jEDGE
-u
PRICE ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, INVARIABLE IN ADVANCE.
OUR MOITO : DIEU ET MON DROIT
THE LEOCEB PUBUSHISG COMPACT.
VOL. XI.
WINDSOR, BERTIE COUNTY, N. C.V WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1894.
NO. 39.
. '4
if
4
, Miranda.
.They had "a small and early," at "the Elms"
l across the way,
Where the season's budding beauties blushed
in summer-time array ;
A galaxy of loveliness rose beaming on the
view,
And only tresses harbored gloom, and only
eyes were blue ;
But in all that starry gathering the fairest
spot to me
Was where the sweet Miranda poured the cof
fee and the tea.
Oh, heriace was like the lily when the sun
shine follows shower,
And the men around her hovered like the
bees around a flower.
How they hungered for her glances when her
lids were lifted up !
If she smiled on one 'twas sweeter than the
sugar in his cup ;
And her little trills of laughter seemed celes
tial melody
xotne swains wno watched Miranda pour
the coffee and the tea.
Skilful sculptor never molded who could re
produce the turn
Of the arm of sweet Miranda as she tips the
steaming urn.
Yellow blooms will be tho fashion when the
', news is spread abroad ;
Each gallant of the country-side will woo the
jealous god ;
For before the season 's over, tete-a-tete, for
happy me,
Will Miranda's dainty fingers pour the coffee
and the tea.
Clinton Scollard, in The Century.
KATE'S COMPANY.
BY MRS. M. Ii. RAYNE.
Miss Weatherby was alone at home,
the family being absent at a social
function where they would be detained
until midnight. The two domestics
were with them, assisting at the re
frcshment tables, and Kate, like the
brave girl she was, elected to keep
house and take care of herself dur
ing her absence. She quite enjoyed
the prospect, for she had several new
magazines to read and was lazily in
clined to "loafe and invite her souk"
Such a chance had not come to her for
many days and she would not -have
been alone now had not her young
friends supposed they should meet her
at the entertainment.
As the members of the family and
the two girls filed out of the front
' door, Kate quickly closed it and, in
obedience to her mother's command,
put tip ' the clanking burglar-chain
which secured it within. Then she
wentinto the pleasant sitting room,
turnedup ' the gas to make a warm
cheery light, and seated herself close
to the table, on which lay the pile of
magazines.
"Now this is comfort," she said to
herself, with whom she was on very
good terms. "Afraid? I should like
to know what there is to make me
afraid. Thank goodness, I don't be
lieve in ghosts, and what's that?"
It was a rustling sound, but it lasted
only a moment and Miss Weatherby
told herself that it was some piece of
furniture unlimbering its joints. She
had read an essay on "How the House
Behaved When the Family Went
Away," and she attributed several
other vague, distracting sounds she
heard to the same cause the furniture.
"Now if, I were nervous," she
thought, "I would be calling on the
neighbors for jrotection against imag
inary burglars. I'm not nervous, and
if the chairs walk about the room they
will not disturb me. "
So she took up a magazine and be-
cran to read. Strangely enough, the
first thing that attracted her was the
description of a phantom battle which
had been seen in Pennsylvania on the
banks of -the -Delaware. Several per
sons of undoubted veracity had wit
nessed the phenomenon, and given a
detailed account of it. They had even
heard the plank of ghostly armor and
seen the fall of a headless horseman be
f ore-the cut of a ghostly bayonet. ' The
troops were described as wearing the
revolutionary uniforms, Jand they were
' led by a gigantic ghost of George
Washington. They wheeled and fought
all night, but as the sun rose they dis
persed in , mist, ana tne appearance
was supposed to be a premonition of
disaster. Kate, who had the blood of
patriots in her veins, was thrilled and
r chilled by the ghostly - recital, but
- afraid? ;oh, no ; why should she be?JIf
' there was anvthincr she was thankful
' foryit was that she -- was, not supersti
. tiaus. - ;
Xlf she had turned her head at that
moment, she would have seen a vision
incomparably more terrible than that
of any ghostly regiment, but for-
tjmatelv for herself, she did not look
bu WBB aoi crysiauzeu into &
pillar of warning.
A - n . . " i i .
She put down the Magazine contain
ing the revolutionary story, and took
up another one, and - ran oyer its con
tents. The title of " one storv Miss
... v
Weatherby was fond of light read
ingstruck her favorably, and she
found it quite interesting. The he
roine of the occasion was a young
matron who was left alone for an
evening like herself in a large
house, but, unlike her, was very much
afraid. She had known that her hus
band wouid be absent, and"; had in
vited different ones among her young
friends to spend the evening with her,
but they all declined on some pre
text or other. Then a thunderstorm
came up and as she was very much
alarmed at the lightning, she closed
up the house, and sought refuge in a
feather bed which a nervous old aunt
had donated to her as a patent light
ning protector.
"A great knocking at her door pen
etrated above the sound of the storm,
and the timid woman looked out to
see a long file of sheeted ghosts, their
fleshless faces hidden in the folds of
their shrouds, making as much noise
with their bloodless fists on the door
panels as if they were still in the flesh. J
The frightened woman moved back to
her feather bed, and her husband
found her there, half dead with ter
ror and suffocation. The ghostly epi
sode was given a single item 4a the
social columns of the vilage paper in
this fashion :
" 'The sheet and pillow-case party
which was to come off on Wednesday
night at the residence, of Mrs. B
was a failure. The young people ma-
terialized, but the hostess wouldn't let
them in.'"
Crack creak swish but Kate
never turned, her head. She wasn't
going to humor the furniture by
watching its capers, and she knew she
was alone in the house : she could tell
that by her average number of senses.
But at that moment something did
strike her as odd.
"Perhaps," she said to her Ego, "I
am developing an extra sense of smell,
but it really does seem to me that
there is an odor of tobacco about."
There was nobody in the family who
smoked, and tobacco was an unknwn
quantity in Kate's social algebra.
' 'Pshaw ! I'm tired ' sitting sti U.
Eleven o'clock. In another hour the
folks will be home. I'm going all
over the house, into every room, just
to prove I'm not afraid."
And she did, finding, as she be
lieved, everything just as it had been
left. She did not miss her sealskin
jacket from the rack in the hall, nor
did she see how empty her jewelry case
was, nor miss the basket of silverware
from the sideboard in the dining
room, where she took a candle and
lighted it to see her way to the furnace
room in the basement.
Could she.!
have seen herself as she descended the
stairs, she would not have been rec
ognized. Her face was white and
rigid, her eyes large and intense, and
she had the nerveless step of a sleep
walker. When half way down stairs
she heard a sound that startled her so
that she nearly dropped her candle.
Her heart beat and thumped and
threatened to choke her. But she
was not afraid, at least ' that is what
she said to herself. ,
"Bon," she called, "Don, where are
you?"
Don was a big Maltese cat that, slept
in the furnace room. He did not run
to meet her as usual, nor could she at
first locate him, but she saw a pair of
hot. shinincr eves under a bench, and
tried to call him out. - He would not
come, and when she attempted to seize
him, he spat at her and bristled up
with fury. .
She said to herself that the cat was
bewitched, like the furniture, and
looking around saw that the door of
the coal cellar was open. , From some
undefined impulse she decided to close
it.', Pirst she thought she would put
her Head in and look around, but the
blackness repelled her. It was her
one supreme hour of destiny, but she
did not know it. As if swiftly impelled
by some invisible force, she drew the
dpor to, and turned "the key in the
strong iron Iock. ; lnen running up
stairs she sank in the first . chair she
could reach, and trembled from head
to oot. There she remained until the
doorbell rang, and she admitted the
family, all talking' at onoej ajd bring
ing in a new atmosphere of fresh night
air. . ' ;..., ' v
"What's the matter, ' Kate?" they
inquired in concert. ' ' . '
. "No thing," answered Kato; "do I
look ill? I feel a Httle faint, that's
all."- '
Pah!" said Mr. Weatherby, "who
has been smoking vile tobacco here?"
"He's in the coal cellar," said Kate
and fainted dead away.
; There they '"found him burglar,
tramp, murderer, too, if occasion had
demanded it, for he acknowlcjige,d,be-
fore he was isent up that if Kate had put j
her head in the coal -cellar to which he
h'ad retreated at her approach, ho
stood ready to strike her down with
the bludgeon he carried. .
Miss Weatherby often speculates up
on the possibilities entailed upon her
on that memorable evening, when she
so unconsciously trifled with an unseen
and terrible agent of evil, but the
family always refer to nun in a jocu
lar way as "Kate's
troit Free Press.
company." iuq- I
A Superstition About Yellow.
"Did you ever know that actors and I
irirrma -nan-nln Tiftvn n. RTmnrhtitinna I
dread of anvthincr yellow, "asked Billy I
Thompson, a member of the profession,
of the corridor man at the LindelL
"It's true, nevertheless. If a yel
low dog should run across a field
where a circus was erecting its tent it
would consider it an omen of bad luck
and would at once change its locality.
I remember one incident that occurred
down in Tennessee a few years ago that
particularly bears out my statement
I was then a member of a travelling
r, arA .loinr
an exceptionally good business, until
one day one of the boys bought a yel
low clarinet. From that day business
began to fall off, and finally got so
bad that we were playing to almost
empty houses.
Ofcourse we all agreed
that the new vellow instrument was
thecauseofour hard luck and besought
ita ;f TT Anativl
L, - J I
..... ... . . 1
sold it to a fellow wno was a member I
of a local band in-the town, and just J
to show you ho w misfortune travelled
with it, the very night he bought it,
while on his way homo with tho clar-
inet under his arm, he fell down and
broke his leg. After we got the yel-
low thing out of the company business
commenced to pick up again, and wo
did a good business the rest of the sea
son. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
A Pigeon "With a Memory.
It seems really impossible to extin
guish the homing instinct in a good
pigeon. . A story is told of a French
carrier pigeon which was captured by
the German soldiers during tho siege
of Paris in 1870. The bird was being
carried in a balloon from Paris to
some point in the country whence it
was expected to return to Paris with a
message. It was taken to the German
headquarters and presented to the
commander, Prince Frederick Charles,
who sent it to his mother in Germany. -
Here it was placed in a splendid roomy
aviary and carefully fed and nour
ished ; but, although it was kept here,
living in the lap of royal luxury for
four years, the French pigeon did not
forget its fatherland. At the end of
that time the aviary door was left
open one day. The pigeon flew out,
mounted high in the air, flew about
for a moment as if to find the points
of the compass, and started in a
straight line for Paris. Ten days
afterwards it beat its wings against
the entrance to its old loft in tho
Boulevard de Clichy. There it was
recognized, and its case being brought
to public attention it was honored aa
a patriot returned from foreign cap
tivity. It remained at the Paris Jar
din d' Acclimation until it died, in
1878. New York Witness.
A Gentle Reminder.
Clarence How this soft, balmy
air of returning spring revivifies and
restores one ! And then the promise
of the radiant flowers, the budding
trees, the velvety grasses ! Ah ! tho
joy of spring 1 Da you love it Ange
line? Without it, would not lifo lose
for you its sweetest flavor.
Angeline-7-Nay, Clarence 1 Do you
forget that mine's vanilla! Brown
ing's Monthly.
Some of the steamship companies
employ more men than are enlisted in
the second-class navies of Europe. The
- 1 Cunar I116 employs 10,OQ9,
CULTURED SAVAGES.
This Paradox of Kaces, Exists in
Africa,
Tribes of Natives as White as
Europeans.
"Most people think of tho natives
of tropical Africa aa naked savages,
without any of tho resources of 'civili
zation." said an ex-missionary to a
.Wiihington Stui reporter.
"But tho
fact is that many of the tribes are ac
quainted with not a few of the me
chanical arts.
"Ton are probably awaro that the
mining andworking of iron have been
understood by the natives of that part
of the world ever sinco prehistorio
times. In Liberia the Mando aro
smelters of iron and workers in gold
and silver. They aro also tanners of
I . -
leather and weavers of ciotn, ana iney i
make an infinite variety of .domestic
articles. The Makolos aro excellent
wood carvers, the Diours aro skilful
iron workers and tho Bechuanaa aro
cood metal workers, fur dressers and
architects.
. "The Baganidaa of Victoria Nyanza
do beautiful work in brass, copper and
-V . MA 1
ivory, un mo siavo coast ino pcopie
of Dahomey, who otherwise possess an
unenviable reputation, aro accorded a
very respectable position in industrial
artisan ship. Glass making is not un
known among them. They make
cloths of cotton and many other tex
tiles, and their dyes of blue, red and
yellow, owe their peculiar richness to
native coloring substances. Tanning
thoy also understand, and they obtain
salt from sea water by evaporation.
"Among tho tributaries of tho
White Nile, at Sakara and Benghieh,
aro tribes of natives aa white as Euro-
pcans, having oval faces and silky
Tmir Tjnrd TtfArnfllfi kaIiI- of tha
Zulus: 4They have outwitted our dip-I
lftwftf nntmnnnvrfvtl flnr wner&k I
, - - - I
. a. , I
ana converiea our missionaries, anu
yet wo call them savages.' ,
"The Mandegnas havo attained a
considerable degree of cultivation and
knowledge of the common arts. Their
musical instruments aro tho flute, zith-
er, harp, bell and drum. Tho Veia of
Liberia, having obtained an acquaint-
ance witn letters irom contact wnn
Arabs, havo invented an alphabetical
primer of their own language, original
and independent both of tho Arabic
and English characters. This is tho
greatest effort over made by an Afri
.a w 0 a-a . f a
can tribe toward the advancement of
culture. The Vies make pens of reeds
and nso indigo for ink.
"Africa is destined beforo long to
become tho great gold-producing con
tinent of the world. In 1889 it yielded
$3, COO, 000 worth of that metaL Last
year it produced about $23,000,000
worth of gold. During 1894 tho output
of its gold mines is likely to equal
the $36,000,000 prodnced by the
j Tjnitod States.
' "The total exportation of diamonds
from tho Capo of Good Hope, from
tho date of their discovery to the
present, haa probably exceeded $350,
000,000. Tho annual expenditure in
digging for the gems is now $5,000,
000, and the export is limited to fonr
and a half millions of carats annually,
to prevent a depreciation in price.
J The Orango Free Stato haa recently
given to the world tho largest known
diamond, weighing in "the rough 970
carats, and likely to weigh when cut
600 carats.
Tho rum of tho white man ia a
curso to the natives of Africa. It ia
estimated that 10,000,000 gallons of
spirits are annually imported into tho
dark continent.'
. Aids to Longevity.
Thero are two sorta of pressure
which tend to shorten life, blood prca-
sure within and atmospheric pressure
without. The latter ia a specially im
rn riant factor in a humid climate. In
I advancing age the circulation of tho
blood and.lvmph tends to become
alow, and the enfeebled heart finds its
embarrassments increased by this con
dition. Especially do the more vas
cular organs, such aa the. lungs, the
liver and the kidneys put'skida on the
wheels of the blood circulation. Flain-'
ly, then,. an important condition of
cardiac easement, and therefore of life
prolongation, ia the maintenance of
an uncongested state of lung, liver and
kidney. Thus' are internal pressures
relieved, and 'thus Is cardiac energy
conserved. Of almost equal impor
tance at any rate in Great Britain,
is tho question of atmospherio pro
suro and moi&taro to aged persons.
Situations which are at once low-lying
and damp, give of course, a maiirnnn
of atmospheric pressure. Such pres
sure weighs down at a single stroko
body, mind and life. The d&ercnee
to aged persona between living at the
sea lcvl and living 500 fect above it,
between living in a moist atmosphero
and living in a dry one, is sometimes
quite incalculable Not seldom life
m-y bo lengthened by fivo or even ten
years by living in an atmosphere which
is both light and dry. Thcae physio-
logicMl coniliiertiona r0 commended
to tho aged and to the physician of
tho aged. London Hospital.
An Anecdote of Hetty Urteru
A characteristic anecdote of eccca
trio Mrs. Hetty Green, the wealthiest
M 9
wo ,vw;i a uj
prominent hotel man of thU city.
Many years ago Mrs. Green's aoa Ed-
ward,who vas then a child, sustained a
fracture of tho leg. Tho broken limb
was badly act by a New York surgeon,
and tho boy was threatened with per
manent lameness. Mrs. Green brought
her son to this city to bo treated by a
specialist, and put np at a Broad street
hotel. Sho explained to tho propria-,
tor that sho Vas a poor woman, who
had como hero to secure lor her litUo
boy proper surgical treatment. Sho
was too poor to pay for her board
and lodgings, she taid, and asked if
sho could not bo given a room very
cheap. Tho proprietor, who was a
charitablo man, fixed s her aa comfort-
able as possible in the servant quar
ter. Sho had been in tho houso a
week or so when a New York man, in
looking over tho register, saw the
name. "I aco that you hare as your
gt tno richest woman in .eirlort,-
Bald HO tO WO proprietor. "DO S
that?" asked mino host "Mrs. Hetty
Green, . said tho other. Oh- no!
. ,
vnVA
you're mistaken. She a poor woman
whom I have taken in out of charity,
said tho proprietor. Bat tho New
Yorker explained tho trno condition
of things, and Mrs. Green found other
quarter. Philadelphia Becord.
lilt Gradf Against the Roai.
On a Michigan avenne car the other
daya woman had a baby about a year
old on her lap, and next on her si Jo
sat an oldish man, who was evidently
fond of babies. Tho child looked at
him, and he smiled and ducked in
return. Ho. was getting along finely,
when all of a sudden tho kid puckered
hia lips and began to howL
4Thcre! there! Don't cry, ray
precious lamb!" said tho mother in
toothing tones.
"Seems to bo afraid of taef ob
served the rain.
"Yea, air, he do, and I can't toako it
out. I had him out in the country
last week and ho sav hogt and horse
and cows right along, and never
seemed to care about 'cm."
A giJJy young woman acrosa- tho
aUIo began to giggle, and a man stand
ing up and hanging to a strap uttered
a gruff "haw 1 haw!" and slapped his
leg. Tho old man flushed up and
looked hurt in his feelings, and seeing
another giggle and another haw I hsw 1
on tho y, he rose up and went out
on the platform and said to tho con
ductor:
This is about the tenth Umo I've
been insulted on this road this year,
and tho next hyena who does it is going
to get both eyes knocked into one I
Golnto BedbyCempait,
"I always sleep with my head to the
north," said a well-known electrician.
"Why? For tho simple reaaojx that I
think that was tho way in which nature
intended us to sleep. If a human body
could be suspended In the air hung
like a magnetic needle, you would find
that it would act like one. Tho head
of tho body will eventually point to
ward the north. It might Lake time,
but it will surely get there. Now,
taking this into consideration. I bo-
I lieve that every person
should sleep
with the head to jhe north to get the
benefit of the magnetie currents that
come from that source. Yea it is rath
er inconvenient sometime. In many
hotel where I have stopped I have
had to place the bed diagonally acros
tho room. "When I travel I alwaya
carry a eompaa to go to b4 by. To
mo it is ju ia important as a watch.
ritUburg Dispatch,
THELAEOB T70ELD.
Taa Lc(L eidsi 300,003 ec.
IScro Lm C3.0CO tiftrpJey! wooc
Xrw y3Lix rT-" to It lit strd
tcir.
Tkb JLscri-vi XU7 Ctla txs 111
Tern (hthi mctrtial Wc:tn' VzSza U
tuttoa tn is t2X
(Ohio) CCiifTI LT t-CO
graced t LU a dtr.
T Wost&as XaidSrUl Lig3a Is a CcJ
r4o oriraaiiaiSoa.
Utrrrkto (X. T.) ra:Vrs wasl tta aa-
tert aai tirp-foanL ot tca arv
T Urrt ruSras-J icj la wntil
ar tb9H ot lb tZx Tcrzx mi E:u.'.-.s::t,
Tarn arvrc riactloa of wr la SXV?M
irsa Cztizz it Ust six tsoctts Las tca t.
Taa Eritlib Uioaw ifals cert Ur toi
Ihaa ttm wctlter erter, exar;C ta lit
CaSl Butm.
Tat fnxrts ot Tails ar rrrf4 rrtry oor
l&Z Ij tuJ aal 03 !r asTt5:rrs,
S)Tiia lato 113 trie. 1
Eiaar axrcaxd s;1t1 a
WfT OTTfTocM ta OilUaS, c5L, aa.1
sJppi to &cri&2o ta tax ear.
Soncimt Unr tarM la ti, carv
trottsall strtkra vitf tr ukrtb
rUc of rwrasjicas ot laiurlU wsaUu.
Bafs.
Artraxru ts;li am bawsirjr
dtmpenia. EzirsiuU ars rocisxn. a4
Xircij-tyzr tcrsUrs Lr bca stc tj
fcoaWLcUcrs.
sT&airM a aaVoa. Its d;rt wr
n-.m ! to tbC&mJ LKc Uilac! Tf trra
rraa.tj!TaU.
Cotts-act labor hit ta abrtt t-r tt
tsntlrfpU aiatborulfflS ot Onwm, Ckds,
aa4 all work tor Ihm ei:y wU ur I- d&a
try Uhott tlroi Ij Ibm d.
Jno !Aaav. et nrjfcj::v.U, asrs tt
rro of tex:U werkrt kT Usly r
da?ii t wstj4v4 pr ?cr. saI srtatj pr
emu of tb crafl Is cars:;ri.
Aaorr 100. CO 3 !xr!r4 tr ta
mrl for rUiaa of Xb ltrr-Zloz-l
TrrxrrpIiicaU Ucia CvajkiiA Ottt
tzret owsnsct ot tl Xct;Iv.
At CoTlaxloo, Kr..tb rsaalrf! a-nber
til tppolat! tana;4arl ees.r of
tra4a&l4& ta Ult it csltcs of t& ea
rxplorL Ttry wvrsptll l tttratocl IS
Ntw Jm.trrh. 1X2: frtcr a
rrUjdof tl.CD3.C03. wk: ta thm i U
fortef 5wTork tm UiD.CCO U U
mtttl. la all tb rM of Cal zzt
ara osJy 1C1 rlJs. MiAliliirru.
Taa Trtaeh Pri'-t trTls tr ca tls
rallwavs d nf.zx hu S-tU to-sr ta Trxa-.
ttit wtca tb rra y3r&r It D&fJSl
hit fUerrf arr elraUi- wtuU tt c'4 lrm
et If jpil for as rvux r: aa J ttis nz&
Momt fX ct lbs raliwaf sun, aal mct
la tl?:L
At ttsaaal vztlzg tt ta Ln&lsa
eiej of Gci-lj!:Li aai Jmr tx tu r-
rorti tLt ttT ar la t- tr4 ta !: x. J -a
tOsao;, vZh 1 12$ ruin ervrl U lb
BAastATter otrv7. Tt- Uri;ltif
vartocs tr&ct r1r til i
tsoal taoa!n zi2 s:eri. 11? t r4
m, Hi i claia cxXrr, CJ j -rvc::r, o.
PEOMHiEiT PEOPLE.
Tat aUrr of t- ArcitUiisa ef
Vzsj it 175,003 a rmr.
Txs Ui EUxt j. Ertrr pcrscs.il
r-rotj LsrrzorV at I l,oj,72X
Leva SxiusraT K? txcAirjdLtx:
papers Lao ca et Eli?a's $cac;r;lA.
-Baa" ra,ti lIlrMo pert aa-12;st
foial JJ ta t2, a lew dirt ac?,
asbovllscGnwa. Er.
Ptcxrr Currtjura . tx awr;S aa
timet Isa 19 tsasatmrf &sWii!p la lis Car
czixl 8oc:rfy et 1UjcL-:.
A Canrxsa C32l toiu Ln Crcx. ta
tt CalTfT7 of Ulctlcxs t saU l U i
direct de4Aat of 0?r4aa,
Ixjxt A. Tirrurx-i, Stlzlxtt thtt TsJ?3
tzar trca Ila wi, wu &rr.l 13 3lt
UxrM rocter cf ?. Jc;b. Jiiti.
H. Cocmr ts dUr4 ta t tV rl-ia
actor ta tx worVS. wz II eery Imix a
xoosX IkratArJl U (& wmUM ctrm.
Jclmm Sato. lb rsiact Jrrar2:'SAa,w!t
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