THE EDUCATOR. Published every Saturday, in the Mo* lutyrc Building, Person Street, FAYETTEVILLE, N, C. KATES OK SUBSCRIPTION : One Year, in advance, .... $2,001 Six Months, in advance, .... 1,00 rhree Months, in advance* - - 60 POETRY Wo were UoysTogether BY GEORGE P. MORRIS. we were boys together, And never can forget The school-house on the heather, In childhood where we met— The humble home, to memory dear; Its sorrows and its joys; Where woke the transient smile or tear, When you and I were boys. We were youths together, And castles built in air; Your heart was like a leather, And mine weighed down with eare. To you came wealth with manhood's prime, To me it brought alloys Foreshadow'd in tlie primrose time; When you and ! were boys. Wc'rc oul men together; Tire friends we loved of yore, With leaves of autumn weather, Are gone forever more. How blest to age the impulse given— The hope time ne’er destroys— Whieli led our thoughts from earth to heaven, When you and 1 were boys! THE SABBATH SCHOOL. Miirkn of a Good Hunduy ISeliool Scholar, 1. Promptness. He, or she, is at school ami in his seat on time, lie does not hang round the door, or lag behind, or creep in after the exercis es have begun. Punctuality is hit motto, and he sticks to it. 2. Regularity. He is never absent unless for the best of reasons. 3. Readiness to take part in the ex ercises of the school. In singing, h» sings, and sings heartily. In reading, he finds his place and reads distinct ly. He is not afraid to have In voice heard. 4. Perfect lessons. His recitation.- show tout lie lias studied, that lie un derstands, am! that he wants to lean more about them. fl. An attentive ear. 6. A lender conscience. 7. A willing In-art. 8. Remembering lus contribution money. If the school have a weekly penny collection, as 1 hope it has, tu bas. bis money on i and, and never forgets to bring it. 9. He is devout in prayer, and tries to make the words of the su perintendent in prayer his own words 10. When the school closes, he leaves Ills eiass and tfie school in an orderly manner; not pushing, gigling elbowing, or rushing, as gome schol ars do. He remembers that it is the i-ord's day and the Lord’s house, and behaves accordingly. 11. He cherishes a grateful and af fectionate remembrance of his teach cr and superintendent, and often thinks how kind it is in them to care for and take so much pains for his good. 12. He thanks God for his birth in a Christian land, knowing how many children in pagan lands have none of the opportunities which be has of knowing and loving and serving the Lord. Have you these marks, my child ? Examine yourself and see. — H. C. K. Two Somebodies.— l know some body who always appears to be mis erable; and this is the way she con trives to be so— think always about herself; constantly wishing for that she hug not got; idling away her time; fretting and grumbling. I know somebody who is much happier; and this is the way she con trives to be so—thinking of otbeis; satisfied with what her Heavenly Father has judged best for her; work, iug; caring for somebody else be sides herself; and thinking how she can make others happy. My little “somebody,” which kind of a “somebody” are you? The Educator. YOL.I. FAYETTEVILLE, N. C., DECEMBER 19, 1874. NO. 13. Bleauod to Give. “Fifty cents to do just what you please with I” exclaimed little Allie Flint, her cheeks glowing, and her bright eyes beaming joyfully, “Oh, what shall I get with it? Oh, how splendid! I’ll get me a picture book. Just think! Mother, can’t I go to the store this afternoon, and get some thing with my fifty cents?” “Yes, if you will be a good girl.” “I will, I will! What shall I get?” “I would get something useful,” said her mother. “Well, I try.” So after dinner Allie put on her cloak and hat and started off. As she was walking along, happen ing to look over on the other side of the street, she saw a poor, ragged girl. She did not stop, but kept look ing at the girl as if site was thinking about her, until she turned a corner which hid her from sight. “I guess I know what I will get.” She soon arrived at the store, and inquired how much print she could get for fifty cents. “Five yards,” said the merchant. “Well, I will take five yards of that, said she, pointing to a pretty piece of calico. As soon as she had received the calico and paid for it, she tan back to the little girl on the side walk. “This is for you,” said site, putting the calico into her hands, and run ning away before the little girl had time to thank her. The. next Sunday, what was her joy to see her young friend come in to the Sunday school in her nice new dress. O, young readers, is it not more blessed to give than to receive! Oh, what blessedness there is in giv ng to tl.o poor.— Yount/ PiU/rim. RELIGIOUS INTEL LIGENCE. We respectfully invite any minister d the gospel to communicate to us promptly any items suited lor this department of the Educator. Eve ry minister should subscribe. Ad tress Waddell A Smith. Fayetteville N. C. A Mliort Method with si Muteriolist, The London Spectator tells a good story: A meterialistic lecturer and a city missionary met before an intelli gent audience to discuss the question of responsibility. The lecturer’s main point was the absurdity of the scriptural notion of judgment to come for deeds done in the body, in asmuch as all the matter of the body changes every few years, arid it is unjust to hold the new man, who is formed from the new matter, respon sible for the sms of the old man, who has passed out of existence. Then arose the city missionary, whose wits must have been lively, and said: “Ladies aud gentlemen, it is a matter of great regret to me that I have to engage in a discussion with a man of questionable charac ter—with one, in fact, who is living with a woman to whom he is not married.” Up rose in wrath agaiu the mate rialist. “>Sir, this is shameful, aud I repudiate your insolent attack on my character; I defy you to substantiate your charge. I was married to my wife twenty years ago, and we have lived happily together ever since. This is a mere attempt at evading the force of my argument.” “On the contrary,” replied the city missionary, “I reaffirm my charge. You wcce never married to the per son with whom you are living. Twenty years ago two other people may have gone to Church, bearing your names, but there is not one atom in your bodies remaining of those which were then married. It lollows inevitably that yon are living in concubinage, unless you will admit that you are the same man who was married. l’l-ot. Tynilull In ll Nut shell. Prof. Tyndall’s laborious address to the British Association may be readily summed up in the simple re statement of a very old argument. An egg contains all the material nec essary to lorm a chick. It holds also, for a time at least, the force requisite to construct the animal out of its component elements. The only tiling needed is to set the formative pro cessive in action by the application of another form of force or motion, called heat. But this last must be supplied from without. The sum of Prof. Tyndall’s researches is precise ly analogous. He finds in matter “the promise and potency of every form and quality of life,” just as the naturalist and organic chemist find the organic materials of a chick, and the promise and potency to form one, within the eggshell.—But neither the philosopher nor the experimentalist can go one step beyond the iacts. They are wholly unable to explain the something from without, in whose absence neither an eggful nor a world of life can be called into a palpable existence. This is the point at which philosophy again arrives— the old point at which it has been arriving by various paths ever since the first effort to penetrate an inscru table mystery. The Egyptians sym bolized the difficulty, and their inabil ity to surmount it, by offering the mysterious egg reverently to their gods. They laid the unsolved prob lem of the finite at the • feet of the Infinite Prot. Tyndall and the Brit ish Association might learn wisdom, without humiliation, from the ancient idolators, and emulate their not igno ble submission. —London Globe. A Grecian Leoest. —When Bacchus was a boy he journeyed through Ilellas to go to Xaxia; and as the way was very long, he grew tired and sat down upon a stone to rest. As lie sat there with his eyes 1 upon the ground, he saw a little plant spring up between bis feet, and was so much pleased with it that be detemined to take it with him and plant it in Xaxia. He took it up and carried it away with him; but, as the sun was very hot, he fear ed it might wither before he reached h s destination. He lound a bird’s skeleton, into which ho thrust it, and went on. But in his hand the plant sprouted so fast that it started out of the bones above and below. This gave him fresh fear of its with ering, and lie cast about for a reme dy. He found a lion’s bone, which was thicker tbau the bird’s skeleton, and he stuck the skeleton with the plant in it into the bone of the lion. Ere long however, the plant grew out of the lion’s bone likewise. Then he found the bone of an ass larger still than that of the lion; so be put it into the lion’s containing the birds skeleton and the plant, into the ass’s hone, thus made his way to Naxia.— When about to set the plant, Lo found that the roots had entwined themselves around the bird’s skele ton; and the lion’s bone, aud the ass’s bone, and as he could not take it out without damaging the roots, he planted it as it was, and it came up speedily, and bore to his great joy the most delicious grapes, from which he made the first wine, and gave it to man to drink. But behold a mir acle! When men first drank of it, they first sang like birds; next, alter drinking a little more, they became vigorous and gallant like lion’s; but when they drank more still they be gan to behave like asses. Faith.— lt is said that one day, when Bonaparte was reviewing some troops, the bridle of bis horse slipped from bis hand, and the horse gallop ed off. A common soldier rau, aud laying hold of the bridle, bronght the horse to the Empeior’s hand, he said to the man: “Well done, Captain - ” “Os what regiment, sire?” inquired the soldier. “Os the Guards,” answered Napol eon, pleased |rith his instant belief in his word. The Emperor rode off, the soldier j threw down his musket, and though i iie had no epaulets on his shoulders, no sword by his side, nor any other mark of advicement, ho ran and joined i lie staff of commanding offi cers. They laughed at him, and said: “What have you to do here?” I am the Captain of the Guards,?” he replied. They were amazed, but he said: “The Emperor has said so, and there fore I am.” In like maimer though the word of God. “lie that befieveth lias ever lasting life,”is not confirmed by the j feeling of ihe believer; be ought to j take the word of God as true; be- j cause he said it, and thus honor him as a God of truth, and rejoice with joy unspeakable. Ton Buies to Farmers. 1. Take good papers aud read them. 2. Keep an account ol farm opera tions. 3. Do not leave implements scat tered over the farm, exposed to snow, rain and heat. 4. Repair tools and buildings at a proper time, and do not suffer sub sequent threefold expenditure of time and money. 5. Use money judiciously, and do not attend auction sales to purchase all kiudsof trumpery because it is cheap. 6. See that fences are well repair ed, and cattle uot grazing iu the meadows, grain fields or orchards. 7. Do not refuse correct experi ments, in a small way, of many new things. 8. l'lant fruit trees well, care for them, and get good crops. 9. Practice economy by giving stock shelter during the winter, also good food, taking out ail that is un sound, half rotten, or mouldy. 10. Do not keep tribes of dogs and cats around the premises, who eat more in a month than they are worth all their life time. Large Requests. —A story is told of a poor woman who went to a Governor and told him a very mov ing tale of her poverty aud her need. The Governor was touched, and said to her, “My good woman, how much i do you think would be necessary to meet jour wants? I wish very much to help yon.” “O, sir,” shc>said, “if I only had a hundred dollars, I should be perfect ly happy. That would buy all I want.” “Xow think,” said the Governor, “are you sure you do uot want any more?” “O yes, sir, I am perfectly sure that a hundred dollars would be e nough for me.” The Governor generously gave her the sum she asked for, and lor a time she was full of ecstacv. Butl after awhilu she begau to think that she might have had more for the ask ing, and she said, sadly, “ah me! why did I hot say two hundred?” When our God, the possessor of infinite resources, whom giving does uot impoverish, says, “Ask and ye shall receive," we ought to make large requests. “Open wide thy mouth,” Bays He, “and I will fill it.” Panthers, Lions and Snakes.— There was great excitement in New York, last week, by a newspaper hoax announcing that the wild beasts of Central Park had got out. The story grew until our own servent, with white cheeks, told us that “two thousand people had already been “killed, and they were still shovell ing them up.” It wss probcbly got up by a reporter who had been tak ing a little too much the night before. It is said that bad whiskey taken in undue quantities will make a man see a whole menagerie, even when there is nothing there. But there are snakes, panthers, and lions innumerable on every street, in the shape of bad books and unclean newspapers. Anthony Comstock has shot more of them than any oth er hunter. We wish we had many likfc him to throw body, aud mind, and soul into the efforts for knocking out the teeth and extracting the sting of these cobras. Let parents espeiai ly be armed. See that none of those vile creatures hide in your children’s trunks. Be watchful tiiat not so much as a scrap cf a bad newspaper come in bound round aparcle of dry-goods ( One drop of foam from a mad dog’s I tooth may produce hydrophobic con j vulsion. One picture evilly - suggest ive, or a sentence charged with dou ble entendre, may do the work of moral devestation. Where are our police aud mayors that they pass up aud down perpetually in presence ofj news-stands reeking with the vomit of hell? Surely the sewers of tile lost world have broken lose. Glad would we be if nothing worse than panthers lions, and snakes were ranging the streets. — Christian at Wort. JL>isupi>ointinciit aud Disgust. A young man who was in Cov ington on Friday, in the interest of a new heating apparatus, heard that Maj. P. was building a new house and speedily hunted up the veteran. “I heard you are building a new house,” he said to Mr. P . “I ain’t exactly building one,” said the major in the tone of a man who don’t care to commit himself; “I have built it." “Exactly! Glad to hear it, 3 said the agent. “Have you made any ar rangements for heating the new building?" and the agent looked anxious. “Well, no,” muttered the major with a stare, as if the heating of the building was a subject that had en tirely slipped his mind. “So much the better for you,” ex claimed the agent, “as I think I have just the article you want, combining ec momy, heat and cleanliness. We have sold thousands'of them through out the country, and have yet to hear of a single failure on the part of the heater to do all that is claimed for it. It is the sum total of every ex cellence yet produced in the numer ous devices patented for heating buildings, and I am confident that I can demonstrate to you the superior advantages which the heater enjoys over all others?” Where is your house?” “On Essex street,” said the major. “Suppose you jump in the carriage with me, and take a drive over there I should like to see it.” The major consented, and getting his overcoat he mounted the seat with the hopeful aiul eloquent agent ! and they drove off. On the way the agent rapidly went over the many 1 favorable points of the admirable heater, and was much gratified at the impressions he iiad evidently made on his companion. Arriving in front of the new build ing, a large and rather unpretending structure, the agent said: “Wbat are you going to do with! this, major? Make a tenement or a boarding house of it?” ‘•Oh no,” said the major, as he care fully reached the ground aud look !ed innocently around, “it’s an icc house." “What?” screamed the agent. “It is an ice house,” replied the Major blandly. THE "■! EDUCATOR. Published every Saturday morning at $2 00 per year in advance. RATES OK ADVERTISING: One Square, one time, - - $ 1.00 “ “ one month, - - 2.00 “ “ six months, » 8.00 “ “ one year, - • 1100 Yearly contracts with largaaAvas.'.i sera made on very liberal terms. The last seen of that agent he was applying the lash to his home, and tearing out of the neighborhood at a marvelous pace. A Bomauce of Two Con tinents. Fifty years ago a young English officer named Hendricks was travel ing with hio sister la Italy, vriieWr he met, wooed, won and run off with I the charming daughter of a rich an I proud nobleman. Even as the father of Desdemoua disowned her, so ti/e Italian count swore never again to acknowledge his recreant daughter. Nothing, disturbed thereat, she ac companied her husband to the Brit ish dominions in North America, thence to New York, where, r.l' .v giving birth to a daughtef, She Hendricks, having thus lost his w ire, gave himself up to dissipation, l«t was so far mindful of his tnotbcrivsss infant as to marry a German wonum who had taken a fancy to the chit !. The girl grow to maidenhood, receiv ing little education, for the family was poor, and when still young >-s married at Vincennes, Indiana, to an Ohio river mate named Iliram T«'»m They lived happily enough uni ii Ti tus died, when she removed to L 'i isville, where she led a desolate !' . Now the count, her grandfather, L s yielded to heaven his vital truH, as sole lineal heir she has gone to I’aly to claim his title and his wealth. The fortune which thus falls to her Is va riously estimated from S2OO,(KW to SBOO,OOO. _______ A Mexican Grotto.—Amog the recent discoveries of ancient ru ins in Mexico is that of an artificially executed grotto, fifteen miles from Tancitaro, in the state of Michoacnn. The grotto is represented to be of immense depth and vast extent; the remains of walls and arched corri dors are still to bo seen, and many curious specimens of the handiwork of an unknown race has been brought from this subterranean palace.—-T*o citizens of a neighboring village re cently penetrated into the cavernous depth of the grotto and lost their way. Three days and nights Were spent in wandering through the lu >- yrinthinc passages of this wonderful place before they found an outlet from their strange imprisonment. Subsequent to this competent per sons made a more thorough exami nation of the grotto, when the tact that at some unknown period in the past it had been shaped by human skill, and walled in on overy side by human hands, was revealed. It is a dark labyrinth, surpassing in extent and intricacy the fabled one construc ted by Diedalus. The walls arc cf masonry, and the passago walls, | which connect vast chambers, ai-e | arched over with stone. These evi dences of human labor and i-.ntn j vance lead to the supposition that it lis the work of an aboriginal race j which long ago perished. j One of the jurors in a late murder ' trial, after being excused from set ; vice because of his opposition to j capital punishment, was asked bv a j neighbor how he came to go'. ».i. I lie answered, ‘Oh! I'm opposed to capital punishment.’ ‘Are you in i -Iced? Why what would you tie ! with a - man who should dellberAu ’y waylay ami shoot down one of h.s ! neighbors 0 ‘lTang him, sir! I'd ncv -i 1 -cud him up to the capital to be pm • I ished.' Uesisti ng Falsehood. —When the immortal Sydney was told tl at he might save his life by telling r falsehood, by denying his handwrit ng, l.ejanswered, “When God hath brought mo iuto a dilemma, in which I must assert a lie, or lose my life, he fives me a clear indication of my duty; w hich is to prefer death to falsehood. — Gray.