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lymsTON JOURNAL, KlNSTON KINSTON JOURNAL PUBLISHED EVERY ZUUltt3XXsVJ OURNA ! 11 INST0W, LENOIR CO., M. C. tta..... icoj sr i cci ntt JW... esqueesseeJsacs rt tMUeoumMte Tits ltd.... .. uieiutejiiwjndmw Editor and Proprietor. TL S. NTJNN, Proprietor. ; Independent in All Things. sans or svrcairrioa i 11X0 FEB TH1IL On leu.. $3 00 Six Hontha... ......... ...... l 00 VOL. HI- KINSTON, N. C, THTJESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1881. tftglarrats Blank always on hand. NO. 38. Osstrasta lor fclrtHc asjr -r- av ttflM M be saaWU at tfcs mOmvt Cte Kami Jocuu, la Iks triak Mar CWwU KMl, - ... The Lost Kiss. I pat by the half-written poem, While the pen, idly trailed in toy hand, Writes on : "Had I word to complete it, Who'd read it, or who'd understand ?" Cat the little bare feet on the stairway, And the faint, smothered laagh in the hall, And the eerie-low liap on the silence, Cry up to me over it alL Ko I gather it up where was broken The tear-faded thread of my throne, Telling how, as one night I sat writing, A. fairy broke in on my dream, -A little inqnlsitive fairy My own little girl, with the gold Of the son in her hair, and the dewy Blue eyea of the fairies of old. Twas the dear little girl that I scolded " For was it a moment like this," f. said, "when she knew I was busy, To come romping in for a kiss i Couie rowdyiog up from her mother, And clamoring there at my knee For 'One 'ittle kiss for dolly, And one 'ittle uzzer for me! ' " God pity the heart that repelled her And the cold hand that turned her away! And take from the lips that denied her Ti,i answerlfcHH prayer of to-day I Tkf, IiOrd, from mem'ry forever That pitiful Hob of doapair, And the patter arvHrip of the little bare feet, And tiH one piercing cry on the stair I I put by the half-written poem, While tli- pen, illy trailed in my hand, IV riirH in : " Had I 'words to complete it, Who'd read it, or who'd understand ? " lJ:it the little bare feet on the stairway, And the faint, smothered laugh in the hall, And the; eerie-low Hup on the silence, Cry up to me over it all. J. IV. liiley, in Indianapolis Journal. TOPICS OF THE DAT. m -w Z M.M. WWW - 0h, Losette aear .uiseiiei cnea gracious and rjndmurbed young ho tt- Barbara. "Im so sorry, but L gave the esses. steak to a tramp, yesterday, between They all enjoyed their impromptu Th foitune of the late John IJurnaiJe two slices of bread and butter. He lunch in spite "of the mystery that sur- of New Orleans the rich old bachelor, looked so nungry, ana ne saaa ne naa rounded it; and when Mr. Dulcimer re- E0 by examination to $3,000,- naa noxmng uul raw nurmp w iur turned to the hall, they all walked half- vw instead of $5,000,000, as at first two days, ana wnen x was loosing ior way through the woods with him. starred, and the pangs of hunger more I than any immediate danger of capture j were doul4!?s the compelling mo tire to surrender. Bitting Boll has been called the Sioux Napoleon, from the bold leadership he has shown, but his LADIES DEPJLimiEJT. Man lore the tiyt'riu. A leas sky and the Ml-blown rose !eav him unmoved; but the violet which . . .... estimate, lint tb n V. 1 T r . . - aides lis uuamrg beauties ttial the white roses, this morning, I saw the two tv. n v r. t7. m ! . v.w ,v. fn tt v..i ru""J Ma UT! "V" w7 bush, and the w j w u auu vv . iui . iu if wi muF aQii cj wa m tms. aao s i ass slices with only one mouthful bitten Barbara, with sparkling eves. T fn. no relatives at all when he died a short ' i a : i - ix. i T A J 1 . - w. oux oi eacn, nung into me uububb. auu, cie(i J0U ft hauehtv ariatoerftt. hn ume ago, but now there are scores of wouldn't notice his humble neighbors l1 ad they are still popping up like at all r I toadi tools. Philadelphia has furnished " I hope you are disabused of the idea 0x166 there are sereral of the now," said the young squire, smiling. large t wards to hear from. A town " un, entirely I said Losette. wmca canno rurnian a uurnside now ....-- i i . . . . . "And, believe me." said Mr. Dulci- Qeserre8 10 Decut off from the least ln- iuor, iioiumguarDara s sum, Drown hand s """g eaiaws ot deeds of the band are the lon thouxrh m nis a second or so longer than was WUAI"J Europe. oh, Lisette, there was a black bottle be- sMe them. And Tm afraid he wasn't a nice, honest tramp I" - "Then that settles the meat-pie busi-1 ness.". said poor Lisette. " Couldn't we make the white pigeons into a fricas see?" " My white doves into a fricassee?" been overrated. His vindictive ferocity, however, it is hardly necessary to say. has never been exaggerated. Since 1869 he has been the pest of the Mon tana border land, and during that time has been engaged in numerous raids upon the white settlers, his band being the most powerful and dangerous on the plains. The most famous of the moon when etaergisg be hind a cloud, are to Lira source cf In spiration and pleasure. Modeaty is to merit what shade is to painting it give boldness and prominence. Nothing adds more to female beauty than mod eaty. It sheds around the countenance a halo of lignt which is borrowed from virtue. Botanists have given the rosy hue which tinges the cup of the white rr4 Xetfcen. If aa U kedm a 3 Ue Ur4s KVki Urv to s4 mm Ay la 1U ot ta. Or Wn er 1m 5 saaiwaJ ee feaU aayt "WliraarC ttltaaa4 Ul ml UrUf WVU voaU i rch Jtx4 &k4a er akyiat, wr or trvm T almost shrieked Barbara. "Oh, you absolutely necessary, " I should never cruel, cruel, heartless, marble-souled have forgiven myself, if, through any thing! Why don't you talk of making law of stern necessity, I had eaten up BARBARA'S GUESf. " Cooipany for dinner I" cried little Barbara, in despair. " Oh, Lisette, what ftbaU we do?" It was a KUDf-hiny day in early July, j as fast as you can me into a fricassee, and done with it?" "Barbara, don't speak so loud !' said Lisette, energetically. "We'll send to Widow Millett's and borrow her din ner!" " What V said Barbara, fairlv as tounded by the magnitude and orig inality of her young sister's idea. "Send Benny," said Lisette. "Tell V til i a " m mm uer we li return n next weeK. write a note, and say that papa has invited a gentleman to dinner, and that we haven't a mouthful fit to eat in the house, ex cept bread and cheese. Mrs. Millett is an excellent cook; she always has some thing nice. And you will see that this will help us out of our dilemma." "Yes!" sighed Barbara; "but there's my muslin dress. Why couldn't the man stay away until 1 nad modeled it over, like the plate in the fashion 'maga zine?" , " Never mind the fashion magazine," said Lisette; "but run and set the table And be sure that your white doves in the shape of a fric assee. And he disappeared into the woods leaving Barbara and Lisette looking with amazement into one another's eyes. "Lisette!" cried Barbara, 'breath lessly, " is it possible that he could have heard what we said ?" J " He certainly has" Lisette made an swer, with a comic gesture of despair. And then Benny was called into the witness box, and made to own up that the elegant luncheon came direct from Dulcimer Hall, and things seemed worse than ever. " We are rightly punished," said Bar- Flaced 1x1 anything she may ssy. Mrs. Samuels the mother of the James boys whose exploits in the Western country have gained them an infamous notoriety, looks upon her sons as heroes. She lives about four miles from Kear ney, Clay county, Mo., and always ap pears in Kansas City promptly after the committal of a conspicuous crime. A few hours after the recent train robbery, in which her sons are supposed to have participated, she arrived there in accord ance with the predictions of the police, anxious to hear all the news and talk about her "boys." She affirms that Jessie and Frank are dead, and there fore could not have been engaged in the robbery; but not the least confidence is rose the name of "rasidea blush." This untimately unsuccessful siege of Fort pur md delicate hue is the only i-sin. Christian virtue should use. It is the If all tW beOm sf a3 t gtrta Aul Wy tin to tw ate day Trees eeaatjV grvuS Or tkt Tsf-iaatt, Jt saatiwafhS mm aWVil ay i Wsoa ar mum ftria twa4 toyx F;4U of rrvV trvla a4 maUm 1 KIM art UV C ar. a p I -cmu is g ; Pease in 1875 and the Custer massacre June 25, 1876. Since the latter date he has been a fugitive, and made his escape into Canada, where he and his followers lived quietly and safely for a time. But his band has been weakened by de sertions until now, with a few adherents and reduced by poverty and starvation, he is but the wreck cf his former self. For the present he will be kept a close prisoner until a determination in his case is reached. PC5GE5T PAEAGRAPHa. Wind and Weather, At a recent meeting of the Farmers' club of the American Institute, Mr. A. J. De Yoe, of Hackensack, N. J., sent the ticheat ornament. A woman without modesty is like a faded flower. diTusia an unwholesome odor, which the pro dent gardener will throw from him. Her destiay Is melancholy, for it termi nates in shame and repentance. Beauty passes like the flowers of the albe. which bloom and die in a few hours; but modesty gives the female charms which supply the place cf transitory ireannees oi youio. Foppsca, wife of Nero, uted a mask to protect her complexion from the rca. The chair of O reek language and lit erature in the TJnirr mtv of Kansas has with the great clusters of tiger-lilies all you put on the very best cups, and re in blossom in the garden, the cherries member to turn the cloth so that the boRinning to turn crimson on the trees, darned spot will come under the tea ana tue roses Hinging their subtle fra- tray?" grance on thn air, as if tbey fancied themselves Mooming in some Persian vule. The tl erinometer stood at eighty in the bhfide. Squire Dulcimer's hay makers wore dotting the sides of the distant upland, and all the windows of the little collage were wide open, to admit whwtover stray whiffs of cool wind might be roaming athwart the blue air. And little Barbara had ripped her muslin dress apart, and was fcittinar, Turk-fashion, on the floor, con sidering how best she might combine the breadths into something more mod em, when Lisette, her sister, came fly ing tumultuoasly upstairs, like the wild little sprite that she was. . Barbara was small . and dark, with bine-black braids of hair, large, solemn eyes, a crimson dot of a mouth, and the prettiest of round, dimpled, chins Lisette was tall and slender a sort of human lily, violet-eyed and transparent skinned, with shining yellow . curls, gathered into a net, and a sweet, bird like voice, not unlike that of a linnet. And these two girls, with their little brother Benny, were all that the old doctor had. He had married late in life, this odd, eccentrio disciple of Galen, and lost his wife when Btuny was a baby; and ever since the young things had grown up by themselves, like the wild roses on the edge of the woods. " Do I" repeated Lisette. " We must go down and set the table, that's what we must do." 44 But there's nothing iu the house for dinner i cried Barbara, tragically clasping her hands, as she rose out of the whirlpool of pink -muslin on" the floor. "Oh, dear! oh,, dear! Why don't people stay at home' when they aren't war ted?' Who is it, Lisette, anyhow?" 44 I'm sure I don't know," answered Lisette. 44 Some traveling book agent, I suppose, or some shabby genteel medi cal man, from nobody knows where, who thinks he is entitled to come here just because papa is an M. D. I only caught sight of the back of his coat, but it had a dreadfully seedy look." 44 1 do think papa is too bad," sighed Barbara. "I was going to have the " UV1C UttJ ir dressmaking, so as to look And downstairs sped little Barbara, with cheeks as rosy red as cherries, and black braids breaking loose from their yins in a confusion of shining jet ; while the guest, sitting composeely out upon the pqreb, had had full time and opportunity to comprehend the entire situation. 44 1 seem to have arrived at an inoppor tune season," said he to himself. 44 1 am sorry now that I accepted good old Dr. Bloom's cordially-proffered hos pitality. But I am rather too substan- tial to vanish down into a crack and too real to float up in a pufTof vapor, like tho genii in' the children's story books; so I must remain here and abide until the end of it. But I'm glad they aren'6 going to make little Miss Bar bara's pigeons Into fricassee." Three minutes afterward, when little Ben, the youngest of the family, rushed whistling out with a covered basket, he was deftly intercepted by the stranger. " Where are you going, young man ?" questioned he, in a low voice. "To the Widow Millett's," said Benny; 44 with a note." : V Don't go there," said the stranger, " Go across the woods to the hall, in stead it is but a few steps further and give this card to the old house keeper there. And hark ye, Tommy" "Benny, sir, please," explained the lad.' 44 Benny, then don't let your young ladies know that you haven't obeyed their orders. 'I'll make it all right with them, and here's a silver dollar for you." . , Benny darted away, with his face all ismiles ; and just then up came the old doctor himself, apologizing for having been so long in finding the dusty old ..volume which he carried under his arm. "But I always lose track of time when I get among my books" said he. Barbara had just come downstairs, after a hurried toilet, which had added a pink ribbon bow to her dress and a cream colored rose to the heavy black braids of her hair; when she found Li sette in the little dining-room. " Barbara,' cried Lisette, 44 just look here t Is it enchantment that has been at work 7 oars Dursting into tears, "for our m- hospitality. And I never never shall forgive either myself or Mr. Dulcimer !' But she did. She forgave both the criminals before the young moon, now hanging over the hills like a thread of silver, had widened into its full shield of luminous pearl. 4 'We are friends," she smilingly ac knowledged, to Mr. Dulcimer. 41 So far so good," said the young squire. 44 But may I not hope that one day we may be something more ?" And Barbara blushed celestial red, and said " she did not know." So Mr. Dulcimer leaves the solution of that problem to time. But it is more than probable that the question will be settled to suit him. f11nD(n Ian Vi wi 1 A a t Vi . naa r 9 - It All.. .1 which a person can stand beneath his a ,or 7 Some curious statistics of suicide are own vine or fig tree in any part of the published in a German paper.from which Northern Hemisphere (north of latitude 044 Da 7"a it ft that, rnntnrv tn th crpnArl fifteen) and for hundred of miles aroun 1 liond ring will scratch her no, in belief, the number of suicides in London bim he can form an accurate opinion &ten Vio3 is relatively much less than in other European capitals. In Leipzig, the " Chimborazo of suicide," as it is called by a German professor, the average number of suicides from 1875 to 1878 was 450 per million inhabitants; in Paris it was 400; in Vienns 285; in Berlin, 280, and in London only 85 per million. Another popular notion, that suicides are more frequent in November than in other months is also incorrect; the greatest number of suicides occurring in May, June and July. . Those who are tired of life or are destitute of the means of supporting it, usually hang them selves; while those who commit suicide for shame, remorse, or unrequited affec tion, take poison or use firearms. The proportion of men to women who com mit suicide is as four to one. , four times at cf!a as how the wind and weather are progress- 7 woman. In roan iranciaco a handsome Italian woman cf eighty, with ailrer Lair, is a A Journalist. Journalism, being the most liberal and progressive of callings, presup poses necessarily a relative degree of enlightenment among those who follow it. Mhe journalists, as a class, must be Christian families in Constantinople men not only of a broad general culture, mo prohibited from hiring Mussulman but wide-awake, observant minds, inca pable of intellectual stagnation. It is this universal wide-awakeness, this quality of alertness and progressiveness joined to a culture rathervbroad than deep, that gave to men of this class their peculiar aptitude for society, and renders them the delight and ornament of the circle in which they move. A journalist may be shallow, but he can- women as domestic servants but recently the mother of Sir Alfred Sandison, the chief interpreter of the English mission there, hired a Turkish girl a cook. Feeling ran high against the girl and it was not many days before she died under suspicious circumstances. Sir Alfred notified the police of Pera, who dis covered, or said that they discovered that the cook had been insane and had not be ignorant; ho may be superficial, probably committed suicide. She was but he cannot be narrow; and he must, of necessity, be a man of extensive general information and enlightened ideas. Of course there are exceptions to the rule, for there will be quacks and pretenders in every profession, but then buried, although tho Christians of the town of Yenekeui, where tho inter ment took place, strongly protested against a burial without examination. The minister of police heard of this, caused the body - to be exhumed and whatever deficiencies he may possess, a entered upon an inquest at which it was practical . journalist, even of the most I found that the girl had met her death ing, 1. When the temperature falls sud denly there is a storm forming south of you. 2. When the temperature rises sud denly there is a storm forming north of you. 3. The wind always blows from a region of fair weather toward a rsgion where a storm is forming. 4. Cirrus clouds alwsys move from a region where a storm is in progrets toward a region of fair weather. 5. Cumulus clonds always move from a region of fair weather, toward a re gion where a storm is forming. r. When cirrus clouds arc moving rapidly from the north or northwest h ere will be rain in les than twenty four bourn, no matter how cold it mav be. 7. When cirrus clouds are movin rapidly from the scuth or outhwct there will b a cold rain storm on tho morrow if it be summer, and if it be ranter there will be a snow storm. 8. The wind blows in a circle arouud a storm, and when it blows from the north the heaviest rain is east of you; from the south, the heaviest rain is west; from the east, the heaviest rain it Kouth; from the went, the heaviest rain is north of you. 9. The wind never blows unless rain or snow is falling within one thousand miles of you. 10. Whenever a heavy white frost occurs a storm is forming within one thousand miles north or northwest of vou. moderate pretensions, is rarely or never that bet noir of polite society ex pressively termed, in f eminino phrase ology, " a poke" or "a stick." He al ways knows the latest 6lang perhaps he even invented it; he can tell every thing that is going- on everywhere a great deal better than the people who live there; he has always seen the latest new. play and can tell ail -a Don t tne by violence. It was impossible to prove that she had been murdered by her aggrieved co-religionists though this is strongly suspected. At all events the affair has caused great excitement, and every endeavor is to be made to get at the bottom of the mystery. professional foggar, txtvilhtUndicg that she owns three bouses for which she receives $180 a month. The mother of the Saltan Abdul Axis has sddressed a letter to the Saltan Abdul Hamid thankicg him fcr hsvisg revenged her son and purified LU nine acd dynasty from the stain cf suicide. The Empress Augusta, cf Germany, it a woman of great courage and pa tience. For many years she has suf fered torture! of istcnae pal a from a wcariag dUco, and has borne it with a remarkable energy, firmness and quietness. At the Bag hot fanry fair, ia vLich royalty ahirrd so active a ior?, a ?onng gentleman took a fancy to a certain arti cle and remarked to a ladi at tt stall that it wat very pretty, hhe aeated, adding: My mother nt it." lUally," M)ftly reautued the cuattaer. AYfcy, let me ; I almost think I matt have Lift your mother. Her name it V "The Qncen," replied the Malelady." JitripM gjeaadinrt are the tamt sty. lit-b. Finger rings are not worn in tie street. Hand torso ptraoi are e-Jged wj'h Spanish lac. Very little jewelry should b-i worn with summer toilets. It i the height cf fsahion to Lang a C cf eld faded laptalry on the wall Fantastic figures are embroidered in bright colors on artisti and fancy lawn tet.uit cofftumes. The mualin skirt compotod of tvo plaitings falling one over the other is as old as the hills cr thereabout; ssy about fifteen years eld. 31 all e and balitte dres- in pale tints The tins Silence appears U the new Bottoo directory. It must bslcng to one of the masculine gender. A firm advrrtlftes Bathing BuiU.0 We knew that losg aga It suits the majority, especially La Rcsa. What does a woman care who wrote the declaration that made us frea, so losg at she can gtt a bustle for fifty cants. A Bufalo paper Las an article tm "Giant Thirty Fet High.- That last rain seems to Lave done a heap cf good. VcVs oV. It was a fancy little boy who, whsa he saw a dairyman f eedisf his cows salt, said he thcsgU tby didn't salt the butter till after it was churned. A man who had tried nearly Irrtrj thieg and failed became a shots&aksr and prosptred. lis. sail he was bound o l sncceatful at tha last. An excLar $ thinks that the funnlsai thieg cxrerakg a pknio Is thlnklsg about it before you start. The text f urnieat thkg Is cos grit nisling ycursaii hen it is over. A tan c&a iif e a Leg four mllss aloog a country road with brckea-dowa fT.cts a i keep his Ucjj but when it comes tv putting ca a pair cf aid glare that's too much. H1I where did yea g4 that tro-a- acrsf" asked an Iriahmaa cf a man who happened to be paaaisg with a remark ably shcrt pair cf trousers. M I go them where they grow," was Lbs Indig nant reply. Then, by csy cacjaeUaos," thsza a year said Tat, "you've pulled tco socar She was ttaahicg and fiirty, and whan Lm aaid Lev father was a broker and a as connecttd with on cf the Wading railrrada in the country, all the men at the wale ring 'place wcra after hsr. Titf didn't dUcovrr until the end cf tb) saaoa that broke the trains. Ler palrrnal rtlatira Of late years there has been much discussion as to whether vaccination ia eomintr urima donna before anvbodv Ia7 safeguard against smallpox, else has heard of her; knows what new pictures will be on exhibition at the academy, has read the last new novel before it is well out of pressi in short, he knows something of everything, and is never at a loss for conversation. The slight professional stiffness that clings to men of purely literary callings, as the clergy and authors for instance, is rubbed off the journalist by constant contact with the world. He is not merely a writer and a student, but gen erally something of a politician, and a practical business man besides. Begin ning his career usually as a reporter or correspondent, and working his way by successive stages to the editorial dig nity, he often adds to the refining influ ences of literary culture the advantages of extensive travel, and a wide experi ence of men and things. He is a bet- ter balanced man every wy tnan tne Benny's big eyes, watching them from purely literary character, who usually behind the lilac bush that shaded the sacrifices the practical too much for to GuniW . : w Pr window, grew preternaturally bright as be contemplative. or tne promotion alone in !,T P. he noted their amazement : and at the of a ML healthy, vigorous intellectual W vvainiiat V. I w MAV4UVUS InUO uuului duuiudu " - I AUCl w ... - n I - a quoted Li dolorouslv all v: .i.- 1 fi:. it if there is no calling IUBClJ . .... uoul&n't . , I , ii .BMu... -? - r nnvaconated it' reaches tne enormous 1 1 ik' r m - n urn n i n r . - . . . - amj. a a n v i i .. ... 3 1 dorr,t i i . a or upon tne taoie was spreaa a oui- Jce t at church next Sunday, for Mr. ution ofcold boOed ham. sardines glist- "uiimer and his sister are cominir back. L.-s ..i. i uno doesn't want to look like a na Tl a.' "v 1W4 XIAO a na- Sal a A inA ,nnr.A mVo trVllf OTArtAS "ve I'ataconiftn kA t . . 1 4VW r - wBvuian. And I was cmncr in 1 3 . . . .., .t give papa bread and a , raw Dernes as. large as iaay appies. of home-nr? d a gla8S And a slender roll of French bread was "ewhatheeata , P cut in sHces on. a napkin in the center Wri Zrr- t he 8 so particu- cf the board, vliila .a1f a r! AT ATI Ttates , . . m3 Kuests. And T , . . .7 r ue loie gras in their nttle metallic cans stood opposite. j . and the following statistics which have been published by Dr. Buchanan, the medical officer of the London local government board during the present epidemic of the disease in the English metropolis will be found to be valua ble data from which the question may be argued intelligently on both sides. During the past year 1,532 per sons of all ages died in London of smallpox, and of these 325 were certi fied to have been vaccinated and 637 not to have been vaccinated, while the facts about vaccination are not stated in 570 of the cases. Estimates made by the ' Metropolitan Asylums board in Two Historical Incidents. Whether from a medical or a political point of view, few historical crimes have better merited attention than the first attempt upon the life of William the Silent, founder of the Dutch republic j of color, trimmed with imitation Valen- A pistol shot, fired by a half-crazed ciennea and flemish point and Vermi- Spaniard named John Jaureguy, trav- re Hi laces, make lovely afternoon and ersed Prince William's face and throat, evening watering-place toileU. causing an effusion of blood which Artiatio parasols have spray cf eg- seemed to make his death absolutely Ian tine, daisies goldta rod, straggling certain. No regular surgical appliances inMcts, and sometimes birds tainted as being at hand, two of his friends re- I if falling or flying, au nature I, over the Iieved each other for several hours in I gores on the outside, sometime en keeping their thumbs pressed upon the wounded artery till help could be ob-1 while the linings show shaded effects la tained, and this simple device actually I fall, delicate tints of blue, green, rose saved the prince's life for the time be- I cream, pearl and pur white. ing. More akin to President Garfield's L!w aGIrlMte a Train. A lata Irtua cf the Odta (ia.) i. fmirimr tayi: On lat Wednesday night, when CXeil, Dona'.u and Olmalead went down to death, a roils girl, but fifteen years of age, was watching fear tlw PmJetj cf tho hoa dnty called them out over th railroad ia the fear ful storm. KaU Shelly, who father was killed en tha railroad seme years ago, lire with her mother fust ca the ral side cf the riter, and nearly eppo eite where the eegioe made the fearful plocge and Donahue and Olmitead lost their live!. Mian Shelly and her mother heard oca crash, and, realizing wha had Lapprned, KaU took a lantern and atarted for the wreck. Her light socn went out, but she felt her way through the woods and fallen Umbers to tho exlge of iha daubing waters thai cov ered the drowned men. Bho could hear above the roar cf tho storm tho voice of Wood, the engineer, who had caught in a treo top. Kha knew that tho ex- preas with its load cf passengers was croaching on tho lace border cr fritge, da- a young gixl, was tie only unsLg Dei eg vno couu prevent aa awf ol catas tropha. The telegraph ede at Moisgna or Boon was tho enly case in the universal interest which it excited, although widely different in other respects was the murder, as it is now held to have been, of Count Mira- beau, the famous popular champion of the earliest days of.the French Revolu tion. The moment his illness noised abroad the people closed the street against carriages with their own THE HOME DOCTOR. nineteen times more numerous than the bands tbut the theaters and roughly BeTer-failing. kirAint, to t;. nn( of I handled more than one party of ball-1 A very weak I goers. Thousands upon thousands When a mustard plaster is not wanted to b lit ter, mix the mustard with th white of an egg. To remove substance from the eys make a loop of briatls or horsehair. In sert it under the lid, and then withdraw lowly and carefully. This is said to be stomach which ref oact to aasimilato asy other food may some-1 tho wind blowing a gala. placo where aha could notify tho coers To Boone was five miles orer hills and through tho woods and before aha could get there tho express would hare passed. To Moingona was only a mils but between hers and Moisgona was tho Deo Moines river, tea or fifteen fact above its natural height, and to crcas this sho must pasa orer tho railroad bridge, fifrv feet abort the swollen waters. Sho must cross this bridge, 400 fast long, with nothing but th tias and rails 5oi last a sent the thanse for tW . i e 10 - w ni fn.: .... a lwWr st r,, BUS. and carelessly buttoned dressing gown, comparable to the higher orders of mod " As well trv to c&irh . 1 tiahered his guest into the nreBence ern iournalism. Philadelphia Sun, f .... - - BUYtff ..1 1 - V " , . . - I ui me wilderness," said Barbara. "C? Bhters. uum uouk thej were every one of V I v ' 1Mcimer. Lisette," said . cDars htUe girl, here's our vised census of 1881, 3,020,000 have Jlie1 eaca oer rouoa vae iTuiieuBm, umea ue laagni u ao u woia proper jy been vaccinated, and the unvaccinated n1 Mirabeau's doctors were literally by a diet cf skimmed milk ; cno-half class numbers 190,000. Applying the crowded off their feet whenever they pint taken every four hours with some mortality from smallpox at all ages to PPrJ- "f11 France," it was en- lime-water if necessary. Is the amount these classes it is found that the rate Pcally said. " attended the funeral; prescribed, of smallpox mortality for the twelve- and the aeal of some admirers went fur- A jWh gurgeoa month among the vaccinated is but tLer stllL " elevation cf a person's arm will stop million, while among the " , - bleeding at tho nose. Hsaxplains tho nirnT xoo Daa inn ih auuuju ue, growled the fellow, ihen Mirabeaa's dead.- (rained mmh i A neat-pie r suggested Lisette. . meat make Barbara, brusquely. i TesteH the remain8 ot day before 1 yesterday eleav ttM r.. -""P fa and-" of," We When a woman burns her finger she cries a little over it, and keeps the burn in good condition to show her husband when he comes horns ad get sympa thy. A man in the same condition will x! . Li. S'''L Via mnntfi 1nV OTPT Anaintha mifl.t . .. . -t tiohand ru.i neir consternay tneomco bwui, bww bra nuJSiiSl'- Bar- forget ail about it. One is tho effect of oara w.rs obliged to aasu, tho part of lort; tho othsr of Ymsineoi. - bm.vj aavav w w av ighbor, the youhcr mti.ta. "nnl.iTr.o-r Ti70Ut0 mJ cirla-Blonde figure of 3,350 per million. , Sitting Bull has surrendered at last A Michigan girl went into the par- and one of the most troublesome Indisn son's with heryoung man to get married chiefs of the present generation is harm- but just before tho knot was tied sho less for the present at least Tho tele- was called to tho door. She did not graph announces that he arrived re- come back and then it was found out ,w tPnriBnford with 150 followers that sho had gone straight to another and has been received and placed under I parson's and married a rich widower olive oil to diaaolro it, shako up well, emird bv the commandant of the who had sent word that ho was wait- and rub ths inflamed joints night and jtnn and his band wtra nearly ing for her tham mcming. and mora frequently If painful iua aai - .... fact physiologically, and declares it a positive remedy. It Is certainly easy of triah Or a strong solution of alum wa ter, snuffed up tho nostril, will euro in most caaea, without anything further. To cure bunions uso pulverized salt peter and sweet cil. Obtain at a drug gist's five or six cents worth cf salt peter; put into a bottle with suScient in a thousand bet would Lav ahruxk from such a task. But this brave girl gathered about her her flowing alirt and on hands and knee crawUd over tho long bridge from tie to tia, WUh tho blood from Ler Uorralod knees rtlMTig her dreas sho reached the ahotw, and ran tho remaining half-mils to tho telegraph cSLcm. Brrathless and Labrokso aeceuts she told her stcry and fainted ia tho arms cf the bystand ers, Tho wires were set at work and a mora horrible disaster was averted. X doctor recently leprorad a friccd for his too liberal cso cf absinthe. Bah r said tho hater, Tv drank cf It ainco I was a boy, aad rm sixty.- "Very likely," replied tho doctor; V-'. if you had tevrr drank cf it, per-; would now bo seventy.4'
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1881, edition 1
1
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