'Our Aim-wOl. be, the People Right Maintaii uiuwea oy rower, and Unbribed by Gain. WILSON, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNSTjANHAPV a ppp NO. 43 A YEAR'S BUSINESS. filT 1887 HAS BEEJf A )tf 1 rt KOR9fOUS BUSINESS. Thonsand Seven Hundred fr",J ..ronr 'Miles of Bail. Finished Ineraaae In the " .-miry-i-General ImproTC S. G Dun & Co.'s review of trade says: s' , nrmnni business closes with V year ox . IflOrC thin UlC ecaovuawiw uuhiivm. sTctions much beyond the average in l' . a n.-tnlvr nreoared for slack- c-xmDer , of trade in November and Decern- y. which has been maeaea dj iann un nv several htrikes of importance , jjy speculative ii fsaal pressure for money during the fall the other hand caused adjustments prevent severe pressure as the year d, and except at a few Western points t money markets are comparatively easy th collections almost iair and at most ts reasonably good. But the pending cies and controversies about wages and certainties as to the future in some of Z largest industries operate unfavorably. Ease of money, ana ucticx mat mc i.cau- . .i . ..!-? nrf Incfr havp l-iflrrl zi strue. u"'u (Mcks to improve until recently, wnen the 0Mned with some reaction. Hopes of icuvuT ana auam.siwi. jwm Lrfain nrices, but the great movement of foreign capital hitherto for investment has teased at least tor the time The dvinz year has seen 12,724 miles of rd finished, making the mileage for the United States 150,710, but changes of freight rates at the West tend steadily downward, lessening the prospect for build sng nextjear. The iron industry, after the largest Year s output on record, is rap idly cutting down production, prices, and at many pointi wages. Sales of thirty thousand tons Alabama and Tennessee toii arc reported, but no ' sale of rails, . for which next year ' order' wver only two hundred thousand tons." The cotton Indus &y record for the rear larger productions,' !m and profits, than for i886,and the year dotes with so excellent demand, stocks I1 cleaned up and many markets told well ahead. But the woolen manufacture described as baring about the most un B&factoryyear It has ever experienced. 5A business and profits smaller than last jear, and foreign agents are again offering "wjrwwteads five to ten per cent, below fct year's prices. The rear' return of Mures reported to R. G." Dun & Co.. the serchantile agency, shows '-'decrease of o hundred in number for the year, but a increase of $53,000,000 ih liabilities. p returns from the Dominion of Cana- ow 1882 failures, with $16,311,745 duties. The failures, in the Dnmlninn fereonein every ci nersnna in hK;nMe tall ? tinted States average one in every bisons 1 1V"C youJ 1 could not live a moment with out your "But you will hate me, Arthur, when you know what I have done" said the r. rowful'girl, as the tears began to follow one another down her face. 'Tell me, oh! tell me what it is." he whispered, as his heart took a 'circuit round his left lung. "At supper II oh! I" she stam mered, as she moved toward the sofa and cropped upon it," half lifeless. "At supper 1 ate an onion!" Selah! A MIXTURE. EDITOHIA1V ETCIIIIfCS ECPHOIfl. OUSxTx ELUCIDATED numerous Newsy Notes and XXany ""X . nomu Faragrapttleally Packed andJPlthlly Pointed. Dr. I,. G. BBOUOIITOIf. formal Resignation Tendered . and Accepted. THE WIDE ESTBAJfOEMEXT, iHL?tt0n Mear Sl not "D Sener that Xftg-ht. With At the regular monthly meeting of Ihe Wilson County Medical Societv. held on the 1st Monday in November, Dr. Ii. l5rcughton tendered his resignation as one of the members, which resignation being u-cepiea, a committee was annointerf tn. araugnt resolutions to be read at the Tanu ary meeting, of which the following is a "Whereas, brother L. G. Brouehton has tendered his resignation as one! of our memeers, and whereas we feel it our dutv A ... to accept n, we cannot do so without ex pressing our appreciation of his labors with us. He joined us in the initiation of our society, and has been' an active and useful member. Inspired with zeal and ener. he has entered the profession of medicine with that high sense f honor, which looks to the welfare of the afflicted, more than to personal aggrandisement. He leases our community with the regrets of his profes sional brethren, and our society looses in mm one of its most active and useful mem bers. We heartily commend him to the good people of Reidsvllle:as a physkfan whose worth ind merit will entille him to their esteem and confidence- .r.Vi .?- a h'ght heart- t,nA . 1 1 1 less. V M-pc ui iiappi- WaL S!!PPed Up to the door of one of " ' beautiful mansions and rang the How the vision of his fair one came eni before his eyes as hetood there ha7enng darkne8s waiting for the anH f WS Wn trea8ure to turn the receive him in her dear, fond h! ha the door opens, she w . k1 is wronor? vu ,-. 1 looked at him with a cold, feed qu ,,unS- w"at has hap- J1IC rca gaze, arid motioned him to a At u'i hC Z6' and stepped to " holding out his arms, while his v w noie lrame at even- hnat , nave t a ' t, done, oh! what have I hnguid movement .of the hand telK u... . V far A' take A seat. ihc.: SCOnsolate iook from the eves J V? 80 bright- tellinS him that v, leilmgr hJrr. (U .L- 1 r wi4w 111C IOVC 01 ed, and gone forever. jewel, tell me what has nan . . 'Berth, anished, and gone forever. ; The language" of flowers cling to refy few of the gardens of conservatory ; but this cannot be said of those star-shaped lit tie blossoms which we call forget.me-nots, nor of those man r-hued flower, the pan ties. Little faces hare the nancies 1onVinr . ( .ww.... t us and nodding from - between the sprightly green leaves that are among the first in April peep through the ground That the,ir colorsajre; purple and gold; that their texture is lilw velvet and their odor delicate is not ajlv their charm. So it is that when the young girl receives gifts of flowers roses, violets, lillies of the valley -they may or may not mean what the poets bid them say, but the pansies with no uncertain voice repeat Thinlc of me." The forget-me-nots, too, never loose the refrain of their legend. rTwo lovers, says the German story, on the eve of marriage were walking on the banks of the Danube A flower, blue as the deepest .skv, swung upon the waves, which seemed ready to bear it awav. The young ladr admired its beautiful color ftnd bewailed its impending destiny The affianced bridegroom leaped into'the'stream; siezed the blooming stem and sank engulfed In the flowing waters. With a last effort he threw the flower on the bank, and at the moment of his disap pearance forever, cried out, "Love me, forget me not!" The Only War. Strangely do some people talk of "get ting over' a great sorrow; overleaping it, passing it by, thrusting it into oblivion. Not 60. No one ever does that at least no nature which can be touched by the feeling of grief at all. The only way 1 to pass through the ocean of affliction solemn ly, slowh , with humility and faith, as the Israelites passed through the sea. Then its verv waves of miserv will divide and become to us a wall on the right side and on the left, until the gulf narrows before our eyes, and we land safe on the opposite 6hore-. - Se Awfully stnpid. ?heheMhed Srr0vt lttricken - First sweet girl I understand Stembles hls hand upon jus throb- J handsome young stranger has been c ;and 1 tobla -ever! that calling on you quite regularlr. Second sweefgirl Yes, but he's awfully tiresome. Tiresome? - vr 1 j . J it At t 1 1 lit 1 1 1 1 7 1 1 tic. -1 rninrr Tna . - r I a lTv,f, . j J - ".w n iiWlk. w fiacu, as ne came . mg but sit on the extreme end ot the sofa I have never ceased to 1 and talk." ofh; 'and glared wildlv at the ob $loj; .eepest adoration. .'vo!1 diStinctl-v the a" er came: W. '-0a can now- 1 Pan t tl e me a&ain ;.we am to blame." Toot terrible-The blast p the amateur cornet player. V,'. " . -The latest wrinkle that in the tails of your overcoat. .'- -; Why is a'tired man like in umbrella? Because he's used up. - "Doing good is the only certainly hao- ! py action of a man's life. Happiness is alwars where, we find it. j but rarely where we seek it. A good motto for a." dime museum. I "w oncers will never, cease. ? A helping hand at the right moment wouia save many trom ruin. k J: Women have a tendency toward aiv- archy. They blow up their husbands. A miser grows' rich by seeming poor: an extravagant man" grows pbbr by seem- ing rich.. A The chiropodiste is content to begin at the foot in business; the - barber straight at the head ...... - The great high rpad of human wel fare lies along the old highway .of steadfast well doing. - In the United States there are t, 300 different railroads. These are operated by 500 corporations. Cheerfulness Is an excellent wearing quality. It has been called the bright weather of the heart. John Sherman has been preparing a Tariff speech, otherwise a bid for the Republican nomination. - The Popo fainted durinr the recent jubilee. He declined to receive the gifts sent by.the;Klhg ofj The Paris edition of tne New York Herald has a bitter attack upon Mr. Glad stone and wishes him in hell. ; It is said in the organization of the Ohio Legislature little Foraker is on top, and Sherman is left in the cold. A german army corps has been moved eastward. This is regarded in Iondon a anothei'slgn of approaching war. The strongest friendships have been formed in mutual adversity, as iron-: is most strongly united by the fiercest flame. Major General Isaac R. Trimble died In Baltimore, Monday, in his 86th year. He served with distinction in the Confed erate army. The President flatly contradicts the manufactured-to-order statement that he would send a supplementary message to Congress. He has spoken. As the sword of the best tempered metal is the most flexible, so the truly gen erous are most pliant and courteous in their behavior to their inferiors. Study rather to fill your mind than your coffers; knowing that gold and silver were originally mingled 'with dirt, until avarice or ambition parted them. We should manage our fortune like our constitution; enjoy it when 'good, have patience when bad, and never apply vio lent remedies but in cases of necessity. How much trouble he avoids who does not look to see what his neighbor says or does or thinks, but only to what he does himself, that it may be just and pure! Miss Frances C. Fisher ("Christian Reed") was married, December 29, to Professor James N. Tiernan, mining expert of the Clyde syndicate. The ceremony was performed in New Orleans. Thoughtless and inconsiderate Boston nians are laughing at the young English women who recently, after hearing much praise of butternuts, said: "At what sea son of the year are the doughnuts ripe?" The orange tree and the lemon tree are both descended from the citron. The history of the orange tree is said to date back to the crusedes the retumihg Pilgrims Carrying into Europe 700 or boo years ago. The Railway Age shows that the rail way construction of the year 18S7 in the United States surpass that of all other years. Nearly if not qui:e 13,000 miles of new main line trade were laid, .North Car olinaV share naving been 184, Virginia's 64, Sonth Carolina's 104 and Tenneseee's 6S. T Florida is to hare an exposition of rte fruit and flowers of the subtropical region and of the industries of the people of the region as welL Slander is often its own punishment The good and useful at whose characters It is commonly aimed generally outlive this unscrupulous form of opposition so that those Mr ho" have sought to injure are in turn despised. There isnt a fool in the United States who is fool enough to believe "Chairman Jones when he says that the present Ad ministration is hostile to American indun- tr7- American, anywhere, is hostile to American industry A fascinating young German ladv who has been teaching school in Conecti cutis said now to be no less a personage than the Princess of Prussia and to be on the point of marrying a son of Gen. O. O. Howard. O! O!! Ol'l -The two-and-a-half-year-old x was watching the effect the cold heat had on his young breath, and tickled with it he was breathing his lungs out. "What are you doing that for?" asked his mother. "I'm blowing the dust out of me." At a recent lecture on "The Decline of Literature," the eloquent orator shout ed: "Where are the Chaucers and Shakes peares and Milton and Spensers and Ma- cauleys? Where are they, I say?" And a voice answered sadly from the gallery: MA dead." We cannot always tell that people mean by what they say, but when the bot- torn comes out of the ash barrell that a man is tugging and straining to get up the cellar steps, and the man says something, It Is safe to assume as -a general thing that he means it. STATE NEWS. riion the dexp hick sea to WBAHD OLA BOUJCTAIXB. 1 nr P1.ms.Uj pmnt XTitU Petersburg new. Academy o! Music will be inaugurated next Monday evening by the Petersburg Musical , Association with a programme of exercises appropriate to and worthy of the occasion. The musl caj taste and culture of Petersburg are well known;: They render the charm! ri dty named, indeed, perhaps the leading musical centre of all this section of the country. Jim Blane has the same old mahge- tlsm, and the same taffy talk that he had in 184. In addition to these charms, he has fortified himself with the tariff issue which he stole from John Sherman and yet there are only twenty-five Republican members In Congress who support him with the Presidency. Blaine is acknowledge by his party to be brilliant, but the troubble with him is that he is one of that class of men who shine and stink. From the annual report of the director of the mint it appeals that at the assay office in Charlotte the deposits during the year were $224,336.36, the earnings $1, 93I.23 and the expences $4,31 5.85. Direc tor Kimball says of the institution: 'The assay office at Charlotte may be said to be fulfilling the purpose for which it was es tablished, and providing necessary facilities to a mining region in relation to which it occupies a central position." A sign of the times is the election of a college graduate, a Massachusetts man, as master workman of a national trade assem bly of Knights of Labor leather workers just organized. The new officer, more over, has decided views on the tariff. He thinks free hides have made work in leath er plentiful, and as a result "we have been able for twenty years nearly to export con siderable finished product. I consider the wool question a parallel one to hides. From the third annual report of Fed eral Commissioner of Labor, Carroll D. Wright, we get some idea of the cost of strikes and lockouts. The report is for a period of 6ix years ending December 3 1st, 18S6, and shows that during that time nearly $95,000,000 were spent in the sort of amusements referred to, $59,948,883 by wage-workers directly and some $35,000,- 000 by employers. These are big figures and are exclusive, it must be born in mind. of the year just gone. It behooves every workman to 6tudy them well. That was a pathetic incident the fail ure of any veterans at all of the war of 1812 to appear at the President's New Year reception. Last year there were but six of them. This rear there were none. The whole number of this class of veter ans in the country is put down at 1,069 and Senator Hearst, of California, propo ses to ask for an increase of their pensions from $8 to $25 each, per month. The widows of such veterans, however, num ber upwards of 11,000. We have still rea son to "bevare of the vidders." The house of worship for the Second pust Church, at Asherllle, is nearly completed; The Tarboro Southerner is the oldest paper in the State. It recently completed its sixty-fifth. The Cunberland county jail in Fayctte ille is without an inmate for the second time in three years. .' W. G. Simmons, of Wake Forest, has been in New York for some weeks and is Improving in health, . The question of the union of the two conventions of Baptists in this State is' now under consideration. Thepostoffice at Asheville. was robbed of $800 last. week, it being supposed bv an employee recently discharged. " , The business men of Wilmington have held a meeting and protested against the proposed reduction of force in the custom house. The Matthews News tells of one of lis citizens, fifty-three 'years old, who n-cently purchased his first suit of rezdj-midt Clothing. The Hamilton and Tarboro narrow guage railroad has been completed, andfs now uoing a good business In freight trans portation. During the past year J. Van Lindley, the noted frclt grower of Guilford county, has sold two hundred and seventy-five thousand fruit trees, vines, etc. f .... . - - - We see the name of Hon. W. R. Cox mentioned In connection, with the Mexican mission. We hopV there lsmore than mere mention at the bottom ci 'the Incident. .Thctt of ; Raleigh hittoio7uyted , lire Alarms during the laYt-Vyear. and the low fram nine of them was not over $600 ane loss xrom the tenth, which was a cot ton seed oil rhlll, was about $55,00 Bro. J. H. Mill, -was fn Raleigh on Christmas day and addressed the conre- , gatlonofthe First Church on the Baptist 1 Orphanage. Tbi church gave the Or phanage in cash and subscription upwards of $300. , rfie Raleigh News-Observer says that there Is pending in the Supreme Court a case in which a man named Stfllwell is in volved in blockade- distilling, and another case In which a man named Truelove is ' charged with beating his wife. What's In a name. John O. Leach, Chatham county, died yesterday morning at the , age of 73. About a week ago he received an injury wum a ran wnicn was followed by pneu monia. He was the father f George T. Leach, of New York, and M. T.and G. E. Leach of Raleigh. The Louisburg Times says that Mr. Rutherford Perry Informed the editor that one of his neighbors had a gourd vine con taining 54 gourds, in addition to nearly a wagon load which he. had already pulled from it. To off set this our old friend, . Louis Bartholomew, Esq., told of a man in his neighborhood who planted peas on shares. He planted one bushel, and at last reports had already received 43 bushels for his share, and shelling was still going on. The Methodists of North Carolina are doing a grand work. The reports made during the recent Conference in Fayette ville show that there are in the bounds of the Conference S95 church building worth $917,646; 108 parsonages worth $192,295; 86,262 member a gain, of 3,389 during the year ending Nov. 30th; 548 local I preachers; raised for Sabbath schools, $8,- ' 647; raised for missions, $22,066. Trinity College is getting along well in its efforts to raise $100,000 as an endowment fund. To this date $40,000 of this is secured, and it is practically an assured fact that the re mainder will "be raised in the coming twelve months. -The Church has 923 Sabbath schools, with 7,430 officers and teachers and 55,077 pupils a gain of 46 schools during the year. ; x . "Shall our girls whistle?" Of course if thev strenghten their lungs by taking Dr Bull's Cough Syrup. "When headache joines neuralgia, then comes the tug of war." A wise general marshals his forces, charges with a bottle of Salvation Oil, and the doughty foe lies cringing in the dust.