Rockland Gazette : December 11, 1879
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The Rockland Gazette. Gazette Job Printing PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY ATTEHNOON bT ESTABLISHMENT. Having every facility In Presses. Type and Material, VOSE & PORTER. to which we are constantly making additions, we are piepar.ed U. execute with promptness and good style 2 I O Main Street. every variety of Job Printing, including town Report?;, Catalogues, By-Law. i j : i t M IS « Posters, Shop Bills, Hand Bills, Pro- If paid strictly in advance—per annum, $2.00. ffrarar^is, Circulars, Bill Heads, If payment in’delayed 6 months, 2.25. Let* *r H eads, L a w and Corpor- 2.50. If not paid till the close of the ye a xon B la n k s, R eceip ts, B ills Ujj-Xew HubscribeiH are expected to make the lirnt / o f L ading, B usin ess, Ad inyiuent in advance. dress and Wedding No paper will be discontinued until ALL a r - XARGEs arc paid, unless at the option of the publish Cards, Tag®, L abels, e d Single copies five cents—for sale at the office and & c ., il the Bookstores. V O LU M E 35. ROCKLAND, MAINE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1879. NO. 2. PRINTING IN COLORS AND RRONZTNCI Z. POPE VO3K, J. B. POUTER. will receive prompt attention. going* on, when the lower part of the mill [ outsi.de that someone was keapinga ‘sharp A Bag Picker’s Lair. For the Presidential Year, gortig. —that old empty store-room back where it ( watch . on thosu mill people, after all, and DESSERT. Valuable Kiln&Wharf can’t be seen from the street—is lighted up ' tliattllls might lie a bi tter way of doing it (frardcnOotur. Ed!- For Sale, or To Let! From Scribner for December. ' T’vc watched the ' fr. '^ns a Very informal school. One ' THE LEADING AMERICAN NEWSPAPER." Brief articles, suggestions,and results of experience HE Subscriber oilers for Rale or to let, bis KILN GOOD-BYE, SWEET DAY. handsomo thing in dresses—A pretty and WUAttF on CROCKETT POINT, Rook* relating to Farm, Garden or Household management Tland. This is one of the best and most desirable privi are invited from our readers interested in such matters. leges for the manufacture and shipment of lime in this city. The Kiln is in good order, with a tight shed and through the tele- everything in readiness for operation. It is easy of THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE FOR 1880. Good-bye sweet day, good-bye ! accc&s and the wharf has a good and sufficient depth During the coming Presidential year T he T r ib u n e' I have so loved tliec, but I cannot hold thee, else does. There may be a gan^ - ............ --------------- cause from every window looking PREMIUMS FOR BOYS. of water, and is a safe place to lie at in rough weather. will be a more effective agency than ever for telling the Departing like a dream,the shadows fold thee; or counterfeiters starting for all we under all the crust of opinions that she had this yard ropes were stretched to some oth “ YV hat is it, doctor? ”—“ Twins.’’ “ By -or ter i and further particulars, apply to the sub- news best worth knowing, and for enforcing sound know/’ "christened jduty;..*—- -i.she became interested,de Gemini? ” criber. politic*. From the day the war closed it has been most j Slowly thy perfect beauty fades aw ay• er window, and alone them were hung Last year Hon. Stillman B. Allen, of. JOIIN W. HUNT. anxious for an end of sectional strife. But it saw two Good-by A suppressed giggle made Tim sud spite her uncomfortable situation. rags of every color and description, in Rockland, Nov. 5 ,1S79. years ago. and was the first persistently to proclaim The position was unpleasant. She did Charleston, S. C., was founded 200 years Boston, made an offer of liberal premiums denly cough and put down his coffee cup. every stage of decay. The yard was oc ago, 1GS0. the new danger to the country from the revived alli Good-bye, i rcet day, good-bye ! “ Timothy,” exclaimed his aunt severely. not like playing eavos-dropper to this inno- to the boys of York County who should ance of the Solid South and Tammany Hall. Against | Dear wet thy golden hours of trnnquil splendor, cupied by a dozen Italian rag-pickers, who that danger it sought to rally the old party of Freedom “ If yon can’t drink coffee without doin’ it gathering, hut there seemed no help Discoursing sweet music—blowing your raise the largest crop of corn on a given ZSTZEW and the Union. It began by demanding the abandon Sadly tin yieldest to the evening tender, started up at my appearance and then went, so fast that you choke yourself, you’ll have for it- She could not escape through the on suddenly with their work. Heaps of own trumPeL amount of land. A large number of boys ment of personal dislikes, and set the example. It 1 Who w ert. fair from thy first morning ray ! tn go without it. I’ll do my best to bring locked door; and boldly revealing herself, called for an end to attacks upon each other instead of Good-bye, veet day ! rags were everywhere, nnder foot and Prettier than the picture—the original of competed for the prizes and some splendid the enemy; and for the heartiest agreement upon what- I you up right, whatever comes of it.” and explaining her absurd suspicions, and overhead. Rag picking and rag cleaning j it —sometimes, ever fit candidates the majority should put up against Good-bye, sweet day, i the remarkable way in which she bad come crops were raised, showing that tbe boy.' the common foe. Since then the tide of disaster has Bringing up Tim in the way he should is the principal business of Mulberry street. rp, ,, ... ,, n u m i i been turned back; every doubtful State lias been won, ' Thy glow and charn go was one of Mrs. Wilkin’s strong there, was more than even her thought could The very atmosphere is impregnated with I Tllf° he Railroad has been in opera- farmers of York County are an enterprising and the omens for National victory were never more glances • points, lie was the son of her niece; and.[ endure. So she kept. her ,place, , hoping, that rags. A very little of it was enough. anti T t,on ten *ears 1,,st M“>- cheering. Vanish at last, and s alemn night advances. set of lads. This year Mr. Allen has made Belinda had married in opposition to her , when the pupils were dismissed she might stumbled up some rickettv stairs to 9ee , 300 years ago Sir Francis Drake entered The Tribune’s Position. Ah. couldst thou yet a : little longer stay ! aunt’s advice. Mrs. Wilkin protested and j slip out among them unnoticed. But when a still more liberal offer, which is open to Good-bye, sweet day ! what the rooms wore like; the only one I the bay of San Francisco, Of T he T ribune’s share in all this, those speak then washed her hands of the whole m at-! Hie Jpsson hour was over, they departed had the strength of mind and of nose to all boys throughout the State who have lived most entbnsiasticallv who have seen most of the strug- 1 Maine will have been a Shite years s t t s i s . gle. It will faithfully portray the varying phases of Good-bye, sweet day, good-by? ! ter. lint, when the poor minn was so in- Mow;/,by twos mu threes, flie open door venture into win han, to sel.ve n-s in Maine two years, and who will be under the campaign now beginning. It will earnestly strive' All thy rich gifts my grateful heart remembers, considerate as to die and leave Belinda flinging a Hood of light out into the hall. „,„n of j sb[,d ,ho fn.3t d60r•SP 'j the 15th of March next. 18 years of age on the 1st day of next June. that tin- party of Freedom, Union and the Public Faith The while I watch the sunset’s smoldering ember) will, ha f a dozen children just when she At last. on y one lingered, and Mrs. M ilk.n ,.alne ,,nd fo„n(, „ woman c0()kj some. ( Thc hi gbesl narigable Wj,ter on this con- may select the man surest to win, and surest to make a We print below Mr. Allen’s generous offer, r^W/THOMPSCir! good President. Butin this crisis it can conceive o f no Die in the west beneath the twilight gray. needed lus help. Mrs. M ilk.n s opinion of listened intently ns she caught Ins voice. ovpl. „ f„.e room ]ookedBollt on . tinent is lake Chickamauga, X. Y. nomination this party could make that would not lie Good bye, sweet day ! his general “ slackness” was verified.; Aow, lim , said the little kmtting-wo- , l . , i i1Pin,v Th>« «rnm..n .15.1 nnt «««.«. as given in a letter to tbe President of the preferable to the best that could possibly be supported Respectfully announces that his The family w e re poor, of course. Sho man, “ I like to have yon come, you know m | I - , ‘ n t on with Dow to turn people's heads—Couic into Maine Slate Agricultural Society. The of by the Solid South and Tammany Hall. didn’t believe in sending in many things— (that, and I’ll help you all I can, but you , bp" work"’' I"learned afterward tha/tlm a conuert 1:lte- “nJ wi‘h creaky boots, ’ T he T ribune is now spending more labor and A Lesson in Mythology.