Deim TKfa7Yo5Ti iviJAUJL (Ob IU. HOOXK, WATAKJA COUNTY, X. C THURSDAY, JANUARY, fi. 18'KJ, NO. 17, VOL 5 VKOVHSSlOXAl. W. IUOtJNCILL, Jr. Attorney at La .v. Boone, N. C. i b. corxeiLL. m. i. Boone, N. C. ltesid.-nt Phvsicinn. OHiee on King Street north of Tost (Mice. E.F. LOYILL Attorney At I a Boone X. C. im. L.r. beeves PHYSICIAN AM) SlUCEON Office at Residence. Boone, X. C. L. D. LOWK, Atlornsy at Law vxn- AYJ7V1J' ruiiur, HANSEN'S ELK. X. C J. (I. WILBAR, DENTIST, KLS PARK, MOUTH CAROLINA. ORers his professional services to the people ot Mitchell, Vntjintrn nnd ndioininsr eoun- ties.S"Vo Lad imtteinl used and All work iuar;ivteel."s& May 1 1 y. J.FJIOBPlliiW, ATTORNEY A 1 LAW, MARION. N. V. -(o)- Will prnctirr in the courts ot Watauga. Ashe, Mitchell, McDow 11 and all other counties in the western listrirt sarSpecial utten tion given to the collection of claims." NOTICE. Hotel Property for Sme. On account of "'failing health of myself and wife, I offer for snle my hotel property in the town of Boone, North Carolina, and will ell low for each and make terms o suit the buyer, and will take real or personal property in ex change. Apply soon. W. L. Bryan. Notice. For naif. 900 acres of land, on Rich Mountain, Watauga County, on which is asbestos, and fine land for sheep ranch. Sales private. L. I). Lowe & I. T. Furgerson, Ex'trs. of Mrs. A. P. Calloway, deed. Banner Elk, Nov. If '90.. NOl ICE. Parties putting papers in tny hand for execution will plea se advance the fees wit h the papers ahd they will re ceive promptattention, other wise they will be returned not executed for the want of fees. D. F. Baird Shff. tJITERSlTY OF HORTH CAROLINA. Instruction is offered in four general courses of study, six brief courses, v large number of special courses, and in law, medicine and engineering. The Faculty includes twenty teachers. Scholarships and loan funds are available for needy young men of talent and character. The next ses sion begins Sept, 1. For cat alogue with full information, address President Wins.oii, Chapel Hill, N. C. Forllalaria, Liver Xrov. ble.or Indigesti on, ut BROTH ' S IRON b-LtR. Washington letter. From oar Regular CorretpondenU Speaker Crisp was one of the few prominent democrat ic congressmen win) ate their Christmas dinner in Washing to.i. This week he will iro to New York for a few days am! thereby hangs n tale that is very discomforting to those gentlemen who have h,ieii working overtimeeoncocting stories shoeing why Presi-Ue;it-elet Cleveland would op pose Mr. Crisp's election as Speaker of the next House. .Mr. Crisp uoe to New York upon Mr. Cleveland's person al invitation to confer with the President-elect about leg islation that is to come be fore the present House, the extra session question, and the organization of the next House; and now thequesliou is being asked, why should Mr. Cleveland wish to confer with the Speaker if be is opposed to his re election by the next House? It seems to be a repetition of t he old sto ry somebody went off half co' ked. The populist members of Congress from Kansas have evidently heard from home. At first they were discretely silent about the alleged can didacy of Mrs. Lease for the Senate; now they openly rid icule it, characterizing it l!8 simply a republican scheme to make the popu'ists ritii' ulous. Senator Hill is a inernbJ'r of the Senate committee on Immigration, and he doesn't agree with the ideas of the majority of that committee as to the legislation necessa1 ry. He wil! Roon after the re assembling of Congress pre sent his views m the shape of a minority report and will ei ther introduce a new bill or offer an amendment to the Chandler bill, providing for one year's suspension of im migration, when that meas ure is taken up by the Sen. ate. The joint Houseand Sen ate Immigration committee has one sub-committee now on its way to Cuba and an other consulting with Treas ury officials, both after infor mation to be made use of when the immigration bills are taken up by Congress. The House and Senate com mittees are working harmo niously on this matter, and bo far politics have been kept out of it. The only question with members of all parties being, what is the best thing to do? There is going to be some lively financial music in Con gress when it gets together again, bur, it is not yet cer tain who is going to do the dancing. The pressure for the suspension ot the purch ase of the 4,500,000 ounces of silver bullion, which the Secretary of the Treasury is compelled under theShertnan law to buy every month, is enormous. Mr. Harrison and hiser.tire cabinet favor the suspension, and, it is said, that Mr. Cleveland has also said to more than one dem ocratic Congressman that it ought to be stopped: Let ters n.v the hundred are re ceived at the Treasury de partment every day. from merchants and bankers nil over the country, urging the immediate eusiwn.Mi ti. It cannot be sti spend -'d, except by action of Congress, and the attempt to bring about that suspension, tither by the passage of Senator Hill' bill for an out right repeal of the Sherman law, or by the adoption o f Senator Mc pherson's resolutions author izing the President in hi dis cretion t suspend the pur chase of silver bullion, will be the signal for the music to be iin. The free coinage men say they do not propose to allow any suspension f the purchase of bullion, unless a free coinage bill be passed. Not wit list anding recent ex-tr-iordin lry efforts of the re publicans to defeat the will of the people, it is the general belief here, republicans inclu 'letl, that the democrat will organize and contiol the Sen ate ol the next Congress. Both those w h o oppose and those who favor the pro posed amendment to the World's Fair act, of the last session, allowing the exposi tion to be opened on Sunday, claim to have polled the House, and both sides claim to have a majority of votes pledged. It is goiur to lieu red-hot fight and four days lo, to 13, of January, inclu sivehave been set apart by the Hoase Exposition com mittee to hear arguments for and against the proposed a mendment. It is the impres sion of experienced observers of things Congressional that the amendment will be adop ted by a small margin in both House ami Senate, but ther seems to be a doubt ns to whether Mr. Han ison will ap prove it. Strange td say the must ol the opposition to Senator Vest's bill directing the Post master General to make a ten year's contract, for carrying the mails, at existing rates, with the proposed Chicago and St. Louis electric railway as soon as that company is ready to guarantee that they shall be transported at a speed of not less than 100 miles an hour, comes from those who fear accideats to travellers at that high rate of speed. Queer argument, that, for this lushing age. It looks now as though Mr. Blaine might getjweli again. For nearly n week he has im proved, very slightly, but still improved. His family and friends have grown very hopeful, and his physicians- say nothing. Bay Horses. According to "Public Opin ion" the word "bay," used with reference to horses, did not signify a color originally but was first applied to '9 breed of horses too light to be called brown and too! brown to becalledred. These horses were found in a dis trict in England noted forits bay trees, for the leaves of which they showed a great t. 1 i. r itviiiK. i:ivi?iy urreoer 01 horses in that locality relied upon these trees for the med icine with which to cure his diseased animals. The horses coming from this district be came known as bay horses; and their uniformity in color led to the common use of the term. ShuH's Mills, Dep. 13, 02. For the 1)KM(K RAT. A man tha has been translated out of the darkness of sin and ir nde an heir and a joint heir with 'he Lord .lesiisi Christ then a servant of Christ. The gate of the vineyard stands ojM-n and the broad field in spread out before the laborers; but the question isaked, "What will the Lord of the harvest have me to do?" God will make known the path of du ty to those who seek to do his will. Then christians to know themsrlve and be right be fore God is the best prepara tion for doing good, and wnenever Christ gives the command they should feel it and honor and delight to work for him. And to have an influence over the world of sin Christinas should imitate the unpretending ministry of Jesus, uniting love and hu mility, caution and boldness, activity and perseverance in all their labors, rememberirg the faithful workers of Christ will e;ij y the highest honors of he.-t v; n. And as his vineyard is so trr'at and so many tenipta tbr.s along the way, chris tians should put on the whole armor of G d, that they may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. It is the design of God that christ ians should be on the watch tower of Dutv ban-.!- ing as ambase.a.bws ?or Christ and ghiag evident of the true religion they repre sent. The love and service of Christ is the true christian's delight. Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, to visit the fatherless and widowsin thek-affliotion, and to ki'ep himself unspofed from the world, James 1: 27. The christitiH is blessed, hap py in his doing; and is gra ciously rewarded for his ser vice, as he performs it. The christian who does not live above the contaminations of this sinful world has lost, his religions influence for good. How' noble fhe office and workofth. christian minis try! H:w earnestly should we pray for its increase, and how obediently should pious .young1 men heed the Lord's call to enter its ranks. The christian's secret prayer is an important means of grace; a safeguard against tempta tion, and a preparation for a faithful discharge of duty. It is the duty ol christian pa rents to teach their children the way of life and salvation when they know sin, by get ting thein to repent of their sins and take up the cross as a soldier for Christ. The faithful and prayerful efforts of parents to secure blessings for their children will not be in vain. It is the christian's duty to live such a life that his influence will bring ot hers to the Lord Jesus Christ. Young christian it is your duty to Btart with the deter mination to overcome the temptations of sin through life and to follow the Savior faithfully to the end, What will be the reward of true christians who have faithfully discharged their duty? The reward will be everlasting happiness with God the Father, with Christ ilis Son, with the holy angels and with all the redeemed who have passed into the Celestial City. A. M. Mast. Tbe Two Hrd d Woman. Millie Christine the "two headed nightingale," ''the colored wonder of the world," etc., was born near White ville, S. ('., in the year 1831 of slave parents. She, they or it is hardly a monstrosity but rather a phenomenon or freak of nature. Shehastwo bustsjnnd pairs ofshou'ders, two heads, four ar ns and four legs, and, so, an ana tomical examination h ajs proven, she has two hearts, two sets of digestive organs. In fact, she i? two distinct persons blended into one at the wnist. Mentally she is certainly two, being able to carry on two separate con versations on different sub jects at one and the same time. She is a fine singer, one voice being a high sopra no and the other rt clear ton ed contralta. Sheisa highly educated woman, or women, and speaks several languages fluently, among them Ger man, French nnd Spanish. She is without doubt the greatest or one of the great est human wonders born this century, her) physical make up being a wonder to the sci entists and a puzzle to the common people in general. PAPER, PENS AHD INK. Paper was in use in Egypt as far back as 2300 B. C.. and not merely, as old Pliny thought, from the time of Alexander the Great. The ancients, it appears, knew more about pens and inks than they usually hare credit for. The Greek? made silver and other metallic pens, and Latin manuserips show n great variety o f inks red, purple, green, blue, si Iyer and gold. The great Floreffe Bi ble in the British Museum shows the skill of the penman in the Twelfth Century in the use of this modeofdecora tion and in somewhat later times it was no unusual thing for scribes to annotate their texts i n colored inks red. green, violet, blue using each color for u distinctclass of notes, historical, biograph ical, geographical, etc. Sci entific works are often made exceedingly attractive by colored diagrams, chronolo gies by architectual arcades and ornametal panels. Didn't Forget His Sister. Los Angeles, Cal., Dec.30. --Out on West Sixth street. at the corner of Flower street, resides a lady who is a sister to the late Jay Gould. She is the wife of the Rev. A. M. Hough, who is a retired Methodist minister, in great ly r e d u c ed circumstances. Mr. Gould left her $23,000 and an annuity of 2,000 a year. yFay yoar snbs,Ti ption. GOT TX A0AI. Moaefceij Eni 01 Thil Tfffcal GjmmuU From the Wilson Mirror. Yes their head get nsarer and nenrer; their warm breathings mingle together; sigh meets sigh; soul sinks in to soul: and n qell borrowed from elysium, falls upon the bubbling channel o f their dreams, and veils itacurrerifc with a spray of rapture as sweet ns that which Fancy weaves around the brow of enchuntment. In utterances as sweet and soft as a rose, or the down upon the tender t histle their hearts' lives have been dedicated t o eternal worship. And while sipping sweet nectar from weddedlips, thoughts as pure and sweet as zephyrs bathed it Hermet tus decs rise like incense from theshrineofcupid. And seeing such perfect happiness we were led to believe that such love scenes ns this is al-' most as holy and as sacred and as hallowed as the finest and purest emotions of relig ion itself, for tender words, so soft and low and so full ofheart-thrill,theelectrifying and quickening grasp of spell bound rapture, drunk with an estacy more thrilling than the mellowing influences of golden sun-sets, or intoxica ting witcheries ol Beethoven's symphonies which bring with them the consciousness that they are but waves and rip- pies ofjfee'ings from ths" un fathomable, unmeasured and unbounded ocean of love, and then it is the finest emotion, at its keenest moment of rap ture, passes from the dull prose of expression into the softly lulling poetry of sileuce, and every thought sleeps in the spell of a sweet and holy mystery. Life then becomes a blessed prelude ofblieeful immortality, earth an entrari cing vestibule to tha temple of elysium, and every sound an echo of some celestial har mony. John L. Won't Do InWrrlewel, BJ He'll Meet Corbett. New York, Dec. 38.--Johrf L. Sullivan refused to be in terviewed till afternoon at the Windsor Theatre, where he has been playing, in regard to Jimmy Wakely's state ment that the e. -champion was an ingrnte for Jmakinjy attacks on his honor. He, however, toll Dan Murphy, who met him at the wind-up of the performance, tniii he would yet meet Corbett end will start in to trriin at Hot Springs, Ark., netxt May. Charlotte Observer. A Wail P'npcr of Portage Stampa. The little village of Berated near Bognor, possesses a unique curiosity in the form of an innroom papered with postage stamps. Theapsfrt inent. is fancifully decorated with many descriptions of used stamps, nnd even the passage leading to the room is similarly papered. Some five years were occupied irt making the collection, which numbers some thousands of stamps. The room being completed in 1887 it was nat urally given the name of "Jubilee Stampioom." In deed some members of the royal family interested in the collection are said lo have; added to it a number of stamps on theirown account