oihor's Friond is a liniment for expectant mothers to use externally. It softens the muscles and causes them to expand without dis comfort. If used during most of the period of pregnancy there will be no mprning sickness, no rising breasts, no headache When baby is bom there will be little min, no danger, and labor will be short and easy, fl a bottle at druggists. Send for a Freb copy of our illustrated book about Mother's Fribhd. The Bradfleld Regulator Co., Atlanta, 6a. jeSOtf so fr we THE IrlTTLB HOUSE, ' The little home is mcdest. and tii bid den b? tbe branches Of the sheltering trees that hover o'er - iti roof to old and brown. And the sanihlne streams upon it in a ', ' t golden flood of glory, : Like a flicker of God's eyelid, sending benedictions down. Tbe flowers grow about it, fragrant vio lets and roses, And the sparrows chirp and twitter, making music in the eaves, The morning glories clamber all around its doors and porches, And the honeysuckle 'round the gate fragrant garland weaves.1 ' , , In its prim., old fashioned garden, dear old f ishioned blooms tun riot, There the hollyhocks stand stiffly and sedately in a row. ' There the pink and the sweet william, and the larkspur and the lilac. Shed their spicy odors on the air when summer winds are low. .When our feet are worn with walking on the rocky roads of travel. Thro' the Citv of Confusion, down the Vales ot Toil and Care, When our only prayer is for that peace tbe world can tfever give ns, O, our bruised hearts, and stricken, will be sure to find it there. When at last we reach the pathway that leads upward to its threshold, When we gain its sacred portal by a long and weary route, We will And tbe gate wide open to give welcome to the wanderer, ' And the door is ever ready with the. latchstring hanging out. ? We may linger in the mazes of the City of Confusion, " f Thro' the "palaces of pleasure" we ; may long have wished to roam, Bat our steps will soon tarn backward to the brown and gnailed roof tree Where love's beacon light is shining for the little bouse is home. New Orleans Picayune. SUNDAY SELECTIONS. How many people there are who are t ready to do good; bat the trouble is to get them to make a start. . One of the highest of spiritual luxuries js the enjoyment of pure and exhilarating and sublime thoughts. Cuyler. - I have sped over, much land and sea, and mingled with much people, but never yet could find a spot unsunned by human kindness. Tupper. i - Lost, yesterday, somewhere be tween sunrise and sunset, two golden hours, each set. with sixty 'diamond , minutes. No reward is offered; for they ar gone forever. Horace Mann. . It is when great truths have struck great men that great movements have started forth. Every truth of wbat- ever size has breezes for mental sal's whenever they are unfurled. Tilden Suffered 20 Years. TBT if ES. MART LEWIS, wife of a promt- J wl nent farmer, and well known by all old residents near Belmont, N. Y writes: "For twenty-seven years I had been, a constant sufferer from nervous prostra tion, and paid large sums of money for doc tors and advertised remedies without bene fit.' Three years ago) my , condition was alarming; the least noise would startle and unnerve me. I was unable to sleep, bad a number of sinking spells and slowly grew worse. I began using Dr. Miles Restorative Nervine and Nerve and Liver Pills. At first the medicine seemed to have no effect, but after taking a few bottles I began" to notice ' a change; I rested better at night, my appe tite began to Improve and I rapidly grew better, until how I am as nearly restored to health as one of my age may expect. God bless Dr.Mlles'Nervlne." Dr. Miles' Remedies are sold by all drug gists under a positive guarantee, first bottle : benefits or money re funded. Book on dis eases of the heart and nerves free. Address, -ww J nervine! Torej HeaKhV DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. Q D I r 1 A I weakness easily cured by OrllIMsL Dr. Miles' Nerve Plaators. No morphine or opium in Dr. If ilea's Pa Put Cu AU Pain. . "One cent a dosa." ' For sale by all Druggists, Chang. Inoa IK 1 i . a m tb Liverpool and American Any weight sacks, coase or fine, fresh packing. A large stock ' Bagging and Ties, which we! offer af lowest market ' " prices; j'; Groceries in quantities sufficient to fill orders promptly. Correspondence solicited. Hall Pearsall, ' .Nuttand Mulberry streets. an 10DW ti T. Wlo 7ants to Bay ? 2,000 Bushel Corn. 800 Boxes Tobacco (great bargain Y 400 cases Starch (Celluloid & LnmnV 300 Boxes Soap (Toilet & Laundry). 100 Barrels Pocket Salt. 125 doz. Mexican Mustang Liniment. All ot these going with sucks of other goods not mentioned at a . close margin. I ask buyers to get my prices. D. L. GORE, Wholesale Grocer. Wilmington, N. C. aoSS tf i i . . a V -J i - ' - - . : . . I I $6c gtttcclvlu jSlat. . l'0 A COQUETTE. ' Her wit is like some diamond bright . Wherein rare powers combing Tis brilliant as a flush of light; J 'Twill cat m well as thine. Htr eyos are like her wit, I awearj TJ:y also play rare part, And love holds brilliant jewels there - To gild or pierce our hearts. Blii ralifas a queen In fashion's oonrt, Ji;.t vidoia breathes: "Beware! ( A sLaiturt'd heart is not my forte. And prudence sighs,. "Take oarel Alas I alas I She's too refined ; Her arts too fair I've found. Bor wit and charms are n11 ealRned ' To dazzle and to wound. " ' ' 8o, lovely lady, we must part. Twcro vafn in meto try To keep thy hollow, fickle heart I give it up I Ooodbyl -Larry Cbittcndon, "Poet Banchnian, "Toxaa (Sifter. - : MILK A NUTRITIVE. In A Medical Man Who Existed For Thirty Days on Sweet Milk. , A medical man expresses the belief that n person could live for any longth of time and take lieu vy exercise all the while on no other food than sweet milk. His convic tion is the result of personal experiment. He wanted to establish the fact that per sons convalescing from sickness may grow stronger with no other nutriment than sweet milk, and that they are not obliged to take "something solid" to eat, as so many people imagine. Be holds that many a convalescent lias gone Into his grave as a result of overtaxing his weak stomaoh by putting "solid" food into it, and he main tains that the old belief as to bread being tho first essential of; human life is shown by his experiment to be erroneous. His'test was ta live 80 days with only sweet milk ns: nourishment In the whole time he lost 5'A pounds in weight, but no strength. Ho oven" attributes the loss of woight to tho wjrmtb of the weather and to excessive exeralso on the bicycle and the daily manipulation of 16 pound dumb bells and other heavy weights. He took more exercise than usual in order to test the thing fairly. On the seventh day of tho experiment he ran several fast races in a skillful manner, bat was beaten in each On tho thirtieth day he again pitted himself against the same runner and got tho best of his opponent, which certainly would tend to confirm his statement that he Ipsti no strength during the 30 days' test He drank four pints of inllk dally for the last week. He thinks a, healthy person should take about five pints of. milk daily when no other food is being taken.' His practice was to drink milk at intervals for two hours during the day, commencing at 7 o'clock in the morning and continuing until 10 at night After that he would take no more until the next morning. St Louis Post-Dispatch. : , ' " ' Marriage. "That trouble I could have averted from my friend by a bare turn of my hand ; that mistake one thoughtful word from me would have prevented. That is the kind of self torture every Hu man being has more or less to undergo who has any influence whatever in the world. : How much more deeply may tbe responsibility bite when the sorrows of a whole family those w bo are the nearest and dearest hinge on the folly of a delib erate act of perhaps1 many years back, when two people, choosing each other for better or worse, have built up a home and house hold to depend on them and their relation unbroken! Those who marry despite remonstrance. saying, "It is no one's affair save ours," speak in the obstinacy of an almost inten tional blindness, for they nave only to loot back and forth in the family history per hapsto see where here and there and in the other place the deliberate infusion of bad blood or weak will or vicious instincts has swept a whole generation out of its in herited place. o man may live or die alone, and least of all may a man marry alone. In thut one tie are twisted strands that run back ir.to the past and forward into the future Whon tbe unhappily mar ried begin to see miserable and' furreacb ing conditions arising, it is impossible that they should not remember that nil is re sultant .upon their own 'act, which need never havo been, and with the thought tbe iron enters more deeply. Harper's Bazar. j . An Explained Ghost' This is a true JCnglish ghost story of an Dnconventioual kiud. A young lady ar rived late at night on. a visit to a friend. Sho awoke in the darkness to find a white figure at tLo Ioct of tho bed. While she watched, tho bedclothes were suddenly whiskod o3 and the apparition vanished. After an anxious, not to say chilly night, tbe visitor went down with little appetite to breakfast. At tho table she was intro duced to a gentleman, a very old friend of tho family, who had, she learned, also been sleeping iu the house. He complained of tbocuja. "I lope you will excuse me," ho said to the hostess, "but I found it so cold during tho night that, "knowing the room i ct mine was unoccupied, I took the liberty of poinr in nnd,carrying off the bedclothes to supplement my own." The reoui, as it hr.p poised, was not unoccupied, but he never loi.rnctl bis mistake. San .Francisco Argonaut. - The Ladies of Llangollen. Tho ladies were of unusually fine ap pearance. Lady EJeanor, the stronger miiiried of the two, is described as being Biniili, brisk, j.linnp, with a round, fair faco and flowing health, when they first -came to Lliiiifcolici- while licr friend was tall and fair, with a gracefol, elegant fig ure, a lxj;utiful face and sweety womanly features. They adopted a costume at once coiufortablo, sirvicvablo, and at the time becoming, from which they never varied. Each wore a heavy dark blue riding habit witlt stiffly starched neckcloth, a gentle man's l.iit and boots, and a profusion of rings and brooches. : On special occasions Iady Eleanor, wore somewhat conspicuous ornaments tho cordon of the Order of St Louis and a golden Illy almost of natural size, presents from the Bourbon family. Helen Marshall North in Century. NEED FOR SLEEP. The Most Important Connmnutlin For All Effects of Fatigno. By far tbe most important compensa- tion ior an euects of fatisrue is sleen. Everybody, even the man mentally most inert, develops when awake a mass of mental effort which be cannot afford continuously without Buffering. We need, therefore, regularly recurring pe riods in which tbe consumption of men tal force shall be slower than the con tinuous replacement. The lower the de gree to which tbe activity of tho brain sinks tbe more rapid and more com plete tbe recovery. The mental vigor of most men ia usu ally maintained at a certain heiehfc for the longest time in tbe forenoon. Evi dence of fatigue come on later at this time of day tbanin the evening, when the store of fojoe"in our brain has been already considerably drawn unon bv the whole day'a work. If no recovery by sleep is enjoyed or it ia imperfect the consequences will invariably make themselves evident the next day in a depression of mental vigor, as well as in arise in the personal susceptibility to fatigue. The rapidity with which one of the persons I experimented upon could perform his task in addition sank about a tnira arter a night's journey by rail way with insufficient sleep. Another experimenter could detect the effects of seeping nimsell awake at night in a gradual debrease of vigor lasting through luut unjn. xum oDservation was all tbe more surprising because the subject was not conscious of the long duration of the nisiuroance and was first made aware of it inoidentally by the results of contin ued measurements on tbe causes of the manifestations of fatigue. Popular Sci ence Monthly. Snakes' jEyea. The serpont is peculiarly liable, crawl ing as it does on the ground in sandy and dusty localities, to Injuries of the eye, and this organ is therefore protected by being Placed under the skin or pouter epidermis. When a snake sheds Its skin, whloh It does three or four times a year, the skin of the eye come off with the rest BUSINESS ; LOCALS M Nonas For Keal or Sale, LM and Found Wants, and other short mltceuaneoas advertisements lafsrtvd on Ant taken for last tain 80 cants. Tanas podtivaly calk la advaaea. j ' -1 - Wanted Mala Help, F Govsmment Ber vica. S.'OO appointments mide last year. Chances never better than now to secure positions examin ations soon in Wilmington.- . Particulars as to dates, salaries, Ac. and beautiful views of Washington City free. Write to-day. National Correspondence Inati tnte. Department C S. S., Washington, D. C. au 29 ft . r ).- .. 1 a Salesmen (tide line preferred): To sell Wrap ping Paper and Advertising Novelties to merchants in their territory. Correspondence solicited. Xzclu sire terrlt ry given. Kemper-Thomas Paper Co, Cincinnati. O. j -as Wit Wanted Reliable man to eprn tmal office and handle my goods. Potition permanent. Stamp and references. A. T. Morris, care this paper. m1i . - . : : VH anted Position by experienced Salesman .in grace y or general store . Most satisfactory refer ence. Addiess, Lock Bos 9, Sanford, N. C. auWlt . - : To My Friends and Patrons I will remove my Confectionery Store the latter part of this week to a more commodious stand, . No. 87 South Front street where I will keep on hand a fresh stock of Candies, Fruits, etc. Thanking my customers for their liberal ' patronage in the past and ! Soliciting a continuance of the tame, I remain A. S. i Winitead. Gilbert's old stand. ". H Y - au28tf , J uat Received The fourth invoice of that Fine Coffee, the Coronation Blend, the same at was served at the Banquet of the Carolina Yacht Club. Goods always fresh and the best, at tbe Atlantic Tea Co., Front and Market streets. '. autStl Snip your Beef Cattle, Milch Cows, Sheep and ail kinds Produce to Mj C. Benton, Mo. 5 South Water street, for best prices and prompt returns. an8tf i i : Can be found , at 18 Market street, J. J. Shep ard. Proprietor. ; By to-day's steamer 100 Ladies' Wrappers, nice goads, black and colors. Mosqnito Nets and Canopies. Piano Covert, Table Covert, White Docks, Lawns, ate , at bargains. Come quick. 1 " tf "Wanted High-grade man of go d church standing to act as Local Manager and State Cor respondent here, after having thoroughly learned our business; salary S909 if; qualified.' Kndose self addiesscd stamped envelope to A. T. Ilder, Genera Manager, care Daily Star. au4tf Wanted High-grade woman cf good church standing to act aa Local Manager and State Cot respondent here, after having thoroughly learned our business; salary $900 if qualified. - Inclose self addressed stamped env.lope to A. T. Ilder, Genera Manages, care Daily" Star J . ' au 4 If .... r - Hay Timothy Hay, mixed" Clover - Kay, Prairie Hay, Straw, Grain and all kinds of mixed feed for hones and catrie. Jno. 8. McBachem , 811 Mar ket St. Telephone m" 13 Harden, P. H. aas ta stack boggles, road Carts sad harness of an kinds. Repairing done by tkfllzal workman on short otJce. Opposto aa CoartHoass . i el Johnson & Fore WILL OFFER TO MORROW, MONDAY, Ladies' Shirt Waists. ALL Lawns, Organdies, &c, -AT, ACTUAL COST. N, BIAll persons owing as i ac- . I ! I- - ;"'!' counts are requested to make prompt payment of same Respectfully, & Fore. anSltf We Have Other Goods to offer besides 'ClOYer Bill Butter." Read oar list and find out. 100 Boies Fall Cream Cheese, Candles, Gun Caps. 1' kinds. Drugs of all Flour all grades, Inclu Jlng Pills bury's Best, which Is the Flour for good bread. ( Flsb, Fresh N. C. Fruits, Glue, Potted Ham, Cooked Ham. Car load choice Timothy Hay Ink to suit all, Jellies in Glass and in Wood. E. W. HICK8, Wholesale Grocer. an 14 DAWtf TURNIP SEED Crop 1897, JUST ARBIVED ALL VARIETIES PLANTED IN THIS SECTION. The Largest Stock and the si Lowest Prices. . -i .;' ! " h - ." , , Write for quotations ROBERT.R. BBLLiUI Wholesale and Retail Druggist, jeaatf ; Wilmington, N. C. Millinery Goods, .... ','.!..' ' ' I PRINTED ! i Johnsor j. Wa Murchison, Wtolcsale ani'Retail HariwarelDealer. I AGBNTFORJ : LafliE Sl Rand Powder, ;r. 'A- , i . j- Howe Scales, Richmond Stovesjand j CAPITOLA H CO ta (4 W a ... faat - '! j- . Steell! Eanges. Ort6n Building, Wilmington, N. C an 15 tf "clut. Eyen tbe KIDS are working bard to get the HANDSOME WATCH which It is certain will be GIVEN AWAY on October 1st, 1897, at 10 , - j a. m. by j ! - i - .- MERCER & EVANS, 115 Princess Street, Where good cheap SHOES may be had at ail times I au 14 tf GOT the CHILLS ? 50o Will Cure You, - , , WORTH KNOWING. HUGHES' TONIC is "an o'.d time reliable ' remedy for Fever ; ... : and Ague. : You oan depend upon it: i Spe Cure for CMUs ani Feyer. FOR 40 YEARS A SUCCESS. Read this Testimony then TRY IT for Yourself. ., i ' - i : 1 Preprittort havt many letters like tkttt: BETTER'THAN QUININE, Mr. M. af. Kenersm, Ark,,! wrt: "I can eenify to the fact that Hughes' Tonic is tbe best chili tonic I ever tried. I consider it better Una quinine. " ( - . - ; cures chronic cases. Mr. H. W. McDonald, Misisippi, writes: "Yoor Bagtws': Tonic lor chills and lever has never failed yet and I have sold it to a cumber of chronic cases. It cures tacra every time." Aikfor HUGHES' TONIC and Take o Other. i Oe and $l,0O BotUea, Dreggittt and - Merchants have it. jf2313t W NEW CHEESE. 150 NEW CHEESE.! I V 100 BARRELS NEW 'MULLETS. 200 BOXES CRACKERS. 175 BOXES CANDY. 700 BARRELS FLOUR. : 100 BARRELS SUGAR. ! 40 BARRELS RICE - if 10 BARRELS CANDY. W. Bj cooper, sn 33 D&W tf Wilmington, N. C Special Bargains -IN- TOBACCO and CIGARS. SAETL BEAR, Sr., 12 Market Street. au 3 tf f i Wilmington, N. C. To Any M-CatMc in Kortn Carolina. n ONLY TEN CENTS PER ANNUM. To any non-Catholic in North Carolina we will send for only ten cents per annum, "Troth" a Catholic magazine devoted to giving trui explanations of the Catholic Church, that is of the Catholic Church as it is, not as caricatured and misrepre sented. Address, "TRUTH," Raleigh, N. C. Riv. Thos. F. Prick, Manager; my9tf .DW j UOHEYJAYBD. CASH BUYERS Of' Corn, Oats, Wheat Bran, Cracked Corn, Cow Feed, &c., should not fall to get our prices be fore placing their orders. Boney ft Harper. an IS tf 025 Beward THE RITURN Or A MUL THAT strayed or was stolen from me on1 July 89, 1607. It as a Urge dark Horss Male, ova years old; htl shoes on front feet, scar ia left flank. Tan dollars rewrnd for information leading to hit recovery Ad d ess, L. C. HKRRINO. anWli DW Jaford.Dupllo county, W.C, 5 BATTLE OF THE.NHE. ITS EFFECT AND ITS INFLUENCE WERE FARREACHINQ. The Continent of Europe Wsi Convnlsad Vrom End to End When tba Newa Wsi Known Honors and CongTatulations Were Showered Upon Nelson. Of ,18 French ships of tbe line all bat two were taken or destroyed. The flee was annihilated. " Victory' said Kelson justly," "ia certainly not a name strong enough for satin a soene as I have passed.". In completeness of immediate results upon the field no fleet action baa ever equaled tbe battle of tbe Nile. Upon tbe fortunes of the particular enterprise wblcb elicited It Borjaparto's oriental expedition the effect was absolutely decisive. It became Impossible, and was by experience demon strated to bo impossible," to afford to the expeditionary forco tbo renewal of men and supplies, upon whloh depended not only the prosecution of tbe undertaking, but even tbe maintenance of tbe position already acbloved. - i . ; Tbe hifluonco of tbe battlo of tbe Nile was more fiirrencbing.-still. The conti nent of Europe booaine convulsed from end to end cs soon a tbe news was received. Elated by Bonapnrte'8 career o( victory ln: Italy and by the submission of Austria to terms of pence, the French government bad entered upon a course of arrogant ag gression tawiird other countries of whloh tbe unprovoked Egyptian expedition was only owe exumple that had aroused tbe wrath of all t nations. Even the United States was forced from its attitude of be nevolent noutrality, which bad depended upon tbe tradition of tbe war of independ ence and tbe adoption by Franco of repub lican institutions. j . ; Tbe general resentment in Europe was, however, curbed by experience of (be might of tbe French revolutionary movement, and of the French armies when wielded by a man 11 ko Bonaparte, and there was wanting tbe demonstration of some power capable of imposing an absolute check up on their future progress. .The battle of the Kile gave such a demonstration. As Nelson said, it was more than a victory; It was 'a catastrophe. The French fleet was annihilated, tbe Mediterranean passed into the absolute control of .Great Britain, the flower of the French army and the in vincible Bonaparte were cut off hopelessly from France. Turkey, previously over awed by the fleet, declared war In a month. Austria, Russia and Kaples bad already drawn together in coalition. They were emboldened, os the permanence of the conditions due to the battle became evident, to pursue their military enter prises upon a scale which brought the re pubiio to tbe brink of ruin, from which it was saved only by the unexpected and for tuitous return of Bonaparte and his acces sion to supreme power a year later. Be fore the year 1798 expired a combined Rus sian and Turkish fleet entered the Medi terranean from tbe Black, sea and under took to wrest the Ionian Islands from France. In India tbe movements against the British domination wbioh had been fo mented by French negotiations, and which Bonaparte expected to foster, fell stillborn when the disaster became known there. Kelson aware of tbe Importance of the news to British interests, had at once dis patched a special messenger overland to Bombay. j Tbe general satisfaction, not to say ex ultation, was shown by tbe honors, and re wards showered from all sides upon the victor. The sultan and the czar, the kings of Sardinia and ot the two Sicilies, sent messages of congratulation and rich" pres ents, tbe czar accompanying his with an autograph letter. On the part of bis own country, the two bouses 6f parliament vot ed their thanks and a pension of 2,000 a year. The East India company. by a gift of 10,000 acknowledged the security gained for the Indian possessions. Other individ ual oorporationB took appropriate notice of the great event, instanoes so far apart as the cities of Loudon and Palermo and the Island of Zante, showing how wide spread was tbe sense of relief. In titular rank Kelson was raised to tbe lowest grade of the peerage as Baron Kel son of the Kile. Indignant comment was made In some quarters upon the inade quacy of thi3 advancement to the brilliancy and importance of the service done. The ministry justified its action upon tbe tech nlcal ground that, though no superior was within 8,000 miles of Abouklr, Kelson was nevertheless a subordinate flag officer, not a commander In chief. j Kot, least gratifying to him, with bis sensitive appreciation of friendship and susceptibility to flattery, must have been tbe numerous letters of congratulation he received from friends in -and out of the service, and especially from men whose eminence and professional standing made their praise a sound criterion for the calm . after Judginentof mankind. Besides many other officers of character and reputation, tbe three great admirals,: Lords Howe, Hood and Si. Vincent,' the leaders of the navy in rank and distinguished service, wrote to Liui In the strongest terms of ad miration. The latter two did not hesitate to style tbe battle tbe greatest achievement that history could produce, while Howe's language, more measured, was so only be cause, like, himself, it was more precise In characterizing the special merits of the ac tion aDd was therefore acknowledged by Kelson with particular expressions of pleas ure. "Nelson In the Battle of the Kile," by Captain A. T. Mnban, in Century. A SEA ABOVE THE CLOUDS. Extraordinary Superstition Ones Preva . ; lent In England. The curious superstition that there is an ocean above the clouds is illustrated by the following strange story by an old English writer: "One Sunday the people of a certain village were coming ont of church on a thick, cloudy day, when, they saw the anchor of a ship hooked to one of the tombstones the cable, which was tightly stretched, hanging down from the air. The people were astonished, and while they were consulting about it suddenly they saw the rope move as though some one la bored: to pull np the anchor. The an chor, however, stilly held fast by the stone, and a great noise was heard in the air, like the shouting of sailors. Presently a sailor was Been sliding down the cable for; the purpose of unfixing the anchor. When he had just loosened it, the villagers seized hold of him, and while in .their hands fie i quickly died, : just as though he had been drowned. rtAbout an hour after the sailors above, ' bearing no more cf their com rade, cut tbe cable and sailed away. In memory of this extraordinary event the people of the village made the binges of the church doors out cf the iron of the anchor." It is further stated that these hinges "are. still to be seen there," a bit of evidence Biuch like Munchau sen's rope wherewith - he; once climbed to the njcon. If you doubted the story, you were confronted with tbe rope. There is another queer tale about this aerial ocean. "A merchant of Bris tol," it is said, "set sail with his cargo for Ireland.. Some time after, while his family were at supper, a knife sudden ly fell in through a window on the ta ble. When the merchant returned and saw the knife, he declared it to be his own and said that on such a day, at such , an hour, while' sailing in an un known part of the sea, be dropped tbe knife overboard, and the day and the hcuT.were found to be exactly the time when'it fell through tbe window." AH of which was once implicitjy believed by many and regarded as incontroverti ble proof of the existence of a sea above the sky, Ono is at a loss to conjecture bow that "unknown part of the sea" connected with the. rest of it A phys ical geography showing this would be no small curiosity. Boston Post To tbe poet, to the philosopher, to the saint, all things are friendly and sacred, all events profitable, all days holy, all men divine. Emerson. The man who has not passionate lo cal attachments can never become pa triotic in any broad or generous sense. -Amerioan Friend. PROFITABLE SWEEPINGS. Bow m Londoner Makes UsCbf iacaxdad Odds and Knds. I claim to bo the proprietor of the very cheapest shop in London, and without me some of tbe poorest of the poor would have to go even shorter of the necessaries of life than they do at present. The majority of my things are of first class quality, and I retail them at often less than half the price" of the most inferior stuff on the market, and make a handsome profit too. How dolman age it? I am what you might term a river marine store dealer. Every day up on the falling tide I proceed down the river with my small barge and boat and make my, way to any ship or craft which has just discharged, or is discharging, her cargo. The sweepings of the fihip are what I trade in. ';' When a ship arrives at its desti nation, no matter what cargo she has. the owner of the careo engages extra men to help the sailors get it out While this work is in progress part of the cargo more especially if it is in bags is sure to get spilled about the hold and deck. When the 6hip has finished discharging her cargo, the sailors . sweep her out to make ready for the next cargo, and the results of the sweepings are their perquisites. ' The vessels which I like to buy from most are those which contain eorh and those which have a gen eral cargo of dry goods. As regards the returns, they both pay very well. But there is far more chance of finding something in the latter cargo which will give me a better assortment. For instance, I bought a bag of, sweepings once which con tained lump sugar, haricot beans, maize, split peas, nuts of nearly ev ery description, candles, nails, two bottles of ink and a packet of writ ing paper. Some years ago i was offered a cask containing something unknown that had been picked, up at sea. I gave 5 shillings for the lot, and took it away. I noted the name on the cask, and during the same evening asked a friend if he. knew anybody who would buy the contents of the cask. He never said one word as to the nature of the stuff to me, but must have gone straight to the po lice station, for within half an hour there were nearly a dozen policemen at my place, demanding to know where the cask of dynamite was which I had offered for sala At the time these policemen arrived there were over 40 pounds lying in front of the fire to dry I ' Quite the reverse from this, how ever, was a cask I bought from a bargeman for half a crown. It con tained What I thought to be a lot of dirty pieces of marble, and was picked up on the beach near Dun genesa I placed it in the store and thought no more about it until some three months later, when my son told me he had sold it for 30 to a gentleman who had come to fetch some oil I had previously sold him. I afterward ascertained that it was a cask of the best india rubber in a raw state, and its value was about twice what tho gentleman gave for it. But I was very well satisfied, considering I disposed of it at the rate of 23.300 per cent, returnable in three months. Tea and coffee are sometimes not very clearif but there is not always any injurious dirt mixed up with them, I sell nothing7 that is not pure and have a printed card hang ing in the shop to that effect. Most of the maize, barley and oth er grain I sell as mixed corn for poultry food But the beans and the best part of the wheat pass through a si fting l machine, v containing 30 6ieves of various sizes. The wheat is then sent to the mill and ground, after which I turn it into bread. This I can sell at a profit at half the usual price. No. I do not think my peculiar trade encourages pilfering. The profits do not allow of that. At the present time I am open to buy any thing under the sun, from the loose cement which falls out of the bags to the pieces of straw which are al ways to be seen lying about after a carefully packed cargo. London Answers. - ' SILKWORMS OF LEBANON. Bow They Are Cultivated In the Monn- ' tains of Tripoli. Harry Fenn, the artist, has written a' paper, entitled "Silk and Cedars, V for St.! Nicholas, describing his visit to the famous mountains of Lebanon. Concerning the silk industry, which plays such an important part in the lives of the natives, Mr. Fenn says: As the time approaches for the silkworm to hatch-Out tbe egg the family move out of the house and camp under the trees, giving np the entire establishment to the worms, after having placed the eggs on shelves made of a reedlike bamhoo. At first the young worms are fed ijiu" finely chopped leaves, but! as they grow larger the leaves need only be broken in two. The people have to feed and watch the worms night and day, or they wander in search of food and get lost, and in the silence of the night the sound of the worms feeding is like a gently falling rain. The worms fast three or four times during this period, and about. 24 hours is the length of each fast. A curious feature about their fast is their posture. They assume the attitude of a cobra, snake about to strike and remain rigid ly fixed in thatf position for the-entire period. When they are ready to "spin,' small branches are placed on the shelves, and as the cocoons are formed upon them tbe dead (wigs seem to bear golden fruit. When the worms get through that part of the business, the neighbors are Called in something as to an old fashioned New England ap ple paring bee. They call it "qtaf" in Arabic that is "picking," and scon yon see piles of pale green, pure white and golden yellow cocoons heaped upon the floor. Later they may be spun into banks, but usually the, cocoons are sent down the mountains to Tripoli or Da mascus, and after their 80 or 40 days of toil they, too, often have to sell the prodnce for next to nothing, as the Chi-' nese are always ready to undersell them. Another curious use Mr. Silkworm is put to ic to soak him in vinegar for some hours, after which he is drawn out into so called "catgut" to make Bnells or leaders for fishhooks. ! Tbe willow has such wonderful vitality that, even When the interior is so far gone from decay that only tbe shell cf tbe tree remains tbe appearanoe of life in green leaves and foliage will still prevail. It is said that by a blunder of the maker tbe standard yard of the United States Is one-one-thousandth of an lnoh too long. 1 AN EARLY FALL We expect an early FalLf Oar i . .. - w 'ui .ran and or- have arrived and are decidedly the prettiest Patterns we have lDt Everything is new, in style and fabric. England and France dS Wl1, thts neasoo, and the modesty ot one mingles with 'the Uvet t fr0?0 , - . . ' ' ' - y : i - j ' 7 01 Mother HEW WEAVES FOR FALL OF 1897., These goods are' now In stock and we urge oar custom,. select patterns before they are "PICKED OVER." " Cal1 and DRAP D ETB, a beaatifol fabric with the soft tm of'th. tr on one side and the appearance of Ladies' C'.oth on the, other nrietta B'PINGLES. -The heavy twill-characteristic of Lhe old r. Is noticeable in this fabric, and there is one thing sure hothinz we Vp,ini "EUDORA" Silk Warp, YoTl must call for this weave and'! in order to appreciate it ana examine VENETIAN CLOTH -Like Venice, is beam ml and rh moderate and within the reach of all. , ' and tb ; PAGUIN SERGE Another tew weave, different from anvthi have seen. It's an innovation bonnd tn aUn s..., 'tnin2 r .. . .. . . . lortn exclamations ot delight from ., A. D. Successor to BROWN & RODDICK, j an 39 tf ' C THE COST IS NOT COHSIDEREO fl 1 Special atteniorirto mail orders. Statement of The National Bant of Wilmington, r WILMINGTON, N, C. Condensed from Report to the Comptroller. PBIDAT, JULY 23, 1897. ASSETS. loans aodDisconnts ......i..... Bank RniMino $281 844 24 Reoempt on Fund wilh U.'sV Treasurer U. S. Bondf.: premium on U. S. Bonds.. Stocks, Secn.ities, etc ' Over Drafts 23,(00 CO 2if0 00 fo.eoo ro 5.4S7 50 4,993 CO 82 H 84,t-9 14 128,527 15 Due from Banks . Cash and Reserve $530,668 17 No interest Paid on Deposits. Approved Security. Collections a at Lowest Rates ' JOHN S. ABMSTEOTTQ. oa . i . . TZ " ij riKSlDBNT. CONTAINS ' Than Any Bovden IJfhio The Only Known Solvent of Stone water From Lithia Springs,Ga Popular Prices. W. A. Wakely, obtained, quick Rheumatism and BOWDIN LITHIA WATER is guaranteed to care all diseases of the Kid - ' neys and Bladder, Rheumatism. Insomnia, Goat and Nervons Dyspepsia,- Posts Card brings illnxtrated pamphlet. Oar Sparkling Tabl Water Has no Equal. For Sale in Any Quantity By BOWDEN LITHIA SPRINGS CO. marSD&Wly I Make Your Idle Money Work for You by De- i positing it in The Wilmington Savings & Trnst Company, The next interest quarter will begin September. 1st. Deposits made on or before that day begin to bear interest the 1st day of. September at the rate of 4 per cent per annum. Every clerk and mechanic in Wilmington should have a nest egg Jn the Wilmington Savings & Trust Company. I au3tf ; ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK, : WILMINQTON, N. O . . Makes liberal loans to customers move tne cotton and tobaccocrops, when good security is offered, avery accommodation consistent with security and reasonable profi s accorde in all branches of banking. Promptn-ss and accuracy gnarantfed. No interest paid on depoy'tj; BOOK BINDING AND RULING The Star Job Printing Office, Are Complete in EVERY VARIETY OF PRINTING, RULING ANDBINDING DONE NBATLY, EXPEDITIOUSLY AND CHEAPLY. " FayetteviUe, IT. C.f A select home School fnr States last session. Not a case of Write for catalogue. . Yl i UW lm Col. DRESS onnn? f. t?. be Price is yon lut oumirai nn -t,a t womankind. " mH a-uciks ana naids in all cnln r WE OFFER . A solid Blact Walnut Ladies' Sew ing Rocker for $1.50. w' A High Back Hand Carved OaV Leather Seat Polished Dining Ctair for $1.55. , A High Back Catved Wood Seat Diner for 50 cents A Polished 'Oak Leather' Seat Rocer fur $2 65. V Mm MMUs m f arflrta at manufacturers' prices. 'Seeing is believing.'-Come see. 116 Market Stfeet, Wilmington, N. C. au 24 tf LIABILITIES. Capital Stock... Sorplns Undivided Profits .; Dividends Unpaid...... , Circulation. lleposits ,,, .$iro,oni ro ,. 11.500 0(1 ,. 1,015 69 ,. ) 3M 00 ,. 45,000 00 .. 372,629 18 $5M,t6S 17 Loans Made at the Lowest Rates on Specialty, and Remitted for Promptly , V. R. TTAWF18 - " I Cahijr, MORE LITHIA Other Natural BROWN THE SNEED CO,, mineral Water tn the IT or Id B In the Bladder and Kidneys. 4 Dr. J. B. S. Holmes, ex-President Georgia State Medi ca ssociation, says: "Have used Bowden Lithla Water exnsively in bladder and kidney troubles, and the re sults have been most gratifying," M. D., Auburn, N. Y., says: "Have and satisfactory results in Chron.J Bright's Disease." 174 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. . . : desiring money with which to help - Book Bindery and Ruling Rooms Their Appointments. f WM.H. BERNARD, Proprietor, Wilmington, N. c Ulilitaiyl lAcademy. ; TTIrrlo tnHnreorl . BoVS ffOrfl "VC serfon sirVn!i sinrft its foundation. T. I. DREWRY, C. E., Pilncipa- 1 r