1905
The death of W. H. Rockhill, ex-clerk of the courts of this county, here verifies in a way the thesis of Goethe that no man can survive a happy moment.
He had been feeling ill and went to the office of his physician to tell the doctor that he was improving in health and that he never felt better for many days.
The words had no more than escaped his lips than he keeled over and died of heart disease. — Lebanon correspondence, Cincinnati Enquirer.
Effects of Prosperity
In the six years of the country's greatest prosperity, from 1897 to 1903, average prices of breadstuffs advanced 65 per cent, meats 23.1 per cent, dairy and garden products 50.1 per cent, and clothing 24.1. All these were products of the farmer and stockman who profited more than any other class of the community by these advances. The miner benefited 42.1 per cent by that advance in the average price of metals. The only decrease in the average prices of commodities in that period was in railway freight rates which decreased from .798 per ton-mile in 1897 to .763 in 1903, a loss of 4.4 per cent. The report of the Interstate Commerce Commission shows that the average increase in the pay of railroad employees in the period was trifle above 8.5 per cent.
Wednesday, July 4, 2007
Saying He Never Felt Better, Died
Labels:
1905,
commerce,
death,
food,
Goethe,
happiness,
health,
mining,
physical,
physicians,
prices,
prosperity,
railroads,
salaries,
statistics,
United-States,
wages
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