. ; . - - - - , ,, f Vr ... . , - . . " ' - w PRICE ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, INVARIABLE IN ADVANCE. , . OUR MOTTO : DIEU ET MON DROIT! T,.r .m,r ...... - VOL. XIII. 1 Sunshine and Shadow. Mil WO ' - . rVnlr 4-va Tzra oIti r. hint the air is iuu oi music, find the flowers are blossoming, . m 1 j may joy ln D1as ajxa Diossoms, Yetvrnen summoi ujo uu lindtht DUU3 uu unua uato lauuuou Uad we stand Derert, aione. jt when in some gloomy valley flijjj a fearsome step we grope, , . jaring not iuuam, . Seeing no a ray ' hoPe - then, through the gathering darkness; . gome kind hand should meet our owa - ; . I its flrai and Kindly pressure 3 us we are not alone, the step takes on new courage? the lightened heart can sing, - hen owtoo even in the darkness, ' bright flowers are blossoming. ' ary Wood Allen, M. p., in. Union Signal. A FRIEND OF MINE. - " ' v - . . s ; H C i. j v Ifte called mm iu.ascoi irom ine 3 we first had him. You see, we agiit.it was a great piece of good U my getting him.anyway. There now, nosing the earth over a laeatthe root of that tall syringe. light? Smart? Well, Ishould think . not that he knows tricks ; lie esn't need any such superficial 1. Tt'a nfonernl infolHtroTioo h wit that you want in a companion, l a Treat tender heart ; eh? Well, O aoald say so ; and I don't expect in i world to find more intelligence or aore loving heart than Mascot has. In may laugh if you want to, but I off what I'm talking about. You Ink some human being is having a land existence in his form, perhaps. no no mere human being ever hi in that way ; he s a aog, fast bus; a. Come here, Mascot; give a isM ne an ugiy-iuun.iug ienow, wnu i.i rn :il i rough hair standing up all over L not long enough to droop'and, graceful? He's one of the kind :'g so ugly he's interesting.' Scotch tier with a few drops of bull-dog loa, nancy; no inorougnreu, you 1 T. 2 1 I I J But look at his eyes strong and i i ii it : ' ' i iq ana loving uai s enougu. I've been the closest of friends ever be we met. I'll tell you how, that l-orbave lever told you? No? wife says I tell everybody two or pe times over, and that she has no- Id that all my friends arc .careful to mention the subject of general, lest I may begin canines on , my; Itionlar one. it down, Mascot, and lean against knee. He likes to lie with his Id on my foot, and I like to have ts tw.o years ago this 'spring. I going down Clark street almost on mto catch a train. There hap- led not to be many teams in the K for it was not yet seven o'clock he morning. I heard a sharp cry M the way. It was so sharp and first I couldn't rpa'- nnvthinc dis- well." 1 ' ther Crv thrA wfta om rtlfft rising I warm water and castile soap. the center of the group, which p a sort of alcove formed by two Rgs. I forgot mv train and ran dashing right in among the ina When I see ascertain kind 37 I'm ashamed thai I'm a " man, erlam! , " bad this dotr lie still. Mas- "they had him muzzled, his jaws Nether so tightly that the rope V hound them had gnawed into lestl and was bloody, and a boy iteach side of his head gripping cord; two other bovs held lbJ hips and hind less, and what think a fifth was doing? Hold-; re those kerosene torches un- aog.'s body. Yes, and I smelt Qing flesh as I jumped on the ae&t. The tortured creature la terrible effort, but he' wouldn't scaped if my coming hadn't Nthe villains as it was. the; shed at me and leaned on me. in his wild evps! VHow he do something for me. IQ his throat: for i . WS Ifltro anted to kill every boy there was 1 did knock one over ; the rest Pi- The torch was left smok- oiuewaiK, anci ineu u jju 1 came alonorl sannterins from rWe. he was xaad. I. shook my WINDSOR, ijEBTIE COUNIY, N. C., head; and walked off; the dog bo eagerly at my-heels that I had to be careful how I moved. . v I hurried into a street where, at this time of day,, thero were still fewer people. 1 sat down on a step, took out my pocket-knife and cut the rope from the dog's mouth. . ' His gratitude was heart-breaking ; it almost seemed at first as if heVould die of it -And I cried; I couldn't help it, t and you know very well I'm not .one of the RmvlH Vi 7 vM - ...... 0 -to, Mascot, it's all right now ; you needn't lick my face, and we're not going to part. There, lie down again; Well, as soon as he became a little more calm, or I might say as soon as we became more calm, I looked at my watch. It was of no use to think of the train now; I couldn't' possibly catch it. The dog kept his gaze on me ae if ho feared I should leave him. We walked, he at my very heels, un til we came to a hack stand. I took a carriage and I put Mascot I had al ready named him ininy mind on the front seat ; then I placed myself oppo site, and told the driver to take us out to Northrup street that was a good half-hour's drive. So we started. Mascot didn't like to be as far away from me a the dis tance between the front and back seat. He was continually reach ing out a paw, and presently I lifted him over beside me. I hurt his poor burned flesh as I did so, for he whined, then hurriedly licked my hand as if in apology and to assure me ' that he would allow me to hurt him if I wished to do so. ' We lived.here then, and my wife was in the garden when the hack stopped at the gate. She saw me with' a smooch of bloody the dog's blood, on my iatie, ana gave a little scream as she ran forward. She had believed that I was already miles away on that train. - . .. . . .. . . . . "I'm all right," I hastened to say, "and I've come back, because I've saved this fellow. I hope you'll like him." . - - ' I stepped out, and Mascot stepped out after me, or rather with me, in his fear lest he should get left. He was not a reassuring object. His hair was full of mud and blood; there was a gash in his under lip ; and he was now beginning to feel stiff and sore. He stood pressed against my ankle whila I paid the driver. . Fortunately my. wife had had a dog when she was a child, and if you hare ever been intimate with a good dog, it makes all the difference in your feel ing toward the whole canine race. Having become convinced that I had, met with no accident, Margaret looked at the new comer an instant, then she held out her hand and said softly: "Poor fellow I What a hard time you've had I" V Mascot extended his head and licked sized that I stopped involuntarily, the tips of her fingers ; then he fne other 6ide was a group of boys glanced up at me and said, "I'm going a dog in their midst. Though at to love her, , too but not quite so yet I knew directly that the 'We took him into the kitchen and 'were infernal little scamps, and put him into the sink. We washed they were torturing 'the animal. I him, we cleansed liis wounds with How gentle he .was, and . how he tried to bear it Then we put an old blanket in the corner, and he sat stiffly, down on it. - Ho ate a basin of bread and milk, and then we 'left him. t But he would cry, I went back to him three or four times, and he seemed perfectly happy while I remained. At last Margaret suggested that I leave him something of mine. I "dropped my handkerchief beside him. He put his chin on it, and when we left him alone he didn't whine again, I wa glad I called him Mascot, for that very night one of the firm, to whom I had sent word that I was de--tained from starting on my business trip that morning, came out and said they had. decided to put me in another department, with five hundred dollars more salary. He said that he knew I washable to fill that place, but he ac knowledged that he . shouldn't have Krfr1it nf Tromotinsr me just now if Viim if he couldn't he couldn't "And what do you think made her was ask ? " he inquired. "Why she in a carriage on Clark street early this morning, and she saw you rescue that dog. Shewas so thankful to see you do it that she said she knew you could fill a higher position in our house. That is a woman's way. of reasoning, you know.'--The Chap Book. - Eating a Menagerie. Daring the siege of Paris, after all the supplies from without had been cut off (September 22, 1871), it was decided to sacrifice the inmates of the Zoological Garden. th Jardin Ja Plantes. The sold animals were slaughtered and eaten. , A list was keptat the time. and from this we learn that from Oc tober 18 to the end of 187t the following-animals- were sold and eaten in the order,-given: One dwarf zebu, 14 ; twd buffaloes, 12; two-sambur stags, 20 ; twelve carp, 6 ? two yaks, 15 Gs; three geese, 2 8s tlfone .small zebra, 16; one lot of hensV "ducks, etc, 34 10s; one lot of ducks, 4 12s; eleven rabbits 4; four rein deer, 32; two Nilgau antelopes, 40; one doe, 12; two wapiti stags, 100 ; one antelope, 26; two camels, 160; one yak calf, 8; two camels, 200; two elephants, l,0$0i Most of the above were sold to an English butcher, who kept his shoD in the Aveuue de Friedland well stocked all through the seige with all possible, and previously impossible, kinds, of meat. '. 1 . To killing of the elephants, Castor and Pollux, presented some difficulty. The former was fired at three times, and was at last dispatched by means of a steel bullet discharged from a Ch&s sepot rifle. A single shot behind the ear brought Pollux to the ground. The flesh of the elephant was sold at 50 to 60 francs a kilo ; the trunk fetched 30 francs a kilo. ! Trunk and feet were regarded! as particular delicacies by the gourmands. The same batcher sold the flesh of a young wolf at 24 francs a kilo. The flesh of. the cassowaries was bought by Baron Rothsohild.who was ione of the butcher's best customers. Iiondon Mail. -.- Fraudulent Pets. Distracted dog-owners who object to the order of the muzzle may per haps find a word to the wise in tie following experience of a well-knovn Parisian society woman. This ,laiy bought, recently, from a perambulit- ing dog-dealer on the Chamns Elvsaes. a ravishingly beautiful little toy poodle, whose feet especially attracted attention by their extremelr delicate appearance. She took .the treasure Vinma Viqt oninn onri lm..;. I " "w" fied in seeing it run at once up the .nrfoin Tho Anr inrnail onHn Va . I rat sewn into the skin of a baby poodle. This is an improvement on the story of the other Parisienhe, who imported a.most rare and expensive little tov doi? from London.and found out, at home, that it was a joyful 1 little montrrel sewn into the coat of a canine grandee. But why should not the distressed dog-owner of today go and buy a rabbit-skin to wrap the un muzzled doggie in? Westminster Gazette. Extreme Praise. She was a sweet-faced old woman, but her clothes showed plainly that she came from a part of the country where Sundav crown and bonnet are bought but once in ten years or so. She had crone into a fashionable church and paid devout attention to the service, but when tne congrega tion was dismissed she went forward,1 leaned on the cfiancel rail, and looked loner and admiringly at the flowery. Finally the thoughts of her heart found their way to her lips, and she murmured; "Well, I never I Why, they're al most as pooty as wax flowers 1" -New York Herald.. Two Opinions. "What I know about bicycle rid lner." said bcorchleigh. "would nil a good-sized volume." H UUb JUU UUU Ii liUUW UUUUb 111, said the officer who arrested him for running down an old lady, would fill a good-sized cemetery." Pack. . " . Seir-Reliant The Farmer It's hotter today. His Dausrhter T?he thermometer says not, pa. - The Farmer Well, you. kin goby the thermometer if you wanter, but I guess I know how I feel, 'thout any machine to tell me. Truth. . More than 40,000,000 of postal or ders are now issued annually in Eng land, and, the amounV thus sent through the postexceeeds S30,000,000. THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1896. . : FOX FARMS. A ITqt? Industrj to Eeplaca For ' v Sealing. i . . i - Wary Keynard Eeadlly Grows " 4 Tamo as a Dog. . Cattle ranches; ostrich farms, and even snake farms are common enough in some parts of tho world, b,nt such a thing "as a fox farm is comparatively rare. Just think -of thousands upon thousand of foxes io the Aleutian Isl ands of Alaska running at large, to a certain extent wild,' but still under care, and furnishing an industry that will, if properly nourished, last as a means of support to the natives of the Fur Seal Islands when the destruction ' of the sleek-coated denizens of the lower arctics has been completed. Byron Andrews, connected with the staff of the National Tribune, is one of the originators of. this' enterprise. In an interview recently he said: k"At present the industry is really iu lis iuiuuoy, yut wo nave strong hopes of cventuilly making it one of tuch proportions that it will go a great way toward solving the problem of the future employment of the Alaskan natives, when tae far-bearing animals are practically! extinct in those re gions. It wai in 1884 that certain gentlemen, at hat time agents of the government, t ok up this subject with serious consideration. "The suggestion was made by, Cap tain Thomas P. Morgan, of Groton, Conn., then aa agent of the Alaska Commercial Company, on St. George's Island, that the fox might be domes ticated and under proper conditions bred with profit, thus utilizing many uninhabited islands sad giving em ployment in a congenial business tz natives who were coming to hsrdship by the extermination oMuv--4,--and walrus, i It was finally decided to trv the experiment. A small num- ber of yount foxes were bought of the natives anaiaseu iu iuo iwi m ueiuwi Islands, about 225 miles southwest of the village of Kadiak. 'Houses were built, : a small colony of natives was started, under the supervision of a white keeper, and a year'a supplies were left for their comfort. 'To bfl brief, after manr ups and - dowta, the experiment prorea a suc- CPS. BO much BO SS to shOW that the breeding of the blue fox in domesti- cation was practicable, ana irom.tnis email beginning there aro now no less than twenty-two of these little islands devoted to this business, giving sap- pott to more than 100 people, nearly all of whom before depended on aea otter hunting. All thft earlv settlements for the fox-breediug business were made by whites, .mnlnv native, but 1 mmmm f mf 9 within a year or two some of the more intelligent natives who hsve learned the business have taken the islands and are making satisfactory headway in this new industry. "For some time we have endeavored to get a lease of soma island, with an option of purchase, at the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury. This was because of the local conditions. The first requisite ' of the business is isolation.' Islands have been selected. therefore", that were uninhabitable, so far as internal resources were con- I cerned; then, too, those chosen would never attract settlers by commercial advantages, through fisheries, timber or the precious metals. These require ments, however, " resulted in placing tho establishment on a frontier in fested with maritime marauders flying the flags' of Jspan, Cansda or the United States, to whom these fox islandajlif they may bo so called.might become a tempting object for raid Under these conditionathose who havo engaged in the business have felt the need of the strongest possible titlo for moral effect. It was apparent that it was a matter of the highest impor tance that in order to avoid any ground for. quibble entire islands should be recognized as under the control of the occupant and not simply a por tion. "Theso islands, or at least those in tho Aleutian Peninsula, aro merely desert places, most of them like mountain peaks, cropping out of the ocean. Most of them are supplied with fuel only by driftwood. They aro so far north as to afford so little herbare that but a small number cattls can bo kept oa the best of thesa and on most ofa thcia none at all, aa that the- stock-raising element does not enter into consideration to any great extent. The Treasury Department, bavins by law an oversight of the far busi ness of Alaska, and mesas to enforce the SecretaryV regulations through tho revenue cutters, practically and morally is the solo eridcaca of govern mental authority among tho Alaskan Islands. We who havo developed tho industry hare always Iclt that wo should havo the-protecUoa in oar ef forts to reclaim the waste- places that other citizens have enjoyed in the re demption, of the wilderness. Ucnce our move in this direction,, which we hope will bo ultimately successful. Do the foxes Ume readily? Well, tho mass of them are tame enough to come up to the great feeding troughs that we have built, apparently with out fear, but they are generally shy, as might bo expected. However.it is a common sight U seo foxes that hsve been thoroughly Uraed lying around the houses nd as sociablo as any dog. The natives havo taught some of these a few tricks and derive a good deal of amusement from them. Koadi In France. s A traveler is especially struck with the fine roads in France, of which tho people aro justly proud. The govern ment keeps up a perfect system of care and inspection, and wherever one goes he may be sure of finding the princi pal roads in excellent condition. They are often bordered with trees for miles, and are in a perfect atste for bicyelo riders. All the underbrush, small twigs and OTen the lower branches of the trees have been cut for firewood, and not a twig is wasted. . All are gathered and tied up in bundles, ready for use. Every foot of ground is culUrste J, or BO"It seCESTO-KtiJjrtn mmww mountains and barren places where nothintr will crrov. bnt eterv bit of proJaca ujlhlQgU , . , . . m south of the Loire that vegetables aro flourishing in the gardens at all times. There are, of course, certain seasons for the different ones, except tho hari cots verU (string beans) and the dwarf radishes. These aro always In season, and tho quantities eaten in prance mast be enormous. The fields are generally sepsratcd L . ce or hed Tho aji line is, however, clearly shown by tho sort of grain growing In them. As most of the farmers keep sheep, the absence of fences necessitates the shepherd or aheperdess. WhereTer one sees a smally number of sheep thero is also to be sec a a gnwdian with them. Alas! it is not Dcauiuui SQepacrueM vi Poe au painters I I suspect she nerer existed except in the fertile brsia of thes artists.. In reality, the shepherdess is often an old woman, who leads her flock from one spot to another, trsnquilly knitting a stocking while her sheep nibble the grsss, Pittsburg Dis patch. TT Hi Pay for HU "tame. An advertisement appesred in a re cent i&sne of a Sunday cewipspcr that throws some light upon tho unscrupulous methods followed by somo of the so-called collection agen cies of the city. It reads a-s follows: "A largo msnufacturiug concern desires to securo the services of an attorney at law of good sUnding to the extent of permitting the uie of his name as signature to peppery let ters to be addressed to alow pijiog customers. To the right parly we will pay tlOO per annua." In other word, this concern is will ing topsy 100 for tho us of a lawjcr's nsme to sign tho bulldozing and threatening letters, intended to make tho slow payer belicto thst legal pro ceedings sro cintcmp!tcd. This msy bo mitbin the law, bat the per sonation of city rnarbaU by cnpl-jycs of tho collection agencies and tho actual employment of city martha's and their duties as collector, in which pmnte capacity they pretend to boacliug o-lull, niirjj a nrc.nt show of "papers' and badge aro I garded n direct violations of U-ar, bnt I bo omiuoa th it ui ono ever tluak j of questioning their act. 2Cew of 1 Journal. T a r , - 2s O. 3 7. THZ LKZZTt reliefs Is 7iit arr tls't-r.llr-TrjMrr;?a (D. C) l tire a zzltzi Tizztri'tzl trrc3 frrM rr!:cs st CrUad,OL!a, tr4t U rrrlTlir. rtIU.!f:;t!ss thr zzizzs ers will sriAii.'flt cf i ars trrv? t? TleAta&!su2l JL:2cf Ci.-r-rz-j terstsjstaiUnt!p tx-llz tlfX X l HeJ roorr. t-iren, rliiers ' ar 1 Ins. xars T9 33.003 cea rz;:?7Z tz ti. brewtatf ia3ci?rr. wto rocjT eihyr.tz iracrts 82J.C05.COi j rcrslatiisUa!:I8tt. ; j Tbs Kew Tork 1X1? Crrrten LxLil- txr-. bJurJait arrtrt n:UvIipilA, U tzilrtl CAaaM tv J;s. 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