Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / July 5, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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Attorney, and CouneaUor ati.Law,; ') Ttboro'N.O. Omoxs: J Rocky Mcunt, N. $tg" adjustment ol cl lma m specially. piUL JONES, Mt y and Uoiinceior at taw TAB BOKO, N. C. I T J. M.AKT1N, J . ATTOBHit at Law, Practices in the Courts of .ijdge j . combe, Martinet d Pjt;t. . 0$ee rear 61 Doodle Pender 'a Store. TAbboro, N. C: . Havicer' opened the Bakery at the old stand, opposite the Bryan House, a am now prepared to furnish presl BreaiPiis M Calces every day to all those who f avor me with their! patronage. Call on ine for pie.", cakes and bread,, and your husband will have to txcuse to complain of the baking. H. C HEL.I. Tarboro, Mar. 29t 18941 J i)UN, L. BtflDGElVs & 60N, i At torneys-at-L&Hy , I'HRBQRO, 14- G DOHNBTJ. QltXIAaf . vlLLI Ail. & SON I A-ttombys-at-j-a, TARBORO , N. O. j Wi i practice In the Counties ol Edgecombe, Halifax and Pitt, and in the ConrU 1 the first Judicial District, and in the Circuit and Supreme Courts at Raieifh. . . 1anl8-lv. I v P. XiXM. Jl. U. J PHYSICIAN Sl SURGEON, Tatrtooro KT- Cf,: Office next door to Hotel How arjd FOR FALLING HAIR, USE CULLEY'S Bald Head Preparation I desire to Bay to the public and the la dies especially that I now have my liair Preparation bo that I can arrest the falling out of the hair within 12 to 15 days, and this you I will readily see if you will give U a trial. llair also thickens from its use. It hu no unpleasant odor and leaves no danget conlt acting neuralgia, cold, &c Mus- achee easily; thickeccd up by its use. Young men will please make a note of this. Nothing asked to show the trtth- fulnees of the abve except a fair trial of CTJLLYa Bald Hk4d Prkparatkin; Good references given to Bl o that the hair is tuiCB. 11 nut luiutcr wan tyrr. ALFRED CULfuEY, , . Tarboro. N. C. 30;iy G. EDWARDS. ! HSN AND HOUSE PAIHTEB, t Papar hanging a specialty 4 tOtf. :. TARBORO. NJ C. PO THE PUBLIC. f f I am Prepared to do alt worktn thai j v. Undertaker's Business, at the shortest notice. Having con netted with my shop the repairing business. All work Left at my 'shop shall have Prompt attention. PRICES, MODERATE, 43tf to if! 1 Horrible Temptation of an, TnrHah Burgeon on the African Coast Ia tha Far f aat Kaapty Itrauik Ha , Itanablae Cpoai a Caaalb! Caaasv- DMat lit the Fa se erf ' tec BoUaS A real fine old English gentleman was Dr. Thomas Gun ton. who, while1 .confabbing with' a number of friends In a prominent 'resort recently, re lated a number of Interesting expo- j of the memories left by my family ia nences irpis career, says ma wean-1 tnat country. He did so la terms Impressions of the Comte de Who Srvd with Him. It was after the review that I made the personal acquaintance of the officers with whom I was to have the 1 good fortune to fight for a cause which was. already dear to me. All made mo most cordially welcome, but It1: was with Kearney that I found myself most: at home. He It was who. could rpeak tonne of the French army in Algeria in; 1840, and The Horrible Dssta of a Baa daoo Womia Highest of &H ia LeiYcsing Powttv Laiest U. S. Govt Report rria4 fas' THm When mv littla cirl was om dxtb- old. ak had a scab form n W faoa. It kept pT rtiug until she was oonpletely covered from bead to foot. Then aha bad boila. - 8be had forty on her head at one time, and mora on her body. When six months old she did not weigh seTenponjicU, a pound and a half leas than at birth. Then ber skin started to dry np and got so bad she could not shut her eyes to sleep, but lay with them half open. About this time, I started using the ce nc'UBA Bmnm, ana tn on mou a m c&mpifUty ewrtd. The doctor and drug bills were oyer ea hundred dollar, tha Ccncraa bill was not more than Jh dollar. My child is now strong, healthy, and large as any child of her age (see photo.t, and It is all owing to Cuncvai. Yours with a Mother's Blessing, ' Km GEO. H. TCCKZB, Ja., 632 Walker Bt Milwaukae, Wis. Bold thrioghont the world. Pottsb Dara tn Ck. Coar Bole Props., Borton. AU about the Blood, Skin, Scalp, and Hair," mailed free. Baby BlvmUbes, falling hslr, and red, rough l... prerented and cured by Catleora Soa. WOMEN FULL OF PAINS rind In Cntieara Antl.Fala Plas ter uatant and grateful relief. It hi the drat and only palB-kUUng, strengthening plaster. TIN SHOP. Tin I AM DOING A Skis' - ail RcoSag BUSINESS as cneaD as anv. I ID Ington I t His later years have been passed looking out for sick peo ple in the Canadian wilds, but his younger days were marked with activity and no little adventure. "What do you regard as about the most perilous position you were ever In, dootor?" asked one of his mends. 'Well," musingly replied the doc tor, "I am sure that a circumstance that happened . when, as a young man, naa tne aouoie omce of su percargo and surgeon of an English trading vessel on. the African coast, left a deeper !and more painful 1m presslon on my mind than any other event tn my life. , His listeners gathered somewhat closer and the doctor went on: "Our captain and the ship's com pany generally Were pretty well ac quainted with the natives, and varl ous kings and priests and other men in authority would frequently come aboard to get a -bite of salt pork, and once in awhile a glass of rum, etc, so it was not considered dangerous to go ashore and make little excur sions Into the Interior. The natives were cannibals, but they knew who to eat, and Interest for their per sonal welfare prevented their mouths watering for the blood of an English man. I went ashore one day with the mate, who got the notion into his head that he wanted to kill two or three gorgeously plumaged birds, cure and dress their wing feathers and take them home to his sweet heart. We got separated In the jungle and I became lost. I had left my pocket compass aboard the ship, and to save my life I couldn't locate myself. Well,' I was In that forest for two days without a thing to eat before I was lucky euough to strike the coast, from which I bad at no FRESH CAM do repairing m t j -i vue coast, irom wuioa oaa a 1113. IrOn ana ODD.er time been three miles distant. I ' as I : Z I . . r . promptly. hire their Also a. first-class HEARSE for Thankinc my friends for lormer patronage, I hope io merit the same, should they need any thing n the ' ;l - . v. Undertaking. 1 i "'"t OR " . I Repairing Business Mr Place is on Pitt Street Three Dcors frr i tV e Corner of Maift ' . - " .'-'! -f 1 - 1 E. 1 . Simmons. .1. i ViliLLS i Fashionable :-: Tailcr J10 I'ltt St , one door below Lwaidelj&i Tarboro. KTi Cl. - Fine Full Dreea and Evening Tailor- Made Suits. The term well dressed ex tend from tha neck to the foot ot the subject. f wCutting, repairing tnd cleaning -.ne at short' notice. I M THE NEW YORK WEEKLY UEBALD WILL BE WlfHOUT QUESTION AMERICA'S ':: j Leading Family Paper- : - . f f The reputation that the Weekly J Herald Has enjoyed for maof years ct being the best home newspaper in the laod will be materially added to during thjeur of 1894. No pains or expense will De spared to! make it in every department the most reliable, interesting and instructive of all wdekly newspaper publications, , j . it will be, improved in many ways'. A number -of new features and deparls mebts w ill be added: The latest develoo meat in all fields of contemporaneous hu maa interest will be ably discussed , from week to week by sccomp dflbed, writers. tflE NEWS OF THE WORLD will be given iu a concise but complete form. Every important 'or interesting event, either at home or abroad, jwill be duly described in J the columns j of the Weekly Herald. V ' la politics the Herald is absolutely in dependent and sound. It tells the; rights and wrongs of all sides without fear. Farmers and stock raisers canndt afford to be without the Weekly Heralifc during the earning year. It will ccntain a: regular department each week devoted exclusiye y tn subjects of timely interest o them and giving many valuable suggestions and new ideas. ; .' ' f t 1 . The women and children of the land will and In the Weekly Herald a Welcome visitor. The household and children's pages will be both instructive and enter tiiinine."'Thev will abound in bints and i rereinta whtah wftmen so much value. A brilliant array of novels and short Btories by the best writers- in America and England has been secured, so that fiction will be one of the most attractive features in the Weekly Herald during 1894. In fact, the Weekly Herald will he a . magazinq of the highest order, combined with a complete newspaper. j NOW 13 THE TIAUB TO SUB SO RIBS. UAT THE CANDY J: T. WARD, Austin Building. I make the most superior Coffee i Pot evt-r offered to the public. 13tf STAND Nathan Williams, inn AT Cents Per Ponni, ALL kinds, i:: AID IS THE SAFEST INVESTMENT I EVER MADE. a Umtv THE REST Only a ftw doar3 belcw Hotel Farrar, TARBORO, N. C. starving. I think for the first time in my life I realized what hunger was. Here the doctor made a grimace. "Boys," he said, "as I got near. the coast my nostrils met a most savory odor. It increased my torment of hunger tenfold, while my heart re joiced at the prospect of food, but to my horror and fright I walked right into a group of niggers boiling a man. . The remembrance of the temptation offered me clings to me yet. Weak as I was, however, I ran from the place lest I, too, should become a cannibal. If I remained with those niggers in my starved condition I should have partaken of their hell broth. But. I was safe, for a party of the ship soon found me, and when I saw them I fainted dead away. 1 "That terrible temptation," the doctor continued, "was the one event of all my career that makes me gloomy whenever 1 think of it and I almost always think of It. The Czar's Staff. - which deeply , touched the heart of the.exlle.the son of the duo d'Orleaoa. Kearney had participated In- ooe of those campaigns on African ground Which brought out strongly tha sHerita of the French soldier. He had also associated himself with the triumphs of France in the Italian campaign of 1850. One who saw Philip Kearney rec ognized In him the typical soldier. As early as 1849 the young and bril liant cavalry officer had lost his left arm before One of the gates of Mex ico, at the battle of Churubusco. His Infirmity did not prevent him from always mounting the most vigorous-looking horses, which he con trolled on the march with rare ele gance, holding In his band his reins and his naked sword. A head, the picture of energy, framed by the cape which almost invariably hung about his shoulders, a strongly marked nose and. a piercing eye, gave him the look of an eagle. His abrupt speech and his imperious manner denoted a proud disposition, and a character Incapable of flattery or of dissimulation. But though at first his manner was not always fit ted to attract, one soon learned to appreciate the noble qualities of his heart, the firmness of his will, the accuracy of his judgment, the truth fulness and grandeur of his soul. This man, apparently so nervous, was calmness Itself in the presence of the enemy. .His unerring eye, his prompt decision, his clear' -and concise orders, at once revealed in him the true warrior. He Inspired an unbounded eoofidenoe in all those who had onoe been under fire with him. - If he did not spare his soldiers at the decisive moment, he spared himself still less, and by his example obtained from his followers truly he roic efforts. Century. - REVIVAL OF THE STOCK. JACKSON IE Only Sl.OO a "Scar Hknd fob Baku Copt. -.': ... ' v v " i . Address . 1 V S''l- THE WEEKLY HERALp, i I Hebald ShA,'' I ; NEW 4YOIUw. There are single retail shoe stores In our large ernes wnicn aell z.uuu pernor anoea a auy, miuj a set profit of $260,000 a year. We aell shoes low, but we aell a irreat but Mire, the clear profit on our lad lea, mlaaea' and chjldrens' aboea ia at leaat ten centa a pair, and on ob - cna and boy a' ahoea 15 centa a pair. We shall saollsh shoe stores in each of the fifty largest cltUa of theU. B.,and if tbey sell only S00 pairs of shoes a day tney wouiu cam $525,000 a year. We should babble to pay s yearly dividend of X3 a share, or orer SO per cent, a year on the investment. We sell tho stock at $40 a share. The price mast inevitably be roach more than $10 a share. No stock has ever been sold at less than this price, which is Its par value. Stock non-assessable. Incorporated, Capital $1,000,000. We have over 1,000 stockholders, and the number is increasing daily. Some of the principal stock holders are : T. 9. Walling. N. Y.j I. J. Potter, Borton ; V A.Berd, Jr.. Chicago; J.B. Campbell, Chicago ; W. M. Karansurh, Little Bock, Ara.1 L, If. Kick, Chicago: J. F. Turner, Phils.. B. Harding, N. T. E.j. rsyne. Battle Creek, Mich. I F. P. Uullette, Areaue. N. Y. Write for a prospectus containing the names of oar stockholders, etc, or tend an order for ttock, enelotinff cathirr't check, ath or money order. Orders taken for one or more shares. Price, $10 iirurrn SUflC tfl s .tft rt UCA I tii OnUK UUi sv, sostoi. Agemt itaruea. Fill Jackson, Tenn , lANCFACTDBEBS OP School, Church and Office I Administrator's Notice. Having qualified as sdminist-ator of Gracy C. Stallirgs, dec.-ssed, late t Edge combe county. North - Carolina, this is to notify all persons' bavin? claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or' before the 12b day of April, 1895, or this notice will be olend in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted U sV.d estate will please make immediate payment. ,f This lZth day of April, 1894 . - ; ! ' HENRY JOHNSTON, It Adm'r of Gracy C. S allirjuf. AdmlD.Ftrat0rVI10t.ee, The nodersiened having q .all tied as adm'r of T. B Barlow, d- eeed, tbia is 1 1 ni.t fy all persons owing H e said Jeceasfd, to make Immediate payment, an) all per sons havlDtr claims against the fsiq i. d. ISailow, to, present them lor payment tthtn nn ear from date, or this notice Hi be n'tad in bar of. their recovery.. This 3rrt "day of Mav. 1894 - - t W. L BAKLOW, Adm'r. J. C Bridgers & Son, Att'y s. Ol 1 Furniture. School and Churches Seated In tue Best Manner. Offices Furnished Send for Catalogue. The court of the emperor of Rus sia, says one of the St. Petersburg papers, consists of one chief cham berlaln, five chief court masters, one chief gentleman of the. table, one chief hunting master, one chief court marshal, one chief carver, one chief stable master, thirty-fire court mas ters, seventeen stable masters, six hunting masters, one director of the imperial theaters, two chief masters of ceremonies, eight assistant hunt ing masters, nine assistant masters of ceremonies, 173 chamberlains, 249 assistant chamberlains,- twenty-four court physicians, twenty-three court priests, ten ladies In waiting, four ladles of the bedchamber and 180 as sistant ladies in waiting. Work of a Tract Society. The American Tract society, soon to erect a twenty-story building In Nassau street. New York, is one of the oldest . bodies of the kind la America. The society has been sending out millions of tracts, books. leaflets and the like through its long life, and some of its publications have been more widely circulated than almost any other printed mat ter. The society sends a vast amount of . printed matter to the south, and takes a special Interest in the colored people of that region. Maker, el Nsatkwaar Q Back to rKe i Forties for Fashloras. "The revival of the style of wear ing stocks." said an old dry goods man to the Pittsburgh Dispatch, "recalls a story my father used to tell . me when I was a boy of how they compelled the soldier of tha German army to wear needlepoints on their stocks, under their chins, to make them hold their heads erect. Tha stock recalls memories of the forties, when the fashion was in Its glory. ; The dude of that period waa not oomplete without a stock fastened around a bishop's collar. First, they were made to buckle la the back, then to be kept In place by a spring, which held the stock tight against the couar. About six years ago, when I was la London, the swell haberdashers ' told me ' that they were making an endeavor to re vive the old-fashioned stock. They thought they could force it upon swelldom by stages, so they first In troduced a collar, fashioned after the stylish collars of the forties. with the points coming up well un der the chin. Then, a number of swells were Induced to add the stock to tha collar. The effort proved a feeble ' one. - In a year, from a few people, wearing them.' the number dropped, until only old men who al ways oling to the oIA-fashloaed Idea remained. X waa surprised to tea a, Sl ,aaa upon what a great scale ine iiocx ha been - Introduced into America, The neckwear manufacturers here evidently consider' that they will be more fortunate than thelf Engltasi brother ware six years ag awsaaaaa-BaaaaaaaaaWa!saaaafW Sophia Hertford, 'of! 8aa Tranclsoo, .met with a frightful ceata from glanders a the ceault of the greed of horse dealer, say the Chronicle. Htr Ufa was taken thai lea dollars might be gained bt the owner of a bora afiloted with the incurable A1 sense. L . Mr. Hertford was the wife of teamster, . and she died Jus j whea the blow would fall heaviest oo the a a a a samuy, as an naa givea bin to a child but a few week before. The story Is a horrible one. Ia January Ben ford bought a fine-look lng horse from James .; For. rester. Tha horse would ordlaar Cy have been worth about seventy-five dollar, but Bars ford thought h waa getting a fine bar gain when he secured the horse tor ten dollar. ' ' A few day later Mra. Dersfbrd, who was Just recovering from her confinement, drove the' horse out to the park. While she was standing hear, tha horse s head tha animal sneesed. Soma of the spume from 'his nostrils wa blown In Mrs. Bats- ' lord's face. She brushed It' off and thought no more of It, A ' day or two later Bersford notloed a running from the fiorse's note. Not suspeot Lag glanders he went to Forrester, who Is almost as well verted la the disease ot animals as' a veterinary surgeon, and asked him what the matter was.: ; Forrester replied that tha horse had caught a slight cold from sleep ing in his oorral, and that if Bers ferd would put a little grease la his nose he eoud easily cur the animal. Had Bersford done so he might hav been killed aa well a his wife. Here ford was not satisfied and took the horse to Dr. Creely, the veterinary surgeon to the board of health. A glance' was sufficient to show hln that the horse was suffering from aa acftite attack ot the glanders of a moat malignant type. Aa Hertford was very poor he was allowed te taka tha horse to Forrester so as to get his money refunded beor the horse should be killed aocorttlag to law: Forrester told BersJord that a ( he had the horse tea. day ha ought to have got ten dollar' worth out of him and that he would not re turn a cent of the money, j He also Informed him that If the horse had Xti glanders Bersford could kill him hlrpself. Dr. Creely then destroyed the animal. 5 t '.Theliorse was killed three or four ds after Mrs. Bersford had bees out riding, and about the same day ah began to get uL Tha first day she-had a severe headache. Chills and pains followed, together with a awelllag of the fcreieid, similar to eryseptas.' ' Physician were sum moned and the woman was., treated for a fever. About tea day passed. Tha woman continued to grow worse steadily and waa removed to the French hospital. Dr. Talt, tha chief surgeon, waa summoned, and Im mediately recognised that tha wom an was slowy dying from glanders. Whea she was brought to : the hos pital she was In a comatose condi tion,' with her' temperature at 106. There' waa a sloughing on the fore head and on a part of the scalp, and eruption, had broken 'out vail over her body. ' Not a thing could be doaa for tha poor 'woman. Every' oar was given her, but aha soon became delirious. She then tank Into a com atose condition, and lingered along five days, until fiaaHr'she died. By this time the sloughing,' where the spume bad reached the moeou mem brane ot the nose and where It had spread to, presented ar dreadful tight. i THREE GBEAT HEX. ficameat Brttlsb FMXoeophare ot tbe Century and Thalr ZXfarenoeev Osaptrka, TrseaQ see -TM Ski Hues, Kasanse af taa Trta Wrtsea a Bias slsll s ltk akaa Oliver Twa, To me, profoundly averse to au tocracy, Carlyle's political doctrines had ever been repugnant, says Her bert Spencer In Fortnightly Re view. Much as I did and still do admire his marvelous style and vigor, If not the truth of his thought o much so that I always enjoy any writing of his, however much I disagree with it Intercourse with him soon proved impracticable. iwvoe or umce, m. isoi-z, l was taken to see him by Mrs. G. IL' Laswe, but soon found that the al ternatives were listening In silence to his dogmas, sometime absurd, or getting Into hot argument with him. which ended In our glaring at one aa other, and aa 1 did not Ilka either alternative, I ceased to go. With TyndalL however, the case seem to have been different possi bly because of greater tolerance of his political creed and his adrocacy of personal government. The rule of the strong hand was not, I fancy, as repellant to Tyndall a to me, and Indeed I suspect that, had occasion offered, ha would not have been re luctant to exercise such rule himself. Though hi sympathies were such as made him anxious for others' wel fare, they did not take the direction of anxiety for other freedom as the mean of their welfare, and hence he waa, I suppose, not In pronounced antagonism with Carlyle on these matter. f But, 'divergent as our beliefs and sentiment were in earlier days. there baa been la recent days mu tual approximation. . A conversa tion with him some years since made It manifest that personal experience had greatly shaken the faith he previously had In public administra tion and made him look with more favor on the view of state functions held by me. On the other hand, my faith In free Institutions, originally strong (though always joined with the belief that the maintenance and success of them Is a question of pop ular character),' has In these later years been greatly decreased by the conviction that the fit character is not poesed by any people nor Is likely to 'be possessed for age to ooma. A nation of which the legis lator vote as they are bid, and of which the workers surrender their rights of selling their labor as tbey please, has. neither the. Ideas nor Sentiments needed for the mainten ance of liberty. Lacking them, wa are oo the way back to the rule of the strong hand in the shape ot the bureaucratic des potism of a socialist organization, and then of the military despotism which must follow It; if. Indeed, some social crash doe not bring this last upon u more quickly. Had we recently compared note. I fancy that Tyndall and I should have found ourselves differing but little In our view concerning the proximate so cial state If not of the ultimate so cial state. THEY TUMBLE UPWARD.' Deep-Sea Fish Face a Osnger. Usa known to Other Things. It Is only reasonable to suppose that the ability to sustain an enor mous prcaMrure can only be acquired by animals . after generations of . gradual migrations from shallow waters, says a writer in Popular Science Monthly. Those forms that are brought up by the dredge from the depths of tbo ocean are usually killed and distorted by the enormous and rapid diminution of pressure la their journey to the surface, and It Is extremely probable that shallow water forms would be similarly killed and crushed out of shape were they suddenly plunged Into' very deep water. The fish that live at these enormous depths are. In con sequence of the enormous pressure, liable to a curious form of accident. If, io chasing their prey, or for any other reason, tlicr rUe to a consid erable distance above the floor of the ocean, the gases of their swimming bladder become considerably ex panded and their speclSc gravity very greatly reduced, tip to a cer tain limit the muscles of their bodies can counteract the tendency to float upward and enable the fish to re gain its proper sphere of life at the bottom; but beyond that limit the musclato are not strong enough to drive the body downward, and tha fish, becoming more and more dis tended as it goes. Is gradually killed ea it long and Involuntary journey to the surface of the sea. The deep aea fish, then, are exposed to a dan- ger that no other animals ia tha Tforld are subject to namely: that of tumbling upward." That such accidents do occasionally occur Is evidenced by the fact that some fish which are known to bo true deep-sea form were discovered dead and floating on the surface of the ocean long before our modern Investiga tions were commenced. Feats of Divers. Many- fabulous stories hare been told about diving. If a mas In a State of nudity should undertake to dire with the assistance of weight sufficient to carry Lira to the depth that a diving bell or other apparatus reaches, he would most probably die In the effort, because the actual ' press-uro against him Is greater than he can sustain. Siebc states ths greatest depth to hkh a man has aver descended to be two hundred and four feet, equivalent to a pres sure of eighty-eight and one-half, pounds per square inch. The depth, however, to which a diver can de- aoend and tbo length of time he can remain underwater depend, to some extent, on personal physique. On hundred and fifty feet is considered tha ordinary limit for safe work. Slight men of muscular build, with good circulation, sound hearts, steady nerves and temperate habits, make the best divers. The greatest diving feat ever achieved was in re moving tho cage of the ship Cape Horn wrecked off the eoaat of South America, where a diver named Hooper made, seven descents to a depth of two hundred and one feet, and at one time remained under water forty-two minutes. Brooklyn Eagle. THE COOPER MARBLE WORKS, 111, 113 and 115 Bank Street. NORFOLK, VA. LAkGE STOCK OF FINI8HU I , Monuments, and Gravestones, Ready for Inmedla'e Delivery. March 31. t . i, l'. ar.sMll'Ji.i'rtansMtf ia COMMERCIAL COLLEGE of KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY - .a,.ai sate. as at ff A tsV Ba D sT D T H C llAinU wr, ' 1 m V m V r mar afst MEDAL .ZZZIZZ Address, MlUM,ats ' OTaakT. Trwi Wrttlaf aa. Timnw WVat afilTH. fcaxlcat. Hj. A r ft Agents' profits per month. JiU3 Drove it or pay forfeit. Will New art.de Justoot. A $1.60 sample and terms free. Try us. Cbidester & 8on, S8 Bond fit,, N, T. . Harbor In the Far North. The plan of constructing a large Russian i naval port on the border of the Arctic ocean, close to the Nor wegian frontier, where tha aea is free from ice during the winter on account of the gulf stream, I not by any means j abandoned. The plan also comprises the building of a new railway from TJleaborg, the norther ly terminus of the Finnish railways, to the port in question. This rail way will be about four hundred and seventy miles long, and Its terminus will be either at the Peschang bay, close to the Norwegian frontier, or at Port Wladlmlr. There are no serious engineering difficulties - In the way of such a railway, and as It will be built on a cheap system. much used. In Finland, the cost would only amount to some 2,700, 000 $13,000,000. T5SarWseri , Very many stood stories are told of Dr. Jewett, the master of HalUol college. At on time a student waa "sent down" for-faHuritopass an examination In Greeks . 1 The boy': mother called: to aea Dr. Jewett, and .talked about her on until the listener wa somewhat weary. She gave tha lad the bast of characters, stnd closed with the rs llgiou lrrelevanoe:' I '" "He will have the' consolation of religion, and there l 'oft .book to which ha can alwav thro.1 "' . Dr. Jewett eyed her benignly. "Yea, madams, he said. ?iTha Greek grammar i- Good evening." Youth VrtmpanJaa. ..... Hew 1 errspta Price Vary. The Baltimore market la now well supplied with terrapin' and game ol excellent Quality.' In one store aa Just Like the - A Nice paper recently contained the following, which has eecasloned considerable amusement among the American : there. It is head Very American": "A very Yankee ha recently offered the ecus teas of Janse 1,500,000 franc for her house. It furniture, object of art, and whatever else It may con tain Worthy of purchase ) The resi dence Is to be torn down most ears MHyVaad scientifically and transported- stone by stone to. the other side or the ooeaa, where It la to be rebuilt without the slightest depar ture being made from the original building or In the arrangement of it furniture." A Dxke Wabwked. When coeamanding- the Galatea, some years ago, the duke of Edin burgh called In ' plain detbc on aa admiral, who' rebuked him with the stiff greeting: "I -ebouU. have been very happy to receive your royal on any other occasion, out rf tandUdi j highness on any rv i a . . nKi., mrA I unhairollv at this moment X am ex- there are hundred of them. 'They are . graded accord Log to lse and ( quality. On bin contain t lot from i 7 to 8 Inches long! . The 'terrapin I are worth about $100 a dosen. Next j come the l -Inch terrapin.- They are quoted at about $70- a dosejx; 1 Slx-lnch terrapin bring $24 a dosen, and those from & to 6 Inches, $3 a pec ting a visit from the captain of the Galatea." The ouke went Dec to his ship and put on hi uniform. . Income of XngtSs Clergy. Tha revenues e the clergy of the Church of England amoant to $33, 000,000. But of this sum (which la not so much as the elergr of Amer ica' receive), almost noUrxng comes from' the free-will offertscs ot the dozen. TerraDlns 41 to 41 Inches are . . . a. . r.Ki t xrosa vie iree-wu vucxiot quotea hum a oo.en.-a.- iacome fr private more Sun. I C- 17. a .iTaa , 1703 SMSsasa a as ssiw S f Valsl sS"Wa - SVa.aa, w V- An irean niece of the Tear 700 ' amounts to less than $1,600,000 a B. 0. la the oldest cola l&'th world. , year. Robbers est the Champs Ehri ZngRsh 'ladles must be careful, when sitting In the Champs Elysees at Paris, to Judge by the experience at Miss Marie CorellL. She was alt ting' there with a lady friend one afternoon last wsek, and had taken her purse to pay for the chairs. man tore the purse from her made off. Two other men ran after this Barabbas, shouting VoUur." When the poUoe turned up, they explained that these two men war probably confederates, and at the prefecture de polios, where she wa asked tocaH. and where she waa treated with the greatest civility. he waa told that robberies of this sort were becoming frequent, and that several ladies had lately had their earrings torn out of their ears by the Champa Clysecs rousts In broad daylight. Lond. Tru'h. testator Sherman's Waakwata. . It Is said of Senator Sherman that If there la any possibility ot mispronouncing a proper name he Is sure to hlVupon it when he happens to use the name In one of hi speech es. This orthoepical , weakness, so to speak, la well understood In the senate, and hi brother senators watch for mispronunciations and chuckle over them. . Seme Oecsratiena. In France dog are decorated for bravery. One dog bearing a collar was decorated for stopping runaway horse. He lumps up and selxes them by the bridle. Another dog bearing a collar attacked a robber and saved his mlttres. Another dog saved three children from drown Uc Outlook. . Taa-Qrowing tn Russia. Exhaustive experiment la the cultivation of tea are oon to be made in Russia. The czar I per son ally interested In the plan, and experts are arranging for the culti vation of the plant In the western limits of tbe Caucasus, where the temperature Is much the- same aa that In which the plant I grown La China. TlUWSNESS" Who has not suffered this misery -canned by bile in tho stomach which aa inactive or aluggith liver failed to carry off. - THE rtrttaTioa AMD CtlRt IS t .4 liquid or powder, which gives quick action to the liver and carries off tbe bile by a mild move ment of the bowels. Itisnopur-r-liv nr erircnir medicine, but swwn v v W KZM - purely vegetable, take pill more Liver Regulator. ilany T-eopla tale Ei minon art aa ts a a vteUm aa ftrii reikrra sra 1 r at S-rY)r v. aim, boSBar wtoaaeSiaairr aba, aatJBaa, aUsw 4 'J 4 - 1 V 1 .. , . i ! i ! j ! 'J 6 ", i. t f ; trr A i t i : - 1 j t J l .11 rs ejSsaaa.1aSWsiallsa; -
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 5, 1894, edition 1
1
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