'..it.'-.-". ';. : iv .i. . r;: .' - -.'.r.'r";.i- .';-."' ... jas, A. THOMAS, Editor and Proprietor. vol xxvm CHUllCH DIRECTORY. METHODIST. Sinday School at 9:30 A. M. Geo. S. Bakeb. Supt. I'f-Mcbinj? at 11 A. M., and 8 P.M., ewy Sunday. 1 i i hi meeting Wednesday night. G. F. Smith, Pastor. baptist. Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Thos. B. Wilder, Supt. Pr-iic-liing at 11 A. M., and 8 P, M., rVKrv Snuday. i'rayr m etiDg Thursday night. Fokrest Smith, Pastor. I'roltiisNioual cards l)1 S. I'. BIRT, K.UTICING PHYSICIAN, Louisburg, N. C. . in tin- Ford Blinding, corner Main .1 .v sh streets, bp wt airs front. 15. u MASSENBUKQ, ATTORN ET AT LAW. LOOISBUKO. K. C. practice in all the Courts of the State uliice in Court House. V. il c. M COOKE & SON, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, L0UISBUR6, K. 0. u-,,i attend the courts of Nash, Franklin, nmuviiu-. Warren and Wakecounties.alsotbe (iui.r'iiie Court of North Carolinp, and the 0. Circuit and District Courts. . IK. K. S. Fi'STKK. Dr. J. E. Malonb, J) .RS. FOSTER & MALONK I'liACTICINO PHYSICIANS & SURGEON8, Louisburg, N. C. i nvrr Aycocke Drug Company. AY. 11. LIFl'ITT, M. D , PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, FRANKLINTON, N. ('. 1)R W. II. NICHOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN. LOUISBUK8. N. O. yl'Kl'lLL & KUFFIN. ATTORN EY S- AT-LAW, LOUISBURS. W. C. Will attend the courts of Franklin, Vance, Onumlle. Warren and Wake counties, also the MHreiiie Court of North Carolina. Prompt tteiit I'm Kiveu to collections, sc. T illui B. WILDER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, L0U1SBCB8, N. C. offlce on Main street, over Jones & Cooper's ture. rp W. BICKETT, T. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. LOUISBUBS N. C. Prompt and painstakinj wg att attention given to evry ui ittrr intrusted to nis 1 i nanus. Rffi-ra to chief Justice Shepherd, Hon. John MmmiMir. Hon. Rout. W. Winston. Hon. J. C. busioii. 1'res. First National Bank of Win ston. ui.'Lii & Manly. Winston, Peoples Bank of Moiu ue, chas. E. Taylor, Pres. Wake For est C jil.xe, Hon. E. W. Timberlake. office in Court House, opposite Sheriff's. il. PERSON, ATTORNEY AT-LAW, LOUI3BUBe, N. a: Practices in all courts. Office In Neal UliiMiiik. Vy u YARBO ROUGH, JB. ATI ORNEY AT LA W, LODISBURG, N. C. 'Mice on second floor of tNeal building Hani Street. All liual business intrusted to him will receive prompt and careful attention JR. D. T. SM1THWICK, DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. Office in Ford's Bnildinpr, 2nd floor, !ias administered and teeth extracted without pain. JjR. R. E. KING, DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. Omct: over Aycocke Drug Company. Willi nn experience of twtnty-five years i m Mitiicient guarantee of my work in all tlie un-to-date lines of the profession. j HOTELS. HOTEL WOODARD, W. C. WOODAED, PrOf ., Roeky Mount, N. C. Free Bus meets all trains. Hjjs $2 per day. FltANKLlXTOS HOTEL FRANKLINTON, N. C. SAM'L MERRILL, Prp'r. ftood accomodation for the traveling public. Good Livery Attached. OSBORN HOUSE, C. D. OSBORN, Proprietor, Oxford, N. C. Good accommodations for the traveling public. MASSENBURG HOTEL J I MasNenburg Propr HENDERSON, N. C. ood accommodations. Good fare: Po !ite and attentive servant NORWOOD HOUSE tarrento n, North Carolina w- J. NORWOOD Proprietor. Patronage of Commercial Tourists and "veiiiig Public Solicited. Cood Sample Boom. 8T HoTIL 10 8T0BM AIJ COW B0V9H " SBSSBBBW THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. WESSON I, FOURTH QUARTER, INTER NATIONAL SERIES, OCT. 2. Text of the Lesson, II Chron. xIt, S-ia. Memory Tersea, 2-5 Golden Text, II Chron. xlT, 11 Commentary by the Eer. 2. "And Asa did thAt i.i. . nnd right In the eyes of the Lord bis God." Last quarter was spent chiefly with the prophets Elijah and Elisha, men of God and nnv va am t-n . ' .. U19 k, nave several lessons on fuf 8ho were men of God- Asa was the third king of Judah after the kingdom was divided at the death of Solomon, and w uo ngnt in the sight of the Lord. This statement is made concerning seven other kings of Judah, bat not once concerning any of the kings of the ten tribes. The throne was called the throne of the Lord, or the throne of the kingdom of the Lord over Israel, and the king was said to bo king for the Lord his God (I Chron. xxlx. 23: xxviiL ti- tt ix, 8). ' 8. "Ho took awav the altars nf tk. strange gods. ' Although the Jaw of God said, "Thoa shalt have no otter gods be fore me" (EX. XX, 8). vet Solnmnn In. troduced many strange gods to please his wives, and beth Rehoboam and Abijnh uuuniuueu me iaoi worship. It Is diffioult to go against the customs of your father and grandfather, but Asa feared God rath er than man and was determined to do right before Him. - 4. "And commanded Judah to seek the Lord God of their fathers. " In vnrw 8 and 4 of the next chapter we read that israei had been for a lone season wlthnnft the true God, and without a teaching priest, unu wiinout law, Dut when they turned to the Lord and sought Him He was found of them. In verses 12 and 15 we read that they sought Him with all their heart and soul, even with their whole desire, and He gave them rest round about. The Lord takes heed to our hearts rather than our words and will fulfill the desire of them that fear Him. 5. "The kingdom was quiet before him." Verse 1 says, "In his days the land was quiet ten years. ' ' Quietness is one of the great gifts of God which shall yet be fully enjoyed not only by all Israel but by all the world, when "the work of right eousness shall be peace, and the effect (or servioe) of righteousness shall be quietness and assurance forever" (Isa. xxxii, 17). In quietness and in confidence is strength, and the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit is in the sight of God of great price (Isa. xxx, 15; I Pet. Hi, 4). 6. "The land had rest, because the Lord had given him rest." In Joshua xxiii, 1, it is writton that the Lord had given rest unto Israel from all their enemies. In I Chron. xxii, 9, the Lord had told David that his son Solomon (peaceable) would be a man of rest and that Israel would enjoy peace and quietness in his days. Lamech said concerning his son, "This shall com fort us concerning our work," and so he called him Noah 1. e., rest or oomfort. The earliest rest is that of Gen. ii, 3, which was broken by the devil doubting God's word and God's love, and thus he still seeks to break all rest. 7. "Because we have sought tbri Lord our God He hath given us rest on every side." When Solomon was about to build the temple, he said to Hiram, "The Lord my God hath given me rest on every side, 6o that there is neither adversary nor evil occurrent" (I Kings v, 4). The rest of the kingdom that is coming will be glori ous (Isa. xl, 10), or, as in the margin, glory. Even now He says, "Come unto Me, and I will give you rest," and "When Ho giveth quietness, who then can make trouble?" (Math, xi, 88; Job xxxiv, 29.) When, even in our ordinary daily affairs, we allow the government to be upon His shoulder and the peace of God to rule (Isa. ix, 7; Col. iii, 15), we will have a glorious foretaste of the rest of the kingdom. Some say that they seek Him yet do not seem to find Him as their rest, but it must be that they do not seek Him with the whole heart (Jer. xxix, 13). 8-10. The adversary will not allow us to rest if he can help it, so here we have over a million of Ethiopians gathered against Asa in battle, and he has but little over half as many with which to meet them Wars will not wholly cease from the earth until the devil is cast into the lake of fire at the end of the thousand years (Rev. xx, 7-10), for, while the millennium will be a time of peace, it will end with a great war. Israel had no reason to fear her ene mies, however numerous, for the promise of Uodr was that one should chase a thou sand and two put 10,000 to flight. The deliverance from Egypt and the conquest of the Canaanites, with the many deliver a noes and victories in the days of the Judges and in the time of David, would strengthen the hands of any one who feared God. David could say, "I will not be afraid of ten thousands of people that have set themselves against me ronnd about." "-Though a host should encamp against me, my heart shall not fear" (Ps. iii, 6; xxvii, 3; xlvi, 1, 2). 11. "And Asa cried unto the Lord bis God and said, Lord, it is nothing with Thee to help, whether with many or with them that have no power. " Jonathan 6aid to his armor bearer, "It may be that the Lord will work for us, for there is no re straint to the Lord to save by many or by few" (I Sam. xiv, 6). . The greatest hin drance to the Lord's work is generally our fancied strength or wisdom, and there is no proverb, much more nnscriptural than this, that God helps those who help them selves. In the matter of salvation it is only the lost and helpless and ungodly for whom it is provided, and it has been provided wholly by our Lord Jesus Christ and is given freely to every penitent sin ner. In the daily life for God it is God who works all our works in us and for us (Isa. xxvi, 12). He delivers the needy, the poor also and him that hath no helper (Ps. lxxii, 12). When Gideon had only 82,000 men against an innumerable host, the Lord said to him; " The people that are with thee are too many, lest Israel vaunt themselves against me, saying, Mine own band hath saved me" (Judg. vii, 2) God must be glorified in all things, and no Jlesh dare presume to glory in His presence (I Cor. i, 29, 31; Isa. if, 11, 17, 22). If we are living in the name of the Lord and seeking only His glory, no man or demon can prevail against us or even touch us without God's permission. 12. "So the Lord smote the Ethiopians before Asa and before Judah." Tboy were destroyed before the Lord and before His host (verse 13). Yet when the king of Israel came against Asa in the thirty -sixth year of his reign he forgot this great dellv erance and relied on the king of Syria rather than upon God, and when rebuked for it he grew angry with tne Lora s serv ant and put him in prison (chapter xvi) So prone are we to forget God and to lean upon an arm of flesh instead of patting oar whole trust in the Lord! Blessed are 11 they thai trust in Him (Ps. ii, 12). No Cure No Fay. That iii the wav all druggists sel Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic for Chills and Malaria,, It is simply Iron and Oninina in a tasteless form, onuaren love it. Adults prefer it to bitter nan seating tonics. Price 50 cents, If people didn't haye to work thejr would hare more time to get tired of doing nothing1, . . Don't forget that you can dye all kinds of fibers, cotton, wool or silk at the same t.im: In the same - vessel- with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. - gold by A. PHyett & LATE LOVE. Love came to me through the gloamlns, The dew on hia wings lay wet. And th voice of hia wistful greeting Waa weary with old regret. 'Oh. heart." he sighed at my casement Must 1 wait for a welcome yet?" He had come with the early rosea In the golden shining of morn. But I asked a gift he bestowed not A flower, that bears no thorn, 8o through the glare of the noontide He left me to toil forlorn. And now, in life's quiet evening. When long are the shadows cast. He cornea with the few pale blossoms He has saved from a hungry past. And into my heart, unquestioned, I take him to rest at last. M. E. Martyn in Chambers' JournaL A SECRET KEPT. "Why, sister, isn't this our birth day?" "Yes, I suppose it is." "I declare, it completely slipped my mind, so much happening. I never failed before to star up a cake. Did yon re member it?" "On, yes, I remembered it I couldn't well forget it with such a fine present coming to us. The sisters were sitting on either side of a wide, open fire in high back chairs. So exactly alike were they in form and feature and dress that onlv one who knew them well could have told them apart. Their fingers were busy with knit ting. Jane's work was a scarlet and orange afghan. Ha da was rounding off tne toe oi a pair of gray woolen stock ings. In the center of the room by the claw legged table a young girl sat, apparent ly reading, though her eyes rested on the two figures before the fire. "What present did you get, Jane?" Hulda stopped her work and looked over her glasses. Jane smiled and nod ded her head toward the young girl seated by the table. The tall clock that stood on the wind ng staircase at the end of the lona drawing room struck 1. The three start ed and looked around, and the girl threw down her book and sprang to her feet, laughing. "Old Father Time has come to life," she said. "He objects to our being so quiet Come, Aunt Hulda; let us do something to celebrate Aunt Jane's birthday. Aunt Jane, what shall we do to celebrate Aunt Hulda's birthday?" The eyes of the two elder ladies were still fixed on the clock, and they made no answer. The girl came and stood on the hearth rug, and, stooping, took Jane's face between her small, plump hands and kissed her. Then, catching up the afghan, she ran down the room and up the stair and threw it over the face of the clock. The sisters laughed merrily. "That was the hour we two came into the world," said Hulda. "You can't say but it was rather startling to have the old clock ring out that hour. It hasn't made a move to my knowledge since you went away, Amy. " "Oh, well, it just happened. Aunt Hulda," Amy answered, with the hap py carelessness of youth. "Besides, it isn't 1 o'clock now. It is only 7:80. " She danced across the room and seated herself at the piano. ""Come. Aunt Jane; let us sing something." "Why. child, I can't sing." "You used to sing beautifully. " "I'm afraid you forget that we've grown old since you went away. Peo ple don't sing much as a rule when they are 60." The girl wheeled about on the music stool and shook her finger at the cov ered clock. "You have done this," she said. 'You pretended to be sitting up there doing nothing all these years, but you've proved tonight that you're up to your old tricks, running away with the years. " The sisters laughed again. "Ton nsed to stand and talk to that clock when you didn't come up to the drops of the weights. Amy," said Hulda. " We've a long account to settle," Amy answered, shaking her head. "To come home and find you both so quiet and complaining of growing old, when we used to have such good times. Shall 1 get some knitting and sit down in the corner and grow old too?" - Hulda rolled up her work and stood up. "I suppose we do seem changed, child, " she said anxiously. "What can we do to amuse her, Jane?" "We might dance the minuet" said Jane, standing by her sister's sida "That used to amuse her greatly when she was a child. " "Oh, do, "cried Amy. "I'd forgot ten about your doing that " She turned to the piano and began the stately musio of the minuet Dain tily the two little old ladies stepped for ward in time to the music. Their small faces at first were grave with the desire to please, but presently the melody en tered their hearts. Their faces lost the dull line of years and shone with the pleasure of youth. Jane's hair fell out of coil and hung in soft silver curls about her face. Hul da picked up her skirts .and tripped air ily away, showing her trim little feet in blue embroidered slippers. " You do it even better than you used to, : Amy cried, clapping her hands as the musio ' came to an end. "I never saw any one more graceful and pretty than you two are. Sixty isn't old. Why, you could go to Washington and be the belles of the season yet if you only wanted to. You have just staid here in the country, and you haven't any idea how lovely you are. " , The sisters looked at each other and smiled. Jane dipped her hand into Hulda's. ' We haven't been discontented, or 1 suppose we would have made a venture put into the world," she said. "I wish you would make a venture this winter." said Amy seriously. Yellow Jaundice Cured. Suffering humanity should be supplied with every means possible for its relief. It is with pleasure we publish the follow ingi'This is to certify that I was a terri ble sufferer from Yellow Jaundice for over six months and was treated by some of the best physicians in oar eity and all to no avail. Dr. Bell, onr druggist. -recommended E lectrio . Bitters, and after taking two bottles I was entirely cored. I now take great pleasure in recommend ing them -to any ' person- soflering wltu this terrible malady.- I am gratefully ISold by Aycocke drug Co, DnggW. - yours, w. a. -hvbt COU-NT ..-TBE! : - louisbuhg, x: a, Friday, seitember 23, m : : i " There ia no ned of otrr iUYinff her. I Uncle Jame. say. f ha. invited joo re- 1 poatedly to come to Washington. I amid . I'd stay all winter, but T" don't believe I it i.ixj lonely." We have never been lonely." said , Hnlda after a short silenoe, "but of . " " to aiways uau ue woagni that you were coming to lire with na wnen you finished school. It will be different when you no awav this time. Amy ran and threw her arms around them. "It is a beautiful home, dears, and you know I love yon both as though you were my mothers, but it ia so still and solemn here, and yon know I haven't been used to it" "We might recite her some of the plays, Hulda," said Jane. "What plays?" asked Amy eagerly. "Yea, I'm sure that would auiuse her, " said Hulda. "I hope you don't think, Amy, that we are women who settle down and spend all our time and mind on our work?" The two left the room, and Amy waa presently surprised by their returning dressed in costume. With the first lines she knew they were dressed tortpiwnt Portia and Nexissa, With urpridng ability in recitation and action they went through the well known scene from the "Merchant of Venice." They could not have had a moro ap preciative audience Amy recalled them again and again with a storm of applause. The two little ladies had u?ed the years of their solitndo and leisure in learning from beginning to cud a num ber of the plays of hake8penre and for amusement had bought several chest cf costumes and before the long mirrors in the drawing room had acttxl many parts together. When they again appoarvd to Amy from an inner room, they were in tlx costumes of Rosalind and C-lia in the forest of Arden. So perfect was tb ir presentation of this part that it certain ly entered tho borderland of art. rsravo. criel Amy in grrat excite ment. "We'll not go to Washington. We'll have Wa:ington como t'i ua We'll send a lot of invitations and hav the gayest home party that was ever known in the country. To this plan Hulda and Jane gave slow consent. A month later every guest chamber in the fine old country boost' was tvu pied. The news of his t.ist.r wonder ful accomplishments drew the beloved brother in Washington to tho homo he had not visited for 20 years. They were mostly the brother's friends and Amy's, who r.i.-vle tbt place gay with laughter and ui. But ono room wua reserved for a guest whom Hulda and June bnd spe cially invited. It was late cu evening after all the others had rftm-d that he arrived. Amy was greatly arnufed and surprised the next morning when sh. met on the stair one of tho mar.i neighbors an old gentleman who lived just across the country nmiL "Why, Mr. Weston." she eicUiin.-d. "Are you the guest of honor?" He was a tall, hand.somo man, with a most dignified bearing. "I've always U-en an honored fjrtet.t in this house." ho replied, holding out his hand. "The girls thought I couldn't really be one of the party unless I oIowmI ray bonse and came over beg nnd gage. Now, if you 'don't mind. Amy. just keeping it to yourself, let th-m think I'm a dignitary from wuue remote quarter of the globe, and they will ap preciate me, but if they know I'm John Weston, who livt acrn the road. I'll figure for -a simpleton." "No, indeed, you wouldn't, " Amy laughed. "You'll be tho life of tho party. I hoped you'd couio over every day, as you always do, but it will be so much nicer to have you in the house." Half an hour later, when tho merry party had gathered at the brvakfast ta ble, the guest of honor was presented No one had ever a truer gift of conver sation than John Weston. He naturally assumed the position of his long friend ship with the family, and it was noticed that Hulda and Jane deferred to him in all things, as though they were used to depending on his judgment. The following day it was rumored that the sisters intended giving the cony scene from "Romeo nnd Juliet" in their first appearauce 'before their guesta Amy had been out sleighing all tho afternoon with a number of the young people and had not known that her aunts intended representing these ju venile lovers. The drawing room was being set in readiness for the amuse ment when the party returned. John Weston, acting as stago archi tect, was banging a Minted screen against the winding staircase. "I'll have to run over home and get my screen with the woodbine," ho was saying to tho man who was assisting him. There was a burst of merry laughter in the doorway. "Oh, Mr. Weston, what are yon do ing?" Amy exclaimed, running for ward, "Aunt Jane and Aunt Hulda surely can't act Romeo and Juliet. " "Can't they? Wait till you see them try it You heard me say that I live across the road, didn't you?" he added, smiling at the young people who bad followed Amy into the room. "Well, we need both bouses to circle round in any way. " With a girl on each arm John Weston presently went down the snowbeaten path and across the road to his own home among the evergreens. "I asked Amy who lived here the other day," said one of the girls, "and she said, 'An old gentleman, who spent all his time with his books.' I've been so interested wondering what you were like. What made you keep it secret that yon lived here?" "Oh, Just for sport 1 didn't really expect to be able to keep it all through the month. " "But this is such a beanrifr.l home." "There isn't a finer interior in tha country, said John Werton proudly Cures Kidney and Rladder Trouble?. Thoasands of aueh rasen have been cored by the use of Botaoio Blood FUlm ("B. B. B.") If yon doubt 'It. call r send to the Company whose advertise ment appears in this paper, and they will, for a one cent ttnp, send yoa a book of wonderful enres, not only of the above diseases, bat of all manner of ail ments arising from impure blood. It ia the standard remedy of the age for core of all blood aad skin disease. $1.00 per large bottleT V. , , - , 5 For sale by drogclst. - 1" ! STATE , 'I'M M TJTST03ST MTv n.. - Well, i t Ut wty i ma leaL W tb ar or ohk bow artLjda " the oilx rrf th. firU .xk,Maed a. thy entered tho hilL "You've been abroad. Only peopUwho triTel have hnn th. uJy i7wlVki. "I have been in every cocntrr that I ever heard of." John Weston replied, smiling. "Now yoct roars arooad axd make yourselves at home." One of the girls wandered away, bat (be other sat dowA aa4 fixed her bright i yea oo the erect old man before her. "Well, what U it my child?" be asked. "Will you think I am very rude if I ask you something?" "No, indeed. Yoa may aak me any thing you please. " "Do you love both of them Junt the same?" John Weston's face flushed like a boy's. Smiling, he shook hia head. "Is that answer aamcientr" be aakcvt "Cut how do you kuow? They are just alike. None of ua can tell thorn apart." "They are no more alike than yosj aaJ L ' be replied gravely. - "I sappoue I shall kuow erhich It is if I wait patiently. " the Rirl said, with a pert little toes of her bead. "Nevexl" Johu We ton anjrwrrtvl quickly " But if you live long enough yon may know what friondahip U when it is tree from aelflnhuena. " The guests gathered in the long draw ing room thjvt evening wro prepared for nothing more than amusing melo drama. What could Jaao know of Jn liet's fcupreino surrender of love? How oiuld a little old lady of 60 bo other wim than amusing as the ardent yicng Montagae? The ruom was but faintly lighted when from out the garden thick yrnnd Romeo Htepped. His fimt w.mU held hiH listener' Ut attention. ne u at scar who nver fait a wound." If Jane and Hnlda WainwnKht bad employ. d their years in tamest effort to win the attrntu-n of an edmirtnjt public, "hey onuld not have tjrvwll mor completely than thy bad in pti vnte otndy for tbvir own plra-ar and i in prove men t Tho old hotu rang with ajipl.ia' as the sreno ctmo to an euii. Th i was tho beginning J a -rie ij entertainment. Surely a mntith liko this had never Nwn irjTit in the co-on-fry! The sleighing w prfvt The wind had swept the river baro for niliea. Kvery rniug a party oi skater wer sfu gli:mg in and nut between tho wilnl ! tuiks. John We(ou wa tbJea4er of the outdois- pnrta Skatinwas a paittra that he nad clnng Jo with the en:hui ani of M IxiTh.nnL It was g-i t tho hale Md gentleman in bis for trim ined c.a: and cap gliding aa before with an -a.w of motioji that only years cf river, skating can perfect. The i: ytery of unloid love that ho vered at. ut him made him of oiotinual interest t.) the young pipla Tb girl who had dared to rjoetl him wots many pretty little romance, in which Jane and Holda alternately apr-arvl as heroine. he watched the utem ej.r ly, hoping to n-ad the rvl in one of their fa-,, tut tbo bnrwu eyes cf each wore the mnip geutle ci-rsbd. nc w rxn ever they spoke with the;r friersL One evening, wtun the min was full, several rf Ux party bad gvaio down the nvr to ikatu fix an boar or two. The later hours were to be j-nt in dancing, and tb drawing nitn was be- mg put in rea.linowi. While they were buckling on their skate Amy proposed a rai- "I'll rae the party," said John Wetn. "Age against youth. If one rvachea the bridge beicxe mo, I'll pay any forfeit he may ak. " They rindod the wooded point and wen' rtT for a char half milo to the bridge. After the flint few minute the competition rested lwtweoi twa Amy and John Wprtou were spwdirig on together. Shooting and cher fol lowed them. Tho white arch of the htone bridge was bat a few rod ahead. Now Amy was in advance, waving ber muff aixive her head. A moment later they had reached tbo bridge and were resting in the shadow. "Well, littlo girL what is my for feit to U?" John Wfeetou aaked. laugh mg. "Oh," said Amy, breathing hard, "whom do you love beat in all this world?" "Thfct isn't fair." "Ye, it Ik " aho laugbeiL "If you had won, I should" have paid any for feit you aked. " "When you are as old as I am. yon will not make a jest of love I'll pay my forfeit, but I'm disappointed in you, Au.y. " He loaned forward and wburpexed th name in her car, then turned about and skated under tho arch of the bridge The poor little victor flew after him. "Oh, forgive me," she cried, cling ing to his arm. " It was all in fan. 1 didn't expect yoa to tell me." Ho put his arm around ber as they still 6kated on, bat made uo reply. Aft er a few moments they were overtaken fry the rct of the party, and all, joining bands, skated back up tho river When the house waa reached, tho dKJciug had already begun. Amy stood at one side, with John Weatou's confi dence heavy at ber heart, watching ber flints in their pretty lilac silks a they glided by her. They seemed more alike to her than ever before, but she knew even better than John We. ton bow un like they were. She knew, too. bow inseparable was their love for each other. It waa like rending a story unfinished and very smcL ehe tbonght. Cut afterward. In thinking a boot the near friendship the three enjoyed and their life of study and clom interest, it (lid not aocm so sad after all. Before another year bad nsuasnd the paraee of Jane and Hnlda Wainwrigbt were widely known, and their heme came to be in time a Mecca to all artists and itudentaof Bhakcsrpeare. Oertrode Smith in Chicago Record. Discovered bv a Woman. Another grettdlaroeery baabvea mad tbat tooty a Udy ia thW eoealry . "Ditv-aee fatee1 It clatcbee opoa ber and for erven year eb with stood it iM-tHivst teats, bnt her vital organs were d o Jerro ire-d and death seemed taacalaeat. For three tnoothssb eoogbed loereaaaUy and eo oid not sleep. 8b Baallr disco rred a way to tveovery by porvbaiaT of n a bottle oT Dr. Kioa-'s 5w DlaeoeeryJ for ooasemptro. aad waa so aoaeb re tteved na lakiajr flrat deae. bat she slept all Bight aad with two boUle baa tt- abeotstely cvrwl. Ur avam . ha Mrs. Lot ber La's. Thes writes W-C, Haas nick & Co.. of Shelby. 2C. C For aai at Ayeocka UroT Co.'e rei store. RecaUr slaa eo seats and Ifl.OQ every boUlo guaranteed.- .... .. , . HUHfcSf POPULISTS COy IIS BOIL iocaTTU.a, si. u.t 8pUmbr 8ta. 1838. Tothi Vorraj or Pa i iu Cocrm Fit years ago-1 Uft ths D.o cratie party aad bcan a mebr of the newly orjranlsd Popajliit parly. My purpo deins; Ula was pure and patriotic 1 W lied tbat it repreeeoUd the beat Ml of principles and bad tba bl platform wblcb any political party bad ever prom n (gated I believed ibat in il waa tbe hope of deliver ane from tbe datamation of Wall trNt and orgaoll'd capital. I tlieed tbal tbe Democratic party under Cleveland's adaaioi 'ration, waa unsafe, and tbat II was foaUriug; tbe brood of Irotta and combine that bad grown am nnier ttepuoucao refissa. I I that slowly and sorely lb pingU rr14 standard watfaf ftjUe) upon me country, aad thai IV mocracv. under Cleveland, waa permitting ibis work of ruin and robbery U proceed. To my mlr.d Populism waa a protest against th iniquity and rlo ml of both tb dominant old partle I have nuapoloo-iee to make for bavlrig been a Popnliat. When I Joined tbe prtv it was. in snv judgment, full time U call a bait in nnr national affair, and to thence in nor ever inrreasler tendency towards tb detpotifoa of a hesrfle p'u'oerery . i mo I I a a born and trd a I erat. and Inherited a . I a iw 1 1 1 : -. y iof and a repninane to RBnhlu im For tb teachings and teeela of that party I be neither aym patby Dor loUralinn. It trend toward entral;aation. and :t re cord of cerrnptioo in Stat aed na'ion. bar dpn-d cay nrritr toward It. till lbre L not or d trine thai it holds in baraaooy with my views. I left tb Ivqo.. eratic prtr. did Ihonsauds cf others in tbe. Stat Uiom it w t growing, under 'tvland. taor and more like ih Repabilcac pariv. us noanrni p 'fy v-t "xeewy similar to to nranri: policy cfjobn Sherman, aei w kso. under the whip and spar of Presi dent Cleveland, it Cnallv trnk i silver it death blow, 1 joined with the political party thai was: boro of ibis incident. I did not unite with Popohsta tofltl'.fc IiDocriU only, bi tbe slogan f oir party was to do ballU to ail political organisation which did, not aland on our platform ar. 1 e poue oar views. TI Rpubtieac party, the au'bor of ail oar i'.'ji. , was oar arch eotny in tbe conflict i I mad tbe campaign ia Frank- lin coiintv. in 15SV2, vo-j will re munbor, a th notnioe of tb I pnlist larly for the orTiceof, Sbtriff. I enteral tb ngbt, ar. i carried th burden ef tbe who' ticket, with the profoord convie tion that 1 waa right, and I be lieve, now tbat. in it orir-n ae i first eimtenc. tb Popahit part wa right. Tbe central and mala plank in our platform waa tb refermation of our fiuanee. epr.iallv tbe free and milltrited coinage of t'vr at the ratio of 16 to 1. I b-lieve.. in tbat doctrine then. I implicitly I all ve In it now For Iwo year th PepolisU party met ray views and fulfilled my highest ideaa. I saw tbe who! couotrv shaken, t by a storm witb the B to wing strenirtb of Ibis voaeir . i it. .IJ i.v iink iw.u mi u.u parties looieq i in alarm at tbe incraamg host of tboee who arrayed tbemeelves h neatb onr banner. In tho do clarei porpoees of oar rro w n g army was the promiae of sweeping reform. Huddanly in North Carolina, eemingly without cauee, certainly without eicae, I saw this parly, which boasted a purity unknown to both tbe old patties, begin a system of trading and trafficking in political honor and principle, more degraded and more diagost ing tban baa ever before disgraced any political orga dilation in the world. I saw men professing the aame jrinciplca which I bold, aed moro vehement in their utterance tban I bad ever beeu , vote) for gold bags, and barter tbeir party' honor away wilb no tboogbl of auytbing tare tbo pis coootar at which they were being fed. I taw tbem deliberately abaadoo tbeir platform, disavow tboir prin ciple, unite oo e-qoal term wilb tbeir life long enemie tbo K rablicaos and leave tbo fewcf na wbo valos our political lalef rity, without platforaa or party. I saw corrupt aad Incompetent men, wboee every politltal Iboogkl, idea and porpooo, was at alter va riance) wilb our avowed principle, pnt into office by Popnliat votes aud honored witb Popolist hallola. I saw in my own cooaly nogroow elevated to poaitioea ef I mat and pro jit, appointed to adcaloiater tbo edocatlonal aad fiaaasial mat ters and affairs of wbiU ioalita tionf, and Jba votes of PepalUla required by tbair leaders to briaf a boat this revolt. I saw l be popolist party lake by its lea dart aud delivered, like a flock of sbtop tbo Of -on market, to tbo Republic? org aalaatloa ; its role roiiod on to elect lo of fleotbosaao crowd of vaadals and carpot-bagrors tbat bad loo tad tb-o StaU lo 1BS9V and aa iafaaetn and corropl trade dignlSad by the not of cw oporatioo," 1 saw lb- bf loalDf af a re.ro of dsbaacbery that did o4 spare ten tbe pocr insaae Is ILe 8tte Ami la KtXLmi : WrJ for a U, .r ,. oaatraU Ika hmIUim i MtB latlth lV FUU'a aaeesy ,D Id eilravaranra. aad craau svsw efic by lb awe ia ordsr U fed tbeaa al Ik ptil ubU I saw tb tlerity f Ut Pop,. si party vi43 I! as aad li t-ai-, ana ltttr tbe hl earn bta prinelpU atd pi tbe latUr tlasspbe-1. ' I saw tbo Dmoraiic party poro lUelf of Oeeelend. aod, plaak by plank, adept at Ihelr S o-n airooei very deaaaad ef lb r- I... a . - i pa'iy in iia nrsl g real i ebrUr. aalii tbe Pepnlist ladre boldly fbarfed Ibat lb nttof,u bad etoleo their plalfrrn, aad Ibtn I aw the pop,lii party ci HWeraUly walk eff that Hatferaa J I t ana coony pai om tbe Kepwbl.caa otiira 5 r.,;BHGGY AI.D W1G0U Tbe raak aad fl list party art aot t!a for tbo sake f sfiej thoy eaa kardlr reaJiae tbal ibv bav best so bltUrly d..-i aad b-alraved by their la,ire This fail atolhr ltier. , " be b1d. saakUf f-jr m wkicb tt 1 Popahst party has participate mc U birlb A ria w ar ealid pon to violet ed t- : every soUcaa dlaratio ef platform, ar.d u fnt w ik ti ot for irld eUtvlb;,fr., aai 1 Q CO lb p l q t a f rx-i Tis m i tnak three let!,:. ,f f9 lf wb:eb w ba kB 4 e , 1 traded awav aad Iraftctod i.w. .ii. . i w. . i ' - - in II I w r l, asked to le for saee live and rxxiticei petacip' flat calrad:ctia t ;t ' oar plifosa I knew aef b t as s v w . & lb etbr etr . Krack it eteoty. bat a f 1 . t a1 p as y d Vikat m ii t U f f rr-et. a? asaa w . , is hor.eel wilk bieW t. 1 wk: ote frosa (iitc,M i; 1 ; at is I ttai. can fellow ttc ',rMbi--.i iad erv any : gr tk. '. .. I CIM t I "t :;- tactiv a 1 !-. d it f -1 ;'. It 4 i of priactp.e. I e.mr..v te til fo.l. beat ekl' i tb tao wb ,:t if. t t : w. aod tbir tooi'ff. at i k : s lbtr tiiH atii sitir is' Ui all w b dir rt ;t '. i: t aad p-eiilt-cai i !Te.irri. v abandee il as 1 1 ,4 a --. r wbiU san tbe .-. party i tb great, lb rr.ii ; rt now. h boWis wiibit it ik H , poesibt ily of rei.af fr-ssa ti . arafai e tdtliota '.bat r. t" sm the naaa f oir S'at a i and a by word To lb b -. ' iowl f ral of Ik r-arty ; s. and v'.-! far av. I hat et r t c dt. frat:t-ad. asd ' -tb;r sab 1 tw apea'. U !v.ia u t)w m back !- ti tb ra".i that w f; It rcrr.:-t . '- it coar. try, : I ;r:as.-t a oar mentooi K: i-e I Sbi Kasior. r Tm i ' . : n - tick t : a... vet th tb a v tar vol tb ItBoralif litkl M ? reaaon for tb.s Ia sbcrt as . 2 I am warra Ma !. a P: lists who dslr Vo vol fra cs p!o a :.d for w b 1 1 t a ; rtr t t a r. ! I hoast aovrnmtil. htt tl'a . 'bond to acatjow',-!,- tb.r rr-r it ) lriog lb lU ' rtorn lo It. locate far'.y Th neit bee! tbit- to r.r making a saislake it lo correct 't one that is made as soc at ;- lb.. Y ea ra t ra l v . W.'K. Pa:T (r-ra re leery tdaeatjoc A brother remarked :o .i w thai io hat opsno-n end Se i t. rorarantecfsan Nrih Car;.; at re a coenpo'terKy cdwra: Dti '.t m e i be ccedl imrwcfc'. ( .krr f tchoolt. (.Jcr'aiclr l.Se f &: ' .r -j h c b Scale rdorattoti rev a.aj ;m litci tSc t.fb: of I S Vase i - : m parrnit to aco-i tScir cb:'.ie-i t - tr . We do rot look w th ca?! the com oa c j dc. tare (hat oenber b! c sre ;:c schools arc yet rrcparrd o :. V"- roraoittrcatao td tbtt :n c-ee of pbJc KbooH endct hn csre. n ct there should b rr be en i y t Irca. be iuaaod oat tbrre. T'h t coev ecr1 him of the net eta! y cd a rovptliMi racaearc. It to jbt Kaee at rraS't Cooviacrd kiaa of Ibc rrf ret I i4 m ' pforviBf lb Ire stbooi. W :o'.oc to Ulwve Ibat ,1 bnter acnoois -rrc provaird, the perpi woohiap precaatc tbe sb. . Bet f taoe Ml well thai there arc many who mm be corn pelted toed -tea tr ihcir chiWrrw, a&d. so aooe as car achool shell tar made c4 secciwai , we arc rerpaee to eric a coep pwboej aaajcrrc. What atarrata bcKribly io tbe tacw m (ar froca r trreatrg tbe free acaooat, so Ur tram bavrag aa s isopea of tbesa. eo Ur i o brier ready to a oBVsory mrmT. out pecipee arc aciaaaHy aa dira io tea Ibetarsrlrrt to aaak (tares wtanb a-J Uad-af. Wc Korib GaroJraue boaet ot c-af achool iua aad aatkc like wr troaid destroy the aaa wbo lif.s a aa ftrr ari'tet tbcaa; bat wv kac wty will thai ua aaaay saxtwasi cafew Vase tW (rt SKhooia ar a arsa media. pvuiaA saockrry. Omr auatodc a inorkjr( oT O. feUot rpc-i Ca. J1.C3 hr Tw. tfj h Unit. XUHEER 32. i OUQQY AND WAQON WORKS Tt r Fri ir. ! v.- i.Lrn!is, w -: a t JEWELRY, J EWER Y, JEWELRY Watchet. Clock and Jewelry C-C AP ar0n CAftM REPAIRING. ar J D. P. LYNCH a : S B Tai Feed Sale ; Livery STABLE HATES ; FULLER. Prfni'in LOUISQURQ H. O. Th VMS A.M V 'I-ITK IPalVK'sN I I 77r.N7I' -XT I-l't WF.N THil t r 4 V t ft a-wra ep fl baraea fa J t., al very raablo I prlrea. : ' " j f HJ2 tf? jTJJJ 1 I I .or. j LtlL'BtHO, 7. C. HfETS OVKE ; oie huicBEo nyjim c:uhx. ia cf wrn o ioj ni m rt rni:icFtrtriri, t. rw'n'eJ Hlevwst, or rar.t lo CWk- Mocry t W- r -a aprsMrvaJ cf ranty. Wcxtta moat, frw.ti.e4. A. E. Mtt:a. Tan f-tiaali tt W. J. Pfaaxv. Caka. Irpasat Eoxssi loc real, f 1 ;J I ! I crr-mrxi I ruwuui w.t trim, r. w ;