:
Vol. XVI.
IWJifJg"1. ..L-LL
•_Gawtoqlm, N. C„ October 3, 1895.
isgraa^ljtjji^ kq <o.
BAB OH WORK AND TALL
THE FEMUIIE TOIGUX AID FU
SES BUSY II HAIIOIY.
(bitrUnk ar'.itm-Tti: wajr rr<:>-t
W»MM Uitmfl) V*rH« **»;.
lawlxx «b» »)»)*« Xumb'M
W»»«i«W?jliW A|>jm>r at |-jf
%aM>n'a Drawlac-XaaM.
X. Loub Uaimbiie.
A* w* alt lo tlie coolest corner of the
poroll and knit, eroohet, tailor do
tan07 work that call* fur toms artistic
ability aud require* that one be nut
with one's noodle, naturally euougli wo
dlsouaa all aorta of tilings. I like lo
aae a woman oiooliel, but 1 don't mink
any woman ought to crochet or knit or
tatl who baau'l pretty hand* Hut
whan alie bus aod you know that alio
controls the Ivory needle or ahutlle.
the really make* a picture aa site furc-«
toe womanly weapon to fly in aod onl
of the red srool or the flueoollou. Ad
eanow) women consider all ibis sun or
thing folly. Imt when one rvalues that
the tatting makes a yoke for am
baby’* frock, the knitting result* In u
•hawl lo protect elderly shoitldt-rs,
while the leaf or Ho net wrought on n
141 of Gue linen la lo ouvrr a tray for
•II hiVHtld, or be Hie slip for a sun pU
low, cool nod line, on which an aching
bead will mat. 000 la certain that it la
not folly. We wort and wet ulk. Tim
feminine tongue and tbe feiohilnc an
ger ero busy in harmony.
Tlie Knitter «sy»: “I don't toiler*
there ever was a lime when women
draesed their nocks so prettily."
tffwcxe, uraurircL skb humbly.
••Well,” aey* die who was tutting,
“It is a blrased good thing, for we are
■II Ured of gaamg upon necks an ahrlv
elcd that they looked llkr old chickens,
or so thick aud short Chat lliey aretn
like no necks at all, and one la furred
lo woudrr what would lia|H>*n to llw
owoer thereof if she werotbo victim of
tlM guillotine."
“Boeakinicof the guillotine," says
the Knitter, “suggests lire French
women aud the ctrvemeas with which
tboy have always arranged their neck
dressing. They seldom have pretty
necks, but thnj don't show them unlww
Ills absolutely necessary, aud then
thay bring out their best puiuta. and
conceal tlieh woiat. Many women
who liava grant hollows just la-low
their throuis have good hacks,
so the Jfarlalenoa cats her bailee vary
low hi the back, shoeing Ita someth
surface, while ebe liktrs Hie hollows
wilii strings of pearl*, or innumerable
gold ehalus, to which alia alincliie
suitable |»nd.uita. Sim ace* Llm gieat
•dVBuUgr, however, of the stock; so if
she Is narrow of shoulder, she utilizes
her Stock to conceal that miaTortuno.
UowT Hy arrangiog the ribbon In soft
folds, then having two very Q wing
bows stand out on t*«U aide from the
book, and in earti a way that they give
bread Uu If her shoulder* are broad,
then alw clasps the stock wltli an ef
fective brooch and has neither rosette
nor loop to Innenk the cent rant between
the round lliroat and broud aboolder*.
In the huuae, where site wltlws to have
• softer oec* dressing, eltlicr for her
litUe jacket or her tea gown, an*
doesn’t put a stilled tr.ll of chiffon or
an ordinary rufllu of lac*, blit slut
makes a broad tailor collar nf insertion
aud ribbon, and with thong!it as to the
hour of the day, she *|Miig>M it; or, it
spang]ts arem te fiivola* Tor her
height, itie trukU to tlm lac* and rib
bon for its buoctnliigiicas. If the It
tall and akmder, with u leaning Dr
ward the art latte, then she follow* th«
fashion of tbe divine Sarah and wean
n Pierrot ruffle, with possibly long
strings te lie it in the buck. tilie would
never make the mistake, being slender,
of a V-neck: that would add length lo
her nose aud give a sharp appearance.
Ho, If the neck ia lo be open at all,
than the tntkrt it square, nod not a
deep, but a broad aquaie.
3be toes Die advantage of real I too,
end baring herself n piece, twists it
into ejeh-il, or a cravat, and glvra an
ulr of elegance to a very ordinary
bodice.
oiiraaixtt koii uoyai/tv.
Tlx saddest sight hi the world >• to
•te tlx thin, scraggy old women at tlx
Quean's drawing-room. They mart go
low-necked. Tlx Queen herself hit
alwaya had a beautiful neck and
shoahlers, aial aha prrauinus Unit all
EsgliftH women follow Ixr example Id
tlila a* well aa other rasper! a. K.-alUerx
add to ber height and dignity, li.-iictf.
tf a woman ie 7 feet high eha la forced
by order of tlx Quran to mako herself
look It with the atilt phinxa. Many a
mother who Iduatusl to think Unit her
baby uw her bnnee lute toexliihlt them
In all llxlr awfulueae to the Brltiili
public or stay at home. And Lhhi la uo
aalf-nsipratlng Kugllsti womun want*
to do. Ton hart heard the sto.-y of
Hie okl Sootoli woman who got the bet
ter of tlx Queen, haven't you? Writ,
I am glad there la ao nobody to whom
It la *vw. She belonged to Ux
Dpogtae family, and they have wilt*
quite as atrowg aa the Guelph a. Six
wrote a peraonal letter to tlx Queen
telling that alia ealTmed ao with rhea
matins in bar shoulder/ aad hod tlx
qqlnay ao badly that six hetfgid to be
allowed to some with a high Uxlioo. aa
she wtahud to present hrr granddaugh
ter. An aueervr came from the I/ml
Chamberlalu laying Uiatlt w.x Im
poaafble. After that twu lettors were
written to him, staling the case. The
••Mo” waa poaltlve. Tlx horror „f the
MeeWlJ) can he Imagined when Touiy
Sarnli iljnglax appealed. gowned su
perbly hi while Inwado, wearing all Uin
family Jewel* nud having Ixr Indict
la atern comfort and 'her* nmi way
down to the wrlatg a firry red lUnnel
atilrt that told Iww. fur once, Mooteh
wit pot Uw better of German stubhoru
TIIV VB1L.
Tlx gtrl wbo was sewing looked at
hov finger and admired bar 111(010)0,
end said; “Well, I don’t Waco# her,
and I aeppose that waa what Wright
tlx Quern a Iraom. for nowaday* she
Kalita, If sn ehlei’f lady aakt her,
waarlng ef a Wjanr* ot V-soek. 1
- I
Uuve never U.*d much trouhlo ubuot
•IrvMlitg my uock — my bate uMr In Hm
dreaahiR line Is my roll, u U g«nr
Hud to suit me.
“If I pat It on tight, «Hirer my eye
!«•*'»• P«ka through, or than ia a tola
It. tb. eenler. and my nose come* out
ns it there was a perfume t dklut quite
*ke. Then, If l mranga It loose I have
« sa'iuliila kind of an air. You know
UKte real l«on veils; limy east like
everything, but It has always seemed
to me dainty to liava a rcnJ lace Tall.
Flret, l got a while one with a border
<>f Uack rueelmda. For Dull paid
«evon beautiful dollars, and I don't
know bow to describe what I looked
hka in it. However, if I aay |t gave
me tba air of a perfect lady, l can. £
•oppose, leave the test to your Imaglna
tlou. I l.flii toggery I eau’t wear. and
ao I guve that to a friend of alna, uu<l
«lie look* charming la !L Tlien I
bought a black ooe with a while border,
for wlileh I uuld fiS. and It age* oie so
that the trades people apeak to sea for
ray owu mother. And yet. In Faria,
tins summer, tbs French women ware
•raring litres will and looked lovely.”
"My experience,” annouuctd the
Knitter, -la that a thin Mack net with
Urgii (lota far apart ia tlw roost becom
T*u °f Ml. Those very cun ran ones
lint lliey call kite Russian mesh am
only desirable when one Isn’t wall and
wlsliaa tn ennoaal tits ravages of slok
niva Yuuiig kra. John Jacob Actor
and her set are, Just for a freak, hid
lugtln-ir pretty fooea under two Tells
nowadays. Thoy put on first s thickly
nottrd one, which ia draped closely
around the faoe, then over this coma
a white chiffon, dotted with Mack
pluoed on in that Happing curtain
lash km—Uie reeullf Why. the result
ia Uat Uwy all look aa if (hay had the
»mall|>ox. Oil. of oouraa. It will keep
theikin la good condition, for they
will make one ao warm tlutt tba nor
•piration will flow freely and Ute aklu
will whiten and grow Brin. Hut noth
ing will aver make a Uilekly dotted
veil brooming. A roae-colotad vrllf
Thn Frenoh wouiea look wall in them.
f>’lk here! Well, here, the women look
like the vary—well, aay i-.iaahlef,’*
BEAL TRVMB rACKIKU.
Tbo woman who was sewing, stopped
lot n minute, and then said: “You
b«ve heard of queer leeeoot, but did
you over User nf anybody taking i*a
sons In the art of packing a trunkr
« nil, I did. Two years ago In 1‘aiis
1 Mnt for a pri.feseinnol packer, and
tlien watched lilm. He brought bis tools
with him. They ooriitatetl of dnt*r.s
of shecu of lavender tissue tiapvr.
place* nf whit* (ape, paper* of large,
■ while pin*, suntil tanks and a hammer.
The dunam had their vleevas stuffed
wltli paper, aud when each one was
laid in im place, after being carefully
folded, innumerable sheets of paper
wer* laid between it and the next
dree*. His reason for using a colored
paper was that the arsenic fa the white
will yellow any frabrlc.
"Strips of tap* wore cut, pluned to
the lists and lion nets nnderaeatli tlm
crown, and Uwn lb* ends sure tacked
to the side of the tray ia which they
rrpoeed. so Hint they never sllrrod.
Every Bower was wrapped ia Urea*
paper, nod a feather that stood up a ss
bent down sod pinned. Parasols were
la the bottom, each carefully wrapped,
and Its paper lied securely with tape.
Tim slioea were all staffed with isteer
to auk* tiitm retain their shape; but
Ibey, of coarse, went In another trunk.
When tbo** things wore uksn out af
ter a weukt travel, nothing was
crushed, nothing had moved, aud
eveiytaing waa In order, that Is to say,
the glove* belonging to a certain frock
were lying Just under its bodice, aud
if there w;u a apaolal neck drwwlag, it
wa* can fully pinned on, but, best of
all, just Inside llm lid of tin trunk,
was lacked a list of Ute article* there
l». so that on* didn't bant fur tbe
Une cliffou where it vrai uot, or *x
P*ct In Bod the gray gloves wbsm they
had no rraeyu for being. 1 paid fl
Hpleca to have my trunks packed, and
it wa* money I didn't begrudge. 1 of
ten wonder that tbe perambulating
msiiicurre and halrdretaere dnotadd
trunk-packing to their other business,
for iu tbe ein-log and fall there would
be money In K.”
-.SpeaklHg Of moany," said the Eult
ter, ‘ while 1 respect it and Joy ia
tpending it, still I am continually
amas id at tbo lack of knowledge wow.
cit slow of wbai I call good spending.
d> many women let Uiolr money go In
liUJe tilings, and an many more buy
tiling* just because tlwy are cheap. A
woman I know paid 4 cent* a yard for
•om* lawn. She said it was so oheap
*lic coaid afford to put 1«U of ribbon
cm It, au4 w sbe had three piece* of
ribbon at IS apieee used to trim it,
and paid u dressmaker 816 to make M.
And sa they say In tbe old game, the
eontequenea was that It never looked
Nnytiilug but n cheap sleaxy gown,
mode with a trimming (no rich and
ailer a design too elaborate. Tim
Hard of Aeon hit tbe nail oh LIm head
when be sold ‘Costly thy habit m thy
puis# can buy,' for * good material
will stand making ever, and always
show wlrnt it la, while a cheap one
bran tbo Imprint or obasp aud nasty
Ml WAVS*
riltMW* THAT AHB HOT UirHAP.
* ■That woman la a bud spender wt»
boys things ah* doesn't want ‘-Tnn i
lh«y are oWy, or who buys thing* not
*qltrd to iler ago or appearance, onunl
iag oo lIMr bulng awful some day.
tttufti go owlof laabloa, and a re only at
for lust elorlia Sba wbo gata ohany
gb>»»*. or ohaap ahoaa, bu no btpol
ue«a In thaw, and alia wtw hoys chanp
«itiOoinl rtowara aod puu than on her
hat, ankre heraalf look a tawdry aa
limy ara Thoro ara things which are
rsaamible In price, and which H la
l<o(italila to bay. I abould ba foollah
i if I pa>d 10 emu a yard for lawa whan
le*D gat good for 13 oawta; bat I can’t
j f*t good fur foar, Yet whet 1 go la
boy • black gnwu, I should ba acre
, »hon fcoljab Tl l didst g* Uw bast
to* then t would Iw certain M
I* **• •••dug well.
°* Was* gwwoa rrBlndc
I A flam «MMA MUd
mtiiHffMtorrr* lo-tklnf for an ait
wucM *Und daat, and Uut wouldn’t
■Und wear of u; kind, and crnoa
wiui thamolt. I think tele U *o. but
•tin I nh going to have a gown of It
lor 11 water wrar r.ext wintar. Tlwra
mreau many things that ura untullnbU
for theater waar. and aha who goea aa
maoh aa I la woll aoqualoUJ with tha
fbltlaa committed In tba naoM of diaan.
TntNon vrn mocld avoid.
“It »* a fully to put an upatandlng
faultier on a smell bonnet; that feadier
•HI Oil thaeyn of Urn woman Us ’ad
yoa aod *hu will oavar aaa tha stag*.
“It la a folly to waar a tailor made
gown to tbe theater; tha hard chair
•eara oat tha back of tha bod tea sad
tho narrow teat ratna tba sat of the
•klrt.
“It la a folly to waar over-large
a oavas to the theater; tha man on each
•Ida of yuu will Joy in mushing them.
“It la folly to waar a handsome wrap
to the tlwater; It lum to be rolled op
aod put down under tlw aaat la front
of you, and somebody's fact utlllae It
for a stool.
“It la a follr to fan at tba theater,
for you give tea woman lo front of you
a oold that caona a crick In bvr nook,
and aha facia aa If aits would like to
Me you—well not in a very cold place.
Them are tbe tollim eltad by the
Knitter, who ie a wlao woman, and at
aba told them t cheeked off each with
a nod of my bead wbtoh made m« feel
Ilka a China MaodaHa rather tbao
Dab.
A cum » Journal.
A» the )i»t of Drmocratk Slate Con
▼rollon* lengthens, tits deeper grows
thsgraT# of free-silrei i«tn.
. /•» Jersey Democrats con
tributed to the preparations for the
iniernrnt yesterday:
Et&Srgi&Ss;
X£c5 tiiir2zs?r£ H£§e*S:
tUntxtod ufmii (hu 4rb««rm*nt of U*o notUoni)
ctirrcooj wo ora In muaI oimm •> inpa(hj.M
Now Jersey Isa noble Democratic
state. It pas gone Democrat to hi
em7 Presidential ett-cuon asm one in
the Inst forty years and eerries the ban
nar of Ilia Northern Democracy. H
was Ute refer* to be ex pooled that its
state Democratic Convention should
•peek out at this time elrarty for the
Democratic principle of sound money
■a opposed to free ailrerlsm. The re
eord of Uns year’s Democratic State
Convention* on the question of tits
frrs and uollmitrd oolnswe of stiver
and tlia votes of the respective states
In the National Convention stand as
folio wc
rnr tho fro* nod uit*
brail oil ocinajft or
■nvrt.
Htlartliil . . . it
. . . .~W
Amlm lb* im ud
mliiaUwJ OQtiwcv of
■Uvor.
n
aa
TMal .... am
l^i tha f nod work go on !
1 --U-1J V_U1L»
Bteht ( oh hr VMha.
SaraonBh Karra.
Middling cotton vai quoted at A
cents in tievannah yesterday. Wa
luiv* no doubt that the price will ad
vance considerably beyond eight rants.
How great the advance will be will de
pend upon tbs crop report*. Every dev
It becomes clearer that the orop le s
ehort one, and that the rot I a . atm of
the yield that have been made tbos far
■re exceedingly liberal ones.
H la quite safe to say that the ootton
farmers are firing to receive more rnoa
ey for their orop this year Own they
did last notwithstanding the fulling
olf yield, end Ibelr peollU will be «
great deu) larger than they wore last
year, because II* ooat o( making the
orop was rnneb b-ss.
.. W“.b*VB bWa expecting to see in
Urn silver it* newepapaiwn some ex
planation of lbs great rite in the price
of ootton, but w* Imre bran dbaip
pointed. W* refer particularly to
tbora silverlta papers that day after
day a few months ago, when cotton
was selling at live rants a pound, a*,
clared that the low price of cotton was
do* wholly to the fact that oar sriats
wm eluted to the free and unlimited
oolatM of silver. If. as tlwy aaserW,
the alleged demnnetliatlun of Miser
eaoyrd tlw low prio* of cotton, wtrnt
ta now the cause nf IU high price?
We won Id Ilk# tn bay* the aitotriM
papers rraokly answer that question.
When the price of cotton was frye
Mate a pound Uie Jf-jruinp Mews stated
tliat Uie low prion wm due to overpro
duction— tbst tile supply of cotton ex
ceeded the demand. We conidn’t get
our esteemed atlverlt* papers to aecrpt
tliat view. It didn’t suit their per
porato accept It. Their elm was to
convert the people to tin belief tliat
only by the free and unlimited coinage
ofelWsj could they bora to seethe
price of cotton much, If aay, above
Are rants.
Everybody who has ever paid asy
attention to the matter, Is aware ef tbs
feet tint the price at iron It Ute moat
perfect barometer of bus loses knows.
When the price of iron goes down,
everything beo-imra drprsesril, and
when Uia price of Iron goes op. ImsV
oem Immediately begins to iovrish.
There has keen a greet deal ef talk ef
the approach of better times within
the past few weeks; but beitovart to
tho iron ttwory Imve not been especially
encouraged Mow these people teem
to bare o«aae for oongratuhitioa. The
*ew Vorh /ren d|r centra a rise la
the pries of Irou fro* fu to Alt a ton
In one wtjf. This repreecu an ad
'feara of 97 per lea above lowest price
reached last year.
amw m kvkixatim.
U» Hna Imm MbaiMita ttetlMi
fiMMltV. It
Meraw Independent of tbe eeiad. Ml to
ssSiavtjnH
w'V&'X'txsxrzsz
we get old tbe me a La] power grow*
•inmgrc and memory weaken■ but the
BMinorlea tliat feaUeed eumeebare la
oer cranium. Inenr y00th do oerer
f“de. I remember wejl Ute eoeoee.
nawmaad Incident. of my ehlMhood.
I rrtnembar wbro I wore eorona and
bow old Ant Minty, the oook. looked,
and how my rather killed tbedcTbe’
eauae he foavod at the mouth £3 wm
thought w be going mad
urt. . >bl then.
WiM 1 wm alx Man aid at mother
fooud bar king SUlZ
oMiaber the meeting aod how they
embraced each otheraed ertad for joy.
Their parent* died in Ouirleetoe of
yellow favor tad were buried III *a#
tmvaand tha tw» tittle children were
252&TOUSAS' EwedS/S
care for then. T*e toy wm Bwt#e“
thlpand neat to BruCon-Uwawloa
Beoh waa piaoed In an orpinn aeyloa
aud they never fouod raefa other aaUI
aoaM yaara eftar they wan grown and
married. Dillgaut aearrt. weaweae
in Chartaaton, hot ao claw aealo to
toand, andaaalMt rvaort my father
edrertlted la a Jtaeton paper end It
waa ate* and n letter oaoe that woe
written In team j remambar el) the
•«* bcottor oama and
what a haadaoma young e*n to wan
‘bepeopta nf the ihtta vOtag*
Joined in the rejoicing, x remember
hoertoe avxt year aayfuher an J moth
er. wiUi my brother aad myaetr, went
to Savannah la a carriage—^SsO ad lea—
Ml* Utatetar Boetoe
to vlatt that brother aad hi* family.
I waa ruminating about thla. lev 1
waa In Savannah laat weak and I re
called Hie river and the wharf and tha
vcaael that are took puaeageou the taag
v^egeotthlrty-aeveodaya. Iremem
beretf the lim* wide KreM aod It had
a double row of lmioeaae china tree*
that Oglethorpe planted. Tboee tree*
am all gooeand other kind* ham tak
en their plaoea. I waa told that their
old trunks warn planted In the water
to aepport the erfcareee aad that ink
of thma am there yet, tor tha aaa
worm* will not touch china wood. A*
I meandered along Uie Mieet* £ won
uered how many people wen living in
that city who were there aixly iwn
ago when I ft ret vtalted It. Probably
there are not flfty—perUape aot ten.
There are not but Bre ie Bom* who
were Uiere forty Are yemtau when £•
eettled there. Wliat a people we are
lu die or move away.
Savannah u e lovely dty. How
Lietia, Ivow shaded. bow onmmnited
with evergreens aild flower* I What
beautiful parka with UN green graaa
growing all around where the happy
c hildren frolic and the bet* carriage*
"bound. Monument* are I We, too to
commemorate oobl* men—Polaakl aad
JTaeper and W. W, Gordon aad other*,
but non* to Oglethorpe. What a grand
people need to adorn thla historic aed
otasalo elty. X remember Uie time*
when the Uetorahama. Hardee*, Kl
llotta. Bollocks, Joneom, Honatoua,
Lawe, Jack* aad ’Mbit* lived them.
Some of their dneeaflanU live there
now, mod wear the mantle of their
fat]tars in tone and manner* aad high
moral principle*. They are gautlemea
by Inheritance aad training. Who
ever aaw nobler gentlemen of the old
en Urn* than UeneraM Lawton aad
Jaekaouf Who «v*c *ew a finer epeol
moo of younger manhood Uiao Fleck
ing duBlgnon, the moot cl.imle and
eloquent young men and orator, end
»tenUcman V
When Xeraa * oollega boy £ did mm
at flrat mix with the boy* from Savan
nah. far It wm eald they wer* Mack
upend pmud, but la Ubm I Wee ao
Ueoelved aad waa plumed to rank them
«* my friend*. id
lheir per* liar -
aald pa end |,
while we np id
ata like per and — — — —A
wooda toga aald paw aad maw. Tto
low country boy* Mid gy«H far girt
aad we thought It waa affectation.
Saraonab turn the wm peculiar folk
lire yet aad 1 Ilk* A- U aouad*
gentle aad toft and redoed- Bvenr the
MBro lingo baa a ototm about It. 1
heard and old nurse e*y ta * child la
the park: -Uoney, year mar My
mm dure to her, ran loug chit* fore
da hack re auto notch yoa.’r
annro u no raw m Baranaan. Br*
rykody and everything toko lb®*r Ubm.
A dlguldad leHura pierall* amouc the
bneluea* mm. aad they wilt Uka tin*
to glee aniutaoM attanllaa to rieitori
wlienas la Atlanta the* kata no time
for Uio court min af flfc. *'Itownro
you, howdy do; are ell well y Cmm
ronnd and aeo me,” and you. friend
will burry on. Atlanta gata her ouut
nera horn »wth Georgia mainly. The
People are kind, llbaral. progreaatre
ami deaperataiy la aarueM. aapae tally
after money. Saraseek pooMo are
mora aekotarty and daede, and that la
*hy tike Historical Society wae founded
tbero and liu bean Belong and so lib
crally attatNlnml. la oar eolhga day*
Heary Low nod Mooroe Halm wars
the most girted orators, and the ora
tion of tho Cermet on “PMl at Mara
11111” la Mill remembered hy tboaa who
heard It and art yet all**.
, I was ruminating about that long
journey of ate daya to Waena.mlt by
eairlage, »«<! »„.w tha otter sight \
took berth la labwparetl uMoek sod
awnkwi next morning In Sayaanak aad
Jotmd breakfaM awaltb'g aw at tl*
I*«oto I vital. 1 waa iktaklak about
that stormy rayaga af thirty aarau
daya to Buoton, aad bow wo ouflknd n
partial ahlpwreoh, and my father
wonM not rntura by water bot bought
* carriage and wan of Moot borate
■ad are cams all tha way to Ooorgia
overland, end It teak as da long wteke
to make the trip; and how we never
rroeaed a railroad,for there w*« none U
araee. AO thw W whklo my ream
»"• r*B2 *7^ "" wiu oi mi
ITirtjiimlBrtdg* I,, Vbwinle I a to Ut
awftt ahan hatew #dj
•^■ortaO Mka me fail aad. for of all
Wfct**f** »botbea Mrad I only am
■aft. Father aad mUf aad unclra
Md eeaUeod eoualai all daad. What
aa araatfal Ilf# have I Mead, aad what
aa adraaaa la the world’* araaraaa
l bar* 1 aara. The time «uaL I
had to do all my reading aad atadr
'll«,L,,t«tll»by tha Ilabt of • uiiow
dterdaaadla-iiat only that, but I
aadmybfMbarliadta4lp Uiaa*. uad
limbed* •0CB*r la tba axpoeiilna I
voald Ilka to (how tha boys and alrl*
bowlt wasdone Wa thought w.lw
a Roodtlma, aad aw did, bat It would
be awful to Hva that w*jr now.
Batdtf.
iitoCU*.
■k tom* a» »■**«.
.J* taaoaMtioa whether thanaofni
Moa of balllgemney Ja what tha Calko*
li to ■Ofj Umo prahabU tHjtt
H^nyrSoim, Mis?,!?*!,*;
with the Cuban* agsluet koala, aad
UrtwoaronotatXhWyXdt
StsS
of our uodoobtad aad almost uedte
nlaail friendship for UMr c*ao* hy
m mala tain a dlaoraut allonae
Tkla Uuaurameat ooald not afford to
°mlj for ito pBrpwi of nUstM vlgU
“«s^’rtax“iL‘asi
Ssi'syss^&sis.'fi
susiwiSbir*
It might be wall to lot tillage taka
tholr Baucis both |a this aawftn aad
unlam we w»al to pitch fo aud
tan a haod ouraalrw la tha im
Mm.Uubaaa ouww
*ymn*Uy to batter adta* lags without
“*« »«*nlUouof thalr belli
f«rua( ngots.
>•* Yom Mania.
Her* la what baa baao aoeoaplialied
00 aa Amarloaa railway:
fim—A train baa Una ran four
V>trty-,tn* bad a half
S.'S.?1*’ boattaud t*o miaou*,
without a atop.
■jS’qj . »■< at tba rate of abuo
drad and two aUos aa boar baa baao
■alaUiind for Ira mi Isa.
Thirds Tba dtstenea of Sftjr-olfbt
and tLraa-tenUis milas has boon muds
In Cost,-dot sod three-quarter minutes,
or aa aronae of aronty-olz and a half
alias no hour, twanty-Qyo allsa of the
distaooa Mac rua at tbs rut* of eighty
allsa aa boar.
Fourth—A train baa been run froa
NswYovh to Buffalo, a disUnoa of
tear hundred and thlrtr-slx and a half
«*•!
iiar^rttasraurai
Tboy demonstrate tin
*bat. ao ter at least aa JoooosoUrsa
■ad rolling-stock are concerned,
■oob faster tnloa than any bow In
asa are praetleuMs, but there remains
lbs question wlwther aocb train*
oould bo caploved with safety la asny
pbua on existing road beds, with tbslr
sums, grades, grade crossings, etc.
It to evident, however, that to at
tain tba fastest runway trawl Is It
ooly n ■Binary to otaks tba etnoo pro
grssa Id road wmatroettoo as baa baao
•sblsved la toooaiotlve bnlldlog.
1
-j tbaltoalorXdltor rtfriNd
to an Article lotrodneed lu th* Ouo
sUtutlunai Convention of hoqth Usr>
Ilea -that no minister of lHa gospel
Mali hoWaoy civil o(Bce to Uta State.”
Tbsro sms ones an ArUcis Introdoued
In a Constitutional UoovonUon la
Qawrals that no alolttsv of tit* faoptf
•boold la Mlgibto to a act In tea Leg
islator*. Dr. John Wltheiapoon, ora
<* tba signers of tba Deck rattan of
Iodspwndsoos, nod at that tlaa Prtal
dsot of Princeton College, wrote to a
Oeoctfa paper eogqestitig mi aarod
asat, that la ease any alntoUw An. old
fall from graoe and broom* a profane,
drunk eo or towd reprobate, la aright
basteotad to a seat in tbs togtalator*.
Wn would oommeod thia suggeeUou
to the asabsr who lutoodooari that
bill In the OavoaUaa of South Curo
IIon, if It U oc* too lata. Tbrrw to no
■oto rioaoo why a profano or lotoa
parnta aa who bad ones been a mio
«o«M B«d oar) should not
bo a toffisUtar or abort* or guvsnor
than sny othar orofaoo or lataatparata
“Kqoal rtgbU to all and special
privileges to none."
ITiMm,
» •«*
Ii’o »grout tlm« of lb«
»w. ________
Ttr* Um n»ti«,
Of Junction
JS tknlten wto
An hop* for W, hut two koUInt r>,
&wsasw&$
Tl.o# Kg««, I* flnrldft Bt Boo
»*>■1
zjff'S&Gnno? xr.
Dt&rmj ut m two twti won
P"f‘ Hn t« notornUjr tl.nkf.l. It
Innoqti lynlu. of wfcMi tlwoo »ro
*f* BWI Uo wowUrful «f.
SSjSS fiffCwS
SsaJE*
SSEa?"*
f535»^3E*«e
««ValUd oolaago of
•ttfwdulkra, «acli dollar to aonUia
g uaraoleeloe tta (surreal otmakUan
a»d Mrtt/rt MO and elhrw, mat*
compel by law I bo-ptiniw of tta
uaw Mkn in —--- -r" "rr
,Tb» is to radnoalfca walu* of
Ua dollar about ona-hait, u| by forc
>f erydtiom to tatatLk drtkr tut
&gswn.«s
SSttSfUUSSf 'art
Mid ia faO. but tta aaaabpaeuSiM?
or woman wbo hat manly tnutad to
**Jgg.* «*> totiSTtoto ta-taaS
JPOJort In proportion a* the dollar It
Jbo lVpulieU an aoltd tot tbit
SSTiw h’* *■ ^*lr “toof btalMta
™> m wwd tan dollar tariur
nay IrtriMto value, bat If they mart
taw a dollar wwrtb anything at al-tba
krtitb worth tta tartar ttaaKtItaS
Very few lUpubUeana Uka aay atOOfc
!■ thi ivta9*oti; And Um miiii it u
•todlad tta aoouor it ATiI?
by alt Udafclag mm. ^,T^’
Tta aiitatora mmnm. taeaaao Kan
am paotria an la deU, ilmt ovary JCea
Swa.**tk» ItkMta
•*>**• ha Urn la
£■“JSLt *■ ***< »• (MWra
•oiMim whteli bit Tttnariaaua talk him
k wrong. • v
.iy to toMh in data aa tbeavei
•It Bataan. bat I cannot ear why (Ml
ftet tbonld Uiad tta eonecteneo ir d*!
•tovy tbo abHUy of n an It rmtaa an
ssTsmrtt.ir,71s.*iss
roSann af silver at -trindird monoy
V?",u‘nJ* “* *' M«ky
Uwt all odour doltanVm bTrqS} tor
tol pnrpamn. Bat tta BaraTiaw
gramma ia merely a aobama to acale
owrtandmd dollar-U, wbtcb all ton.
imotslaiyo boon mado-fer tta Nr
poaa of robbing creditor*. ^
ff thee* agitator* simply wanted to
vooala a kw^makU* tbo now taiton
kprt tender for retan debts only.
Put tbaf Dot what tbey want. Thm
toertt tort time* mw cbnp dotted
mart boeaadt a legal taadar far nN
—Wt*» that because it ia
| Bat ta most prove It hr earns tatter
trail meet (ban tta tlxesdbir* eeeer
tlim UutJohu dboratan osnepbrad wHb
{*• Ptotaeblld* to rob laaoeaat poo.
Pj? for avow if umt
IdUtlo eutMsmt ware tra* it wonld
*«•«>* I ehould eon
tpir* to rob a mweh lirger number o<
equally tonoeoot people today.
The Jfcm/iKfaurr’i Utmri neeoUy
Stated Unit Uw bljh price of oettou
this year would off** tbu deertasTtn
y»H»- .Following OK the am
thragbt, Un 5e« Torit Jnnud <J
-Tsr*erop
tiaa been urou uoen gt A AUflt of mar*
then $40/100,00(1 leae than tat yrarti.
while it la prou«hie that higher prtae
will eeuae the total rulea of tbe eceo
to be huger errn than that of last
yeert 10.000,000-UUe yield. Aeoord
jue tv Hi* .Waul tf <Wiw'* cakm
lauooa the eroy Uriayeer ought to be
5*J;b w lueet restate at
beet 830,000,000
wee.
, The yield of fruit in the
the largest on record, sad ...
erop wl<l probably tun nut the -
•ey, eo that another $90,000,000 at
; ***1oul * to the ota raealta at
IfoaUwwn taming operations for MB,
leaking a total pradt over 1804 of not
leeetbaa gioo.oog/ioa la mnnaoMsa
with title inuceetiHg prosperity In
•grietatunl Intelset* iSTSTgrata
aotHrity in Iron aad the (act that
priere are nearly double what they
ware this tlane lau year, the riiiarte
ijary Bow of Money 8ouU» as a result
ta the exposition, and It win he area
the* the eoudlUeoe for prosperous
>!■■« ere pbeaoiaaaally geed.
aHekeety UntaOwve*MUm.
•area neb tOaJ Saws.
la Florida tlie other day an eM d*r»
key was brought lari ora a —g‘Tlnit
epos the eilarge of .“wantonly aaad
MtaWoude kUllag a fewt-oue bon.”
'SXVLHSJJS.
The dafaadaot upoa anratoffieeut
“•** w*wire*o^ is Mitt*
gotten ef the offense that he hod been
uaglit from boyhood to klU M«f
tagwlhg he*, lie had board the de
ceased liea craw upon one or More oc
eeataae. and b.d followed the tSaehlagi
Of bgyueth. He was dlrcbargrd.
A omi r»i«ni
Ommxxm KUmUH
lAttSuod** White ww In Ooword
wawtwlfafhm wlU hMt, uw (her.
wit* faint mat 100, It wm inn.
int oat In Odorado. TharT »m i
ry',r hW«urd In Wyoming. And th*
ftrir^UI to tlw MW ttldf raoot
dlMrnlt to Inculcate and alwaja hard
eSS*
^yatea dfaratl—, ywmnu DrwwyaU
[ And a drwa afteT a hnuty
ptete* win prmat amt dteatwfwrV
tt^Uwfaatgaad nlgM faddy.
B«t te tiw feet ttatekiamoc mn
communities are averae to eablfe
debu, • mighty aal loaa strtdTfor
rfts&jrfc'issaraa;
•as it u «umu tSSrJl
»l>ile not entirely new It If rurartto
Je* * capital Idea, and out that oo«Jd
to made to do food for Utepraeeot tod
Um oomtae geaerwttnna. Fiftr tom,
aaddoUar: would baiM ilSjfo
affood macadam road, garbnpe so or
■ore. aad a foros or bauds eoold m!
llUlaafaw smethsTgiringaeF
gj fc* *’•“*" * “ *“1* *•***»
A toot 84,000 la imHaatmi aiiDoally
farimid purposes, which wll pay •
pvomt interest ei> «M,000 aadaco
With the four thousand near i nitrated
a Urge number of nude era marked,
but none are toad ao that they will
•aed eo enrt work. On idee of
^txsstsfaam
Ie this woatrr^theaeaftlMt^SB
ba a doubtful owe. hot la
•Boat Idarte the rock la right near god
«u be get la mueji cheaper Uiaa
na>tba •*■*•*■
While thia applies to Alamance
coouijr. It ie equally applicable to any
eoantyia tbaduceoreay lows lotto
flute, that wants bettor nude or
streets.
The Maaaaehliastu farmer MU M
jaw^erafor bisan, while the
•r_
tDAJ lc® f
Veraadbeeettt la a great" am
log 8tnte nod ths operatives meet have
•read. There la ao fertiliser Cor tto
farmers* grids like tl*- smoke of the
feeWnr chimneys. WJthoutdotrt*. the
Umew la tto Btrmiettam dtorlet
ttofftsehe arts for III sent la tto
Usekbelt, let him ask hie pfcmtatteme
sad toy taad Ie tto BUmtegtom die
trial.—Birmingham AsSERKl
Comment inf nn tto Coaegotmu tto
JUaeferiermr* Rct*r4 aeya:
J^rruas
j^r&jirsSi-Kra
800th It wttl ataee a certain ament
of money h, tlm pockets of the Camera
esd truelt crowsm f.ir foafl garWt&Z
ptnyes. Tire cu'.ton mIQeat Ureas»5g.
flPMteehorg. CHarkwto end athar ta
dsettle] centres gtve "VrSigl to
thoowuriaof paorde. They art Uulr
famlihe mart have mewl. Hour, meat
* •*» ami to
rsJrsst:bvr^ ssna
fltottora gleator abneM eneoarage la
dn.trte* aa reset* as the raeratoot.
Ttog Ml e steady deeieed tar bis
rt^od aaerarfrulm, ao«rae«g£
\ »u a*
. tortilmiMw! BbMHi*
»«*■» *»• Mm It. OmA. fiwM
auU« certain u to ntat It la tartar.
Ra IfWrt In Qoiuoy, IN. Tartar**?*
aaarrtad Alim Il'amm-or iki ij
rlart Mm: pcriwpa tl«*y aarrlart aaok
aUar. It any rale, Allan and Mw
warn Mar rlart. /nation Allan, ate
ltd UN knot, aw tlumfoaurtad nkan
tko contract K*r parUaa InalaUrt Umt
tfmmrSmmuika imtnd anmto
•aka /oka oramlm to *-i«Ta, honor
«"rt okay" \lteo, nn4 Alloa ptnalaaiM
"ikarMan/aton a ml to aara for Ma tart
W«I"afakjmarm milS.
gjT. ”.***» »«« a“ /"kn marn
■ IbU Btf> mil Mg John Hi Man mp
JaknUoakT la ke nn» Mr. Mia Uaok
or Mr. Allan HMiomit Of mint All
na*N U Dtamla," hat nkatalaa akaM
wa anil Mar
' vry^MfryiMiar 1H