1 77 77 mm $2.00 PER ANNUM. V THE ORGAN OF THE NORTH CAROLINA CONFERENCE OF THE M. E, CHURCH, SOUTH- ; 3 REV. F. L. REID, Editor ESTABLISHED 1855. RALEIGH, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 7, 189!. VOL. XXXVI., NO. 1. V-C : -w i z . POETRY. Over ami over sixain, No matter which way 1 turn. I always fml in tin- hook ( f Hie Some loson I liae t loani. I must take my turn at the mill, I must griiid out 1 1 i gohh'n grain, I must work at my tak with a roolute will Over and over again. We cannot measuie the need Of even the thrift How er, Nor cheek the How of the golden sands That run tlnough a single hour; But the morning d w s must fall, And the sun and the summer rain Must do their part, and perform it all Over and ov. r again. Over and over aga'n The brook through the meadow llows, And over and over again The ponderous mill-wheel goes. Once doing will not suffice, Though doing be n t in vain ; And a bU-ssing failing us once or twice May come f we try again. The path that has once been trod Is never so rough to the feet, And the lesson we nee have learned Is never so hard to repeat. Though sorrowi ul tears must fall, And the heart to its depths be driven With storm and tempest, we need them all To render us meet for heaven. Joxtphinr Pollard. lOMMUNICATIONS. For the Advocate. Correspondence. Our Virginia, BY REV. JOHN E. EDWARDS, D. D. The beginning of a new year is fruitful of practical suggestions. "We have lived to little purpose if we have learned not something from trie ex perience and observation of a current year. The seasons have come and gone in their turn. God's promise has not failed since the rainbow spanned the retiring skirts of the lust i .dond of the Noahian Floorl : "Seed time and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and wintev, and day and night," in the steady march of time, have come and gone. We have had harvests, more or less abundant. We have had food to eat and raiment to put on. A measure of health has been meted out to us. If bodily afflictions have befallen us they have been tempered with God's loving kindness. If reverses of temporal fortune have overtaken us, they have been light in comparison with what they might have been. If death has robbed us of some of the cherished objects of our affection, we have occasion to thank God that we have noi 033a bereft of all that we love. D.trk days may have come, but sunshine has shimmered through the clouds. We may look back upon our misfortunes, "through the prism of a tear." The Bow of Hope bends in beauty on the cloud as it drifts away. "Hope thou in God, for I shall yet praise him, who is the health of my countenance." "Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life." The experience of the past has in it the pledge and the prophecy of God's tender mercy and loving kindness to the end of life's pilgrimage. " 'Tis grace has brought me safe thus far, And grace will lead me home." Longfellow's Psalm of Life has its suggestions, bat, better still, Joseph Addison's inimitably beauti ful hymn, beginning; "When all thy mercies O, my God, My rising soul surveys" Let us take hope and courage from the past, and 'girding up the loins of our mind,' let us start out on the new year, invigorated and strengthened by the lessons gather ed from the past. God's immutabil ity and fidelity fully warrant us in trusting in him for the future. But, superadded, we have his fatherly kindness to inspire us with hope and confidence. "Like as a father pit ieth his children, so the Lord pit ieth them that fear him;" and, as if this were not enough, we have the addendum; "for he knoweth our frame, he remembereth that we are dust." He therefore does not ex pect impossibilities of us. Take heart, halting, hesitating, timid and distrustful Christian. God knows your infirmities, and constitutional weaknesses. He is not a hard mast er, "gathering where he has not strewed." If he has given you but one talent he does not expect the im provement of ttro at your hands. Then, for your further encourage ment, as you look hesitatingly to the untried future, think of G ds preci ous promises: "I will strengthen thee," to bear burdens and to en dure hardness; and as if that were not enough, he adds; "yea, I will help thee," and even more than that; "I will uphold thee." The Bi ble contains a treasure of promises, from which we may, at every turn of life, under every trial of life, even to the end of life, confidently believe that the "goodness and mercy" that have hitherto attended us will attend us to our journey's end. We should not be discouraged because of our weaknesses and in firmities. Elijah was a man of like passions as ourselves. Even after God had answered him by fire, and sent rain in answer to his prayers, he became weak and timid, and lied for his life at the threat of Jezebel to murder him outright. How could he doubt the protection of that God who hid given him such signal vic tory at Carmel ? And yet he ran in hot haste from Jezreal to Beersheba to escape the vengeance of the ex asperated queen; an I then he went a day's journey into the wilderness and lay down under a juniper tree, and, in sheer exhaustion wished to die. God knows our frame; he re membereth we are dust. Cheer up, cheer up, doubting and distrustful saint. Your fervent, earnest, and oft repeated prayers will prove "ef fectual," notwithstanding your weaknesses and infirmities. In the forecast of life, as we now look ahead at the beginning of a new year, we see the trials, burd ens, and anticipated conflicts and duties of life grouped together, and forget, for the nonce, that . hey are to be distributed through three hun dred and sixty-five days. Let us learn to live a uay a,t a time. 1 uis . . 1 a a m 1 IS tilc.SoCret Oi 'LaUoaug Hie S UUtles comparatively easy. Take no anxi ous and distressing thought for to morrow. "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." Don't climb the mountains that lie before you till you get to them. There, take them in detail, as they come one at a time. We suffer more in the an ticipation of life's trials than in their realization. "You know not what shall be on to morrow;" why then worry yourself with that which may never come? A day at a time. This is the God-given secret of a happy Christian life. The foregoing homily has been suggested by the beginning of a new year. It may prove profitable to some one. "It is better farther on." If, in no other respect, certainly in this, that each successive day car ries us nearer the end of our jour ney. "While in this body pent, Absent from heaven I roam ; Yet nightly pitch iny moving tent A day's march nearer home." Our preachers in the Virginia Conference are getting settled down to their work. Happily, most of them got to their homes before the severity of the winter set in. We have had a super-abundance of snow in the Piedmont region of Vir ginia. Along the line of the Blue Ridge the snow lay to the depth of thirty-five inches, and in sections, even to a greater aeptn. A more recent fall of snow, over a wide ex tent of country, covered the ground from eight to twelve to fifteen inch es in depth. The Sunday-school festivals, during the Christmas holi days, were greatly abridged in en loyment by tne cola ana snowy weather. We sympathized with the little ones. Just now there seems to be a check to the "booms" in real estate. Speculators are hope ful for the future. We shall see. "All men have not faith." But, in any event, "we shall see what we shall see." There are enough of lots "staked off" in the cities on paper,in Virginia, to furnish a free hold for nearly every family in the State. Happily the "booms," how ever they may terminate, have brought a large amount of Northern and foreign capital into the "Old Dominion." Beuna Vista, and per haps other cities, so called, is an as sured success. Lynchburg Va. iii Fur the Advocate. Our Icaf Mutes. r.Y REV. Z A DOCK PA IMS. I know that we have older and abler men than myself to suggest methods that would facilitate and hasten the complete Christianizatiou of the world; but, having for year closely observed our almost utter lect of the Deaf Mutes of ou; land, aad having seen nothing writ ten concerning their salvation, I am constrained to call attention ti this deplorable fact. Men and women write about ForeignMissions;and depict in vivid language the moral degradation oi the Pagan world, and the millions of poor wretches that sink annually into a Christless grave. This is', right, and every line that falls from their pen, demands the profoundest consideration of every man or wo man through whose breast the milk of human kindness flows, and into whose heart the love of God has been shed. Men and women wiite also about Domestic Missions; and paint in glowing colors the poverty and ig norance of our people, in certain sections of our country, who are al most secluded from the Irietimof the gospel and civilization; and urge the necessity and duty of sending ' them the gospel. This is right, and j should arrest the serious attention j of every Christian. And I thank j God that our people are doing more j for-Domestic and Foreign Missi ns j than ever before. j But all this does not exonerate us J from preaching the Gospel to the j unfortunate Deaf Mutes. ! I do not know how many we have i within the bounds of the W. 1ST. j Conference. We have 10 or 12 on the Lilesville circuit. There are 133 j charges in the Conference. Say they ! average 4 to each charge, and doubt- y less they will, we have over the Conference. 1 . - tx great uany 01 tneso educated, and prepared for the some of secular business of life; them, but verv few bek church, and none that I know ever attend Sunday-school. Judging from their attendance cn public worship ocx my charge, I suppose about one tenth attend church on the t abbath day; and they being unable to hear, derive no benefit. Just think of it! Over 500 souls right among us every day, totally neglected, so far as the pulpit is con cerned. Now, that these persons are enti tled to the Gospel, is evident from God's word: "Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every crea ture." According to this passage, we are under just as much obligation to preach the Gospel to them as any one else. Hence the question is: How can we do this most effectually ? Certainly not through their pa rents. For some have no parents; some have wicked parents; and oth ers have very ignorant parents; and not only so, but to say that parental instruction is sufficient for them, is to say that it is sufficient for all. Consequently, we would do away with preaching, and Suaday school instruction altogether. It cannot be done through our regular circuit and station preachers, because they are not acquainted with the Deaf Mutes' language, neither is the Deaf Mute familiar with their langu age. They just as well be preach ing to Chinamen as Deaf Mutes, for neither would understand them. Hence, the only way to reach them, is the way we reach all others of a different language. For, while their language is the same as ours, their expression of it is entirely different. When we want to send the Gospel to China, we educate a man in the Chinese language, and so, when we want to send the Gospel to a Deaf Mute, we must educate a preacher in the Deaf Mutes' language, or his expression of ours. Numbers of these Deaf Mutes are worth property, and would be per fectly willing to help support a preacher who could preach in their own language. A great many of them have parents who would gladly help support a preacher to preach to their children. And so, I think that all we need is some one to look after this matter; have a suitable person appointed to this work; and if he cannot get his 50m r support from the Deaf Mutes, then support him as a Missionary out of the Domestic Mission Fund. If this were done, we should not find then, as we do now, whole families of these I unfortunate children of Adam, out ! of the church; out of the Sunday ! school; and almost ignorant o: God. ! Then when we shall have taken the ! world for Christ, and all nations ' shuil acknowledge Jesus Christ to j be Lord to the glory of God the j Father, there will be no Deaf Mutes I in our own country, in our own i homes, and around our own fire j sides, as there are now, to rise up I and say : We have not even so much ! as been taught whether there be any (jurist.- Ana wnen we stand before the awful bar of God to give an account of our stewardship here below, the lost spirits of these per- sons will not rise up to condemn us, and send us to hell; but having had their tongues loo sed, their ears un stopped, and their robes made white in the blood of the Lamb, shall to gether with us, phalanx after phal anx, sweep through the gates into the city of God, to hear and sing the song of the Redeemed forever. For the Advocate. - - - - - - - - - f- ' ' - --"--)- I !l - i 111 !ii ll:il(r liters, AND THE POOR WHITE GIRLS OF N. C. On the morning of Jan. 13th, 188G, a little company of ten women met at the residence of Mrs. Frank Bot tome, of New York City, and de termined to organize themselves in to a sisterhood of service, hoping by this closer union to increase their usefulness many fold. The new order named itself The King's Daughters, (Psa. 45) and cno.se for their badge a ribbon of the royal color worn with, or without the Maltese Cross; for their motto: Lo k up, not down, Look forward, not backward, Look rut ;nd not in, L-.H'd a baud ; ma lot- tneir walcnwtau, La iiis Name." The King's Daughters are re sponsible only to the King for their choice of a field of labor, hence in all details relating to work, there is largest liberty, the object being to unite women willing, or eager to do the Master's work in a way to se cure to each, the sympathy and co operation of all, and to induce all to widen the circle of helpfulness by drawing into it constantly more and more hands to work for humanity, and more and more hearts to love the King. Such in brief, is the origin and object of the Order known as The King's Daughters, gathered from Leaflet No. 1. It has grown so rapidly as now to girdle the globe. It is so elastic that Christians of all denominations may band together under its colors and do any work in His name, for humanity in general, or in particular. The smallest ser vice, a cup of cold water, or the largest giving yourself and your all to help the Redeemer, is equally as acceptable. This is the sesame: In His Name, that has opened the hearts of the daughters of all our people to the influences of the Holy Spirit, and united them in this order of consecrated service. The first Circle formed in North Carolina was The West End Circle of Greensboro, and that historic town has now six Circles. Wilming ton, Fayetteville, Raleigh, Chapel Hill, Hillsboro, Graham, Greenville, Salisbury, Concord and Murphy have each, one or more Circles. Therd may be other towns in which Circles exist that have not reported. Last May these Circles met by delegation, in Greensboro, formed a state organization ana electea a State Secretary. Among the vari ous subjects of interest and work that came up for consideration, the helpless condition of the poor white girls of the State elicited much svmoathv. An earnest and able talk in their behalf, was made by Mrs. M. M. Hobbs, of Guilford Col lege, whose position as wife of the Pres. of that School had made her familiar with the needs of this class of ffirls. Following tnis was a motion that a Committee be appoint- ted to draft and present to the next Legislature of North Carolina, a petition asking for an appropriation of 20,000 for the establishment of an Industrial School for their speci- al and exclusive use. This motion was carried unanimously, and the Committee appointed by the State Secretary, Mrs. Ilobbs chairman. The petition will soon be in circula tion, j We appeal to the law-makers of North Carblina to help her daugh ters; we jippeai to the electors of these lav1 -makers to give their names and influence to this object; we appeal jto the wives, mothers and sisters whp sit in comfortable homes guarded bjy strong irms, and shelter ed by loving heatts, to lend their sympathy! and 4id to an effort which seeks to enable less fortunate women wj'ho are compelled to be "bread-winners," to equip them selves to earn honest and honorable livelihoods. ; For ev'ry class North Carolina has provided by legislation, except her daughters. TiielTniversity is for her sons-'-likewise the Agricultural and Mechanical School, but unless her daughters be blind, or deaf and dumb, or criminals, she says: "I take no interest in you; live as you can; be good or bad, high or low; learned or ignorant; I care not." And thisj is The Old North State. We seek no office at the hands of politicians, we ask no seat in your Legislative Halls; we desire not ac cess to the ballot box; but we beg for the yomen of North Carolina the privilege and the opportunity of learning! those trades and occupa tions by which they may support themselves decently and comfor tably. ; In bejhalf of The King's Daugh ters of ijs orth Carolina, and In His Name, Vhom we serve. Mary E. Carter, State Sec. For the Advocate. 1 From Franklin to Salisbury. Dr. Keid: Ai Franklin for two i years av'e were sandwiched between LUC iilOiitiUiiUo. . J t- a o mils closed jabout us their solemnity melted j into friendliness, their awe dissolved into a sense of nearness. We grtlw familiar, became friends, then fo)lowedthe delightful sense of being confidential. 1 Of old re had written The wiud, the wave, the sunset glow Be the flole lis:'ner of thy woe, but ouir new companions silently drew fiom us, alike, the ills, the joys, repressed the bad, encouraged the g kd and, like nature's great workshop wasted nothing, but trans muted! modified, made over all we gave only to fling it lavishly upon us in a thousand helpful lessons of pa tiences We blinibed thei r heights, drank the vij;w of the great hills still be yond and above, whose distant peaks shaded from clear yellow light into soft volet shadows at their feet, be low us the hills appeared as unde- finable erne raid-green islands moved in spalce, while in and out the breath of a siaower ble w in caressing fond ness. ! It all brought to the mind a succession of waves, one above the otheri giving exquisite glimpses of slanti!ng sunbeams hidden in their rocks' as if the blue and scarlet and purple of the hangings of the taber nacle; ha 1 cast their shadows there. Likie Peter of old we said : "Lord, it is good for us to be here." We dwelt in the tabernacle al ready made, and were hedged about by a happy, contented people, whose love and kindness packed our hearts with dear rememberances of, and abiding love for them. But we have come down to dwell in the broad sunny valleys whose faces! beam with all the comfort which comes from the "joy and suc cess of eventful living." These Salisbury Methodist's have welcomed us with the ring of the gold. Can any one enjoy and ap preciate more fully a genuine home welcome than an itinerant aEdhis family? God stores up these sweet welcomes for his servants. Are they not the compensations for our hurried, tearful leave-taking of those of whom we have grown fond? They shoot up under our feet like daises, their perfume has in it strength. The parsonage is ablaze with com fort. We are at anchor for the year. Not idly anchored we pray. The ship in dock may rust itself away, the fine polish of the tempered steel, from unuse,may upon itself corrode. The work looms up heavily, its responsibility overshadow us. God will take care of the success, to us belong endeavor and struggle. But we have love and faith, they send their rays of light athwart our ways. In the splendor of life's noonday, they can shine above the brightness of the sun. Mrs. W. II. Leitii. Salisbury, jV". C. For the Advocate. The Best "Monument" to Per petuate the Memory of Kf-v. J. T. Harris. Y REV. W. P. WILLIAMS. Dear Bro. Reid: The relatives of the late Rev. J. T. Harris will doubt less erect a Marble Monument to his memory, but I think he is entitled to a "Monument" more durable than marble, and believe that he has enough friends in N. C. to rect' at Trinity College, a "j. T. HARRIS SCHOLARSHIP," which will be a living, intellectual, spiritual and perpetual "Monu ment," that will continue to 'thrive,' when all cold marble shafts are "blended in common dust!" A "J. T. Harris Scholarship" in Trinity College, wmld perpetuate itself, not only through time, but eternity also. This grand idea was suggested by Bro. Tuttle several months ago, in memory of Bro. Stanley, but too late; as the "Mar ble shaft" had been provided for. I am not a member of either Conference, but am one of the many friends of Bro. Harris and of Trinity College, and would like to hear from others. Davidson. College, X. C, Dec. '90. The above suggestion stands of itself. A sum of $1,000 would bring interest enough to rrake an annual scholarship of from 00 to 100. Why could n )t a few friends under take this and thereby encourage young men to higher attainments in Christian learning? Nothing could more fittingly express the aspira tions and doings of our late brother than this scholarship: in the pro motion of knowledge he was a leader; it was his custom to keep some one worthy student at College each year. Such a scholarship would go a great way toward perpet uating his example by helping afc College the student who should from year to year become the bene ficiary of this fund. Year by year the world would continue to get the benefit of this noble example of Brother Harris. The catalogue of the College would contain notice each year of this scholarship with the name of the beneficiaries. The brethren of Durham District, which was the last served by Bro ther Harris, could do nothing nobier than to establish a scholarship of any amount in honor of their heroic leader and guide. If S1V000 could not be raised, perhaps &500 could, or even less. The College will wel come any amount and will open sub scriptions for that; purpose from any one, to the "Rev. J. T. Harris Scholarship." Joun F. Crowell. Do Your Best. "When I was a little boy," said a gentleman one day to a friend with whom he was talking, "I paid a visit to my grandfather. He was an aged man, and wore a black vel vet cap, and knee-breeches with large silver buckles at the knees. When I went to say good-by to him he took me between his knees, kind ly, and then laying his hand on my head, he said : 'My dear boy, I have only one thing to say to you; will you try to remember it?' I looked him in the face and said, 'I will, grandpa.' 'Well,' said he, 'it is this: Whatever you have to do, always do the best you can? This was my grandfather's legacy to me. It was worth more than thousands of gold and silver. I never forgot his words, and have always tried to act upon them." Exchange. Our duty to God is measured by our ability.