' .'v"''''-" - .. - . s ' -. -.v.. -." - . -Tr " " T . - : - - - , - :f; r f 5 f J' f si VOL. 63, BE SURE YQTJ ARJj RIGHT ; THEN G-Q AHE AD.-D Orpckett. TARBQRQ N. C., THURSDAY JULY 30, 1885. i NO. 31 qR-H. T.BASS Offers his proles 4I serricM to th.8 ciM- insof 1 arboro nd ncinity. 5' (mice in T. A. McN air's drag store onXala Streat . . , . . - -, ;i pRINK POWELL, ." TTORXEY-A TLA W Tarboso, - - 9. C RANK NASH, TARBORO. N. O. I Practices jn all the Court, gtete ftnd cid- CKORflE HOWARD, ' Attorney and Counselor at Law. TARBORC Jff. O. - I :-" ;"Prctie In li th. Co.rtKi 8tW;auul Fliers!. . V ; Bon5-. JNDKEW JOINER, , A TTORNET-A T-LA 1 GREENVILLE. N. C on n of Sdeeombe. OAh ut Tftrboro Hofiae. G M. T. FOUNTAIN, ATTORHKT AND COUNSEL! jOK AT LAW, Tarhoro, N. C, t Office orer Iaaanuwe Office of CpU Oitca Williaiuis. feb21-kb ALTER P. WILLIAMSON Attorney-at-Law, oQice U Poet Office BnUdifig.) TARRORO' K ft i7 Practice, in Bute snd federal Confta. H. A. Gilliam. QILLIAM Uomu GnxiAM & SON Attorneys-at-Law, TARBOEO', N. a Will practice la the Counties of Kdgecotube, Halifax and Pitt, and in the Coorto of the irst Judicial Dtetrict, and in Um Circuit and npreme Courta at Ealeigh. Janl8-lr. NORFLEET, I Attorney-at-Law, rV4l TTrTn V JT CraGOTTv Edgecombe, Nasb and WJl son. Loans negotiated on romaooabte tenia. L. BRIDGERS & SON, Attorn eys-at-Law, TARBOEO, -- OS8KT BATTLE. n Attorney at Law S v. TABBORO, N. C. r Rattle fe Hart. RocKr Mount, N. C..1 Practice in the courts of Nasb, Edgecombe Wilson and Halifax counties. Also in the Federal and Supreme Courts. Tarboro offieej np-etairt over new Howard building, Main street, opp. Bank front room, j ; apr 1 8 -K. i. N.CARR, Surgeon Dentistj TA.RBORO, N.C. : Oifice bouts, ;rom 9i.ii. 'Oil 1 p. m. and rom 2 to tf o. la. 8Next door to Tsrboro House, over? Koysier & Naah. IV U. R. W. JOINER, SURGEON DENTIST Has nermaneDtly looated in Wil- pou, N.C. All operations will be neatly and carcfollT performed and on terms as reasonaWfe as possiDie. Teeth extracted without pain. Office on Tarboro street, next door to Poet Office. - Jan-1 6m I l. savage; Livery, Sole, Exchange and Feed Stables, I'OKNES GRANVILLU A 8T. iSDIIW Stkuti TABBORO. W. V. Ttiew 8tables are the largest in the State. and have a capacity of holdW tea car-loads uiiiot'K. uiveumacau. janior IN THE JAWS OF A WHALE. "There blows I there blown blows! blows f cane from Ut lookont en the ship Vlaeyard, ff the eoast of Peru, early one morning. " . . . , , . i No need of the nana! question. " Where away f" . - Three large sperm whales were rolling aloag and spouUng, a mile distant,1 off the lee bow. " .: Out ef the cabin, like lioa, sprang the square-ehouldered, square-headed, griaaly old Nantucket captain Slmoa Block. . " Call all hands i Stand by the boats ! Soon the four boats were ready. "Isrwei away I" was the order, and down they went, splashing alongside. - The boats were about shooting from the hip's aide, when: Beetle, the captain's pretty daughter- eosy young wotaaa of eighteen ran to the open gangway. " Father your pipe r and she held ,np the briar-wood pipe, which., he had f'or gotte to take wltk bUa. . . - . "Ay, ayel Throw It to me i" said Block, directing his boat so as to pass the gangway.. . The captain's harpooaer a fine, hand some young fellow, named George Cart wright, and who was Bessie's acknowl edged lorer, looked up admirugly at the, maiden. ? She was about throwing the pipe, when her foot slipped and down she went, falling plump into the arms of Cartwright, who thus saved her from being hurt. "This is bad. We'll lose the whale, Bessie by going back to put you aboard." said Block. "I can stay where I am ; you need not stop to put me back. I am not afraid. I hare been in a ' fast boat' (a boat fast to a whale) before now, father ; you know that." " Aye, aye ; you're a , Nantocket ' girl of the true grit," answered Block " a r'al old-fashioned whopper, worth eighty bar'ls of good Ce," he added, now allud ing to the whale ahead. The men pulled' with a win until about eighteen fathoms from the leriathan, when, fearing she might be "galled" (frightened) by the else of the oars, the skipper ordered them, to use their paddles. . i Noiselessly and swiftly they now ap proached & monster, until within ten fathoms of her, when up sprang Cart wright in the bow, his harpoou held ready. . "Now, then, give it to him!" roared Block a minute later uib 1 ncuwe iron, 10 oe Durieu to the socket in the whale's lump. She Just gSTe one tremendous sweep with her flakes, scattering a cloud of spray round the crew; then she sounded, and away went the boat with the line, spinning through the chocks and hum ming round the loggerhead. In less than a quarter of an hour the whale's speed slackened, when the men were ordered to haul line. - ' Soon the monster came booming up from the sea not twenty fathoms ahead. Taking their oars, the crew pulled toward lance ai fcr vHm uaerrntg- wound after wound, . y ; V - : Scarcely was he within good reaching distance of her, however, when whirling round and lashing the water to foam in her terrible anguish, her huge left side just touched the boat, almost turning it over and spilling out all the occupants ex cept Bessie and, George Cartwright, who. from their positions the girl being seated in tbe bow, holding to the gunwale, and her lover standing, in the stern sheets, grasping the steering oar eontriTed to save themselves from going overboard. The men were good swimmers, but ere. they could regain the boat, the whale, churning the sea with her flukes, dashed toward them her huse jaws wide open. disclosing her long, sharp teeth. Panic stricken, the sailors swam away from her, when suddenly taming, beating the water madly, as if feeling far her foes, she now lay alongside and abreast of the boat, with both bristling Jaws wide open, extending above and across it amidships, the lower just touching the gunwales. With this formidable "archway of death " between him and Bessie, Cartwright now perceived that a turn of the line, which, by the wild motions of the leviathan, had been tossed about in all directions, had caught around the 'waist of the yonng girl, who was vain ly endeavoring to extricate herself, well knowing that unless she could get clear before the whale should go down, she would be dragged by it under the sea. There was not a moment to lose, and Cartwright, expecting to see the monster sound (go down) in a few seconds, resolved at once to try the only means left him of reaching her in time to free her from the line. ' eerjarated from her by the whale's jaws. which, as stated, lay between him and the nirL the young sailor conciuaea to en deavor to get through that terrible open inr tit tuui batween these huge rows of Ueeth, wkteh raifht'cW fcpon him, how. aTer, cutting him in two ere ne couia nau accomplish bis purpose, oenoing nu una he quickly seized one of , the boat, thwarts for a support anq npng uimwu ,yvcr u Whonie without pain. iit Free. (ia. W1IISKEX HABITS cured at tut pain. Book ol particulars B. M. WOOLEY, M. Atlanta, y vat r TEACHERS. Make t70 to tt50 per month 1 nr.n;n nn Btinilanl .Books A Bibles. Steaiiv work for Rnrlnir and Summer. Ad dress J. C. McCurdy & Co.. PhUapelphia, P UTHER SHELDON, DEALER IN P LATE F0RDINNER. From th. French May A. Halsey. - At the Macy mansion the dinner hour is six o'clock sharp Mr. Macy, who has been absent since morning, comes home seven minutes late. Mrs. Macy (not giving him time to offer an excuse) "Well, when you rang I thought certainly it was the doctor." Mr. Macy (anxiously)" The doctor ? Are you expecting him ? , What is the matter t" "Isnpposeit has never entered your mind that a womu, though blessed with a constitution of iron, might suffer from having her meals at all hours of the day and night Neither would yon call it be ing sick, I suppose, for her to sit and wait and worry, tormented h v all ktnrta r in- -Jactues and ' fears ; expecting every mo ment to hear that her husband has been crushed to death by a car, or met with some other fightfnl accident. - (Macy, who sees the storm coming, wise ly remains silent.) - . " Will you at least condescend to answer tbe only question that I shall ask you f" "Assuredly my dear." . " VV1U jrpu! be good enough to inform me If yon intend to come home at this late hoar .very night " - "Surely, my dear, you are not going to scold because 1 am seven minutes late this once. I was detained by business ; but do not ask what It was. for I promised not to tell." "Ihaveno doubt that you will be a whole week late one of these days, and will end, perhaps, by being away from your family fbr years." "" Pshaw, my dear ! How absnrd !" " Absurd, is It . Why, it was no later than last night that yon were telling me about that sea captain Perouse, I believe his name was who left home one day, promising to return at the nsual time, and has never been seen since by his unhappy family." " But that happened ninety years ago." "So much the worse." "Besides, don't you -remember that I told you he was shipwrecked ?" " Oh, yes ; it is easy enough to say that a man was lost at sea, especially when he is not here to contradict yon. But don't think when you make np your mind to leave home forever that you will be able to deceive me by some foolish story print ed in the papers, declaring, for instance, that yon have gone np in a balloon which has never come down again ; oh, no, I shall not believe that story any more than the one yon tell to day." " Iron sure I do not know to what story you refer, my dear." " Oh. indeed t A man comes here brim ful of mystery, and when his wife ques tions him, when she ventures to ask him a question, he responds guardedly that it is a secret. Oh 1 1 am not at all curious. I have not the slightest desire to know your wonderful secret. Far be it from me to try to and out what perhaps would be the last thing I should' wan t to know." ' "Now. are yon fating to imagine an sorts yuuust A nave uwu iKcuywu wau u other man's business to-day t" . "A nice business it must be that a man dare not tell his wife. You are the great eat talker in the universe away from home, but it is simply impossible to get a word out of yon when you arealone with your wife." 'But, I tell you, it is not my secret." "I suppose not. A very good excuse, that" " Good heavens ! How exasperating a woman can be." " A man never is of course not" "Well, for the sake of peace and quiet ness I'll tell you the whole story." "Kever mind I do not care to hear it now." "Why, confound it, are 'you not willing to let me explain ?" "What is the nsef You would only invent something. You are very good at that sort of thins." "Will yon allow me to speak?" " I cannot prevent it, can I You need n't be so fierce." "But I warn you I shall not believe one single word yoa say." "Then I may as well remain silent" " There what did I tell yon ? I knew very well that you wouldn't have any thing to say if driven to the wall. Ah ! I understand you." 'Oh! certainly swear ; that's just like a man. It will give you more time to in vent a plausible story, too." 'Do you intend to let me get a word in edgeways t" : " Oh, go on, go on your humble servant Is all attention." " Well, then, a friend of mine who is on the verge of bankruptcy, came to me this morning and begged me to give him some I assistance, and I have been running about all dav trvinir to help him out, and even at last offered myself as his security." "Is that all?" "Yes, that is alL" "Well. I am thankful I paid the baker yesterday ;. we shall at least have bread one more month, and I shall begin tnis ilower jaw, as a man sometimes flings him- I Terr nigt to let the children go barefoot, feelf over a fence. Unfortunately, a tooth I tor tnat u w BUILDERS' HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, Alio Kuild'ioi; Material of every description OS. IB W. BIDE MARKET BQUARE A 49 ROANOAKX AYE NORFOLK. VA. Novemberl882. 18,1-y. W O. WOODWARD, 1 with E, 11. BLAMIB - Norfolk, Vs. WUl mail sample, of DET GOODS WHEN BXQDESTED, Druses mad. to order. Corr.spond.nee so netted. .tlogaes or Patterns maiieu lltns : to aoy address. caught in the belt around his waist, and twn he went, thus falling crossways on that lower Jaw of the whale, Where he lay on his breast, right between the fangs of the monster. It was a terrible moment Trulv. a mora awful sight could not be : Imagined than the whale's enormous head, i which, half covered with barnacles. Its di minutive eyes hardly risible, continued "a side-long, yawing motion above the I i .K- iA nnper jaw became motionless then down in with a terrible snap, upon shreds of I Cartwright'. jacket, upon nucap ; U for Bessie, oblivious of her own peril a 1 sight of her lover's, and nerved to unusual Eulltng mm xrom o m in gs. just in time to save him. With his sheath-knife the young mam then severed the line about the girl, res cuing her at a critical inomeub, u. nuw Botngdown , ffwnd LUer. n. xne men u tu wi i":-:r up. When old Block, embracing both Cartwright and his daughter, declared that they were well worthy of each other, and that although he'd lost the whale by the harpooner's cutting the line, yet he'd soonerloie a thousand " bar'ls of He" than his Bessie. -. . No whales were token that day, hot on the next the one which had been cut from waa discovered lying dead, ahead of the ship, and was towed alongside. Of that whale Bessie, long since mar ried to Cartwright, has in her possession one of the teeth, which she never looks upon without a shudder, thinking of that fearful time when she beheld her lover hanging in me jaws ui ww- . . i ' - v ' ' ' ' m ' - It may he encouraging to some of our friende to know that of the 51,000 fourth class postmasters la the United States, 2,- 500 of them BsVeteen fitted by democrats r'nee March 4th Altogether the present administration bss appointed , about 4,000 democratic postm asters. - . . Can tt be said that a Ash U crasj when be ii in4eic. " what the future has in store for the Door things, with their father squan deriutr his fortune upon every scallawag ha meets." , " Scallawag, indeed I Be a little careful .rhat you call a man till yon know who he ls.".- " Oh ! I can guess fast enough ; it is that fool of a Farns worth. " . In the first place, madam, Farnsworth Is not a fooL bnt a very Intelligent man and In the next place, it is not Farnsworth atalL" "And for such a miserable creature as Farnsworth do I see myself and children reduced to beggery." ''And. I repeat that it was not Farns worth." "Well. then, it was some other good' for.nothinir fellow whose name you dare not telL" "Do not call names, madam: yon will soon regret it if yon do." " IS must have been a sharper or swindler ; a gambler, perhaps, or even a thieL" "Very welll Since you force me to it, know that it is your brother whom you are abusing, and that he has been specn latiair too deenlv. and is heavily in Tolved." : .: " Oh, Frank, won't you forgive me (They fall into each other's arms. ) "And now. my love, Bince peace restored, let us sit down to dinner. " "Not quite yet" . "And why not?" " Weil, yon see I sent the cook away be cause she was saucy, and I have been wandering around the-city all day trying to find another going from pillar to post, from one employment office to another and I only succeeded In getting one a little while ago, so that " "So that, I suppose, I get no dinner at an?" ; , mNohw that dinner will he rady ftt MTta," AKOHTMOUS WRITHES. Some Known lathers STho Bfade Their Entree Under Nome e ' Pinna, . - : The praclice of writing under an as sumed name has been made use of from the earliest times. Authors, from mod esty or other reasons, have hidden - their Identity by using fictitious names. The story of Beowulf, tbe first known-composition in English, was written anonymous, ly, and the custom is still a common -one with all degrees of genius from the cross roads scribbler to Sir Walter Scott and Washington Irving. . The reasons for patting a book before the public under a pseudonym may be be cause of a fear that critic and public will roughly handle the first attempts of au obsenre author. " " " The blitory df literature shows that tbtr best Jndges have often been deceived Id their opinions xm a new composition: -and yonng writers recall the reeepUon offered to Carleton's best pieces in "FarmBal lads," holding a latent belief that theirs may turn out so fortunate, y . v Another idea among writers is that the anonymous work piques curiosity and raises speculation,, thereby bringing" the book prominently before the public Most of tbe great novels were written under 110ms de plnme. Irving's first ef forts appeared under the name of Knick erbocker, and the novels of Sir Walter Scott created the greatest, discussion by being signed " By the Author of Waverly." Humorists use a name that is In itself a jest, such as Petroleum V. Nasby by TxK-ke, Josh Billings by Shaw, Artemos Ward by Browne, Mark Twain by Clem. enB, Lnt ie Kemus by Harris, and Orohe us C. Ker (office-seeker) by Newell. - Hod the author of the Junius letters made known his identity, the many books written and warm discussions argued would never have been pnt forth to dis cover the authorship of the famous clas sic Benjamin Franklin's entrance into print was made anonymously. The men in the printing office where he was serving as an apprentice were accustomed to' pnt in short articles in the paper, and the comments they made on one another aroused him to a feeling of emulation. Very carefully writing an article in a dis guised hand, he slipped it in under the door of the New England Conrant which paper his brother printed, and awaited the next morning. "They read it and commented upon it in my hearing," says Franklin, " and I had the exquisite pleas ure of finding that it met their approba tion, and that In' their different guesses at the authorp none were named but some character among 4xs for learning and in genuity." Artemns Ward was another printer's devil whose first appearance in public print was by slying slipping in a contribution into the editorial box. After joyfully seeing it accepted and set up in type he went up and down the streets, and, as he said: "I thought I was the greatest man in Boston." No such feeling of happy emotion has ever been experi enced by any great writer as the appear-. 1lmtMVmttt?9wryti;iwe$ .Qr story The late finding or Air. Charles Kgoert Craddock," the now famous author ef In the Tennessee Mountains" and "Where the Battle Was Fought" to ben woman, recalls to mind a similar instance of mistaken sex. in an anonymous writer. ; When Charlotte Bronte appeared at the house of the publishing firm that had ac cepted and printed "Jane Eyre," and announced herself as its author, she was met with incredulity, and witnesses had to be brought in to prove that Currier Bell and Charlotte Bronte were one. Dickens wrote his first articles for the London papers under the pseudonym of Boz. Everybody in Boston knew the an- thorof the Bigelow papers, but James) Russell LoweU was known . more widely as Bigelow tnan . ne was as tne poe. Tbonsanda who have been charmed with the graceful English of George William Curtis know him only as "Easy Chair.". Eli Perkins Is another name for Melville D. Landon ; Labonchere, the London edi tor, formerly signed many of his articles Besieged Resident V. C Ooinn, tbe war correspondent, wrote his picturesque war papers and juvenile books with the pom de plume of Carleton. Cholera. The following is an abstract of a paper prepared by Dr. Pepper. Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania : Cholera has prevailed in India for cea- ttvries, occurring mere anno annually. Its essential citue is unknown, although. recent investigations teud to show that a peculiar minute organism is closely con nected with the production 01 tae dis ease. . , . Whatever the specific cause of cholera mav be, it enters the system by the stom ach and bowel, and acts thronghthem to produce the characteristic symptoms. The discharges from the stomach and bowels, which are very copious la cholera, and which contain the specific poison, must be received into the system in order tn nrodnre the disease. This usually oc curs bv the use .of drinkiug water which has he rime tainted with these discharges. It may also occur by breathing an atmos phere in which particles of this poison in a dry state are suspended. Which particles become mixed with the saliva and are swallowed. - The poison retains its vitality for a long time, and it is . easy to understand how the disease may thus be propagated along the patlis 01 commerce. It seems somewhat strange that cholera remained limited to India for a thousand years before its firt migration in the be-o-tnninirof the 16th century: but it must be explained by the more rapid and fre quent intercommunication both by land and water at and after that time. . . The poison seems to require heat to de velop its activity ; and it mnst find other fniiffitiona anitable lor. ita development. These conditions are associated with des titution, over-crowding, filth,' bad arinK innr wuter. and other sanitarv defects. - If a sewer into which cholera dis charges enter, should communicate with the stream used as a source of drinking water, the disease would spread rantrtiy. When the appalling damage--to -life. nrnnortv and business caused bv an out' break of cholera is contemplated. U is clear that the most prompt and liberal provisions againsu its occurrence areas manded. ' j TXt TiaioE m HXAiuio or fiih. ntereatinn Kznerinsensa In Fleet enltnre hy aw Kxyart. r But llttte' has been written On the de velopment of vision and hearing in fish, and that little has been theory rather than deduction from actual experiment My owm experiments, (says H. P. Wells in "Fly Rods and Fly Tackle,") as to the effects that sound produces on tronc (and I assume that all fishes are more er less alike la this respect) have been confined to thta;T Frequently when unable to ob serve a tront while myself nnseea 1 have screamed and shouted at the top of my voice.' These demonstrations have In variably been without thejrilghtest effect; bn when varied by ? a coacmwloa which wouid etnamanlcate itself, te She water v- '2Ja 00 longer been the case, and. vt i ft.? ef alarm, or at least tht th on eoistos was felt had been apparent, ). an English work, the " name of which I in vain endeavor to recall, aa- aceotint of some very interesting and more decisive eiperiiaenteare given. The writer ceased a building to be-erected over the water.' and mnrtf hi. ehaervattone through email apertareelonstrncted. far the purpose, so that he was quite concealed. His tront were welf accustomed to the wflea' of the angler sad timid. Sending a naan. wit of sight behind the building the. firing of a gun by him produced not the slightest effect ea the trout, who rose freely during the experiment to flies blown toward them through a toW. I am, therefore, convinced that no sound is injurious which doer no communtoate Its vtbratioa Co the wafer. Bnt concussioa upon the side er bottom of a beat, or jumping from rock to rock, or blows upon a hard bottom with the wading staff or with hob-nailed shoes, I think are so invaded through and by the water as to be some measure perceptible to the fish and alarm them. That fish poses the sense of bearing their anatomi cal structure goes far to prove, while that they are not Insensible to sounds produced in the air, muss be admitted, nniese the doubter Is prepared to call In question the 'numerous accounts by alleged eye witnesses of their coming to be fed at the sound of a bell. Sec. This I. for one, hesl- tate to do. notwithstanding I hsve never been able to make a sound in the air which seemed to produce the slighest effect ou trout in water, to which fish my experi ments have been confined. It may, how ever, well be that the sound was perceived, while toe fish were so habituated to the roar of the waterfall and similar noises. without any ill-consequences ensuing, that sound alone was not regarded by them as an Indication of danger. SLEEPLESSNESS. A 9Ieihere Hem.ay-H.w li Operated Ann Baby. One evening a few weeks ago, says a writer in Babyhood, I had an exaggerated form ef s very commou experience with my baby. He never goes to bed exactly with tbe setting ot the u ri. bus on the evening In question It seemed as If he had AERONAUTICAL AD VEH TUBES. Anecdote, or Sueeeaaful Balloonist.- Some Amaalnn Sterlea. One of the most successful aeronauts ever known In this country was Loo is A. Laurlat He was a Frenchman by birth, but a resident of Boston. He was a gold beater by trade, and his first balloon was made of gold-beater's skin. He at tempted to ascend with this and failed. On tbe 4th of July, 1835, however, he made magnificent ascension from Boston After this he ascended from Providence, Castle Garden, Chelsea, East Boston, Nashua, Concord, Portland, New York, Jersey City, Hoboken, Troy; Rochester, etc He went up twice in the British Provinces, and made two ascensions from She City of Mexico. ' He made in all 63 .asnstona.-V;.:-.:-? Ms. Laurlat went en. once frcm CbVrlei. A too, Masa; and the westerly wind carried aim over Port- Shirley and oat to' sea. For an hour and a quarter he was drag ged through the water with great rapidi ty, and when picked up by a vessel from Wellfleet at the end of that time, was in sensible The balloon went farther out to sea and was lost His ascension from Concord, N. II., was made at the time of the excitement re garding the great comet which many prophesied would' butt itself head fore most at terra firma and going clean through would split us into bits, or at least would give us such a brushing with that beautiful long tall of his, that when the operation was completed all the out side material of this earth of oni s would be turned into polishing powder. A Yan kee among the Green Mountains of Ver mont discovered a way of escaping the general devastation; he dug a hole, com mencing in the cellar of his house, and extending under the ground, a regular tunnel In fact When this was ready he watched and waited. As Lauriat ascend ed the wind carried him direct for the Green Mountains, and having gone far enough, aa be passed over the brow of one of the mountains, he opened the valve and began to descend into the valley be yond. Seeing a man at work in a field ahead, he called to him. The man stop ped work, but seeing no one, went at it again. A second time he called to him and the poor fellow looked everywhere but upwards. A third time he called and at the same moment threw over one end of a loiig heavy rope. The man was our over-credulous Yankee. His back was toward the balloon just at the moment when tbe rope caught on the top of a board fence behind him, giving a ter rible r-r-r-r-up that made his heart nearly jump from his body : that was enough to frighten the poor fellow to death, but when he looked up in his distracted state, and saw the great comet tail and all- he gave a yell and a bound, and with but one thought save that of saving himself, his wife and child, like a locomotive un der full speed, flew to his house, scream ing 1" Mercy 1 Mercy ! (that was his wife's name.) The comet's a coming i the comet's a coming 1 Get Into the hole 1 get into the hole I quick t ouick 1" . The aero- his eryTug soon led to such a fit of cough ing and choking that I was frightened. and 1 vowed never to do so again ; and so again : as 8.9,10 o'clock came, the little eyes were wide open. 1 used all my arts of soothing and persuading, but there be sat and laughed and cooed, and watched the light and the shadows until 11 o'clock came and went and I a was just at hand Something mnst be done, and I could think of nothing, unless possibly a wet cloth. on the head might have a sooth ing effect 1 at least it would do no harm to try. I took a piece of Canton flannel, large enough when doubled to cover tbe whole head, and wrung it rather dry oat of warm water, then pat it closely over baby's head so as to cover both ears and eyea The effect was wonderful ! There was a brief struggle, then perfect quiet, and io less than five minutes the little lellow was sound s sleep. Since then I have tried It again and again, and always with the same quick result. It is a simple reined y fo sleepnessness and well worth knowlug and trying. Jitla Hint I Hey. I stood in the store the other day when a boy came in ana applied tor a situation. - Can you write a good hand f was asked. -Yeas.' "Good at figures r Yens." That will do 1 don't want you," said the merchant. ) "But" said, when the boy had gone, "I 'know that lad to be an honest indus trious boy. Why don't you give him a chance?" ' '."Because he hasn't learned to say 'Yes, sir and' No, sir ' If he answers me as he did when applying for a situation, bow wttl henanswer customers after being here month t" . ' Whatcoukl I say to that t He bad fallen into a habit, young as be was, which turned htm away from the first situation he had .: ever applied -for. Veto London !-.';'- - - .'' 'Qnla.'V ' . ; Vial of Qnln, the actor. He one evening made a bet with a nobleman of 100 that by breakfast time next morning there should be in th months ot Londoners word that was never before heard. ,' The bet was accepted, and when the: theatre had closed that night the Irrepressible actor furnished each of the supers " and others Whom he had hired, with a good lump of chalk, and Instructed one and all to go through the principal streets of the metropolis and chalk on the flags the word "quia." The task waa accomplished. and next morning' the people were startled by seeing such an nnnsnal sight Some believed it a signification of danger that a secret enemy was near and this was his watchward. So the word went the rounds in a most amazing way; Quln, of course, won the wager, and the world a new word. is He Preferred Vermont Hallways. ' How fur Is Albany 7" asked a country' man at the Grand Central station in New York. "One hundred and forty-four miles." " How long does it take to git thar 7" "Three hours and twenty-five minutes by fast line." "An' how much does it cost?" : " One dollar and forty-four cents." -" Gosh 1 a dollar and forty-four cento fer ridin' less'n four hours. Why, np in Ver-1 mont A aiu riue uuu a uay wu m nuinwi fer less money than that, an' not go near so fur, nuther." Clean faces, clean hands and clean clothes ar suppt eed to show good breeding in In dividuals, but they are not more vital crite ria than are clean streets, clean J yards and clean alleys of good breeding in tbe commu nity. .' - It is said that some California friends of Gen. Grant have raised S12.000 towards 1 raj ln Ivs doctor's bills. . Paper Bags. Hew often we throw them away when emptied of their contents. If there is box or bag for them to the kitchen, where we can pnt them as soon as emptied, we can use them in various ways. They are handy to cover the lamp chimney after it is cleaned, to keep off files and dust; handy to lay over the top of bread or cake in the erven when haklno- toe fast : handv tetcOver the tdsss jars of canned fruit when set on the cleset shelves : silo over tbe Jars like n cap: this keeps the fruit from tarniag dark. A Chlneie belle has arrived in San Fran Cisco. - She is the first genuine exhibit of her kind the Pacific coast. She is tall and handsome, and her feet possess tbe reqolsile deformity so thorougly that when ever she walks a servant supports her each side. - A colored baby in Craven county bears the name of Grover Cleveland. house ; there were others that came to the balloon, however, who were able to ex plain the mystery concerning the poor de luded Yankee. , A good story is told of Elliot, the Bal timore aeronaut Some years before the " he ascended from Charleston. S. C. It was a very w. hA7i and atter re malnlng in the air two or three It was getting dark he descended on one of the islands in the bay. The white folks had all gone to the city. In a cabin lay a dead negro, Dick, and around the cabin door sat half a dozen negroes. Elliot and his balloon descended noiseless ly in front of them. Just before he reached the ground, the darkies caueht Bight of him. They stood not. upon ;the order of their going but went at once. The anchor had reached the ground, and one of the darkles in his baste to get away, stumbled over It jnst as it commenced to drag. He knew at once who had got hold of him, and his piercing shrieks were truly heartrending as he cried :, " Oh ! oh 1 1'se not de niggar 1 Oh ! massa debble 1 Rood maSsa debble t I'se not de niggar ! Dick's in dah I Dick's in dah !" By this time he had got loose and made for the swamp. Buying Wall Paper. Light papers make a dark, dingy room much more cheerful ; large figures make a small room look much smaller and oc casions much waste in matching the fig ures. All low rooms should be papered with striped paper, having the stripes run ning up and down, as it makes tbe room seem much higher. Subdued tints take off the glare of too many windows. The best effect is produced by havinn a paper with pattern and colors of a quiet tone, such as does not at once strike the eye on coming into the room. The paper should relieve and set out the furniture that stands In front of it, not attract attention I rom it Mllpper. of Paper. Paper slippers are the latest form in which paper la Introduced in new inven tions. An Englishman has patented .e system of manufacturing slippers, san dals, and other covering for the feet out of paper. Paper pulp, or papier mache, is employed for the upper, which , is mold ed to the desired form and size, and a sole la nrovided. made of oaner or pasteboard. leatherboard, or other suitable paper ma terial, which is united to the upper by means of cement, grae or ether adhesive material. The upperis creased, embossed or penoratea at tne instep ana siues, which renders them somewhat pliable, and prevents their cracking while in use. A Germ Trap. In the Philadelphia Medical And Sur gical Reporter, Dr. Webb describes an in genious apparatus of his own construction, which he calls a germ trap. Its main features are a cylinder, an air pump, and a series ot steel disks, across whose open ings are stretched thin veils of pyroxylin. The air to be heated is drawn through the machine by the aid of the pump, and the microbes are intercepted by the veils. The latter are then removed and placed under a microscope, which reveals the special character of the bacilli. With this trap several successful searches have been made in particular localities for the bacillus of consumption (tuberculosis). A Lous lime Between Ueala. CoL E. Wolfe, of Indiana, and Gen. Hatch of Arkansas, met in Tennesee, near Memphis, at the early part of the war. Hatch was In the regular service and Wolfe a volunteer officer. On the night in question some movements were in opera tion, and others were coming in thick and fast To while, away the, tedium of the time the two officers sat down to a game of poker in a log cabin which they occu pied as headquarters. The play was In terrupted by the arrival of frequent order lies, which were promptly attended to, and then the game proceeded. After a while, however, orderlies began to come in - at both doors, and the situation grew critical Major Hatch started to his feet with the exclamation. "Wolfe, this thing la getting too hot. Mind, it's your deal 1" and, leaving cards and stakes on the table," he. hurried -from the hovel and mounted his hrseet Jong af?o two men met la the iSfiee ol the lirettum flonse-.lafleld'-Helkk'- Haton,- "said the ex-wluntr office v who would have thought of seeing you here!E 5. A twinkle came to the eyes of the veteran- addressed, and extending his hand he dry ly remarked: "Wolfe, It's your deal!" A quarter of a century had elapsed since that unfinished game of poker, and since that night in the negro quarters till the accidental meeting in the hotel of Winfleld they had not seen each other. "More mortar' A mason was in the habit of whistling to his laborer whenever he wanted a fresh supply of mortar, as the scaffold on which he worked was rather small. This oc curred very often during a day's job." A joiner, noticing that Pat answered dutifully every call from the mason. thought of playing a trick on him by im itating the whistle, and thus brought him up with a hodful of mortar when there was no room for it. The mason told Pat that he had not whistled, so he had no al ternative than to trudge back with his load. This having occurred the third time during the day, Pat thought he would watch to hear where the whistle came from. He had not waited long, with the hod on his shoulder, when he heard the identical whistle underneath where he stood, and leaning over, he saw the head of the joiner protruding out of the window immediate ly below. Pat, without more adoemptied the hod over the whistler's head. The joiner yelled and spluttered while attempting to clear himself from the ad hesive mass ; and in the midst of his con fusion heard Pat shouting at the top of his voice : "WkiMoi agnta, me -nnoy, "wneii you want some more mortar !" TTATT 0 VX0Z7A1LI Jl fi llljQ ftlCXLLAJr Benewer. Seldom ao a popular rueusy wla snch a strong hold upon the pablie eoaAdsnni ss lias Haxx'i Hats Bsirawaa. theesMslavfefe It has aeeompllshed a onatnleta rartoratton ut eolor to the hair, and rigorous health to iU scalp, are Innnmrrabla. Old people like It Cor its woaderfal power to restore to tbeU vhtteaing leaks their orifiaal color and beanty. MlddWaga. peopla Use U became It prevaats then) tram nttoag bale, . keeps dandruff away, and saaket the hair grow thick and strong. Tesng Miei like It a a (treating beeana. it (! tk. hair . kaaa tLful glow? lustre, aad enablai tn Xn areas It la wbauvn form they wish. Thastt lathe , ; favorite of au, snd it has heooexe so staply : oecwne jjdjaprurtiioooeMl PLAQUE-STRICKEN PLYMOUTH ! .. .T , DOES A 'SIMILAR DAKGEB TERZATEE ETERY05S 0E US! Bow PuMIe Attention Is Directed to ' Personal Peril.. rRoehtar (N. T-) CorrHiMdnter lattaaapoU. SntlML i...h,i.ii;i -- . ...... Fast Steam Craft. Two Hudson river steamers, the South America and the Mary Powell, are said to have made 26 miles an hour. Other fast records are : The Mary Powell made 76 miles. New York to Poughkeepsie, in a 39 m. 80 sec, Aug. 0, 1874. Chrysooolls, 125 miles, Sacramento to San Francisco, in 5 h. 16 m. on Dec, 31, 1881, Allda, 145 miles. New York to Albany 6 h. 21 m. R. E. Lee, New Orleans to Natchez, Miss., 16 h. 36 in. 47 sec, on Oct 88, 1870. The same steamer, New Orleans to St Louis, 8 days 18 h. li m. Stiletto, yacht 29 miles In 1 h. 17 m. Roe we 11 P. Flower publicly annoucces that he is a candidate for tbe Democratic nonunation for Governor of New York. He was Tammany's candidate for tbe Pi esi jen cy, in the last national convention, be is able, popular and a man of large wra'tb. A. good time to kill mad -dogs. And they are always mad with sheep. form sncces. at th. bar." . ' . " Ah, young man. that secret is a life study, but I will give it to you on condition that you pay all my bills during this session of court." "Agrewl, sir," said the junior. Evidence, indinputable evidence," - At the end of the month the Judgu reminded the young man of his promise. ' I recall no such promise." - " Ah, bnt you made it." , 1 1 please?" And th. judge, aot My wjtnj, lost a caM for once. . The man who can produce indisputable evidence wins public favor. I had an in terview yesterday with the most success ful of American advertisers, whose ad vertising is most successful because al ways backed by evidence. " What styles of advertising do you use 7" I asked H. H. Warner, Esq. , "Display, reading matter, and para graphs of testimonials." ' " Have you many testimonials 7" In answer he showed me a large cabinet chock-full "We have enough to till Boston, New York, Chicago, St Louis and Philadelphia morning papers." " Do you publish many of them ?" "Not a tithe. Wonderful as are thoss we do publish, we have thousands like them which we cannot use. ' Why aot 7' Xet me tell you. ' Warner's safe cure' has probably been the most successful medicine for female disorders ever discov ered. We have testimonials, from ladles of the highest rank, but it would be indel icate to publish -them. Likewise many Statesmen, lawyers, clergymen, doctors of world-wide fame have been cured, but we tan only refer to such persons in the most guarded terras, as we do in our reading articles." "Are these reading articles success ful 7" ' When read they make such an impres sion that when the ' evil days ' of ill health draw nigh they are remembered, and War ner's sate cure is used." " No, sir, it is not necessary now, as at first, to do such constant and extensive advertising. A meritorious medicine sells itself after its merits are known. We present-just evidence enough to disarm skeptics and to impress the merits of the remedies upon new consumers. We feel it to be our duty to do this. Hence, best to accomplish, our mission of healing the sick, we have to uae the reading-article style. - People wont read plain testimony als." ' .. "Yes, sir, thousands admit that bad they net learned of Warner's sate enre through this clever style they would still I be ailing and still impoverishing them selves in lees to unsuccessful practition ers.' It wonld do your soul good to read the letters of thanksgiving we get from mothers grateful for the perfect success which attends Warner's safe cure when used for children, and the surpriMed grati ncation with which men and women of older years and impaired vigor, testify to the youtnrui ieenugs restored to tnein by the same means." " Are these good effects permanent 7" " Of all the cases of kidney, liver, urin ary and female diseases we have cured, not two per cent, of them report a return of their disorders. Who else can show such a record 7" . " What is the secret of Warner's sufe enre permanently reaching so many seri ous disorders 7" - " I will explain by an illustration : The little town of Plymouth, Pa, has been plague-stricken for several months be cause Its water supply was carelessly pois oned. The kidneys and the liver are the sources of physical well-being. If polluted bv disease, all the blood become poisoned and every organ is affected and tu ijreitt danger threatens every one, wlu najiects to treat himself promptly. I was nexrly dead mvsell ol extreme kidney disease. but what is now Warner's safe cure cured me, and I know that it is theoHl) remedy in the world that can cure such disor ders, for I tried everything else in vain. Cured by it myself, I bought it. and, from a sense of duty, presented it to the world. Pnly by restoring the kidneys and liver can disease, .leave tne Diooa ana tne sys tem. A celebrated sanitary physician once snid to me.1 " The secret of the wonder ful success of Warner's safe cure Is that it is sovereign over all kidney, liver and urinary diseases, which primarily or secondarily make up the majority of human ailments. Like all great discover ies it is remarkably simple." The house of H. H. Warner & Ce. stands deservedly high in Rochester, and it is certainly a matter f congratulation that merit has been recoguuted all oyer ' ue W nd, and that tbis-.ncoess has been nu aaaiiBsdlv deserred. - Pxs Fgui, I have invented a SIMPLE WATER PTib ft SEAT, for the core of the above troublesome and painful malady, which I confidently place before the public as a Sum Kmu . Uurk It has received the endorsement r ik. leading physicians in this community, and wherever tried, ha given entire satisfaction, and wh re it fails to relieve tbe (money will be willingly returned. Thest Seats will be farnlsbed at the follow ing prices : . - Walnut.. . .an.001 - '1 . . y W j, , .M . - Directions for usiuif will ceoMjpany ecn Seat. We ti oulile you with no certlfleates We leave the Seat to be its advertiser. Address, LEWIS CHAMBERLAIN. Patentee Tarboro, Edgecombe Co.. N. C. jeSB-ly BUCKINGHAM'S DVE ; FOB TITE WHISKERS - Has beeom. on. ol the looct important pop, lar toilet article, tor geattaaea's was, Whan the beard is gray or naturally of an eades. sirable shade, Buckhkiham's Pva Is -tbe remedy. j raKraaxn by E. P. Hall & Con Xahaa,Y.n. 80U by sU Draughts. Y -, ....... ' y- ; A NEW AND VICE. VALATJBLE DE Patent i - i' i Water Closet Sea: FOB TH1 CUKE OF HEMORRHOIDS, Commonly Called Piles, j INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL PROLAP. BUS AI. t V 4 NO MEDECINE OR SURGICAL TJOK JNECKH&AKY. OPERA r 1 1 'i'i : ft HAVE YOU A GARDEN? IF YOU HAYS Aad will f tit t- Urtl lm-f ill anutl'Ml't't-e-I sail, -.wd feet-re ,ir-- S WW. wmL tit e- ?v a THEQHLTTEU TO-MID Will purify the BLOOO, ren late trie LIVER aiul KIDMBVjBi and lnsTouK tub unA4xia and VIQOa of TfOtTTK. Vr Mila, WulorAWMUt, IB liac 01 nmiHi lllffMhttOII aul nreo reeuur inawitii urei. uoaen. bhmcim b nerve, reeeira aewiorrc, a LADIES FjitlV4iia the mill! tauiiies nruitt rwwtr. Sutr-Wnn from ewaittalnt W ueeollar to tbeirava WIL- Gnd in SB. HARIEBS IBOH TOHIO a sp-(Miv cure. uiv a cienr. nealu Kroiueiit attewpts at coiintt-rfc tn Ike normlarltv oi'tha orl.lnal. I ment icetilie Okuiinal and Bust. Keea toot MaMUiiw or. nana, 81. Loui.. Mo. for oar "DKEAH i olloi .Uiuig. and iimtoI lalttiaatiwM. ill..... . ..I... tiltki. rnfc.li-f ki. IMMfuiHrt, rSei feu tea.ba RESUMED. :o:- We take pleasure in announcing in our nnmerons patronp and friends that we have now recovered from the disarrangement to our Ivusiueas caused by the recent lire, and bum now ree timed at the Ik-low uauitMl lo cation, where we trust to iuf ui ail of our former customers. 1 '. :0: mm f; ZOELLEB PHARMACISTS A5D DRUGGIST. ' - AT THE WEDDELL BOOK STORE. Opposite the BUi'AX HOUSE and . adjoin - ing the P08T OFFCE. t . i r t .r i : i D. ccmming8, - f . f Sells i.1 j LI VA TAB WH18K1T. ki. t-.t.i