Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / April 26, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 V- - -? r- e - B " e Jatre-pT ... ; . - I 4. .. ... - . ... A'A- IS. Y A aj : -.; 4,! BE BTJEE YOU AEE EIGHT ; THEN GO AtEAD.-Di Crockett. A, i. it iii t it ii Ax '-N i ' 1 I J , j- j 'ft- ii j i i r a i . . r . l !: ri U! I P ' VOL. 72. NO. 17. TARBOROV N. C, THURSDAY, :APRIL 26, 1894. PRICE FIVE CENTS PROFESSIONAL CABDS. r TiOSSET BATTLE, Attoniey and Councillor at Law, - 7 ( Rocky Mount, N . C, . Adjustment ot claim? a specialty. pAUL JONESr 1 xU'y and Councelor at Law . TARBOhO, f N. C, J.MARTIN,- j j Attobhby at Law, I 11 Practices . in the Courts of i Edge combe, Martin and Fiti. i . - ... - r ' i' .... . ' V t ' Office rear of Doodle Pender's Store. Woodward & Lothrop, 10th, Uth and F Sts. N. T7. - Washington, D. 0. A' JOHH l: bkidgeks & o, Invite the attention of patrons in Virginia and'the : Caroli- , nas: to the r; v A t fbrney s-at-La w , Freshes a. A. OnxiAM. Q.ILLIAM & SON uoinu GXIXIAH I r ..Brighest,-- Clea'nest and Attorney s-at-i-aw, : TASBOKO', . C. ,3 . v IVin practice in th.o Counties of Edgecombe, Halifax and Pitt, and in the Courts of the First Judicial District, and in the Ciitmit and Supreme Courts at Raleigh- 1anlSM.T. . HANDSOMEST i stock of Goods tbej hate erer shown. MOTHERS 1:.! MOTHERS !! To know that a single applica tion of the Cuticura Rernedies will afford Instant relief; permit rest and aleep, and point to a speedy and economical cure of torturing. 2 1 disfiguring. Itching, purnlngand scaly humors, : and not to . use them without a moment's delay Is to .failTin..your. duty. Cures made In childhood are speedy, economical and permanent., -i T. p. mmt si. d, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. Tartooro N O :- Office next door to ' Hotel Bow ard. - .- J 30 ly G. EDWARDS." j SIGN AITS HOUSE PAINTES, Paper hanging a specialty. 40tf. : TARBORO, N..C.7 THE PUBLIO. am Prepared to do all work in i the Undertaker's Business at the shortest notice. Haviiig eon nected with my shop the repairing i business. All work Left at my shop shall have Prompt attention. PRICES MODERATE, i hire their merit Also a first-class HEARSE for Thanking my friends ffoi former Tjatronafire. Ii hooes '.oi the same, should they need anything i n the 1 1 : 'T ! ; . Undertaking i Repairing Business My Place is on Pitt Stree Three Dcors f xct tVe Corner of Main. E. J.Simmon. J. L WALLSt Fashionable-Ir:. Mcr; Pitt St , one door below L. Wendell & ixi ON MOJIDA7, APRIL 2D, - they offer 100 .pieces of silk striped French Flannels at S3 cts. per yard, Tame 75 eta. :One hundred pieces ;of Orepe 'de C bene, 15 eta. the yard in all the newest and delicate shades. . ' OUB HOTJSEKEEflNQDEPTS. eontainaver eomfort, ; lozory J and necessity with which, to ' tempt the taste of the artistic ' - aa well aa the thrifty house wife, ." ! HUCK DAMASK AND,. BIRDS EYE TOWELS . - with knotted fringe and hem stitched ........ I .. $6 a dozen. Irish Linen Pillow Slips. SI a pair. OUR SUMMER DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENTS Teem with novelties, beaatiee and exquisite fabrics of jhe '.most celebrated manfactarers.' OUB INDIA LINENS ' . Sheer and cool for hot days. OTJB CHINA 8ILKS Elegant and. comfortable for ' calling or evening -wear. OTJB MULLS AND LAWNS DAINTY and incomparable. OUB PRICES ABE IN keeping with thsr time lower than ever before. Write to us forsmjles and prices. Bold Ouvaghoot t world, rams Dwoa tn Cmrnm. Cap. sole pt urttuf, Botoc- Mir All AbiUMBkNdlinipwMlBMr,Mwiie4 in. iar racial TTUsjilsfcaa. fimij arii snd aiaoJa Wy rubM proaatad bj Cntlmr Soav. II tirod. aclOsc. sbtmi mmt. ex knew the comfort, Btrensth, and vitality t Ovtlevn Pliiten, they .would never be without, am I every way Um pues. r beatotplaktara. SHOP I AM DOING A : sn, 0 BUSINESS as cheap us any. I do repairing Tin, Iron and Copper promptly. J. T.- VJflRD, t : k Austir Bnildtrjg. . I make the most an peri or Coffee Pot ever offered to the public 13tf in A BACHEWSIPEOPOSAE it Nathan Williams, Goods sent by Express C. O. to any part of the South. Tailor- Fine Full Drees and .Evening MadetsuiM. The term well dressed ex tends from the neck to the foot of tbe subject. ', " . I wuuttine. repairmz and cleaning d ne at short notice. J . dtt best m ummmmm 11 1U1U I EVER MADE. THE NEW YORK WEEKLY DERALI) -Por 18944 WILL BE WITHOUT AMERICA'S I QUESTION Leading Family I Paper- The repaiation that tbe Weekly Herald j haa en j nved (or-man f years of being tbe S . best borne newspaper in the ) land will be materially . added to during the year of 1894. No pains or expense will be spared j i- to make it in every department the most i . reliable, interesting and instructive of all '. weekly newspaper publications. , s It will be improved in. manyways. "J A number of new features and departs ments w ill be addtl. The latest develop ment in all fields of contemporaneous hu man interest will be ably djscusstd from I week to week bj accomp isbed writers. THE HEWS OF TUE WORLD " will be given iri a concise but complete form. Every : important or interesting event, either at hooie ir abroad will be , I duly described in the columns of the -Weekly Herald.' , . .1"-V - la politics the Herald is absolutely in dependent and sounds It tells the rights aud wrings ot all sides without fer. Farmers and stock raisers cannot afford to be without : the Weekly Herald during the coming year. It will contain regujar department ev:h week devoted exclusive y to sahjecis of timel y interest to them i and giving many valuable suggestions and . .'. new fdeas. : it ; f . ' -i Tbe women and children of the land ' will find in the Weekly Herald a welcome visitor The household and, children's pages will be both instructive Ind enter taining. Ther will abound irbints and receipts which women so much value. A brilliant array of novels and short stories by the best writers tn Ameiica and England has been secured, so that fiction will be one of the njost attractive features in the Weekly Herald during 1894. i In fact, the Weekr Herald will be a magazine of the' highest order, combined with a complete newspaper; , NOW IS THE TIME; TO SUBSCRIBE. I Only a few doors below Ectel Farrar, TABBOBO, N. C JACKSON 1U1 m mam Then are rfngle teUU (ho (tore la ear Urf etUes which nil 4,000 pir of ahoea a dy,mkinf net Troftt of a'260.000 Tear. WaaeUafcOMlow. but vtnlli graat many pmtra, tho elear profit oa aimm' I our bultea, ml ' and ehUtfrena sbom U at iaaat tea casta a pair, and oo o "3T and bojr1 ahoaa ID eenta a pair, yi a anaot -Wr5iin inoa norca in each of Ua fifty larraat ettlaa of thaU. B.,aa4 U they Mil only S00 pun ot ahoaa a day they would ears $525,000 a year. Wa ahoold b abta to pay a yearly dividend of ao.z& a aoara,or over ao par cent, a year oa the inveatment. - W aell the ateek at $10 -aahare. The price mart inevitably be much aaore than $10 a f hare." Ka stock haa ever beoa aotd at leaa than taia prioe, which la iti ipar valuer Stock noaaaeaaable. i Incorporated . Capital $1)00,000. "We have over 1,000 etocklioldera, and tbanumaer la inereaaing daily. ' Some of the principal atock. holderaare: T. 8.WaUhf, H.T.i X. J. Potter, Boatoa f -K. A. Becd, Jr., Chicagoi J. B. Camjioell, ChicaKoi W. M. KrDurh, IJttK Boct Ark. il Ii. Kick. Chicafa 1 1. F. Turner, Phil, i B. Harding, ft. Y. E. J. ljrn, BalUa CrNk,kiea.r.F.BaUaaVArcad,'BT.T. Write for a proapeetna containing the aamea of ear stoekholdere, ete or tend an order for ttoelt, encloting eathter't cAeck, oath or monty ordtr. Ordera taken for one or aaoaa aharae. Frice, $10 a fhare. "'.. i ncvTCD ounc M m..m. ?" UhAI M flnw vuii - av. awaiua. a ina. v. u Only Sl.OO a 1? car Hbnd fob Bamplb Copy. Address THE WEEKLY HERALD, i . .He bald Sqtjaek, NEW YOB?. ABRTEYEOYAL PILLS the celebrated Female Begnla tor are1 perfectly safe and always reliable. sFor all irregularities. painful Menrtrua-ions, Surppe. tion, ; etc.; they, never fail to afford a speedy and ...certain relief. No Expibi- miht, but a scientific and positive relief, adopted only after years . ot ; experience. All orders supplied direct from our office. Price per package, i.0O. or six packages for fS.OO, by mail postpaid. Evbbt 'Paokask OoAauirrtXD. Particulars faeal. ed ) 4c. All correspondence strictly con fldentiaL PARK REMEDY CO.,' 10m6 Bostok, Mam. Administrator's notice. ""Having qualified as administrator of the estate of tbe late Barah N. Bass, all ' per sons having claims agrnst the said estate are hereby notified to present the same to i me on or before April i, iovo, or inis no tice will be ple d in bar or same. All I persons indebted to said estate are notified I to make prompt payment to me or my at. torneys. J. n. baoo, Aum r, T Whitakers, N. C Jko. L. Bbidoxbs & Soa, Att'ys. March 29, 1894. Jackson, Term., Manufacttjbxbs or School, Church . and. Office Furniture. i School and Churches Seated in tit e Best Uanner. 1. Send for Catalogue.' 111, US and 115 Bank Street,' " NOBFOLKVVA. LA&GC 8TOCK OF FINI8HXP i Uonumants, &ai (rrtTestoseS,' Ready for Inmedlate Delivery. March 81. l' " 1 'i , - COMMERCIAL COLLEGE if KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY nmsmklM AND XJIM-OMA. Peter Patterson was HI at least be thought so. - It was wara vprln weather and he felt laucniid ana de pressed. "What should I do, doctor T be raid to the wbite-balred bid bnyslclan. "You say nothing ails me, but I can tell what my feelings are better than you can. I know. I shall be down with something soon. Couldn't relish my coffee this mornlngr left my miiic - toast tintouched. Hate ful life, that of a bachelor. Oh, dear me." "Why don't you marry, then? said the old doctor. ' : "They need so much courtinff,- said. Mr. Patterson..' "You spend six months, or so at least. ' You must go to the theaters and opera if she s gay, and to church meeting's If she's pious. . At fifty a man likes his slippers and his dressing gown and his easy chair of an evening. . If It was just stepping over to the clergy man and getting married,' putting a ring on her. finger and .saying or nodding 'Yes two or three tlmeft. why, I wouldn't mind it, you know. vAh,' well," id the . doctor. everyone to his taste, My advioe to you is to go into the country." , t io anovner cotei ana more mer cenary waiters??; ,? " L.Tioj go to a nice private house. I know one. Rirer before the house. woods behind it- orchard to the left, orchard to the .right; no fever and ague: no mosquitoes, I'm going up there to-morrow; and 111 see If shell take you. . "Very well, 111 think of it- Patterson thought the matter over and thought better ot it every day, and when the Little note inform ing him that the widow would be willing to take 'him in reached him he had his trunk already packed and was. ready tostart that rery afternoon. 1 As for the widow, the doctor bad prepared her for her boarder's peculiarities thus: "Nice fellow; solid; plenty ot money; thinks himself ill, but isn't; oughtJole .married; told him so, but he bate the idea of courting; marry off-hand some day, no doubt." The widow was what Yankees call a smart woman. She bad married at sixteen. At forty-fire she had married off all her daughters and was well-to-do, buxom and happy. I ' Her son and his wife boarded with her, and she added to her savings by taking a summer boarder or two, If they happened to offer. "Fifty, and a bachelor," said Mrs. Muntle. looking In the glass. "Well, it seems a ; Ditv; but then when elderly gentlemen marry it is gen erally some girl that leads them i terrible life, and likely It's for the best."' Then she looked in the glass again Mr. Patterson came to the widow's and obeyed the doctor's prescription earefullv. Then. too. Mrs. il untie did not smile at his aches and pains, and insist that he must be perpetu ally well because be had a freahoom plexlon. She bad savory teas and tasty potions which she produced. when he complained of "feeling mis erable." -1 ' ' .' For two months and more Mr. Patterson boarded with Mrs. Mun tle, and happier months he had never lived through. Then he went back- to the city for a few weeks; returned in urgent need of more milk, more fresh air, and stayed un til the last chrysanthemum 'was blooming on its. wilting branches. Hehad CTOwn'ao iond of his ntue room and of the coxy nursing o buxom Mrs. ; Muntle that he could scarcely bear the thought of parting with them both altogether. After all, why could he not buy a house and try to get Mrs. Muntle to keep it for him? Perhaps she would- He wpuld offer her a high salary. - If "Only he could approach the ub- ject without offending his hostess showing her, as he did so, that he considered her his equal and a lady and aUthat, as she certainly was. After much consideration he final'' ly mustered courage for the effort and, walking Into the front parlor, sent the small servant to ask Mrs.; Muntle to step there a moment if she pleased. - , .'"Gracious!" thought Mrs. Muntle, what can he want?" Then she settled' her necktie and walked demurely in. ' i Tie seated, ma'am," said Mr. Pat-' terson. "I have something to say which may require some considera tion." v " - - ! f Oh, dear, it's coming," said Mrs. Muntle.' ..- i 11 suppose you know, tbal Tti a man of some little means, ma'am," said the old bachelor; "able to buya nice house, furnish it well and live in it comfortably?" . . . . , ' - "So' rve'understood, Mr. Pattert son." said the widow. - "And of course it's tleasanter to live -that way than' bachelor's loagings. . , . , - , . .. . .... -."I should judge it might be." .rSfou. judge rightly,"- said Mr; Patterson-, "but vou kno w a bachelor piusKbe1 in the hands'; of aerfaati it be keeps bouse.' A gentleman doesn't want thati he:wanls a lady, to au If he erer said the lady to bet self. A!rod she answered: : ' 1 Weil, sir,' I : am -pretty4 free. It's true. All my children married. ,' "I 'know money -would be no ob ject to jorx.' T6uve jnough." Bet IftWete to tell you'.'that T haUd boarding ' houses,- and " wanted a home, 1 thlnk yotf d have ptty on me.' ni buy " 4. beautiful huse,' and fou everything 1",'""!" ( -"I ' . .. ', ' I ,Ha paused and Looked at the lady. thought, i,; , ... !3 'It alavt rxmxaatic fought Mr. Muntle "bui UUf,twe aj&'t., youag, either of muaa4 it get to he .lust that with the mot eeattjaemta. after : 'Don-'t rtfuae ae,"pleaded Mr. Pattersca. i : " t,v s t ' 4 ."Veil,' J.iPattejrtoa, I won't," aid Mrs,r Muntle.' "Tra my own mlstresstiand! theugh I Xv never thought ol a ieeond marriage, why, I think: l'mrwavraoted' ha makfmr oae...i Andj-na doubt? I shall-n ever repent, for 1 think you've a fine- dis position and I understand your ways and tastes. - ; :.i .'--Htr;. - alt; rotterBoa luteaed. lie saw what lieTha4'4oWHprci?oeed euid beerJ aeoepted, without, having any idea of what he was about. ;- j He looked at ' Mrs.- MonUe; she was verynloe and fresh and comely and ' ten - years hU Junior at least. He could not' have . done a' better thing and he would be married with out any trouble and courting.' " So he put his arm about Mrs. Muntle s waist and said: ". ; 1 f Thank Too, my dear. , I consider myself very lucky." : ' : He wrote to his good .doctor . In about a fortnight's time to 1 teH him Wb Zrrlgatloa .Baa , , Paeeit Bpot la Oolorado. that he had taken, both his preacrip- i -t w -arr - . ' i vujua. it., i. iiews, , . , if - I ligtert oi all La Learetun Powtr Lattnt U. S CoVt Export. rr if r-'-ir .-ni -r r-n .XUa'0 Tkewa) Bet liHi JTt twwa aw Sew JL . ' STaM Saeai iff.TT"?? a"aK rasarx: e 7 ' L7ii t- Own um Wa, iaMMf wtun, u .at. avMITtft. aaafart AdOraaa, W arflF AgenU proflUper month. Will Jiaa orove it or nay forfeit. New article lost out. A $LW sample and terms free. Try as. Chidester ft Son, S3 3ond8t,,N,Y. Ues ParrMW In e Defile ef Mertit. . Wwstern w wiia 1 The largest tree la the world lies broken and petrified' at the end of a defile iaitcrth western Nevada. 4 Its dimensions are' o great ! that those who know of iU existence hesitate, to tell the story becnse they hardly expect to be believed; but there is sufficient revidence:to gtreHh'e tale credit,', Improbable ' though It may This tree makes the monarch ol the Mariposa grove seem like Lmpoe InraL rwf ivnnam1 Ca It "tlm UnMt pine grow a on "17orwegaa hUls to be the meat ol some great admire ts but a wand." As for the story ef Its discovery, it to thus told by "1W Lyon, of Fresno, and supported by other equally well-known people: "Back in 18GQ a company of about forty-five left Bed BluS to prospect the then, .-unknown country beyond Honey i lake and .Surprise taUey. There were la the, party lawyer, butchers and ahoeraakeriv but we were" one-sided oa one point; each individual felt positive that thlf waa the tuming- point- of aia extotence. and that bright, saining gold la a- 11 ml ted quaatitU would reward the rather tmftleaaaat Jaunt. v ' ' J '"The' Indlana-wwei called them pa-nwaYa- wt at that time rais ing hair, aad very'maay-tudd& moves were at 'tknesr1 aeeeesary to get rid of their unwelcome-attentions. -Flndmtr but-Bttle gold la this section we traveled' toward Baker county; Ore., through a eomv try entirely- derfndedbf tunbeT, ex cept a few dwarf 'ccttrin'Vdodjg along the waterway. Close to the Baker coun ty' Una we cime'aVpealng la the rocks atooVwlde enough' forour wagons to go through, and on either side loomed up preclplcee five hun dred and six" hundred .feet blgh. The crevasse waa about fifteen miiee long, and at its" end. Just . to. the rieht of .the iralL 'we found a num ber of. petrified tree stumps of dlfier en$ h)fAghts4VS . . ! ' ."In their midtt' op the ground lay a monster tree, soim what; imbedded in the soiLrlt . wa . -completely pet rified, and from the cleaa-eut , frao turee of. the! trunks seemed to hate fallen after lis -petrification.; At the butt tlita tree was qul sixty leetw diameter. 1 1 We 1meaered IteteagUt with a tape Uae. rlt1 waa just abx hundred and sixty lx feet long. No limb tmalnedL.bai'-ln:'the trunk were cleft where Urab apparently had broken off. v Amber-ilka beads of petrified pitch: or irturi adhered to the eidee oL the trunk for ffistanee of one hundred feet or more. ' : "Where the mag iraxik was broken squarely off the center seemed trans parent,1 " ant the growth marks showed lnv' beantlful 'concentrlo rinira: ; ' Its natural aTToearance handsomer thai"aay.'drsed marble or : mcealo 1 1 ever have teen,' and e all -'expressed' the"pttlotf that "It would make a wcmaerfully "beautiful floor and Interior "finish for some grand bundmgr-SeTraacle amlner. T bought thee potatoes from the town founded rrr ITrtra fli!t " W said, a he entered the oSoe of the newspaper ouaded by Horaoe Oreeley, say the New York Tribune. There wer only two potato, but they filled 'the basket La which they were carried to thi city by Geors Wt OaleVesglaeerj from Greeley, .tv eta county, wo use ci ucn weighed .two pound and tea pvnoe and the other wa' a, .trifie Jighter. Either looked Large enough to snake a meal for ' average family. , JThey are aampin of what can be grown u in, sou ex UoJoraoo alno th LrrlgaUon. , preached by Mr. Qreeley has changed that part ot the country from a barren waste . to a bountu ui garden, Mr,. Gal ald.- "X doa't mesa that all the ootatoee grown-45uV ,thcrare3th lxe.f the, but some ol them are much Larger. A I left home In harry , these are the largest I could find. They are of th Rural New Yorker variety, but the CEarly.Bo and other, vartette grow, to th same aii. Ooeaere C irrounA will fcro-1 due two hundred and fifty bushel of. potato or of wheat in oae eea- -' A farmer who has a farm of oae hundred and six ere sold his crop for eleven thousand doCart hut year. Greeley to now a dtycf three thousand inhabitants and contain large storehouses! and elevator of farm' pTodooe.' It to a sight worth seeing when the farmers com Into the city with their slx-horss team and wagons loaded with' produce. There seem to be thousands of them In th street and th load oa each wagon Is enormous." V ' 'I "Do all vegetable grow ; larg m that part of ,th oouatryn laqulred a reporter. . - .'j . "Not all of them, i Pumpkins, for Instance, grow ao larger thaa la the east. We can beaCth world in growing cabbages, however, v I saw on head of cabbage .that weighed eixty-fouT pound.- It waa ao bjg that It filled a cart and the, leaves hung down over) the wheels. Pie plant stalks- are longer, than I am. "When Mr.- Greeley first saw Ah 1U of our eity," said Mr. Gal, fit wa a candy waste, with here and there a cactus.'' That waetweaty three year ago. . ; - .fj-. TIe went with the first colony and they were obliged to rrid in stage three miles from the nearest railway station. " When some -of the' men r saw what a' doiattvlooklsa, spot they had been taken to they turned back at onoe and left the plac for good and alL. Mr. Greeley, mounted a box on the sand an d made a speech to those who remained, telling them whet'might be aocompliahed by irrt gatloa. .Those '"who listened to hi advioe and ataid In Greeley have be come rich men. , ft Isn't at all sur prising that th people out, there be lieve that Mr. Greeley was on of the best and wisest men that erer drew "breath." I , i a ' -t - v Va""t r? t . LLOtD DECADCNCK.. ' , A Oark Ptctwre Orawm of ISe Pin ale auwdo YAf Maav ' ' Is th ehrralrv. th. ttK amd a. J th -PfWtT arriv at tht tSoa,tUearast txrpoe. th ptabs PC37 T rocgh aad anh uvLeg aad cool seu-sacriae taat ?H A ftaHUT fACTOmr. ' . Qvtctv Ire a4' haaabU faAgwr r4er QJH i Waas make a maaf.W look la vain among th bulk of our writers even for sp predatkm of the qualillc." With the younger me all that Is asueily ealtivated .to' that flippant smart ass' .which . 1 synonyraoos with cheapness, -..Tkere is each a waat of wit amongst them, too, sueh a -lack ol variety, such monotooy of thread bar .srsojects worked: to deatll Their Vomto" paper subsist ppoa TepetiUea of the tare veaerabl iests, the mother4a4awt soesebody dnrek, and as edifying deception Yoceeesfully practiced by aa smfal Le fts' bra band or wife. As they have nothing true so they - have nothing new, to give us, nothing, either to expand th heart or move us to hap py- mlrta. - Their .Ideas of oeaaty tbrratra always to be satisfied with the.bTJetV,cancrs legs, pretty things la their way, but mot worth mentioning a aa aid to th moral, Intellectual and physical strength that make a man. , They art sadly deficient ia imagination, .too; that old raHacy to irhkh-they cling, that because ao evil thing ha , always beeo, therefore it must always co tirxnels a much th result of waat of Imagination as of the man s trick stained and ef all aba and euallUa JumUed together: Thtware first taksa vp try Iron arm project! g from aa sadless chala to th fifth story of th factory. Her they are weighed and etsptled la to larfebLa. Ptom the Ua they falL to Ihe next tory, lato. large cyllader, fourteea 'fast lomr,; wakh. revolve rapidly, and by frictloa th ants are eieaced from, the rth which eliag' to tkem and polished, ao tht.thy coca ootwhlU and gUitesicg. . . . 4 From this story, the nuts fall through shoot to "th third and most Interesting Boor.' Imagine row of.locg, marrow table, ch divided leBgthwlM.Lato.tfira seo tlon by-th 4aah-hljrh stripe of wociTbas strips -also ssrreund th dg of , th table. -.Each of. the. section Is foredwlth a strip of heavy, whit canra. which mete lacessaotly from th mouth of th shoot to an opening 'blading down below at ta farther ead f th table. Those slowrymoMageaavas bands, about a foot wide, are called the plektg apron." . ., s Upo th outer apron of eas4 ta- oi orxnoae oowu irom u , Joct a slradec itream of peanuts, aad oa each aid of the . table so cloe to- of tvadieg th resonsibUlty of see- Rttber.a ercly,Jo have "ajbow lag right done In any matter that doe not Immediately affect his per sonal comfort. But there la one thing th youngerjpaa are specially, good at, .asd. that is. giving their opinion; fbis they do to each other's admiration until they verily believe It to b worth something. Yet they do not even .know where we are In the' history . Of t the world. Sarah Grand, In, North American Review. ...V.Ta Orww TeotMwcaw.. , RESULT ,Or. EARTHQUAKE. R awl foot Lake. baiTew '.. adrt aw lxsak Waltawis. 1 - 1 Tleelfoot lakej la western Tennesi aee, la one of tie most remarkable bodies of water- la th United Sutes," said John E. York, of Troy. "It to popularly supposed to have a subterranean source from the 'Mis sissippi river, It having mo visible outlet or Inlet j but the evidence seems to be decidedly acalast this theory. I tried: to fsthom It once; and while this can be done at some places, yet there to a considerable area La tbe center where no line has yet been found long enough to touch bottom." It Is, -not affected by the rise snd fall of the river, but ha a tide corresponding with that of the sea. ; The oldest settlers can ' re member when the land where the lake to now was a fertile farm. One night there was aa earthquake, dis tinctly fait, bur doing very llttl damage to the surrounding country. The next morning the land was gone and Beelfoot lake was .there, and has been there ever since. . It Is on of the most noted fit hie v resorts la the south." Globe DemocraL , Chsrfes Lamb was oooe Invited by an old friend to meet aa aithof who had lust published, a volum of poems; ' When he arrived, being somewhat early, he was asked by his host to look over, the volume of the expected visitor. . A. few minute convinced Lamb that It possessed little merit; being a feeble echo of different authors. f . ;:, The opinion wa fully confirmed by the appearand eC the gestlcmaa himself. wLk self -ccU,od con fidence La his own book wer so man ifest as to awakes in Lamb his spirit of tthektevoo waggery. His" tena does memory eaabaedhim daring th dinner to quote fiaently several pas sages from tht pretenders vol urns, with th to trod action: 'This re mind me of sone . verse I wrote rhea I wa very young. - "-Whea this "had happened several time, tb .real ' euthor of th line quoted, looked .' ready to burst with s B ppr eased indignation. AtLasta a climax-to' th 'fmi, Lam V coolly quoted th well-known opening Uae to "Paradise Lost," a being writ teabyldmseLf. -'.- " 1 This wa too much for tvtrse raooger. He Immediately rose, and with, an: Impressive solemnity of manner add sees ed th claimant t so tnany poetical hooor. ' t "Blr," h said, "I . have t Umely subialtted alt , this " eealajf , to , hear yoo cLsIia the merit that may belong to any llttl poem of my own; this I . have born, la sHeace; but, sir, I never will sit quietly by aad aee the Immortal Kiltoa robbed of Tared! Lotr-Youth' Conpaakm. room stand rows of negro girls aad women picking out fc Inferior pea nut a they pass aad thro wing thaca Into the central sec tloa. So fast d their hand snore at this work that ce cannot see what they ere doing till they cast a haodf ul of nut 1st th middle dlviskm. '.By the. time a arut ha passed Jhe sharp eye aad etickhaad of eight or ten'pkksrt on may be quite certain that It la first-class article, fit ,for the. fi&al plane down two stories lato a bag which BaaH preseetly .be marked with a bread which win commaad for It the highest stark et pric. . . Tha peaauU. from .th. eeatral aprons fall only to th aecood story, where theytmdergo. yet. aother . ptftlng over oa similar tables, the best of these forming th second grade. , Th third grade of peaairu. or what remains after the second packing. Is then turned lato a ma chiae which eruahee th Basil aad separatee them from. the .kernel. These ar sold to th manufacturer of candy, whil the shell ere ground up aad used for l&ors .bedding. So ao part of this llttl trait, vegetable or mat, whichever it may turn out to be, to finally wasted, but an serve torn 'useful purpose. Blu ai Gray. - - A H sWleve perlntend titags for hlmcme on ! . eaaofrsa m4 saaflTiAtnanv "f si WF mil I ua a T&ajA.siAam; sraawa of las to that." ;-.-, ' " -I know that," said Mrs. Mantle, : Tou are almost as much alone a I am, Mrs. Muntle,n. said Mr. Pat terson, coaxingly: '-- - '.' 'The doctor knew him. ; He's gt lag to do it just as he said he would; ad. N. Y Sun.' Thlrtswn Mads Hsr a Dwchaaa. The preseat duchess of .Sutherv lead, according to a' story which to current la ".Scotland, owe her posi tion to the ftupersUtkm coaceralag the - unlocklness of 'thirteen. ' One day at the house' of the late Lord Bosslyn 1C, was diaootered that there were thirteen . persons at the dinner table. . To add to the number Lady MU!icent,-a daughter of. the house who had not yet com out, wa sent for to Join the party, and the young marquis of Stafford was so charmed with her that he almoat Immediately afterward proposed and was accept- a i c.' ... - ' Trawtaesreart LeattSaav f aawaasawsa There to at crsnt a eooA deal of interest manifested La the prepare- uoo of transparent leather.: Accord- leg to a foreign, exchange, this may b aocompliahed . la the toilowLnjr manner: After the hair has been re moved from the hide, the Utter, tight ly stretched upon a frame, to rubbed with a mixture consisting' of- oae thousand parts glycerias, two part salycllio acid, two part picric and twenty-five part borio add. Before the hide to absolutely dry It Is placed la a room where the rays of the oa do not penetrate and to saturated with a solution of bichromate of pot ash. Ua the hide becoming very dry, there to applied to the surface a solution of tortoise shell, by which transparent effect to obtained. Thw lesthertoof aa exceedingly flexible character, and Is used for th manaw txfactur of toCet article. It to claimed that It to exceedingly valu- lMa(w?hviLm hnl It mmHL Itie la thto 'dlreetloa have met yet : I been put to th testa-. Y. Ledger.1. X.drey affect. YOUR BIRTH MONTH. ocoecwew for Qiris Wa . as Sue) Talaga. Aa old astrological prediction give th fellowisg character of the girt avorrdiag to the month ah wa bora La, a follows, say Harrison's Monthly Magaxln: If a girl to bora La. January, sh vQ b a. prudeat-hpueewlfe, given to melaacaoly, but good-tempered aad fond ef fin clothe; if Iq Febru ary, aa, aff ectionat wtf e aad tender mother, aad darvoted to dress; If ia March, a frivolous ehsrterbex, some what given to quarreling, aad eon Bloeierrriagowra aadbeojaets;,f la AmHU.lacooitaat, mot very LotellS Ct, bat Uksly to be good, lookisg aa4studicascr, fashion. plates; if la May,, land aom, amiable, aad give to sty U la dree; If la Jam, Unpsta ous, wtU marry early, be frivtlous, aad like dressy, clothe; If la July, peealbly headset, but with saDry temper aad- a pe&ehaat for gay at tire; If la August, amlsbie aad prac tical, likely to marry rich aad dress striklsgiy; If la September, discreet, affable, much Hied and a fashionable &rmert If la October, pretty snd coqueUsh, ad devoted to attractive garniture; If la November, liberal. kind, of a mild disposition, and aa admirer of stjUsh dress,, if La Pe oember,. wen:prporloaed, food of srvsltv.axtrsrmnaL aad a stadia t W a . -w- T " A.TaBor and a Doo Juan Marts' Die d Aux ef ToreUas, a tailor of Trots var, Hub rary, who died .the ojher.cay, wa, deepit hi eomprtlvely, huasbl calling, graadee of Spain. Ia the early thlrtVee his father wa foreed to tU from Spala for political reaa sons. All his great, estates wer eonfiaoated at th time. With th little ready, money .which h had saved he purchassd a acssli farm la .Wexsche La.Scuth Jlsngary.. H lost er eathst, .however," aad his see, Jean, rtmamad without a friead la the world- A 'tailor of Temesvar took pity, oa hlaa, tooght him his- trad asdeaabJed the boy to become at least a respected and honored dt Uetu He tried to rrgala posseeiloa of the confiscated estates, but wa unable to do so, a h did mot hav suffideot money. .AS tha tailors aad the shoemakers ef the city followed hlsS to th grave., . "a. ' S ;The Old .Friend And the best fxic&dV that merer fails joa, jseimaeist liver Beco lator. (th Bd Z thats what . yoo.' hear at th tae&tloa cf this ' excellent liver nedicbe, . and t' McahooIiBoi b ptriuadad that asyur Is will do. ' . ' . It Is tie Kxcg ot Liver XTed- dne; la bctier thaa pilX azhl tale th place ci Cousin and . Calomel. i It acts directly oa th liver. Kidney aad Bowel aad give &w life to th who! aye- ' tecx Thiais the median yon rwant,; Sold by all Prnrs-jt La liquid, 'or fa Fowder to be taisa aa 9 at a a dry cr made torn a ea, i 1
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 26, 1894, edition 1
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