Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / Sept. 13, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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i - . . . ' - . : 1 Aril f tiff ' rrirV BE 81JKE3 YOTJ ARE 'EIQHT ; THE &O A PrA-n,Lh Crockett. li hi. AVAVAV t ' y VOL. 72. NO. 37. TARBOROV fl. C. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13. i84 1 PROFESSIONAL CASDS. pOSSEY BATTLE, ' . vAtternarani Cotmcsllor at Law, ... ' ? Tarboro, N. C. wwo: j Rooky N a la Tarboro office erery Monday, Rocky Mount balance oi week. Adjustment ot cl-uma & specialty FOR FALLING HAIR, -USE CULLEY'S- Bald Head Preparation I desire to say to the sublic and the la- i dies especially that I now have my Hair Preparation r so that I can arrest the falling out of the Hit 1 and Councelor at LOIV will readily see il you will give It a trial. I uair aiso iDicKeos irom .us use- it pas aDd T)AUL JONES, A TARBOaO, N. C, MARTIN, K . , ATTOBXEY.; AT LAW, Edge- Practices ia the . Courts of - combe, Martin and Pitt. Office rear of Doodle Pender's Store. TAbbobo!, N. C. JOHN L. BHlDGEKrJ SON, no unpleasant odor and leaves BO danger ! contracting neuralgia, cold, &c Mus taches easily thickened up by its use. Young men will please make a note of i this. Nothing asked to .how the troth- i fulness of the above except fair trial of i Cuixxt's Bald Hxad Preparation. Good i references given to sbow that the hair is thick if not thicker than ever. i ALFltED CULbBY, i 43tf Tarboro. N. C. A t torneys-atf X-a w, TAFtBORO lilv X C DOS HBXI. GILLIAM ! fct. A. ttlLUAM. HILLIAM & SON VX. s:r:'Zt.,,. :.1 ,- Attorneys-at-i-aw, TAKBORO', K.;C. ' hthh m lartjM n the Counties of Edgecombe, 1 Halif ax and Pitt, and ; in the Courts of the First Judicial District, nd in the Circuit and dunreme Courts at Kaleurn. j ianio-x. I p. ictjm: d. PHYSlUAfl& SURGEON, 350". O . Hotel How ill afsatrri, Office next door to ard. 30 ly FRESH CAM TETTER FOR 15 YEARS da Face And Soalp. Physklaaa Pro' scrip tions said Remedies Fell. Iiosjt All Hops of Cure. Thought Himself DISFIGURED FDR LIFE Cutleursv Removed Crusts mt Onee Disease Entirely Gone In One Moata. Mow Wo Trace. Skin Smoota. - f Tor ssere Vbmn fiftom mars I was effected with wnatng Tetter on my fsoe and MUp. ranuiMd, Minf arwrwara. mued w) physUitsnsi and aQ to no avalL I hm& nop her: views. PRICE FIVE CENTS Impressions of an AustraHaa Travelimr In the TJnltod States, e 01 ounc earwi, ana oonciuaoa uk S I MawinoiH ui ia mma psnnaaM nei to rtretW CwncFmA KKvxmsa . uil, which I1 did In thia wT : Takinc th. Cu riam Kaobl Tnr two MuDoaarols after mrk mnl baUxid bleetd psm warm watrwttfc Cvtiocba' &or, ud MOUmi tk. Ccttocb freely uUl Utm Croats was all moved. Is eoe Month mj tmomi ad oalp wm perfectly amooth. I rtr. this tbsstf ill ieattSMOy for the benefit of all who aro thus afflicted. T. J. CAJiANISS, IX I.. Colombians, AJs- TETTER-CHSCJILP AND HAND TJssd CcmocKA RxjacDtBs for Tetter oa too esip. They left a. aovad and wall. My aunt hadJSeMmaef the seaipslBM girlhood, Cxm CUaVa, t?"WT.m enred her. . . i B. J. BL'BJCHABT, Bathtoa,Te&n. Had Dry Tetter oa my banU. TJaed seraral nanedies without relief. CtmcvaA KCMaxxaa entirely earsd m. My hand, are amaoth and soft. . F.B.WAlJiKK,Oaa-and,Oa. THE TORTMOiSFIGURED Aad humiliated, verywhere, will find ra the CimcTJBJt Kuom . speedy and oaooanlcal cure for every riiaoaae and humor, from pimples to scrofula, from infancy to age. vV G. EDWARDSi AT THE- Bold throughout th. world. Price, Cvtlftaa SOe.; Soar, sae. ; BneLnrr, $1. Porran Dace awn Cxiau Comr Bole ProprWtorS, Boatqo. S- ? Bow to Pure Bkln riSMSM," BaaOed frae. I rTVCUE8T S1. CtoaseMfikis so Boftost LUIL Haada predaoed by CtmroaA &AT. SHORT BREATH, Chest Pains, Soreness, Weakness, Asthma,Plenriry,aad Inflarsmattoo reUevwd ra one mUat by the CmUeura AU-Paia PLaeUs. TIN SHOP Boaaekawplas; fern ThJ. Csutry mm av rrelBe-Brej4 JCahtns; at Ho: i The BeaUa of Bwaaea BallwA Crria;e. . w nen a visiiea jjinjfiana many J years ago, I was struck by the perfect appnintments and the smoothness of the domestic machinery, not only among.the wealthy, but among what Is called there the upper middle class. It was far beyond 1 what we could hope to reach, for although our Australian help has faculty, and can do many things fairly well, and will undertake new things bravely, she is not the perfect Instrument de manded by modern division of labor. American housekeepers seem to strive after the Impossible. They know what Is desirable, and coute que coute, they aim at It. ; They try to run a house which In England would have five or six servant with the aid of three, and have bread making and I washing " probably thrown In. They succeed marvel ously wall, thanks to their own clev erness and assiduity, but at an Im mense expenditure of nerve force, and often at the sacrifice of health. t A FISH HAWK'S MISTAKE. .His Keen Eye Deceived tWe Ocetii - Usher In This Ca.se. . Fishhawks get their entire food supply from the water. Their eyes are so constructed that even at great heights they can see fish that .swim near the surface and then dive with lightning speed, The fish Is caught In the claws and is taken to xne nest of the bird ; before being eaten, a ne writer has seen a hawk make a mistake and catch a hard crab, and when the crab trot rjnthhla big claws fairly at work oa the ten der part of the bird's lees there was somewhat of shaking sod -drs-intf In the air to get rid of the crab, but It is notoiten they get fooled. -Jt Is gen erally all In their favor. A hawk will fly away with a big eel wriggling in its claws that a man. could not hold thirty seconds with both hands. The hawks sometimes, however, will dive at ill At . . . uuugs toey oo not want, and a thing occurred a few years ago which Is worth telling. A steamer was passing Seabrteht. It was a big coaster from Savannah to New York, and a lady on board lost overboard a handsome and valu able lace shawl, which floated away alter striking the water. The pas i sengers, being Interested, watched V , 1 . . toe enawi as iar as iney cotua see it, and finally sawafishhawk dive at THE CmED-POET. 1 Uttls Poopls and (Their Beautiful Gift of Imagination. Highest of all ia Zvening Po-rtLsiest U. S. Cot Rraort I think American domestlo nrrainU do more work than they do in Aus- lt 14 'Mfc to his claws and fly In- . i .. rf -lit U iraaa, ana more than they do In . " auo iaay was very SIGN AND HOUSE1 PAINTEB, Paper haDging a specialty. 40tf. i TARliORO. N. C. CANDY TO THE PUBLIC. I am Prepared to the do all work in STAND I AM DOING A Undertaker's Business, at the shortest ncticei Having con neeted with shop the repairing business. All work Left .at my shop shall have Prompt attention. PRICES iHODEBiTE, Also a first-claaB HEARSE for hire Thanking my j friend s for their former patronage, ! I hope lo merit the same, should they need anything n-the " ' r-;.:-:l':-"-'--.- :' Undertaking OR ' ." v.."-' Repairing Business ; My Place is oni Pitt Street Three Dcors fic -tl?e Corner of Mam . AT 10 Cents Per Poll, ' ALL OHDS. ! THE BEST AMD IS THE SAFEST INVESTMENT t EVER HADE. JE. J J. i Simmons. WALLS. Fashionable y. Tailor, Jl'itt St , one door below:!. VSV.-tdell & i t Tarworo.N C Fine Pnll Dreta and i Evening Taiior- Mart Riiits. The term 'well dressed ex- tPnH fmm; the neck to the foot of the sublect. i - I I , - ' r 5S"Cuttict,l repairing and cleaning ik ne . at short notice. i f y" THE NEW YORK WEEKLY" HERALD rrpBYS KM. M. JUa M. W jpN BUSINESS .... as cheap as any. a. r I do repairing in Tin, Iron and popper promptly. J. T. WARD. Auitin Buildicg. I make the most superior Coffee I Pot ever offered to the public. lSif England. When I asked: Whv Is bread making at home so general in Amer ica, for surely that Is a business that ought to be done by , experts?" I was told that everyone preferred home-made bread. I discovered the grobable cause for myself. Wheat and flour are as cheap in America as anywhere In the, world. Every ex porting country has its home price fixed In the London market, deduct ing the cost of transport. The price of flour, therefore, is the same In America as it is in Australia. But the price of bread is a very different thing. In Australia I paid five cents, or 2id., for a loaf weighing two pounds. ; in several American cities I find the baker sells a single pound of bread for five cents. The prudent classes buy flour and make bread at home, but the poorest peo ple are those, who pay cent, per cent, on the price of this prime necessary of life. Why cooperative bakeries are not established in every city in the union Is a question that . will I much put out at losing the article aaa aaveriisca a reward for tbe same. A lineman took a notion- he could get. the shawl after hearing the circumstances, and . with his spurs he started to pay a visit to every fishbawk'B nest in the country immecuaie'y back of Seabright. The shawl was found ' hanging oa the side of a nest on the Lewis White farm near Little Silver. What the hawk wanted with the shawl is hard to tell, for they use no such thing la building their nests. Philadelphia News. GOLD T Tons MININQ IN QEORQIA. Nathan Williams, A: asked me In England, where cooper ation is a great and a beneficent agency. ' I must confess that a good Amer ican house, with all its labor-saving appliances, is a great help towards domestlo comfort. I should like to of Precious Ore Said to Be , Available. Some time ago a prominent geolo gist on being approached on the sub ject spoke of the possibilities of tbe production or oeorgia gold very highly, says the New York JournaL "The gold In Georgia." said he, Hs In a perfectly accessible region, which makes it twice as valuable as be ' gold that might be taken out of Cal- I Ifornla or the Black Hills. A mine of enormous richness Is ot little value if it Is la an Impenetrable region. The gold oountry of Georgia la in a Perfect net-work of railways, and the metal can be found very near the surface, thus Import one bodily into Australia, making It easily reached by the There are single retail abo. store. In our largs etnee which sell 8,000 pairaof ahoe. a day, making a net prolit of .250,XXS .year. Weaell aboealow, bat -we sell great man? pain, the clear profit oa our ladiea', mMC and ehildrena ahoee la at leaat though we .could dispense with the elaborate heating apparatus. When the heating is not overdone (the great temptation to Americans), the manner in which the wide sliding doors can be left open between the public rooms pa one floor gives one ; an Idea of epooe impossible to be ' conveyed when each room is closely ' shut to keep in the heat from the ppen fireplaces.! have neyer missed the pen- fireplace. ' Winter In Aus tralia is the short half of : the ' year. WILL BE WlfUOUT QUESTION I AMERICA'S Leading Family Paper- - The reputation that the Weekly Herald has enioved for many years of being the best home newspaper in the laDd will be materially; added I to during the jear of 1894. No paios or expense will be spared to make it in every department the most reliable, interesting and instructiye of all weekly newspaper publications. - It will, be improved in many -ways. A. number of new features and departs , ments w ill be added. The latest develop ment injall fields of contemporaneous ha maa interest w ill be ably discussed from week W week by sccomp.isbed writers, THE iSEWS OF JTHE WORLD will b0 given iu a concise but complete form. Every important or t lnterebting event, Neither at home or abroad,- will be ' duly described in; the columns of the Weekly Herald, i j In politics the Herald is absolutely in dependent and Bound. ' It tells the rights and wrongs of all sides without fear. Farmers and stock raisers cannot afford to H without the Weekly Herald during the ceming year. It will contain a regular department each weeki devoted exclusiye y to subjects of timely interest to them and giving many valuable suggestions and new ideas. - 1 4 I The wnmfin and! children of the -land will llDd in the Weekly Herald a welcome visitor. The household and, children's pases will be both; instructive and . enter taining, j They will abound in hints and receipts which women so much value. A brilliant array of novels and short stories by the best writers 4n America and fEngland has been -f secured ,-eo that fiction will be one of the most attractive features fin the Weekly Herald during 1894. - ' In fact, the Weekly Herald will be a j magazine of the highest order, combined with a complete newspaper. NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCKIBE. .tfm ranU a nalr. and on oa. vyse and bora' I 15 eefiu s pair. We ahaU jtoHah abo. atort is each ot the fifty largest ctili of th. U. 8., and if they aell only 300 pairs of sboea a day they would earn $525,000 s year. We ahowld oe ab). to pay . yearly dividend of $5.25 ahare, or over 50 per eeaU a year oa the investment. WeaelltheatockaftO a share. The price mnat Inevitably be mach more than $10 a hare, Ko stock has ever been eold at lees than thia price, rhich ia iupar valne. Stock con-aseaablc. Incorporated, Capital $1,000,000. We have over 1,000 tockbolder, end U Bamber U increasing daily. - Bome of the principal ftgekr holders arc : T. S. Wsllint. N. Y.s I. J. PoUr, Bortopi K. A. Reed. Jr.. Chicsgoi J.TJ. Campbell. Chicacvi W. M Knuh,Lhl JVa. 'Ark., tit Rich. ChicmoiJ. F. Turner, Phlla. B, fidipg. N. Y. E. j. Payae, Battle Write for a proapeotua oontaiBing the names of our stockholdera, ete or tencLan order for ttoek, enclosing cathier' check, eaih or money order. Orders taken for one or more shares, I'rica, f 1 DEKTER SHOE CO., Agent Wanltti. , Only a few doors elcw Hotel Farrar, TARBOKO, N. 0. ; " miner. The water courses that pour down the hills give the best possible power, labor Is cheap and easily procurable, and It Is neces sary to transport the ore but a short distance.' It has been estimated that the gold belt of Georgia Is about one hundred miles in breath. The rich est sections of this belt have been found to be In the counties of Chero kee, Lumpkin, Whits and Dawson, t A well-known mining specialist, JACKSON n, xn m vnnFn mm via v r v a n sa a iw iv am wnnw m . a . -" v. w vu .u.. Q , teaKing or tats discoveries, re we dq not cower beside the - fire, cently said: "It seems to be decld The equable warmth of. tho whole edly in the range of probabilities house is agrecabiethough the con- ihat tons of tbe rrecious ore can bo trast between indoors and out-of- fti, I,, 1 " v -rm swr . mmm MM m $M V WS Goorsw pretty sharp, me over- beating and bad ventilation- of .rail- I ivav cacr laces are the-arreatest in- I conveniences I hate suffered from. ! Miss O.t IL Speoce. In Harper's Mar?-1 'ailne." . , ! OFFiCS FURN 4 : v K U i J en-i Opium Habits I y . rwl a t twain A tawith. 3- -t a 9 cutpain-Bookofoar- Atlaut,C-i-ClK-liMVVhUehsilSt. THE SUN The first of American Newspaper CHARLJ2S A. DANA, Editor. j The American Constitution, the ican Idea, the American Spirit. , first, last and all the time, foreyer! Amer, These 1 The Sunday Sun Tb the createf.t Sandav -NesrssaDer in the - world. .. Price 6c a copy. B mail, $2 a year Daily, by mail. - - - $8 a year Dailv Dd Sunday, by mail, - 88 a year The" Weekly - l Address THE SUN, New York. Only &I.OO a Year , i Bend fob Bavpls Oopt. Address Tim WEEKLY HERALD, f Hebald Sqtjaee, , ! NEW YORK. Administrator's Notice. " Having qualified as admlnisUator of Gracy C. Stallir gs, dsCvased, late tf Bdge combe county, North Carolina, thia U to notify all persons havinf Claims against the estate of said.dcceased to xhiblt them to the undersigned on or before tbe 12. h day cf April, 1895, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. AH per eoas indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 12lh day of April, 1894. HENRY JOHNSTON,! 7t Adm'r of G;acy C. S'sHicts. AdmiDUtrator's Notiee i The undersigned . haviDg q-talified as adm'r of T. B Barlow, deceased, this is f i not'fy all persons owing the said Jeceased, I to make immediate payment, and all per- i sons having claims agaiosi me saia a. t. Barlow, to preseot them : lor payment within one year from date, or this notice will be p'ead in bar of weir recovery. This 3rd day of May, 1894. i W. Ii UAULUtYi A-am r. T T. RrirlirerB & MOD. Alt'yB. Oi ITORS CO. Jackson, Tenn , . M AHUFACTTJRXB3 OF .-It-. School, Church and Office Furniture. School and Churches Seated in the Best llannef. Onlccs Fiirniuhcd Send for Oatalogue. iTlECQDlilllulIlfOEXS. Ill, IIS and 115 Bank 8 troet, NORFOLK, VA. LA&OX STOCK OF riMISHBP Monxtments, and OraTastcnes, Ready for I Timed la' e Delivery. March Sl.l How to Live. Hundred Years. t i.rinn ttai of U rhimiihkL COLLEGE sf KENTUCKY UMlVM.m . raw;?. ttinXTwTiZ, pSiTi.7 1 stvi.at C C A C AaU' profits per month. Win Jnn proveit or pay forfeit. Hew ' art de lust aW A fl.oo sampis ana terms free. Try us. Obt Jester A Son, S3 i3ondet,, N, Y. Dr. Fortln.rof Paris, has just pub lished air In teres ting book under tbe allurlag title: s VHow to Live a Hun. dred Years." It is on thebrt of pro longing the human life and is evi dently a Work CvL which the doctor pas his heart i and soul, Man does not die. lie kills himself. This Is what Dr. Fortln asserts.' If you want to have a Iorig life you roust first of all desire It with all your heart, and for that purpose you must early In life become old. , In a word, the art of living Is the art of grow ing old, the definition being taken In all the senses . that it comprises. Fortln rests hla ease first of all on one piece of advice among many oth ers and that Is the renouncing of splrituQus liquors. , . A Fsnttitic B onnet, The taste of a woman is nbeyopd ordinary comprehension. Once the ambition of a woman's heart was to have a truly, "love of a bonnet," but times have wonderfully changed. I Mrs. "Jack" wears a strangely antiquated headpiece of rich device Irnown as her "Egyptian bonnet,M which enjoya the. happy distinction of being Unique and solely alone In IU glory. Another woman equally noted ia her Mrtlcular sphere as a writer wears,. a. bonnet -which Invariably strikes curdling terror to the heart of a sensitive, creature. Above the fair face' of tbe lady so fine is a glory of iroiden snakes.. . Two snakes .with bodies an : Inch in diameter flashing with- thickly-studded mock ieweis. Writhe and. wreath around the fair lady's trolden bead. i The upright .tails of the reptiles form' the trimming In front, while the trreat- heads in the midst of aiirrettes form- the book trimming. It Is needless., to" say that although the wearer la a fascinating woman, a cold horror chilis your bean as you look at her. Boston Aflvertuer. existing newly opened veins, if the proper machinery Is used and the shafts are sunk deep enough. It Is a question pf International Importance where we may replenish the fast-decreasing supply of tbe precious metal when the mines now being worked faiL I do' not think' that govern ment aid would be misplaced in opening up these valuable lands. but whether or not any action Is taken', by our government, the Georgia . hills cannot long remain undeveloped. Dainties for tU 81k. In strrovidinir" dainties for sick people tt should be rem am be red that sweet things are seldom as tempt ing to the sick as ther would be If the person . wars in health. Tart sweets, such as crab-apple Jeflv or current Jellr, are gerally aooepi- abis, but atrawberry pmerrea or jelly will sloken. Thsv bslocg tq the cloying sweets,. As a general thing salty things taU best to tbe conralescenti : ; 4 weak ' booillon, rather salt, or a bit oi nice, sweet ham, with some hotter tout tatting of the saltv birMsr. a sof t-boDed egg Bo Ssbla a th A$mtm Trmm Th TNOihsi niai is W.i rtavj - G'a Ttfttj Sk. Children hsvs the poet's gift of personification. Their vi rid Imagina tion endows everyihlng with We, and they make oorspanlons of bird and tree, bush and Cower. i A little girl was walking with her mother one 'day when. they saw la Uie grass the first daade&oa oi spring." "Ron, pick It." said ths mother. The child ran, but preseaV lj came back without it. "Where Is the dandelion?' asked tbe mother. "Oh!" answered the child, "it looked right at me and said: .'Please, little Helen, don't pick me. I want to stay right here.' So I dlda't pick It." To her littls sensitive heart tbe Impression. was f just as real as If the flower had actaally spoken th words. j A little fresh-air child who was seeing the country for the first time, would throw herself upon the grass, face downward, and foodls and talk to each separate blade as she lay there, and the sight of a growing flower would throw her Into an ecstasy of delight, t One morning she came stealing down as soon as it was light. f'TThy didn't you sleep, Bertha?" called the bouse mother as she heard tho child t coming down. "The leaves talked to me and I couldn't," answered Dertba, looking with eager eyes toward the open door. ' - !A Utile boy stood with hushed breath anfl parted .lips, listening eagerly to the twitter of a robin la the apple tree. f -"Don't make a noise," he softly said. "Blrdls Is telling a story to the apple-flowera.,, A little girl was watching a. gor geous sunist, when with awe- truck faoe the exclalmedi "u mamma, Cod has opened His door and I can see right Into heVen P I 6hs did cot know that some , poet before her bad likened the flaming clouds to the "vestibule f beaten. A sU-year-old boy I was watching the lire-works on a Fourth- of July evening. The full moon had Just arisen, and i to mors than ' ooe ob server the sharp contrast between God's Work and man's was mads strikingly appareot;ibut to Ernest the contrast was more than he could bear. - Suddenly he exclaimed: "Auntie, I ahouldn't thlok God would like to have his rrttv hv spoiled with smoke,'1. To this ! poet-soii the whining rockets and wheels and Roman can dles were as nothing In coca pari so a with. "God's pretty sky." Harriet A. Farrand, In Chaulauquaa. GROWTH Of NEW WORDS. How They Are Gradually Adopted Into Everv-Day Language.: The growth of new words in our existing languages Is ths aafest gnidt to the, origin of language la general.. Such new; words are eon tlnuailv arising from day to day la our midst. lust at first they are usually Imi tative or onomatopoeic and mors or less Inarticulate. They are defi cient In vowels. The steam engiss seems to say to us: "P'f, p't, p'f;" th cat seems to say to us- ; "P'rrr, p'rrr, p'rrr;' the sound of a cannon ball as it strikes ths ground we represent by 'Th'd.f the sound of a gun we represent by "Bng." But when we coma to use the sounds familiarly as part of lauguag we soon grow to vocaSxs them. W sav puff, puff, puff pur, thud, bang. la proportion as we us such words In composition do they be come mors and more articulate a ad less and tats onomatopoeic, whUa at tbesam tlma they tend to become widened ' and conventionalised : fa meaning. At last when we talk of whining wheels, of a banging door, of girlng a friend a pull ia th pa pers or of dexterously booming a new Invention we have almost lost sight of onomatopoeia altogether. Even whea we remark that ths eat urrs or that we distinctly heard a oud thud ; at a distance w ar scarcely conscious of Imltatlvs ln ten t!on, Longman's Xagaxln. : . CABS IH THIS COUNTRY. Worrasn fatronkins; the Haasmh Not Perttcular Abwrt tW silry. Two-wheelers have come Into their own again, and the hosts of women who drop up to town for s day's shopping this weather are generous patrons of the hansom cab, says the New York Sun. It Is a pity, how ever, that they are not mors gen erally: employed by men, Women are less fastidious In: matUrs of physical comfort sod ars 'careless about exacting ths use of rubber tires. Ia London, no cabby could earn bis salt who rattled aid banged a fare over ths stones th way they do In New York.. Even the shabbiest publio vehicle on Piccadilly or the Strand has rubber rinsed wheels. while It b a dIScuIt task to find one la the long line of csxrlsgos fringing Msdlsoa and Unloo squares. When ths manager of one of the big cab companies was questioned about this fact he said the expense Involved made It impracticable. "It costs," b continued, "from seventy Jive to oa hundred dollars to put rubber tires on a four-wheeler, while 'the extra circumference allowed for two wheeled carts and hansoms brings tbe cost up to some thing Ilk fifty to sixty dollars. And only with th most careful driving can the tires bs mads to last over a Tear and a half. Reckless Jehus who steer publio cabs, Chink noth ing of running their wheels sldewsvs against sharp street car rails that out th rubber like a knife. "It Is discouraging," the manager added,' "to try to improv cab serv ice la New York. Women are the most generous patrons of hotel sp- town conveyances, and they seem to lack all sense of selection In the matter. If two hansoms stand side by side, the one drawn by a feeble looking bees t and every bolt rattling will stand eoual chances with a smooth running cab, having a sleek animal la th shafts. Of course. If New Yorkers want rubber tires they can hav them," h concluded, 'but you must remember lgusbinen know a lot more about comfort thaa Americans, and won't be put c3 or fooled even In the smallest details." MARRYINQ One f IS A PANIC, the Pom Into WHJch Girts Have Fallen. Ia the serlT pert of her girlhood a woman Is apt to think all she has to do Is to wait and am use herself la the la terra! j that tbe future holds the fairy prince who Is sure to present himself sooner or later, and thatii will be all that she would have him be. She has mads unher mind wbst he Is to be like, and what must be his various qualifications, and she erta chooses men tally the color ox his ejes and his general ap pesraace. She Is so sure of her iatorss and that the "right man" wiU finally put In an appearance, that she gives littls or no thought to present Suitors, and remains 1n maiden meditation fancy free" untlT sudden ly she realised the awful fact that thf years are passing, and that ber xhanees" are txmlng lessened. and that ths fairy prince Is a mirage after alL It Is then that the average woman will, la nine cases out of ten. take the first available candidate that oSers, rather thaa remain un married. Her family expects her to marry; she is broegbt cp to no ooca- patlon; what the world win say she has been accustomed to consider all Important. So rather thaa run ths chances of remain log single, she eiects to unite nersea ror better or ior worse to some comparative stranger, who may be utterly unoon genial, th match being simply the result ox a panio. ?. Y. Tribune. A GOVERNMENT UP. Or of Coi4sema Twcksr's Way of Securing Volts. ,1 Apropos of the distribution of seeds from tbe department of sgri culture, which was under discussion la the house recently. Representa tive Tucker, of Virginia, told a story. H said that down in Appomattox county there lived an old farmer to whom he Lad on several occasions sent packages of ads and ship ments of fish from tbe fish commis sion, with which to stock the creeks and ponds on his place. One court day, when the representative was la town, his farmer friend ap proached and In a confidential way said: Tuck, you've sent me seeds and nu two or three tunes, and i am very much obliged to you for thorn, but there Is ooe other thing I wish you would do if you can." What's thatr asked tbe repre sentative. "Well, I want a thoroughbred hound pup for my kennel, ' and I thought maybe you folks up st Washington could seod It down to m just as well as not. If I only asked for it." "Why, certainly," responded Tucker. "It will give vu crrst pleasure to send the pup ! vou. and as soon as I get l u k l Y.'sUntoo yoo may look out f.r him " Th representative said iLi!. trab could see, there was u rvaori hy tbe government should not gninto tbe business cf. supplying thecou stltueats of eocgreeasoen with dogs to Improve their breads, as well as iec4 to Improvs their crop and fish to add to their food supply. "So," he continued, I bunted up a thor oughbred bound pun, had him nice ly crated, prepaid th express charge fad sent Lira down. And yon cA WilUt constituent Is solid for Twklr WaaUoffton Post. Tits Dispersal of SheHa. A. book tasbeen written by H. W. Kw on hh ditptrsal of sheils. Th observations are naturally mad by aordsnt, and Darwin has recorded sevsral cases. Mr. Kew observed a number ot fresh-water mussels (Anodon) carried by sv whirlwind and falling with the rain. Canon Tris tram found tha egs of some moOusk, probably Suoctnee, attached to th foot of a passing mallard thai by him la the Sahara, a Tsusdrvd tnlls from water. A few lasts tm-s are on record In which birds mt the wing hav been shot with bivalves adhering to their tor. A- water beetle (Dytiscces) has twice been captured with a small U valve (Sphcertumi attached to its an other specimen was caught with Ancylus attached to Its winjr-rase. Sevcral other aovstic insects have often beeo. found with molSutca at tached to them, though they were not actually caught on tbe winj. Land shells do not seem to b? hu carried about, though some live Basils (Hells) were found ia a wood p!geoo three dsys after it had isersi shot, and an circulated land snail which bad caught the foot of a bum blebee was dragged alosg.br !i K. Y. Independent. tt D.dn-t Work. Bi way Use an alarm cWk noe-a- daysT Jlgsup No; never tried one but once.' Blway Ho JlffSUP WeT time it treat tS what It was heaven's sake, tut the first 'tsiaetly know I slid: 0. for Uaiia, shut npr w was Idlln andto well salted, a silos of toast all tbess -WU1 sick person who trot touch them if weU- ttiSlt to be neat i dalntUy. In sateriQf to IXl eatabwilladl y. Medical News. a . k . a with dry eateh by a not want to prim red- !-T0Weii lexfs things " How Can We. A gentleman, accompanied by a lady wearing a handsome dress and bonnet, came out of the Albert hall one night to find it raining, while they were without umbrella or wa terproof clothing! "Why, Charles," the lady cried, It's raining!" "Sol see," said Charles calmly "Weil, what shall we do?" INGENIOUS. MEANNESS. A Brother Piers the Flr-Paoir Game on His Church. A good story comes from a neigh boring village, and a report of the Ingenuity of man's acquisitiveness may be a pointer fcr some of those hot averse to turning an honest penny their wsy, ssys the Fargis Forum. A certain brother In the fold,, who takes an active part in church work, and In whom Implicit confident has been placed by his as sod ate, has been detected of having a piece of sticky fly paper In his hat when he went to take up the collec tion at the church.' 1 All the coins that dropped upon the fly paper stayed there, and It was amaxlng how the big pieces crowded the little ones off. When the audience had been - "I rather think we shall have to . ikited. this smooth individual would let it rain," replied the matterof-j advance and turn' his hat upsid fact husband. - ! down over that of another who had ...... . . t.t xxctied oy uisoisasier svaiunfr ber garments, , the lady bys tenders greatly by saying: that dropped belonged to the church, Why, Charles, how can we, when ' and all that remained In the hat was I have on this light dress and bon- to remunerate hire tor the net? Tid-Bita. . . had done, so to speak. r. 1 The Trsvetlftg MaeJa. Is It a revival of th Impulse hst drove our European ancestors forth into ths wilds of North America, or Is it ths Inherent and restless love of change that Is supposed to animate ths modern American, which has la spired ths society woman ot New York with a yearning for travel? Not to Europe and back again; ah does that on an avrsgs once a year. and thinks no more of tt thaa the quiet housekeeper think s ot her daily trip to market. Eh wants to really outdo Cpt-.-Kldd or tbe Flying Dutchman, and ssU away for a year and a day to the wildast sort cf lands. Here Is a pretty girt, with an Indul gent widower father, seoding around her P. P. C cards for a trip to loo la ad; a young married woman has carried a meek husband If on a jaunt across ths steppes of Russia; while a very merry party lltera-y sailed for Europe la th smartest old froe of f uU-riaTd ship, bcwtd "first . a sj ssvsh . a sskav ftssay " - Jr Maria hardened to be awake, end- well, that Is bow It was. Boston Courier. . BILIOUSNESS Who Ess notsnfTerod this mLrr aaasc4 by bile in the ttomacn which an inactiTe or sluggish, liver tailed to carry v'J. mi rtmnTioM s.o cut ra quick action to the liver, and carries off Die bile by a miU move ment of the fcoweu. it is no pur : been solicit In the audience on the amused tbe ! other side of the house. All the coin type of f uU-riggd to the Asores, thence to Usi at Li- j bon and tsiea w:il.r z trur tir-gn Portugst . Tttt - ' r Ufud tj r-; gaiiv or portly t t&kd f ii' ' Liter m :ng maoicirje. Hit : ra .!: fc'iasaorsi they the v attt-i: 111 twt f-o t ? Lou ion, wLica j i 4 g:e f'-rl cpmcuj an- ss ':vialy "done," and r. j;g"more worthy her -Dedorest's Msathly. t . i . sa-t. A "''rs X- ' M 8B. wlKls. ahWl.'T t". m S.hnaan, AVaa. - , - Afanya-s S fSear MiUiSCO.
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1894, edition 1
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