Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / July 18, 1889, edition 1 / Page 1
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Z , X - . " Z r , 'r f" 1 1 -1 1 1 L3TC 8UHK TOU ABE BIGHT ; THEN GO AHEAD.-T) Crockett.. iff' I I VTA-H rail It HI . I 11 I I VOL. 67. NO. 29. Wb OFFER We are the Sole Agents for If YouMave o apiMllU, IndlgfeMlon. Flatulence, MrW Hesdacbe. "all run down," lott ing flesh, yeu will Oatl d-o remKl.T yfa need. They lenenjt ueak Ntomafh and build i.pliie .j-iins einsrsios- Jt f Tt-rei !'r(";i i .ii il or pliysicl OTfrwookwMl 1 lu.l i .ol i runi Hie'ii. Aicoly s.gr r,-lcU. V y . " ' it 1 . 1 . 4ftt1yr PROFESSIONAL CARDS. I) R. LOUIS H. REID, WlLLIAMSTON, N. C, Kespectfally tendershia Professional 8ervice to the Public and to his Bro. Physicians in Martin and surrounding counties. Office in 8. R. Biggs' Drug Store. 22tf Geo. Howard. J. . Martin. ir OWARD & MARTIN. it'oraeys and Counselors at Law, TARP.ORC N. O. y Pracs: in I" the C::-ts. 'ta' p.nd F -derai. ;.).& ly . II. V. Uonsr.L Gi i.Liaat ULLIAM Sl SON Attorneys-at-X-aw, TARBORO', N. C. VHl practice In the Counties of Edgecombe, Halifax and Pitt, and In the Courts of the Kirst Judicial District, and in the Circuit and Supreme Courts at Raleigh. Ianl8-ly. J OlIN L. BRIDGER3 & SON, Attorneys-at-La w , T.-iRBOKO, ltlyr D R. H. T. BASS Offers his proleesional services to the titi i"ns of Tarboro and vicinity. Office on M ain Street near Coker'B corner. J) R. G S. LLOYD. EYE EAK, NOSE AND THROAT. )? :( Recently havinfr taker special courses in the above, offer his services to the people of Kdtrecombe and surrounding counties. Office in old Bryan House, near bank, TARBORO, N. C. jyi. DON WILLIAMS, Jr., DENTIST, (tiraduate Baltimore College Dental Burgery.) Offi, Old Bryant House, Main St., 20-ly Tabbobo, N. C. iw If Yon Wait Tte Earn I can't i?lve it to 3'OU, but anything usually It fpt In a FIRST-CLASS DRY UOOD3 STORiC V nU CAN OKT and -SO CHEAP That you wil1 not miss even the small chang' out o f your pocket. A few Of these goods I had before, but most of u'ii I hare JUST PURCHASED IN THE NORTHERN MARKETS. I wish to call special attention to my stock of Ladies' DRESS GOODS, TRIMMINGS, BUTTONS, LINEN & CAMBRIC HANDKERCHIEFS. There Is no need to particularize. Vou just 1 liink of anything you want and COME HERE o I get It, for I've got it, BKANDNKW. GOOD, R. C. BROWN, am In the Ootton Market and will pay the EST market Jrl6e. 'Will take cotton wrapped -"j a itia Wood. 3 1. o- TARBORO' N. C. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PZVNYSGYAL PILLS ESS CSQS3 DimXiZ ZZJtXZ. I liAbltipill ijri'. Ni verKul. DiamttnA Brand in red - uUitv bttxM. WJiuv . ! ith Liu- rib. txxi. At Bracelet. Arrrpt t hr. All Dill tn btilv l'r boxos. pick wrappers, ar a 4kKcrr om eoBnterfelt. Svd 4. (wwnvt hr .rliulr and Urltrffar 1 mAl.- - ,., . f Utlar, br rtm mail. 10.OUO Umti- aauntaU from LABICS n ueil Uienu Naua Papar. . LiiicaeaUr Cucmleal C0Badiea S.,FliUwF M'sfi s 4& THIS LISTER'S PUKE LINK.BY.LINK ! A Thrilling Tale of the Franco Prussian War. B Y MA UJRICE LELAND. CHAPTER XVII. i "condemned !" In the darkness 'of his close an ! small sell, wittj the heavy tiamp of guards aloDe waking the etilluess around, Pierre Leroux lay through out that weary night. Whith con sciousness, came back the memory of all his folly had brought upon him the words of his foe the sweetness of the jtoowledge of br innocence that even gave him gl id ness in this hour of martyrdom "Oh, God!" he jprayed, again atd again, "to be free for only one hour! To see her face orjc more, nnd till her I believe in her at last." But when freedom might have been his, the b md of his word fet tered him with; iron, and now in the eyes of all men he was a t aitor, and arraigned on the heaviest cbarge that could be liid against a s 1 iier. The hopelesness of his fate came home to him at lut wit'j a bitter--necs he tad nevr deemed possible. But now Ke knew her guiltless, stainle-sp, pure, as when he hat taken her to liis heart ; nd his whole soul went out in that yne inten-e 1 ng ing that fieree, imploriDg cry, "To be free only for oie hour !" He looked down at his fettered limbs in muteagduy. Of I'o 'i y suf fering, weakness, paio, even of the fate in r-tore for jhiu, he dl not think only of her. He had wrong ed her so deeply, judged her so harshly, and through all fhs had loved him with a love whose dtpth and purity he had rever fathomed before. He grew delirious at his agony as he thought of it. As he pictured her now hunted, oppresed, pur sued by ruthless foes, by a passion merciless and cruel as the grave, the iolence of his hatred against this powerful ennny increased to fever point. It was not for himself that he would have recalled the blow, whose penalty his life would pay but for her. For her who would be at his rival's mercy henceforward, for her whose you'h and beauty and weaHh of love and faith were all sacrificed because of his want of trust. "If she bad ODly ti!d me," he moanod in his! feverish remorse. "How could I dream it whs her father she sheltered" For he was in ignorance as yet of the oath she had taken, of the cow ardly desertion and traitorous be trayal of which this mart had been guilty. He knew nothing of the struggle between a daughter's duty and a wife's lovejthit had so per plexed and tortured th girl's young, loving he rt. He knew nothing of the cause that hd induced her to accompany her father in his hour of peril, seeing that her husband no longer believed in her, and had f r saken her first p Now it was all too lat. Ha had no hope left. With the morrow the cautt martial would sit-"-his fa'e would be decided and then As that thought crossed his miud be threw himself on his knees his lettered hands upraised to heaven the hot tears raining down his white, sunken cheeks. "Oh, God!" he prayed, "if in tThy courts ab we there is atonement for earth's suf ferings, or forgetfulness of earth's paisf Itt me meet her there since here we may no ever meet in life again," . . . , . With the next day noon the ti ial began. I The case was !brief, clar, indefen sible. The planj o escape fortu nately gave no names, bore no ad dress, ut the fact of its being in his possession" was conclusive evidence. The soldiers gave witness a? to hear ing the straggle between the Prus sian officer tuidjthe-prisoner. Colo nel Brandfltein-sworo-to the assault, 8ttintllarthetnatui-wBs evidently desirous" f regaining possession of he paiB iyvjoieBoei .Xh4 state' mentswerweoBeise-and plain-enoagh. Whon-Leronx5 was - asked- if be had any thing- to; Bgyv? he merr ly Te plied that the f provoca on: - given him had be-io stron for wny man to resisfeand that Von Brandstein had, in thfl firsf plaoej ezed iiim by the throat anda-jivieriiriim'he'lie di rect. When njae8rionTftS';to the plan of e6Cape,''fhe- refnsed .'to sy from wh.enceithdd come r who contrived fo deriTer it, bu-. sid that be ng oh parole, -he had declined Uking any stepfe in the m :t'er, and if he' had Intended to escape . he wou4dnot have4watted three- weekt before kltig'.,th0 atteraptr 'He knew -heaf wfeff fJie had d m was unjueia'b3ciHi-ttilitary law, but ;1e beggef ih Jadgea to take into eon sideraUaith'e irriinr' y and cruelty to which he had been tubja ted ev r '9 yVOTIS'TL'S OF THE TIfcMET ALLIANCE OE EDGECOMBE COUNTY. x AT A VERY SMALL MARGIN FOR CASH, OR PAYABLE OCTOBER 1ST, TO GOOD PARTIES, CORN, HAY, BRAN, MILL FEED, MEAL. MEAT Shorl Ribs, Sugar-Cured Ittma, Shoulders and W jjj nHi K. a Strips. MOLASSES Cuba, English Islands and Porto Rico. SUGAR Granulated, and the Yellow Grades. TOBACCO of all grades. FLOUR Powell & Co.'s, Alliance, and Minnesota; Gr b rill ' Patapaco Superlative, which has not an eqaal for making Tight creamy bread; I del, President and Gem are the brands of KAUFMAN, the great miller of St. Louis. ' v ESiPure Unadulterated BUTTER from Bracebridge (Carr'k) Dairy at 35 Cents TRY IT.-gj BONE SUPERPHOSPHATES, the best on the market. Commercial value nt the Seaboard, $24.90 per ton. D. W. JIBFFMIET & 13 I since his entrance into the garrison. I pends on your acting as I counseP" His enemies themselves could hear "Mv husband Pierre? What do iiiS enemies themselves could bear witness to that, and therefore he considered himself morrally exoner ated, if for once he had dealt with his tyrant and traducer as man to man, and nob soldier to officer. "I know I stand at a disadvant age here," he said. "I am a prison er at the mercy of my enemies. I can hardly expect you to believe that with the means of escape at hand, I refuse to profit by them; yet with death before me, I solemnly swear I speak but the trutr The story may be hushed up doutless it will but truth, sooner or later, comrg to the fore; and then, in oth er lands and ii other tongues will my wrongs be proclaimed ut last-, and men will learn how Germany al Itjwb privite animosity to t- ke the lead of public justice, when dealing with a conquered foe !" Ther4 was an instance's silence. Tin faces of the judges grew .sterner and paler. Something in the nr.ble bearing, the calm, heroic fac of the prisoner touched them with compas sion. Yt they "knew bis do im waa sealed." Military justice is s'tru in its exaction, undeviatincf in its de crees. Wi h the close of t sentence was pronourced. I it day o mnft di-. He who had so long prav d for dcUh aa tbeeveetest boon man could bestow, ireinbie.1 as he heard his doom. Then his c-yes turn d on his foe and met his malicious exal ting glance with the calmness of despair. "You have your triumph," he said, bo low that scarce any one heard him. Then he was led back to bis cell, there to await the en ! of his martyrdom. Faint and weak with long illness. Ninet'e lay in her close, inr.ow room. The confinement, th-3 a' sence of air, the loathing of life, al. com bined to weaken the vigor of f ame used to the freedom of field, the freshoess of cool, sweet winds, the width of meadow and forest, aud whose eyes yearned for the sight of far- stretching skies, unbounded by a city's myriad roofs. All the inborn instincts of her f ; ee, glad pleasant life returned. She th yUght c f tha millstream song -of the foam-bells dashing on the gr;-at brown timbers o' the turning wheel of the radience of summer flowers of the rich scents of the roses round the porch ol the gleam of the enow white lilies, in whose cups the butterflies loved to hover an ) !Cst L,f the coo of the biight-pluwi aged pigeons as they flew to and fro from their little arched homes of the ve per chimes from tha vil lagfo church nestled in those quiet fields. All these thoughts and memf rie3 came back to her as she lay there alone, with the ban and curse of a cruel fate upon her young, desoU e heart, and an utter hopelessess and despair in her soul. Turough the silence around her, a voice suddenly pierced a voice that made her start and tremble as he heard it, a id forced from her lips a cry of inte- se fear. Another instant, and amidst the shrill clamor of the old woman's cries, and the sturdy resistance of Gretcben, the do r was thrown violently O'en, ad Leon Mod prat sood before her. -Father!" burst from the girls pale lips. He threw himself before her, ,nd caught the ' folds of her dress in his bunds. "Oh, Ninette can you ever f rgive me?" "What is ii?" she gasped" in teiror; "is he with you?" "Hfe? No. Coward, villain, traitor that he is. He has betrayed me?" I flv now for my life." "How have you discovered me?" she asked. "By a strarge chance a soldier of the garrsion is suspected of pi in ning the escipo of a prisoner. Brandstein had him watched aud you were discovered- I have don you an injustice a l ruy life -let me atone for it do. Fly with me I have passports all is ready. I had a friend who ai led me for the sake of services long past. I have a p'ai I will seek the king himself he if close to Berlin to-morrow he ea ters. Com chil for Go I s sake time is precious. Oh, Ninette! do not refuse me now? ' She threw herself calin'y, proudly awav. ' Father, you deceived m once. I cn never t'ust you again." "Do not say tha," he impTo-d. "I know you fear I will lead you to him. I swear I will not; every word I ut'er i true to the lett r. O!', Ninet e, be merciful to yourself, if not me. How can I leave jou in this ruffian's power?" "Is it not rather late in the day to think of that?". "Child, you torture me. Will nothing move you? Even if I tell yo'i yoar nusDana a gaivauou de TARBORO N. 0., THURSDAY, JULY 18 o TUT A TTDPm 11 1IU AA.-LLU "Mv husband Pierre? What do you mean?" "He is condemned to die. At daybreak, tomorrow, the sentence will be executed. They hurry it for fear the king may reprieve him." "To die he? What is his crime?" "Ven Brandstein discovered the plan for his escape. He insulted him and Pierre struck him." "Oh my God! my haod again deals him his fate," moaned the wretched girl, as she sank on her bed and gazed at her father's face with blank unseeing eyes. "Will you not come?" he urged again. She started as if a blow had struck her. "Come?" she cried wildly. "Flee like a coward and leave him to die? Oh heaven! what do you think I m?'' "You might see the king, you might intercede," he pleaded, with a pitiful weakness that roused all her scorn. "Go you and seek the king !" she cried with sudden passion, "and look you, if he die I count you his murderer !" Then she turned and seized her cloak, and fle- fleet as an antelope from the house and on through the dark and silent streets, with a restless speed that made all pursuit useless. He lingered there a moment, then went forth and confronted the pale and frightened woman in the adjoin ing loom. "She is my daughter," he said, with the strange, dazed eyes of a man half asleep, 'and her husband dies tomorrow in the garrison yon der at sunrise." They hoard him in silence, too terrifie 1 for any words. Then he .oo drew his cloak clojely around him and went out on hia errand of danger, knowing each etep, each movement now waa fraught wiih deally peril and beset by watchful foes S';je meanwhile hurried on, quiv ering as one under physical torture, her strained eyes fastened .on the emty air, her heart throbbing as if it would burst. . S!ie had scarce sense or knowledge of what she did. She bad but one thought to see his judges, to proclaim her share in the plot and bis innocence and refusal to share in it. It was a wild, mad idea, but the thought of a woman desper ate, loving, faithful unto death. She went on and on, slackening her pace whenehefuw other figures, increas ing it whenever she was alone. She kntw nothing of the way and dared not afck From some chance word that Bohmer had once dropped she knew the'garrison lay southward of her place of concealment, and she he took her way the by sheer in slinct. The hour was late. She heard idnight strike fr in a clock in some church steeple near by, and the -'in i filled her heart with terror. At sun- Be he was to die. Could she -ach him plead for him save him y.. 1 O still on she flew, shrinking b.ick in the shadows of portals at the a, proach of night patrol, and hurry ing forward with steps to which fear uni love and longing lent wings, w. ruever a deserted streca lay before her. Her fa e was white and stem, set in martyr's courage, a soldier's en durmce. That she would tave him or die with him eho was resolved. She w.i . stiil weak. The languor of long '1 'ie 3 stole over her frame and clogg d k r steps at last. Thespnit withiu w.ia trave and strong enough, but ti e poor elight body insensibly weighed it down, and tole away the" feverish st.ength that had come with the shock of peril. Still she wus pressed foiward, the thought of his danger alone in her heart, nerving her fuihng strength, lighting her strainirjg eyes as they swept over the gra , dim sky, or searched for the landmark she longed and dread ed to b-hold. "Shll I ever r ach him?" s! e thought and a sob shook her fron.e- u ob of despair, aa in creasing w ak r.etia m;de itself per ceptiblc, mi sdie knew she was still far from 1 destination. Before her i i the roid she saw a vehicle w'ai'.i. g. he tired horse stood with d on the bi x to bis sld . "Will yim son?" 6he iu j ping head. The man asleep. She came r ct me to the garri r d. "Is it far " The muD stupid eytK. "Too far you ride?" l t! I at her wiih sleepy k." he said. "Will he desperation cf urging her ou, o er own poverty o off r hi:u p .y- mveyance sha her cue gr. a : . she gave no h- e hr r own inabi ;. ment for I i (sprung in w th ut tution. "Drive thor.-?" a i instant's Le i h yaid and the man obeyed. She dfuwLe:8).f iii-.i pressed ner hai .d. . bing head H r b ain but of that ore mad the se t and st her throb i ad n sense resolve her (Reeeral Merchandise, (Koose Jest, eyes no gaze, save for that dreaded "Take heart," he eaid kindly, in Reunited, happy, safe, the long sienal the first faint rose-flush in his rouirh German accents, "it is bet- tried husband and wife on r mnr signal the first faint rose-flnbb in the east. "We are here," raid th man. "Two tbaleis, if you please." She gazed at him bewildered, then in stinctly put her hand to search for her money. 5, "I have but one," she said o3fering it. He swore rudely and angrily. She paid no heed. "She Sprang from the cab and hurried to the entrance gates with a terror and gladness in her eyes thut silenced his fierce com plaint. The sentinel stopped her. "Who goes there?" rang out his challenge in the stillness of the gray wintry dawn. She would have paesed on in her blindness and ig nor.no, but aain the voice stayed her eteps. "Halt, or I fire." She paused and looked at him. "For the love ofHtaven hear me!" he cried. -There is a man here a prisoner condemned to die, is there not ? I have brought information that will save bim. Can I see the com mandaint?" "At this boar? At this time?. You must be mad! Be offl I can hold no parley while on duty." "Oh stay she ciied in an sgooy of emragemeut that silenced his rough words and thiilled to his heart in its imploring and piteons despair. "Think what you do. It iB a human life you would sacrifice, and an in nocent one. If you were in bis-place what would you say to the man who denied yon common justice,-vn at the Hst hour ?"' De8pie himself the mio was touched. He looked at her doubt fully. "What are ye-u to him?" hi asked. ' His wife." "I am sorry or you, but I can do nothing. Even to speak to you now is a risk. Stay I will pass you on, perhaps the Lieutenant miy allow you to see your husband ere his sen tence is executed. " A moment afterward Ninette was within the foretrees and in cbarge of another soldier, to whom sfee gate the same message. She must see the commandant on a matter of li'e and death. The message passed from one offi cial to another. Each an i all received it with the same wonder, but to all hearts ;that lovely, piteous, imploring face appeared more strongly than any words. The fierce rough-voiced chief came at last. He started aghast at this strange intruder, yet ere word or questiontion oould escape she was at his feet pouring out her tale in breathless eager words. Then he laughed aloud. "His wife yon say. Well, what ot that? The plot was none the less of his participation. Moreover,' the chief offense for which be is to suffer is the blow to his superior. That admits no appeal." 'You do not know be was provok d," she cried. "You do hot know what he has suffered and all for mel Oh for the. love of Heaven do not make me his murderess!" "You pretty fool! Whyj fret for the Iobs of tme man? There are hun dreds of as fine fellows as he in this land. Leave your old lover alone and take a ntw one that is the best ad vie I can give you." 'Are you quite merciless " she moaned. "Can nothing move you? ' Will you not even delay the execu tion of his sentence till the return of the king? Oh, if you would bat kill me and let the guiltless go. "J'hat would be a pity, indeed; you are far too pretty to be sent- out of the world yet." She turned on him with acorn and disdain that fired her eyes and flashed her cheeks, and made her tenfold mote beautiful than ahe haul been in her weakness and despair. "Will nothing move you, bribe you?" she cried. "You might bribe me if you would," he Raid, with a glance that mad ), her shrink from him with a- sbudda -of loithing. "Yon are brate, indeed, to f.irce your way in hither. Such captives as yourself would make our gai ri?on life bearable." She started back with, a cry so terrible that it curdled the Hood of all who heard it. Following the glance of her eyes he isitw through tne narto v bared window the first line of light in the eastern sky. He rose and called a sol lier to his side. "Guard thie woman, curtly, "1 muBt go." She did not speak or ' he said move, but crouched down on the floor -nd burried her face in her hands in the anguish of dread, in the hope! mess of misery The man looked at her with d- "p compassion. The sympa thy of the whole garrison was with the coidernoed man, and the sight of this beautiful girl who was bound to him by so close a tie, aud for whose misjudged effort he wis to suffer so terrible a fate, moved bim to an intense and uncontrolable pity. 1889. mwwm his rough German accents, "it is bet ter that he die thus than that he 1 vea on to bear tha life he has led here." She raised her he d and looked at him. So might the dying look he thought, with that unearthly horror in their glazed eyes, that mute despair upon their silent lips. In the stillness came the sound of marching feet, the rattle of musketry the long solemn roll of a drum. That Boutin" awoke her from her trance. She sprung to her fet and gazed wildly round. The loldier had turned to the window to watch the procession. She looked over his shoulder, and the sight froze her blool to ice. and held her limbs oerve less and powerUws in the horror aud remorse that consumed all other feelings. I She saw the man she loved as he walked slowlv, steadily by. A priest fby his side, murmuring the service bf the church his executioners beside and around him. In the open square thy paused, turned, halted. Her eyes saw every movement her ears caught every sound. She saw them bind his ejes. She saw the golden sunlight pour down its rays on his bare head his erect and tran quil foim. She saw the 'eveled mus kets awaiting the signal, while over all that mockery of justice, that tragedy of revensre. shone the rosy warmth of the glad new day. "Wait oh wait?" The cry bust from her lips! With the next instant 6he was on the spot her arms around his neck her head on his breast, while through the air a crash of sound thrilled and thundered, end a rolling column of heavy smoke hid them both from sight. As the crashing echoes away, there came a command, stern, and ominous. "Wait in the King's namt! ' orderly, with breathless haste died loud An and armed with a missive, whose purport none could doubt, stood before them. The commandant approached, pale and troubled. "I regret you aie too late," he Eaid, the sentence has just been executed." He pointed to where the amoke waves still hung in heavy, misty folds; but even as he pointed a great cry rent the air, for there before them stood the man erect, and unharmed, and clasped in his arms was a wo man's slender form. In that mo ment all decipline was Torgotten. This silent, rigid, phalanx threw aside their muskets and rushed to that spot where, with aa agony and dread beyond all they bad yet known, Pierre Leroix bent over that lifeless and silent figure. "You have killed her!" he cried in his wild and terrible grief. My love, my life , my own! What was my life worth that you should eeek to preserve rt at such cost? "Hush!" said a voice in bis ear; "if she be indeed dead, it is not from ball or powder of ours. The bullets were drawn!" L ENVOI. Leon Monprat had for 0 nee per formed a courageous action. At imminent risk he had sought and secured admission to the presence of the victorious and returned sovereign, and with utter forgetfulness of self powred out to him the history of his daughter and her husband. A stern lover of justice and equity himself, Prussian monarch beard him with deep attention, and moved by the story of the man's patient hero ism and the girl's long martyrdom, he sent an Order f jt the delay of his sentence, until he himself had in quired of its details. That order would have oome too late save for the fact of Ninette's desperate sacrifi ces and Bohmer's artful stratagem Determined to give bis unfortunate friend a last chance of escaping his fate, and with some inadi supersti tious idea that Heaven muss inter vene ere a sentence so unjust could be carried out, he had, unknown to all, drawn the bullets from the mm kels of those soldiers appointed to carry out the sentence, , and when the reprieve came Leroix was sved, and Ninette had only fainted from the shock of fearful ordeal she hnd undergone. Angry as the com at and ant was, he could say nothing in the face of that'poworful mandate, and when Yon Brandstein- henrd of all that had occurred, and k ,.-w whurt the inquiry that would follow might mean for himself, he sent in his res ignation and left Berlin with all pas sible speed. The fate of Pieire Leroix was soon decided. Wh t the king might n..t havH yie.ded to any j err-uasm. b yiel led 10 tho lovely f tc.- tin I pitiful entreaties of the girt wife who hd suffered so deeply and so long. With the conclusion of the war he gate them permission t ret-rrn t their own couutry and their on home, not even allowed of a ransom IE iriea nusDana ana wite once more found themselves in their own fair home, with the fredom and the peace, and the sweet delicions sense of lib erty and love alone filling their henrts. Like an exile restored to his birth right, so Pierre Leroux feasted his eyea on the waving golden fields, the glad green dewy earth, that had nev er seemed so full of peace and beauty as it seemed now. Then his eyes rested on the fairface beside him on the deep lustrous eyts from whence all shadow of suf fering had departed, leaving only love ! Sweet as the light of the day looked the future before them, all the sweet er for pain long endured for sor row's weary martyrdom. "Nothing shall pait us again, dear love," he murmured tenderly, "noth ing need have done so had. I but trusted you more. Now we have en dured so much, it see-ns as if. our very joy had bten snatched from the jaws of the grave." "Does not that make it double pre cious?" she asked, cringing yet more closely to the arm she held. And she was right: for there is no love like that' which rises victorious over doubt and pain, and in the cru elty of despair, lives on aud on, un- conquered and undismayed, to find its paradise of joy even amidst shadows of death ! (the END.) A charming story, "Petticoats the and Suppers, ' will soonba begun in SOUTHEBNEB. the His name is R. J. McKinney; his residence is Woodbury, Hill county, Texas; his statement May,1" 1889: My son was cured by S. S. S. of bad sores and ulcers, the result of a gen eral breaking down of his health' from fever. He was considered incurable, but two bottles of Swift's Specific brought bim out all right. Mr. John King, of Jackson, Miss., says that he was cured of Rheuma tism in his feet and legs by taking Swift's Specific. This was after he had tried many other remedies, both internal and external, and paid many doctor's bills. Swift's Specific has saved me years of untold misery by relieving a par tial paralysis in myieft side. This was after I had been treated by best physicians in St. Louis and Chicago The trouble was caused by some de rangement of my blood, which has been corrected by S. S. S. T. A. Sheppart, Sherman, Texas. B. O. Gillett, of Purdy, Mo., says Swift's Specific cured him of Eczema on his limbs and body; He took only two femall bottler In Burgon's account of Dean Man set, it is said tne me:aphysician was once driving out with Professor Chandler and others, including a little girl, who suddenly exclaimed, apropos of a donkey by the roadside: "Look at that donkey! He has got his head into a barrel and can't get it out." Mansel was heard to mutter: "Then it will be a case of as phyxia." Equally good wa3 his suggestion, on seeing the figure of Neptune in St. Paul's Cathedral, that the only Christianity it hadtodo withit would be," Triden tine." On a stndunt stumb'iug vaguely through an answer in clo, he is said to have addressed him with the words: "Really, sir, if you cannot be definite you had better be dumb in it." But best of all, for neatness and brevity, was his remark : on the appearance of a candidate having for Christian names "Field flowers." That man, said Mansel, "was brn to be either plowed or plucked." Only he was neither, aid said to be now a colonial bishop. Absolutely Pure.- This powder never varies, A marvel of pnirty, strength and wholesoroenese. More economlca) thsn the ordinary kinds, an, cannot be sold in competion with the "unit! tnde of low test, short weight alum or pno 5 hate powders. Sold only in can. , tUyal aking Powder Co., 100 Wall St., H, Y ...tm. PRICE FIVE CENTS, nn tftTITitW'9iLnhllh I I .U I U l"fllL -Al flllQl It.) L a&j m NEWT Of if N Kext MeKsloa UegJiM Auxuet 189. ' Full Academic. Buineg and -Collegiate Oonres. with Music and Art. Ten ac complished I strootor i-4d buildings, appa ratus, Ubrarief,: rWiTfaorongh worfe and moderate expenses; Pure wa'er a ad mountain -air. Catalogue Free". Address - ; 29U Bev. J. J. UPP, O. I.Prea. ' CHAPEL HILL, N. C. o o The next session begins . sieue r-'ivii'jFt rjrxz 1000 Thorough instruction la offered In Litera ture, Science, PbUtsophy and Law. Tnltton, $30 per session, - Foe Catalogue, address HmV. KEMP P. BTTr. .: . SJ8110 , President . MEDICA L COLLEGE OF VI It GINIA. . -.:.. ' : . Richmond The fifty-second annual session of lb al ore na . ed Wt.itntlnn will IwiHn OCTOB ERlar 1889. and continue six months. - For Cotalogua or other Information, write to DU. J. S. DOR8KY OULLKN, Dean of the Faculty. 23tl3 St. Mary's School,- IB AT-TTTCa, ST. C, T ft E" tttNETT-FlFTH BEVaANNUAL Session begins ; Thursday, September 12th, 18S9. For catalogue, address the Rector, Rev Bennett Sinedes, A. M. . ' 2?tt3 A NECESSITY IN EVERY HOUSEHOLD A BOTTIjB OF OCTR Gcnninc Trtnch Brandy BUY GUINNESS' PORTER. Binke'sBottliog, Imported. BUY OLAUSEN'C 'PORTER, For the Best Domestic. I HAVK A F1KE1 UKK OF " n I T-rraM tin TrVn A truth m i ar xi ! ' I From 10 cents a bottle upward. mt xrira ior CAN NIvDGOObS At 10 cents per can, haa no equal. FINE BREAKFAST inoMlN', ' . Ab SCTEBiOR vilEAD' RICE. metolti&i:!- tbx qjnvFiNFrN, SARDINES, With a key to every box. WE RETAIL NONE!BUTTIUCTLY PURE LEAB f LARD ! GUARANTEED. 100 kegs Old Dominion Nails. ; Hay, Corn, Oats, Heal and Bran a specialty. " - D. 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Also, squally ffleeelmis wkniwd tn miladies, swA Vtm,' fwr 8rv Tiain, Halt lte ai, Br iCP?' ".' aVaVXFJB m ba) aadtoa)nUBa-'-B I ' ' - SeU ky all Pr assists a i 3 WAN rib Man of eool selllnir aMiity to renresent ne as-Bs4e-Aoot la titts town. i0to$ ,000peryea cn be made. Addrew 1 - - ' ' ' " WANiMAKBtd8 BfcOW, 1 - Phlladelptila , Pa- JJ The Largest . Ulothing ana Mercfcaat TaW- rlni House in America, dfiStl tff. uiuiniuL 11mm un" c. A Few facts .-.
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 18, 1889, edition 1
1
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