Home and Fireside. More Than A Dream. live up to the highest that's la you, lie true to the voice iu your soul. I*et love and your better self win you. And follow them on to the goal. Afar in the path of Endeavor The temples of Happiness (fleam. They stand as a promise forever That heaven is more than a dream. We fall iu the moments of weakness. Borne dowu by the passion lor sin. Acknowledge the error with meekness Aud strengthen the guard from within. The lusts of the brute we iuherlt Must cower and shrink from the light That Hows from the throne of the spirit And shows us the path to the right. 1 know not what creeds we should cherish. Or if tht y may all be astray. I only know nothing can perish. That nothing is taken away. 3 know not, when earth-chords shall sever. How much or how little survives; I know not if spirits forever Move on through a cycle of lives. 1 know not the kingdom immortal; Yet feel in my innermost soul That Death's not a wall but a portal. Through which lies an infinite goal. I know not the glory supernal. Nor paths that the angels have trod: Yet something within is eternal And grows in the sunlight of God. 1 know not the realm where my spirit Sojourned ere I came into birth; Yet know in ray heart I inherit A memory not of the earth; And by some interior vision, Beyond the dark river, I see The hills of a country elyaian I'll tread in the" aeons to be. 1 know with the wisdom of Sorrow, The lessons I've gleaned by the way; The fruits that we gather to-morrow Are grown from the seeds of to-day. (life's page we have blotted and checkered No power on earth can restore. We write an indelible record. To blight or to bless evermore. With voices seraphic and tender Our loved ones are calling afar. With light that is golden in splendor Truth shines like a mystical star. The veil of the Silence is riven. The banner of Hope is unfurled; And Love, through the portals of heaven. Illumines the night of the world. ?Denver News, j l he Good of Bern? Good. In one of his early stories. Wil liam Black represents a sour temnered Scotchman protesting against the idea that a sinner he has in mind should be allowed to escape the consequences of his acts. "What's the good of being good?" he asks, "if things are to turn out thatwav?" The Scotch man's question has often been put. The Satan of the Book of ?Job implies it when he asks, "Doth Job serve God for naught?" Jacob, at the outset of his spiritual life, suggests it in the terms of his covenant at Bethel. He bargains that, if God will take care of him, he will do certain specified things in return. The elder son in the parable looks in the same direction when he contrasts the kid he never got in payment for his virtues with thg tatted calf bestowed upon his re pentant brother. There is no doubt that this con ception of the relation of obedi ence to reward has its uses in the earlier stages of the spiritual life, whether of men or of races. The child may be brought to take its medicine or its exercise by the j offer of some privilege or gift, before it is wise enough to appre-1 ciate that tht happiness of health is the true icward. So in the spiritual life our first instinct is J to look for some outside reward 1 beyond the life itself, as its end 51IM1 CUIlHUIIlIIltH-lVil. To this need, indeed, the Bible adapts itself very wisely. Its pic tures of the life beyond death, for instance, with crowns of glory and golden harps, and other de tails of the apocalyptic vision, appeal to the untrained percep tion of the beginner. But tne Bible itself, as we come to read it in the light of a deeper experi ence, suggests grander meaning for these symbols, which are seen to correspond to spiritual bless ings of vastly greater worth and: and beauty. In MacBonald's happy phrase, (iod seems at times ^ to offer us a sixpence, and we find it a shilling instead. But it is because sixpence attracted us the more. The reward which seemed to lie outside the lifedrewusmore than that embraced within its bounds. Jeremy Taylor reproduces from some Oriental mystic the story of the King who, when riding out to the chase, met a woman bearing a torch and a pitcher of water. He asked her what she was going to do with them "To burn up heaven and quench hell," she said, "that men henceforth may hate sin and love God for himself alone." There are people whose notions of heaven and of hell leave work for both her torch and her pitcher. As long as either is conceived of as something from without the life,?we are llngeringstill among primary and inadequate ideas of the truth. The-truest conception of hell is j 1 that it is life prolonged in a con dition of unmitigated selfishness, with each human atom flung into ceaseless and unmitigated strife with all the rest, and each en during the essential misery of the ceaseless fall in the black pit of atheistic despair. What the en vironment of such a life may be matters little. Were it transact ed among all the beauties and delights with which poets and painters have invested Paradise, its misery would be the same. The misery is within one, not i without. Some one once, bishop Whipple says, tried to pose a poor colored woman by asking lier where they would get all the brimstone needed to keep up hell fire forever. She replied: "Dose sinners all takes dere own brim i stone wid um." As for the life of the redeemed, the Apostle John takes us as far, in a few words of his great Kpis tle, as in all the visions of the Revelation: '"He that hath the Son hath the life." There can be nothing greater than to live in fellowship with God the Father and his Son Jesus Christ,?to be found with the only begotten Son in the bosom of the Father. To live that life is to have attained to the highest blessedness. This true, spiritual heaven is not a thing beyond death onlv. "He that hath the Son hath life." He is not waiting for eternal life to be reached after liedies. Hedoes not, in the Stoic phrase which has slipped into ourChristian speech, expect to "goto heaven." It is not a Muslim paradise, to be earned by specific acts which sus tain only a conventional or arbi trary relation to its own nature. It is the fruition of a life begun here,?the victory of a warfare going on now. For this life and for the next, therefore, the good of being good is just in being good. It is the good of spiritual health, in which every function of our spiritual nature has the tone of true vital ity and energy. It is the joy of the widest usefulness, in which the energy of every function is directed to serving God in serving our fellows' need. It is the life of serene communion with the Father of our spirits, in which we attain that rest for which we were created, but can find nowhere ex cept in the embrace of Him who made us. "Thou art the source and center of all minds. Their only point of rest. Eternal Word ! From thee departing:, thev are lost, and rove I At random without honor, hope, or peace. From thee is all that soothes the life of man, j His high endeavor, and his glad success. His strength to suffer, and his will to serve, j But, O thou bounteous Giver of all good. Thou art of all thy gifts thyself the crown, j Give what thou canst, without thee we are j poor, And with thee rich, take what thou wilt away." -8. 8. Times. And Jobn Had To. "John," she said, as she toyed with one of his coat buttons, "this is leap year, is it not?" "Yes, Mamie," he answered, as he looked fondly down on her golden head that was pillowed i on his manly bosom. "This is the year when the pro | posing is done by the young ladies?" "Yes." "I hope you don't expect me to propose to you ?" GyVllv Vi omi/? /Ino * T rtrnmw 1 " 11?T ? unii , 1 ucvci gaye the matter a thought, I?er' ?to?to tell the truth, I've onlv j known you for?that is to say?v ! "I'm glad you didn't expect ine to propose. I'm not that kind, I hope. No, John, dearest, 1 couldn't be so immodest. I'm going to let you do the proposing yourself, in the old-fashioned way. The old-fashioned way is good enough for me." And the! gentle maiden gave her lover a beaming smile, and the young man rejoiced that he had found j such a treasure of modesty.? Ixmdon Tit-Bits. Ideal Enough tor Earth. Miss Bridesoon?"Whatis your idea of the ideal lover?" Miss Yellowleaf?"The one who marries."?Smart Set. The Boil. This is a Boil. It is on thej Man's Neck. M ould you like to Feel it? If you I)o, the Man will Feel it, too. The Boil is a mean Thing, and it is a Coward. If you strike it, it will Run. But the Man will not Run. He will Danoe and make Remarks. Boils may start Way down near a lit tle Boy's waistband but they alwayscome to a Head at last.? Eugene Field. - f If troubled by a weak digestion, lodB of appetite, or constipation, try a few doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets, j Every box warranted. For sale by Hood Bros. There is Never a Time. They say there's a time for everything. Hut It isn't exactly so - There's a time to shout ami a time to ?iug And a tim?* for the weeds of woe: I There's a time to risk for the stake, a time To conceal your hand aud wait; There's a time to creep and a time to climb. Hut never a time to hate. They say there's a time for everything. Hut they haven't expressed it right; There's a time to imrley, a time to fling Sweet patience away and tight; There's a time to charge ami a time to flee. Aud u time, alas, to grieve. Hut never a time to selfishly Endeavor to deceive. ?S. E. Kiser in Chicago Record Herald. Sell-Help. Atlanta Journal. As t lie commencement season approaches many persons who are supposed to have skill or i ability in writing are receiving from college students, both boys and jiirls requests to prepare sjieeches or essays for them. It is always a pleasure to well-dis posed persons to aid the young and inexperienced, but it is mis taken kindness to do so to the extent that is often asked. The boy or girl who has suffi cient intelligem-e to win a place on the list of commencement speakers or readers should be able and willing to make prepara tion for tilling that place credit ably. As a rule this can be done by earnest and unaided effort and the boy or girl who makes that effort will gain much more from college training than by relying upon others. The lesson of self-reliance is one of the most valuable that can be taught. To put forth one's own efforts, to use one's own knowledge is to strengthen both mind and char acter. The habit of relying upon others for work to be displayed upon special occasions is, we fear, quite general among' our college students. it is impossible for professors to prevent it, except in those cases where the proffered speech | or essay is palpably beyona the capacity of its alleged writer. Many of us have heard at col lege commencements so-called! original productions which we knew were not written by those who delivered them. The teach-! ers of such institutions must j have known it also if they were capable of filling their positions.! Such evident frauds discredit the i school which permits them, as well as the students who perpe- j trate them. There is a sort of assistance in such matters which is perfectly proper, and even commendable. To refer the young writer to au thorities on the subject he or she is to discuss or to some good book that treats of it is all right. But the aid should not go be yond that point and critical cor rection of the student's own work. Give the young mind the mate rial and then let it assimilate it as much of it as it can and put the result in its own way. It is not the part of true friend ship to prepare the work which the student should do for himself and leave him or her to merely memorize it. The son of a man of great ability once wrote his father to prepare for him the speech he was to make at commencement. The father replied: "My boy, I sent] you to college and have kept you j there four years that you might fit yourself to do that sort of thing for yourself. If you have not done so your college career has been a failure in spite of the honors you have taken. I would lie ashamed of you if I heard you deliver as your own a speech which another had written." That was a seemingly harsh answer, but it was really a kind one. The young man struck out for himself and wrote and delivered a speech which won for him very liign praise. Better still he learned a lesson that has been of incal culable value to him. I jet us encourage our young friends to practice the noble and elevating habit of self-help. To Cure a Cold in one Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. drove's signature on each box. 25c. The Blfger Boy's Side of it. "Don't you know," said the kind-taced old gentleman who stops to talk to the children, " that it is very wrong for you to fight u boy smaller than your self?" " Yes," was the reflective reply. "I'm willing to take my share of the blame. Rut I think he ought to have a lecture, too, on the impudence of speakftig rudely to boys that are bigger than he is." ?Washington Star. WHAT ALARMED HIM. v7! A story is told of a gentleman who is at present serving in one of the largest European capitals as em bassador extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary from the United States which, fhotr'h it seems hard ly credible us being related of the suave and elegant minister, is vouched for on unquestionable au thority. The present embassador had just graduated from college and was en joying a stay in Paris with some of his chums. One evening after a din ner in which considerable liquid re freshment had been imbibed tho merry company took cab for a the ater. The show was a pantomime. The young men arrived late, and all rushed into a box without stopping to obtain programmes. After they had arranged themselves and all qui eted down it was noticed that the future embassador's eyes opened wider and wider, and lie seemed to , be in great terror. Finally, just before the curtain fell, he rose slowly. All eyes turned on the box, while the young man, in 1 a husky voice, which was audible to every one sitting in the lower part of ' the house, cried: "Take me home! I must be fear fully drunk, for 1 haven't heard a confounded word of this show!"? New York Sun. I 1 Good For the Enemy. "I have been reading about the latest German army innovation," re marked the gentle optimist, "and it certainly seems to me it tills a long i felt want. It is a sleeping bag, just ! large enough for a man to crawl i into, and when he once gets in it is pulled up over his head and tied, the air for breathing purposes being ! supplied by tubes. The advantages of this bag are said to be that it J keeps out bugs and snakes and rain, but it seems to me it has another,! which its advocates have overlooked. ] "Think of the value it would be , : in case of an unexpected night at- j tack ? the value to the enemy, 1 mean. It is so difficult to handle men at large, even when they are surprised, and it is so easy to handle j them in bags. The attacking force would only have to tie extra hard knots in the cords that close the bags and then dump them all into wagons to be carted away, for even the inventor admits that it requires time and patient effort to get out of one of these new army beds. "The distressing confusion that usually follows a night attack would be lacking, and the results could be summed up by the officer in com mand of the sortie as follows: 'Sir, I have the honor to report that we captured 487 bags of men. Where shall we pile them up ?' "?Chicago Post. Peculiar Presents. Two elephants were once offered to King Fdward, and not long ago two fine Bengal tigers arrived at Sandringham. "I have accommoda- 1 tion at Sandringham," He said, "for - horses, cows, dogs, cats, mice and even rats, but I must draw the line J at tigers." The German crown prince received a fine steak from a society of butchers on his eight eenth birthday recently, which re minds us that Bismarck once re ceived a lump of coal from some miners. But the record in gifts be- i longs to a speaker of the house of : j commons (Mr. Brand), who received an old pair of trousers, carriage paid.?St. James Gazette. He Want? the Money. Here is a characteristic letter whieh Andrew Carnegie is said to have received from Mark Twain the other day: Dear Mr. Carnegie?Understanding that you are blessed at present with an unusual surplus of in come and knowing well your generous spirit and desire to do good to those who will help them selves, 1 want to ask you to make me a contribu tion of $1.50. When 1 was a young man, m.v mother gave me a hymnbook, which 1 faithfully used. It la now. thanks to my efforts, worn out, and I think it should be replaced, and you are the man to do this. Appreciating to the full the generous deeds tbst hsve made your name Illus trious in this and other countries and believing that in making me thia donation you Will be carrying on the apirit of your work, 1 am yours faithfully, Mari Twaiw. ; P. 8.?Don't tend the hymnbook; send the one dollar and fifty cents. M. T. "Baby It Sick." The state of Kansas hn8 for long years been nominally a prohibition state, and the law has been en forced perhaps as well as such drastic laws can l>e. Spirits are allowed to be lold only as "medicine," and that is how the following story camo to be told: A bronzed and stalwart Cow boy planted a two gallon demijohn on the counter of a chemist's shop. "Fill her np," he said. "Baby'a gi jjj HARROWS, CUUTIVATORS, J \h And Fertilizer Distributors- ffl PAINTS, OIL, VAR BUGGY AND WAGON HAR W NI8IIES, SASH, DOORS, NESS, COLLARS, BRI W BLINDS, DLES, SADDLES &c? we have. A a# "m Watch This Ad. for a Change. f* $ HALL'S HARDWARE HOUSE. * S^w.U3."halL, ! ; ?Bre?N'K-?- _ J| x FINE MILLINERY 3T The best stock of Millinery and Fancy Goods ever brought to Clayton just received at my store. Ready-to wear and Drese Hats. Newest styles and shapes. Dress Hats 50 cents and up, Laces, Trimmings, Neckwear, Belts, Baby Caps, Veiling, Gloves, Collars, Stamped Linen, Embroideries and every thing in the line of Notions that is usually kept in a millinery store. Standard Designer Patterns for Sale, You are invited to call and examine my stock. Respectfully, MRS, J, A, GRIFFIN, H20?2m CLAYTON, N. C. g SOME 1901 PRICES, i *3 -? Jf4 """ ? Dixie Plows, $1. J 2 Stonewall Plows, $1.75. J * Traces, 40, GO, 75. H Dreast Chains, 30, 50. Jp Haines, 30, 40, 65. mj Collars, 45, 75, $1 and up. ? ? Collar Pads, 25, 30, 40. ; * Bridles, 65, 75, $1. $1.25. * * Plow Lines, \2\, 15, 20. ? Hack Hands, 10, 15, 20, 25. % Grub Hoes, 45, 50, 75. m Cotton Hoes, 30, 40. jg Axes, First-class, 50. 2 Shovels, iT5, 00, #1.10. 5 Spades, 50, #1.10. 5 Forks, 40, 50, 60. M Hakes, 25, 30, 60. ? Sj Stonewall, Dixie, Clipper, Ward, J J L. W. BOSS CASTINGS ^ g AS LOW AS ARE SOLI) ELSEWHERE. ? g White Lead, Oil, Ready Mixed Paints, as low as can be sold. Doors, Windows, &e. I E. J. HOLT & CO. | ?tSSKKKSISSSSSSKKiaiJiKXKKSSS* SPRING GOODS. My line of Spring Goods Is now in and lsthe nicest T. have ever had. My line of staple and fancy Dress Goods cannot be beaten In LAWNS, OR GANDIES, DUCKS, PIQUES, PERCALES AND DIMITIES, I have as pretty colors as can be had, In heavy and staple Diy Goods. I have the goods and the prices that will suit you. Latest Styles and Loudest Prices on Ladles' and Gents' Belts and Neckwear. I also have latest style in a STRAIGHT FRONT CORSET. FANCY SHIRTS. Be sure and see my line of fancy shirts before you buy. I can give you a good Negligee, Madras, Silk Front, Percale or Pique Shirt from 50c to $1 25, SHOES! SHOES! My line of Shoes Is as good as you can get anywhere. I challenge any man en quality or prices, for my spring and summer trade. I have a nice line of Lsdies', Misses' and Children's Oxfords, both black and tan. A good line of Gent's Oxfords from $1.25 to $2.50, A complete line of HATS, CAPS, AND GENTS' FURNISHINGS always on hand. Be sure to see my stock before buying. PRESTON WOODALL, Apl7-tf. BENSON, N, C. * G. K. MASSENGILL, * / 5 ? DUNN N.C.] Dealer in [DUNN. N. C. ? * * J; Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing, * F3 ? SHOES, HATS. CAPS. ? J| QENTS' FURNISHINGS. * Heavy and Fancy Groceries J | AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE 1 * g Look out for our ad next week. Prices always ripht. J M TWO STORES. ffl 3 and 5 East Broad St. DUNN, N. C 3