Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / July 19, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL.72. NO, 29 i P rkett. - - TiUllll Mil I' II 1 I' M i i - ; PB0FESSI01TAL CABPSl JJOSSEY BATTLE, Attorney and Councsllor at Law, Offioks: I 'T.1- i J itocky Munt, N. C . In Tarboro office every Monday; and Uocky Mount ba!anc of week. - M& AdjustmentfiUims a specialty. PA.UL JONESrj " tt'y and Cdtincelor at Law - TAhBORO, N.C, J J. MARTIN, Attorney at Law, Practices io the CourtB of Edge- cotube, Marliu acd 1'itt. ; Office rear of Doodle Pender'a Store. TAbboho, N. C : I JOHN ii. BHIDGEKS & dON, : Aitomeys?al-Law, 14 lv .J - - i- 1 H. A. ti IbLJJLM. ULUAM Attomeys-tat-l-aw, TARBORO", N. C. ! ,- Vh j practice in the Counties of Edgecombe. Halifax and Pitt, and in the Courts of the rirst Judicial District, and in the Circuit and j aanreme uourts at Kaleipb. 1anl8-lv. 51. IK"' PHYSiUAN &j SURGEOf. Office next door to Hotel How ard. .v . ; . :j ! ; 30 iy AJ G. "EDWAKDS. SIGN A.ND HOUSE PAINTEE, ' Paper hanging a epeciaUy. tOtf. TARBORO, N, C. THE PUBLIC. I am Prepared to do alt work in toe - j . Undertaker's Business at the shortest notice. Having con nected with my sipp the repairing business. All work Left at my shop suau nave rrompt attention, I PRICES KODERATE, Also a. first-class HEARSE for ; hire l banking my friends for Ttheir former patronage, I j hope oi merir th6 same, shoul J they need anything Undertaking ' i Repairing Business !- ilvPlace is on Pitt StreelThiee IXors far i t e Corner of Main J. i. WALLS Fashionable :-: Tailcr itt St , one door below L. NWideH & i . V f Fine Full DreES and Evening Tailbr- u MadeSuiU. The term well dressed ex-i.-teud from the neck to tbe foot of the . v Subject. - j " : ; j "Cutting, Vepairirie ind cleaning ne St sU rt otice. " j " i .tSt j THE NEW YORK : WEEKLY IIKRALD -3F,or -1894- W ILL BE VI fHOUr QUESTION . ; MERIOA'S ' Leading Family Paper. j lbs reputation lhat the Weekly Herald has enjoyed for iran f years of t2l:ittg the best home newspaper in the laud will be nkateriall . added to during tho- j ear of ; ifsat jmo pains or expense will be spared up mae it ip every department the most reliable, interesting and instructive of all Weekly newspaper publications, a . I It will be improved in many ways. I A number of new features and departs menu will he added. The latest develop ment in all Helds or contemporaneous hu mau interest will be ably discusstd from week to week by accomp ished writers, THE EWS OF THE WORLD will be given iu a concise but complete fna. xyery important or 'interesting event, t ither at home or abroad,! will be duly described is the columns of tbe weekly Herald. t la politics the Herald Js absolutely in uepeoaent ana sound. . it tells the rights o - ii . i ... . " uu wjugs oi aii Biaes wiinout rear. j Farmers and stock raisers cannot afford to be without the Weekly Herald duricg the ceming year. It will contain a regular "tpaniucDi ewn wees a e voted exclusiye y io sii-jecis of timely interest . to them anii giving many valuable suggestions and l lie women and children of the land will find in the Weekly Herald a welcome ; viBitor. The household, and children's paes will be both instructive nd enter- i lining. Thev will abound in hints and receipts wbicb women so much value." A brilliant array 1 , of novels and shorl eyries by the besfwritera in America and ; England has beensecuredj so that fiction will begone of the most attr.jtive features in the Weekly Herald duritig 1894. in fact, the Weekly Herald will be a ,KiaKazin5 of the highest order, combined with a complete newspaper- r ".' y .- , - NOW IS rUETIlfE TO SUBSCRIBE. Only $1.00 a Year f : Hksd foe Bamplb Copt. I Address rXtlJS WJ2EKLT MKRAT.n , "'"v " Hebald Squabe, NEW YORE. : r w s. a ri ri imvii FOR PALLING HAIR, j USE CULLEY'S Bald Head Preparation! -I desire to sav to th nnkiu ,v. . . .r - fwaav- aaJa UiQ IB djes especially that I now have my Hair Preparation wf that I can arrestee falling out of the 12 to 15 days, and thiaycu wui readily see if von win it . ..i ir. Btso inicneng irom its use. It hit "opicwani Odor and leayca no i.n... cpnUacUniE neuralgia, cold, &c Mus achee eaeily thickened up by its use. Ifounjc me . will pkaw make a note of Una. Nothing asked to show the trtth fuiaesa of the ab T eznent a fa ti.i vu! a wtu nilD I'BKPABATTOH.. QflOd reftreocet given to gl ow that the hair ic f-,, t r v- muck, ii cot imcRer than ever. . ALFKED CDLLEY, 43lf Tarboro. N. C. .-AT THE CANDY STAND AT 10 ts Per Ponnfl, HNDS. THE BEST ARD IS THE SAFEST INVESTMENT EVER MADE. . 'There are alngla retail ahoe atorea In our larn ctttea which sell 2,000 plr of ibex a day.maklD a net profit of SOOoTyear. We aell .hoe. low. TS."1.1 ' ?ret, m?yPt. th. elear profit on onr ladie.'. bmm' and children.' afaoea i at leaat ten mt a pair, and on oa- and boy.' .hoe. U "V.'.P'ii- W ,haJ t l'IU,, "hoe atorea ia each of the fifty largaat ctJa. of tho U. 8.. and If they aell only 800 pair, of aboea a day they would cni S525.C00 a year. We ahould bo able to pay a yearly dlvidendof 5.25aahare,orover 50 percent. ayearontheioTcatment. WnaniKhn.rik u a .hare. The price must Inev itably be mnch more than $10 a .hare. No tock haa ever been .old .t value. Stock S 1.000.006. . , . i 1; 7, - imHuaiuci k. n 1 ..i,8 oany. bomo or the principal atock holder are: T. 8. Walife- K.T.-. I ; PoVb, K. A. Bed. Jr.. Chic.Kei j.'b. CbHlfchSi, wJm.' Kannaueh. Little Rock. Ark.; t it Rich" chiS7i P Creek, kick. , F.P.UullettAjeaS nT": ' Bm V rite for a proepectua coDtaiBirjg the namea of onr atockholdera, etc, or tend an order for Hock tncloiing caihier't check, tath or money order'. urdere taken for one or mote aharea. IVice S10 a .hare. - DEXTER SHOE CO., i, 141 a m rwni at- aosToa. aaaa. Agent H'anltd. i i t i- r s 5 f "-. i ar..l Opium HaMts .ciicu at norao Wlia S s-;r pain.Uoolt of t I . umrscnia"ax.li -amrsacntFKI I - ' - " 5-WOOLLEY.M.D. i THE SUN The first of American JVewspapert, CjlARLES A. DANA, Editor, The American Congtinnion, the ic-tn Idea, the ' Amei Imn Amer These dr$t, list and all the lim- foreycl The Sunday Sun Is the greatest funday Newspaper in t I world. Prjce 5c. a copy. B mai $2 a year Daily, by ma l, . - - $6 a yes r Dady nd Sunday, by mail. - 8 a veer The Wetkly - - . SI year . Address THE SUN, New York. Administrator's Notice. Having qualified as sdminlat'alor ef Grary C. Siallire. dec. ssed. late f Kdire- corobe county, North Carolina, this is to notify all peisoos having claims against the estate of said d ceased to exhibit tbem to the undersigned on or before the 12ih day nf April, 1895, or this aotxe will be plead in bar of their recover'. All rer. sops indebted t said estate will please make immediate payment. " This 12th day of April, 1894. F. HENRY JOHNSTON, ft Adm'r of Gracy C. S'.allincs. The undersurned havine o laliflerl aa 1 a.im'r of T. B Barlow, deceased, this is 1 1 , n t fy all persons owing tbe said deceased. I to make immediate payment, and all per. ! sons having claims against the said T. B. 1 Barlow, to prefeot them ior payment ! within one year from date, or this notice will be p'ead io bar of their recovery, i This 3rd day of May. 1894. f W. L BAULO W. Adm'r. JJj. Bridgers & Bon, Att'ys. 6t '"iiil' j - 4 S J FKESH CANDY Cen it nmrn ii nun ii i n i ei ITCHING SKIN DISEASES Cuticura-Remiedles1 A warm bath . with, ci mcT id i SSU?, Pcat sk" cure, will afford instant relief nr,; J Md sleep, and pant to a speedy. economical, and permanent cure of the most distressing: of itchinr, burn. mgj bleedinr, scaly, and crusted skin iSi??P lfter Physicians, hospitals, and all other methods fail CuTicuRA Works Wonders, and SmSES of.-torturin. disfiguring humiliating humors are the most wonderful ever recorded in this or age. naMiUtatMU. Potto DraT-Tl"5' -T!Tr. wdjd afly .Id. KU8CUUR8TRJUX8,PAIX3 wbw. back rk iu . aa4 caaM aaiaa nB TI I TIN SHOP. I AM DOING A Til, M - aii HooEsg BUSINESS t as cneag as any. I do! repairing in lin, iron prompUj and- 'pper j. t. vim, Austin Bui'dirg. i mak tLe m- st superior Coffee rot evrr offered to tbe public, 13tf Nathan Williams, rvi- - r. j .... M . . vuy icw uocrs oeicw Alotei raTar, TARBORO, N. O. JACKS ON I Jackson, Tenn , M ArTUrACTUBtBa OF School, Church' and Office Fiir.nitiir.rt J! UrnitUre. School mid Churches Sealed In the Best Manner. Offices Furnished Send for Catalogue. THE CflUFER MARBLE VOEXS, III, tlS and US Bank Street. NORFOLK, YA. ' LAKOK stocb; or riNisHcr 2Icnnment8. and Qravestmes. Ready forl-nmedia'e Delivery. March 81.1 4 commercial college of Kentucky university lczinston. .. whb tmc b u wV. ctH iSiw. fytdz r !.. "!. i . .. ?ali.. t !iraU!" hUSJTtTJ w,Tl; tfJlXT Qara. w.aaiTu. uiufiaa, m. CCOC AgenU'proflu per month. Will PUaCJ prove It or pay forfeit. New art de a . v a a terms Bond Bt,,N, Y. ; X W In..'nt. OFFICE Ml ' i - bmbbbbbbbbbbb, -, m w wi -w- aW - - - AUSEFDL FAIX Some 'of th Tilnn. That Btamg X. - ! Tothe earnest .tudt of .utnp collecting, or, M It b more prooerlr uned, pbilatelv-mn, '.VvTT of atamoe. or. th. f.- ," inop &nn itlftaellt.. ai Rreat fields of knowledge to be ex ? f nd those wh have Dm -uuikw, in tne pleaaures of the pnrsutt. and to mm a tv: "-TC tues springs of knowledge are aeaiea oooic; and why? Because those who i lected stamps know nothing about the pursuit, and soma wh hoi. vmj nave ior their object the ao- 1 . . vuuiuiimg or as many specimens as Fossiote, witaout regard for the dif- lereni varieties to each; and as to uuw Bna wnen those varieties made. The collecting of stamps were com- imof as soon as th fft postage stamps were i.. Ind,inl840.and the IZZTtZZX uwoj since that period has not been due to a so-called "craxe." ror now some fifty years later, the stamp collectors In various parts of www are numbered by tbe hun dreds of thousands. The growth of philately has been uuw certain fascination about It, and to the many branches of studv pcu up ma makes Inter- wiuiff u those who follow it Cio . a "'""P coiiecun and ffeojrraphy run together. It Is impossible to be interested In one without learning - mer. omau and obscure wuninea, such as Stellaland, Tonga, " -u'mh:i oeyeneues islands, etc.. vKuuuuauj coming before col- , iu usumg or sur charged stamps for their use, or by a regular issue, and thev atT finp f.a ue auojects ror study.' "Where is it located f What m.mtr i belong to? Whose picture Is on It? n ny were they issued? These and many similar inuAatirma are brought to the collector, and "U",B acnooi might te deemed tSSStjESZT'' n.p- nave only to look at the wraps or if ranee to see its change from republic to empire, and empire to republic Successful revolutions inrougbout the world are almost In variably followed by a change In its stamps, while the portraits on the various Issues make the ; collector familiar with the faces of thousands of the world's great mea. i a .ij. jme, nowever, from these two studies, there are many paths which will lead the collector into more In tricate fields, and those more closely connected with the world's business ways. Among these are methods of engraving and printing, the different varieties oi paper, such as laid, plated, tinted, embossed, etc, while the great scheme of raising the rev enue for conducting the business of governments is taught through the collecting of the match, medicine ana other proprietary stamrjs. The period before the Introduction of government postage stamps la learned through the postmasters' ttamna ilia m ti; .a . . v! lauiuiarw inese Deing that of our New York post- master, issued in 1842-3, some five years oeiore tbe regular government swmps. -me great Now York post wuauo uepanment, with its annual revenue of nearly fifty milliona nr aouars, is a special study for the col lector, and many of the departmen ts, with all processes for cancellW rw forwarding letters, are familiar to Dim. " The stamp collector ranWlv the names given to money in the different parts of the world, as each designates It ia itaown way on the stamps, so that centime, nfennii?. pi, sen, kreuxejrels, ccntavos, anna and such names are as familiar to tne collector as his -native Harper's Young People. coin. Those Lovsrs. . , , u They had-beea engaged, but now were.sunering irom one of those quarrels which sometimes ruffle the course of true love. Triwi ria? - ia Uy; neither wished to be the urst to yield. But vrlth the hankering which af flicts murderers and lovers with ref erence to the scene of tire late un pleasantness, he called-at the house on a trumped-up business mission to her rather. By chance (?) she answered his ring at the door. ( Gathering . himself, he, ' with a cold, slow .voice, begins the follow ing dialogue: . -. . i . " He Does Mr. Dudley reside here? She He does. i He Is he in? .! She He U not: He Will he be In soon? She HewilL ' ' He Thank you; I will caU again. (Turns toga) r. She Excuse me, who shall 1 sav calld?-Llfe. 7 What Ha Wanted. ' Lawyer So your wife hit you with the fiatlroa and poker, did she, and you want damages? .benezer Damages I Lawd, sab. no! IwantW t,. t'ousand dol- - - I dun kit all de damage I kin stand, i . . i 9 at Tk I Boston Travellerx 1 . r r r k 1 1 i m cnm a"--i THE WAR OF GIANTS. TMa war of Riant will have Ruj. I nd France oq the one side, Ger many. Austria and Italy on the J . ajl i"ackwood'a Mazarine. w e vdib etident we bare only to look at the actual poaltlon of the cotri upa ounnff peace In each of these M inQlc?"on of where the dan MCi .MC MQ direction which the contest win ultlmatelT tV. tK. ax. position of the Russian army U by - , uuiurvani iKlor. KUS&!, OWhlff tO th lmM.. tent of her empire and tS wr, tlvely small number of her railways In proportion- to ihnm rf .n.vl. w..: " .... . j vvw. rupcaa swe. u ouite una.M t concentrate powerful armies for of fensive purposes on any point of her nlSth.any aPPc to the fPj2 wtkl ttis can be done In France, German v. TtxU Austria. She is consequently obliged to mass upon her frontier durin peace those forces which she intends t once to throw Into action during r. The sure aicm h.MfnM V , . . . T V( vi I fwncs to strike her blow .."f V10!? contest ensues Is to be looked for In the tual distribution of her army. This Is by no means tr th anm. extent the ca-e with the other ittmI powers. France and Germany es peclaHy, hare a perfect system of railways laid out with a strategio purpose. Every prepara tion for a speedy concentration of their whole forces by these mo-n. on any point of their likely to be threatened, either for or fenalve or defensive reasons, has been so thoroughly made that their troopa can be left durina ( . far more dispersed slat ! n .u.t. further back than is possible with Russia. Dradgad Up a Cannon. IVom the wreck nf a Mul v.4 i. believed to have rested mar tw "ur7 oeneath the waters of the Delaware river a cannon of antique type was hauled to the surface bv JkA A a . a . . ruttB f up what Is left of Smlth'a Uland. x or some time rjaat th aa have been bringing up bits of tim ber that were evidently part of a vessel of large slxe, and some ot Vfhlca are In. a trood sUt nt nrm. atioa. The finding of the cannon set the Delaware ircnna matin. hunting up old records, and It was the general belief that the wreck Is that of a British shlD which inA up the Delaware river prior to tho revolutionary war, and, havlnr? bc- come unseaworthy, was abandoned on tbe edire of the bar f mm wli y Smith's Island crew and imuiimiw sank untU buried under the sand. It U believed that more of the ancient cannon wlU.be found, and develop- of interest-Philadelphia Record Courtshlp bvTelsphene. Now that telephone receivers can be bad for the small sum of two dol lars and fifty cents each. th.. i. some curiosity to see whether thev will be extensively put to the sam. uses as they are put to la Soaln. fo example. There a young lady must be under surveillance when she sees her lover. So the custom has arisen between lovers of talking through the telephone. The lover stands In the street with a receiver at his ear while his sweetheart talks to him from the other end of the line In the second, third or fourth-story win dow, as the case may be. There seems to be no doubt that the ex- aZ At a a ... going to add largely to the responsl- Wlll.i . . ' t Virion oi tne teletJhone natent la uiuwea oi cnaperons. Boston Her- aid. A Lecturer's Dtvlc. Since readlntrs have com to h numbered among the diversions of the! season, aa Innovation ado by Frenclsque Sarcey may be recom mended. At.Sarcev'a lwrnna . women he always had on arh ala Of him two instrumenta that IaaIti JUte gasometers. These held oxygen. WheneverlSarcey saw any of bis fair hearers yawn he turned on the oxygen. This acted like a bracer. His audience soon redraw i and took on a renewed air of appre ciation. . When this was accom plished the lecturer turned the oxy- aaai .awJsf a Bwuu. i. x.&un. I Private Exscuttona. Private exeoutlons. savi the Indl. anapolls News.Ure conducted In th iouowing eigh Countries: In Ba varia, by hanging; Brunswick, ax; Hanover, irulllotln: Prusala. ivnM- Saxony, guillotine; Switzerland, In wo cantons, guillotine; United Kingdom, hanging, and the United States, hanging. ; An Island Missing. The American ship Daniel Barnes, from Caleta Buena, Chill, reports the total disappearance of an Island In the South Pacific ocean. Oa Oc tober 10. Cant. Arae un h naaA over the exact spot where Pod eats I 1.1 At. ltsak . . I uxmq u iaia aowa oa the chart. He had men aloft looking for land, and, although It was daylight and per- fectly clear, he says that nothing could be seen of it, The Uland was about forty feet high, three-fourths S!?e 10 dinaetr. nd la longl- tude 89 degrees 1 minute west, Utl- . tude 33 degrees 15 minutes south, It Is thought that soma Tolcanin disturbance on tbe mainland caused vu too mainiaaq causea alV. I.t. .1 A a a kUO "ana w aisappear. Baltimore American. A O0LLIBR POET. Th WcdkUrful Zlfa-etory Jopa 8ajjM7. w Om mi KaiWi ma1 WrUaaa KateaA "" TIm Rla Bwlf InaU the anaala of literary his tory there can acar-lV i orded a life story taom unusuaL IS- Vv1 earicre?. th1 ot Jcnh fiklpsey, the eolHer poet. Il UnU worthy the orAsideration aaA iKi kutA of thoaeto whom fata has Wa Shields la the "Black Countrr March, 1832. Hu faf, ... .77? dead In some mining riot when the future poet was onV f,- IT! old. . He wu the Totina-i JtjTi children. -and thw1wJX: was hard pressed to keep her little one, fed and clothed. Joseph was only seven years old W k ... nt to irork In the coal pita of the Percy Main, near Norti, CvLm. -Ti from that time until I, . J. fifty almost all Ma lif w.. V7 the dark world undsr guni t i . ww door, cpea it when he heard the rumble of Tap- prh&gcartof coals, and clotWu wnen in cart had passed urougn. f ' '..ji naw i aw in - - : "ui a gigantic egg, and s I watched it X seemed 2 opeT It was by meais of this door which fe guarded tbatSkipser Uughthlra K? read, for.. Wonly learned Bne! whntl'p aent to the I af leas treas ures to hira. He used them to light tus darkneaa ttKn. . T . m U -.Y" . v oq his 'Stfef? " ox 7 placards or ad- teaching himself to form letters Cto words untU he bad learned to read Before be was eleven years old he had formed a serious resolution, to commit the whole BihU tn r.- I ad be could probably, even now, r peat more chapters of Holy Writ muj uiaer person all re. ' He printed a few of K!. i 1 ,1853, and In consequence of the In terest they excited Ee was made sub librarian of a literary! society at Xewcastle-oa-Tyne. But the salary was pitifully small, and after a brief experience he returned to M. ground world, where he could earn wr seven uouars , v . to keep bis family I L, o woa more left the nduesand was soon after Invited to edit Walter Scott's series of "Can terbury Poets," and the first six of mjc lenes came out und M. on na W1 vUioo and with admirable prefatory aatava rM Vt. . . VT l BU P- p health compelled him to resign .uu((cwal WOTST. T i! a - urn ne was curator of Shakes peare s birthplace, tni his wife's Ill ness obliged Lira to resign that po- aw uus ne naa always found uwewung io ao, and no UiScultles uto conquered his resolute buoyant spirit. I a .1 - ' r ancy a uie or j which nearly fifty years have beea passed, under- Krouna ana yet out of whlcb has vvoie wo evolution of a poet! Notb fd?" than his lawn I mnl. ilm .t ii. i . '7VC Z 1' . wJua 7 ana or -the visions writH.,vtw peopiea ws aarkaeas. . Sunday was literally sun dsj to him, for it was the only day oa which he ever saw the sun. i i He has publlsied la all some five or six volumes of verse and has now , w UU UQ recognixea position among Enjr lish poeU. Rossetti said of him: 'HU real-life pieces are more sus tained and decided than almost any thing I know. He Is a poet of the people and has lived what he de scribes, " Sklpsey himself would not speak of his life as sad; for It has bad the glamour of Imagination, the excite ment of aspiration and endeavor. He has-won friends among the best and the noblest and he has proved - a uxiuer vnaa nis en vironment, more powerful than what we foolishly rail Ma Mta. Youth's Companion, . . af aiw wetlUJi'-" ! Measuring thrWaH of China," The great waM. of China was re ccn Uy. measured j by Mr. Unthank, an American engineer engaged oa the survey for a Chinese railway. HU measurement gave the height 18 feet. Every few bundred yards there U a tower 25 feet high. The founda tion of the wall U of solid -.granite. For 1,300 miles' the wall goes over plains and mountains, every foot of uie foundation being of solid granite. and tno rei ' tho tructure of tblii flan naAM - T .a -a - in on3 places the wall Is DuUt ,moolh P against the baak. cr cfosse precipice where there Is i shorr descent of 1.000 feet, I T. w ,i Th Workr P '" " It U computed that the death rate of the world U sixty-seven a'mlnute, and the birth rate seventy a minute, and thU Dercentarm nt mrim ta an cient to give a net increase ot dodo. o Kive a net increase . a w A B - uuoa each year of almost one mil lloa two hundred thouaand aouW lUsteadHv I aaa Highest of an ia Utra t o a m HAINIEK OR TACOiU. apat Betvraea Two SUvalry.a, " III l In thaMM. ' f thU mountain all the rivalry be- abcwjs ana CieatUe finds ex s-awa. i know of one Tacoma man who refused to be introduced to yerKn wDom be had been most aaxlous to meet because be hap pened to overhear the Utter refer to Mount Rainier. In Seattle many subscribers were once obtained U an ' eastern magaxlne la which aa article oa their city was to appear It was published, and was as Uudal lory of them aa th nvnt .. . . ' I wuia aesire. but not ... . oveniaht. UM rltrK Mt1a the disputed mounUla "Tacoma." In the Seattle ataf i.. .v thej keep slips of paper with "Mount Rainier" neatly crisis v eatly crlnUsd no tf.m r. i--wng over the "Mount Tacoma- W NOtUfflM are oougea to selL They also carefully erase the words "Mount Tacoma- from all souvenir pho- . v ... - .TR; H that come Into ;.w P"oa and substitute itainier before S-" . co. uem. INo order, The Tacoma man will exnlalr. wHv conyinclng earnestness 'that Ta-ko- u was the aboriginal name of the arouwa i or centuries before the " mlJ eupooaioua, but beautifully poetical in iU oeuW. t.Al..a il.i . . nourishes.- "Sure- J." he will say, "a most appropriate name ror a mountain whose glacial .w perpetuaaly. nourish the -ai its reel. And who was this wuer, anynowr An Englishman woo no only never saw this coun try, out was Inimical to it and IU Institutions." When you repeat this to your friend la Seattle he w ul assume a w fine expreasioo of mlncried iMra fii? .r Jour wdulty, and exclaim: That s all bosh. Tacoma doesn't meaa anything of the kind. The word simply means mountain an, nothing snore. As for the name fr 'Ttf by Vancouver. tbe first white maa who ever aawthl jn"tain, and who certainly earned tne right .to name what h 4a... I j awya I erea. It aorjeara m hta .1,.. I thU regwn, and aa all bis nomeacla- turehas beea adontM k. thaTT.ts I States coast survey, there U no reasoa why aa exception should be made la this oase. Thla am. WUh thOSe fellows OVr thara I oropiL Rainier it U. andRaml-pit will be for all time, even If we have to go up and chisel the name on tbe mountain side In feet long." letters a thousand So for him who WOUld milnUia friendly relations with both camp It b well to remember that t.. coma' U the countersign In Tacoma. and "Ralaler- la SeatUe, wb1 neutral ground tbe iubWt nf teatloa should be snnWn nr a "(.. UfUtntata w ' V r .ta uia amuuilU AlOUB- ain,- "the Disputed Mountain," or " uuioi oi America. a . is nas been, sucTested that th questioa might be settled by oom- FHU ana popular vote, by sub mitting the combination- 'Ta. conier" and "lUicoma.' to th- pie of tbe two cities, and calling far cprxsiou oi preference from every man. woman and school child la tbem. Outsiders are tnrarai1 Quite willing, for the sake of peac. to call the mountain by any name approved by the cities. By thl. means a controversy to which ao other end seems possible might hap gly be concluded. Harper s Week- Phartomanpn of . WalL In tbe ground of Iivesey HalL ne-ar xiiacxDum, there U a sprinir AiotDer juvesey s Well." xae curious tklag about thU well U that the water only flows during alae mouths of tbe year, and U quite dry during the other three months (June. July aod August), however wet tbe weather may be. The water always commences to ow on the ame date each, yearj and never treeaee even daring the hardest frost. tweeds New. . 8C Htna's Income. Ia the Island oSL Helena's total revenue for 1832 of 7,691 U Included the odd item of "Z139 received from dealers throughout the world tot postage stamps." The populatioa of tbe Uland U but about a, 900, and r,,,u " unit rnw a t oiLr i o Ulat V.iR Qua O AJoo IIoMa This Dtst. uhoboo m TV There are ouee&s. Msnr. ..a Prtnoeasee la the old world who hold the rank of colonel of .- ' i87 J?"nents, and not only is Qoeea Victoria the chief commaad- IngofScerof the crack rMm,t dragoons of' the German army, but she has erea beea known to review ber own troops at Alder hot arrayed ia the gold-embroidered ararfat of a creneral wUh-ika . that rank adorning her shoulder-strap- and collar. There Is, howerer, only one wora i admiral la Eurom anl tv. i. Queen Oli-a of Greece. wK fc i.... beea appointed by the cxar to be aa admiral of tbe Russian fleet la the Mediterranean. WMl tv hand this Is a compliment calculated to flatter her miWiv k. i. I 'TT of the arau,tcg her yacht as constantly as thv lt- do their carriaarea. and nothing It Is, so much as a atl9 kra. V " J MK oa the other band, an extremely part of politic move oa tbe Alexander II L Rn. ia siasoa sorely In OMd a port ia the eastern ttortlAn n txa. Mediterraaeaa where she eaa raJ l!-. .fiSuS Constantlaople, whlcb is wlthla strftixifT dlstanoe of tbe Pirwrn. Am admlri-La-chief of tbe Medlterr- nean squadron of Russia, Quean Olga can scarcely refuse hospitality to' wht r practically ber own aLine. aad beaoe tbe cxar rwalTv- Athens as a convenient beadouarter. for his navy la tbe eastern water. of rrt laUn1 rom ber earliest rhiuvj COTdlE (T tO a mrH ,v - xotk Journal. Ouam t-v-. v.. &en accustomed to the sea, a fact due la great measure to her father, having been tbe a-ru, rrw RussUaad tbe Ugh admiral of the Muscovite ernnire. Rh-Ka irv.tt.. I.a.w.. 1 W m iay urassey, passed the exara- loatioa and received th l-figed aalling master, and U Wa nIte both aaillag Tala' d steamships as If she had done nothing else all ber lif ' It U no secret that much of Em-' Ffr0r WU:iAm animosity toward. hU sUter. tho crow. rJn ' Greece, and especially toward his brother-in-law th i f W W faf, ajj LrVTa, VM due to th v.A.iM v.a .t.. T? . M1 the government of Greece are altocvthep in c-v.v i.v t . Instead of with tha trlrJ- He Pd when bU sUter mar-' ried the duke rJ RraH. . reece into an adherent, but haa I Oeea aaOIT rTlaanrtrant J t- aflflTTed bT th tSanlnf. I -a the crown prlnoess to rsrt iu 1,1 teres ts of tbe land of ber birth to. tht of bcr husband, a country over WBB Wa I aa BV , ni a wojcq sne wm one dsy reign. This ioe real secret of F.mn.mr mt. tt . . . . : " "a.- rerusai to bold any Inter sUtet course whatsoever Sophie. ritb bU A town WhwiTi. The most curious rftr In th U situated oa Sajrlnawhav an am of Lake noron. ItU without a name, has a populatioa ei about five hun dred, and ccnilsU of modem huts oa . wheeU, to the number of one bua dred and fifty, which, when tho fish ing season arrives, are rolled 6a the ce lathe bay. BILIOUSNESS Who haa not steered this misery. caused by bile ia the eiomach which an inactive or sluggish liver failed to carry off. aBjl the ntrrtanoa amo cvtt it j liquid or powder, which gires quick action to . the liver and carries off the bile by nmild move- . meat of the bowels It ia no pur gative or griping medicine, but pnrely vegetable. . Many people take pflle -more tke Bimmooa Liver Eeguktcr. . "I tmv Waw ftwIaaiBB aa am anna Sar jwn. ajd aAav trraw wi raaaaaaaa SaaWafjaaa DHawf JTU.MaL cw " ' . i it ".1 - t .jf-j- "c f W."-Wi '," 'V "7, ss,
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 19, 1894, edition 1
1
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