fifflA m p--'-v HALL & SLEDGE, proprietors. -A. NESPAPEB FOB THE FEOFLE. TEIR-MS 2'H0 IEK ANNUM IN ADVANCE. VOL. XVIII. WELDON, N. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17. 1887. NO 37. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS Premier f A'SUr'IVE Q PFATINI. VCAGAMBRUL MrcC. PATAPSCO FLOURING MILLS. ESTABLISHED--1774. Tin' value of FUrit il, j n,U up.ui the ESSENTI .VI, ELEMENTS (IE NIT TUITION CONTAINED IN THE HltE.VI) IT MAKES. ()r I'ATENT HOI, l.EH FI,OritSarera.iiiir.ioliirc.',l few th l'IIOI('El' WIIBVT ci!i:iin ',),. ;a. liiu-.r.' Maud pre-eminent in this cminiry as n market for i-li ..iw wheat wlii.-li uives ih a peat advantage in the selection of III.' HI-.M t'OM IU A hp , i,i ir,.i ..ii iim.M-iiAIM UiiKHtlunliil. cnaMcs i to .,;lee ..n the nmrket. I'lmir l'.EO,l AI,I,ED Kilt ITS l'I'KITV ANH NUTIti TIOI'.S I'KOI'EKTIHS. Thin luct in rcoivniwl nut only in this country, hut ii Eur.w as well, where the. "PAI'ArSCO SUPERLATIVE'' COMMANDS DECI- 1KII,Y MOlth MONEY than any other l'atapsco Superlntive IVent, Pitupwu family Putent, l'atapsco i'.xtra, (Jtiesapealte Kxtru. liahlwin Family. C. A. GAMURILL MANI'FACTlililNlJ COMPANY, 214 Comtnercc St., Baltimore, Mtl, onp la ly. If. H. BOBBITT ft S0Hv LITTLETON, N. C, II AVE .ll'ST OPENED THEIR FALL CONSISTING OF Dry Goods, Notions, Ilutx, Boot! aim Shoes, ( Vitectiuncncs, centrally, un.l respectfully lure making purchases elsewhere. Very Respectfully, Sept liiltf THE PLACE TO GET inas m -AT LOWEST PRICES, IS AT DR. A. It. ZOLLICOFFER'S, WEST SIDE WASHINGTON AVENUE, OPPOSITE R. SHED. V E L I) 0 N. N. C. STOCK KEPT COMPLETE BY FREQUENT ARRIVALS. WtuanUPTIOlt DEPARTMENT FILLED WITH Till! BKST KKI.ECTKI) MATERIAL.- PKKSCKHTIONS COMTOUNDKD AT ALL IIOl'US WITH GREAT CARE. l'ERFUMEKY, STATIONERY, FANCY SOAPS, BRl'SIIKS, FANCY ARTICLED, TOI1.VCCO AND CIGARS. REMEUBKR thata hearty welcome alri ."alts you at ZOLL I COFFER'S. tr GROCERIES. We keep on hand I full lino of grocer ies, consisting of Sl'GAR, COFFEE, FLOUR, SOAP, MOLASSES. Fine Cigars, Smoking and Chewing To bacco, ie. CONFECTIONERIES. A full line of Candies, French and Plain, Fruits, Foreign and Domestic. We are prepared to fill orders for Cakes. Bread, &c, on short notice for parties. We keep for sale Freeh Bread from our own BAKERY. We have just received a cur load of the , BEST WHITE CORN, and keep on sale F11KSII MEAL L-rouud at Choekayotte mill nhll, i. i.mni.nnmol I.V nil til he KU nerior tn anv meal to bo had in this market. OUR RESTAURANT is open and our table supplied with all the best things for the comfort of man. WTYou can get a good meal at any hour. Call and are us. NAW & ITHNEI.L. juno 2.1 Cm J. L. FRYAR, BEER A SODA WATER BOTTLER, I yet In the market will, tils BOTTLED GOODS nreveryvtrtetr. second to none la his Hue. Dett B r and odb iter of everr Vlilely of flavor. If Jem don I believe It sire him au ORPEU ANI SEE. Alwiyi it lit, t to attend to tho limine. With thanks for vast favor, lie hope, to merit a vouttnuanf o. luaranteing eatisnuillon. Respectfully, . J.L,FaYAR,WcUou,N.C. CctMtf THE J II AT IS liliOWN. TliiSlII'KlllOl! Aiuerieun l'l.mr. Ak your grocer fur lieill'ord Family, North Point Family, Orange Grove Extra, AND WINTER STOCK OP (iOOI S Hardware, Tin ware, Groceries, aid invito everybody to eoine ami sec them be W. H. IIOlllHTTA SON, THE - MILLINERY. M" ff2 I urn daily rtiH-ivhiR my F.U.I, k of MfiUiw ry, FttiU'T liiHHln, N'tioim, Ac. i-ij;l.mt iiij( nil Wit Uet itovultiea. Vou a n'Uh'tifully tnvit-l u .'UmitU'iauiliieni al prtn-if, ln-fniu pur i'lmcliig. MRS. P. A. LEWIS, Weldon. N. C. apr IS ly NtHUNunvLLurcu It I i'MiVr.lili-m1 N H"" I.M.M'eiKli.OKVKir il-t.l'. R'l Itk.SM I U K H , 's .....Til.nB "" 111 " ir ' ' '" r"'"i 'i" n,,...-.,!!.,, III. U.i,.- I- LimC iji fli e lie.. I. n II,. , null l.-i...r.-. lii.l,l. i,,..;.,-,.,!. li.i' To77-..t.si.. ..,. I wniJk'TNd CLASSES A I I tN I funl, Hll.-lH..- with cm- nIoympnlt hjmc. Uic w bole of ttic time, or for i.IK nf i'itiiir hii I'dsilv vhmi from .' cciittr'.ilcrovi'iiiinr."ii'l irirUinml kitiu by.lvotiiigall Un-ir tliuv- to tli buHim-M. Bim m much hk mi'ii. Ttmt til who m'ethliiniiTB.'n-l tlilr Btidn-wi, and lt the biiMnwu. we nnUe lhli.oltVr To -;irii u m not well Mliaflwl wc will n'iil om-dollar to ny for tne tronbltt of writing. Fn Ui" " AtldrUUa. U CVVIfVUft on.i'.'- 'r-t to 1e mult'. Out Hits ont and to tiimtoiiH, hikI we will ttend you illll hni-itiunce tortm. Uut will surt vu in ltiiMiicn whieli HI lrln yuiiln incwifiuoii- fyrlaht away than iiymn yiw nmn w inu. Any me mh do the work ami live at homo. Kithat all ain. HoinettdiiK iipw Umt Jiift eolimmon ryfor the Tworkem. Wowllletnrt you; M1Ul nnt mnxlrd. TIiIp la on of tho jromilnf, Imoortant ohtwcrtofti llfvtiiuB. Tlinm who mo atnWttimi l,T LiZ rijrIMuB wbl not di-lnr. Ownd outfit fret. AdtUviB, . " ft' IMI tr li f'l Aumut lialiiB. "dec Hy. A DREAM. A. MAN MEETS A PA3III.Y HE II Alt DIIEAM- El) OF Kiir TWENTY YEA US. Kr.nii the IMImiJ TrlUw... Twenty years op) .1 la -helor in Oak- lanl dreamed of visiting a family consist ing "I parents- and two little girls, who were unknown to him in his waking hours Fiom that time furl Ii he continued to dream of them lor a score of years. II siw inecliil.lrciigron trum childhood to womanhood, lie was present at tho clos ing exercises when they graduated. In luet, heshired all the pleasures and griefs of this family. His friend-hip to his dreamland friends seemed so real that he often remarked that he felt certain he would know them in ic ality at hoiiij I'm ore time. Two months ago he saw in a dream the husband die, an ) from that time he ceased to dream of ihein for the lirst time ii period of twenty years. About six weeks ago he was astonished at receiving a letter from New Y. r' city, the writer being the i low of a twin of his, with whom 1, had never h id any intercourse since his boyhoi.il, over thirty years. The widow wrote that she wished to make San Fran cisco her future home. After exchanging a few letter it was arranged for him meet her uud the two daughters at Oakland wharf on tho arrival of an East em train on a certain day. On their arri val imagine bis surprise to see his dream friends. They were coil illy so when related his string! series of dreams in wliicb tliey figured. Ho told them imi dents connected with their past lives which he could n it h ive kiitiwn under ordinary circumstances. He described their f rmer h.iu-e, even to the furniture nod Ionise- hold ornauicuts, which was correct in eve ry particular. The s.'.Uel is that he re cently marricj the widow and is liviig h ippily in this city. ROMANCE IN NAMES. I knew a niiin by the name of ltuse oacu n liu was of a romantic ilpoMiion. und wlit'ii ugirl baby wch burn tu hiiu lie luiiicil lur Wililo. it uumli.il vury pjcti- cul tu wriu it WiMo Jlusi', bui wlicu blie grew up ud uiarriv'd u man by tliu name of Hull, its .-lie did, it w;iu't half so pret ty. Hut tbey called her then liunu Hull and slie uow nitrns lur name in tbut way. The ili vk of the Suj.reine Court of the Ii.Htriet of Columbia U named lu tutu Jonathan Mei. llii litthei uud ltm grandfather' were the name, uud (lie hot of the line, nearly u hundred yeurn hu, was ealled Juiiathuu M. is. He bud u h wet-1 heart who jilted him, but afterwards Vf&s sorry for it, uud ent liiui u little jiieee of paper uu which wad written timly this and nothing more: "U turn Juituthau." It vi ah tho iuo.t welcome uud gratil)iiiLf messiie ue ever receive',, una it was an swered iu pereion. The couple were mwu married, aud when their lirst baby wan born they celebrated the eveut by calling him "Ueturii Jouathau." Thu uame has been haudetl down in the family for four generutiuurt to the tiroL-boru son, uud it now appears twice iu the Wa.Oiiu'tou di rectory. The nam? of a mo:nber of CotireM from Michigan UJtilius Ciiiar Hurrcuhs. His father Witi fund of several eharaikif iu history, and .showed his iidmintiiun in christeuiti hU ehihlreu. .Mr. liuricu-hn his a brother iu Ni.rihs.in Ohio wh".-e name U Nap ilenn It napitrte, uud 1;.- hai two siiUrt. called Marie AuUduette and Catherine de Medici resp-dively. The father of Vice-President ll unlin had a similar ta.s(e uud eulletl his sous alter the j;reat warriors of neiiut histury Al exander, Julius Ctiar, Ciiieinnatus and Uiiiinib.il, while he naim-d hi- four duu:l.--ers alter the eontineiiis Kumpe, Ahim Au-jlruliu uud America. If he had Mirtunate eli unh to have u lit'th, 1 piK he wtiul 1 iuvo call -d h.-r Aiii. he'-hildieu didn't lmll out. been bat Th nam !' the rvreiary of the lute I'i'ir u l.ti'-ut- l liiilus Cim'iini ittis Iiuiar, A. M . Ii. I. 1'., while h. h.t4 a ul-rk uu-d-r liiui.il e.ilo:.'d inn), wliw father ,-hriMeut'd htm .tl.i nrmi Jfrt'-rs-m l.'m i.ln )i -rritt ;ui;h .1mm,-. There is an -ih- r e '1 r -d iim:i in a A a.-hinirton bar !t.-r h 'p. wh w tide ii I'anairut Ibliirc-'ti Kvete I'.'rt-r II -piuH, in honor of lln several ntv.tl com uand -r under whom he rrved i:; t!u navy (luring the w:ir. Theie is a yni- lady the sain i city named Desire Moore, and hur hi-tler, who wa burn a few )eiti later, is called Plenty Moore. CoNsi'Ml'THiN, Waist ing- diseases, and general debility. Juctors disagree as to the relative value of Cod Liver Oil and UypophnHphite tlie one aiipplyinir slreiigtli and fl fdi; the other giving nene power, and acting as tonie to the di-estix and entiro sys'em. Hut in Scott's Kmnl nionofCod Liver Oil with llyp..phti phitee, the two are combined, and the ef feet is wonderful. Th"Ui tnds who have derived no permanent benetit from other preparations have been cured by Un use. This is not nn iHtutuptinn, but facts that re substantiated by the experience of tlie past ten Team, and the endorsements of thousands of tho best physicians through out tho country. uov 101-m, The best always tho cheapest Save money by purehanin the celebrated Buy State and Zeigtcr Hro'hers shoe bought direct from the manufacturers. For fiale by P.N, Suinoack iCo. AN EXPERT STENOGRAPHER. A "I mi Cuit Write Out Thing and MiimU Anothltr NliitiiltuiiiiouHly, 'How loiiy; have you lived here?" The lawyer wan Ukinx tho deKmitiin of a witiiiSH in his ctlicp in the Mill buildin;;. Tin- 'iieil of the ilentiK'riiilier vas mmih isipidlv tnor his paKr, leav ing U'liitid it a Ktrii'K of jMithiHik.s and other uWmil HVinUtlN of KiHtt h, "Vni rt.iv that you have knuwn the de f. ndaiit ur the t it yeara. Now, I want i nk you whether at any time dm in;; that iierind you over notietnl any Hyiiiptoin of in.iunity iu hia Uliavior?" conlitiuiHl tin' lawyer. At llie instant the lawyer began this (juery the BU-nornplier turned to the re Hrter, who w.u netted by his sido at the laljlf, and, without btoppuiy; his writing for a seeond. whistled: "'A'ait a mo nicnt and I'll U' through. This won't Lint nmch longer," The refjorter lcnj;etl anxiotisly ut the notew, e.iectin to see tho pencil stop ita travels, or at ieaat at the end of the ques tions, retraeo its steps to reviso mmo phrase incorreeliy trauncrihed. Hut it made no Mieh hivak, When tho lawyer ended his inquiry the ieneil stopped. "Now, hir," continued the lawyor, "you may tell me whether you were well enough acquainted with the defendant to know whet Iter he allowed any weakness of mind or not?" Hi-fore the stenographer had completed the second lint of his reort ho ajain whkpwvd to the reinirter not to U in a hurry, and, as before, ronelmletl his work without a particle of apparent interrur tion. This was tho hbl tiuestion. and after the mi tern were gnthered together ami tho wituesH had left the oil ice. the i jforter askeI the stenographer whether lie liad written correctly all that was said verbatim, or had only epitomized what hud iteeit spoken. "I wrote exactly wliat was taiid. Why do you uik?" "t'au you read it without dihVultv?" "Of con rso I can, otherwise 1 should not, lie hero; but why do you nskr" 'I didn't see how vou could write d.iwn what was lieing HMikcn and tiS'ak to me upon another siil'jeet at tho sunn; tmu'." "That is easy emmgh to do," iejonded the stenographer with a laut;h, "when vi.a only knuw liow and practice long enough. Shorthand writing is very much like playing the piano or nH'iiling some thing from memory. It in mechanical. 1 found years ago wnen 1 was reKrtiug iu a western court, that it was extremely useful to be able to hear and think of ot! r things transpiring in the court room lh:tn the evidence itself. 1 llu-u licgau i'lactk ing k that I could train in self to 10 lwt neparate things ut the wane time. I wouM mentally make note of every thing occurring mound me and keep on with liiy writing. At Hrst I would make i mistake or two, but I gradually got so that 1 could hear everything that was said ami understand it too, uothwith itandiug the fact that my pencil was moving all the time." "1 should think that when you Is'gan to k pea It it would have thrown you otF your track?" "It did at .hut. I learned that by jommitling to memory some poem and reheating it while 1 was rejiorting, until 11 last 1 could carry tin a conversation on :li:io-t any subject and write from dic tation tin.n oik entirely different. It's i very useful accomplishment, but I wuildn't advise you to learn it unlets v. u intend to lcetmie a profe.innal Monographer, ami 1 wouldn't advi.M that inl. ss you have nothing heller to do than :o i.ft-ak atones in the Mrects. New York Mail and Express. Thf Onttro't 1.1 Te nt lliiliiiitriil. A eorresv mdent, after picturing (be liuiplieity tf the life at Hahuorul dur ng the qiiit'n's stay there, di-scribes one if her ordinary everyday breakfasts. Tho 'olltiwing is the menu of the breakfast iTved one day last week: Scotch or-:idg.-, coM rump steak pie, hot rump Ueak, cold gaiiimon of bacon, tailed ggs, Scotch scones, brown bread, butter, loney, tea, oniric, and a kind of cocoa ;ierially prepared for the queen. The torrid,. ;o was placed on the sitlelxuird, ind w;is wrved to each guest iu blue and .vhiie cliina basins. These liasins w vvo i!l'd l-y the attendants, ns it matter of oar e. wit html any question as to .vheiber orridge was vanti-d or not. It ivas evidently retiired lv court eti p'.ett 1 that tlu1 meal sliotiM U le:;uu vi h t hi -t solid fountlatioii, and that in li v iiht.il UlsIcs of the hiiiored visitors n.'l t le kept in ulievancc. Our in ;ornia:!t expresM's surprise that thei-u .rui no game on the table, considering hat to lusivrtiuu knowledge the larder v:w full of gnaisi' shut by Prince Heiirv ind the I:coht. which certainly wanted niing. lie is jircbably not aware that he ijucn cannot tolerate the smell of ;:mie the lint thing in I lie morning, nnd j:i1v allows it at the h.ler meals out of Werenee to the taster of others. Lon- loa Cor. New York World. Tlie fur ot .Ptit'ijoriuiiit. A Calcutta paper calls attention to ft cmar!;ablc decline in the iMipularity of J i.' great Kath dattra or Car festival nt ; bo Juggernaut temple iu Orissa, That Ii-' tni.tiiiT of visitors this year should tlhv a l.ir.v d-. -crease nii;;lit have Ut-n ::;c. ;.'d, owi:;g to the recent loss of two il a;e;auor.s end to the common lx ici' t!i:tt tli. U-. of tho third wn x lie; til. U lip! win's, however, that li'ioii :ii th" I'.iihiig t'fi is more marked ,!iit jt iir, it lias r.-eii going on ateudily Jo:' :.oi-io yearn ui. 'lite religious en :;: ii ' f t!ie cio.ul Li slid to I to nUt livi;-';;riug. Tln-iv U nolmgyr a wild U-.li lor t!io car, iu which the itlol it b.i;;gtd from P.m temple to rt country :.ie and UicU ag-wt. nnd on tv.'veral oc- "joi's it Ii:im bt i'ti neee-'orv t litre 'Ot!i..i lo perform the work. New York iun. Niw lltioilkorrhlffn In I'uvla A Vati.s correspondent tell.; aUiut the now hand kerchiefs the ladiftinremrrying there. The Princess de Sagan's favorite hand kerchief u bordered with a garland of scarlet pinks; flowers and leaiMunlroid cred iu their natural colors. They are KMilcd w it h the stiiaigiierfuniecxtnicttsj fiiim the Kiine llowcrs. The lloiule Mar quise de Citt-htulde has (ill of her hand kerchiefs embroidered with the corn flower in all its v;triepiU d blue tJiades, au l her jKTfume w the tswext fccvntetl clover. Pink bast isle, with white hlies of tho valley worked on them, is the Duchess de Uragninu'B favorite handker chief. 'Un- empress of Jaui! has ordered pale .stage t men. worked itb ctiryKiollio uiums of nil existingcolors. Tit widow's liaitdkcrchief is a pitle lilac, worktnl with dark purple scabious. Now York Sun. I have no faith in medicines. My rero edic.i nre f;u,ting and the warm bath. At the fame lime 1 huve a higher opinion of thafcuigical profession thuu of any other. Napoleon. Flciiido spiders iu-e sold to capture largo number) et enakesa Uictr wchs. A GREAT PRIMEVAL TEMPLE, A Vl.lt to tho Mlfflity (Iranlto llhoki of NtofHheiff A FumoiiH Ittiln. Coming over llio crtwt of u hill just ulove the village I see owning U-fore mo a seemingly Uiundless expansti of undu laling gray intHirlund, scantily dotted with u few stray chntijai of tns-s. This is Salisbiuy plain itself, and on the brow of one of 'its nearest swells stands u clus ter of dark objects, which the veriest Hlranger would know ut it glance to In nothing else than tlie gnuiile blocks of htoiicltcngc. One's lirst impression on catching sight of this wonderful relic is apt to boa feeling of disappointment, such us one cxjierieticeH on seeing the (Jreat Pyramid rising uliove the date palms that line the highway from Cairn lo the Nile, The eciiliar effect of the Egyptian atmos phere urtuully diminishes tho apparent size of the pyramid in projxirtit-n us you approach it, and not till you are close to its foot do you at length begin to realize the ubsolute nothingness of tlie mightiest structures of modern times when com pared with this giant of the past. Ho, too, with the great primeval temple of Salisbury plain. Standing alouo timid that vunt expanse of bare upland, with nothing near it by which its height can be in any way measured fur the neare-tt farmhouse is at least half a mile distant it appears nt the first glance ah-ainHy inferior to the imposing idea of it con veyed by artists umt travelers. Hut when once you reach it and stand Is m-alli the mighty shadow of its outer bowlders, tho smallest of which towers several yards alxive our head, you begin to look iiou the Druids uud their architecture vwtli somewh; t more reverence. With id) its grandeur, however, tho shajie ef lids famous ruin undeniably conveys at lirst sight the grotesque im pression of a cliild'slirst essay iu building a toy house. The recurring feature of two upright blm ks with a third hud iim them crosswise is just the style of archi tecture which one may see growing up under the hands of some little Tonimv nr I'Veddy in any nurnory of london or New York. I'errault or Hans Christian Ander sen might have made tine capital t;f tho it lea of n baby giant who had legun to build a toy house on this sMt, nod then, having failed to complete it to bis own satisfaction, had partly knocked it down iu a lit of rage, leaving the fragments to Ik- thu wonder of all succeeding genera tions. In its original form Kleitehenge nj vars to have Urn a simple ring of enor mous granite blocks, set upright in tho turf a few fis't apart, each pair of I owl ders supporting a en slab laid athwart their lops. On the northern side this (urination i.s ttlill tolerably preserved, al though most of the cross piecen have fallen, and the bowlders themselves ;;ie so thickly covered with moss and lichens that the rugged granite is almost hidden. The southern side of the circle, on tho other hand, is now well nigh destroyed, mid the few blocks which still remain erect lean forward as if just uIhjuI to fall among their prostrate comrades. Cmuis takahlo traces of an inner ring of smaller stones ure still vif-ihle within tho larger circle, and just lietwcen the two Maud those two pail's of gigantic "uprights" (surmounted by cross slabs of propor tionate hize), which figure so prominently in all pictures and photographs of St one hen ge. At a little distance to theiiorllt of tlie circle, jmt at the edge of the high way that runs westward to Warminster, towers a vast Milittiry liowlder the out Iost Benlinel of this army of giant.-- -overtopping by two or ihnu feet at least the tallest of its colossal brethren. By what agencies ihese mighty masses of granite werctransported and arranged iu the remote and I arduous nge to winch they Udong will probably always as great a mystery as it is now. Countless anliquariei. have extruded usn the sub ject the contents of what they an phased lo cull their brains, ull flatly coutnulict ing each other as a mutter of course, nnd each insisting uhhi his own theory as tho only one worthy of the slightest atten tion. But hitherto the results attained have Ix-on on a iir with the discovery of I he learned critic in the old utory, who found out (hat tho "Iliad" was not writ ten by Homer, but by another person of the same uume. But the occupants of the ancient tem ple, when I enter it, are of a widely dif ferent sort from tho at'.iquaries or men of letters. Shock headed boys an- . lay ing leapfrog over the fallen titones. lied faced country bumpkins are drinking lccr in the shade of one of tho hugest lovl- ders, empty bottles, eggshells, cigar ends ami i-craps of greasy pajs-r lie strewn on every udi. The moment 1 npiear a photographer's agent thrusts half a dozen "views" into mv face, while a fat mar ket woman olTers me a basket of cakea indigestible enough to choke nn ostrich, Under such circumstances I naturally cut short my tour of inspection and take my departure as stum as iHvsible. David Kcr in New York Times. Webntpr'i Lnnt Miilu Uvacomlaitt. Ashburtou Welwter, tho last mule do- seentlant ol Daniel Wcltfter, uieti m New York city Jan. 2:1, 1S7U. Ho was tho son of Col. Fletcher "Webster, who was killed at the head of bis regiment in tho war for tin1 suppression of the rebellion, and was born the same year that Iad Ashburtou, his grandfather's friend, i!itt. He was ctiaeuicd at the Naval academy at Annapolis, but did not enter the navy. Afterwards he studied law, but practiced it vciv little, if any. Most .f his hto was utssed ut Maishlk ld, which he hciitcd from his grandfather, and win TO he caught thectilil that linully killci) lam, w hen the old mansion was burned in iM, Not n single ray of ancestral glory illn iniunl his uneventful career r In ightemd its clo.se. lie simply exchanged the ob acttrilv of life lor the deeoer oliM'uritv of death, mid pvoUibty not 500 (ssiplo in tho land I; new that he bad ever lived until ho had ceased to live. Ben: Perley iwrt' B ljetter, Tli (tnly iftitlrm:ui. A lady Mood hanging to tho strap of ft fct. Paul liorso car when u woikingin;m in the far corner urosu and ixjlitely ollt it d hit wat. '-1 thank you," s;ud she, "but 1 disliko to deprive tho only gentleman in the car of Ins neat. i. hicago Herald, In the .'eficultnral districts around (ho citv t'f Z'nti-cas a laborer geta tl cents daily. The hours of labor are from sunrii to sunset. Tlia l op Italia of Dakota. The l von wet d is a Dakota emit wily. (ts btalk ii lilce that of a cabbage, with a avge, round top, tho size and color of a llublxim wiuusii. 'llio "norm westers n tho fall blow the iop balls off tho talks and roll them for miles over tho irairies till they roach uueveu country, ivhero they pile up Uko snowbanks and icrvo hufTalo henls as a blielter from tho winter blizzards. A pop hill which noots any hard object explodes with a .rewendous ix'ixnt amj senus auotit tiiouiiiuuls of line, neoUk) liko Beeds lit irery tluxtiou.-l'hiMdelpuia CuU. . A LETTER. AuM thn elamormifl clty'H ittat,' Where all let warm nave fricmU too few, And ImiifHt oicu, nnn' too run-; Wlieiv toemliiK fulw linvm little truo, And allium! nlmkcii h Ix-lirf, Vol- vvliii tho lnui(li oti every wind 1 niteh the thmb ol itnlleu irrlt-f - 1 long for Khat I'ttt left behind. We hurry no; we do not Oue To vulii life llllfoineatue nil), And hy ttu- t-ninik-'M last fuinl Uiir We f too welt the Hunk we dre. Hilt 1, who've lnnl atrhnitwtoo brief Of life au holy. )tire, i kind, To think ft here i.h-1u1mim me Ihl.-f- I lohH' fur wliat I've left behind. 1 hear the Bob White' whlntlp whera The (fraleful ratutes hold tho dew; 1 aec thu uurtmiK lraLi-lien bear The fruit wtlh life hknul bhiHhlfiK through; I feel thu iueemto from eaeh leuf, W hii'h, rwking trmtful, dieH not mlud The threatening of thu etimlnj; hen( - I lolitf for what I've left behind. Denr) Yon who birat h a purer air Within your Heeiet heurt can find The why though you were here, i there 1 lone for w hat Pve left behind. William t'arvy in Thu Christian Union. A DANGEROUS PRAIRIE GROWTH. The Ciii-Ioiih I'liuit Known im the "Tum ble Weed"-. A (irfitt Men nee. W. K. Niederlumler. a nruininent real estate man, hits on exhibition in the win dow of his oiKce a tino seciiuen of the curious plant known ao lite "tumble weel. I fns Kpecunen was taken from the old fair grounds last year after the grounds were abandoned. The plant is a mass tf branchi-M, upherieal in form, and so tightly interwoven as to form ui- most a compact mass. Like the earth, this globulous mass of branches is flat tened at tho poles--or more so. The pres ent specimen is about live feet nt its greatest diameter, Mr. Nietlerlamler savs he has wen sitccimcns fuliv twice the si.e. The weed once grew rdentiftillv through this country and Colorado. When green they present a very nrettv iinnenriLiiee. and luik more like it dw;irf tree than a weed. Ihey are very dangerous incase of a iirairiu lire, and often dangerous iu piiuu winu siorms when there is no lire. In case of firo llm llames seem to strip the plant of its leaves, and it at once goes rolling before the tlaming hurricane a perfect wheel of fire. These revolving wheels uf Jiro will ilium any ordinno furrow or fire break and carry the hi. into tho titular or gn.ss, ns the "case um lie. Nothing can top their progrttw but a river. Into these they jump, leaping out into the stream forty, fifty or nxt) leet, ami go down w itn a hiss, throwing up a column of steam w here they wnk. 'I have seen hundreds of these pLul. iu BarU'r county and the Siqimshie v;.l ley," said Mr. Nicdorlandcr. "Wh.-i, started to rolling in u tiro no ordinary horse can run before them. Once, in lb Siqimshie valley, I only saved myself b. driving my team into the river, which 1 lortunately reached just in time." In Colorado wind si onus these w eed nre also a source of much danger, hi Miuuie park a lew veai-a ago a nartv of travelers were suddenly overtaken by n storm. Seeing what they nipposed to be a mass of huge bowlders in the distance. they made for them, thinking they would ull'ord at least partial shelter. To their surprise, as they approached, the bowl ders suddenly broke loose and commenced rolling toward them at a furious rate. cutting all sorts uf curious capers and gy rating menacingly as they came. At times ihey would strike an oUlmction mid bound high in the air, and acain strikimr the ground resume their rapid, circular minion. Tho travelers put spurs to their hor:es, nnd it was only by the greatest effort that they managed toeseaw from the track of tittup monsters, On exami nation they found their sumwwed bowl ders were really immense weeds which liad lavn torn up by tho roots by tl? wind storm. Them weeds are so eolid that they are a great menace to man and beast under such circuit udunccs. luiielled by a heavy w inu, iney woum go with I oreo enough to kill a horse, and a huAum being Ih iu great danger if he cannot get uut of the track of theso nmnsteif when they are running lieforo a hurricane or in case of ft prairie fire. W iclnta Journal. Winning Wella' of Northern Knglanil. An English writer snvs throughout the north of his country there are "wishing wells," where the Kisser by may breathe his wish, "and may rest assured of its fulfillment if he only drop a cnxtked pin into the water." This use for crooked pins must lie ten- erally known and practiced. Another iH'ttson says: "it is ttfurcclv lliree montlis since I looked into the wishing well at Woofer and saw the crooked pins strewed over the Uittom among thu gravel." The same tiling is told of others of these springs. One curious thing alsnit the practice is that crooked pins are used. It inav be thought that such pins, Iteiug worthless for any other use. were held as tit fortius idle ceremony. This is looking ut the matter from our jioint of view, not from that of the bumble questioner. The older and more complete cere mony is described as el ill to be, witnessed iu Cornwall. "Two pieces of straw, aUntt nn inch long each, were crossed and lite pin run through them. This cross was then dropped into the water uud the rising bubbles carefully counted, ps they marked tho years or months or days that would jkisk Ih fore the Impelling of the event which was of concern." Auguries were drawn from these crowes in oilier wavs. They were made so us Istrvly to (lout; then, "if the crosa swam, lite lluouer wiw to oothe tho year; if il Kink, he was lo the within that lime." Ol'icr matters were to Ut leurm-d from llie jstsiiiiat the ciikm took as it flouted oil thu surface. Youth's Compuniuu. A rmill Coutlnent. If an intelligent Auatntlisn colonist were suddenly to lie translated backward from Collins btreeL, Melliourue, into the flourishing wotsls of the secondary geo logical jioriod Cay nUriit the precise mo ment of time when the English chalk downs were slowly accumulating, speck by Ks-ck, on the silent floor of wane long forgotten Mediterranean the intelligent colonist would look n round him with a wet t simile of cheerful reoognitum, and nay to himself in some surprise: "Why, this is just like Australia." Tlie animals, the trees, tho plants, the insects, would all more or less vividly remind him of those he liad toft behind him in hilwipr home of the southern seas, and the Nine teenth century. The sun would have moved back on tlie dial of ages for a few million summers or ft, indefinitely (in geology we refuse to be hound by dates), und would lutvo landed hint at last, to his immense astontshment, pretty much at the exact point whence he flrat started. Iu other words, with a few needful quali fications, to be made hereafter, Australia is, so (o apeak, a fossil continent, a country still in its secondary ace, ft mt vivinn, fragment of the priuiitiw world of Uie chalk period or earlier agea, Corn hill Huntuipe, A D V K K T IS K M K NTS. What Is this Disease that Is Coining Upon Us? Liko a tliit f at it ;;-lit it wtt-als in iijiuii H uimwitivs. Tin; pa i iciit.-i hit v. mitts iiUint the ln-nt itinl si.li-fi, atiil hutiit tiini-H hi tli Inn k. Tltt-y ft'fl dull tad s!n''; tint inutith lilts a liail ttistc, i'sifiinlly in the iioniihg. A Hot t of sticky slime ollft'ts aliotit tho tivtli. The tipjietittj in jioor. There is a fueling like a heavy load on the Htonmeh; Homt'timesafitiiit, all gone stuiNatioii ut the pit of the stomtrth which food does not satisfy. The eyes are sunken, the hands) and feet become cold and clammy. After a while a cough sets in, tit first (hy, but after a few months it istittend :d with a greenish-colored ex pectoration. The patient feels tired all the while, and sleep loea not seem to afford any vest After a time he becomes nervous, irritable and gloomy, :iud lias evil forebodings. There is a giddiness, a sort of whirl ing sensation in the head when isiug up suddenly. The bow ls become costive; the skin is ley and hot at times; the blood ic comes thick and stagnant; he whites of the eyes become tiged with yellow; the urine i scanty and high colored, de 'witing a sediment after Htiind i. There is freqtienily a ilting up of the fond, si inte nt's with a sour taste nniJ metiiues with a su'.'tisL tc; this is fre(itenti; at iided with palpittition ' the art; the vision becom. im- ..ireil, with spots bci. ih, ves; there is a feeling o rettl , (lustration and wetikness. All if these symptoms are in turn ireseiit. It is thought thai ic.'irly one-third ol our popu lation has (his disease m borne of its varied fornix. It !rw been found ilint diy siciaiH liiivc misijtk.n the cause of this dis.'tise. r -;w. have treated it for a liver i-nn; daint. others for kidney .i etc., but none oi ih. tivatincnt have ' - se, etc., kinds of iti-nded with sticces C011Stii:uioil , i it is n .ally ! -1 ti.-ia. It 11' is also f.iuud tinit .Shaker Ex tract of Hoots, or Mother Sei gel's Curative Syrup, when properly prepared will remove this disease in all its stages. Care must be taken, however, to secure the genuine article. IT WILL SKI.L MCTTKU THAN COTTOX. Mr. John 0. Hem; tinstall, of Chulafirniee, Cleburn Co,, Ala., writes: "My wife has been so much benefited by Shaker Extract of Roots ot Seigel's Syrup that she saye Nhe would rather be without part of her food than without the medicine. It has done her more good than the doctors and all other medicines put together. I would ride twenty miles tc get it into the hands of any suf ferer if he can get it in no other way. I believe it will soon sell in this State better than cotton. TESTIMONY FROM TKXA8. Mi's. S. K. Barton, of Varner, Ripley Co., Mo., writes that she had been long afflicted with dyspepsia and disease of the urinary organs and was cured by Shaker Ex tract of Roots. Rev. J. .1. Mcdtiiie, merchant, of the same place, who sold Mrs. Burton the medicine, sjtya he lias sold it for four year and never knew it to fail. H111-: WAS ALMOST IIKAD I was so low with dyspep sia that there was not a phy sician to tie found who could do anything with me. I had fluttering of the heart and HwiniiniiiL' of the head. One day I read your pamphlet called- 'Life Atmmt) tlie Mutters, which described my diseass better than I could myself. I tried ti. L.aker Extract oi Roots and kept on with it until to-day I rejoice in good health. Mrs. M. E. Tiusley, Bevier, Jltilileubtirg Co., Ky. For Bale by all Druggists, or address the proprietor, A. J. White, Limited, 54 Warren bt, Itew York. S A LX OF I.OtiruttTlIII. On th, Mth daf orNuT.rab.r, ucxt. It tolng th. first day of the Duptrlor Curt, I wit! Kll at publte aurtiun .1 tb. MS tiouM duer la tb. town of Haltatx.aircMh, to Urr SUtaaad .uuatjr Ukm lor 1IM, Wl Mm or lud ta r.atki towniklf IUtMuyK.U.Dul.1. B.J.UtWIt.Uwrlir, If J.A,Julolo.,t).(l. CtUM ADVEEXISEMENTS. 1857 " TAU 1857 JiXDART at II IT. RUFE. W. DANIEL aBOCIKIES, LIQU0K8, F1NI WINES, C1UAK8, TOBACCO iit.m.M.H a i:n(.i;i,'s LAGKK BEER ON ICE. R. W. DANIEL, N.i. 10. W.sh. At. W.ldon N. f! fEiUbltslied: UK.) I '! I '- i 'i f . .t.: Mitmirartur.-rs ."ilruiu-lti'liiml ft ut .!., idi. n.iv 11 ly. ROANOKE NEWS, "WELIDOIT, IT. C. TERMS $2.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE Tlie lioauuka News was established in ISCfi and is on a firm foundation. It is Democratic in politics and is devoted to the advancement of North Carolina, Hali fax county and the town of Weldon in prosperity and wealth. While giving the news of the State, county and town, it does not ni-gloct the literary department, which it is the object of the Editors to Ulako equal to that of any paper in the State. Now .V THE TIME TO Sl'BSCiilBE. As as advertising mediim the Roanoke News is UNEXCELLED in Eastern Carolina, circulating as it does eitensively in aome eight or ten eountiea, It it read by men, women nnd children, and an advertisement in it column, in lurj to be read and to pay a fcnndred fold. Terms for advertising low, nnd oan W had on application. HALL el SLEDGE, PuUwherifcod P,ropr.etora kVaitrt'i sEStl aWU-t I .. ' j - !!