the m OMCI& .WTLTCESBORO. N. 0. German wQmeu,bave been appealed to . bjr the International ' Woman's League for Peace in Paris to- help them in bringing about a general dis armament.. ' ,' :' 'J-S.. v -. ' .. '..:' ).c -"rv-;- . ;. ; r .-- ' t. J l" -1 I . , - Henry Watterson," editor of the Xouisville Courier Journal, is going to write a life of Abraham Lincoln from the standpoint of an ex-Confederate who admire ilw cuius of the martyred Fresident. - Four professors of the University of California, after listening, as judges,, to a public debate on the New Wo man movement, -voted solidly against the New "Woman, deciding that the movement "is not for the best inter, ests of the race-" ' Alphohse Daudet, the . French .nov elist, has been sorely troubled, by his uncomplimentary remark about Eng lish women. -. He declared the other day that he had decided to say noth ing" about women in the future, be cause this "sex, usually called feeble, has too many defenders when at tacked' The Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany has asked all the important lines using Pullman sleepers to join in a request to the Pullman Company to reduce the price , of upper berths twenty-five per cent, below the price charged for- lower berths. Pullman cars are run on. 127,000 out of 173,000 miles of road in this country. Feminine caprice in dress has ruined many a flourishing industry, and now the Calais lacemakers are the sufferers. The present faiicy for thick heavy, guipure laces prevents sale of the fine delioate fabrics wrought in the neigh borhood of Calais. Calais manufac turers have distributed their lace free to Parisian shops, but customers will not take it up. The truth of the adage that an hour of sleep1 before midnight is worth two hours after midnight is questioned by Di. E. P. Colby, who states that' he made some study of the subject while in naval service during the Civil War. The ship's company on shipboard ' officers and men alike stand four hour watches day and night, with the interpolation of a dog-watch of two hours to change the time of -each set of men on successive days. These men are therefore obliged to get their re quired sleep very irregularly, but in more than two years of observation Dr. Colby could never discover that the watch officers and men wereiot as fully refreshed by their sleep as were the medical and pay officers, who. stand no watch, and have hours as reg ular as any householder. In the varied industries of our cities, where many workers are employed at night and must sleep by day, further evidence could doubtless be found that the time when sleep is obtained ha, not the in fluence upon health and longevity for merly attributed to it) - '"I ' . . t 1 mmm - i Tennessee has planned and is now constructing ah industrial exposition of interstate and international scope to celebrate the one hundreth anni versary of- her admission i nf.ft .Via Union, to open at' Nashville, the capi tal of the State, September 1", 1896, and to continue 100 days. The plans call for twenty main buildings to be 'grouped aronnd a lake, a military plaza, and a reproduction of the Par thenon at Athens, standing snow white and alone in the middle upon a high terrace. In the main exposition buildings Tennessee will present in classified form under ' appropriate de-, partments the evidences of her re sourceful mines, her fertile fields and her numerous mftnnf.p.fnrpiR' Sh in. vfc o very , omer .ocace ana j. ioreign, land to come and place its exhibits . side by side with hers, and will make no. charge for the- space occupied. ,Th4 management to which has been in- . trusted the. details of the fair desire : that the. most unique and '. the most complete exposition possible may re sult from their labors. For Tennes see's part more than 1000 prominent -men and women scattered throughout the State are said by the managers to be working earnestly and patriotically, ; and without salary, preparing exhib ii&F For other States, -free -space in large buildings for "exhibits' and sites for individual edifices are dffered, and the management will render all assist--ance to such commissioners as are, ap- - pointed for the successful perform ance -of their dutiesi' "Tennessee,? ' say the managers, 'is in earnest j and ; she will prove again . by. her exposi tion the fitness of the term 'Volunteer "State.'" -..'r 'v: 'J: EAUrjFUJL. HANDJI. - as I remember the first fair -touch ' ' . Ot those beautiful hands thatjlovo so much, I seem to thrill as I then was thrilled Kissing the glove that I found unnlled; , When'I met youraze and the queenly bow As you said to nie laughingly, VKeep - it , now!" . . . 1 And dazed and alone in a dream, I stand Kissing the ghost of your beautiful hand. When first I loved in the long ago, And held your hand as I told you so- Pressed and caressed it and gave it a kiss, -And said, "I could die for a hand like this!" Little I dreamed love's fullness yet ; -Had to ripen when eyes were wet, And prayers were vain in their wild demands For one warm touch of your beautiful hands. Beautiful hands! O beautiful hands! Could you reach out of the alien lands Where you are . lingering, and give me to . . night 1 Only a tduch-r-were it ever so light My heart were soothed, and my weary brain Would lull itself into rest again: For there is no solace the world commands Like the caress of your beautiful handsv James Whitcomb Riley. "IT." OING 'into my wife's boudoir, after a tempor ary absence from home on (busi ness, , 1 - discov ered her upon her knees before an arm-chair, upon which sat a small boy with very large, round, sur- . prised eyes. She rose, came rust ling towards me, and greeted me with neither more heartiness nor more formality than was then her wont. "There it is I" she cried, pointing to the child. ''What do you mean?" I asked. She was crouching again in front o the little one, holding a biscuit close before hie eyes, and, turning naif to wards me, she said : "Why, don't you know we read about it in the paper the other day ? Isn't it nice?" I remembered then that a few even ings back she had thrust a newspaper into the circle of light beneath my lamp; ana had said, pointing to an ad vertisement, "There I just read that I" It was the well known "petition to the charitable a despairing cry from a stricken heart, from a mother, offer ing her child for adoption by well-to do people. "What do you think about taking it? she had asked, and I had only given her baok the sheet with a shrug of the shoulders. "But Martha, what is the meaning of all this?" I cried, with a sharp note of indignation. "You can't have really" "Certainly I have, as you see, she replied. "And it belongs to me. I have made a bargain with the unhappy mother, and made her a solemn promise, too, that it shall- be well taken care of. Y.es, that it shall 1" She took the little head, with its light brown, silky, curling hair, caress-. Jingly between her hands. "Eh, little one? You shall have a good time, sha'n't you?" Not a feature of the little, delicate, rather sickly, face changed; but from the bowshaped month came one of those curiously deep child-sighs. I foon gave up all serious protest against the arrangement, and, indeed, for years eich of us had been in the habit of going our : own way. , Our marriage was not happy ; any thing but happy, in fact although we had not married for love. The union had been arranged by our respective fathers amid the clink of money on the exchange. She .had wrenched her heart away from another's--in mine a silent passion still glowed ; but figures were mightier, and we fully intended to be obedient children. At first each of us was. a dumb reproach to the other, then followed wretohed days of declared war, till at last we settled down to a polite but colorless peace. And yet she was pretty and good, she had brilliant parts, and other peo ple went so far as to call her "a per fect angel." , How about myself, then? well, I don t think I was exactly a monster. Analysis revealed the ex istence T)f the finest rainbow colors, yet the sun was iaokmg. We had been married six years and had no children. Welly, and so the child was her property ! What was more, she had given the mother 1500 guldens, the value of some jewels which she had sold secretly and in haste. "Why did you tell me about it?" I burst out at this intelligence. "Because it would have been too late if I had waited till you came back and I wanted to have it for myself alone 1" she said, defiantly. . My norses, my dog her canary, and her goldfish I' That was reasonable enough. But that she should wish also to have her child all to herself it was really a little too much. The thought worried me daring two days. On the third, when she had driven but, a muffled woman desired an inter view with me. It was the mother of "her, child." Like a shadow she stole through the door, and pleaded with law, half stifled weeping, "to see her marling once: again she could not part from him like this." ,) Iimmediately opened my cash box. "There, my . good, woman," I said,v 'take this -you have not been paid enough." Then she broke ' into wail ing sobs. I must not condemn her un til I knew the extent of her misery. She had another, child, a poor, help less cripple, and she herself was ill and had not long to live. What would be come of this unfortunate being when she was gone? Well, she had thought to herself the sentence was interrupt- ed by a violent fit of coughing she had thought, as Imade out the broken words : "I will sell the bealhty child that the cripple may have something to live on when I am dead." Ah, she was not to be condemned we rich folk have an easy code. . i v : When my wife came back I told her about my, visitor. - "I gave the poor thing exactly the same amount as you nad given ner, ; saia. "o now, you understand, the child belongs to both of us." She bit her lip. 1t is all the same to me, ". she observed, after thinkinc for a moment ami kissed the little one with a vehemence that sounded like challenge. Oar child, forsooth ! I hardly ever got a sight of it, and all the changes oar estaoiisnment sunered on nis ac count uapjjoiiBu. t ib were away over my head1. Sometimes, in more than usually important matters, my consent was grudgingly asked, "We need T 1 1 nurse ; j. nave aireaay secured one I nodded mutely. "V - x u i -rrr . ur n wouiu oe, we must arrange a nursery it is too warm for the child up there." Again I nodded, without a word the workmen (were already busy in the passage. There was nothing to be done, for was it not all for our child? We two seldom talked about him. When we,did we always spoke of him as "It." But I was all the more con scions all day long of the presence of this It in the house. "Hush! not so much noise; It is asleep. It must have its dinner. It must go out. It has hurt itself.' The whole house hold began by degrees to revolve round It. This nameless Neuter annoyed me. "It is absurd;, he must have i name," I said at last. "I quite forgot to ask the mother -I mean the woman his name," an swered my wne. "onesaia sne was coming again, but she has never been ; I suppose she is ill. Well, I shall call It Max. Max is pretty and short, don't you think so?" "fl'm," said I, between two puffs of my cigar. "Fritz is a nice name too." - "I can't have its name changed about for what everyone thinks, she an swered, shortly: and going to 1 he door she cried, "Is Max up yet?" Our child, indeed ! On one occasion, however, I did assert my dud share in our child. At lunoh time It was having dinner at a little table in the adjoining room. In the intervals of our scanty, flickering conversation we heard his merry babble, accompanied by the rattle of his spoon. My wife had not a moment's rest ; she was perpetually to and fro between our table and his, to see if the soup were not too hot, or if It were not perhaps taking too much. "Wife," 1 said, quietly, nut very decidedly, "from to-morrow It shall have its meals at table with us. it is two years old quite old enough. " From that time It dined with us. Sitting up in its high elbow-chair like a Drinoe. close beside my wife, the two opposite seemed like a hostile party. The poverty-stricken, yellow- ish pallor of me little lace naa given place to a delicate, aristocratic bloom, and the round cheeks above the stiff folds of the dinner-napkin looked prosperous" and cherubic. Bravely did it work away at its soup, and when it was finished the little, round fist grasped the spoon on the table like a sceptre. My wife and I had exchanged a few words and now sat silent. As the silence was pro longed, the great eyes seemed to open wide and wider. x They gazed at my wife, gazed at me, in astonishment, almost uncannily comprehending, like the eyes of a grown-up person who felt that all was not as it should, be between us. I confess frankly that those eyes confused me, and that it was a . relief when Eriedrioh entered with the next course. And I know my wife felt the same. It was the same thing next day. The big, wonderfully blue eyes always seemed to be gazing a sort of reproaoh ful question at the pauses in oar talk, and, absurd, as it may seem, we two, man and woman, felt ashamed before the child. Thus it happened that by degrees our talk became more ani mated; we explained and elucidated the opportune lispings to one another, and even sometimes laughed heartily together over the little one's stumb ling efforts at talk. r Her laugh was as clear and pure as a bell. How was it I had never noticed it before? It happened often now that as I bent over my writing that ringing laugh seemed to sound clearly in my ears, as though borne from afar. With the first spring days It carried on its doings in the garden, of which I commanded; a view from my seat in the office; and she was generally there too. I heard the patter of the little feet in the gravel, and then her step. Now, as she made a snatch at it, its chirping voice vied with the chorus of sparrows now she held it, and I heard the sound of kisses. How could I work with such music going on? I had opened the window; a warm balmy air streamed in, and a butterfly strayed on to my writing desk. Then she appeared from be hind a green-besprinkled thicket, dressed in dazzling white upon which the - sun poured a flood of golden light ; only her face was in the red colored shadow of her parasol. ' Slim and graceful, she came towards me. 1 must have been blind ! Why, the aunts and cousins were right she was beautiful ! A charming smile Jit up her features ; certainly at that mo ment she was rand the happiness came from "her child." ,. ' ' A voice within me said, perfectly distinctly : 'You are, a monster." - , I got up and went to the window. What a fine day 1" I said. The prosaic words fell oold as tha shadow of a-heavy cloud upon a sunny landscape. She made some reply which I did not hear, but the happy , light had vanished from her face. Then she lifted up the child, which stretched out its arms to her and ca- ressed it before my verv eyes." It was then that the first feeling of jealousy awoke in me. KeaJ jealousy, though of so odd a kind that J was not quite sure as to its object. When It called her "mamma" a stab went through my heart, and the , caresses with which she overwhelmed the ,ittle one put me beside myself. I was jeal ous of both of them ! I wan sore at having no share in the drama, at not making a third in the bond, and re sdlyed to take steps to gire myself a olaim to il. Alas, I thought drearily, the child wa afraid of me ; and as for herself, I had kept her, as it were by force, at a distance, through long 'years. One day at dinner there was a pro found silence after a skirmish of words , a painful silence. I stared down at the painted, flowers upon the Meissen plate before me, a pucker of anger upon my forehead ; but all the time I felt the great, eyes of It fall upon me and hers too. The rays from those four eys seemed to burn .upon my forehead. Suddenly the silence was broken. "Pa-pa I" And again, louder and more confidently, . "Pa-pa 1" I started. It was bitting there gaz ing at me in terror of theu storm its word would call down. She nad turned scarlet and her lips trembled. No one but herself could have taught him that 'papa." My heart was warm within me why did I not spring up, and with a word, a touch, cancel for ever those dreary six years? The right word at that moment would have done it, but I was under a spell. I did not say it. There was no doubt that with young curly-head a new spirit had taken pos session, a spirit which made me a stranger in my own house. The rooms were illuminated even when the sun without was hidden by clouds. The faces of the servants, even intimate objects, seemed to reflect it ; only I was left untouche J. I became more and more wretched in my solitude. My jealousy grew apace and filled me with mad thoughts. I would oppose the little tyrant ab surd idea ! I would set before her the choice between him and me ah, but which way would her heart have gone? At one time I thought of taking steps to trace the unhappy mother, and to enable her by a gift of money to take back her child. Yet, behind my wife's baok, that was too mean. I could not work I looked troubled and confused, and when people asked what ailed me 1 pleaded indisposition. But the sunlight would not be wiped out, and the spirit of love was stronger than I, and drove me forth. "I must go on my long journey, Martha." My voice trembled as I said the words, and my wife observed it. Something like a tear of pity made her eyes bright. She held the little one towards me as I was going. "Won't you say good bye to oar child, too ?" she asked, in a gentle, persuasive tone. I suppose I took him upto roughly, for he began to cry, t,nd fought against my embrace. I put him down and hurried away, I wandered hither and thither about the world, and to my first companion ill-hnmor-r7 another soon joined himself, who in formed me straight that J was a fool. I heard it first as a whisper, but the words grew louder and more mocking ; what a fool I was I At last I began to read it in the newspapers. I saw it written on the blue mountains; it was borne to me in the shriek of the en gine. Yes, yes, I quite believed it enough! But why did I not turn round at once and go home? Ah, the fool had to work out his folly before all could be set straight. At last, full of tumultuous feelings,. I returned home. A solemn still ness reigned in the house ; every sound seemed subdued and mysterious. My wife came towards me, her eyes red with weeping. "It is very ill--dying!" she sobbed. I tried to calm her, but her fears were only too well founded. Only a short respitefof hope less anxiety I Through the last night we both sat by his cot, one on either side, and each' of us held one of the little hands. How the pulses beat and throbbed ! Quick j sharp, fever beats ; and every beat was an admonition: "liove love be good." Together we felt the measure and understood the exhortation. Our eyes met through tears, and the look was as a sacred vow. Words would have been sacri lege. Then we laid It to rest in tne warm spring earth. Afterwards, when we sat again at table for the first time, again there was silence between us. ' But, it was another sort of silence to that which the poor little stranger. had interrupt ed with his lisping "pa-pa." His high elbow-chair still stood against the wall, and on the board in front of it lay the spoon-sceptre. J , My wife held out her white hand to me across tne taoie. uia you love It a little, too?" she said, and her voice shook. . "My wife, my own dear wife I" I held her hands. ; . And then I pointed to the high chair. "It came to teach us love," I, whispered. . " "And when It had done its work It went back to the angels," she said, crying. From the German in Strand Magazine. Why Men Urow. Bald. Men become bald more frequently than women because of the closeness of the hats they wear, which keeps the head too hot, induce perspiration and weaken the hair. --The boys pf the fa mous Bin e Coat School in London, who never wear hats, never becoma bald late in life. Pittsburg Dispatch. WOBDS OF WISDOM. ; The man who dies young will'no be obliged to die old. . , ' C It is often .a good thing that men do not practice what they preach. There is a great deal of common sense in getting scared in time. ; The man who assiduously courts trouble will in the end be married to it. It is exceedingly bad husbandry to harrow" up the feelings of your wife. When a woman is indifferent to the size of her feet, it is a sign of old age. What an admirable recipe for hap piness to I know, how to do without things. M A man who is rated as smart in good lnck is often rated a fool in ad versity. ' :i. : . j 0. !Love labor, for, if thou dost not want it for food, thou may st for physic. r It is not necessary to pump some people in order to get out. of them all they know. The people laugh, at everyone'who makes a fad of collecting things except the collector of bills. A man who stud ieth, revenge keeps his own wound green, which otherwise "Would heal and do well. J Whoever tells us of our danger is our friend, no matter whether we be lieve what he says or not. , Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let -us to the end dare to do our duty. Wisdom is the principal thing ; therefore get wisdom ; and with all thy, getting get understanding. Love is more pleasing than mar riage, for the same reason that novel's are more amusing than history. The South-West. Hindoo, Fafcirg. Herr Knhn not long ago presented a communication on this subject to the Anthropological Society of Mu nich He had the opportunity of per sonally observing two cases as to the genuineness of which he had no doubt whatever. One of the fakirs referred to had been buried , alive for . six weeks, the other for ten days. The condition which the fakir "has the power of producing artificially is in all respects identical with the catalep tic trance. The fakirs, who are all hysterical subjects of a very pro nounced type, put themselves through a regular course of training before the performance, weakening themselves by semi -starvation, taking internally, various vegetable ' substances known only to them, keeping their bodies motionless in the same position for several hours at a time, etc. When the fakir has by these means got himself into the proper condition he has only to lie down in one of the positions enjoined by the sacred books and fix bis eyes on the end of his nose to fall into a state of trance. The fakirs are also believed to use hasheesh for the purpose of lessening the force. of respiration ; that bypnotio agent, as sociated with other vegetable sub; stances and used in a special manner, is believed by them to supply the want both of air and nourishment. At the beginning of the trance the fakir has hallucinations, hearing heav-v enlv voices, seeing visions, etc. Urad ually, however, consciousness becomes annulled, the body becomes rigid, and, as the' fakirs themselves say, "the spirit rejoins the soul of the world." British Medical Journal. v ' A Tough Goose. The manager of a certain cotton mill in Lancashire keeps some geese on a bit of square ground behind the engine house. Last Thursday morn ing, about 6.30 o'clock, the engineer went out and left the engine house door open, and the geese walked in One of them in some way got into the fly-wheel, and when the engine started and the fly-wheel commenced going round at the rate of seventy-seven revolutions a minute, goosey could hot get out again. When - the engi neer went into the engine house again he saw the unfortunate bird still going round, but, thinking that it must be already dead, did not stop the engine. Imagine his surprise, an hour and a half after, when he stopped the en gine for breakfast, to see the goose walk out as if nothing- had happened. It was very dizzy, but in a few min utes it seemed to come round, and started walking up and down and eat ing along with the others. It is liv ing yet, and does not look any the worse for its ride, only that it is.eov ered with black oil. The fly-wheel is sixteen yards in circumference, and goes around at the rate of seventy-seven revolutions per minute. The: goose was in ninety minutes, and so would have, gone round 6930 times, dr. have trayeled sixty-three miles. - J. H. Olegg, of Milnrow, near Booh dale, vouches for the accuracy of these facts. London Weekly Telegram, i Bobbed a Stasre .With a Bogng Gnn. A stage robber held up the stage on the Ager-KSamath Falls , line near Keno, Oregon, with a bough of a tree one day last week. , The district At torneyand a Deputy Sheriff were the only passengers. A voice from a clump of bushes by the roadside called out "Hey put up your hands and glancing in the direction of the voice the driver and passengers saw what they took to be the barrel of a rifle sticking out of the bush. They promptly threw up their hands. Then, following instructions, the driver threw out the mail sacks on A few rods further on the Deputy nena jumped off. stole backi and shot tthe robber.- The man5 had no weapons and had pointed a stiok of wood at:, the stage. . But experience T teaches people in that region not to question appearances too closely when they indicate firearms. New. Xork" i Sun " - - i i- 13 ew Drug . Store. erry Bfos., Wilkesboro, N. C. ' Keep on hand a full line of Fresh Drugs, Medicines, Oils,' Paints, Varnishes and Every thing kpt in a First-Glass Drug Store. Prescriptions Carefully - ' V Store in the Old Steve 'Johnson , Building, just opposite the Court House. '. Be Snre to Call . and See . Them; B. JL STALEY & CO - DEALEB IN DRUGS 9 PATENT MEDICENES, : V ; : ... . 1 . TOBACCO, CIGARS, Cigarettes, Fancy and Toilet Soaps, etc., etc. m a 9 ' ' it " 1 ' ' jrrescnptions prompny ana accur ately filled. Situated in the Briok Hotel Building. . OTiFEl UTILES, A C-WELLBORN. PROP- Situnted on Main 8treet, eas of the Court Home. Good horses aBd- new ve hicles of ail kinds re dy for the accom modation of the i raveling public. ' Horset 'Carefully fedt and attended to. Qiv .us a trial and see how we feed. A U. WELUBORN, Wilkesboro, North Carolina. ft, Attorneys at Law, WILKESBORO, N. C. Will practice in the State and Federal ISAAC C. VELLBOR N, . Attorney - at - Law, tsilaori 1M. O. Will practice In all the courts. Dealer In real estate. . Prompt attention paid tc collection of claims. v T. B. FnruiT. H. L. Gbxxitk. rim rv p PDrrrir i hill i a UI11.L.11L., Attornfcyd;. Law, WILKESBORO, N. 0. Will practice in all the courts. Col lections a specialty, i Real estate sold ot Aommisthm ;:" ;, MMMM'MMiMMiMMlMMMBSJMjii as A Tobacco-Chewing Dog.' ... A dog addicted to chevying tobacco is owned by John Holden, a butcher of Eighteenth and Sigel streets.' The dog is an improvement Upon the average tobucco chewer, in thtt he doesn't spit on the floor of a trolley car. He takes a bit of tiie weed, and, holding it between his fore paws, sucks ail tlie substance out' of it. -He has been chewing tobacco for about three years. Tobacco is (he first thing he wants in the morning, and if he does not get it at home he will go out among tbe neighbors, who know the dog's habit, and whine among them until he gets what he wants. He will hot touch one cut, hisl Weakness being in the direction of plug tobacco" He learned to chew when a puppy, his owner being in the habit of giving hini tobacco as a joke when he saJ on his knee. ' ' : . v )isasters to Swallows. ; Although swallows are such won derfully quick-sighted birds, and can change the direction ) of their flight with amazing rapidity and ease, it occasionally happens- that they either do ' not perceive the danger lying in their path or are jhot quick enough to avert It, for I have once or twice, while fly-fishing I tor - trout, ' accidentally knocked down and stunned ans wallow. Several instances have also been , re corded of: the' poor bird being struck and killed' by golf balls, and in one case at least, even by a cricket balL Petrels and other sea birds have been known to collide while in mid air, and drop Into passing boats. Wild duck are occasionally picked up on board shipsC that have been . lying at hnchor all night in some of our large rivers and estuaries. They strike the rigging . or 1 funnels during their noc turnal flights, and . as many as , five jvere found one morning; on the deck B Conpiiil