8 I : J I k E l - - , V. )L. 63. BE STJRE YOTJ BIGHT ; THEIr GO A PTPiAD.-D Crockett, w t ALTER P. W. n Attorney-at-Law, TARBORO , N. C. office next that of CoL J. L. Bridgers, oyer a .it's Jewelry store, mm street.; t-Practices in State and Federal Courts pBiNK POWELL, A TTOENE X'A T-LA W n. a Tabbobo, - ' - " pRXNK NASH, ATTOBNET-AT-IAW, .TARBORO. N C. Practices In all the Courts, 8UU and Fed- G KOaGB HOWARD, attorney and Counselor at Law. TARBORC N. Q. pfPraciices in all the Coots, State and Federal. . uwim-xj. NFREW7 JOTNER, ATTORXEY-JLT-LA TTt . GREENVILLE, N. C. Ia future will regularly mttend the Boperior ouris of Edgecombe. Office in Turboro House. I TBE TIRED noTIinn They were talking ot toe glory ot the land be- jouu iae sues, Of the light and of the gladness to be found in . paradise. Of the flowers ever blooming, of the never ceasing songs. Of the i wandMngs through the golden streets vvr wuiie-rooea tnrongs; And said father, leaning cozily back in his easy chair (Fatter always was a master-hand for com. iurx everywnere); Urh In..-1 1 ... ming xwouia be to know that when this life is o'er One would straightway hear a welcome from the blessed, shining shoretn An Isabel,.our eldest glrL glanced upward iixu uie reea Bhe was painting on a vitw inn mured "Ves. indeed." And Marian, the next in age moment dropped her book, And, -Yes, indeed!" repeated with a most ecstatielook. . .. . . . , . But mother, gray-hairad mother, who had coma to sweep the room. , "With a paUent smile on her thin face, leaned ugnuy on ner Droom Poor mother! no one ever thought how much she had to do And said: "I hope it is not wronr not to ram with you. But seems to me that when I die, before I Join the blest. I'd like just for a little while to lie in my grave ana rest." . -Harper's Magazine. BELLS, BELLS, BELLS! M. T. FOUNTAIN, ATTORNEY AND COUNSEUjOR AT LAW, larooro, ii. v., nffl.-e nvsr Insuraaee Office of Capt. Orrcn j WiliiaHis. . feb21-6tn h A. Gilliam. Dohtox Gilxjam I QILLIAM & SON Attomeys-at-I-aw, TARBORO', N. C will nractice in the Counties of Edgecombe, dalifai and Pitt,1' and in the Courts of the first Judicial District, and in the Circuit and apreme Courts at Kaieign. jamo-iy. ja NORFLGET, Attorney-at-Law, TARBORO ' - - Jf C- 01 1CUTT . Edgecombe, Nash and Wil son. Loaos negotiated on reasonable terras. L. BRIDGERS & 80N, Attorn eys-at-Law, TARB0R0, 14 lry 1M Literature of the World fnlT nf Belle and ITIusicDlckeus' Par- f- M. T. iruun iaipi, i iiuut io neui'ia Hit Noreli. . . . . i Many people are oeculiarlv sensitive tn ouiuju oi Deng ana Decome merry or sou, as ineir memories may be affected. Those evening bolls! those evening be 11b! now many a tale their music tells Of youth, and home, and that sweet time. When last I heard their soothing chimel So sane Tom Moore, and he only uttered wnai everyone reels. ttourrienne relates of the first Napoleon. tnai one ume wauuns with him in an avenue at Malmaiaon, they heard the vil laee. beU. Napoleon stopped, listened Intently, then In a voice trembling with emotion, said : "That recalls to me the first years I passed at Brienne." In one of the dormitories in the Irish college at Rome there is a space on the wall lert ever nn papered and unpainted. whatever repairs the rest of the room may undergo, for there, carelessly scrawled, is the first rough draft of Father Prout's Bella of Shandon. What a flood of tender melody steals over us as we read that im mortal poem, though we may never have heard those famous bells, and have dwelt far enough away from the church and BDire of Shandon. T T TJTMTll F. KS Xr RUN I I With deep affection V I And recollection - Those Shandon bells Whose sounds so wild would. In the days of childhood. Fling round my cradle Their magic spells. On this I ponder Where'er I wander. And thus grow fonder. Sweet Cork, of thee With thy bells of Shandua, That sound so grand on The pleasant waters Our literature is full of bells and bell music Southey calls the . sound of the bells "the poetry of steeples," and George Herbert sayB ' Think when the bells do chime, Tis angel's music rvK. 1. 1. U4B3 i in Enoch Arden, Tennyson says of the A-' I MAT rfltTAVAV Oncelikewlsein the ringing of his ears Though faintly, merrily far and far away. He heard the pealing of the parish bells. But there Is no writer who so- delights rvK. 1. N. CAKK, I m all the varied sounds ot oeiis as uick- IJ i - ; I ens, or who makes so much of them. Not a novel of his in which bells are not heard, ofentimes with startling and dramatic force. In the Chimes he idealizes them with ineffable tenderness and pathos, and Toby Veck's dream of climbing up to the belfry is one of his masterpieces. ' In some of his stories the bells sound forth only dirges, in others they are monitors to warn from crime, and In others marriage Dells, the merriest and most gleeful of all. He marries soma of his characters withontia good deal of ringing. The door bells are: great favorites with him, and he makes the bell handle reveal many or tne peculi arities of his characters. Mr. Dowler Tines the bell with great violence," Mrs. Clennam "with a hasty Jerk," Mr. W at- klns Totts "with a faltering jerk," Bob Sawyer, "as if he would pull the beH out by the roots," the poor relation, witn fapolotrtstic softness." "What a aemnnion Ions time." says Mr. Mantilmi to New man Noras, "you have Kept me ringing at this confounded old tracked teakettle of a bell, every tinkle of which is enough to throw a strong man into convulsions, noon mv life and soul oh demmlt!" Sairey Gamp's bell is " tne greatest little bell to rinsr 1 that ever was," and there was another which produced only two dead tinkles." If there ever was an observer of how bells rang, and who could translate their sounds into wise and witty TW.-w,. Cf7 Tf srnhsi-n.Ao Kncrhsh. Dickens was that observer. The V W tf) ajwo, ' -Blc and sonna of ben,, have never been . , .7 TV. V7Jop mora exauisitely described than in I'oe's Uiou, kw,u, hpontifol Dosm of "The Bells." the lan. UORSBB GUirOIl ST. ABD11W BIUIH JOSSEY BATTLE. Attorney at Law ' . TARBORO, S'JS Practice in the court of Nash. Edgecombe, I Wilson and Halifax countiea. Also in the Federal and Supreme Courts. Tarboro office, ontairs over new Howard building. Maiv itreet, opp. Bank front room. apr 1 '84 lR. II. T. BASS Offers his protea il services to the at! tens of Tarboro and vicinity. Office in T. A McNair's drug store on Main Street ' ,K. 1. N. CARS, Surgeon Dentist, TARBORO, N. C. m. and Office Uoqir, trom 9 a. va. 'till 1 p. on. i to tt D. m. S"Ne door to Tarboro House, over Ro yeter & Nash. J n K. R. W. JOYNER, SURGEON DENTIST Has nermanentlv located in Wil son. N O. All operations will be! Tipaflv anri rftrffullv oerformed and on terms as reasonable as possible. Teeth extracted wit'i wt pain. Office on Tarboro street, next door to Post Office. Jan-l bm L. SAVAGE, TARBORO', M . C. , These RtAliim are the larsrest in the State. and have a capacity of holdinr ten car-loads qi stoce. Give him a can. iaour T UTHER SHELDON, DEALIB IN SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS BUILDERS HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, And Building Material of every description Una it nr BTrtK WARKKT SQUARE A 49 ROANOAKE AVE NORFOLK, VA. Novemberl882. 18,1-y. WILLIAMSON, Manufacturer of TARBORO', N. C., . THURSDAY NOVEMBER 12,.18S5. guage or wmcn is as reasonant as tne bells it describes. Twenty-five or thirty years ago the Swiss Bell Ringers were all the rage, and drew vast crowds to their concerts, wnoina heard them will ever forget "The Wreck er's Daughter, "The Carnival of "Ven ice," "The Monastry ceils," ana "in. ecu Ms By Moonlight Alone" r Tne musio of tboae sweet bells has long been hushed, but eoncertgoers of that time will still maintain that we have no musio nowa days at all comparable to that. The Russians Doast oi tne largest ubus to the world, and the greatest number. The great bell of Moscow weigns 144,000 pounds, ana they nave one mat was u 160 years ago that weighs 400,000, but it has never been hung. That would be as targe as one of our two-etory-and-basement dwelling houses. After the Russians the Chinese rank as makers oi large Dens. Ths most famous bell in the United States is the Liberty bell in Philadelphia. Then there is what uicsens cans tne Marmminable set-up belL" which gives notice to sleepers that it is still half an hour to breakfast, ana n tney are uveiy . morning toilet they may nap w ior twenty mlnntM lnncer. But it were rain to try. to enumerate all the bells that in one way or another affect nn We are their subjects and are movea to tears, or laughter, to fear or hope, to wfld unrmim or calm reDOse. as their varied sounds falls upon our ears. One bell there is affects us an aiiKe, described by Byron as That all softening, overpowering knelL The tocsin of the soul the dinner belL Ha who is not moved by that sweet con cord has lost the birthright of Adam's son. TWO LONESOME BROTHERS. The Laat of Ten Comn.n In ftax HTKa Started ontaa Oil-well Shooters. "Yes, my brother and I feel rather Inn. some when we look back and think over of the last five years," said one of the famous uaiiagner Drothers, oil-well shooters. "A gang of fen of us," said he, "started out in the torpedoing business, then, and my brother and I are the only ones of the party leru l don't "suppose, taking it al together, more than three pounds of the other- eight were ever found. They never found as much as a Yest-button of poor Lew Gray. He was tarrying a few cans of nitro-glycerine on his back in a bag to save carriage, and while he was passing through the Town of Red Rock he slipped and felL That only left nine of us. There wasn't much of Red Rock left ten seconds after Lew fell with his load. Ben Garth wait was the next one to go. . He was getting ready to torpedo a well at , Rich burov and something went - wrong with the business. ".'-A- can of nitro-glycerine exploded. Ren's cap was found hanging on a tree 800 yards away, three' fingers and a foot that had belonged to him were picked up in the vicinity, and that was all any one ever saw of poor Ren. Joe Ross and four others of our gang went to do a Job at Corwin Centre. No one ever knew what caused the explosion, because neither Joe nor any of the other four was ever found. It was impossible to tell who the bits of scattered remains that were found belonged to, and the Coroner's inquest was lumped and the remnants were buried together. Bill Grant was unload ing a wagon-load of nitro-glycerine soon after that at Bolivar, and wastpatssing the cans out to another man in the way some of the recfcles8 handlers of the stuff have a habit of doing ; that is, throwing them out for the other man to catch, the same as you've seen men unload bricks. By-and-by the man who was catching the cans let one slip through his fingers and it fell on a stone. Bill's widow hadn't much of him to bury. I don't know what the other man's name was. Or whether he left a widow or not. So that left my brother and me the last of the gang. We've shot hundreds of wells, I guess, and while we don't have any more fear or nervousness in handling the stuff than you would have In handling so many sticks of wood, we know what it can do, ond we favor it all we know how. Still it's only a matter of time, I suppose. One of these days an unlooked-for thing is bound to happen, and. then my brothel and I will be scattered around like the rest of them were. I might take some other kind of a job where there was less danger and the pay just as good, but I don't know. I do know that I wouldn't hire out to work on a railroad. When I see the train men running along on the tops of freight cars it makes me 'shudder. Why, they're apt to fall and get a leg or arm taken off any minute, But maybe they get reck less and forget what danger they're in. They make me nervous." The lonesome brother turned to a work man who was standing several feet away. "Hey, Johnny P he shouted, "chuck me another can of glycerine. I guess she'll stand another." N. Y. Sun. A Bachelor on matrimony. This I do know, says a writer in House hold, that it is man's duty to marry, and I h," O K think, a fair aacfptkm of wl&t MJOythet-diashtliUasi ih '-ehawlA ittj 'W man from marriage, besides those con tained in the tabular prohibitions of con sanguinity. I have heard some say that a man should not marry till he has a fixed income of a certain sum, and it is said in such a manner that one cannot avoid the conviction that a man ought to marry when he possesses thjs marital enfran chisement. Such an opinion has always struck me s being utterly absurd. The conditions of life and the natures of meu are so varied that any attempt at classifi cation of the qualification for marriage is impossible. Thrift comes naturally to some men, to others no account of preach ing can inculcate the principles of econ omy. Two men of these opposite natures may th enjoy the same income In the same sphere of life ; the former marries with advantage while to the latter it would be most reprehensible. I maintain that a man is justly entitled to marry when he considers that he can afford to keep a wife agreeably to that station of life in which he moves, and his wife is willing to accept. When and how he can afford this is his business, and as such should be free from all interference save by those who are therein, interested, viz., the par ents on either side. I have heard of men who have married on the meanest of pittances and ended their lives in princely mansions. The world has not grown smaller, I opine, nor has human energy worn Itself out. There is a very glib saying that has passed into a proverb, and, like many of its fellows, is neither veracious nor pro found, that marriage is a lottery. To the blockhead who "rushes into matrimony without thought of its duties or care for its consequences I grant it is a lottery, and, like the generality of lotteries, he will find it a swindle. But the world is not as some people would have us believe wholly composed of fools. I declare it i my humble opinion that there are fewer. fools than these pessimists assure us there are wise men, and because a few recklessly risk their happiness in an un considered marriage, they would stigma tize mankind as moral gamblers. A LUCKY FIND. Startling Discovery by an Old Call forala miner. ; St-,. Said an old-timer : "I never saw a ghost, but I once made a pretty good raise when I at first thought I had found a dead man. I was prospecting down - in Amador County, California. One day I went up the creek about a mile and seated myself on a rock to rest Across the stream on the opposite bank were the remains of three or four old cabins. Some of these had almost tumbled into the creek Trom the wearing away of the ground on that side. I observed that part of the fireplace of a near cabin had tumbled down the bank toward the creek and that toe foot of an old gum-boot was sticking oat of the dirt. It seemed to project from beneath the stones forming the hearth of the old chimney. I thought it was Btrange that any man should have laid his hearth over an old gum-boot Then it occurred to ma. ' that some mn might have Aeen uidercH eau oqnea unaer ine neartn, : ;. . h- Crossing the creek to the old chimney I found that the foot of the old boot pro jected from under a large flat stone that was still in place. I lifted the stone and found that there was only one boot there, and no sign of a human skeleton nor iKjnes of any kind. I kicked the old boot down the bank, and then took a pan of dirt and ashes out of the old fireplace,- as I had in several instances made pretty fair strikes in old hearths, for it is well known that the early miners were often careless, and lost a good deal of find gold in retorting it burning out the quick silver it contained on shovels. As I was passing down the bank I came to the old iM.ot, and, in passing, gave it another kick, sending it almost into the creek. It landed le down hill, and from the end poured a golden shower of nuggets and dust. !-, "Hi a moment I threw the dirt out of my pan and reversed the bootover It,, when out tumbled two large buckskin bags filled with gold dust. So long had the treasure lain concealed under the hearth that the strings with which the bags were til had rotted, and one gave way under the kicks I had bestowed upon the old boot. When all the gold was gathered up I found that I had nearly 2,000." ;.; X Opposite H, Moeeis & Bbos., TARBORO, jv. a The obiect of technical schools is not merely to teach boys and young men how to make spoKes. springs, carriages, harness; how to shape the brass, iron, steel, wooa or jeauier, iw. hnw to do these things well Rude workmen are abundant. The demand is for artistic, tnorougn workmen. For them there is alwayi mployment and liberal pay. A Bit of Steep Railway Travel. Mr. Meters carried his famous railroad from Lime to the "crest of the Andes, over three miles high, at a cost of $27,000,000 and 7,000 human Uvea, hut mea Deiore completing it. About fifty miles of track remained to be built. A contract for its construction . has been made with a brother of Mayor Grace, of New York, it is said that the sensation of riding up this railroad, together with the rapid as cent from the sea level to the mountain's crest, produces a sickness called "siroccne" often fatal, and usually sending people to bed for several weeks. The symptoms are a terrible pressure upon the temples, nausea, bleeding at the nose and ears, and f alntness, but the effects can r avoiaea by taking precautions and observing rules that experience has suggested, the chief one being to drink a glass of brandy, and keep perfectly quiet, as the slightest degree of exercise will floor the strongest man. Pleasure and Pain. Pain is the great agent or lever that moves the world; pleasure- nroduees rest, t int-rtia ; pain, restlessness - and motion. So pain produces a peculiar and rapid molecular vibration or disturbance, which quickens and educates our mental faculties as no other agent can. Pain and povcrs y every great thought and act was thrut-t into the world by these masters of men. A man's life or conception of life is arranged around and about- him exactly iu proportion to his ruling passion ( the attractions are always equal to the con ceptions ; a tree, a bird, a beast is not a tree, or bird, or beast, but merely an emanation, an effluvia of the mind and character of each individual A child's first attempt at play or work with blocks, spools, cards, &&, Is to raise a tower or pyramid. The higher It be comes the greater his joy. So It is with the soul or mind of man ; ever drawn to the ideal, ever attaining, ever rising, an attempt of the soul to .flee and . free itself trom mortality and meet and merge into "She" ffimclrtalr omhTpoteni Tanrt infiaicksc; Earth is but the shadow of Heaven. ' , Every object in nature is a mirror, throwing back the reflection and concep tion of God. Genius might effectively be compared to thunder and lighting like the flash of the lightning it lights and kindles the dead soul like the reverberation of thun der it re verl crates from heart to heart with a thousand echoes. No man can be successful unless he be sincere we cannot do anything well un less we believe in it. Genir.s is the nectar of the gods drawn and drank from the skull of man. -4 A traely great man must be sincere, sympathetic and systematic V Morals always accompany intellect moral and mind are inseperable. The mind is like a mirror, reflecting its occupants and surroundings some minds are like concave-convex mirrors, reflect ing all objects with their own convexities and concavities. There are a few minds like rare minors, which give an exact likeness. Berlioz speaks of the pain and suffering his repressed ideas caused him. Dumas says he fell ill by interruption and his ideas were broken. 'Tis the activity of the brain, the surplus electricity or nervous magnetic fluid, which not finding all escape, must overcrowd and overtax the nervous system and pain and discom fort physically and mentally ensue. Some one virtue or vice is magnified in every individual. An evil passion, a des tractive patiun, subjugated becomes at once a creative force. - A OEgERAfrS WAR ASTXCIB. ' The Editorial Corrections rHtOttf P: niurmgm th9rAtlkr ' . ' General Meckleham decided Bpon vnrit ing; a series of. war articles. . YThj shouldn't L Maryf he asked ot his wife, who belongs to a literary society and. who is - considered - an excellent critic ' "I should Just like to know 'why I ought not to give my experience. ; I went through the war and served with distinction, and X know how to write I understand the construction "of sentences. I understand the use of vigorous Tflnguqh, What do you flay, Maryf" V . ,-; ,V . i. - "Why, by all means, write your expert ce. . I do not 'see yrby you should keep back anything that might prove of tAr terest to the public and result in profit to yourself."- 1 UJr '. v-v-v;-.- ."Thafs It, MarWihats It. While I f W63 rt college the stnuenta used te laugh asne fiir devoting- so much attention to rhetot'av Jt wjll come In harxly now, you see. I shall go to work at once." -- - . " The next evening, when the lamps had been lighted, the General said i . ' . "Mary, are you ready to hear my war paperr" -- He read ittoher. : "What do you think of it?" It is good." . "Do you think it's first class?" . "Yes, I da" - "I ; have never said much about It, Mary, but I am a writer. Many a time while visiting newspaper offices I have said to myself. 'Ah, well, you fellows think that yon are great writers, but you haven't learned your first lesson.' Now I shall wad it up and send it to a magazine X ought to get at least one hundred dollars forifc" " "You are going to copy it, are you not?" . Oh, no; not necessary. It's as plain as print" "I didnt know but you might want to make a few corrections. Listen to this paragraph i General Beauregard, seeing that the left wing was weakening, deter mined to reinforce them.' Don't you think you should say -it' instead of them?" "Why? Refers to the soldiers." "No, it means wing, which should be IV " "WelL go on, go on." ' " The General at one time,' continued the woman, finding another objectionable paragraph, was much moved to seeing a soldier dragging a gun with a broken leg.'" "What's wrong with that? It's a' fact, for I saw it myself." ."Yes, but how did he drag a gun with a broken leg?" "Don't you see? The fellow's leg was broken, but so determined was he that he still stuck to the gun." "But he didn't drag it with his broken leg." "Hang it, the fellow's leg was broken " "I understand that" "Well, then leg was broken, but, un willing to retire from the field, he crawled along, dragging his gun." "With his broken leg." "The statement is as plain as daylight When you strike a woman on military matters she can't see two inches." "I understand it well enough. The man -ras dragging his broken sun with his A Four-Eared Xllan. ' A man possessed offour ears is a nat ural curiosity in San Francisco. John Henry Grimes is a native of Novia Scotia, The peculiarity about him that attracts attention makes him the best developed person in the world, so far as hearing is concerned. The front ears, which are placed in their natural position, are per fect and well formed. The extra pair are partly covered bythose in front, yet they appear like ordinary ears. Tests have been mede which demonstrate that Mr. Grimes can hear equally well with either pair ot ears. Lieutenant Greely says there is a belt in the Artie regions where there are sheep with the head and horns of the ox and the tail of the horse. On his next visit to that country he mav discover horses with the head ,and horns of the ox and the tail of the sheep. It seems possible to find almost anything in the Artie regions, save the north pole. The Lost Tribe of Israel. A man calling himself T. C. Pyle, a teacher in the mountains of Tennessee, m a letter to an Ohio paper graphically describes the finding of a cave by a party of railway engineers. The cave was ex plored for a considerable distance. At the entrance was discovered an inscription in Hebrew characters. " After passing some 300 yards into the cave it enlarged into a great amphitheatre. Still further in the cave was found an appalling sight that struck terror to the hearts of the ex plorers. There, on the right and left and in front,- were thausands of grinning skeletons, encased in brass armor, -with ponderous shields. Not less than 5,000 skeletons were seen, each of which was reclining on his shield, They presented the appearance of men killed in battle, who had been brought there for burial. A -large brass box contained manuscript giving an account of their wanderings, According to this veracious chronicler, Tennessee holds the remains of the lost tribes of Israel. - KISS THEM GOOD NIGHT. The tales are told, the songs are sung. The evening romp is over. And up the nursery stairs they climb, ; With little buzzing tongues that chime Like bees among the clover. . - r I ' -j Their busy brains and happy hearts Are full of crowding fancies: From song and tale and make-believe A wondrous web of dreams they weave And airy child romances. The starry night is fair without: The new moon rises slowly. The nursery lamp is burning faint; Each white-robed like a little saint. Their prayers they murmur lowly. Good night! The tired heads are still. On pillows soft reposing. The dim and dizzy mist of sleep About their thoughts began to creep. Their drowsy eyes are closing. Good night! While through the silent air The moonbeams pale are streaming. They drift from daylight's noisy shore, . "Blow out the light and shut the door. And leave them to their dreaming." : Jtj&tydj- J should tbtokJTOiiM .d'.ff er -wry utue nom uraggmg ms gun witn ms leg." v The General wheeled round in his chair. shoved both hands in his pockets, and, in a calm voice, slightly trembling oa the bosom of a struggle, said "When I married I thought that my wife was a sensible woman. I thought inat sue was a woman oi literary taste. Read that paragraph again." " 'The general at one time was much moved to see a soldier dragging a gun with a broken leg.' Ah! I Beet" she exclaimed. "I am glad you do, Mary." The Boldier was dragging a gun with a broken leg the gun's leg was broken." . iimme that paper!" he exclaimed. Then he folded the manuscript with mock precision and put', it in the stove. Arkansaw Traveller. Tney moved It on Bins. A Detroiter who was spending several days in a town in the Interior soon dls- . covered that every villager whom he was introduced to had a fondness for betting. They'd bet on anything, from the color of a horse on the hill a mile and a half away to the number of flies whioh would light on a pane of glass in a given time. The Detroiter kept clear of any wagers for a day or two, and then put up a Job. He got a string and secretly measured the distance from the hotel steps to a certain hitching post and next day, when the betting fever began to rage, he showed his hand. ' 'Gentlemen," said he, "I am not a bet ting man, but seeing that you are anxious for a wager of some sort Fll lay $25 that I can guess within a foot of the distance to that hitehingpost" . "Done!" cried the voice of the landlord, and the money was put up. "Now, what do you guessr" ? "Ninety-seven feet" " By his measure It was six Inches more. He had measured the:- string twice over .with a rule and he felt that he was 125 ahead. One of the boys ran for a tape-line and the measure was taken in a manner no one could dispute. The figures were ninety-nine feet and the landlord bad won. ' ' "I don't see how that Is," muttered the Detroiter, but a second measurement veri fied the figures. It was a full hour before he recovered from the stunning blow. 4-sa he walked over to the post and dis covered that some- time during tne pre vious night and probably soon after his rneasurment, it had been moved a foot and a half (--Detroit Free Press. XJTERART W0REER3. ; The Ilav. Jinn Freeman Clarke Oe- ...'; Scribes Ills Habits of LUe. , The Herald Of Health is giving a series of articles on the "Health and Working Habits of Prominent Thinkers as Describ-i ed by .Themselves." Following is the Rev, James Freeman Clarke's contribution to the series: v . H -rv I find myself 'at the age of 75 still able to do a good deal of work, and X attribute IV under Providence, to: the following causes: ; , - ' . . - ; - - . .-- 1.1 am not of an anxious temperament : I do not worry. . I ap not to v any great extent annoyed by disappointments or failure, and ft has never disturbed me when I have been censured,, so long as 1 Dtnevea 1 was doing right - 8. 1 have a great faculty for sleeping.' Although able to keep awake when neces sary without injury,'; I can always 4all asleep at any moment when, sleep seems desirable," These fragments of ret 'ore, nodoubt, uf very great service to n, - s. l nave always, from ehildhood, been fond of outdoor exercise. I began to ride on horseback, when only about 8 years old, and when a lad joined with delight iu all out of door sports ekating, swimming, rowing, and playing ball, and also In in door athletic exercises, such as fencing, boxing, and gymnastics. But all these belonged to an early period of my life. 4. I have few fixed habits, and am fond of change. When I have done" anything in one way for a few times I enjoy it differently. But if this tendency has its advantages, it on the other hand prevents me from receiving the benefit which comes from established methods of work. 5. Although when young I smoked, I have not used tobacensince I was 26. In half a century I have only smoked two cigars, and those only because I happened to be where the air was malarious. 6. Finally, I love work, and especially brain work. My professional duties as a clergyman have been to me a source of great happiness. I have also . written several books and many articles for the press, and I believe that this kind of work has been beneficial to my health. SEra. Jarby'e Spring Chicken. "I hope you will be home to dinner early to-night, Mr. Philbrick; we are go ing to have spring chicken," said Mrs. Jarby of Brooklyn, as she met Phil in the hall as he was going to the office. "Spring chicken, eh! all right; 5 o'clock, sharp," replied PhiL Philbrick was on time. Miss Lulu bloomed out in a new cream-colored punt ing dress with several extra kinks In it; the other boarders wore a wistful look they hadn't eaten any lunch in anticipa tion of the spring chicken, and Mrs. Jarby was in her glory. The chicken was served and the boarders were eagerly devouring it when Mrs. Jarby happened to notice Phil poking something on his plate. "I hope your chicken suits, Mr. Phil brick," she asked in her blandest tones. "Oh, yes; I had my doubts, Mrs. Jarby, when you told me this morning that you were going to have spring chicken, but I am glad to Bee that there is no joke about this one. You know the old joke about boarding house spring chicken?" " un, yes; certainly, Dut I am sure, as you say, there can be no joke about this ; ha, bar' "Are you a connoisseur of spring chick ens, Mrghilhrir.k ?" aakfld-4hJaj: "Oh, not at alL" ' "How did you recognize the differ ence?" "Oh, I found the spring," and Phil held up to view a twisted hair pin. AMERICAS BOTES. The story of Egyptian mummy wheat having germinated has never been confirmed and is not credited by any one who is warranted by knowledge and experience in such matters to give an opinion. Innu merable attempts to stimulate mum my wheat into vitality have each and all failed. Charity In India. 1 A curious ceremony was performed re cently at Travancore, India. The Mahara jah was weighed against a mass of pure gold, which was then dispensed in Charity. This custom, called "Tulabhara," is one of great antiquity, and is said to be trace able in Travancore to the fourth century. It is not unknown in other parts of India ; though of course gold is only used in case of wealthy persons, the humbler sort being content to weigh themselves against spices or grain. On the present occasion the Mahare jah weighed a little over nine stone. The Brahmins, it is said, wished to defer the ceremony in the hope that the Maharajah might more nearly ap proach the weight of his father, who did not undergo the rite until forty-seven years old. when he weighed fourteen and three-fourths stone. All Explained. : "It is immoral not to sleep enough," says the Herald of Health. We have often wondered at' the high morals of cooks, as a class. Now we, understand It v It is proposed in Spain to start a fleet of ships, representing all mari time nation, from the little port of Palos, in Spain, on August 3, 1892, the four hundredth anniversary o the sailing of Columbus, and to have the fleet sail to San Salvador over the route taken by the great discoT erer. . v ) PEB-gaiCIlY AS A DISEASE, i' An Alarming Inereaao In the Number or Periodical Drinker- . . A certain publishing establishment in Chicago has a peculiar class of employes, in that, with the -exception, of a, young lady cashier and' the office boy; they are all "periodical ditnkeri" Theperiodicar - is the drinker who abstains entirely for a time and then goes to a frightful extreme in a debauch : lastincr a week - nrtwn. These men are usually able and skilled men sober, and the ones employed by this, publisher are brilliant writers and capable of earning good salaries'in steady positions if it were not . tor their occasional lapse into- dissipation: They are vaid barely one-third the salaries their talents entitle them to, but he has to take all risks of their failure to show up when most. want. ed.'One -of these - half-paid, struggfing writers is a gentleman Of classical educate loo and great natural" ability, -who has" beW positions in: educational work, and anything in" Janguage.'f " "I always have two or three' brilliant men about me," said the publisher, "but I never know on coming down In the morning if I shall find them here. I sympathize with them, and never refuse to em ploy-a periodical if he can be of any use w me. j. suppose it was in this way that my place got to be a sort of head quarters for them. It is painful to notice the number of brilliant men who are stricken with this disease. They come and go like driftwood in the currents. Every once in awhile we'll got a man who seems to be proof against drink's temp tations. We think he never was a drinker and in no danger of ever becoming one. Suddenly some morning he is missing and isn't seen again for ten days or two weeks, when he comes in, wrecked in health and a wreck in appearance, and begs to be taken back. As a disease, inherited or acquired, I think periodicity is entitled to careful consideration by scientific men, as it is certainly becoming very common. We havt fewer steady drinkers than we had years ago, but many more men who occasionally fall from respectability to the gutter at one swoop and stay there a week or two at a time, perfectly helpless. A NEW AND IX. VICE. Water Closet Sea: One Effect of Alcohol. One sometimes sees a drunken mau pitched violently from a horse, and when the bystanders rush to the spot, expecting to find him dead, they are astonished to dis cover that he has been little injured. In his "Scrambles Among the High Alps," Leslie Stephen tells the story of a guide whp, while drunk, fell over a precipice so deep that a fall over it seemed almost certain death, and who yet sustained little injury. Stephen accordingly gives his readers the advise not to fall over a precipice, or to get thoroughly drunk be fjoe doing so. The reason of this Im munity is that the nerve centers are so much paralyzed in the drunken man as not to be effected by the shock of t ie fall which, in a sober man, would have acted upon them so violently as to stop the heart," arrest the circulation, and caused instant death. There are 248 cities and towns in the United States having a population of 10,000 and upwards. The practice of numbering houses on the streets of our cities 'began in Philadel phia, where it was introduced by the Marshal who took the second United States census in that city. It was in that census that the inhabitants of the country were mentioned by name. At Dcbusk's ranch, Trinidad, CoL, during a thunder storm, a herd of eighteen horses were drivven against barbed wire fence by the violence of the wind. The wire conducted a stroke of lightning through the herd and thirteen fell dead. A The dog business is not suffering from depression, but trading is active on rea sonable pronts. We quote : English pugs, pups, $15 to f 20 ; do, lull grown, S25 ; terriers, $10 ; do, trained, $75 ; fox terriers, 15 to J25-, bloodhounds, $10 to $25; greyhounds, $10 to $75 ; Italian hounds, $30; beagles, ?25; bulldogs, $25; .New foundland dogs, $20 to $25; collies. $15 to $20 ; setters and pointers, pups, $10 ; do, full grown and trained, $75 to $100; mastiffs, pups, $25 to $30 ; St Bernards, $150 to $200, and very scarce. A Wonderful Piece of mechanism. Detailed accounts are given in the Berlin and Paris papers of a monster movable globe, made of copper, the work of a blind clockmaker, and on the con- spent The globe represents the earth, and, like. It turns on Its own axis by means of mechanism, an artificial moon moves round the globe in twenty-eight days and six hours, while a movable metal band on which the hours are marked, indicates the mean time in the different parts of the earth. Round the upper portion of this Immense globe, which weighs a ton and a half, and whose surface measures 128 reet in diameter, spins a railroad car capable of holding six persons, and which serves to give a better view of the regions or the north pole. The painting ot the globe is done in oil, and necessiated .the employment of two men during the entire year. The sun is represented by an apparatus lighted by an intense Drummond calcium light which enables the spectator tor watch intelll gebtly the origin and change of the dif ferent periods of the day, the early dawn the twilight eclipses of the sun and moon, etc A Promising Boy. Little Johnny, on being asked by his school-teacher if he knew what was meant by "at par," replied thatx"Mar was always at Par when he came home late." Cuban Cigar makers. The Cuban cigarmakers are mainly colored people, although many Creoles and Spanish emigrants engage in the trade. The cigarmakers form the roughest and most miserable part of the population of Havana When high wages are paid they become unmanageable, and manufacturers use every means to entice laborers from one house to another, often bribing and loaning money with no prospect of ever being repaid Hundreds of dollars are spent sometimes in inducing a single workman to leave one place for another. In times of scarcity of bands the state prisoners are released. In 1851 the govern ment freed 800 convicts to supply the wants of tobacco manufacturers. Another peculiarity consists in having to pay , to employes their earnings three times per day. ... v ;" V . IB LIFE WORTH LIVING? Is llfewoith living? Ask the lad Barefooted, homeless, starved. Ill-clad, And hear the answer you will get . "My dorg an' me haS fun you bet" Is life worth living? Ask the wretch Upon the gallows doomed to stretch The hangman's rope, and heed his cry, "It is! It 1st Don't let me die!" Is life worth living? Ask the tramp Whose home's the gutter cold and damp And hear him tell you with a jerk, Itis.oldpadfoIdontwork.,, Is life worth living? Ask the dude Whom old Dame Nature somewhat spewed And see htm suck his cane and say. "Aw weally life taj-aw quite gay." Is life worth living? Ask the fool. The giggling maiden fresh from school. The toller, invalid, the slave; O! life, sweet life, they ever crave. Ia life worth living? Ask the wise Philosopher who vainly tries To solve the mystery about The matter and remain in doubt Is life worth living? Ask the great The millionaires, the kings In state. And note their looks of utter woe As in despair they shriek: "No! no!" H. C. Dodge. In I860, only 5,253 newspapers were published in the United States, or one for eveay 6,ooq inhabitants, Now 13,494 newspapers are published or one for every 3,716 inhabitants certainly a remarkable growth in twenty-five years. FOREIGN H0TES. The wars which have been waged by Great Britain since Queen "Victoria as cended the throne number 25, of which 20 were due to the Liberals and 5 to the Con servatives. The most important of these wars was the Crimea, in 1854 : the IndUn mutinv. 1857. and the Egyptian war in 1882. Horseflesh is sold wholesale at the Paris abattoirs at 4 cents a pound up, and is retailed at from- 6 to 20 cents, according as the purchaser desires soup meat or fill- yet that is to say, met. very tougn animals are ground into ixirraane sausages. The pneumatic postal service in Paris, lately completed, cost over $200,000, and the length of the pipes is over thirty-iour miles. The charge for transmitting letter to-any place within the fortifications is 3 cents. The service covers extreme points about Beven miles apart The business of the little cluster of islands which lie in the Pacific Ocean just off the southwest coast of Patagonia la sheep raising and selling, and is nearly all in the hands of one man, m. Kerr by name, who Is the Governor. He went there many years ago as a poor man, and is now worth more than $5,000,000. The number of sheep on the islands is about 400,000. It is a very curions circumstance that some Koman statues were nttea witn movable marble wigs. The statue of Lucillawife of Emperor Lucius Verus, in the museum of the capitol of Rome, has a wig of black marble that can be taken off and in the Vatican a Venus Is believed to represent Julia Loaemias. the mother of Emperor '.Heliogabulus, with hair that may be removed. There is also a bald bust of a woman, with marble wig attached, in the palace of Sans-Souci, at Pottsdam. Under the Mexican law a creditor can have a debtor arrested on the day when the debt falls due. The prisoner is chained to a post five days, guarded by an officer. At the end of the time, If the money is not forthcoming, the man's labor is sold to the government at . 40 cents a day for as many days as will be necessary to dis charge the obligation. The miserable debtor is sent to the silver mines, where he is chained to a gang of felons, and compelled to work under ground. He sleeps under gcound, and never sees day light again until he is restored to free dom. A paper is manufactured from sea weed in Japan that has the transpa rency of glass not exactly clear flint glass, but a good sort of stained giaas and can te used satisfactori ly in windows. Butternut wood ia largely used for making shoes to wear in breweries and other damp places. NO. 46 IT LEADS ALL No ether bloed-trarlfrinfl medicine n made. or has ever beea prepared, whioh so eom- fHauujr-nHraia uio waoia ox, poynnana ana the goaeral pablio m . o y , .r ; . Iyer's Saiajparilla. It loads" the ltotaiatmlvaclAntlfla nmnara. . tion fur all blood diaeaaea. If there is a lurb OrnrrXfS "t taint of Serof ula about ytfa. -Uuitwr wLA AVKtt's SAjtaAPAaiLLa. will dislodge it and expel It from your system. rur eoustiiroiouainoe seroiatoua vatarrn. PiTIOtSll Avita'a. AKaAr-ABU.L, ia the VIA I AliilM true remedy.. It haa cored -numberloes earn. It will stop, the uaaaeout catarrhal discharges, and remove the sicken. -big odor of the breath, which are laaioattoat : ot sorofulous origin. -. . -i :;:.. f flWfcrTlF T"Ha.TexCSepfcS8,HW2. ULbtttUUa Ai thoage of two yeari one of . QflQCJi? children m terribly afflicted Witi.0- with uleerooi- running sores on its fco smX cock. At b aame time Ua eyee-. vers Gvollou, muott liinamed.aad wry Kr- . V'' t V"" rnysicuMM tola us tnat pow V-j. Ul rful alterative medicine imit len-"Ui. L Tliov united in ronmn. 'AyKR'B .feAMaAfAu.14-4 Al (I daced a peroaibiw LuproveitteA: wuku, i.y an adhersr.ee to your diracttonsy w contin ued to a complete and permanent cure. Ho evidence has since appeared of the existence ox any scroiuious tendencies; and no treat ment of any disorder was ever attonded by -more prompt or elf actual resnlta. Yours truly, 15. F. JoHlUKHf." PKEFABED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer &. Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists; $1, six bottles for $5. ! 1 VALAUBLE DE- Patent JOB THB CURE OF HEMORRHOIDS, . Commonly C alio Piles. INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL PROLAP SUS AI. NO MEDECINE OR 8URGICAL OPERA TION NECESSARY, I have Invented a SIMPLE WATER CLOSET SEAT, for the cure of the above troublesome and painful malady, which I confidently place bciore the public as a fcur.E Ksuxr and Curb It has received the endorsement of the leading physicians in this community, and wherever tried, has given enure satistacUOD, and where it fails to relieve the money will be willingly returned. These Seats will be tarnished at the follow ing prices : Walnut $6.00) Cherry 5.00V Disc ount to Phlsiclans ropiarwTJTrrrnawi Directions for using will accompany each Seat We trouble you with no certificates. We leave the Seat to be its advertiser. Address, LEWIS CHAMBERLAIN, Patentee Tarboro, Edgecombe Co., N. C. Je86-ly , v - t THE 0HLY TRUE ' Will purify tlie BLOOD,"rerii IVfcK anu KlUNCTft lata Uie LIVER and KIDNEY and mstouit the and VIOOB of TOOTH. Dr- ppsla. Want or Appetite, lu- digestion, Lack or btrenrui, and Tired reelliifr absolutely curt'l. lioiies, muscles ana m.rvi t-Hc.'lvH n.w force. iCnlivuns the mind and - . -TST supplies itrain l-owcr. I A IW I Km C Suffering from complaints kHUIhQ neculhirto their aex wlU flad In SB. HARTEBTSIBON TOXIO a fafo iind speedy cure, (ilvesa clear, healthy complexion. Frequent attempt at comiterfi-ltluK only add to Ike popularity of the orlKlu.il. Oo not experl. ment (ret the OKIOINAI. A!JD bkst. Npnii x"ur BtiareMtoTho ur. naner jim.io. St. Louis. Mo.-, for our "DKEAM BOOK..' fall of strange and naeful mfomufcUoo, kJ.Co.V si RESUMED. :o: We take pleasure iu announcing to our numerous patrons and friends that we have now recovered from the disarrangement to our business causedTby the recent fire, and hare now resumed at the below named lo cation, where we trust to meet all of our former customers. :0: STILTON ZOELLER PHARMACISTS AND DRUGGIST : f AT THE WED DELL BOOK CT0RE. Opposite the BRYAN HOUSE and adjoin ing the P08f OFFCE. BURNHAM'S IMPROVED 8TANDARD S In c- - 1 TURBINE sou Is the Best constructed and finished Turbine in the world. It gives betterlper- intaze with 'part or full kate, and U sold for Less Honey per Horse rower Ithar. any other TURBINE. Pamhlet i ree bv . BURNHAM BROS., YORK PA.