ii mpqtgjm n " .... V tr i.'V. . . 7 ' " r - 1 JL i ' - -t , -s ajriftitar Vwrt"- ..tw-iitfgfeif Willi Hi. iwii TIi 3 fl. C.Frefehl Lino YmiTn Bi czrnn Tin gym 51,,. MHMMMMMMW CM m4 afto Cittbit IX UM, Ula Ba vfU imailMinplw TEITS . nmn Baltimore tad New Btni . JIMlf, aVAXVatlXAT. AA &LX r. M. - MTi SATV AUAT, A aA r. M. Tate iMMtrUMTTIUMMl a aw ta tMkMonuiiru Waaajlauaua- ad. u4 ail wttM .Xoci- aaaa. fed aatUicr-ftWit bruioi o'ii cQ Tuaroit ?T!tnra!j p'.T. I'. : IrvAtcrtl m wt'.A no r - ' 1 mntfm :Hut I oww K T pr ' C fi ! S. . wWh la u-. r -tim' v. - .v ! r aut"t u to ' " r 4,-Wti r ? '-! to NiK'! . ' SirT ft Srx,-Tn. - t. t. v. :i-t.. r.a f m .i 1 . .1 f: 4 ft. ! . bra' FOR MEN ONLY. I.-1 or rtrQ. ftji-anl cum t tvii Kftftiatm y JftXr ftvftva btl tmt t At M niWv ,iB,4 f CMT KJi W 1 MMAr. Li1it M4.. BiUBior lAt. W. MoCAKJUCK, aV- liortoo. v. Qyil a Ok. nuifttoifcl. U wit Twft A Sntv TrrnM. LXm, PVr KUHM. lulu, n Culnl wxf. . U. KmAvwI. Tremdmam. R. I. Vor 4muy. iVftM r I -.ii 1 Titf fts4 vf m4) ft. THE JOURNAL. w I IIESPEKfc. oul i Toiclt? to the frozn mcxin, Yet in itluaiber music deep mJ trong Ai sll th iplendi i (Ire of iun.it oo- n . Would that some hcd might strike it into sorif. And yet prcbnce the touch that thus should wke Tha ilenl chord to ring melody. Might bx tha hand of one for whoe dear sake The tong would grow until too great to be. on In in t JO l' Don' h.ivt- in to N.iy t lj.it on self Hiiorc in our ATID WUrHaya. a Use gta. uJ rml m i-ar-B m IM dtOterast o(Saa ol ii or CLK ATI UUP VIA M. C UTJIa. aV H. OtAT. Ao:, Xaw k)tM. X c. Ii 4 EASTIOIM CAROUNA OiSPATCh aWaM n .wUai fllala. . r-Mlaia. Saw T jv. 0 THXSTXXKES9 EAGLET and VESPEB Bm will r aa rvjavr mtb4m Kara avarr Hon iJA T . THC&SUAl ua HATCkiUT OiT tvjha tMan aa MOlaT. WajjSJJ.lT. riUUAY. AMaaila . C. W. M kolOHl noaiAara R. jav Tar. "ita. aal SortoiK K. M UK ravaa7lTaai H. H.. torn ratiaata and Uaa adarULC auoarVor taoiiiuaa fca f aiatt traa-tpoftrta'Uuu Italian 1 ra mmi at Kllaattata Llvr.ai Ma. aaaal f rata; at U im -oaaaii oa an la ja taniaia UaaHiajiKia. IHiaca ai (TftvMJa l tm uiipyftl ta luian rMilBa lajMkw aajiy aa ro.rra AT""" a Iota, fcy rtnn. H. & rtar B, taath tu-rar. fTiUaaittla. tT mu, w. a Bajto. llJaa hl uuoo. au'iaora oy niia, u. A Baiw . K. Iftfll aa. jfttauwa. J. tT orMA MMlMra H- a. f rrbaa:aA alain Trua ali (.a; 5w I or a aaa .1 w Kacavar Mafta aa tow aaa luma ivueAar I ukruj of Wawo. aiwaatnci raru'.rva aaaaftl u-iaa paa "ftiA wui aa ra J?X . tLK (ta. rt. TraAr Aiaal t. H. M.). U a I frajfta iaajvaar WX J - ' WTraloo r!ui Aaal. r w. at . . J"j j vj aoraj Fnktil Aicul Jl T P. ja . M H. .Vurtuj.w BLC. fclCl'Oi . uaaam rratcAt Anal . H. av. .voctixa v. i. aaUKSjH'i'rj. Aawat. Mna. a. a. laaJO a old aouiriiori Sieamshfp Company. SCMI-WEKKLY USE. a Pialalu UMaiiatf Caa aaara Ota) aaval ravaataa WaAar aVaajaa. -rial Alaaaaaria u4 Caa roa iaa, lAaaw 'aval WatalatWa city. aJ4 aa Foiata, North, Eaa ao4 Watt. TCKI4CAT. ntlMAKT U. M awaaaaau Sloxir 1 117 13. tU;t SiitiU, Ajro Xlasj? 11711111 Eift ?nkiiU. 1 V a.. ar - Vaaauafta. afu.NOAln aaa avaaainjaa Aaaaa mi iaa . a) T. M. iaataa,a4 aa MAri aa A rrao klvara. Jraan MMW MKMUft w AVAAUK atraaa, TCKaJDAIM aatral- aaT aa aiixm A. ML. aaaAraa aaa aaajna. wfm IA U O. a. ax vja?a amtpa a away (Jl P Cov- . , Y law wa Ulnar a. Oraa Uaa ftataa ar raliaa . t. Ctoft altiaa w tM4a a aaurtan afwa la aiaaaa aa aa&taaaa. aaaaair all nl aaraa aarvvaa tor Laa aaat aawaurUaaan aa a waa- wa wui va'iwj! aaaaa na uaniaaraft TV arnil (aaai Haraa. jb aa fUBAra. aV 1a. aw Mia hi a Ti AaaAtaaa am aa aaaaa aiaiaiaa. vuj aala aMA.Va aa a U a. a. a WUI teal a a4 lafcia. aa aMft aa-a awarv aaaila ii aaa faaa laaaaVa la a KBiara . m. BOAAA-TSft Afaal, ooiarsrrmx a TrjM. no 1 TRE2JT JUYZB ltaxabt Compvnj. -ml raa la ftiia-a-CB4 laaa m aa aa4 anas J a aa r y lav iaar. 8tjnr Trent THAT-FIGHT Th Original Win. C K. Simaocj, St Lout, l-Topi M. A. &ti acrtiAi Lrr Miicta4, Et'4 I'', ti V. S Court DirtiTl J. H. Z-aijn, Prop'r A, Simmons Lit r MfTJ iter, Et'd bf Zc: i.'tA W. A. S 1,. M. .u (or 7 carri xriaiTio'. IJiLiut i.viii, Ap-rTtT s-ni htofcucB, Etc. Rav T IV Raimav Putor W. K. ICkiuxai. AJir4, Tim., -rrt "I laXlSk I fhM'ai SlTt tX-lH dc bvtt to Tr ('pataouiff M. A. Sun - tDas Ltc Micioe. I hit tA?rtitcs h a 1 to ubttet my heart, ertn as yondr 11 b swet like summer Sj slp. HAT . rain , To huth th lip of ionj wr better far Thavn burt.iDK veto y mphoniea of pain. Stonewall Items. rer of oar town is rather J R. Cnm, Ed iter rW I "rt,Ti a pt k aftJ of your I. : MljC10w. Mfti kit UMd ballf O It- It wvrk a chirn. I iat a bartWT I.('r RpiittT ai cr- of ZtUa' aCxiaj-, Plao'a Cora for Con eu m ptioQ ta aiao tha brat Coogh Medicine. It you hATe a Coufth w iLhMJt duaeavaa of tha Iuntr. a fow draw arr ail tou orwol. But if you aa IClarH thia ea.17 mnuii of aaaty. the alight C' Ugh mar orjorme a aartoa mAUor. and wTrv b -thai will b rixUirxL 5 Al I t rirr! a '.2a lu t. a. aol -Ii iat ackl NT dna aw t-r maO. Tii c:;lt ti:3 IRON TONIC Live ftiQM'v,.Jt,-i t -rf tOuTH tS-apawa.t. Wa -r a,apw1AV lalaaaalM Iefe if gt-H-ajiaT'l AAV4 T1. fM F aaaa .aaaj aAv MBat. gfA-AJ j W-AB 1. aTAwAV 4 nsap.iai lr-i a fwapajr MAlttl - IF03-" TOJiICa aiwaM aaaar Sat-A . t h -- p . t . a amaaaa fat ewantarwttl a 4 7 i U I ."V" LADIES AV. PBaAtT r-raa. O k . 1 aAaawaaaAai aaj i a -'.- 1 aa atiiair f --a rta-llpaa.-.n Ua.. t aw-a:' -. a ti-J I 1ad4l U-a a- i P "' " TI4,: Aajt AT. fll-Tl A) 3 t w-r , -.A f- - r Dobbins Electric Soap THE BEST FAMILY SOAP IN THE WORLD. Ii a Strictly Purs. UmLti in finality. THE ar'-Tj-i ajruub tr arSitS -ns frs a lmiBr f"- -V barcn axL l5--i OAT rVftanrii .at tkka taia;c-Tt Till mmmp tm MaillfraJ ta aia.iltT t4-af.r wttak alklat; tJh rma !. oior-i ia4 BwaK B !cni IT JW jtiaxiaailN awl WnM -- t -r ttWm Mjfk AAai bvC ai hita aatv. READ THIS TWICE a 1 mmt utlaa V :! THME j luiap htm. F-tKcriA. Soap llaaftv. w .11 w, of LftSur, iaftM acrartl !( ta A I r Ic pal f N4 ft3 1-1 A A i : r T IIF. aal tw .411 ana H -aTi anal cuuaaXauVieciI. j ctaeaa-rrr.y Pcwarc of Imitations. A ja3aOar aaf Tat r -1a , aa au a'siNMA (Ur MmiL&a d caaaaa aaa aU lakaraaaaiata n 1 ia aaj-. tjaT UlAatoa. aa Saw Aaraa few Kiaaaoa aa T aaj a aaa rrj ai Uaoioak. at. kat. aa. wu taara KLaaaua aa Maaaan a&a at aU lata 1 Taaraaarai Toaaaia ai I aaallaaa aai Xaoaa Airar. X. J. DHOBWAT a Vawara. W. p. Arajn.1-. daawaa, tV . At ana. raijwAawuia, W. E. t!U), A(al ai Traataa. at. (X Aarrm. Jauy OKAPlaiA. BAaza. 4BaAar BrMca. J III Qaal Mi KiW BERNE ANOPAMLICO LINE. The Steamer TAHOMA, A aaaAaom -It on.trKl.J frMfht aaA aaa . taaaaa . bartaaj twaa ataaa.1 oa Lata waaa. ka aaaaarad tu raoAff aaparkar tmt 1 1 1 a ta an I from a. I potaaa 00 kw Maaaa Arrar aa A PaaaUan aoa-.tr. al Maw Tla rn rar aaa aaaaaat tlva loluwtaa winaaaia win ba la aaaaa Ma: laaaaa Xaw Haraa a-rarr Wad aaaaa 7 aaA aaianf w at A. X. Aw batbom. aaaewtaa; aa ClaaAata A.taa aa-t aaiiUia OaaAa, Vaaaaawra ud wooawmjl. 1 aaaaa B4j5on tmry MmAr an 1 Thnra- aa aiJL A. M . basDtac al maainil. andaaaara. laiua AJa aaA tlttbAtxxa Caaa, avrtvUvt at Xaw Haraa Maautar aaa Taara imj a-raolaa. taaaailaal aaaaaiijaar MumaikUUoa. aab ala trataa aatuuaa. Praiftiaa rtftaatpcaa trr aaJ raeaTraiS Aau T by IX H. A 8 OTT. Aaal. CRrWl. - atoaawail rOWLXJa A DNLJ, Acwnta. HArfftoro, tiaVOAAIA A. MI MIT. aal-twtr Uaaarai Maaaaar aoki avrrr uxrort attoa sen Daaataa' ri.-trw- IWt tskr Wft--Tl4:. Flctn .aftM-'C. Pili3. F-irtirft w ftn-r 5Wt Arsuftl. fttaftply Mrja. it 3 da TTftr vil mia Joc!w.. ftwi r. ir&r ax ist , r . An tbr c DOBRXW.V IJLKT1IC - aid tma ao ociWr. KaHy t.i 1 frot !V-? W aim to a-tai kpM a ia fttock. 1 yvftn tlAfta t it. ar n 3fttw from ha ail vSo? frjcar. Mf cuftvaiirf ut iaww ftrrmptrr uraid cacJl ad ta caraAa to Aai law all raftl aaa A aaan.ai myv" Ya nuiMI ajVarw ft aJ crftilT r jftftvii r Dobbins' Electric Soap. A. CO.. T3 aAI JA bar I. L. CRAG IN riiiuiDELriiiA, r.i. laaf " -',-":,! Hi! I - Miai I THE LADIES' FAVORITE. KEVER OCT Or ORDER. If T'3 -Vaira t.- ri rv tu a rr .r.; ir h a mjr afcrxr-.t at T':r pia prlnnft. If f'i cn tv c Drfcl !:rT." trvnrarat a. 1.1 11 t. 1 j A wido lonely. Mr. NV'm. Lokena is with u, looking" after hi". milliDg interests in Pamlico. C. H. l-'ow ler raised last year five 510 ponnd bale of cotton on five acres of common land with no j extra pains or manuring either. Mrs. ( F. Chapin of Portland. Maine, has been in Stonewall .top ping at Mr. A. E. Cherry for the p.at few days and is at this time at Pamlico. (,'orn planters are moving around and being put in order for use. If the weather continues good the balk of Pamlico's crop will be put in by the end of next week. I saw in the Joi"R5AL a few days ago a report that a man had ben married 14 years and had moved nine time. Well, that was no moving to a man who at this time ii a sawyer at Blade's Bros, mills at .lame City near New Berne, who had been married 21 years and has moved 41 times, so I have been credibly informed. How is that for moving T Bradford Gatlin ha contracted with Whit Holli" and David Harris to refit his old house and bnild a new one ia addition, on his place lately purchaaed of Wm. C. Bryan heir. Brad is one of oar pro per oas farmers. He is at this time patting 100 barrels of corn in C H. Fowler 'a warehouse, preparatory to shipping per steamer Tahoma to your city and has 200 mare to .hip, which was made with two plows; besides, he sold to C. H. Fowler lt,G22 pounds seed cotton, and had one bale of 475 pounds weight, ginned, and raised and fattened a bountiful supply of pork for home use all with two plows to say nothing about potatoes, peas, oats, &c. Now that is what a hard working farmer has done fr him nelf for the past year, and not a good year for farming at that. Ia Jlemoriim. Departed this life at his horae, Beaufort, N C, on the evening oi March ISth, 1SS9, Dr. Jame L. Manney in his 62d year. Thus has paAAed from oar midst one of Beau tort's beat and most useful citizens. Dr. Manney was born in the town where be died, A. D. 18'7, and soon atter reaching his majority he graduated in medicine. Excepting the period of his war service from 'til to 'Go he has been constantly engaged in the healing art. Ue was devoted io hia profeaaion and sought its highest attainment and did whatever he could to elevate its raapect and influence in the minds of hut patrons. He was a skillful and sueceMfnl physician achiev ing what every successful physician mist attain the confidence and repet of his community. This Dr. Manney poseea in the high eat degree, and held it without abatement up to the hour of his de parture. He made a good soldier. At the first tocein of war Dr. Manney left hia home and as Cap tain of Co. "Q"' 10th Reg't C. State Troops, he entered the Con federate service. He wu brave, devoted to duty and won the ut most confidence of his men and superior officers. Though firm, his demeanor was kind, and bnt few had a heart more easily touched for thoee in distress and need. On one occasion when having been ordered to execute some criminals for desertion, he asked for a short respite which was repeated from time to time till the surrender ol General Lee, when he released the prisoners who went home to their distressed families. What a glad spot this act must have made In the heart of this good man in after year. Whether as a husband, a cnrietiao, a latner, a citizen, a soldier, a physician, he was characterized by the same strong devotion to duty, and won in every position the love and confidence of all with whom ho came in contact. He has passed from our midst, and we shall not again see hia familiar face on thia earth. May we all meet again in the "sweet bv and by." He met death without fear telling his family and friends a few days be lore the end that he was ready to go : that life waa an empty show, and wholly without charms except in the enjoyment of the christian religion, lie passed away quietly, consciously, and trium phantly. Peace to his ashae, and gTeen be hia memory in tha heart of his surviving family and friends A Comrade. Sander's Store, '. C, March 20. lioforo Murriiigo. Scler! tho pil. Ajjri-c Willi the girl's U'hrrm polita'B ami t i:eu in it'liion. It" on li.isc ,i nvai kt'ei) ;ui ce II 111' i - .i w iilow IT kci l II li ! ill . 'V-.ir tut .; t li.it Oil i. !!;'. 1 : iiVUv cnou 'li in'Yt-r l,r.ml Your-l,...p. T nit mii'-h swirl stulT on on do mi will hear it r cirri, vv hen our wile oin'1'..il purpose in m- on t he e vereet pun - f.r t.-r-i a-.-i TfJ. A Sfcamor Honard, Independent St u&bcat Line. Oa tad atar Hood a j tie ICth Jav oi far-pa.. ihA (taawaar Howard will rats iVa follow tux aohaataU. raw Traaaoa mvrj Uoadtf aod Fri 4sy at vitfh aVlca. rnramr Tu-raday aatw BAtaraAr. J. J. LXSTTTEH, laAaa-r. . 1. DaacarwAT. Aawa ai 5w Bwraa. Totts Pi s PHILADELPHIA SINGER WARHANTED5YEABS. LOW ARM. $20 FOR TORPID LIVER. afi Ik a tftta tj r j z-T mon I ASJ1. J fS28 Aa I'agTicloai Muiner. I The posseasor of an ungracious I manner will never come up to the ! standard of a true gentleman or j gentlewoman, although possibly ' well born and well educated. The sensation of insecurity and of being Ion the lookout for some ill judged , speech dissipates that safe and calm atmosphere which surrounds the truly refined. There is always a nervous dread of what may come next, and a feeling of constraint is generated. Persons who are much lu the society of the ungracious foster insensibly a gnarded careful-1 ness a to topics likely to call forth .t show of ungraciousness, and a cautious manner of feeling their ( way on a subject, no to speak,) very trying to those having to i practice it. Vet. with every care taken, the failing will appear, and almot t always when leait expected, .ind on occasions seemingly the least railing for it. Don'; paper. I read m at ha.s so me tiicting upon on t i lsliment known to married men Go home at a reasonable le ur in tlit' evening. Don't wait till the girl has to throw h.-r whole soul into a aw:i that she cui't I'lir with b'th hands. A little thing like that may cau.-e a coolness at the very beginning oi the game. If, while w eai mg Your new sum mer trousers lor t he first time, you sit down on some molasses candy little Willie has left on the chair, emiie sweetly and remaik that you don't mind silting on molasses candy at all, and that 'ooys will be tKtYH." Keserve your feelings tor future reference. If on the occ ix'.on of o:n lir-; call, the girl upon w horn you have placed your atTeetions. looks like an iceberg and acts like a cold wave, take our leave eaily and stay away. Woman m her hour ot freeze is uncertain , oy and hard to please. In cold weather finish saying good night in the house. Don't stretch it aii the way to the front gate, and thus lay the foundation lor future asthmas, bronchitis, neu ralgia, chronic catarrh, to help you to worry the girl to death alter She has married you. Don't he about your financial condition. It is very annoying to a bride who pictured for herself a life of luxury in the ancestral halls to learn too late that ou expect her to ask her bald headed parent, who has been kind to her, to take you in out of the cold. Ion't be too soft. Don't say, "These little hands shall never do a stroke of work when they are mine," and " ou shall have noth ing to do in our home but to fit all day long and chirp to the canaries," as if any -sensible w omaii could be happy fooling away tima in that style ; and a girl has a fine retentive memory for tho soft things and silly promises of courtship, when she i washing the dinner dishes or patching the west end of your trousers, and in after years she will occasionally remind you of them in a cold, sarcastic tone of voice. Exchange. Buried Koretti. Extensive forests, covering val leys and hill side.s. are overturned, and the uprooted trees form a gigantic barrier, which prevents the flowing off of the waters. An extensive marsh is formed, particu larly well adapted for the various kinds of mosses. As they perish they are succeeded by others, and so for generations, in unceasing life and labor, uutil, in the course of time, the bottom, under the influ ence of decay and the pressure from above, becomes tuif. Far below lies hard coal; the upper part is light and spongy. At various depth., but sometimes as much as twenty-live feet below the surface, an abundance of bogwood is fount!, consisting mostly of oak, hard and black a-s ebony, or of the rich, choc olate colored wood ot the sew. Such ancient forests every now and then rise in awe inspiring majesty from their graves. The city of Hamburg, its harbor and the broad tracts of land around it, rest upon a forest, which ia now buried at an immense depth below the surface. It contains mostly limes and oaks, but must also have abounded with hazel-woods, for thousands of hazel nut are brought to light by every excavation. The city of New Orleans, it has been recently discovered, is built upon the most magnificent founda tion on which a city ever rose. It was the boa-st of Venice that her marble palaces rested in the waters of the Adriatic on piles of costly wood, which now serve to pay the debts of her degenerate son; but our Venice ha.s no less than three tiers of gigantic trees beneath it. They all stand upright, one upon another, with their roots ppread out aa they grew; abd the great Sir Charles I. yell expresses his be lief that it must have taken at least eighteen hundred years to fill up the chasm, since one tier had to rot away to a level with the bottom of the swamp before the upper could grow upon it. Misplacfd kiniluens. 'Oh, girls !" exclaimed a gushing young lady, in a tone of disappoint ment, "isn't too mean for any thing f "What's too mean '' queried half a doen young women in unison. "Why, haven't you heard f Jack Slawter, who ha been in jail two months on the charge of murdering his grandmother, and whom we have been furnishing flowers and books and delicacies for the past six or eight weeks, is not a mur derer after all ! His trial has just ended in a verdict of not guilty. He proved an alibi or some other mean thing, and all our favors have been thrown away on au innocent man. It's enough to disgust one.''' Oklahoma. e proposed new terntorv of lins name is tho western half of the Indian Territory. The eastern half is occupied by the live civilized tribes, the Cherokces. Creeks, Scminoles, Chootaws and Chicka saws, comprising the bulk of the Indian population. In tho. "beauti ful land,'' as the name Oklahoma signifies, there , ire about tint teen thousand Indians, remnants of seventeen tribes, to whom it is propoM'd to assign cectain lauds.' The Indians do not view with much ', iavur the creation of chis territory, and as an old Choi "aw Indian said, they think that "Its chief beauty in white men's eyes consists in the tact that they have no right to it. '' , However, t his neb. charming, and productive land, offering every inducement to the explorer and settler, is almo.-t sure to be opened to the white race, and there is no reason why it should not bu done in such a way as to confer great benefits upon the Indians, rather than to override their rights. Thou-ands of persons are waiting tor the opportunity to go in and po.-sess this promised land, and it is predicted that within a month at: !' ) k 1 . i i ! ! i i is iMi-iinl to settle men: ;: will have a population of over one hundred thousand. JIIKZB-SZCTIOH ONE. J. VV. RUMPLE. Cannoneers, prpare to mount, tho guns are going in ; The wheel are whirling, grinding, and flashing as they spin; The horses, running lavel from point of ear to croup, Are plunging madly forward, lis Furies to the troop; We're going into action, (I'm Gunner Section One,) And all the boya are riding or racing with the gun. The battery 's in position with caissons back behind ; AU'a ready at the limbers, each grim piece is alligned ; We only wait the order that bids us open fire. 'Tis said that they are going to charge, us that's just what we desire, For pintie-hook and lunette, apart at Section One, Mean gaps and ragged gashes to those who charge our gun. THE LIMK Kl.IX CLUB. "De subjeck ot our discushun dis eavenin' said Brother Gardner, as the meeting opened in due form, "is" : "Do We Expeck too Much V It ar' a matter dat I hev devoted a heap o' thought to, an' 1 hev cum to de conclushnn dat we do. Las' nite when 1 went to bed 1 had twelve chickens in my coop. I ex pedited dar would be jist twelve dar when I woke up dis mawnin'. Had I any right to 'f No, sah ; but when I found only seven left, I jumped up an' down a:i7 fait dat de hull world was agin me. "We expeck to go right along frew life walkin' on our ears an' feelin' as peart as a calf, an' when Waes in 1 () tory tells the wages received o(. On the Pennsylvania the diggers ate the coarsest were housed in the rudest and paid o a month from Hod carriers diggers and We're waiting on the hilltops; a song is on the lips; As shell drownsout the measure, we'll let their big shot rip, Boom 1 there's another! closer! Oh, need a body cry Barjg ! that's our aii ' Umber ! a-com- ing through the rye ! They've got the metal on us, and we of 8ection One, Because we cannot reach 'em, stand singing at the gun. Ah now ! The charge steady, every man. F-i-r-e ' flow is that one, Mason beat it if you can. is comiDg; so. sickness seizes us. wa 'near to be astonished dat sich things kin be. ! "We go to bed at night countin' on de nicest sort of weather for i tomorrow, an' when we wake up an' find de rain comin' down we i feel dat a great injustice has bin i done us. i "I lend de Iiev. Penstock a dol j lar, an' I expeck he will repay me j on Saturday- 1 hain't no right to expeck it, but I do, an' I git left. ' Mebbe 1 doan' git it fur a month. 'Waydown Bebee sends hischil i lVn ober to my house to borry tea an' coffee an' soap an' flat irons. I Come conhdeatly expeck to git 'em back, but dey nebber cjme. II:. lii 1 can ai die', sheds November to May and moitar mixer Both good '.is Duiuan oeius we ar' on- 1 reasonable. We goes sloshin' a-uom- arouU(i a steam bulletin 'speck- j tin' eberybody will cl'ar de road an' Tt choppers, w ho. from 1 7; to 1SU0. labored on the public buildings and cut the streets and avenues of Washington city, received 70 a year, or, if they w ished, ii() for all the woik they could perform from March 1 to December 20. The hours of woik were invariably from sunrise to sunset. Wages at Albany and New- Vork were ." shillings, or, as money then went, to cents a day: at Lancaster, s to ?10 a month; elsewhere in Pennsyl vania workmen were content with Jo' in summer and -o in winter. At Baltimore men were glad to be 'hired at 1 - pence a day. None by the mouth asked more than yti. At Fredericksburg tiie price of labor was from jj to ?7. In Vir ginia white men employed by the year were given .CIO currency: slaves when hired were clothed and their masters paid jC 1 a month. A pound Virginia money was in Federal money .'I..'53. The average A weeond and another ones. Every shot Lias crashed right in among 'em ing on the trot. The charge is on in earnest, and 'erp this thing is done ' giv us a nee track. We doan' We've got to go in earnest to warming 1 count ou co'us, biles, headache, up the gun. j rheumatiz, sore throat an' lame So cut the fuses shorter, and drop her backs, an' we reckon on dodgin' muzzle low; I droughts, freshets, blizzards an' I rimer, next the lanyard, and ltt ; valler fever " U .O I " Shindig Watkins begged to differ with the president. He argued our laet Ehell go. Now- canister, my brothers; then grape- Bhot to the swell ; We'll tear this piece to flinders, or blow those folks to Well, We'll do our duty, cap'n; we're not up here to run; They ve got to come and take us while standing to our gun. Ah! thumb the vent for Walters; he's down beside the trail. Take number one for Carson don't let the rumor fail ; Help Jack to run her forward, for Parker's by the wheal, And Blount has dropped his cartridge to catch his breath and reel. Thus one by one we're falling, but when the fight is done You'll find the section living, or dead around the Kua, I'll stop her for you, Hardy. I've one arm left me sound, And then tha section's gunner will start his gun's last round. But look ! Thy waver, falter. At last they ve got enough; nr ran T bat T hlnma 'm a trrananhnt r-jf. rf a-arrpa fhn cinil rt-ar n-uj i . . " ew , ; " , . , i road is rough, therefore, 0o a year, with food and juat one more dash like that one, and perhaps lodging. Tradesmen. j comrades, there'll be none ---a- Left here at breech and muzzle to fight A Common Mistake of Youth. and serve the gun. Overlooking what lies next to ' We-re goinK out of actiorJi for night i8 hand is acommon mistake of youth, j coming on; The best days for action are too I We've still our gun and horses, our often wasted in "prospecting" for the far future while the work of life lies in the near. Education does not educate unless it draws out what is in a lad, lass, or "young ster." The thing nearest is what is to be first attended to, and if the future is properly disposad of, the far will take care of itself. The millionaire's pile was founded on pennies, and. what is better than money, good standing and a useful life begin m youthful modesty, ap plication and diligence. I i limhflr Anrl rftiunn But where are Dick and Carson and Parker and the rest V Retreat's roll-call up yonder will find them rightly dressed; They lie around the hill-top beneath the setting sun, And three are lft at twilight to limber up the gun. It's two decades gone over, and near another ten; Time's bugle blows a forward! We've left the field since then. Back there they charged our rifle; we had to serve her well; Sometimes they mada us heat her, chase, breech, and cascabel; So here's a hand my brother, my foa of sixty-one, we served you charged the pieces We 11 both go park the gun. FIFTEEN DAYS'-TRIAL ICUt Ml M0C3Z KTD TOU PIT 01E CUT. Dyapepwla, Ccstivene, Rheu-; f--. r V . . .. ll-ral, l-iw an ft ( .ilara. Ht5il4m-Sa?nnif Skin aod Piles, i "I- " -.- . ?y tr rawti Ttiri LA-vatr riilAtaaAlriaiaUlarafa, Pviwa, a. Sold XvTTwherG, A Car or No Taj. All diAaa aria lag from a deranged liver, or from laapura blood, a boila, bloicbaa. pimplaa, acalp diaaaae. acrof ulouaaoraa and awalltnga and oooiamp uoa (waich ia Ian- acrofale) la it arty aCa caa. ara caraat br Dr. Plama'a OnU. ui.i ni.... - .i. . I toun. Alexander Aoak. li or Ate, bft ml fcj dtaaf. llvawmSftV- I .Tj "i. T, J 7 T, ... . , . n- , aa Minimi uuf aimufti n imj Aa-fnead ' l'u lu wui oa prwoapuy rataraao. criury ,u,uuuprn Duiru c; ihub vi mmtkam aa A- aaxfcat. A-Mr-a iir SoJd by drBffiaU and rr a doly axe- New York City. . - - Tfcw C. A. WOOD cXtv eotad cartiflcaia of guaraatea from the i All eyea fitted and fit guaranteed by O . IttA a-, PAUaalAJpAia, Pa, , manafacUrtri. i F. H. Duffy, New Berne. N. C. j!3dlm A movements In the Far Vet. "How's the show business in this town T" asked the advance agent of a dramatic company of a citizen of Buster, Dakota. "Booming just booming, stran ger. There was two dog fights yesterday, a hoss thief was lynched : early this morning, two men was shot in SwipV saloon last might, ; an' a woman went tearin' by 'bout I ten minutes ago, savin' she was t goin' down to ho.swh;p tlie' ditor i of the Bugle In Japan, newspaper editors arc among the class privileged to carry swords. As poets never call upon the .Japanese editor, offering to sell a -IS verse poem on "The Birth of Spring," it is diflicult t understand why he should want to carry a sword. Americin editors don't carry swords. When the spring poet calls, they take a club. A Dtiftlriaaa M n ' Clear Ulon. New- Yokk City, April 4, ls-vs. Mr. A. K. Hawkes Dear Sir: Your patent eye-glasses received some time since, And am Tory much gratified at the wonderful change that has come over my eyesight since I have discarded my old glasnee and am now wearing A Financial Item, don't see why Browne doesn't pay his debts more promptly," prunibld Jnnps. "Lie keeps some of his creditors out of their money six mouths at a time, and it is an outrage. If lie paid me what he owes, I could return the thirty dollars I borrowed from Smyth eight months ago. lie doesn't know what annoyances his procrastina tion causes." "But what does Smyth think of your failure to liquidate f asked Tompkins, who owed Browne, "Oh, I tell him I'm waitiDg lor Browne to pa" me." An Exceptional Case. It was recently announced that a man had read a patent medicine almanac without fancying that he was afflicted with all the diseases descnled therein. It was regarded as a very remarkable case until it was learned that the almanaccon tained an article entitled "The Disease of Wealth."' The man didn't have that disease, but was willing to go sorcewhere and catch it. ituw it I'ays. "Did your daughter find the woi k of operating the typewriter ro mnnerative !" asked Mrs. Kurus of a friend. "Yes." was the reply. "She made -100.OO0 the first year."' "One hundred thou ! Why, how in the world did she do it?'' "She married the rich old broker who employed her, and he died two months later.'' An expedition to reach the North Pole, by way of Eranz Josef's Land, is being fitted out in Norway. The crew Is to be composed wholly of experienced Norwegian icemen, who are perfectly lamilliar with polar navigation, and who have phenomenal powers of withstanding cold. The expedition will start as soon as it can be got in readiness? An. experience had shown that mankfnd are more disposed to j suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolish- i ing the forms to w hich they are ac-. customed. i "Did anybody ever see such wet ! weather afore iu all the born days! of hia life '" asked one countryman j of another. ! "Noah," was the reply. ; have died laughing if you could Is that about tho ritrht Iencrtb. i have seen jt :" Then be added, in sir ?" asked a skillful barber, as he finished cutting his customer's hair. "I like the side.s and back," was the response, "but I wish von would Perpetual Motion Again. Until a few days ago, the inven tors of perpetual motion have been prevented from completing their application for letters patent in the L'nited States by tho skillful manipulation of one of the rules of the office. The Beceiver-General has the power to demand a working model of any apparatus before it can be protected by a patent, and it may naturally be imagined that no 6uch apparatus hag ever made its appearance. But we have changed all that now, for the chief clerk of the Patent Office in Wash mgton has declared publicly that perpetual motion was an "assured fact, and that at the present time there are now in the Patent Office machines which have sufficient power to run themselves from now till doomsday,7 and that "a machine with surplus power for the running of other machinery will come some day, and may come at any time." The American news papers express their anxiety as to whether the practical management of the PateDt Office depends to any great extent upon the chief clerk. Industries. Our excellent British contempo rary is usually very correct, bat has somehow fallen into several little errors in tha above item. There is no such officer as the Receiver-General connected with the American Patent Office. The chief clerk of the Patent Office in Washington has not publicly de clared that perpetual motion was an assured fact; he has not stated that at the present time there ara in the Patent Office machines which have sufficient power to run themselves from now until dooms day. The American newspapers have not expressed any especial anxiety concerning the chief clerk. He is a gentleman of well known auilitv, highly esteemed and re soected by everybody. The management of the Patent Office is in the hands of the Commissioner of Patents. Scientific American. It was at the breakfast-table. IMr. Smillingboy was telling Mrs. S. about the performance of a farce he had attended the night before. ;Ah," said he, "my dear, you'd make it a little Ion Wi'MF.N are said looking in t he glass do, to i u ii less rink. there er on the top.'' to be always s. .Men seldom something in it a tone of burning enthusiasm: "How I wish you'd been there !'' i Kven now he cannot understand why Mrs. S.'s remarks directly afterwards took such an unusually violent personal turn. What we c ii! our despair is often only the painful eagerness of unfed hopes. It is impossible lor that man to despair who remembers that his helper is omnipotent. A Scrap of rpr Saves Her iaie.CJC I; wns just aii ordinary scrap of wrap ping j.aper, but it save.! her l:f-. She was in tin) la-- stages of consumption, told by physicians that .-he v, as incurable and could live oniy a si.ort time ; .-he weighed les than seventy pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper she read of L'r. KiDg s New Discovery, and got u sample bottle; it helped her fhe boucht a lare bottle, It Devil (appearing at door) Copy Want half a column to fill out "Re ligious Department." Editor (in desperation) Tell the foremad to set up a chapter of the Bible and run it in without credit. None of our esteemed contempo raries will know where it camo from. KIPKPSY. This is what you ought to have, in fact, you must have it, to fully enjoy life. Thousands are searching for it daily, and mourning because they find it not. Thou sands upon thousands of dollars are spent annually by our people in the hope that they may attain this boon. And yet It may be had by all. ve guarantee mat Electric Bitters, if used accordingio direc tions and the use persisted In, will bring l n 'n,-d more bought another ancf trrew ' you gooa digestion and onsi me aemon better fast, continued its use and is now 1 Dyspepsia and install instead Eupepsy. strong, healthy, rosv, plump, weighing We recommend Electric Bitters for Dys-i-i" pounds. For fuller particulars send , pep8'1 and aU diseases of Liver, Stomach stamp to Y. II Cole druggist. Fort Smith. and Kidneys. Sold at 50c. and $1 per bot Trial botib-s of this wonderful discovery j tie by K. N. Duffy, "Wholesale Druggist, free at R. N. Duffy, Wholesale Druggist, j New Berne, N. C. Wholesale rates, $8.00 Fur - ale wholesale at fs per dozen. ' per dozen. that a person was boru into this world to take comi'oit. He Uad a right to expect good weather, a reasonable cash income, lots of holidays and the right to keep seven dogs. Why should a person wake up and find a boil on the calf of his leg? It was more reason able to expect that it would appear on some other man's leg. It wasn't expecting too much, as he viewed it, that the hens he left peacefully roosting on a pole at 6 o'clock in the evening shouldn't be on deck at in the morning. The Rev. Penstock, who had been very uneasy for the last five min utes, now arose and inquired: "I would like to inquire if de cheer claims dat 1 owe him a dol lar "No, sah; not jist now," replied the chair. "I would further inquar if I eber borrowed a dollar of de cheer an' didn't return it !" "You hev alius returned it, sah. I used your case simply to ulas trate. If you had borrowed a dol lar of me an' hadn't returned it dar wouldn't be nuffin' to 'lustrate. Did you wish to speak on de ques tion T" "No, sar. I simply desiah to cl'ar my finanshul reputashun in de eyes of de world." Sir Isaac Walpole said he was in accord with the president. He be lieved it was the great fault of mankind to expect too much. Men sat on the fence all summer and expected to live on roast beef and mashed potatoes all winter. They expected to get the smooth sledding and leave the rough roads to some one else. Men who couldn't pay their house rent expected good domes ana a piano in the parlor He sought to be reasonable in his expectations. The extreme limit with him was expecting his land lord to repair the plaster of the kitchen ceiling, and he had been knocked out on that so often that he had become discouraged. Waydown Bebee said he arose to a question of jurisdiction. The chair had made a statement which he could not pass unnoticed While it was true that he lived next door to Brother Gardner, and occasionally had to borrow groceries, be had always made it an inflexible rule to return the loans Did the president mean to in sinuate that he was derelict 1 "Dis cha'r reckons you has paid it all back," answered the presi dent. "I was simply 'lustratin' my remarks. I might hev meant dat when I lent you Java coffee I 'spected de same kind back, but got Rio instead. If you hev no re marks to make to de queshun at issue you kin sot down." "But I feel dat my integrity has bin impugned, sah 1" "You is all wrong. Your integ rity has nuffin' to do wid it. Yon is energetic 'nuff to keep a plug hat fur Sundays, an' honest 'naff not to be cotched by de parleece Dat's all, sah, an' you'd bettor sot down." Giveadam Jones said he had given fifteen minutes solid thought to the inquiry now before the meet ing, but had not been able to de cide the matter. It seemed reason able that a man with a boil on his right lore-leg should expect the public to pass him to the port side, but he would surely be disappointed. It would seem as if the man was put here to enjoy himself, and as if he could expect dark nights in the watermelon season and good weather for Sunday school picnics, but the biggest melons always came with a full moon, and the picnic always had a shower on the way home, if not Booner. He did not desire to commit himself at this time, but would admit that he leaned to the affirmative. Gen. Colfax, Judge Holdback, Prof. Jackson, Uncle Davis and others spoke on the question, and the discussion was then closed and a vote was taken. It was found that the querry was carried in the affirmative by a large majority. "i'he Confessions of an Abbe,'' is the new book by Louis Ulbach, the great French author, just de ceased, and which is in the press of T. B. Peterson cc Brothers, Phila delphia, for immediate publication. The Paris papers speak of it in the highest terms, and say that it is certainly in conception the boldest, in plot the most intensely dramatic aud stirring, in execution the most delicate, and in interest and fasci nation almost without an equal. In it the plague spots of society are exposed in a manner so skillful as not to cause the slightest feeling of disgust or scandal. It will be published in Peterson's series of new twenty-five cent books, so as to put it in the hands of the multi tude, and be for sale by all News Agents and Booksellers and on all Railroad trains everywhere. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Mas. Win slow 'a Soothing: Syrup should always be used for ohildren teething. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colio, and is the best remedy for Jdiar hoea. Twenty-five cents a bottle. RHEUMATISM and NEURALGIA These twin diseases cause untold suffering. Doctors admit that they are tUffloutt to cure- so do their patients. Palne's Celery Compound has per manently cured the worst cases of rheumausm and neuralgia so say those who have used It. I FOR SALE . I NO US! TO OWNE-n . ' navlng been troubled with rheumatism at the knee f.nd foot for five years, I wus almost unable to get around, and was very often eonniied to my bed for weeks at. a time. I used only one bot ir m 1 ue UI ame a ueiery om it V, pound, and was perfectly 11 cured. I can now Jump ll U around, and feel as lively us y " a boy." Fkank Carom. B Eureka, Nevada. L00. Six for $6.00. Drutrtftsts. Mammoth testimonial paper free. WKuta, Richardson SCO., Props.. Buriingtc:, vt. nnunun nvee ' ttuuer md i;r. " I'alne's Celery Compound has beaa AOod send to me. For the past two yean I hare aui fered with neuralgia of tha heart, doctor after doctor laUlni ; to cure m. I hava bow taten nearly four bottles of the Oompouad, ami am free from the complaint, I feel very grateful to you." Cb ja U. La wis, Oent Vilua, Ot. Paine's Celery Compound " I have been greatly Afflicted with amite rhpuinaUxm, and could find no relief until I u'd l'alne'B Celery Compound. After urtn six tot ties of tills medicine I am now cured of rheumatic troubleH." 8juioel UuTCHmsoH, So. Cornish. N. H. Effects Lasting Cures. Pu tno's celery Compound has performed many other cures ua marvelous as these, copies of letters sent to any address. Pleasant to take, docs not. disturb, but aids ll(reUon. and entire ly vc7!.o.l,!p; a rtud can take It. WbAt's the use or sn Hi ring longer with rheumatism or neuiviltrta? tinter ,md Ur. r p . B;rt- Uvlnq upon Lactaitd Food anlUaUl.y, than (myotic Ljts. OriaiLi, jjaypv Bearty. Jl it UmaptaUd. paftaawaaaajMSjaawaw mil n 'l.JfVZjStTm j'S'Tilbi ay s f rand OPE NIN AT . Marks' N EW Tuesday, Apri 2nd 1 o o II o o r'i. i t 3 A 1, III V f 'J : ' 1: V. L . r . v if -7 r "A A .7

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