King's Weekly. By HENRY T . KING, Editor and Proprietor. ABOUT ADVERTISING. part, and often entertaining to the Toon Tom my Settle! Af;.: audience, but there are ofer, some : much hard work he timU th.it th. KnT-Ti-'l at 1 i'iti(l'.-.' at (jrt-i nvill, N C a c il l mail matter. sUK.-CKH'TlON, L." CEK SS A Y KA It. Advertising application- FRIDAY, : rates furnished cn December 6, 1895- JLST THE MAN. The Atlanta Exposition is a great educator, and has accom plished a wonderful work ;n bringing t'ether the people of the various sections in closer bonds of friendship and unio i. Representatives of the various vocations and industries of the American people have there met and realized the im portance and magnitude of their work. Atlanta and the South have done their best, and a era of good feeling has prevail ed, slightly marred twice, bv the words and actions of two men, who above all others, should have taiudit lessons of peace and union. They were John P tgeld, Governor of Illinois .and M 'V' r. I'ldted South aiooua Governor A tgeld first milled the calm, when he refused the olfer of a Georgia militia escort on Illinois day, declaring that if they marched in the proces sion he would not, ami would not allow the Illinois troops to T T " i 1 1 cio so. inline ueiter was ex pected of him, he being a for eigner of anarchist tendencies, so he was humored. But it was not expected that Senator Till man would rant about pensions southern oppression and the like. But he did. He was so full that his little puppet, John Gary Evans, by his own dicta tion and chicanery, Governor of South Carolina, came in for a share of his vituperation, and was called "young and sreen" and a braggart. And all two in the presence of thousands of people gathered to honor the day set apart for his State and which he was claiming to then represent. The Senator certainly needs calling down and should, go home, or perhaps better some where else, and learn better manners. Verily the Palmetto ass brays lufig, loud and often and the people complain of the discoids, not the harmory, thereof. Once upon a time, we were a school boy. There were big school bovs, and little school boys, and the other sized school bovs, all studying hard readin ' ritin' and ritumetic" or 'ci phering.' We all thought we were just way up on " cipher ing." Some even aspired to be called mathematicians. One day while the whole school seemed busy 'ciphering" the teacher asked, "what is arit. luetic!" It came like a thun derbolt. Every boy knew but just couldn't tell. The guessing would hae done credit to a church benefit, where the boy tries to guess the girl he kissed through the hole in the curtain, and the result was about at par with the proceeds after the Six pences.7' f inally one big smart boy slipped a dictionarry, con suited it and knowingly ans wered. 4The cience of nnm bero." Yes, that was it. Nothing more. We all knew but just couhi'nt think of it. Simple enough after being told, And so it is with ad vert. sing. Simple enough when u un derstand the 'science" of it. How few understand P.. It is reallv amusing to hear the defi nitions as given by many self styled advertisers. Getting , th mselves or their business is what generally ppies to advertising, regard less (rf antecedent r subsequent circumstances. There is a great science or art in advertising. The man who understands it reaps the benefit. Those who do not say it is useless, worth less and an expense. Such it i . - . ,..1. . . is iu 3un a iiuiii. dui u IS Hie man, not the advertising- lo advertise means, simply, to publish, to make known, generally with the view of bringing returns to the adver tiser. A man advertises him selt, that he ma become known his business, that it may become knowj, his goods, wares, or trades, that they may become known But they are not ad vertised unless it is so done that it attracts diaws people or customers whereby there is I"""1- i ih-ivivic UUill31lig I . illlV. 1I1V1U 111 it II simply publishing or making known. It is the science or art of making known a man a business whereby it will inure to gain or profit. Then it is a science an art, known to few, the knowledge of which is a key-a secret -to success. objectionable ti;. hires and wt' know of none mort so than the handling of deailly weuKns exceedingly care- j lessly, though they may be -not loaded." It should always he borne in mind that the ''not loaded pistol is a very deadly weHn ami the one that is continually getting in its murderous work. A nother ihing. P is against th law to point an unloaded gun or pistol at a person. The law is very plain on that jKjint. Any one who violates it is subject to he iudi:ted. Thai should be remembered, but it is the awful murders s ott n re sulting from such careless praeine. t n tit should teach a lesson to ama teur actors, and the pistol should be excluded from the stag-. A 1)1 TV. South is to get none or verr fe ,,j fices. lie says he lu3 t -f. ! t).. nnd on-tituf nt rery .- ot TvanU an office, and et hr Uvu .. celd shoulder turned on him . ... every ide in Washington. T iiiin i Jis.Hppo'mted. He exjct-d n jr--? would give the broken Soutt. u, stancial recognition in the distribu tion of ofl'nial patronage but .. finds it otherwise, he turn- his twenty thoiifand hungry fKo - ; eeekers, and almost with tear? his eves telle them nothing W. ! not his fault. Such treatment n,v ; make the dav? of Totnmv numUr!. HITCH HP Uut Can't the streets on Sunday he j rid of some of the very objeclbnia hle crowds that take possession ot the sidewalk ? Tin's may r.e a little matter, but it IS important. Is it light t i foice the ladies to take back streets, go mg ro and returning from chinch because Main street is crowded with boisterous, objectionable, and o!tn', not sober, crowds, who harlly allow passing room? Mreet hulling on 1 uudav h is tcome a nuisance a:ul it i time th- anitiormes were tak ing hob' of buofi matters. It is tleir ini"rative duty to do so. The f Quality, III i I otyie, EWiU Price cuiiis Harness Shop, Au-ir.e.v ;i NV. s.. ..fill!.! M. ' OR A SADDLE. I e-p rvi lung in the llarr.ejj anu adlierv line, and li a v - .h. i-i' ti,-' I -t s'ork of "miiU v r brought to town. I lse Onlv the Best L-athT Cak Han:c:s ITadc t: Crdcr- Big .1. 1: i nijY I V ' ireen lib. N. ( ( 'ombiin .OF CLOAKsatis faction . ; Meets Every Requirement And Satisfies Every Demand. TIipsc (wc the Kind of Cloaks r.crcr Tire o Telling About . .: ' J The Kind You Head About and .7 re Refreshed The Kind )ou Rniand are Made Clad- WE SELL THEM THESE BIG FODR CLOAKS, LADIES DKKSS (JOODS AND NOVKLTIKS, UUV HOOTS. SHOKS. ' LOTH I NO Ac., AT LANG'S. EICKS Unparalelled Undersellit g at , TAFT & CO'S, NOT LOADED. Amateur theatricals are very nice, and agreeable to those who take Our pi-ices and method have won he publics appreciation an.' commence. Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Overcoats, Dress Goods, &c., Unapproachably great the price the styl and such values. U. A G. CORSCTS, HEST ON THE MARKET at Rock Bottom I'ricea. Oive us a cnll ana he conyinced. KICKS, TAET A

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