I.JE1 "' 0!s THOU AITI'ST AT, BE TIIY COUNTRY'S, THY GOD'S, AMD TRUTHS'."- '' ' ! ' - ' "" ' $1,50 a Tear, cas b in Adva n c VOLUME 50 WILSON, WILSON QOUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, JAN 8, 1891 NUMBER 47 S;t'V aiiicIs,Ed's and Prop's DibL ARP'S LETTER KS HAS SOMETHING TO SAY ABOUT SANTA ' CLAUS. i : Talk About the Good Old Christ-:;-:'s Times, and, the Way the people Made Merry. b1 -r forty years I have been wrcilliut with old Santa Clans evory 'Christinas, and he al--wdVt t'f" ine an takes away tnv poeietbook'.and spends my liica. y- and throws the purse Lick to me empty and langhs und.pLaes 'his. fat sides and twiLlilfS bis ejes and puts his th'uuib to his nose and wiggles Jd; flayers at .... xae and says, Goodbye for a year," and is fjoii?- The old rascal. He sets ..iny.T.7ifa against me, and while 73 are wre8tling,:she stands off and laughs, and says, Hurrah Sant go it. my Santy, get his poeiietbook. Santy, for' he kio73 that her children are to share ia the money, and she pats me on the cheek so loving lyaud sirgs, .'J Christinas comes but once a year. .. Well, it is all over now. Cririctmas has come and gone. ,T'; L;s,nquet hlL is deserted. "ii-b Christmas tree has served u. vAtht and now lies dlshon- ml and wilted " on the wood pil?, vrith none so poor as to do it rveifince. How stately and 'proud-it stood erect in. the par lor ; illuminated with its little candies and bending with its burden of dolls and toys and books and candv and fruit for tho children aild richer gifts ior the parents and kindred and the servants of the household ! It uas a family1 tree and only tsvo-of-the household had cliarH uf its secrets. Old San-, ta hid chosen them his depu tisi. The parlor door were loosed and ever and anon mys terious messengers came with mysterious packages that were slipped in at a side window Y - A 1 1 'illl - 1 wiiiie vae nwie cuaps were frolicking in another room. Oat doors the silver moon was giving its holy light. Bright lamps, were burning within, an ) sooa the clans began to gith-ir and - yet ready for the -f.'iision table had been stretch- laden Trith good thing that Mrs. Arp and the good old cook IiiVl prepared, At each end re-p-e 1 a large- brown, oily tar hcy.. With legs pinioned and knee drawn' upr in posthumous .prayer and vrngs closed serene ly ypnn the breast, they seem e'd reconciled. to their fate and laft-.lily surrendered to the sac riflot "'" iiow kind it is in Prov itlrfiic tti keep -all animals in teudtd for food in ignorance oi their destiny! : Good things abounded in all the space be tween -the turkeys, and everys 1., ...- enjoyed the feast and liu gnre l at the festive board. Ev er as.d anon there was a bang of urvrurks, and a flash from a rui jit i and some rebel yells ia ti:c- distance, and all of a sucHeu the children heard a i). on the roof and "a racs tt on the shingles and a jingle of i i.in4a-t4ie parlor, and their an: g lite was gone. The doors rero thrown open wide and there was au eager rush to see the. old- man, but he was gone. chaps stood off! and looked and wondered. The paternal and jLaaternal ancestors were given 'a- patriarchal chairs and lent thtfr dignity to the scene. It v;a-i worthy of a picture to see tha happy faces that beamed ospedint all around, and the 'aarr-Hits.ia the background and old Uncle Sam bringing up the rear vriiU his big, massive, an tlquaU'd frame, at d his dark face iringed with his snow white board. Good, kind, old fashioned ante-bellum Sam. He. slipped a package in at the v,h:do7 the last of all. and id to Jessie : :Put dis down dar luniwars for your ma and uia-rk it from Uncle $m. She . Las 02311 ?ood to me and he :i-hed in the darkness. It v. r. fireplace set of shovel i -;; d c..4i toi'trs and poker and a ' to hold them. He knew h'-.v i-;i:e: loved to clean up the 'ashes and' punch' the fire. i)y and by the tree wis strip i td f.f its treasures. The wag 1 u:T dolls and turniture and s . U-) and knjves and scissors ; handkerchiefs and gloves - , ; rings and breastpins and b I a and dressing gowns and a r presents! had found their I tu livjd owners and every bu:!;. things and talk and talk i-.vA dijsire. Veiily, it is more ..-.I to give than to receive, t ut ..'Chiving ia powerful good Mid litis -more willing advocates. ii is'mijihtVi hard for some to open their hearts aDd i i. urses too, but if any- gift. I have never . discovered it. They always make me calm and serence. 'The world is get ting better, ' I verily believe. The people are more unselfish and humane. It is easier to gather up funds for charity. Dr. Jacobs - writes .-that the Christmas money came pouring in for the orphans, and it was all because the good peoplo were told of their wants. Folks j?ive more slily than they used tc . Many sent money to the orphans aud gave no name. One sent rive dollars and sign ed: Only a drummer. A friend saluted me on the street and took me by the hand and left a dollar in it as he hurried on, and whispered orphans. An old man from the country, who was my neighbor, and worked hard for a living, and has a good kind heart, met me with a smile andsaid, "hi read about the horphans and av brought ye a dollar for them." "Hold Hengland" lost a good citizen when she lost John Allen, but we gained one. I know he is a good man, for we had a poor fence between us and he had" a bad cow and I had run her out of my corn several times and sent him word to put her up, but he was working away from home and didn't get the word, and the next time she was found in my field I shot hdr, I was mad 1 was. The alliance knows I wai mad, the alliance always gets mad under such circumstances but John Allen didn't; He looked hurt in his feelings when he met me. He looked disappointed and said with a trembling voice : "Hi know she were a bad hanimal, but the fence were bad too, and ni were away and didn't get the word. I reckon it is all right, Major, but I would'nt av shot your:?.' Tbe cow got well and John forgave me and we remained friends. A man who loses Johu Allen's good will is not much of a man. But the worst discomfiture I have met with of late was the loss of my bill before the farmers' legislature. It wasn't even read the first time. It never found a friend It was a -bill requesting each member, to give a dollar for the soldies monument at FredericksbuTg. . The 1.800 graves have t all - got marble headstones, with the soldie rs' names, and company and regi ment, but there are 600 graves right in the center, with no names,. They are the unknown dead, and Mrs. $arry wants 800 for a single monument a soldier on a pedestal, who will stand guard over his sleep ing comrads. She wants ?100 each from eight southern states aud has already received it from North and South Carolina and Arfe ansas. Our legislature has adjourned. Maybe the speak er of the house and the presi dent of tha senate forgot it. Maybe they want to give all they have to spare to that en campment fund of $20,000, or maybe they don't care a dogon about our dead soldiers. I won der what was the matter. Only a dollar? Why, I could get that much from Job, or Lazarus for a cause like that. Halt a dollar would huve raised the money, but I didn't want the farmers' legislature to split up their patriotism,and look small before their countrymen. May be I could got the 50 cents. Who knows, but that money must come and it will come. There are a few people outside of the Georgia legislature and I will enter an appeal to them. There is a poor widow up here in Pine Leg district whose hus band was buried in one of those graves, and she vraiited to send 82 to Mrs. Barney for - a load stone. His name was on the book, but not on any grave, and she could do nothing. There is something to me that is pe culiarly touching about these unknown and unrecorded dead. The d im distance of twenty -nine year's has not obliterated our sympathies for those hum ble patriots, who, foremost fighting, fell and were burried int,o their shallow graves and quickly cavered and left alcne as the order to march to their surviving comrades. No wife, no mother, no child, no sister no tears, no flowers, not even a board with rude letters to tell his name. In his last agonies what would the, soldier have given for a mother's kiss or a wife's embrace, and what would the mother or the wife have given for the precious privilege These widows and these moth ers are all over the land. The world was electrified to tears when Wolfe's beautiful lines on the death of Sir-John Moore ap neared. "Not a drum was heard not a funeral note.' ' But there were thousands of our boys laid away in their graves with less attention than Moore. . Of those 600 at Fred, ericksburg the poet could say : "We carved not a line ; we raised not a stone, But left them alone iu their glory." Bill Aep. SUICIDE. Id olden times the burial oi a suicide was characterized by im paling the body with a stake. Hap pily nowadays no snch horrible method of discountenancing the act oi selfsslaughter is practiced, though it it were and the virtaat suicides included in the list with the actual ones, staked graves would be largely In the "- majority. Virtual suicides iii the coiiaectioa means that class of people who die rather thai save themselves by a specific such as Radam' Microbe Killer, which, according to respons 8ible authorities, will care all dis ease if taken in time, Eadatn's Microbe Jliller testimonials are vel worth reading and give hope to the afflicted, who will find it to their interest to send for circulars. For sale by Doane Herring. Lebanon, Ky., April 2, 1830. Radam's Microbe Killer Co., Nashville Tenn: Gentleman I have used a part of three jugs for indigestion and general debility, and am now in usual health. Used it with my little daughter for cattarrh of the stomach, and it has entirely re heved ner when everything e'.ae failed. Very respectfully. Mks. W. W. Wataen. For sale by Doane Herring. Wa Caution All Against Th3m. The unprecedented success and merit of Ely 's Cream Bairn a real cure for catarrh, hay fever and cold in the head has induced many adventures to place catarrh medi cines bearing some, resemblance in appearance, style or name upon the market, or in order to trade upon the reputation of Ely's Cre m Balm. Don't bo deceived. Bay only Ely's Cream Bilm. Manysni your immediate locality will teli fy in highest commendation olit. A particle is applied into each osa tril; no pain; agreeable to ss. Priee 5o cents. From S- Joseph Hospital, A young girl here had been suf fering for 12 years with Blood dis ease until she had lost the use of her limbs, and was .subject to many troubles incident to the disease. The physicians declared her case incurable and predicted that her life would come to ppeedy end. After taking S. S, S. she rccnperaU ed so fast that it was plain tha, -he had ootained a new lease on life, and she has continued to grow better until her permaneat cure is assured.' Many other patients m our hospital have obtained si-jnul benefit from S. S. a and it has be come quite a favorite in our house. The St. Joseph Hospital. Highland, HI. THE FIRST STEP. Perhaps you are run down caa't eat, can't think, can't do '-anything to your satisfaction, and you won der what ails you. You should heed the warning, you are taking the first step into Nervous Pros tratlon. Yon need - a -nerve tonic and in Electric Bitters yoa find the exact remedy for restoriisg your nervous system to its uoroi!, healthy condition. Surprising re suks follow the use of. this preat Nerve Tonic and Alterative. 'our appetite returns, good digestion is restoied, and the nf3r f."d tbe kidneys resume het'thy action. Try a bottle. Price 5o cts aC Bow- ands Drugstore. THE MEW DISCOVEKY". You have heard your frienda and neighbors tfalkiug about it. You may be one of the many who know from personal :xperience ja'st how good it ie. If yon have ev, tiied it, you are one of its staunce n iencs because the wonderful thinje about. it is, that when once given t:i d Dr. Kings New Discovery e er af ter holds a place in the bouse. If you have never used it and should be afflicted with a cough cold, or any Throat, Lung or Chest trouble, secure a bottle at once ana give it fair trial. It is guaranteed every -time, or money refunded. Trial bottles free at Rowlands Drugstore. A RAY OF HOPE. For all who are held bv the chains of scrofula or other disease of the blood comes from-Hood's Sar8aparil!a, which ky imparting the elements of gcd h'-aith i-nd strength , to the vital tiaid, dis solves the bounds o! disease ana sets the captive free. No other remedy in existeoce combines me positive economy, the 'peculiar merit and the medicinal posver c; Hood's Sarsaparlla.- The editor who works all day and and all night, says the Richmond State, is always ready to advocate the early closing movement of clerks who are tired of doing nothing so many hours in stores where the pro nriatora do not advertise Of course they areThe Htaudstills in business at least save coal and weary, hopeless watching for customers. Grcroing Poor Graceiuhy. GrowiLg poor Is actually harder than being bo. Pover ty is not dangerous unless it strikes in. Sometimes the sys tem is strengthened afterward. There is a'great deal of senti mentalism in the talk about success at poverty. Povenyjof pocket is much it ssoftena subject"of ridicule than poverty of soul. People will be apt to think u of you pretty much as'you dojof your self. If because you'eannot en tertain as you once could, you show solicitude lest yon should be 'neglected; if you tak friends to task and ascribe to unworihy motives what may or may not have been meant for 31itjhts; if you endeavor to enlist their sympathies, ten to one they will drop off. If, on the other ? hand, you meet them as of old; if they find the same sunshine about you, you will not mind a few inconveniences. Do not) let life. narrow down. Do not let the necess'ary carelulness strike in. . Surroundings influence spirits, and we long to have grace and fitness and the poet ry of convenience about us. But the best gifts are every man's. We can all have air and sunshine, and with a mod erate share of labor we can all command most scrupulous neat ness. If we cannot travel we can let the life and light of the busy wc rid in upon us through books, magazines and papers. To grow poor gracefully is to bring our wants within our in come. Beach out and bring them in as did Noah his dove until tbe waters abate and you shall ride safely over the mountain tops. But you can no more grow poor in a graceful way by making debts than you can go down stairs gracefully on stilts. Small debts are so convenient, you know, but they are like swarms of insects constantly buzzing in your ears. People will know you are on stilts at the time. You will hate to come down, , but - how jnuch freer you will be on your own footing to feel you have a dk vine right to all you have and are. Boltimorean. Inconsistency- Yes, Rah; bit do beat my time. What's the matter, old man 1 Boss, does you see dem niggers win8 long de road oudar t Dem hypericin' ornery coons is gwine to cl nrch. Well, what about it? Ihtts jes dis way Dem niggers will wuk out in de harves fiel in er July son all de week widout enny hat. Den wen Sunday come dey will hist er $2 nmbreller over er 50 cent suit uv clothes. Data whut mek me say wut I does. A Liar Prom Detroit. A Detroiter who was in a collii iou on the Baltimore and Ohio road two or three weeks ago, says he Was sitting jut back of a farm er and his wife. The train was running so fast that the couple tv4.ra iiorvons. and bv and by the woman turned about and inquired: Mister, d'you think there any dangeif No, ma'am not In the least, he said. Five minutes later the speed having perhaps increased a little, the woman again turned with : Mister, where are you froml Detroit, ma'm. And there is no danger! Soue, whatever. Ten seconds later came a grand crash, and the coach reared up and fe!loyer. A.sit went with every body shouting and screaming, the vjice of the woman was heard above everything, crying: Old William, what 'a liar that man from Detroit has turned out to be! Free Press, From Centennial Headquarters "I find Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup excellent, having a ready sale and rendering more satisfaction than any cough syrup I have evor sold." A; B. Malony, M D. 15th & Carpenter Sts., Phila delphia, Pa. An article based on true an hon est principles is Salvation Oil. Price oalv 25 cents. No one can complain at the pries of Old Saul's Cat irrh Cure it ii within the reach of every one. Sold everywhere at 25 cents. Parents cannot always carry tbe baby on a trip, for the recovery of its health. But they can keep Dr Bulls Baby syrup in the house, and it will compensate for the trip by its promp relief. Cattarrh la the head Is a constitutional Disease and requires A constitutional remedr Like Hood's Sarsaparilla, Which purifies the blood, Makes the weak strong, Restores health, Try it now. NEWS OF A WEEK. W II AT IS HAPPENING IN; THE WORLD ABOUND Df. Condenfteil Report of tha News Frutnonr Con tem poraries. The Winston Daily has been burned out. The paper will not be discontinued however. The round hoae of the R. & G. EL B. at Raleigh has been destroy ed by fire. Tne loss was very heavy. j A 5-nwpiraey to flood the country with counterfeit silver dollars has ben unearthed m Pittsburg, nine teen persons are under arrest. The Atlantic Ooast Line has pur chased for $61,000 a lot in Washs ingtoo city, on which will be erec ted a fine building for gt neral offis ces. M. A. Dauphin, who has for a nnmbar o( years been connected with tbe Louisiana Lottery, died at his residence in Nsw Orleans, on Sunday of last week- The contract for constructing the Raleigh Electric Street Bail way has been finally closed-with Edison General Electric Company, and work will begin m a few day's. The New Berne Journal recom mends the following for hog cholera: Oae ounce each of tobacco, cops peras, asfedtida, blue stone, salt pet re, salt, sulphur and sola. The Goldsboro Argus says that under cover of men irom the tan pontine fields of the South to hire hands, there are several runners from Texas getting colored people. The bottom cause of all those business troubles is tha now nai- i vereal tendency to legislate for speculate Interests. The new tariff is simply a tariff dictated by spco nlators. Philidolphia Times. A Topefca dispatch of December 29 says the president of the Kan sag State Alliance has given out that the scheme for a third party has been abandoned for the pres ent as it is evident that the South Is not for it. The Southern Pines Chewing Gum Co., of Kinston, turns out a nice and healthy article from tbe health giving pine balsam and tar of our native forests. It is really a merritorious article and will in time reach a mammo Ub sale, as it desei'ves Free Press. San ford has a negro brass band of six or eight peices. Some time ago a music professor came here from Wilmington to instruct it. Every night the band met and was opened with prayer, and ifay member was not present promptly he was usually flogged. -San ford Express. The Gazette says that Mr. E. S. Huffstetler, of Gaston, has a cow, an Ayershire and Durham cross, which gives 72 pints of milk a day. Since February Mr. Hnftstetier has Sold from thi5 cow $55 00 worth of butter and. milk, besides, supplying a family of nine, all of whom dilnk milk. The young men get to the front Mr. W. T. Dorob.ofGoldBboro, was the first to settle taxes this year, and Mr. J. L. Carrie, Sheriff of Moore, is among the first. The young men in North Carolina al ways show themselves worthy of every honor shown them., State Chronicle. Mr. Edwards Alcott is running three mdes within a few miles of pScotland Neck' and one of hia managers saia to tne Democrat a few days ago that they have now enough timber to last them six years. He ships directly to Liver pool, London and Glasgow. -ScoU land Neck Democrat. The shortage ia the accounts ofC. D. Upohurob, late Superior Court Clerk of Wake county is est timated at 916,000. Tbe only one if his bondsmen who is responsible is Col. A. W. Shaffer, now Republi can Postmaster at Raleigh. Shaf fer has taken posession ot the resi dence and personal property of Upchurch. v There are some people so oon scions of the fact that there every public action and utterance is prompted by a mean motive that they not think it possible that.any other man can be guided In his public life by sentiments of honor and patriotism. Progressive Far mer. Because men take our paper we are under no obligations to them, for we feel that we give them lull value for tbe money paid us for subscription. It they think differ ently and choose to stop, that is their right, and we ask no quess tion. If they nan stand it we can. But they are, in our opinion, the greater losers. Salisbury Truth. The Norfolk Virginian says : The preliminaries in the Southern Immigration Convention Conven tion -at Asheville encourage tbe hope that its work will be well done. Splendidly spun theories and large promises shoold be held in obeyance by practical measures. Tbls is tbe need of the Southern States. Workers in the Gold Hill, mine, Rowan county, have struck a lead, three leet thick, which puts out $60 to tbe ton. The mine is owned by a London syndicate. The new de velopments have created a stir. the stock of tne mine has risen, and the State Chronie'e is told that 110,000 of it was taken in Sal isbury lat Saturday week. Tbe academy and gymnasium budding of the Bingham Scnool were burned on the morning of the 24th nit., supposed to have been eaased by a defective flue. The contents of the houses were burn ed except the libraries which were saved. There were no other buildings burned. The loss is nearly covered by iusurance. The barn in Pitt county of Mre. Gen.' Bryan Grimes was irccntly destioyed by fire the ork of an incendiary It was a very large barn, which contained 6,000 bush els of peanuts, 100 barrels of corn and 50 tons of hay The contents belonged jointly to Mrs.Grimes and Mr. J. J, LaughingBouse, we learn from tho Greenv'i'te Reflector. The Statesv.I! Laadmark learns that J. A. D. -Stephenson, Eq. an aeooajtilihed mineralogist, is pre paring a cabinet of North Carolina minerals for exhibition at the Columbian Exposition at Chicago in i8D2. It is not too much to propnesy that it will attract the atttkm of the wotld and bring many investigators to North Caro lina. William E. Lewis, of Bladens county, had an encounter Saturday evening with a big black bear. The battle lasted thirty minute' and the bear was not overpowered nntil it had received eight oi nine blows with t.he blade. of an axe, afs ter being crippled with shot from a gun. It weighed 230 pounds. Wo get this from the Wilmington Star. The Scotland Neck Democrat says that a Philadelphia party has been making inquiry as to certain tracts of Roanoke lands, their purpose being to buy 35,000 acrea with a view to starting a stock farm. The Roanoke lands are among the most productive in the State, but for some reasons they have been neglected and per mitted to run down. The Charlotte New says that this year Mr. Jas. M. !.'-. of Prov idence township, -iitkleubnrg county, worked eight mules, pUnt ed 92 acres in cotton and got 100 bales. On one premium acre he made three bales of 450 lbs. each. In addition to bis cotton Mr. Rea made 2,000 bushels of corn,' much oats, wheat, clover, hay aud grasses. Last Saturday Tom Dunn, son of Mr. Frank Dunn, of this place, sat down to dinner, when his younger is ter, Mamie, got down a thirty two calibre revo.ver and began snapping it at him. At tbe third snap the pistol was discharged and the ball c it "the ftkin on the left side of Tom's forehead just above tho left eye. The old pistol had been lying in wait for the past two years, unnoticed ad forgotten, over the kitchen door Mt. Holly News. . The Charlotte News gives the following account of the Christ mas festivities of a colored citizen of that county : George Ransom, colored, who lives about six miles from the city, was in town today with a load of wood to sell. He told a News re porter that he was bound to sell that wood, for there was trouble at his bouse and he needed a little cash to buy necessaries. Christmas eve his wife went out to chop off a rooster's head, v She drew the rooster's neck across a stick of wood and put her left foot on the rooster's head. Then she ra'sed the flxe and in the uncertain light it came down aud not only took off tbe rooster s head, but three ot his wiles toes- About the time he had her fixed up in bed bis 8 year old son John Sherman Ransom went out to the btrn to feed the mule. The mule was not in a very good humor and let his heels' fly. The boy's leg was broken betweeu the ankle and knee. George got the boy to bed and started off for a doctor, but half a mile from home bis buggy broke down and he wa thrown out, his head striking on a stump. A piece of skin two inch es long was torn from his forehead. He wanted to sell the wood to buy liniment plasters, bandages etc., for his houshold. Alliance Resolutions. ' Whereas the members of our 8tate Legislature and of the U. S Congress are only servants of the people and should ever be ready to enact such laws and advance such measures as their conjtituents demand. Res Dived therefore that we the members of the Farmers Alliance in Nash county assem bled at Nashville do hereby de-1 mind of ur members elect, to the Legislature tnat they vote for no man for the U. S. Senate males- he is in hearty sympa thy witn . tne Alliance and xn favor of the sub-Treasury Bill, the abolition of National Banks the free coinage of silver the repeal of the Internal Revenue, free trade on the necessaries of life and the issueing of money direct by the governmen t and of loaning the same direct to the people on proper securety at 2 per cent. Interest. , The above Resolution was unanimously adobted by Nash Honnt v Farmers Alliance con vened in call session January Seo'y. Nash Co. F A Blackguard Journalism Rebuked- The Durham Globe of the 23rd inst. makes a most wanton and cowardly attack upon Rev. Baylus Cade, editor of the Progressive Farmer, which the press of the State cannot afford to let go uurebuked: We say the attack is cowardly for two a-ons ; re First. The Globe insinuates that the editor of the Progress ive Farmer might go elsewhere than in North Carolina by some other name than the one given him by his parents, and which he has never disgraced by a questionable action during a public professional life of twenty-five years. The editor of the Globe knew that he dare not charge npon Mr. Cade what he meanly insinuates. Now, any man who insinuates against another a delinquency which he dare not charge against him; openly acts like a coward. Second The editor of the Globe knew that Mr. Cade's character forbade him to resent any attack the Globe might make upon him, no matter how dirty that attack might be. And we say, that a man who attacks another, when the char acter and calling of that other forbids him to visit his assails ant with corporal punishment, acts like a coward. This dirty attack upon Rev. Baylus Cade was entirely un provoked. The Globe attrib utes to the Progressive Farmer language which the Progressive Farmer did not u?e, and then says the editor of the Progress ive Farmer "lies like a horse thief." The annals of journal ism in North Carolina might be searched in vain for anything that will equal in baseness this attack upon Ihe editor of tbe Progressive Farmer. For one, we desire to record pur indig nant protest against this at tempt of an unknown interlo per, upstart and blackguard to come into this State and befoul the names and characters of good men; and we call upon the citizens of Durham, and up on the people of the State in general to see to it, that the ed itor of the Globe finds no op portunity to use an alleged newspaper to defame the men who are tryiugTtfo elevate and ennoble every class of our citis zenship. If a man of such pure and upright life at Rev. Baylus Cade cannot escape the detrac tion of the Globe, who is safe from its stream of misrepresen tation and foul slander? Mr. Cade came to North Carolina five years ago to become pastor of the Baptist church at Louis burg, and is still pastor of that Church. About a month ago he added to his labors and his field of usefulness by becoming editor of the Progressive Far mer. He is highly esteemed by all who know him, and is upright, sincere, courageous and able. Outside of Wake and Franklin, and among the great army of Baptists of the State, Mr. Cade is not generally known in North Carolina ; and if it were not for the fact that detraction by the Globe is a sure sign of Integrity and hon or, this base slander might in jure Mr. Cade where he is nut known. A it is, tbe slander ous article of the Globe is proof positive of Mr. Cade's high character and pure patriotism. If this dirty attack had been made upon us, we would not have noticed it. But whsn it is made upon one of our friends and also threatens the dignities and decencies of journalism in the State, we cannot do less than hold the author of it up to public scorn and contempt. Raleigh State Chronicle. The Way They Turn Out. - Some of the members of a certain Bapti t church in this State refus ed to read the Recorder last year pn the ground that tha paper was not sufficiently outspoken on tem perancedid noteudorse the third party movement. Since then, a number of three persons have been expelled from tbe church either for drunkenness or other disorderly conduct. W recently heard of one of these brethren being so drunk on an excursion that his pastor had to take care of him aad his baggage, and in his grip sack tbe following strange combination was found: A good copy of the Bible, a pair of brass knucks, a prayej book, a bottle of whiskey, two pistols, a lot or x. M. o. a. literature. He may be taken as a sample.of those who do not like the Eecorder. Biblical Recorder.. The strike of railroad employes in Scotland has seriously affected the shipping trade of Glasgow ow ing to tbe lack of coal, which to getber with the closing of mills, lactones and docks, makes tbe outlook for the poorer classes very desperate. HTOiOat Men Old Abraham Diiltnger sued Bill HilliArd for calllno' him a 1Ir. I1a thought his character had been damaged to the extent of fifteen dollars, and for that amonnt brought suit before a justice of the perce. Just before court met, HiU hard approached Dililnger and said: - Look here, Abe, you know your character ain't been hut fifteen dollars worth. Yas, blamed ef it hain't. Now, Abe, I believe that five doK lars will kivsr up all damages; fur, Abe, you know well enough that you are a liar. Yes. I know all that, Bill, but it's one of them sorter truths that I despise. I don't want no lawyer er pickin at me, Abe. Tell yon I will do. 1 will give you five dollars. Taint enough Bill. Wall, now, I want to do whut is right- - We are both honest men an good citizen. I will give yon fif teen dollars if you will go before court, say that you was a liar and withdraw the suit. Give me twenty Billie, and bla med if I dont do it. I am your man. The money was paid, and after the court had been called to order. Abraham stated that as he mout have told a lie, he would withdraw the suit. Well sai? he, after mak ing te hacknowledgment, I believe I will be going, as it is getting long toward the shank of the even ing, Goin out my way, Bill I Not right now, Abe. Say, hold on a minute. Jedge I want this man tuck up for'falee arrest. He has acknowledged that be is a liar. Let me see you a minute, Bill, called Abe. Bill went out and Abe said : Look here, what is the matter with you ! - - Nothing only I am going to have the clamps put on you. I will give you teu dollars to wipe the thing out. Now, Abe, I want to be fair an' squair. Gimme thirty dollars an out she goes. I ken send you to tbe pen for this, Abe, an' 1 con sider thirty dollars nighty cheap. Til give you thirty five. Thirty, Abe. you must be a fool 1 All PICThf Aha Say! Well. Here's your money. I'm getting tired of this blamed law business, fur thar ain't no honesty in it. Settle her up and let's be traveling I wouldn't be a. lawyer fur nothin'. The following extract is tak en from George William Cur tis's great Vassar address: "Our dogmatism in sheer spec ulation is constantly satirized by history. Education was not more vehemently alleged to be Dhaimrt trim nrntnnn tlian noil! cal equality to be dangerous for men. Happily, our own country has played havoc with both beliefs, however sincerely supposed to be ordinances of nature. The century began with saying contemptuously that women do not need to be educa'edto be dutiful wives and good mothers. A . man, it is said, can dress prettily and danee gracefully even if she ran not subjugate the Greek verbs in mi, and the ability to calcnlate an. eclipse would not help . her to keep cream from feathering iq hot weather. But, grown older and wiser, the century asks, as it ends: 'Is it then true that ig norant women are . the best wivns and mothers? Does good wifehood consist exclus ively in skillful baking and boiling and neat darning and patching? No,' says the ens lightened century, 'if the more languages a man hath the more man is he, the more knowledge a woman hath the better" wife and mother is she And if any skeptic should ask, 'But can delicate woman en dure the hardship of a college conrse of study?' it is a woman who ingeniously turns the flank of the questioner with a covert sarcasm at her own sex. 'I would like you to take thir teen hundred young men, and lace them up, and hang ten to imontv nnnnilt fit elnfTloa nnnn - " -rf r- r their waists, perch them up on three inch heels, cover their heads with ripples, chignons, rats and mice, and stick ten thousand hairpins into their scalps. If they can stand all this they can stand a little Latin and Greek.' " Home -Spun Tarns. We know now of a surety that the reports which were current in stctian about a year ago that onr friend, the Rev. Israel Holler, of Wilkes, im preaching tbe early destruction of the world, were false for be recently wrote a 'note to tbe register of deeds of this county aakiner him to send bim a pair of marriage lisens in order that he migbt wed in due form one of the daughters of horth Iredell. He has since been happily married to a young lady of 68 years, (himself being somewhere up in 90), so it is clear that tie has no idea of tbe early end of tha woild. States ville Landmark. 1 11 id easier than to accept a