THE ASHEBO RO-C OURIER. .Issued Weekly. VOL. XXVIII. S. Rrvant. President J. H. Cole, Cashier &6? ' Btviik oi R-andleman Randlemarv N C Ca al paid in, ' Protection to depositors, $20,000 40.000 Directors: S. G. Newlin, A. N. Bulla, W. T. Bryant, C. L. Lindsey, K. N. Newlin, J. II. Cole, S. Biyant H 0 Barker and W K HatUell. BRITTA1N & GRGGSON ATTORNEYSATLAW, Asheboro. - North Carolina, WRAPTICR III tlio rnurtu of Itnniloli'li ami l r JoinliiK emintUm lii smu- nnii ,f'"'plJ Courts. Promt nttvnllun to Inwlnenul Ml kliul. HAMMER & SPENCE, Attorneys - at - Law E. MOFFITT, Attorney - at Law, ASHEBORO, N. C. PRACTICE III nil the Court-. S'i-ial given to "cllliiniiit nl iMnti-n. I Office iivnr Court Uoukc. 'Phone 33, O.L. 8APP, Attorney-at-Law. Prsetiee la BUt end Federal OoarW. Corporation, Oommeroial and Pro bate Law. Ill boataaat preapUf Mende to. ). R. Cox, President. If. 3. Armfield, ViofPreaident W.J. Armfield, Jr., Caahler. THE UK OF Asheboro, N. 0. CAPITAL .$25,000 00 We ere bow prepared to do a geaeral banking business; and we lollait the aeooante o! Arms, corporations and ladividaals ol Randolph aad adjoining oankiee. Dlractora t U Worth, W P Wood, P H Morrlt, O O MoAllater, O Vox, W jr Hea ding, A M Rankin. W H Watkina, Hngb Parka, Bent Moffltt, ORCd, AWE Dr f E Ajbary. Joaay Paikia, W JArateM. Bond model, ikolca or photo ol iDTentlon or tree report on mtpntalJlily. Fr frr book, wk4 BO VEAR3' EXPERIENCE Copvuiohts Ac. AfiTnMfndlnf aaketrh nddMetiptlon may Oalokl uoeTtcin our opinion it wduidw n Invention Pateota tm th rough Munn Co. reowTC ,, frM. OKtMt mwict for Becurinpatnta. tmvrtoi MUM, wltboejt obarw. in Lb Scientific fltaericam A boiAtonoIr llrntrstMl wartlr. rwwatrtr. MiimCti New York uuloo, D. C Vraooh moa, OS F U Watalnetw. Wood's Seeds FOR FALL, SOW i.U. Farmer and Gardeners who rie ire the latest .nd fullest informa tion about Vego.abla and Farm Sesds should write for Wood's New Fati Catalogue. It tells all about tho fall planting of Lettuce, Cab bass and othir Vegetable crops which are proving aovprcfit:-ble to eoutliern growers. Alio fcbout Crimson Dover, Vetches, Grasses and Covers, Seed Oats, What, R7C Barley, etc V.o;d's New Fall Cat alorno mailed f.o ou roquest. Write for it. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Swtea,-Kich-.i:.:.J,Va. r ME I CakiJoi'.'a-"' JiiiiiMfait VARNER Meeting at Washington, D. C, ol the North Carolina Press Association, Before the Association Dec. 2, 1903. Fellow Members of the North Carolinu Press Association Before I begin my address I desire to acknowledge my gratitude, and thank each of you from the bottom of my heart for the honor you paid me tit rightsville last any in un unimoiisly electing mo president of your association. I shall always feel grateful to you for this and other honors you have conferred up on me in the past. This, our first special mid-winter meeting, was called to meet here for the purpose of talking shop in its most practical form. A meeting to get our heads together and make the North Carolina 1'ress Association more of a business organisation than it has ever been before. This can be done to the profit of all news. papers in our tvtato regardless ot size or kind. The tone and charac ter of the press in North Carolina is above the average. Uur editors ur among the best citizens in the State, and the citizenship of North Caro lina has no superior in this grand union. Out State has been unfortunate in having no large cities, 82 per cent. f our population being rural, there fore, our papers daily ana weekly ave been in the main country news papers. The manufacturing interests in North Carolina is going forward at a lipid rate our towns are growing nto cities, and mu citizens are pros lerinp-; in fact. North Carolina is the "New Lnglaml of the bout li. North Carolina manufactures more cotton than she produces; she the South in the manufacture of furniture, chairs, knitting mill roducts, tobacco, wagons and other things too tedious to mention. Libor troubles do not bother us, vet labor is scarce, high priced and contented. North Carolina is doing more to educate her children than any other State in the South, lhe press of the State is largely responsible for this condition of affiiiis. The prospects for successful news aper enterprises in North Carolina arc better to-dav than ever before. Not for a larger number of papers, but for fewer and better papers. One good newspajK-r is probably the most, valuable enterprise any town can possess, but two poor papers where there is only room ior one to make a decent living, fighting and uttiug each others throat is a nui- ance to any community. We should ill want to make our papers more irofitable, and to do this we must put more wci k ou ineiii auu wane hem belter ami more attractive better locally and editorially. This is the fimndati.m of newspaper sue- ess. After we have made our apers hi tler it is much easier to build ciicuhiiion, which is the basis or the advertising man to build on. pass the question of how to make a L'oud newspaper, lightly, for that is easy where a man has a "nose for a knowledge of human nature and is not afraid of work. I armroaeh the question of how to handle the advertiser and the adver- isimr agent with fear and trembling for this question has been discussed bv the North Carolina Press Associa tion at every meeting since its orgam- ation atUohlsboro, N. C, May 14, 1873, when the following resolution was passed: "Ilesolvetl that the nress feel themselves in honor and duty bound to charge published . J i.i n i- :..t -....., i... ales, anu me an -bjh-liui iuhi uv liseontimied." This re s o 1 u t i o n proves to me that the brethren start- d out right, bin ior ine last iinrij ears a great nioiority nave been xaii- ng from grace and losing money. One of the oldest advertising agiits in the United States, said years ago that "The most im busi ness-hko men in tins coining i; mi newspaper publishers." I do nol doubt the truthfulness of what he said, but I thing he should have ex cepted the brethren who do job printing, tor they will uo worn ue low cost to keep another man from securing it and making a small profit. The average country weekly is gradually losing ground with the foreign advertiser and the foreign advertising is drifting to the maga zines and large dailies.-' This is caused from the fact that the maga zines and large dailies advertise the menu of their publications ana Keep solicitors or special salaried represen tatives on the road soliciting busi ness and talking up their publica tions. These large dailies and maga zine! have a tised price for their ad vertising space and "stick to it. The acquaintance and friendship of the foreign advertiser and advertis ing agent should be cultivated by the newspaper man an J especially the advertising agent, as he is the man who creates the business. I he advertising manager for an agency or an advertiser who sends out bust ness direct is perfectly willing to pay a reasonable price for space in your pairer, but he wants to buy at the lowest price possible that's his business, lie is, as a rule, a high toned educated gentleman, receiving a salary of from $5,000 to $20,000 per year for his service, and he makes the best trade he can for his client. If he did not do this, be would be unfaithful to bis employer. I was talking to a prominent cd Trtiaintr Hcrpnt a few weeki aeot about wliat I am now about to urge you to do, establish nuiform rates, ADDRESS OP HON. H. and he said: 'It is the only salva-1 agencies, I have decided that the fol all daily and country lowing schedule is an equitable rate tion for the small dailv and country weekly, the largo metropolitan paper can take care of itself." Another prominent advertising agent said: "The newspaper de- piirtment of our agency is the most expensive and least profitable of any one ot the several branches, for the reason that there are very few in- stances where a fixed and staple rate prevails, and the rates on by far the majority of newspapers must be arrived at by precedents established by means of orders placed. Our rate file is cpanded und perfected in proportion to the number of news papers with which we are doing business, uni in new territory one must blaze out a fresh path along these lines by making a proposition, counter propositions nndcairying on a correspondence of from one to six months duration. The agency loses much time and is put to great ex pense through thn unwillingness of publishers to answer propositions. Kcturu postage, registered letters and telegrams must bo used in many instances if replies are to be secured. lhe lack of a fixed rate for space is one of the costliest things that pub- ishers have to meet today. The bill posters take from pub lishers unnually many thousands of dollars worth of business, because they have a perfected organization which not only establishes rates but maintains them. With an estimate of six hundred million dollars paid out for advertising last year, it is safe to predict an increase to seven Ini ml red million for the coming veur. The question is, brethren, shall wc get our share of this business or hall we continue to dream while the other fellow gets the business? I HON. II. It. VAUXEI1, PRESIDENT THE XOUTH CAHOI.IXA PRESS ASSOCIATION. desire to urge you to establish a Hut rate a uniform rate per thousand reulatioii and stick to it. When this is done you win the respect and confidence of the adveetiser and ad- ertisiug agent and business is com- arntively easy to get. It is not a ise of establishing uniform rates md standing by them win or lose; f you establish a rate and stand by t you are certain to win mi l if you o otherwise, ninetv-nino times out f a hundred you are sure to play a osing game, r.very men ot ua ver sing in your paper represents ex pense just the same as every bushel f wheat raised by the farmers in North Carolina represents expense. Some farmers say they cm raise heat for 50 cents per bushel, n hat ould you think if they would sell one-hundred bushels of that for 2o cents per bushel just because they got 75 cents per bushel for another ot of the same wheat.' tvery cent per bushel th; farmer received above he actual cost helps to pay the ni- rest ou his investment and to give him a prolit. Canvass the situation carefully and determine the basis on Inch your space may be sold then x your rate and stick to it. 1 he man who has no firm conviction con cerning the question he has decided, and who has not the confidence and stamina suHicient to maintain his dec ision will never gain the desired end. Advertising agents laugh at the ridiculous propositions accepted by many publishers. In conversation with the head ot a big agency re cently, I was informed that the agency had sent out the most ridic ulous propositions they could possi bly fix up just as nn experiment to see .how many hungry publishers wouiti accept it witnout complaint, aud to their amusement over forty per cent were accepted. It is the business of the advertiser and adver tising agent to place their ads. in your paper for the least money pos sible, und it is your business and duty to fix a reosoiiable rate and stand by it und in the end you will secure the business, as well us the confidence and respect of the adver tiser. I recommend and urge you to adopt a minimum fixed flat rate for this association and suggest that the constitution be changed so that if any member of this association shall take advertising for less rate than those adopted by the North Carolina Press that said member be expelled and placed on the black list. I also recommend that the annual dues of this association be increased to $10 per year.payabie iu advance eo that we may have funds sufficient to pay a competent person to handle the foreign advertising for this asso ciation. It is niv opinion that this associa' tion should meet every three or six month 4 to discuss the business end of our newspapers. We should be more harmonious and stand together as one man for the elevation and bet- ferment ot the press oi the otate. I After some thought and consulla I tion with advertisers and advertising PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. ASHEBORO, N. C, THURSDAY DECEMBER ,10 I90J. lowing schedule is an equitable rate i for foreign advertising and submit the same for your consideration,' I am sure that these figures are bi'Sed on good business principals, una thai it is the lowest price you can afford to make advertising contracts ior anu leave you a reasonauie pront: Tapers of 500 Cir. 3c per inch 1000 5c " 1500 " Gc " " 2000 " 7c " " 2500 " 0c " 3000 " 11c " " 3500 " 12c " " 4000 " 133c " " 4500 " 15c " " 5000 " lfic " " b'OOO " 19c " " 7000 " 22c " " 800O " 25c " This schedule of rates is for ad vertising when electors are used. Five cents per inch extra is a reason able price to charge for composition. The advertising agent expects anu should haxe 15 per cent commission from your lowest price. These prices are for good position run of the papei. I imagine I hear the voice of a brother saying, "Nonsense, it can't bo done," and another saying, "I am getting a better rute than that at present.". If you are getting a better rate stick to it, but a majority ot you are selling your space at a lower rate, therefore, we should get to gether and fix a minimum rate and I predict that if it is done the mem bers of this association will have thousands of dollars iu their pockets where some lire now hard run to pav expenses. If an advertiser or adver tising agent comes to you and says absolutely that he cannot and will not pay such a price, but will give you 7o per cent ot your rate, vou may think you cannot afford to lose the contract, you figure that here is a pick-up of $25, 75 or $200 and it would help you to pay some notes soon to be due tor material, etc. 1 he temptation is great and many yield. When this is done you destroy the confidence of the advertiser in you and there is no end to the trouble you will have with him afterwards. Don t be fooled by him; stand by vour price and the advertiser and ad- "vorliainn- ,irr,.i,f u ill nrililn III villi mill your rate. It may be in a month or it may take a year, but he is sure to come if your price is reasonable and vou have the backbone to ftund bv It. The following extract from a let ter wiitten by a big advertising agency proves the truthfulness of my assertions, the letter says: "Vou must bear in mind that the advertis ing agent stands between the publish er und the advertiser. It is necessary for us to accumulate a hatjh of let ters to thoroughly convince the ad vertiser that we are doing the best for him that is possible for any one to do. Whenever you receive a re quest for us to allow your rates to be cut, turn it down just as hard as you wish to, und if you continue to stick to your rates you will get the business iu the end if it is possible for us to obtain it for you. This is the case with all papers that have reasonable rates and stick to them." The truth of this letter has been con firmed in many ways since then. It should be a good sermon to every publisher today. Have a fair rate, a reasonable one, tell vour honest cir culation and then stick to your prices. I am conscious of the fact, brethren, that I have taxed your patience, but I felt it my duty to talk along the line I have pursued, and I sincerely hope you will take some action on the question of ad vertising, which is the bread and butter of our business. I again thank you most sincerely for your many kindnesses add I hope that this our "first mid-winter meet ing will be, the most pleasant and profitable in the history of our associ ation. He'll Do. "He'll do," said a gentleman de cisively, speaking of an ollico boy who had been in his employ but a single day. "What makes you think so'r" "Because he gives himself up so entirely to the tusk in hand. I watched him while he swept the otlice, and although a procession, with three or four brass bands in it. went by the office while he was at work, he paid no attention to it, but swept on as if the sweeping of that room was the only thing ot any con sequence ou this earth at that time. Then 1 set him to adttre68ing some envelopes, and although there were lot of picture papers and other apers on the tick at which he sat, he paid do attention at all to them, but kept right on addressing those envelopes until the last one of them was done, lie II do, because he is thorough and dead in earnest about everything. You may be naturally a very smart person; you may be so gifted tuat you can do almost anything, but all that vou do will lack perfection, if you do not do it with all of jour heart and -trength. Woman vs. Man. As an all-round proposition a wo man can discount a man any day. The man knows one thing maybe, mid he sweats over that and tells now hard he works while a woman from early morn till dewy eve, land if the baby bus tne cone, until alter miu- mght, does more things than a man could do. Her enviroment has held her down but she is learning new tricks right along and within three hundred years, unless man progress es he is going to be a back number when compared to the brisk busy. little business woman of today. Fairbrother's Everything. TALK ON FARM IMPLEMENTS. now They Have Siowiy Been Developed From the Most Ancient Times. R. IlcH lit Mnrlln In (iiiHtnnlit OrurttS. Recognizing that agriculture is the greatest und most important of all industries, and that of ull men t,he farmer is the real power in this country, we send a greeting to them in the shape of a "special topic" this week on farm tools. Again have our farmers been blessed in "basket and store." Corn yielded bountifully. The cotton crop was somewhat short. We are thankful that old Gaston still holds her place as an agricultural county. Evolution in 1a km Implements. Iu viewing tho history of the world, one of the things that strikes the mind with peculiar force is, that for the first 6,000 years of the world's existence, according to uccepted chronology, little or no change was made in the method ot cultivating the soil or in caiingfor the products of the ground. It is true that they were of slow growth, hut agriculture laggard centuries behind tho others, with the single exceptiou, perhaps, of the manner of reducing grain to flour or meal. As far back as history runs, we find that the only method oi reuucing gram ioi me oven was by pounding it in a motor with a nestle. This was slow and laborious. After many centuries, came the method of grinding be tween stones. Not until recently has the roller null come into exis tence. Take the sowing of gruiu for ex ample: The lirst and naturul method was by scatterii.g the seed by hund broadcast. This method fur nished our Savior a theme for one of his finest, most exquisite and ef fective parables "A sower went forth to sow." How wc enjoy that divine parable! Agriculture was one of the lirst industries that engaged the atten tion of man, fjr we read in the sacred volume that Cain, the son of Adam, was a tiller of the soil, and Abel was u shepherd. Agriculture has been held in the highest esteem in nil ages of the world's history. The greatest part of the woi Id's populutioi. has been engaged in tilling the soil, und today the agriculture interests of the world arc greater than all others combined. The ancient Egyptians were til lers of the soil; Abraham was an agriculturist. What were the lirst implements This is uncertain. Among the re lics of prehistoric races have been found rude stone spades. In an cient Egypt the farmer waited for the ovei flow of the Nile, then he went forth and sowed broadcast on the slime or oozy mud and waited for the coming of the harvest. Among the hieroglyphics found iu Egypt is a representation resembling a pick, which was doubtless used in preparing the soil for sowing the seed. The ancient ( reeks placed agriculture among the favored in dustries. The oldest record we have of a plow is from llesiod, a Greek writei who describes u plow consisting of a here, beam ami handles, lius was about 1,000 years before Christ. The Greeks were the lirst to improve agrieulturiiil implements, for they hud hoes, rakes and harrows; ana many eminent Greeks and Homiuis wrote essavs on the science of agri culture" in that day and tune. Plinv savs that "fouj hundred stalks of wheat grown from a single seed were sent, to ine j.inin-iui nuguo And again, "three hundred aud forty stalks of wheat from a single grain were sent to the Emperor Nero, with the statement that "the soil when drv was so stiff that the strong est ox could not plow it, but after a wet season 1 nave seen it openeu oy a plow drawn by a wretched dun key at one end, u "luzy wenclt at the other." The ancient plow shares were simply u piece of seasoned wood with a point of iron. They were of the rudest construction and could penetrate only about two inches deep. Thomas Jefferson invented tho mouldooard plow. Agriculturists have been slow in adopting new inventions, so wedded are they to the old methods that have come down from liibie limes. This may have arisen from the fact that agriculture was the last indus try to have labor saving devices. Every other industry had received the attention and profited by the genius of inventors long before any body seemed to think that any im proved implements for the farm could be made. Uow prehistoric man harvested is not known. The sickle was first used. This crescent-shaped knife was tor centuries ine oniy tool useu in harvesting. We read of the sickle the Bible, und frequently m poems ou harvest, uray, iu nis tfegy in a Country Churcn laru. says: The sweetest pastorial idvl in the Bible is the story of Uuth, as she followed the reapers gleaning in the field of her nio'.her-iu-law. In theJ. old allegories death is represented "With a "I'-kUi, nlmrp ami keen, KrniilliK tlui golilcii Rrain, Ami tnc flower that lull iMtweeil." Later came the cradle and scythe, Man's necessities are God's oppor tunities. Whitney and bis cotton gin revolutionized the production of cotton. lias iiowe oroiigm into the world the sewing machine Isaac Watts furnished the world with a new power. Robert Fulton applied the iniwer of Watts to navi gatiou. Cyrus II. McCormick de signed and invented the modern reaper. Today the plant of the Mc Cormick Manufacturing Company embraces a town of itself, and is subtirb of that great city of the .1 .i r-v.: til Buy Things al Home. By substituting Ashoboro for Au gusta wherecver the latter appears in the annexed article from the Chron icle our home people will have some interesting rending: The place ot the people of Au gusta to traiWfs ju Augusta. This is not a m w theme fur the Chronicle to discuss, but it is .- Hiilely one. A new business seasoi opening up. when housekeepers buying new fur nit ure, carpei.-, stoves, w indow cur tains, rugs and scores of household articles. It would surprise readeis of the Chronicle, perhaps to know how many peoi 'e in Augusta do their important shopping iu New York, Koston or Baltimore. And it would surprise these Aorthein shoppers even more if they would place their Northern purchases alongside ar ticles of the same character and class is the stores of Augusta and compare goods R'ul prices. They would imvi' tiu-ir eyes open to the fact that many things are available right here vt. home cheaper than they got it u thou-.tiul miles away, 'i'here is no ecinit v iu bnving goods in a N'irt,'-. city. The chances are Hi .. y more, and without the s "nee of good material that ; iu dealing with a ryputai)!'' i ,t ,ant at home. You have the cost of expivssage, the chance of loss or damage, if not ex pressed, or the cost of railroad trans portation if you do your shopping in person. Of course, vou see larger stocks and bigger stores in New York, but when you come to till your wants they ure usually from standard goods and your shopping is not at all fa cilitated by being in a department store covering ucies, and employing six or eight Honrs, und several thous and clerks. You do not want to combine a walking match or an ex position with your shopping, und the chances are that you could have got ten at home just what you finally se lect in New Vnrk after hours and days tramping and seeing things that you did not want. The stores in Augusta are now presenting complete li;..-. of fine Fall goods, and by con-uii ing the adver tising columns nt tin .. Miucle you will liii'l bai'g.iiiH ;i I, ue that make that Northern shuppi.ig cither in person, by a tueiiil, or by mail orders entirely uuuecrcssurv. You make your money in Augusta and, where all things are anything like epual, shmjd spend it, here. When an 'Augusta merchant wants anything iu your line you do not expect him to go elsewhere and pat ronize those in other communities. Trade ut home is a good Octobei aud November motto. A WorJ for flood Roads. America took the idea of the steam railroad from England and expanded that idea as the English never could nive done. Today our country not only leads in mileage but builds the best locomotives ii.u.l the linest cars; and there are several riii'.wav systems in the United Stal.s t hut have no superior iu point of nit'anizatiou and equipmeut. In the midst of this development of the railway, however, America has largely lost sight of the import ance of the public road. The twin lines of steel are depended on to carry the load and burden of a marvelous ly active commerce, mid but little is thought of the branching roadways which act as feeders to the great arteries of trade feeders which per meate the farmingdistrietsund furn ish every wayside station with its piota ot wheat, cotton, corn ami other staple products. In other words, the arteries ot the nation are ficj and full, but the capillaries ihe complex network ot small channels re.u bing out through the ultimate tissues arc clogged and oftentimes usil -.-s. Every time th :' ' '.toii loaded with cotton stie - mud of u id road, the n.,' . something. The reason t'e i mil railroad has added so l.i-.n wealth of mankind is that, it ...is cheapened the cost of transport inn for useful articles Bad roads greatly increase the cost oi runsportutiuti, and tin farmer is the loser the tanner bfst ami tnewnoie country at length. It has ol ton been pointed mil mat lerhuns the chief secret ot the great ness of the Roman empire was found in its niiictiitieent roads. Whorever the Roman eagles went, they left be hind them a hplendid highway, and these Roman roads, built to outlast the centuries, form today the grand est monument left by a-y kingdom or empire. Governor .Montague, ol lrginia, uttered u striking truth the other night w nen lie saiu, .o chiumuuh has ever outlived the common road." The Journal has for a long time lost no opportunity to remind the people of the south, an 1 especially of Georgia, that good reads are the cry- need of tins t-.ci. oi and stale, h better roads, t income of tin southern farimi would be in creased by a large percentage, aud the national prosperity would be ue cidedly greater. Atlanta Journal. Bob Deal's Latest. There's a lot of different sorts, sizes and shades of characteis in the world, but the latest edition of court house characters was given in here last week. The lawyer asked, "well what is the defendant's character for truth and henesty?" The witness hesitated, but finally answered, "it vour Honor please. he s a none trader." That's a new one. Wilkes- I boro Chronicle. ' A Message From a Great North Caro linian nf be Pss! to the Nsrih Carolinians of the Present. If it must be so, let parties und party men continue to quarrel with little or uo leg.ird to tho public good They may mistify themselves a"d others with disputatious on political economy, proving the most opposite doctrines to their own satisfaction and perhaps to the conviction of no one else on earth. They may de serve reprobation foi theii selfishness their violence, their errors, or their wickedness. I hey may do our coun try much harm. They may retard its growth, destroy its harmony, irn pair its character, render its iiiBtitu, tions unstable, pervert the public mind, and deprave the public morals. These are indeed evils, and sore evils but the principle ot life remains, and will yet struggle with assured success over these temporary mala dies. Still.,we are great, glorious, united, and free, still we have u name that is revered abroad und lov ed at home, a name which is a tower of strength to us against for- eigu wrong and a boud of internal union and harmony, a mime which no enemy pronounces but with re speet, and wh.ch no citizen hears but with a throb of exulation. Still we have that blessed Constitution, which with all its alleged violations, has conferred more benefit ou man than ever flowed from any other human institution r Inch has established justice, insured domestic tranquility, provided for the common defense, promoted the general welfare, and which, under God, if we bo true to ourselves, will insure the blessings of liberty to us and to our posterity. Surely such a country und such u Constitution have claims upon you, my friends, which) cannot be disre garded. 1 entreat aud adjure you, then, by all that is near and dear to vou on earth, by till the obligations bf patriotism, by the memory of vour fathers who fell in the great and glorious .struggle, tor the sake of your sons whom you would not have to blush tor your degeneracy, by all your proud recollection of the past and all your fond anticipations of the altiturc renown of our nation, preserve that .country, uphold that Constitution. Resolve that they shall not be lost while in your keep ing, and may God A 1 m i g h t y strengthen you to fulfill that vow! Judge lllmm Gaston, to the .Liit erary societies of the University ot North Carolina, 1832 Old Red Eye, For and Against. "1 send you some of the most wonderful whiskey that ever drove the skeleton from the feast or paint ed landscapes in the brain of man. It is the mingled souls ot w heat and corn, in it you win mm tne sun shine and shadow that chased each other over billowy fields, tho breath of the lark, the dew of the uighl.the wealth of summer and autumn s rich content all golden with imprisoned light. Drink it, and you will hear the voice of men and maiden s sing ing tics 'Harvest Home,' mingled the laughter of children. Drink it und you will feel within your blood the tarred dawns, the dreamy tawny dusks of perfect davs. For forty years this liquid joy has been within slaves of oak, longing to touch the lips of man. Hit. .1. M. I1I.TKI.KV S KEl'LY. "1 send you sonic of the most wonderful whiskey that over brought a skeleton into tho closet, or puiht:;d scenes of lust ami bloodshed in the brain of man It is tho ghost of wheat and corn, ciazed by the loss of their natural bodies. In it you will lind a transient sunshine, chased by a shadow cold as Arctic midnight, in which the breath of June grows icy, and the carol of the lark gives place to the foreboding cry of the raven. Drink it, ur.d yon shall have woe, sorrow, babbling, and wounds with out cause, your eyes shall behold strange women, your heart shall ut ter perverse things. Drink it deep and you shall hear the voice of de mons shrieking, women waning una worse than orphaned children moil ruing the loss of u father who yet lives. Drink it deep and Ser punts will hiss iu your ears, coil themselves about your neck and seize vou with their fangs; for 'ut last it biteth like a seriieut and stingeth like an adder." For fortv years this liquid death has been within staves of oak, harmless there us purest water. I send it to vou that you may put an enemy in your mouth to steal away your brains. Anu vei i call myself vour friend." The Laurel Hill correspondent of the Laurinburg Exchange gives the following: The joke is on the enterprising farmer who took a tramps advice about how to catch cows. He was told to make 'cm drunk and then he could catch the whole flock, so he promptly procured a half gallou of whiskey and soaked a lot of corn after which he put the bait out in the Held then went to the house to give 'em time to find the corn and get drunk. He didn't have long to wait. The crows soon began to make a terrible noise and began to fight, so he went out the back way, through the thicket to get close np unobserved and this is what he saw: The crows had been fighting to find out who was boss and the boss crow was standing on a stump swapping off the whiskey soaked corn, one grain for two of the other kind. Foley's Honey mad Tar lor JUidnn, safe, aori. jvoopHHe. f 1.00 Per Tear C24 POTTER ON THE DRUNKARD. The "Victim" Is Always the Victim of His Owa Maklnf. clilcaffo.Rcoord-Herald. Bishop Potter struck unerringly at the weak point in many a temper ance crusada when he said: "In John B. Cough's pictures in his temper ance agitation the drunkard was al ways a victim almost a martyr. This is a false sentiment The drunkard is not to be regarded with the compassion meted to the man who committs an act under the in fluence of temporary emotion. The whole theory of aotign s leacning was false and rotten." Though the dualities of mercy and charitableness should temper judg ment, it may be said very positively that the drunkard has been the re cipient of far more sympathy than he deserves. If be is occasionally driven back to drink by the severity of self-righteous critics who are ot just perfect themselves, the dispo sition in the time of all great "re form" movements is to coddle him as if he were an irresponsible child, and to pour the vials of wrath and vials of liquor also upon tne neaa oi the saloon keeper. This latter per son, moreover, is pictured as a sort of malignant spirit whose sole pur pose iu life is to make men drunk ards and whose joy at the accom plishment of his object is as the joy of fiends. The theory in both aspects is, as the bishop says, utterly false. Gen erally speaking, the drunkard is a responsible person given over to self- indulgence. He understands what the consequences or drinking are, but either he has so underminded is will by the indulgence that he 'himperinglv concedes everything to his appetite, or such will as he liux is the will of a wroiicr headed pride which makes him feel that it 18 more manly to assert, niB personal llc.rty gVu'"g drank thn re" fusing to drink. If we excuse him for his defects of will aud character we ni"st ex cuse all the wrong-doing in the world in 'thi mime wuv. sanction every indulgence .of self, repudiate nil discipline, deny the freedom or the will. But the world is not so morons to other faults and the fact that Ithe drunkard is too often coddled and his abuse is too often coaxed into "a repetition by kind treatment wheu he should be aban doned to his own resources and lit erally left alone. As for the saloon keeper, he is un doubtedly in a questionable business, but he is not a fiend. And even tr he cucourages Jrunkeness, the 'vic tim" is always in the lost analysis a ictim of his own making. Encouragement. There is nothing more helpful to human beings than a little sincere praise, not flattery, not fulsome com pliment, but deserved praise tactful- bestowed. Many hard workers conclude that their labors are not appreciated, and some become discouraged because no one gives them a word of praise to cheer them on their way. Many act on the principle that praise is dangerous, and leave those that serve them to starve for the help that a word of praise would bring, but it is not spoken. Some are afraid to praise the cbu- ren lest it spoil them. A person is apt to live up to the estimate you pnt upon him. This is certainly true it he has any sense aud is any account. raise does not hurt a boy or girl that has brains. It inspires them to ilo their very best, and makes them happy while they are striving for praise. Do not allow yours to snffer in that wav, but praise them when ever they deserve it. Life is full of trials, burdens, bit terness, pains and discouragements. There is work enough; there is fail- re enough; there is discouragement enough in the world. Let us not forget that there are lonely hearts to r, comfort, inspire, encourage, und lighten the burdens of others while the days are going by." There are many wives who would be astonished beyond measure if their husbands were to speak a word of praise to them and perhaps there are some husbands who do not re ceive much of uch encouragement from their wives. There are some children that would be frightened if ather were to stop to praise them. Blame is very common and many seem to think that the best way to keep others in line is to blame them. If you have been acting on this im pression change your plan, and go about dispensing kind words and praise, and von will correct ranits, encourage the hopeless, make heavy hearts light, and be better ana bap pier yourself. Be slow to blame, quick to praise and kind at all times. The Horse Here's to Hlfla. The Horse "Here's to that bun- die of sentient nerves, with the heart of a woman, the eyes of a gaselle, the courage of a gladiator, the docil ity of a slave, the proud carriage or a king, and the blind obedience of a soldier; the companion of the desert plain, that tarns tne moist arrows in the spring in order that all the world may have aounuani carreer; that famishes the sport of kin?; that with biasing eye and distended nostril fear'esslr leads our grf&iesi generals through carnage bud re nown, wnose biooa xorms one oi iue ingredients that go to make the ink in which all history is (rritka, and who finally, in blank trapping, puiis the humblest of as to the M- 'y godded threshold of eteinitv." 1;.. j--r and Driver.