Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / June 14, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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t. . - - - v ' s' fyy ' i ' '. iiiii 11 li : U h. V I ; t t BE SURE YOTJ AEE N QO AHBAD.-D Crockett. II 111 I II 1 V E II 11 4 VOL. 72. NO. 24. TARBOROVN. C. THPRSDA Y, ; 14 1894." i : i PROFESSIONAL CABSS. pOSSEY BATTLE, : Attorney and Cotmcsllor at Law, Offioks: Tarh.ro, N.C. Rocky M-unt, N. C. '. ViST A'lj istment ot cMms it specialty. fpiUL JONES, iy' : 4-. :.-:-- ,': j ,4U'U and Councelor at Law TAHBOaO, N. C, ; I PRICE FIVE CENTS - Bakery ! Having opened the Bakery at the Tax Sale! Persuantof the provisions of chapter 218 of the laws of 1889, 1 than, beginning Monday, Jlay 7th, 1894, at 11 a. m.; in front of the Court House door in Tarboro, sell the below described lands and town oiu sianq, opposite the fry an House, I lota for taxes due for the year 1893 and I am nov? prepared to furnish I unpaid therein and costs for advettlslng same: Fresl BmMies ifl Ota JT Jl ' MARTIN, j Attobhky. at Law, Practices in the Courts of Edge- combe, Martin and Pitt.' : Office rear of Doddle Pender Store. Tabbo&oJ N. C ii: JOHN b. BJUDCrXIW A SON, Attorneysfat-Law, M TARBORO. - . r X-C I It " , ,'. ! . rt. A. OlUIAM. - . fl TT.T.T A X A i) ' . as a a - . UOIIIUiWMilM son Attorneys-at-J-aw, i , TARBOKO, H. C. '-'-j tfui practice in thaCountiea ot Edgecombe, Halifax and Pitt, and In the Court, of the first Judicial District, and in the Circuit and inprem.Comrti at KaJelrn. - 1aal8-lT. r P. WYMYSl. n. Tery day to all those fcho .faror me wiin tneir patronage. - Call n me for pie, cakes and bread,' and your husband will have no excuse to complaioT of the baking. . , - I Hi C. HELD. Tarboro, Mar. 29, lo94. FOR FilLWG nm. Bald Head.Preparation I desire to say to the public and the la. dies especially at I ndw hare my , Hair !Krepaxa.tioii o that I can arrest the fallins out of the 4air within 12 to 15 days, and this tou will readily see if you will gire it a trial. uair also thickens from its user It hM no unpleasant odor and leares no danger coBtisctins: neuralgia, ? cold, &c. Mus taches, easily , thickened npl by Its use." Yoang men -will 'plrase make a note of this. Nothing asked to show the trtth- fulnero of the .bore except a fair trial of Cttixxy Bald Hbad rHABAtros.' Good that the hair is erer. , "Tarboro. N. a 10 85 0 23 43tf PHYS1LIAN & SURGEON. SrSSSSSfitE Office next door to Hotel Bow ard. - . . 30 ly G. EDWARDS. T" SUN AND HOUSE PA1NTZS, Paper hanging a specialty. ; tOtf. .TARBORO, N. C. . pO THE PUBLIC. - " f I am Prepared to do all work in rthe . .'-; : S Ondertaler's BnsiBess, at the iborteit notice. Hafinft eon aected with my shop the repairing business. All work Left at my shop hall hare Prompt attention, i- PRICES fiiElUTl, r Also a.firstlass HEARSE for hire Thanking my "friends for their former patronage, I hope :.o merit i the same, should they nted anything - n the . : j: " Jndertalciig gag t . WiwWil m f. : FKESH CABBY AT THE : CANDY Repairing Business ilir Place is on Pitt Street Three Dcora frr -1 e Corner of Main E2. ".r-J Simmons. STAND TOWHB3OT HO. 1. Bras well, residence near deptt W. J. Burnett, 792 acres, ' Bprirur farm ... Battle Bryan, 41 acres orer rrrer, Hatchet swamp, 1 town lot,. s 78 57 Frank L. Battle. 1 lot in Princerffle I 71 J. L. Coker, agt for wife, 125 acres, Burnett place, 1 town lot, part W 18 83 John W. Cottcn. 1 town lot . . : IS 14 C&ry Dicken, lot in PrinceTille S74 . D. FoxhAll, agt wife S00 acres land - . 15 57 W TQitr. ir aetMxm W.T.Utt .--r -180 aereslaad W18 I JtK. Grannis, 8 town lots , . 85 52 JUenryB. Hart, art -for .wife. .town lot r r . . to 74 WnulA. Hart, agt for' Hart Jef- - --frevs.1 town lot 17 65 J. O. HvxnAn.'aJrt Martha Yauirhan. 1 lot in PrinceTille 8 72 J. H. Johnson, 1 town lot 11 54 Thos. Killebrew, 1 lot in PrinceTille 4 17 J. W. Lipscomb, 1 town lot IS 49 B. F. Uoore, 1 town lot 9 23 At. J. Hathewson, 230 acres, Piney Tvooaa, logs Cornelius MUchel, 1 town lot, it&bles, 512 F. R. Pender, agt wife 2 town lots IS 81 i u. render, agt for Mrs. M. M. Pender, 153 acres land. - 8 92 r. U. Pender. 1 town lot - 15 41 Henry Pender, 1 lot tn PrinceTille 12 87 Milton G. Pittman, 1 lot. PrinceTille 516 J. 8. Quincriy, 84 acres land, Dan. lei place 11 88 W. R. Ricks. 1 town lot ' 86 84 8. W. Smith, agt wife, i land. LloTd field - 2 75 G. L. Winboume, 1 town lot 7 88 E. Zoeller, agt wife, 1 town lot IS 78 Alfred Harris; deUnquent land tax 3 66 J. C Pender, . . 7 31 Ben Smith. " 8 84 XOWUBRTP HO. tf Hoses Chase 1 lot in Penny Hill - 3 79 T E Cobb, 52 acres land, 7 64 KC Knight, 1.849 acres land, 74 24 W Lewis, 83 acres land,. 4 88 Ephraim McNair, 1 lot in Mildred, 1 18 Frank Pippen.1 lot In Hill 2 98 Joseph Reid, Hot in Hill - 160 Towjuuur iro. 3. Mrs Elizabeth Harper. 800 acres land 1185 Mrs BE Howard, 800 acres tend 26 57 TW Howard, 140 acres land, 7 79 Wilson Jones, 81 acres land 365 Owen Jones, agt 1 lot in Coakley, 11 47 J II Ward 125 acres land 3 tts from 9193 i 27 54 TOWSSmT HO. 4. E X Bryant, 265 acres land, - $26 75 Nelson Banes, 1 lot 116 J H Edwards rusrdian MPEd- , wards, aampr IwbvB99 acnalaiKl JLAil JBdw 10 55 864 43 26 40 45 215 146 13 28 8 48 -AT .1. V WALLS. Fashionable x Tailor. 10 CfilltS f er POllL i ALL KINDS. Pitt St . one door below L. Waldell ix xo O. Fine Full Dress and Erening Tailor Hade Suits. The term well dressed ex tends from tbe neck to the foot ot the 'subject. ' :i wCutting, repairing and cleaning due at short notice. i av THE NEW YORK WEEKLY DEQALD TIE BEST AI9 IS THE SAFEST INVESTMENT I tltt HAUL, WILL. BE WITHOUT AMERICA'S QUESTION Leading Family Paper- Ths reputation that the Weekly ' Herald has enjoyed for many years of - being the best home newspaper m the: - landwtu be materially . added to during the Jewt ot 1894, No paios or expense will be spared to make itr i every department the- most reliable intetestlng and mstrnctiye of all weekly -newspaper publications. . it wlll be Improved in many ways; A tramber of ne" fea'tures and ifleparrt menu will be eddt4 Th tAesrdeTloo ment la all fiehls of contemporaneous human-interest will fceably dcusstd;' from weekto" week4)f iccomp isbewtters, THE MEWS OF TlIB WORLD wUI begiTeh ii a concise laV complete f rm. Every impoitant - or interetlag event, either at home or abroad, will be d ily described in . the columns cf tlie Weekiy Herald. ! i .. In politics ths Herald b absolutely ln depeddent and sound. It tells the rights and wrings ot an siats witaout uar. Fnruiers and st'.ck raisers cannot afford to be Without the Weekly' Herald during " the csming year. It will c ntain a regular department each week devoed exclusiye y to subjects of timtly interest to them and giTlng many valnable suggestiuns and new ideas. : : The women and children of the land will find in the Week'y Herald a welcome Tisitor. The household, and . chLdren's pages will be h th instructlTe nd enter taining. Thev will abound in hints and receipts which wamen so much value. A brilliant array of noTels and -short stories by tbe best writers in Ameiica and England has been secured, so tf at fiction will be one of the most attiajtive features in the Weekly Herald during 1894. I In fact, tbe Weekly Herald will be a magazine of the highest order, combined with a complete newspaper. NOW IS THE TIMS TO SUBSCRIBE. Only Si. CO aJEcar ; Ssjro rox Bahpxs Copt. AddreBS ' ' THE WEEKLY HERALD, - HtBAIiD FQtTAM, . '' ' nbw.tobk: IT PUTS Then mi tngl retell he to?M la oar Urg ell shoe low. dties a net -which Mil a,000plr of sboM a day, making nraflt of S250.008 a rear.- wa but aell a mat maBT nalra. tha alcar profit on oar ladiaa. W ami ebiWrau ahoM U at leaat ten ecata a pair; and oa oa.ia aad boya ahoca 1 j ceata a pair. ' Wa ahall f-taoliah ahoa atore In rich of th flitrlargMt ctaaf thaU.8.,aod II they aell only SOS pair, of akoaa a day they woakl earn year. We should ba able to pay a yearly divUead of S&S a ahara. oreTer SO par eeol. - arearaolheinwratmeat. MTeaeUthaatockatllS a ehare. - The prloemaat inevitably be mach mora than f.10 a ahare. No atock baa CTer ben teM at leu than this price, which U lunar ralne. Stock nbn-aweaaablc. Incorporated. Capital $1,009,006. We have over 1,000 tock br-Ulrra, and tbe number la incrcasln: daily. Beme of th principal atock boldera are : T. S. WaUInf. K.T.iLJ. TaUrr, Bmtoa t V. A. Rerd. Jr.. Chicago i i. U. CarobII. Chico ; W. a. Kannawk. Ltttl Bock, Ark-t L H.Rich, ChicaxaiJ. F. Turner. Phlla.t B. Hardinz, N. T. E. J. Parae, BattU r li;,k . v. P. Iliillnn .! V. V. i Write for a proa pec tua eantalalog the aaiaea of oar stockholders, elo or unU an order for ttodt, encloting caikier't deck, coA or monry ordtr. Order, taken for one or newe aharea. Irica, 18 a share. -I . . - . ncvTro Qiinc nn . "'?r" UtA I tn gnub UU,f a.aoari. Agent tfamoa. Administrator's Notice. HaTine Qualified as . adminisfator of Gracy C. SUllii g, deCAied, late i f Edge combe county; North Carolina; this is to notify att persons having claims sgainsi ihe stau of said ffrceeaed to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 12! h day of April, 1895, or tnnr notice win oe plead in bar of their recoTery. AH per. sons indebted to said estate will -please make immediate payment. : . i This 12th day of April, j- i BEN RT JOHNSTON, ? 7t Aim'r of Oracy U. S ailings. Edwards; agt W A Jones, 17ft acres land. John W Hyde, 100 acres land, W AUart,agttor wife, 840 acres land C W Jeffreys, 585 acres land, Stephen McDowell, -4 acres hind, Fannie nttman, Y acre land, Enock 8 Smith, 238 acres land. Madison J Speller,-1 lot, . H L Staton, est Margaret, est of W M Faithful, 210 acres land. TOWSBHTF SO. 5. Dr. J H Baker, 1,278 acres land Bryant Drake, 118 acres land O W Bottoms, 127 acres land W T Mayo, agt 1,080 acres land TOWNSHIP Kt 8. Barnes, 653 acres land Mrs M L Bulluck, 593 acres land Jos A Bryant, 145 acres land Battle Bryan, 710 acres land Frank Black, 1 acre land . f J B Cutchin, 100 acres land . Mrs M A Cutchin, 250 acres land ' R C Crenshaw, 2 town loU " . " agt wife Annie, 1 town lot - C O Cherry, 110 acres land Cutchin, for -wife, 177 acres land Mrs Martha .E Edwards, 8 town lots Francis Etheredge, 69 acres land A Harris, for wife Kate, 80 acres Haywood Johnson, 1 lot W H Johnson, 1 lot W T Mayo, 'agt 'A L Mayo, 402 J acres land Robt Pittman, 2 acres land B T Pittman, agt children, 821 acres J Willis Pittman, 80 acres land Noah Pridgen, 95 acres land Jas W Taylor, 230 acres land M D Taylor, 8 lots -OliTer Weeks, for wife Maggie 40 acres land W W Wslston, 1 lot iowsbhip so. 7. Dr J H Baker, 863 acres land, Carpenter & Bawls, 1,1 05 acres and H H Daughtry, 100 acres land, JPEliaon, 1 lot. Carter Pope, 41 acres land, ' Isaac Pope, 40 acres una, John F Taylor, 1 lot, W J Weeks, 88 acres land, . Turner J Ward f acre land,- TOWSBUIi KO. 6m W H Harper, 42 acres land. Mrs E I Moore, 9i acres land J J S tailings 180 acres land, Daniel Wimberly 125 acres land, Curtis Exum, 1 piece land, v Towssmr so. 9. W B F Newton, 63 acres land, TOWSSHIP HO 10.1 Dempsey Griffin, 81 acres land, G P Sugg, B acres lana, . pOWSBHIP SO. 11. H C Bourne, 801 acres land . I Battle Bryan, 60 acres land Q W Killebrew, 478 acres land W H Knight, heirs, 54 acres land John Sherrod, . 25 acres land . . r Towssmr ho. 12. t . W S Armstrong 28 acres land W A Gray, 1 town lot i Rmith DaTi. 81 acres land i E Fountain, 1 town lot j ". . ( r TOwiHuur Hal8.r Mrs M E Barnes, 191 acres land John Braswell, 81 acres land, j Wiley Dunn, 98 acre land, ! James D Jenkins, 862 acres land JCNorrille, 44 acres land ! Jas Q W Pender, 43 acres land vr v -r vtir. 61 acres land i- AJKi B " ' T . tw t nm. Wilson county. lana W H Johnson, land " TOWX8HIT Hd. 14. . IN A STX)XE v QUA I : tlx. . r aanwa-aBiaaW - , , , nisi TJnlgjue Position rt u Hasr. e vetlo New JRMy. Vcj; a. A WlQMT i City ( Ww . ttramvwlrk lVaato fjady ;S-twaa A SkMch f Sttaa i.arn ' ra mmtt liar Uark-lha Ha alar. , 1 Tratla rBlb.atra.- IrHwply Boys ;. .;; .And. Every" Person -dieted with Disfiguring HuinlHatlng Humors . 'Find Instant Relief , d'5j)eedy Cure By.Us.ng -.Cutictira Remedies SkAaaaasWat JsW wwrM. Wrna wee fgaOaaOpafcoataajBjaUPTe -Ail SylvUa.hTiekba.aw.eatoaafaraaa . kat prareptod aad aurad by CwUrai Bana TIN SHOP. I AM. DOING A . Ml l I a : .11,21113 -;Wm BUSINESS as cheap, as any. I do repairing, in Tin, Iron and Copper promptly. J. J. WARD, Austin BaQdtaf. most tuperior Coffee i . I make the Pot srsr offered to the public IStf 835 61 62 4 5S 560 47 83 82 91 28 64 10 25 29 29 1 28 7 21 13 56 419 127 508 505 8 17 206 8 57 S76 17 89 835 10 07 423 6 69 8 47 838 2 23 180 88 51 19 69 Nathan Williams, 0a3y a fcw doen Wow Batd Fiirir, TARBOEO,N.a JACKSON OFFICE FJ111S CO., 'Women may" bo tnterested ' to know of the InTaslon by "one of their sex of a new field of activity. The Invader Is Miss Margaret Foley, o! New Brunswick, N. J. The new field Is a stone quarry, which aba superintends. , . , . , Cltr Treasurer James J? elleon. woo is.ioe owner .of, toe Quarry, hlch h si the lower .parte! Burnet street. Is a practice! phllaathroplst. as well as a man of meant. Th. problenv of providing' work for" the unemployed of New Brunswick has been studied carefully by Mr. Neil son, and he finally coocluded toi open his quarry to thos who could cot cet more conffenlal work than breaking stone In winter to do. Nearly sixty men fsts at work la the quarry when a reporter Ylslted It a day or two ago. At one side of the quarry, OTerseelng the work, was Miss Margaret Foley. She Is a tall, slender, pleasant-faced woman, with a keen twinkle' In her bright blue eyes which bespeaks her ready Irish wit. The lines of her mouth Indicate the firmness which fits her for her place of foreman. Although about thirty years of age, she looks much younger, but she calls herself 'a genuine old maid." Miss Foley lives in a little brick cottage Just In front of the quarry. She was born In New Brunswick, and uutU the quarry was oftcned supported herself by working In one of the factories. . The reporter was taken through the quarry by Miss Foley, who ex plained tbe way the work was dose. "Don't call me forewoman or su perintendent," said she. "I will tell you Just what I do. J keep a record of tbe men engaged' in the work, and watch them to see that the eVne Is broken up to the proper size, which I judge by passing the stone through the Iron ring. The stone Is shoreled In a half square yard measure In tbe shape of an open box, and I credit each man ' with the amount earned. "Sometimes soma ef the men put large plsces In, but, of course, I take them out, and they hare to break them up to the required lis. Real ly. there) la net so much to "do, air though it Is busier than we thought It would be. When tbe quarry was first opened only a few men were put at work, but now .we hare quite a gang. Mr. Nellson asked me to take charge of the work. You see we rent the cottage of him, and It la Tery conTenlent for me. I did not expect there would be so many men working, but do not propose to giro It fip now so long as I can attend to it." Miss Foley said the men make from seTenty-fiTe cents to one dollar and twenty-flTe cents per dsy. They are paid one dollar and. twenty -fire cents per square yard, and, if they work briskly, can break from one to one and a half souare yards a dsy. The men at work In the quarry at present turn out about forty to fifty square yards a day. As yet Mr. Nellson has no sale for ths broken stone, which Is, consequently, fast accumulating. The men are paid off eTery Saturday by Miss Foley, who Is kept well supplied with funds by Mr. Nellson. Occasionally, when the men are In need of money, something Is adranced to them on account. N. Y. Sun. FRIOHT. Perhaps It Is Exact, But Every ; One Has fit THat Way. - With one fearful, tearing wrench I awoke from sweet tsicoasciousness to a seas ef painful alertness. I I listened, but could hear noiilag. There was A heavy, sodden stUlness la the. air that . pressed pon! my brain tlko ths f ormos of a drug. It seemed a if: the sUeaee lteeli.was deafening. - . . - j I half roes from err bed aad lis tened again, breathless. ; Still ths same awful quiet,' s -though the maehtBery of the who) ttarrerss bad eeased working.- I Hooked slowly aroond ' ths room la Abs falsi " gaallghtt 1 was nry rotta; but hoW changed! 'I feould not tet, bsf ths change was; I only knew that some awful - metamor phosis had glvea srery object risttrte the SDtearanos of ' death absolute Hif,htttcf all b LdTtslrj lnrtx-Lccjl U.S.Coti Expert 0 W aa, w w -w- a aa death! ' The stillness of ersrythlag; be came morsfeppallleg, mors terrible from the fact that Vknsw not irhst It was, nor whenos U cams. I tried to shriek for fieln. i ! Not a sound would Ieavs my lips. Another moment and I should go mad, if ah, what 4 thought if I were nqt mad already. This, then, was the meaning of It alL I, was mad. : j . j With a sudden leap I sprang Into the middle ot ths room and gased about to meet what might la my madness corns to meJ . (V. Then, thank . Oodl I saw' what caused ths, horribls halluclaatlon. The solemn stillness, the Strang quiet, the ghastly loaelinest were all explained. . . Three, Joyous, hasty steps, fsw quick turns of the wrist, and all was righted. With lightened heart, ray brain fre from ths OTerwhelxalng strain, I went back; to bed relieved and happy. ; - My clock had stopped. N. Y. World. 1 s They Cafl Her th Storm Spirit "There Is' a ssorm spirit la Ken tucky," said B. a ! Babhlngtob, of tnat state. "It Is not a spirit la reality, but a worfiaa who has be come known throughout that section by th nam of 'the storsa spirit.' Bh stands whs storm Is portend ed upon a protnlaenc Overlooking the Kentucky rirer in Morgan cua ty, and her appear Is regarded as an Infallible sign that rcreriv weather-may be erpected. I saw her one, aad will nTtr forget how she looked as she stood upon the rocky ledge, her fac turned toward th sky as If beseeching some un seen power, ber long hair Coating la tbe breeze, her face pale aad emaci ated, but her expression firm, and resolute.- Mr guide, who was coo ducting me through the mountains, said sen tentiously:'! reckon well ber a storm. Thar air ths sperst.' From sereral sources X learned her history one the bells of ths moun tain side, she had p!!ghted her, troth to the young man of her choice. Be left for Frankfort on a raft aad was aerer heard from afterward. For many weary months she awaited his return, and then they told her ths truth, that hs had beVa drowned .la the treacherous river. Tbea rrasba deserted ber, aad ever sine, when a storm ts protended, she goes upon th rocks aad appears to plesid with ths elements to stay their fury that her loTsr may retem." 6L Louis Wobe-Democrat. . . PAOPvPg MUSKX - TaerluatK, TaerWU Mach, CrvnlAatV, . , CrvnloatK Breaback. Etc .Though noV associated with Scot Uod thVgptp Is. a UMtrutnent X wrt-aUitKUyvAd wa inaWa long ago to ixo ladUa races, also to the Italian Aad Brstooju. It ap pear to bar reached ltsaost pop nlar'deTslopmeat from the musical and vUiitarlaa view ia th cas of th nighland tMgpip. f , Th ground work ot th Ultra weal Is, as thsssjo implies, a bag of skins, sewed togtther and, ot course, perfectly airtight. This con dition Is aided by th tts of treacle, which is poured into ths bag aad al lowed to soak wall into It. - , Into th bag are fitted fiv wooden stocks, geoerally ot crocus or ebony. The stocks In their tarn hold th three drones, the chanter and th mouth pleo the chanter being per forated by th note holes, whll the mouthplec is used for filling ths bag. - Each ot the drone pipes, aad ths chanter , is fitted with reeds made of Spanish cans, contrary to the gener al Icrpreeslotl, which Imagine th ehsatcr to e a kind of Cuts, and the drone hollow ("ticks. - " Barpfpe tmuto Las a filed scale, and the treble, or O clef, is th only one used. , The great diCculty of Slaying, howsTer, is to obtain the oubllng cf the notes at one quick ly and ' clearly. This prof usion of dqubl or grac notes, as they are called, makes ths msauscript of bag pipe musio Jook some thing like a document filched from the British rnuaMjrn To the . SaAseosch such words a Taorluath, Taoriath Mach, Crun- laath, Crunluath Breabech,' look rery ominous ; but being laterprated, they are simply methods of doubling and trebilng th note. , , It can hardly b denied that the abore termi, although they might be called jaw-brrakera, look much mor imposing than th Italian ex pressioos which figure so largely la fiaaofort practice. Chambers' otiroaL AN UNDERPAID LETTER RdTata We Oowey A rate BWaaiaaaanaaaaaaaiBaBkaB M H i lit rhrw WSaaSr SM a tnww S TaU . IWTa U P Ta C a raaaaV"" " Worry and ldls;MUow Jackson, Tonn , MAJrOTACTtrXXBS 07 oa School, Church a so I ' and Office 255 965 14 87 6 48 500 ! AdmlDMrator's ICotlee , ; i The undefsiSTied haTiojt q -allflad as adai'r of T. B Barlow, deceased , tbi is t nnt fy all persons owing tte said deceased, to make Immediate pavmenr, and all per. sons baring c'stms sgains n aaiu u o. . . - ft i town Barlow, to piceot tnem ior payment ' ;r . i 118 90 ... - ".Ml Wa lal MAflAA I HIS - - - 560 897 7 61 810 3 31 1 57 2 24 10 61 S3S66 2 73 40 86 1 90 4 26 9 914 356 210 3 09 6 90 4 66 418 18 71 .4 95 6 61 818 122 824 Furniture. School and Churches Sented In ill c Best llanner. Officco Furnished ssT Send for Catalogue. within one year irom aw, - - 100 Und will be pVad tn bar Tbi 3rd day of Hay, 1894. f W. L BAKLOW. Adm'r. I J. U Bridgers A 8oa,AttysA 6t J T Sharrj. 26 acres land W. T. KNIGHT, y BherlS Edgecombe County. 5 52 2 16 TEE COUPEE 1AEELE YQEXS, 111, 118 aad 115 Bask Btrest. I NORFOLK, VA. - pit LAJU3X STOCK OT TINlBHkD . I Beady torlnmedlste QeUvery. March SI. I New Zealand Innovation. The flrst.election of a woman to the office of mayor within the limits of the British empire has taken place. Mrs. Yates, the lady la ques tion, was elected by the ratepaytra of Oaehunga. New Zealand, aad has been duly installed. Mrs. Yates seems to bars taken up ths duties ot her ofic with sublime confidence la her abilities to discharge' thm welL Ths retiring mayor, Dr. Es son, prevented ber with the gavel and asked her to bear la mind th motto on the back ot her official chair: "Be Just and fear not." Mrs. Yates told him she did not need to be reminded ot the motto, a she had already carried It into effect la her life. She asked if any man pres ent could say thas his home was not better with a wife la It It may be there were men who felt otherwise, but they discreetly kept still, and Mrs. Yates triumphantly said that the same was true of the city coun cil. She reminded them that for serenteen years they had tried gor ernlng ths city with men alone In power without satisfactory results, and promised them that things should b different la the future. HervAs Well As His. Worry Is a ours and a source ot untold evils. It seams ths face with lines and farrows, and has a most depressing effect upon that hyper sensltlrs organ, ths stomach; which at times becomes a most unwilling and laggard aerrast, Indeed, It Is safe to say that unless encouraged by a cheerful temper aad bright, or, at least, hopeful theught th stora- ;h will play truant or sulk and do work which It can shirk. . To physiological explanation of this Is the close alliaaoe of ths great sym pathetic nerve, which are 1 worse than ths telegrapti for carrying bad news; th worry aad anxiety which depress the! brain toroduo simultaneously a seml-peraljsie ot the nerves of th stomach, gas trio Juices will not ' fiew sad presto. there is indigestion j Oa sign of men Lai health Is seren ity of temper and a self-control thst enables as to bear ;wlth equanimity and unruffled temper the petty trials and Jars ot Ufa, especially those aris ing from contact! with scolding. Irascible, irritating folk. It U well to remember at such times thst these unfortunates are their own; worst enemies; and a cultivation of the art of not hearing win help us Tery 'much. It Is a very useful art all through life, and k vrell worth some trouble to acquire. Demorest's Magatlne. " I j . The Indian's O It. Tw Brands of WHlsty. Two gentlemen met ia a res Lau ras t tho other day. One was appar ently In something of a hurry, tor he occasionally looked at his watch and glanced about uneasily as he lis tened to whatever th other was saying. . Th other, however, was rery much -Interested la whsjhs was saying aad found it Inconven ient to leav off. Us had achieved that peculiar stage where ths tosgu wags without perceptible effort aad time Is no object. . His friend was a ssighty.good listener,-aad nodded his head now and then rather per functorily to Indicate that h was still ia th ring. Ths attcedaats winked at each other aad watched the pair. 'At th cod of an hour th tsakattrs man was apparently as fresh as ever h was, while th lis tener began to exhibit signs of pun Uhmeat. - Then a barkeeper went oer and asked them what they'd bare. Th talker paused . long enough to say Whlsky,, and pro ceeded with th ooeHrtded cooTersa tlon. "What kind of whiakjr asked ths barkeeper. Tight Lr or talkla' whiskyr "Bring me some fighting whisky," promptly exclaimed the "patient la dividual. ,'..' But th other fellow was so mad that he got up aad walked dut with out drinking. Flttsburgh TXTpatch. rr i . . mvt a-tsuis rea 10.- saxi Chicago beak tug Loos at4oTk "commend ma to th old eetab" listed British banker or merchant. "lust befor Christmas th houst with which I am ooaaected mailed a . draft tor nearly four thousand dol lars to a boos la London with which we had docs business for mors years than I personally caa rrmea ber. We hare aerer "regis tered the drafts, and nrrer had any troubls with them natn thb last 00. "About two months after w had a sahls rasag ailing lmmdits remit Lance, and he rsxt Saturday we had a letter calling our attention to ths fact that we Lad omitted t remit La acoordano wtth our usual custom, . , . "Ws cabled back that we had re mitted, tut would secure a dtrpilcatt draft, and oa Men dsy, vs. did this and seat It 00 with aa srplaastioa that If th other draft tarnad xr? they were to notify us. TLe morning after wa had goes to this trouble we recelTed back, ria ths returned letter office of London and .this country, our first letter. with Its laclosur unopened. Ia ths hurry ot a heavy mail on of Our clerks had accidentally cadrrpsid ths letter, aad two cent posts da was demanded 00 Its presenta tion ia London. This sua was re fused aad th Letter rsturaed. La ao oorda&os with the lateraaUoasi pos tal rule, to ths orlgi&al seeder. Oa irdrtcg at th post effic X found that' ccr cas was by no means aa exceptional on. In this country large firms almost Uraria- by take la aa their mail promiso. ously, aod pay any claims tor trader paid postage weekly, or wbea ds maaded. Ia Loadoa, It appears, all th old standing bouse Instruct their clerks to refuse anything that Is underpaid, aad th Item 'exaes postage' Is nerer seen on ths credit cash books. "Ia this prticular Isstaac th cost ot the cable message, would bars eoTered th insignificant litUs out 1st of this kind forawhols year, whll th la teres t 03 money out of which th firm kept Itself for orer a month would amount to qtlt a rem." -St. Louis ClobIemocrat. 78,000 Mnee ef Portage Stamps Last year's Issue of pos tags stamp was, tn round figures, four thousand mi21oa- If theseisd all ben of th Oolnmblaa sit they would haTs been suffkteat to make a ribbon long enough to encircle the earth three times, with something of a remain der. The postal cards used during the samev period. It placed end to end, wold put a paper girdle around the earth more than a dozen times. It msy not be generally known that Uncle Sam orlnts one postage stamp that is not for sals, L ., th seoond-elass matter stamp. .This stamp, new or canceled, nerer passes out of th hands of the post oSc Qcials. Postage 00 periodicals Is prepaid by the pound, la cash, and the . reoeiTtng clerk cancels these special stamps to ths rlu of th postage thus prepaid, aad forwards th oanoaled stamps to th depart- t ds EaH fVm VsrftteM KB. Mr. Budyard Klpliag has bu2 a house 00 a hill ia Brattleborocgh, But, although there ar greet ad. Taatagr In livirg near tts doods, lt Is erpecxlT to ret water ea a high rock-boDd hii t!r.Eplirjr employed sxperts to drjT a wtJ. It went down through th rock at a cost of sereral doiiarf afoot,lteoa tiaued to go down for sereral hun dred ftsi, and, 1 111 no water was struck natn It reached a depth of thre hundred aad fifty feet, which Is said tS up reseat a cost cf several thousand dollars. Ths whole coun try roared. It was a jrrret )ok I se th hard -earned dollsrs of th novelist dissppesrtsg la a hols la th irrotmd. but, strasr tossy, Mr. Kipling seemed to thriT aloa with his driven w;:; th darper It went, cr the steeper becaithhl, the nor his laugh rang out over th hls of his eUte. Afid cow it la known that it Is ths public that Is ultimately paying for that weL aad that Is why th aoreiist langis. Westminster Oasetta. . "MIggs Is going deuoedly slow la a . a . m a- a A S W" a ais courxsmn 01 nua. Airesa. 1 .up- west a new slang Z7. . TZjTaZZ pose, though, he waat to De sure oil . . town 4 -7- - lsmy-L ground before he proposes. turns himself loose, 'trraU I lnpctin Enirranta. aMVWAAl an aa aa a his groi . -"Humph I ; If the Inquiries be has been making of late about the real estate she owns are any Indication i Jake it be wants to be Sure of hers.'' Buffalo Courier. I. r a.- u at i-nnwrirtAt COltfGEaf xEMTUCXt USiUtSlTY - tCSINOTOI. "V.. 00 THl mMri a T. ATfTl TJIPLOMA BrlrWru-.ia-aaa mrJ2lLJZ'72 I Portraits as Buttons. : r r . . , Aairaaa, W. . aJsiTSi. Ialaa- 'r f r Agents' profiU per monlh. Will AH 7 H Drove It or py forfait. New art-oie just out. A 31.50 sample ana terms free. Try as. Chtdester A 80s, 28 BoodBC.N. Y. ; - Large artistic buttons ar among th novelties of the season, and those who have eighteenth centurf miniatures, set la frames, aad STrea and Dresden china buttons, will have opportunity to display STerybody he meets, squanders his money with hangers-on and tns cis- solute, aad. La fact, has a rpgwsr debauch, be Is said to b giving a potlatch." ,1 1 Th term originate among th Indians of th Fadfle coast, where, when a brave is In bad odor, he tarns all his property Into meat aad drink aad asks ths tribe to feast with htm. Th reeult Is bankruptcy, but renewed popularity. This sort of, banquet is called apotlatca." Boston Glob. Inspecting Enl grant One of ths surgeons sent abroad by the Ualted States to Inspect In tending - emigrants st European ports esrs thatvbe knowledge of such Inspection by tbe United States made the steamship companies ex tree: el T careful as to' the sort of steerage passengers they accepted. Hs Inspected fifteen. thousand p senffers and dstaiced but two, while oa this Bid not a sicgls one of thos ra cam under his inrpection was sTnaaAed troo thli country. The Old Friend Acd the best frisaL thai fails yoa, is Bimxaooa Xirer BagO" lator. (th 4 Z tkat'a what TOO. bT at th BsKtiCQ CC this exceHett Iirs? Bdk2at porU ssocU rxi t w ... um a tht ajrjtslSt tSS Vul OX ItisthKcIirsr 1X5--ciEes; la better than pC. aad take the plao of Qriakw) xA CalomeL It acts dlrscOy cm th Liver, Kidneys aad BoVaU aad give zvrv Ills to tb wiici sys tem. This fa th tadjctor yea wxnt. Bold br sH Llk . Liquid, or to aWst U ta; dry or mad tat by HaV i" . .Ml , 1 - t I 4 r i I It 4 1 -" t i f i t 4' i - I ,l" t . A I ' t 1 1 . -
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 14, 1894, edition 1
1
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