TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: I ' (CASH IN ADVANCE) On.- t'opjV One Year, . - . $1.50. NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS. Ml correspondents are hereby.: notified ti, ,t to insure the insertion of their eom muiiications they must fnrnishMis with t i, r linini fide name and address, thich we t. ,, Mi i;ite to keep in strict confidence. - Write ,,:.'; iin one side the slieet. f The 1'l.vxt is in no wise responsible for t!:.- views of its correspondents. a Address all communications to .. THE TOBACCO PLANT - 1 ' DcRIIAif, N. C. A SONG OF KEST ) :vt :iry hands that all the dav ' -We set to labor hard and long . N.w softly fall the shadows grav ; 'I lie bells areirung for even sons'. A ii hour ago the golden sun . Sank slowly down into the wesi ; I'ui.r, weary hands, your toil is done, i i'Tis time for rest ! 'tis time for rest "! O weary feet, that iilany a mile : ' '! I lave. trudged along a stonv wav, At last je reach the trysting stile"; ! No longer fear to go astray. - Tin- treiille landing, rustltn treis : Kin k the young birds within the nest, : And softly singi the quiet breeze :; j'Tis tijine for rest ! 'tis time for rest ! Ojwearyf eyes from which the tears Fell many a time like thunder fain ; Ojwcnry -hearts; that through the'Vears d'.eat with sueh bitter, restless pstin, To-night forget the stormy strife,-" And know what I leaven shall senilis best; l.iiy down the .tangled web of life, i'Tis Aime fori rest! 'tis time for rest, i j ChumhiTu' Mtitjtiz'ntr. Till imvixi: plujiij tisi:. Itrl Taliiiajfe's Sermon, Preached Sunday, Sept. t,"tli, 1HX7. Ii-xt: "AiuJ the I.i.nl suiil mitonie; Amos, wluit tlinu ' ami I sjliil, a plumb lnic."-t-Aliios-7-K. The Solid masonry of the. world had to me a fascination. Walkabout. --ipiiK ofi the triumphal arches imd the eatlK-drals, "our hundred or six. hundred years old, and see them stand as erect as. when they were huthledj walls of .great height for centuries, not bending a quarter of :m inch this way or that, SoKgreatly honnred"'. were." the masons who l.Hildcd these I walls that they were Inc from, taxation and'called "iree" masons. The trowel gets most of the 1 it dit for these buildings, and its clear ringing on stone and brick has sounded across the ages. But there is another implement of just as much importance as the trowel, land my test recognizes it. Bricklayers, and stone-masons,; and carpenters-, in the building of walls, use an instrument made 'of a cord, at the end 'of which a lumptof lead is fastenedi They 'drop it over the side orMheAvall, and as the plummet naturally seeks the center of gravity in the earth, the workman discovers where he wall recedes: and where it bulges out, and just what is the perpendicular. Our text represents God as stahjding on the wall of character, whiclif the Is raelites had built, and in that way measuring it.; ''And the Lord said Unto me, Amos, what sees t thou? and I said, a plumb line." What the" world wants is 4 . A STUAuntT VV AX I) DOWN KKI.HIIONV Much of the; so-called piety of the day bends this way and that, to suit the limes. It ijs horizontal with a low state of sentiment ami morals. We have all been building a wall of i. character, and it is glaringly imper j feet and needs reconstruction. How ; shall jt be brought into the perpen dicular? Only by the divide meas i uremeht. "Andthe Lord sid unto, me, Amos, what seest thorn? and I said, a plumb line." I " The whole'tendcncy of the times - is to make us act by the standard of what others do. If they plliy cards, Aye play cards. If they dapce, we dance. If they read eertaufi styles of books, we read them. We throw over the wall of our character the Wangled plumb line of other lives and reject the infallible test which Amos saw. The question I for me should" not be what you think is right, but What Cod thinks is right. This perpetual reference to'; the be havior of others, as thougli itklecided anything but human fallibility, is a mistake as wide as the world. There are 10,(KK) plumb lines in juse, but only one is true and exact, and that is the line of God's eternab. right. ..-There is a mighty attempt--being Snade to reconstruct and fi up the Ten Commandments. To many they seem too rigid. The tower : ot Pisa - leans over about thirteen feet from ""The. perpendicular, and people go .thousands of miles to see its grace ful inclination, and- by extrja braces and various architectural contri- ' vanct-s it is kept leaning from centu ry to century. : Why not bave the tin granite blocks of Sinai seta little aslant ? Why not have the'pillar of truth a leaning tower ? Why i-1 not an ellipse as "good as a squarp ? Why is not an oblioue as trood asstraiirht up and down ? My friends,!we must have a standard; shall itbetJad's or man s? I , The divine plumb line i -XKKDS TO I5K THROWN OVKIt ALL MKK ! CIIAXDISE. ' . Tliousands of years ago $ol onion discoveml the tendency o buyers to depreciate; goods. : He sajv a man beating down an article lojver and louver, and saying it was net worth the price asked, and when jhe had purchased. at the lowest rloint he told everybody what a sharp! bargain he bad struck, and how he had out witted the merchant.;' Proverbs xx, 14 : It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer, but when he is gone his way, then he boasteth." . So utterly askew is society in this matter that you seldom find a seller asking the pricethat he expects to et. He puts on -a higher value than; he pro poses to receive, knowing that he will have to crop. If he wants fifty, he-asks seventy-five. Anid if he wants 2,000 he asks 20(K "It is naught," saith "the buyer. "The fab ric is defective; the style of goods is poor ; I can get elsewhere":a better article at a smaller price ; it is out of fashion ; it i is damaged; it will fade; it will hot wear well.? After a while the merchant, from pverper suasiori or from desire to depose of that particular stock of goods, says: "Well, take it at your own? price," and the purchaser goes home with light step and calls into hisj private office his confidential friends, and chuckles while he tells howHhat for half price he got the goods, fn other words, he lied and was proid of it. Nothing would make times -as good, and the earning of a livelihood, so VOL. XVI. NO. 40. easy, as the universal adoption of the law of right. Suspicion strikes through all bargain making. Men who sell know not whether thev will ever get the money. Purchasers know not whether the goods shipped will be according to the sample, and that, with the large number of clerks who are making false entries and then absconding to Canada, and the explosion of firms that fail for mil lions of dollars, honest men are at their wits' end to make a living. HE WHO STANDS UP AMID ALL THK . MtESSrUE AXI IXKS KIl.iHT is accomplishing something toward the establishment of a high commer cial prosperity. I have deep sympa thy tor the laboring classes who toil with hand and foot. But we must not forget the business men who, without any complaint or bannered procession through the street, are en during a stress of circumstances ter rific. The fortunate people of to day are those whoare receiving daily wages or regular salaries. And the men most to be pitied are those who conduct a business while prices are falling, and yet try to pay their clerks and employes, and are in such fearful straits that they would quit business to-morrow if it were not for the wreck and ruin of others. When people tell me at what a ruinously low price they purchased an article it gives me more dismay than satis faction. I know it means the bank ruptcy and defalcation of men in many departments. The men who toil with the brain need full as much sympathy as those who toil with the hands. All business life is struck through with suspicion, and panics are only the result of want of confidence. The pressure to do wrong is all the stronger from the. fact that in our day the large business houses are swallowing up the smaller, the whales dining on bluefish and min nows. The large houses undersell the small ones because, they Can af ford it. They can all'ord to make nothing, or actually lose, on some styles of goods, assured they can make it up on others. So a great dry goods house goes outside of its regular line and sells books at cost, or less than cost, and that swamps the book-seller; or the dry goods house sells bric-a-brac at lowest fig ures, that swamps the small dealer in bric-a-brac. And the same thing goes on in other styles of merchan dise, and the consequence is that all along the business streets of all our cities there are merchants of small capital who are in terrific struggle to keep their heads above water. The Cunarders run down the Newfoundland-fishing smacks. This is nothing against the man who has the big store, for every man has as large a store and as great a business as he can manage. To feel right and do right under all this pressure re quires martyr grace, requires divine support, requires celestial reinforce ment. All sorts of religions are putting forth their pretensions. Some have a spiritualistic religion, and their chief work is with ghosts, and others a religion of political economy, pro posing to put an end to human mis ery by a, new style of taxation, and there is'a humanitarian religion that looks after the body of men and lets the soul look after itself, and there is a legislative religion that proposes to rectify all wrongs by enactment of better laws, and there is an a-s-thetic religk n that by rules of ex quisite taste would lift the heart out of its deformities, and religions of all sorts, religions by the peck, religions by the square foot, and religions by the ton all of them devices of the devil that would take the heart away from the only religion that will ever effect anything for the human race, and that is the 'straight up and down religion written in the Book, which begins with (lenesis and ends with Revelation, the religion of the skies, the old religion, the CJod given re ligion, the everlasting religion which says : "Love Cod above all and your neighbor as yourself." All religions but this one begin at the wrong end and in the wrong place. THE BIBLE RELIGION DEMANDS THAT WE FIHSt'gET IIIGHT WITH GOD. It begins at the top and measures down, while the other religions be gin at the bottom and try to measure up. They stand at the foot of the walk up to their knees in the mud of human theory and speculation, and have a plummet and string tied fast to it. And they throw the plum met this way, and break a head there, and throw the plummet another way and break a head there, and then they throw it up, and it comes down on their own pate. Fools ! Why "will ye stand at the foot of the wall measuring up, when you ought fo stand at the top measuring down ? A few days ago I was in the country, thirsty after a long walk. And I came "in, and my child was blowing soap bubbles, and they rolled out of the cup; blue and gold, and green, and sparkling, and beautiful, and orbicu lar, and in so small a. space I never saw nforesplendpr concentrated. But she blew once too often and all the glory vanished into suds. Then I turned and took a glass of plain water and was refreshed. And so far as soul thirst is concerned, I put against all the glowing, glittering soap bubbles of worldly reform and humane speculation one draught from the . fountain from under the throne of God, clear as crystal. Glory to God for the religion that drops from above, hot coming up from be neath I "And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou ? and I said, a plumb line." I want, you to notice this fact, that when a man gives up the straight up and down religion in the Bible for any new-fangled religion, it is generally to suit his sins. You first hear of his change of religion, and mm : : "HERE SHALL THE PRESS then you hear of some swindle he has practiced in Colorado mining stock, telling some one if he will put in S10,)00 he-can take out $100,000, or he has sacrificed his chastity, or plunged into irremediable worldli ness. His sins are so broad HE HAS TO P.KOA DEN. II IS RELIGION, and becomes as broad as temptation, as broad as the soul's darkness, as broad as hell. They want a religion that will allow them to keep their sins, and then at deatli say to them: "Well done, good and faithful ser vant," and tells them : "All is well, for there is no bell." What a glori ous heaven they hold before us ! Come, let us go in and see it. There is Herod and all the babes he mas sacred. There is Charles (luiteau, and Jim Fisk, and Robespierre, the Mriend of the French guillotine, and all the liars, thieves, house burners, garroters, pickpockets and libertines of all the centuries. They have all. got crowns, and thrones, and harps, and scepters, and when they chant they sing: "Thanksgiving and hon or,and glory, and power to the broad religion that let us- all into heaven without repentance and? faith in those disgraceful dogmas of ecclesi astical old-fogyism." My text gives me a gran1 oppor tunity of saying a useful word to all young men who are now forming habits for a lifetime Of what use to a stonemason or a bricklayer is a plumb line? Why not build the wall by the unaided eye and hand ? Because they are insufficient, because if there be a deflection in the wall it cannot "further on be corrected. Be cause by the law of gravitation a wall must be straight in order to be symmetrical and safe. A young man is in danger of getting a defect in his wall of character that may never be corrected.- One of the best friends I ever had died of delirium tremens at 60 years of age, though he had riot since '21 years of age before which he had been dissipated - touched intoxicating liquor until that particular carousal that took him off. Not feeling well in a street on a hot. summer day he stepped'in to a drug store, just as you and I would have done, arid asked for a dose of something to make him 'feel better. And there was alcohol in the dose, and that one drop aroused the old appetite, and he entered the first liquor store, and stayed there until thoroughly under the power of rum. He entered his home a, raving ma niac, his wife and daughters fleeing from his presence, until he was taken to the city hospital to die. The com bustible material of early habit had lain quiet nearly, forty years, and that one spark ignited the conflagra tion. Remember that the wall may be 100 feet high, and yet a deflection one foot from the foundation affects the entire structure. And if you live 100 years and do right the last eighty years, you may nevertheless do something at 20 years of age that will damage all your earthly exis tence. All you who have built houses for yourselves or for others, am I not right in saying to these young-men, jrou cannot build a wall so high as to be independent of the character of its foundations? A man before 30 years of age may commit sin enough to last him a life time. A cat that has killed one pigeon cannot be cured. Keep it from killing the first pigeon. Now, John, or George, or Charles, or Wil liam, or Alexander, or Andrew, or Henry, or whatever be your Chris tian name or surname, say here and now : "No wild oats for me, no cigars or cigararettes for me, no wine or beer for me, no nasty stories for me, no Sunday sprees for me. 1 AM GOING TO START RIGHT and keep on right. God help me, for I am very weak. From the throne of eternal righteousness let down to me the principles by which I can be guided in building every thing from foundation to capstone. Lord (iod, by the wounded hand of Christ, throw me a plumb line!" Lord Nelson's general direction when going into battle was, no man can do wrong that places his ship close alongside that of the enemy. My friend, you will never do wrong if you keep your life close alongside the Ten Commandments. Do right and you can be as brave as Maria Theresa, who rode up the hill of De fiance and shook her sword at the four corners of the earth. "But," y'ou say, "you shut us young folks out from all fun' Oh, no! I like fun. I believe in fun. I have had lots of it in my time. But I have not had to go into paths of sin to find it. No credit to me, but because of an extraordinary parental example and influence I was kept from outward transgressions, though my heart was bad enough and des perately wicked. I have had, fun illimitable, ; though I never swore one oath, and never gambled for so much as the value of apin, and never saw the inside of a haunt of sin save as when ten years ago, with commissioner ot police and a detec tive and two elders of my church, I explored these cities by midnight, not out of curiosity, but that I might in pulpit discourse set before the people the poverty and the horrors of underground city life. Yet though I never. was intoxicated for an in stant, and never committed one act of dissoluteness, restrained only by the grace of God, without which re straint I would have gone headlong to the bottom of infamy, I have had so much fun that I don't believe there is a man on the planet in the present time who has had more. Hear it, men and boys, women and girls, all the fun is on the side of right. Sin may seem attractive, but it is deathful, and like the man chincel, a tree whose dews are pois onous. . The Chippewa, wanting to see God, blackens his face with char j- : THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAIN, UNA WED BY INFLUENCE DURHAM, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, coal and fasts till he has a vision of what he calls God. My God I can see best when I take my hat off and let the sunshine blaze in my face, ahd after a reasonable breakfast. He is not a God of blackness and starva tion, but of light and plentitude, and the glory of the noonday sun is Egyp tian midnight compared to it. There they go two brothers. The one was converted a year ago in church, orie Sunday' morning, during prayer, or sermon, or hymn. No one knew7 it at the time. The persons on either side of him suspected nothing, but in that young man's soul this process wmt.on: "Lord, here I am, a young man amid the temptations of city hie, and I am afraid to risk them alone ; come and be my pardon and my help ; save me from making the mistake that some ot my comrades are making, and save me now." And quicker than a flash God rolled heaven into his soul. . He is just as jolly as he used to be, is just as bril liant as he used to be. He can strike a ball or catch one as easily as before he was converted. With gun or fishing rod in this summer vaca tion he was just as skillful as before. The world is brighter to him than ever. He appreciates pictures, mu sic, innocent hilarity, social life, good jokes, and has plenty of fun, first-class fun, glorious fun. But his brother is going down hill. In the morning his head aches from the champagne debauch. Everybody sees he is in rapid descent. What cares he for right, or decency, or the honor of his family name ? Turned out of employment, depleted in health, cast down in spirits, the ty phoid fever strikes him in the small est room on the fourth story of a fifth rate boarding house, cursing God, and calling for his mother, and fighting back demons from his dy ing pillow, which is besweated and torn to rags. He plunges out of this world with the shriek of a de stroyed spirit. ALAS FOR THAT KIND OF FUN ! It is remorse. It is despair. It is blackness of darkness. It is woe un ending and long reverberating, and crushing as though all the moun tains of all continents rolled on him in jone avalanche. My soul, stand back from such fun. Young man, there is no fun in shipwrecking your character, no fun in disgracing your father's name. There is no fun in breaking your mother's heart. There is no fun in the physical pangs of the' dissolute. There is no fun in the profligate's death-bed. There is no fun: in an undone eternity. Para celsus, out of the ashesof a burnt rose, said he could recreate the rose, but, he failed in the alchemic un dertaking, and roseate life once burned down in sin can never again be made to blossom. Oh, this plumb line of the ever lasting right ! God will throw it over all our lives to show us our moral deflections. God will throw it over all churches to show whether they are doing useful work or are stand ing instances of idleness and pre tense. He will throw that plumb linejover all nations-to demonstrate whether their laws are just or cruel, their rulers good or bad, their ambi tions holy or infamous. He threw thatplumb line over the Spanish monarchy of other 'days, and what became of her ? Ask the splintered hulks of her overthrown armada. He lhrew that plumb line over French imperialism, and what was the r!esult? Ask the ruins of her Tuileries, and the fallen column of the Place Yendome, and the grave trenches of Sedan, and the blood of revolutions of different times rolling throiigh the Champs Elysees. .He threw that plumb line over ancient Rome, and what became of the realm of the Ca'sars ? Ask her war eagles, eaks dulled and wings broken, flung1 helpless into the Tiber. "But," say you, "if there be noth ing but a plumb line what can any of us do, for there is an old proverb, which truthfully declares : ' If the best man's faults were written on his forehead it would make him pull his hat oyer his eyes.' What shall we do when, according to Isaiah, God shall lay judgment to the line and righteousness to the plummet ?" Ah, here is where the Gospel comes in with a Saviour's righteousness to make Hp for our deficits. And while I see hanging on the wall a plumb line, I Isee also hanging there a cross. And while the one condemns us the other saves us, if only we will hold to it. And here and now you may be set free with a more glorious lib erty than Hampden, or Sidney, or a Kosciusko ever fought for. Not out yonder; or down there, or up here, but just where you are you may get it. The invalid proprietress of a wealthy estate in Scotland visited the continent of Europe to get rid of her maladies, and she went to Baden-Baden and tried those wraters, and went to Carlsbad and tried those waters1, and went to Hamburg and tried those waters, and instead of getting better she got worse, and in despair! she said to a physician: "What shall I do ?" His reply was : "Medicine can do nothing for you. You have one chance in the waters of Pit Keathly, Scotland." " Is it possible ?" she replied. "Why, those waters are on my own estate !" She returned, and drank of the fountain, and in a few months completely re covered. Oh, sick and diseased, and sinning,! and dying hearer, why go trudging all the world over, "and seeking here and there relief for your discouraged spirit, when close by, and at your very feet, and at the door of your heart, aye, within the very estate of your own conscious ness, the healing waters of eternal life mayj be had, and had this very hour, this very minute, this very Sabbath ? Blessed be God that over agamst the plumb line that Amos saw is the cross. 71 ALL OVER THE STATE. ITEMS OF NEWS SCISSORED FROM EXCHANGES. Marriages, Deaths, Personal Par agraphs, and All Sorts!, Culled lor the Readers of TheiPlant. i New Berne graded school opened Monday. I i Taylorsville is preparing? for a big jubilee in honor of the completion of trie june bug road. ! Trinity college will in October is Pfof. Arm s,ue a college magazine strong is .editor-in-chief, the students assistants. - I Dr. J. M. Baker, of Tl irjoro, has been appointed Assistant Surgeon General, vice Dr. Hubert, Haywood promoted. , j ; Tidn-City Daffy: Sixty f bales of cotton, together with a box; car, were consumed by fire at Tatjurii's depot on the C. F.& Y. V. railfoad last week. I ; Davidson Dispatch: (apt. Trice says he caught the boss rat of the county last Friday night at the ue- not. It measured 17 inches from tip to tip. I Carthatre Blade: Mai. f . John W. fcjeott, of Greenwood towrisrjip, has a ip, h stim scupnernonc vine that is estimated tthave borne this year onej dundred bushels of grapes. I Ninvx, (( Obserccr : Governor Scales arid family will move from their preseiit residence on Nortlji Wilming ton street, to the Blount mansion on Ilillsboro avenue. ! ! Asheville Citizen : We (asked a friend yesterday "What's tbe news?''' and he replied. "Thingisjis awful quiet" We found them jst). And this in Asheville ! Plant. I I" . ' it ! Raleigh's water works ciajue up to the contract in every particular. The News & Obxercer says theyj proved to be as fine and perfect a system as can be found in the countri'. Reidsville Demon-ot : Iti is said that Maj. Robt. L. Raglandjof Hyco, YjL, will raise 100 bushels bpf tobacco seed this year. Enough to -plant the acreage of the entire globe four times Fayetteville News : The V. S. C. R. R. Co. has about corripleted a freight warehouse in the rear of their otlicejin Fayetteville, whiclpjwill add considerable to the convenience of our merchants. j Neictf & Observer: The cotjton com press has handled nearly 5,000 bales of cotton already this se4son. A count on yesterday showed that eighty -four bales of cotton were com pressed in sixty minutes, j Washington Progress: Thk remains of Mr. Thomas II. Blount, who died in Birmingham, Alabama! arrived in this town on Wednesday night last, and wrere interred in the Epis copal churchyard on Thursday morn ing.: j Kernersville News t Farm : Mr. R. I). Fulton, of this place, had a barn of tobacco which had just beencured,to burn down last Friday, causing a pretty heavy loss. 1 Every lyear we chronicle cases of this kind which shows that additional care? is neces sary. ; Charlotte Chronicle : The cotton compress in this city is doing some of the finest work on record, and is squeezing the cotton at a lif ely rate. Yesterday the press turned out 102 compressed bales per hour,br at the rate of 2,448 bales per ddy, of 24 hours. j Western Sentinel: Mr. Jarpes Line back left Monday morning ith Miss Pattie Vogler, of Salem, for th.e Mor ganton asylum. Miss Vogler's mind has been affected for sorne time, but it was not until a few days past that it was thought advisable toj take her away for treatment. Jj The News & Observer tells bfj a won derful wild creature that! has ap peared in the woods four miles north of Raleigh. It is a wild rriajn or a wild beast of some unknown species. It goes on all fours, has a stuhipy tail, climbs trees, chatters like i ah ape, etc. Probably an old circus monkey. Greensboro Workman : j We are glad to hear through Principal Mor gan that the repairs to the college building, since the storm,j are pro gressing rapidly, and w ilL be. com pleted in two weeks more, and that four new students have been added, making the number on hs.nd fifty four. ; ! Wilmington Messenger : ' The Mes senger is pleased to learn j,h'at an or der for the three drinking fountains decided upon by the mayor! and wa ter works committee of thejboard of aldermen will be given at once to Mr. J. W. Fisk, of New York. They will probably be placed in position by the last of October. j Selma Neics : On last Wednesday evening, as the train which was bring ing back the colored excursionists from Wilmington was passing the Faison or Mount Olive section, show ers of stones were thrown atthe train by some boys and one woman was hurt. These young villains jought to be caught and severely punished. Webster's Weekly: There jis riot a day that passes but that w see lots of little chaps playing around the depot and platform. They pump on the passenger cars to stealj a snort ride and hang on the freights as they are side tracking. The polipe ought to put a quietus on theml Seme boy may ether get killed oriseverely hurt in this manner. j j New Berne Journal : There are: two enterprises which we think will be of great benefit to New Berne and which we think can be secured by united effort, and only by united effort. These are to secure an extension of the A. & N. C. R. R. to - Sahford or Fayetteville, and the otherj is to se cure a through line of railway from this city to Wilmington. " j j Henderson Gold Leaf: Tpere:is a AND UNBRIBEp BY GAIN. 1887 new counterfeit dollar out which is said to be a fine piece of workman ship ami hard toj detect, being made of glass and composition. However, any of our friends who desire to pay their subscription to the Gold Leaf ', need not hesitate on this account. We will take the jrisk of having coun terfeit dollars passed upon us. Charlotte Chronicle: AVork is pro gressing rapidly on the new cotton factory at Fort Mill, and the walls are built up to the top of the first story, and the bricklayers are wait ing for the carpenters to place tim bers before proceeding further. The main building isi two hundred and seventy-two feet long by fifty feet wide, and is quite an imposing struc ture. S.tatesville Landmark-: Mr. Edwin Borden, and Mrs. Octavia Wallace, botjipof Wilmington, were married at t'lie residence bf Dr. L Harrell,on Davie avenue. Rev. Dr. W. A. Wood, pastor of the Presbyterian church, performed the ceremony, and soon thereafter Mr. arid Mrs. Borden left, via Charlotte, for Wilmington. Mr. Borden is train ! dispatcher at that point for the Atlantic Coast Line. Statesville Ldndmarl: : This has been a year of rank growtns. Mr. R. J. Williamson raised on Third creek bottom, in this township, near the mouth of Duck creek, on land which he had rehted from Mr. Hugh Plyler, a crop of born in which there was one stalk which measures even 1G feet in length.) It grew two ears of corn, a large and a small one, and from the ground! to the second ear was a distance ofi 10 feet. Rockingham Rocket: Two negroes, Essie Adams anjl Win. Campbell, ot into a row in Laurinburg last Saturday night, and in the affray Adams drew his pistol and fired at Campbell. The shot missed its mark and lodged in the! body of Burt Wil son, who was standing near. As W ilson fell.Adamjs escaped through the crowd, and has not yet been ap prehended. Wilson died from the wound on Monday morning. News f; Observe?: Three convicts of the squad now lemployed on the Carthage railroad jescaped last week. Mr. Hicks, of this city, is in charge of the squad, and his humanity and kindness to them jwas taken advan tage of by some jungrateful fellows and made a mean of escape. Mr. Hicks had six of them out clearing up the roadway, when one walked up to him and asked for a chew of tobacco. Mr. Hicks put his hand in his pocket to gratify the negro, when the burly fellow seized him while off guard and took away Ins gun and pistols Mr. Hick'b life was in dan ger for a few moments, but three of the six ran off without attempting to do him any injury. The other three went back to the stockade with Mr. Hicks, though 'jhe was unarmed and they could haye easily gotten away. "What is Woman's Worth?" asked a fair damsel of a crusty old bachelor. He did not know, so she said : "W. O. man") (double you, O, man). But a woman feels worth lit tle if disease has infaded her system and is daily sapping her strength. For all female weaknesses, Dr. R. V. Pierce's "Favorite , Prescription" stands unrivaled. It cures the com plaint and builds bp the system. Send 10 cents in stamps for pam phlet to World's Dispensary Medical Association, 6V.'j Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. j-. Lightning Rewards and Punishes Exchange. A Dakota man, while on his way to borrow a neighbor's paper, was struck by lightning and killed. Puck. A man in Missouri, who had just been to town and subscribed and paid for his county paper, found on his return home that the lightning had struck a tree in his yard. The bolt tore up the ground disclosing a rich vein of gold. The Long- and Short of It. rTwin-City Daily. A very little baby was born to Dennis and Betsey Broughton, re spectable colored citizens of Monroe, Ga., the other day. It weighed but two pounds and looked too small to have life in it. But its proud motii er said that there was nothing trie matter with it ; it was "jes' small, dat's all," and she narried it "Martha Ann Mary Magdalene ranees Cleve- land Broughton." A Woman's Discovery. "Another wonderful discovery has been made, and that too by a lady in this county. Disease fastened its clutches npon her, and for seven years she withstood the severest tests, but her vital organs were undermined and death seemed imminent. For three months she coughed incessantly and could not sleep. She bought of usl a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Cjrasurnjtion, and was so much relieved on taking the first dose that she slept all night, and! with one bottle has been miraculously cured. Her name is Mrs. .Luther Lutz." Thus write V. C. Ham rick & Co., of Shelby, N. C. j Get a free trial bottle at K. Blacknall & Son's'drug store. The Verdict Unanimous. W. I). Suit, druggist,' Bippus, Ind., testi fies : "I can recommend Electric Bitters as the very best remedy. Every bottle sold lias given relief in every case. One man took six bottles, and was cured of Kheumatism of ten years' standing." Abraham Hare, druggist, Belleville, Ohio, affirms : " The best selling medicine I have evT handled in my twenty years' experience, is Electric Bitters." Thou sands of others have added their testimony, so that the verdict is unanimous that Electric Bitters do cure all diseases of Ihe Liver, Kid neys or Blood. Onlv a half j dollar a bottle at K. Blacknall & Son's drug store. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for .Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheunij Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guar anteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents ier box. iForsale bv K. Blacknall & Son. $1.50 PER ANNUM. THE GREAT DIFFERENCE. THE TARIFF IX NEW YORK AN I MASSACHUSETTS. The Peel. arations of the Two at States Their - Platforms Side One, by Side Protection for Reduction for the Other. "Whereas, The unnecessary federal taxation of the lasjt fiscal year exceeded $100,000,000 and uunetessary taxation is unjust taxation, therefore the Democracy of New York de mand that federal taxation be straightway re duced by a sum not less than $100,000,000 a year, and also respectfully urge upon Congress that a measure shall be adopted which will, in the language of the President's inaugural address, relieve the people from unnecessa ry taxation, having a due regard to t lie inter ests of capital invested and workingmen em ployed in American industries.' The taxes to be firstj reduced or altogether removed are those on imported raw materials, which now assist audi promote foreign conietition with ourselvesfin our own markets and prevent or hinder thie sale of our surplus products in foreign markets. Along with those taxes should bej forthwith remit ted,or reduced the taxation which increases the cost to our wage earners of the common necessaries of life and the price bf the common daily clothing of all our people. Beside these there are several hundred articles among the 4,182 articles now taxed w-hicli should be swept off t he tax list into thi free list, thereby diminishing the cost of eolkpeting all our seaport taxes and casting awat those which are Jetty, needless and vexati(is. We also urge an immediate enactment If the measures prepared by Mr. Manning aiw Mr. Hewitt and reported to the last Ilofise by the Committee of Ways and Means (.o systematize, simplify and econ omize theliAachinery for the collection of the customs revenue, and especially for making correct appraisements of foreign values wher ever ad valorem rates of duty shall be re tained." j That lis what the Democracy of New lork says. Here lollows m a short sentence the Massachusetts declaration in favor pf protection. This isHhe great dill'erence between the parties at present, or at least this is about the only difference that can be ascertained from their platforms. Massachusetts Republicanism says: "We believe in a protective taring recog nizing the benefits it brings to our country by giving ouri jeople more varied industries, more constant employment and better remu neration, furnishing an incentive for the full development ot our resources - ami securing our markete the best in the world to our own producers." She sitjaply reiterates old fallacies, and subscribes to them. After the platform was adopted the New York Democrats endorsed the administrations of President Cleveland and Gov. Hill in the fol lowing Jariguage : "The Democracy of New York approve the administration of tJ rover Cleveland, Presi dent of the United States. It has won the respect and tonfidence of all citizens without regard to party. It has removed that appre hension of the dangers which would attend chantre of party in the federal administration which had become a serious obstacle to the maintenance; of our system of a free govern ment depending upon the popular will. It has brought back honesty and simplicity to the conduct of affairs. It has checked the waste of public moneys and insisted upon their devotion to constitutional purposes.; It has effected a practical reform of the civil service. It has maintained the national char acter for justice and forbearance in dealing with foreign countries. Its management of the treasury has been signally wise and pru dent and it hjas begun the reconstruction of our naval establishment with a thoroughness that promised the restoration of our ancient prestige upon the sea. Y lierefore we, repre senting the Democracy of New York in con vention assembled, again pledge to the Pres ident our strong and unwavering confidence and support. "New York State now enjoys the benefit of a Democrats- State administration, which has well fulfilled the trust committed to it by the electors in 1885. In eveiv branch of the State government under Democratic con trol the laws-ihave been carried into effect with rigor anil justice, and every right of the people ,h:is j lx?en zealously maintained. Wherefore we heartily indorse the adminis tration of thedlon. David B. Hill, Governor of New iork,iand pledge to him our full confidence and support." Both parties speak of good to the working mari, but if the workingman will think, he will see that the re duction aski'd for by the Democrats will more certainly relieve him than any spurious advantage dilated upon by those who favor protection. Good Times in the East. Fayetteville Observer. It is very ! gratifying to us to be able to announce that the farmers are paying ff their mortgages arid crop liens more promptly and uni versally this year than ever before. The important bearing of this fact bn our future prosperity is almost in calculable. We may talk of manu facturing enterprises and hail them as a means to material prosperity; but there can be no genuine, healthy prosperity in jany section where the agricultural glasses are burdened with debt antl unable to meet their obligations from one year's end to another. i Pierce's "Pleasant Purgative Pel lets." Positively Popular ; Provoke Praise; Prove Priceless ; Peculiarly Prompt; Perceptibly Potent ; Producing Per manent Profit!; Precluding Pimples and Pustules ; Promoting Purity and Peace. Purchase. Price, Petty. Pharmacists Patronizing Pierce Pro cure Plenty, j A quiet life, bften makes itself felt in better ways than one that the world sees and1 applauds ; and some of the noblest are never known till they end, leaving a void in many hearts. There are souls in the world who have the gift ojf finding joy every where and of leaving it behind them when they go.j Their influence is an inevitable gladdening of the heart There is no velvet so soft as a mother's lap, no star go lovely as her smile, no musi4 so melodious as her voice, no rose I so fragrant as the memory of her love. ! Good temper1, like a sunny day, sheds a brightness over everything. It is the sweetener of toil and the soother of disquietude. RATES FOR ADVERTISING: 1 inch, one insertion $ 1 fXK 1 inch, one month 2 50 1 inch, three months, . k"oO 1 inch, six months, J 750 1 inch, one year ".'.".".".:." 10 00 1 column, three months,. 17' 50 i column, six months, .... ; ' 30 00 J column, oneyear... ...... 50 00 i column, three months,.. . .".""" " 2500 4 column, six months, .".". 4500 i column, one year, . . . , " 80 00 1 column, three months 45. 00 1 column, six months 80.00 1 column, one year,. 150 00 1 column, one insertion'.".'.' ". 10 00 2 columns, one insertion, 15.00 Space to suit advertiser charged for in accordance with above rates. PEOPLETAXKED ABOUT? : Senator McPherson says he is tired of politics, and will not seek the nomination for senator. J ohn Washington, one of the most prominent lawyers of Caroline coun ty, lrginia, dropped dead in church on Sunday. TheSwedish nightingale, the peer less Jenny Lind, is thought to be rapidly Hearing the grave. Wil mington Star. - . President Cleveland will be re ceived with enthusiastic greetings in a imparls 01 .triebouth he may visit. Wilmington Star. . Oliver Wendell Holmes says that English people are taller, stouter and healthier than New Englanders. Philadelphia Record. Mr. Kilbride, who attended Mr. OBnen on his Canadian tour, has been elected to the house of com mons without opposition. Samuel L. Avery, nominated Re publican candidate for mayor of Louisville, voted for Cleveland in 1S84, and is classed as a Mugwump. If Gould gets all the telegraph wires in the country Blaine mav be elected for two weeks after the elec tion next year instead of one. Phil adelphia Times. The fact that Mrs. Cleveland does not remove her gloves at dinner, is not nearly so astonishing to Western congressmen as Mr. Cleveland's habit of eating with his coat on. Henry George really does not need a daily Newspaper organ in New York, such as he wishes to establish. The New York Tribune is doing all it can for him. Savannah Neivs. Hon. Wm. R. Morrison, of Illinois, says the President is growing stronger all the time with the people, and will continue to grow stronger until tle next Presidential election day comes around. . . Lord Salisbury's health is said to be very poor. We are not surprised. With the burden of Ireland upon his conscience he has enough to break" him, or any ma.11, completely down. Wilmington Star. Gov. Richardson, of South Caro lina, says that while in Philadelphia he was greatly annoyed by the ques tion: "What did the Governor of North Carolina say to you just now?" '( ilad'Vph ia Record. Ex-Governor Carroll, of Maryland, says his Shite will send a solid Cleve land delegation to the next Demo cratic National convention, and that Mr. Cleveland will then receive an almost unanimous nomination. Lord Randolph Churchill is being boycotted by some of the tory or ganizations, and he gets but little sympathy from ; the tory leaders, a number of whom have refused to speak from the same platform with him. Jarvis will be the man to nomi nate for Governor, an4 the Times be lieves that his election would be by a much larger majority than before. The whole State would rally to such a noble Governor as Jarvis made. Give us Jarvis. Reidsville Times. Ex-Congressman Wm. K. Morri son, of the interstate commerce com mission, who is spending his vaca tion at his old home in Illinois, is said to be utilizing his spare mo ments in laying his pipes for his re nomination to Congress. Wilming ton Review. Secretary Whitney has not al lowed the grass to grow under his feet.- He is a master workman in his department, and is rapidly mak ing a record. He has in less than three years of service taken three strides toward the American navy of the future. Neio York Herald. Atlanta, with President Cleveland as a feature of her Exposition, and Macon, with Jefferson Davis as an attraction at her State fair, are bound to have a close race to see which is the cake-taking city in Georgia. We are betting on Macon's exhibit as a crowd-gatherer. Philadelphia Press, Rej. The plain, simple truth is that Mr.-Samuel J. Randall holds pre cisely the same relations towards the Democratic party that any other Re publican Congressman would hold who should call himself a Democrat, and rest his Democracy on that point alone. Charleston News and Courier, Dem. Mr. Chauncey Depew says with commendable pride that the title of American is equal to a patent of nobility abroad. This is a very pleas ant remark with which to greet his friends on arriving home. He also declared that Mr. Blaine is not work ing for the Presidential nomination at least so it seemed to him. General P. M. B. Young is to su perintend the arrangements for the great sham battle 1 at the Kenesaw Mountain, and he guarantees that no one shall get hurt. The blank car tridges will be duly inspected before they are served out, and in no case will the opposing combatants ap proach nearer than forty yards to each other. T' General Lec went to the theater in Philadelphia, and as soon as the au ditors obtained sight of him they shouted for a speech, nor would they rest until he came forward and made a few remarks. The applause-which followed was tremendous. The man ager says he never before saw bo much attention given to a stranger in a theater. Charles Dickens, Jr., who is to lee- tureln this country, is about as much . unlike what the public would ex pect in a son ot Boz, as a parlor match is unlike aacomet. His round face and rather feeble cast of features are scarcely redeemed by a large pair of spectacles, and in his deliv ery he has neither physical nor dra matic power. News & Observer.