W' l " . " : ; j'ylLSON ADVANCE. : : : : : - -: -- ..- - - v , - - jgr- i . ' - , "LET ALL Tit. ' " ' 4- . : : : : -,- - ut-m -w- n ftln.wi.i-,i - -: - L.Tnoi? c3TflTco&froiiiwnr . ;, - , - -: ynszr: I g; . . t-; : r : ' ' ----- - - - - . -- , : . - , n . .w ' j . . TTTTT - ,11 j i j v L la -. J, .i in- c i , , ., t .1 -i i m I mr w - . , ' 1 1 mm i r : , - .1 WILSON ADVANCE. 9 Published, Etbbt Feidat ax Wilson North Caeoliwa. BT . . imnn until. subscription Bates hi Adtakce . S 60 1 00 One Tear..... gx Months.. fyMoner ca be seat by Money Order or K.-ifHtered Letter tournik. Orric-Trboro Street, la the Old Tout' OBce Buildln. NEWS 01r A WEEK OATB KUED FKOM ALL PABT8 OK THE OBLD. PENCILLING S G LEAN 1 NO 8. Win. Fenuer Esq., of Scot- lurid Neck, died last weak. Mr. L; O. Grady of Halifax, while chopping wood on Monday, w;ih paiufnlly iujnred b.v a splinter striking him in the eye! Frank Hard, or Ohio nnd Tobu W. Daniel, of Virginia, are considered to be two of the most eloquent men is America. Washington hotel men say the indications are that the entire democratic party will attend the inauguration of Cleveland. "Mr. Wr W. Corcoran, who enter tained Mr. Buchanan when lie took the oath of office, offer the like eourtesy to Mr. Cleveland. - A pear' which weighs 1)3 carats and is valued at $17,000, was found last week in lower California. It is believed to le the largest in exiHteuce. Diphtheria and measles are both raging fiercely in New York eity. -Of the diphtheria cases GO average, which Is 50 per cent. An old maid In Nashville keeps ft parrot which swears, and a monkey which chews tobacco. She says, between the two, she doesu't miss a husband much. Mr. Cleveland says: "I shall be safe if I obey the law of the land. aDd I am going to do it, and let the pol iticians howl." Mr. Cleveland evi dently does not take much stock in politicians. D. L. Moody and Ira D. Sankey have received royalties from the publishers of the Moody and San key collection of hymus of $600,000 Every dollar has been given to the cause of religion. At Republican caucuses in various wards of New Haven, Conn., last week, Republicans who claimed to be such still, though admitting that they voted lor Cleveland, were denie I the right to participate. "A fine picture," said a gentle man, pointing to a painted female ou a tbcco tub. '"Yes, indeed," replied his Iriend, "and she is not without good backing, " "How is fUntl'l Utrion1t nks rrvf Mm f lrlw iUAbj UOOII t gUt till' i tobacco." A colored barber in New Or leans spoke of a distinguished Senator oh whom he waited as "one ob de mos' extinguished obituaries ob de place." He had heard -of distinguished habitues, and wished to reproduce it. A plum pudding weighing '21'.) lbs. was served on Thanksgiving day by the Union Democratic club of Richmond. The ' number of onnds represented the number of electoral votes received b.v Cleve land and Hendricks. The Baleigh "News-Observer" nays, yesterday Mr. D. B. Avera received an order from a lirm at Three Oaks, Michigan, for a car load of goose quills. For once in his life he is nonplussed and swamped by too large an order. In South Carolina they are arranging to send 100 red-shirt ed men, from each of the ?4 counties, t6 the inauguration of' Cleveland. If the other Southern States do likewise, it will be a very impressive spectacle, and will boom the red flannel market. Gen. John A. Logan last week sent a message of congratulation to Vice Presideut-elect Hendricks. lTj)on its delivery Mr, Henkricks said: ''Did Gen. Logan really do that!" and smiling he added, "that is certainly very kind on the part of the general." A story is in circulation to the effect that twenty-four years ago Senator Saulsbury, of Delaware, took a vow not to get married mir til another Democratic President was elected; and that he is now looking around sharply for a bride, ne is 66 years old. Less than twelve months ago. Mrs. Hugh Blair, ot Chattanooga, JTenn.vgare birth to three children, all of which are living and in good health. Saturday evening last ti.e same lady gave birth to two boys and a girl, making six children Inilt ill Iaoo 111.1 n run it tiut II Mr llli IWI ill IT-..I tllilll ct J t ill . Direct information from Wise county, southwest Virginia, is to the effect that thej plague which has caused such mortality in that section ol the State is now on the decrease, lietween 2tW and :?00 persons, from three to eighty years of age, have died of t4ie disease. No man in South Carolina has done more to promote good lie liug between the races . than Wade Hampton has done and perhaps for that-very reason the live negroes in the State legislature alone pre vented his recent re-election to the United States Senate from le ing unanimous. VOLUME 14." lotto town 'of Walworth, Cus ter county. Omaha, last' week, Timothv Faraoin. shot and killed four persons with a double barrel shot gun, beat out the brains of an aged father with the bntt of the gun, and then blew out his brains with a revolver. The d-ed is traceable to a case of jealousy and unrequited love. . . In the' . Legislature .-of South Carolina Tuesday, Wade Hampton was elected United States Senator as his own successor, receiving the entire vote of -both houses with the exception of three votes for Smalls cas fy colored,- representatives from Beaufort county, ami two for Whinner. Cast liv colored Senators from Beaufort and Berkley ties. A school girl, speaking of a kiss, says" This oscillatory 'performance is a paroxysmal contact letweeu the liabcl.' appendages' ; attached to the superior and inferior maxil laries, respectively, of a man aud a woman or two woman. The younger the parties are the more paroxysmal will le the paroxysm arising ; from the continuity of tjie approximated receptacles of nutri trions aliment. Mr. Brown killed him Last Sat- BILL A RP'sfTALK. r- . .- Tnn YOUNG CANDY X' EN.TOYME. Candy pnlli butv I suppose theuV 1 have age Aid traine of mit to anything couii i please the children 71 1 1 VI All LKS GIVE 'LUNG. lSCOMFOBT. : A few weeks ago ii accidentally sjiot and self, near Wavuesville. nrday with-the same guu his on Walter Brown was gunning with a companion named Herren. While they were climbing a fence the hammers -of their guns struck each other, and Brown's gun fired, and he received a wound in the face from which lie died in a few hours. . , ' Near the town of Weaverrille, ssjs the Ashevillei "Advance" a Mr. Jones while ploughing ail old field, which has not leei cultivated for many years, ploughed up an old iron vessel, which upon ex amination, was found to contain t7f0.00 in gold and 2;'i(U0 in sil ver aud a small quantity of valua ble jewelry. The vessel containing the treasures bore evidences of having been deposited there for many lin? years, and to whom they belonged is iau inexplicable mystery to the citizens Itvmg iu that locality'. , . I The New Orleans ' Cremation Society' -has purchased a square- of ground on the south side of .Canal street. Laborers will be put 'at work at, once .to la. out. the grounds into a llower -garde i and the furnace lor burning- the dead will be erected without delay. The society is one of the largest and wealthiest in the country, composed of men of a'l nationalities aud religions, the Hebrews, however, predominating. The objections to cremation at other points do not exist in the lowlands of Louisiana, and preachers of all denominations favor it on sanitary if not sentimen tal gronnd.s , How To Carve K Tariay. A fellow wrote to the Baltimore 'Sun" yesterday asking how 'is the best- way to carve a turkey, and he oot the following answer: "There are several good ways of carving forks into the breast of the turkey, slide the royal bird -out of the dish on to the tablecloth, grab it up 'with Im:Ii hands, return it to the dish, and request your wife to finish the job. The carving is then proceeded with in .-satisfactory manner. Another method is to rivet the turkey to the table with railroad spikes and carve with a broadaxe. Hi cases where the turkey is very tough dynamite may be used with advantage. For din- net-table dynamite, ask vour cer." ' gro- Plantation Philosophy. ; Yer kin often cheat de ole man easier den. yer- kin tie boy. De ripes' pear is de sal'test. . Quickness ain't no ign o' seuse. De trout suajis at er hook sooner den de cattish, fbnt he rloan lib so hab eber been deceibiu. De hossrty makes mo' fuss den de yaller jacket, hut 'he don't hurt ha'f so bad. De loudes, talkers ain't alius de wisest men. . (l.eese 'makes more ntiise den tie rooster, but da. ain't got nigh ' m much ense. Er boy is mo' active den er man. Kr colt prances mo' gailev tlen er boss, but lie is' tie siH'ine ter fall off de blu'.f an' kill hisse'l'-. That something - which prompts a man tt lie, il stronger, would piompt him to steal. -"' ' How. Gen. Logan feels. Two,coou hunters on Sycamore creek. W. Va.. the other dav treed a coon, and built a tile by the tree, ; and sat down to watch lr the ' animal. They fell asleep, the tree j burned off and fell on them. One ' was kiliea instantly, lue otuer was burned so he cannot live. The coonf The dispatch is sient uliont j him. - . The Honorable IHiniel Webster Flanagan, ot Flanagan's Mills, Texas, has been nominated to an internal revenue collect orship, in that State. He will be remembered as the plain spoken patriot who at the repnblicau national conven tion of 1880, disturbed the hilarity of the occasion by compressing the bright lexicon of practical politics into the historical question. "What are we here for except the offices?' Gen. Logan, the .defeated man for Vice President, has acted with a:' great deal- more ,ot manliness than Blaine has shown. When asked how he felt about his defeat, Gen. Logan said he felt like the man who stnhtied his toe autl sat down on a stump. to nurse it. "His ueighlioi' came aiong antL asked: 'Hurts pretty' bad, doii'i it ?' 'Yes,' replied the man. -as he hugged the toe up closer in his hands. aud the worst of it, it hurts 'too bad for me to laugii. and 1 .am loo big to civ." It is said that Lo gan has very little respect or kind 'fecliing for. Blaine, as Jie (Blaine) ried to -ignore Logan in the late campaign. -e a nuisaii. fave to havet Tived at the Vil that I sob- Wtning to so when they got their moth Vconsent the matter was all artJed and the company invited wHpt con sulting me. j Ihere was'lpare mom in the house and asJbad some wrJtjpfpaj-flP I adjouriiwl myself there to have a quiet time, While I was ruminating before the fire and smoking the pipe ot leace and tranquility the young folks began to gather and before I knew itj the young ladies were ushered into my room aa a recep tion room, and 1 was. kindly in formed that I would have to va cate. With a sigh of resignation I retired and poked around geper- ally.; I wished I had a room a room of' my own and Mrs. Arp says she wishes she had a room a room of her own. But she can't .have one.. She never will have one, for children and ' grand children 'would - be lost and I wonld be lost. She can't slip off to nabor Freeman's but what a dozen want to know , wbere she is anil when she is coming back. The dog and the cat follow her no she will never have a room to herself. But I found good company at the candy palling and had a gooVl time anyhow, for I do love these ualxirly visits. I love to see the young . folks happy and I love to discourse politics and crops aud naborhood news with the older ones. But this candy business is not all serene, one of the girls burned her hand dreadfully and is still carrying her haudm a bandage. Aud then it is so messy, as Mrs. Arp says. The children get candy all over the floor and the tables and bureau. It sticks to my stockings yet when 1 get ready to go to bed. It melts and smokes on the hearth The dish es are all daubed and bard to clean up again. The door knobs and dipper handles are sticky and they keep sticky as long as the candy lasts. But every pleasure has its drawback. After every dinner , the dishes are to be washed. After every repose the bed has to be made up. We ride and drive and then the horse has to be pnt up and fed. We dance to sweet music and have to pay the fiddler. We go on a picnic or an excursion and come home tired and weary. Every pleasure seems to be followed by pain or by trouble just as the uight follows .the day. But still it is right, for it is nature. We live in contrasts and enjoy them. Suppose we do hunt all day and find un game. Hope is a good thing, and it was one of the questions we nsed to debate when I was a bov, "wheth er the. pursuit or the possession gave the most pleasure." I took the affirmative one time when I was pursuing my sweetheart with love and hope aud devotion, and 1 argued my side with earnest elo quence. But when I lost her aud auother fellow got possession I tiopped over to the other side. In a year or so l recovered and pur sued Mrs. Arp with fear and tremb ling, and when I possessed her I was happy. The pursuit is a live ly,. interesting aud uncertain busi ness where two sweet young maidens is concerned, but the pos session is solid anil sure aud never gives out. Wejiad a frolic at our country academy last week. The night you were all jubilating iu Atlanta we, were quietly enjoj ing ourselves near our hpmes with our wives aud our children. The ladies, God bless them, invited ns to a supper, a feast of .good things with no headache in them. My folks killed a turkey and baked some 'cake and the nabors did likewise, aud they got oysters somewhere and long tables were spread and groaned with good things and we thought it was all a free show un tell we got there aud found a door keeper and had to pay to go in. Then they finished np with bills of fare, and to everything there was a price, but we couldent back out, for the sight and the savory smell provoked an appetite. Alter I had made them a little speech, which I had prepared lor the oc casion, one kind lady .manager conducted me to a seat and said I was . her guest and the choicest viands should cost me nothing; with this assurance I partook amazingly and feasted to-my en tire content, and about that time another kiud lady presented me my bill and called on me for a dol lar a whole dollar, and said I had oysters twice aud turkey " twice. Upaid it with cheerful alacrity but somehow I don't appreciate so uiauv managers on such occa- 1-1 . . . " ! use iney meant it, and I reckon they dwL and the youug folks sor rendered and said, well, if we can't dancA we can have a little twiati ficatioD. Before 'anybod? ' knew what tba meant the ' floor tag' cleared and the music began and the twiatificaWon.to,1arid they twisted all arotiml and about, and crossed over, and hands all round, and changed partnervami-prome-nade all, and parly veo Franeaia, and I dont know what all, and the solemn , trustee looked on wjh enjoyment, and weA satis- titt.""1" w oniy .a twwtl fmlic 3w Well, it , wa , goodly i H went IftXebogs hart. l we scarce of eh'lftPPJr but awfnl Brown has got son0vinor stock in oar school botKClerred preferred his money to anybooS, tor he had more of it. It we bad had him there, with his swallow tail coat on, we would have pre fered some more. When he gives us two hundred dollars more well name it the Brown institute, bat not till then. The name is for sale, but we are ubt going to'rlo like those Dalton "folks andtrame oar school ; for him ft fore we get P?J.rAS"ST0BfcI 2 YC, 'Ai UTTLEXSrCJ DPNT ; TAUGHT , IXMTTENTM E ST. : - -...-. . . ' AEZCrT DISCLOSED. V Ccn ccr! V-p"Ti t h "tv. tune, t least tna is the sort of ex planation tney -often give tbem Srwi coaceir ttei cishajis that uww taeajuxav JJerbj though , ueixaiBrr veionzea. to the cl as I xnaaaeiined in holidav tim: .i a- - -. .. " r mutrjjic; lor - reaij,r seemed uu luaurrjioip nisagteeaie rnase voat seasunaa conspired' to thiog bat a 4merrJ-the year ahy Tb first year of heii to her. Ton, her husband, sprairitied life, kle and was confined to the .an- nntiljona after the new year. Tbv floor rrteatOTestlw taen k k srS. &TMSr -- tll i Itrrr 13 Pnll but "ill., .-- ire gotW3rfcfr;.black J-mhlntehf; -Rafig wrong irtfeSrirtem r-n exjrraoor. I tell ft A the waggrinsL aiao en- eo to pnlVthe otber.bfciL- 4a lerlir saw now ov ttiini thal? pa : hi; .pootvWeared taetl r1 tm as.--e..iiwiH 9 wr l,nslitl, and iu that most niable 1 . . .!... au A 1' ..u 111. 1 tot trtm'Syvfemj.utwkf iua. hlr ue moaned. -ais nhe saw it "Oh, itoor wowai-i-nhappy. ed rrfiPt t wr-- - - ' i k TWoutef doof'bBcduowand m two women"7 met face to race. lls- her? thatV'tbe right .one, pjiemiwaiK riguii in ana taKe A ROSY ROMAXCE. :o:- A SCOTCH LAD AND LASSIE CARRIED AFTER A TIME. A STOKY OF TRUE LOVE. Fdriok-;it's: my ho.': ;. wnJ.'nntbrtaqnate: for, while it less eoed?hiaaalary. it, at-the same the money." They hare-never got, UmetiUtrgediheir bills considera- .vet. Governor Brown don't j blyk ABd Mrsy Derby thought they for honors when he can gettUAO begun life trbabled" indeetl. nni versities. He says , ne has watc'ed them for forty years, and eyery year they turn out a splendid crop of elegant high strung vagabonds, with but few exceptions. But education JsXle Ainericau watchword now, and we will have, to conlorm. If the natiou gets a'n overdose I reckon we will find it out sooner or later. Bill Arp. first to kl the bride; iwf be stood on as best man.:3U 1 A t one end of tho toow; Inscrib ed oa the! wall In fall new Tvf tha company, were tbe wonia i ms: i 1 "True hearts are nor than coronet Alltl NUtlHC i. wood- (Una it im mi? .fiakt.oae -of . the (riie&tM. as.VhailraBklott a bom per of foaminz ale, ta the rheaUh. and pinstwrity of the 'bride and groom. METHODISM. . 'v O CRSTENARY CKLKBR AT10N AT RALT1MOR B. ' - ----- , y- f WONDERFUL PUOaKESrf: The lecond year, Tom's tuocber Tjiey hare.-never got , any la.v them for nothing. Old lather Dobbins is oar rich man op here, aud we are going to try bioi , for an ; endowment and fcabVt the Dobbins old-field school. He likes old -field schools -but he has . net use for colleges ' or eemJuaties o.UahiGifl;fcl died a wee&MCbritmas. and tha nolldSUwiere consequently sad aud dqHipp third and fourth years weja-JBajked bv. serious illnensea gChjrJstmaft .time, and the lastr Payisg Farms. The kind of farming that pays the farmer best is that in which the mao sets out with the primary idea of making . his living his food, raiment and board upon the farm. The crops mus ti be a good deal diversified; they mnst come iu, not all at one season, but at different 'times of the year. The bread, meat, butter, eggs, milk, vegetables ( and -fruits con sumed in the family, and, if possi ble the cotton andtbe wpt)l fpr clothing, must all be grown on the farm. In addition to these there must be a surplus of . seTBral things to sell, to bring in the. money that is needed in the an nual cash expenses, such as taxes, education, doctor's hills, etc. la a word, the farmer must be a sel ler aud not a buyer. The one crop system is no longer ' safe or profitable. The great staples are well controlled by speculators, Prices are fixed before the crop is made, and the helpless planter has to take what be can get, and grin aud endure it with what grace be may. In this case, none but the men who make,tUektsup plies at home are sate or comfort able. The man who sets out to make a living by farming must study his farm and tbiuk lor him self from beginning to the end of the year. lie must see what his farm is capable of, aud watch his points nicely, never puttiug all his eggs in one basket. There are many things that will sell besides cotton, tobacco aud peanuts; some of the miuor crops pay bet ter than the large ones. A pay iug farm depends on the manage ment, the crops, the man. UUlflfloni rDerby got lost on the StreetvABd was gone all one terrible night, It.was not to be wondered at,vtbetftoteithat Mrs; Derby look ed, forward somewhat fearfully as the holidays drew1 near, and not being in the .most robuRt health, she was naturally morbidly nervous over tbt matter, and was prepared to magnify lire 'lightest shador of any unpleasant coming event ; into a very disagreeable substance. 'I -wonder what it will be this year?" she wonld say to herself, as the tune drew near. It7 began a couple .of days e- fore GhrJstmas. , Bridzet. the cook. fell very ill and was obliged to leave and go to her sister's ; the second girl scalded her foot- and was la id np, the Tange became -nnraanagea-ble, the baby had a nerious atta(k of crpnp, and Christmas Eve fon'nd iics, Derby in a state of mind not, ta be en-Vied. j "1 know it-will le somethher qradial his year, Tom," she said, Don't Call i JUIan as be kissed her after supper and said he must work down at the, ofl&ce until twelve that night. f.uYotl are nervous, Doll: don't think of .troubled possibilities ; we are all well baby hasn't been bet ter in months than he is to-night. i i V - . -J - . - " 3 . "The." men " ' went. . iu with their 'eAvyjJpuxdeund the 'wotnevjook "ett . at one-another. .Lv . Derby's t&riit ipttise-ibiMi -btseu .-gtotreat wtbia;.lier owu - dor; ana inns make a oretense of uot having seen tSe fekfcletoa tr "her3ieigh,bor tieaTtlrand homef biit the ft4n i bad Tied ber and bo tbei two ! wq- "ood facft$o:laceij: j-.?:r IJerbv.t CJiri&tmas to V On. Mrs. voice -oitiTH!fc3ti" EUjIrjdafe. ,-Her and hei4'ae'wlf vnrf -sttabge, hard aud cold. VRto maible, so ing her, Mrs. Derbypt answer about her and drew hetber:-arma own home aud into the o4e ner parlor.1 The inen bad fgoneblled wtaits-with Mr. Eldrtdge. and'edfi be heard persuading him to retire: ' There was silence between the two for awhile, then Mrs. Eldridge pntJierJjlead down ujon her friend's slMnlder and burst into tears.' l I'XDUtsee oiiy-soi"owf obf- Mra. Derby" she cried, - "I am a most miserable and wretched woman.? And Afihe 'buried her'- face in her jeweled hands. ; , "Oli! I have trietl so faithfully to reform that man," she went on, in a feverish baste of words which Jt seemed imperative of her to utter. "I did love hiui once, bttt. now 1 1 loathe and detest him, my life is a mockery and a lie. I have nothing to live for I want to die!" "Hush,",whispered Mrs. Derbj, as she would have pacified a rebell ious child. ' Hush; do not think nor speak such words; try to bear j our sorrows: we all have crosses " "No, not all," iadignantly cried Mrs. Kldridge. "What have you? A happy -home, a husband who loves aiid honors-you, children oh, Mrs. Derby! thank" God "for vour The 9 o'clock fast western express that tor ont of Mersey City- Wed nesday morning with a shrill scream j m. . 1 . ; ' oi aenance, leaving long intu ui j black smoke behind, earned among its passengers Ivmud lor the far! west a youug and loving pair, just , starting out on tue journey oi me along the in tiiinonial highway. The marriage of the youug peo ple was consnmated Tuesday night at- the Miuers' .. Arms Hotel, on Whitehall street, by the Rev. Isaac McGaire, rector of the SeamanV Society, and closed the last chap ter of a romantic courtship under difficulties, began iu the land of bonnie Scots and terminated on American soil. Through vicissitudes that would 'make many .a brave heart quail, these young people have ever kept on the even tenor of their vra.v, aud though the course of their true love was not by any means smooth or a path pC rosea, they wove a chain so 8 iron sr that no trial was able : to break its love links. .Eight years ago, in then-harming jy of Aberdeen, Scotland, An antn, illiams, theu a cauuy Kwiviu . . ... r..n j.. 1 with hpiPi lJ .vph oiu. leu in nne a laJe f$iu- An,,ie a lassie iair. n i,.st wnA. 1 vp rax oKa.!ArtBor it. N Et KOSLiKAKSsr, iector-ieer4. izt9 aunnnr .wy tcretA feroJ . kh rfomanhood. bhe , ULJ" the fairs for :r."rl i 7-1.- m could tlance tue - iiiniitnu rung' grace anu winsome ways blue eyed such s nrettv. little children. If I were a mother I could bear even this. No. do not say all. I envy yon your happy life." And she sobbed bitterly. ' Mrs. Derby was silent. She thought of the wicked feeling in uei nearr wi;u wiiicn she had re- ' The GooQ Old Times." Stingy. You 'cannot lie familiar with the private eireuinstriJces which uiakt some men tlose, or cmjel them to refuse a charity to which it would give them pleasure to contribute if thev could, and we have seen a little boy cry in secret because a con panion bail called him stingy, when he contributed his, eutire wages to the support of a mother for whjnm a faithless fathei had failed' to provide. We'd rat her be cussed out of our shoes than be guilty of so great an in discietion as this. Don't call auy- body stingy. Even if he is stingy, ! in the true acceptation oi tne term, it is none of your business. We say, again, dou't do it. sioiis. Nevertheless 1 had the honor of beiug one fair lady's i sjuest even though 1 was another's victim. Then I paid for Mrs. Arp and the children and thought 1 was done, but they had a fish pond in oue corner, behind a curtain. and the children wanted to drop a ; line just to see what they would j catch well that cost some dimes j aud next came a raffle for a fine, j large cake, and they all wanted aI,.i -.ml t .-, A .-, tAnl- n i it ill .line, uun .itis. iwt j IttlllUU IIC oiuiu luiun to n ii u three dice, and shore enough she threw four and retired with ma- i trouly dignity and said she didn't want the cake nohow. Welt, the show went on, and on untell they got all our change and had enough tuone" to plaster the school house. There was good music there and The Rev. Br.i Talmage lectured last evening in the Thirty-third Street Baptist Church on the sub ject "Is the 'World Better or Worse?" Iu tbj course of bis remarks he said: "1 once asked my father, .'Is the world very much worse now than it used to be V 'Well,' said he, with a twink le in his eye, 'tue fact is that the world was never- any better thau it ought to lie.' Laughter. "Peo ple say. 'Look at the Church to day!' Why right ophite the church iu Soinerville, N.J., there is a hotel, and here iu former times, I was told, that the pastor and officers of the church would go in and refresh themselves be fore attending service. Laughter The gayeties aud corruptions or to-day are nothing to what they were fifty years ago. It is said there is no royal road to learning. That was true, but it is not now. Astronomy is now as practical as agriculture. 'Think,' says Wash ington Irving, 'of the ministry having such men as Deau Swift and Sterne !' The world was much worse then than now, I don't see bow our fathers and mothers staid in it; although, on our own account, I'm glad they consented to do so." Laughter. New York "Tribune." A Story In Unnatural History. Mr. J. W. Atwater says he has the finest pig in Chatham county. When it was quite small it got lost from its own mother, aud took to sucking a kindly disjKsetl: cow, which it found lying down. They fell in love with each other, The pig utteily neglected its 'mother world to me." And the again :is she thought of Hie, present, is ceilainly peaceful garde'd her neighbor not an hour anq. pieasanc ; dou r borrow worries; let -the f u t ure res t i n 1 1 ope and trust" Yes, but something always docs bappenChristinas, you know, Tom." "Well, this one is going to be a truly 'happy' one. There, good uight; I'll be home by half-past twelve and we'll fill the stockings,"' and Mr. Derby hurried otU t Jdrfi. Derby pnt the children to bed and listened to their chatter LwithJa sigh in her heart and on her Ups... She wished she had it in her power to-give them all the pretty things they hoped "Shan ta Clauth" wonld bring. "If I was only rich, now, like Mrs. Eldridge" (her next door neighbor), she thought, "how happy I should be! She has ev erything heart can wish, nothing to do all day but amuse herself. ; I dare say she never even feels tired; her rooms are always in order; no one to"put- them in disorder. Oh! dear! and Mrs. Derby sighed again as she picked up the thousand and one articles the lit' le ones had strewn about. Then she sat down at the machine and "stitched, stitched, stitched" at some, of the large pile of work that accumulates where little ones abide. Her back ached-aud her bead throbbed and, as she sat- there, a tired, weary, nervous, overworked mother, re bellions thoughts rose to her miud. "Why should Mrs. Eldridge have so much aud I so little?" she thought. "It is unjust; J deserve as much as she I work day and night aud she ' Just tnen a sud den gust of wind blew the window shade .aside and Mrs. Derby looked over into .her neighbor's sitting room that twa.s just across the' oar row yard. Her curtains were drawn and the room was brilliantly light ed. Mrs. Eldridge sat in the midst of a pile of bright ribbons and silks dressiug a doll. Mrs. Derby, dropped her work and came to the window and loot ed closer. Yes, there sat her neighbor, dressed in an ele gaut costume, diamonds in her ears and iewels on her fingers, dressing a doll babyl Mrs. Derby glanced down at her own plain wrapper which she had not had time to change since morning; she looked around her untidy room, beheld the piles of plain sewing "a month behind," and a bitter, wick ed feeling of envy crept into her heart. "She has everything I have nothing! She is rich I am poor! I work, and slave she drdsses dolls! Oh! this Is cruel and wrong ; why should that woman's life he beau tiful :ind happy and mine misera ble and wretched!" and poor Mrs. Derby, worked up to a pitch of nervous freuzyj threw herself on to the lounge in a passion of tears. A furious ring at the bell startled her lkn ...... ,1 . V. .A MAW imi luc tun, dun iuc tin nmu .. . ,. T, .... .i,l as mnch attached to the ! uom Dei .1 s""i r'u l nor come uowu mans uu, nu became lit tIa ni it cLo ntne - t si IkAn xom I. 'i-t " 1, T " " premonition of some terror to come call. The pig sooq began to grow 1 ikj, t-.. nA .An.irrniir i...t Mr. t r was it not Christmas Eve. and lion oi misioiiunc. the trustees were consulted by the young folks about a dance, just a little dance to wind up on, but they said "no" and they said it thinking it au expensive raise pigs, had it put into a pen. The motherly cow would no leave the pen in which her ..adopted child was confined, aud the pig tried his best to break jail and get to his mamma. Iu compassion to both Mr. A. turned the pig. oat. and they were happy. When. the pig wants milk it will squeal around the cow, and, rear up on its legs. She understands jnte wants and lies down, for him to take his filL They go together all day ana. sleep together at night. "Pittsboro Home." Mrs. Derby flew, down and opened the front door. A carriage stood at the enrb and. two men were lifting out a third one, who could not help him self. The hall light fell upon Mrs. Derby's pale face and light hair that had escaped the comb and she looked like something ethereal. The men stared ; at her without speaking. ''What is it?" she asked in a hoarse whisper. .-. fTell me at once. Oh, Tom! Brine him to me." And she stepped eat on the step to re sign and now! Oh! what were all her little, petty trials to this? 8he felt rebuked and ashamed. It was quiet upstairs 'now, and the men came silently down the hall and passed out without speaking. Mrs. Derby rose to go after a few more, werds of warm, loving sympathy," aud Mrs. Eldridge stilled her grief and saitl : "Good night, my friend. I thank yon, as a woman, for your woman's sympathy. You are the iirst one to whom my secret has been bared by me. When you see me again forget all I havesaid. I will try to live on as I have lived on, and oh, Mrs. Derby! whatever trials you may have in your life, thank God for your loving, hojest, honorable husband aud your little children; and now, good night and a happy Christmas." w 'Well, you see, nothing has hap pened so far; it is 'to-morrow,' and we begin Christmas happily," said Mr. Derby, a half-hour later, when he returned home. "Why, what's the matter?" he asked, as his wife's tear-stained tace smiled up into his, ju, inui ; i am so nappy; it is the very hapoiest Christmas in the " -nrl tl.n rtt ICrtl JCI1 what the comparison' meant. "What do you mean, Doll?:' urged Mr. Derby, iu surprise at his wife's ngira- lio u. And then she told hint all told iiini of all the hard,' rebellious thoughts, she had held in her heart, of the wicked feeling of envy she had harbored: how she had convet- ed her neighbor's goods, and then what, had been revealed to her. "And I shall never feel that way again, Tom,' said she, "no matter what may come sickness or death or any tbiusr. I have you, and your love and honor and respect. and we have the children. And I see now how little we know of other people's troubles; our own may le hard to bear, but how much worse may be our neighbor's! I. for one. shall never break the Tenth Commandment."-' Next day. when a prettily dress doll was sent in . to .little Dollie Derby, with "Mrs. Eldridge"s love,'' Mrs. Derby looked at it with new eyes. It was to her not only a toy, but a symbol of the emptiness of her neighbor's Christmas! h Singular Death. The State "Chronicle" of the 11th says: Mr. William Harp, a nephew of Mr. N. S. Harp, of this city, and a brther-iti-1aw of Mr. M. A. Parker met his death yesterday, afternoon in a singular aud most unhappy way. He bad been moving his household goods, and was on the , wagon with the last load. When the driver drove on the railroad 'crossing the side of Garner's station Mr. Harp fell from the. wagon and was picked the mada. .Ceatarea tih fiP- tiou to-day, to a 5 reporter ns ioi lows : ' i ' - The world nevtr. witnessed au exDosition 4 of -Li:":,tltude of tbig'Tberw tra u-ii x-icninery. moreiirt cittcXsStV and more exJuTOGtDB tatanu re- souroM$rfLACr?C 1 than t the work taje-J xrmt ,pe time. Trt Tsiwiai vof material fmJn rfamedfo jae KxposipOivJUi n!?9 t'uwif ffs are not yet half fc;;?d;tfc&;:5una carloads of freight are on wheem or in TeselSjandJ-w ahaHonea with more 4m position- baa has ever be4m' seeji-4a fti exposition beretolbn; -lAsxo fcialrxkiblt8 go to tb - feonkuftt 4r3iaatfon tor spaoa bwi)90yfltfBrit-ishe- j FriWbjgeam, rfrnwia. Austrian, Jtiaa ght nese, Japseniase, Central America 'and Maxieaaxhrbita, covering X60,00p,ar .feet of space, unr 'uour space atwui 2Ji0O.00O nonare feet, and we shall not be. able, to allat.tSDaoe ifor a week, beoiweislpie grpund jiBnor ami the iral eries araaoll to ove flowing. V' shaUfMUl baddiog 400 feetlong the wain building and have it flnlshedbrthe 16th, althoiish not a post up: As to .Jie exienditure and management defy critleiflii.e penny has ,en expendedj witaeot aa ap- propriaUoa. by the aaardy a close scrutiny by tke ,cHnnitttM r-aad over my: cnicAte,tad, every voucher to the Jaat sUistubneja of the loan . has been , .examed and found correct, prir.w his passed leyond the perioof critU r-ism and will go to countfy lefore Chmtmas, 'and we shall have every bailnff finished and ;..0o0 horRVpier in motion." On Decemlier 24, 1TH4, there met in Baltimore the first General Con ferenoe of the Methodist Episcopal. Church in the United States, which from he seaou when it met ba been commonly known as the "CbristniaH Conference." It was a time fraught with weighty in to the adherents of the Annie. The the young Scotch gallants weK i.;.i at her feet iu seines, but hersw. est smile was for Andrew, bontu . I 1 1 A v mucivie ami true, ami ner eves danced wjtu pleasure whenever he attended her. There seemed to be no reason why the two young eople should not wed in time, but after Andrew became the acknowledged lover of Annie, and the years liegan to step by, the old folks fell to shaking their-heads ominously, and put their fingers in the pic. Both were poor, but both were young and handsome, and their love was strong. So the objections of the old folks did not worn them or cool the ardor of their affection. "Yon cauna wed the vonng lass. Andrew, lad," his fat her said, "for ye be that poor mon. that ye carina much more na keep ver sel." I'm a muckle lad. father." .-An drew replied, "and I'll . ble ine time.' Aud so he did. wr live long. years he faithfully did pay court to prettv Annie n tne on: . country style, and sc was ,true to him. Success in business did not attend him. f? is always the case with those on whom tair lipid smiles. Some of Annie's old suitors pros pered md grew well to do, and she was told that she ws a foolish lass to war; for poor Andrew Williams wnen.weaitn eoum oe nau tor a nod. i "If. ye be true to me. Andy," she said.fl will bide the day-prosperity knocks at your door." Five years is a long time for young people t o struggle against adversity in love matters. At the end of this time Andrew found he could not ciuu enough in bonnie Scotland to 'support a wife, and determined to seen his fortune in America, the country lie had heard such wonderful stories about. So, after a tearful farewell, and" prom ises to write, and one day return and claim her as his bonuio Initio, Andrew left his sweetheart autl set sail for New York. He arrived at Castle Garden .1 years ago, and having a little mon ey with him, at once started for the far West, settling in Hazelton, Buchanan eouuty, Iowa. He took to . farming, prospered and grew rich, and is now one of the largest land owners in that section of the countrv. While her lover was toiling iu America Annie took service in a large dressmaking establishment i her native town, and watched and waited as the years rolled by. Her friends called her foolish for being trne to Iier lover, and many told her that he would never retnrn, and she need not expect to see him again. Her courage never failed her, though the rosy flush on her cheek faded and the lustre of her blue eyes grew dim. Not.long ago a letter post maik ed America was received in the citv of Aberdeen by the sweet lit tle lass in dressmaking establish- ! j ' ment, and rheu she had finished! reading its contents her employer 53 Mil Ql 41 iCflS-Eflf 1 GtOrJlt A Suicide Ii Greene. The Snow ITill "Telegraph" re- cords that Mr. Harry Carraway, who lives on the .Tas, F. Jones I lantation in Greene, committed i suicide on Friday iiirbt two weeks ago. -The circumstances are as follows; - We learn that he hatl leen to GokUbpr o on that day io seJlaonie cotton, od while there bad gotten, tight an.bpqght him a bull dog pistol, and when he came home , he , .had .shot it oft in the yard, and after going in the house be began to snap the pistol iu the fireplace, when a Mrs. Ves- ter, who was there asked him to desist from it, for -if the pistol fired it would J'rixlM'ec ehikl, when Mr. CarrawjjDia6djtha pis tol to bis bead jBnMaidiffmppse it woqld jigpioji; Whk weold be the ie , cqufieqnepcetyTh. pistol was r instantaaeonsiy risenarjjed, making a large, hob) lit tne .back of his head, a Tittle to one ' side, just alove htn rlgbr ear, from the effects of-which - wounds he died He has, a. wife bnt, aoebUdtttn, and a mother , and , severa brothers. Mr. Carraway, wheti' sober, waa a quiets orderly and industrious man. Utile niiyunnnrr -. v uin iu iur newly created Republic. Wesley, tneir great and peerless leader in England, after years ot opposition and persecution on the part of the Anglican Church, had t last de cided, to take the audacious but losrieaf stand which made Metho dism as a separate orgauiration possible. "I firmly belier,' said he, that I am as Scriptural pjro- pwt an much as any man In Eng land: for the uninterrupted sue- reaaion 1 i , knew i to vhe a fable, which no man ever did or can piove.''. And so on September 10, 1734,. ho wrote the ever-memora- We document brought to Americ;i by. Dr. Coke, and under -the au thority of which Dr. Coke ordained Francis Asbnry a bishop iu the Methodist Society; A nuridred years have passed away -since tnen, and a Centen, nlal -iDonferenoa baa met in the aame city of Baltimore, leginning on December 9, but how different tha eoudition of the tHxly which it represents! When Anbury, the first of the line of Methodist bisli ops in this country, was ordained on December 27, 174, the little Church bad about eighty minis ters and not more ' t ban 1 5,000 members altogether. The Centen nial Conference which is to meet this week . will represent a great army of 25,000 devoted aud stirv ceasfid .ministers ami fully 3,8f,0,. 000 communicants, exclusive of other imjiortant branches of Meth- -odlsm not participating. In what ever way it is looked at this growth is almost marvelous. And it mast be remembered that it has ' been a legitimate growth, neither stimulated by adventitious circum stances nor ' fed by foreign immi gration. MethodtsnrThas fought its great battle in this country with no odds in its favor and with no prestige to help it. It had no smooth message for the hardy set tlers or the hast or the rude pio neer of the Went, but, on the other hand, for most of them a- message of doom and judgment unless thev speedily refuted. It bad at first none of the aids which .veutth ami learning can give; even its history was reooieni 01 the lowest purlieus of Londonand its name was taut ened nHn it by its enemies as a term of reproach. But 111 spite of all drawbacks it increased mightily, because it so fully satisfied the heart hunger of the iieople .to whom it came. It had a vital and unqnenchable faith in the truth and power of its Gos pel, in the .excellence and com- ideteness of its ecclesiastical ma chinery, nnd in th Hnlrubilir r .if men s soul. Methodism as a his torical fact was the legitimate and necessary reaction from t he relig- l r ,...... .. . 1 .1, .1.... . ... . lull ni,iitii nuu tiiiatuirKN ill 1 lie Church of Englaml In the eigh-: teenth century. Wesley and Wltttefield, Coke and Anbury, were the historical but not the spiritual children of the fox-hunt- Major Rotblns Ana The Collectorship. Ex Congressman Bobbins, of Statesville, has been ' frequently mentioned in connection 'with the Revenue Collectorship -of bis dis trict. JJeing interviewed .concern ing it he .said: , "I suspect Ike Younc 8tartet' that. It, sounds like one of bis good-hnrhored roor backs, and I'm glad defeat hasn't deadened his inveutive lacnltics. Wouldn't it be a ricb,:Sbjf.ht--'Bob ance and myself aspiring to boss the still houses! some good dem ocrat will have to fill the collector ship: but as for myself- rather accept that -or any other in the revenue service, I'd 'possums for a livelihood. 1 long for is to see - the hateful system . speedily sky , bieb-rnor . down the way would .do as well : and I guess mv old friend Bob is of the same mind." than place bant What whole blown other had a vacancv to nil. I he letter ! contained a C.'o note anil these simple words : "Come to me. Will meet yon in New York. Have lieen prosper- Last Monday one of the Gnion line ot steamers steamed np to her dock, having anions her passengers Annie Patterson, the Scotch lassie. Firmer life It. That there is a Held for yonng and. energetic tanners w clearly demonstrated by what a Blil ledgeville farmer baa , done, i Mr. Sol. Banett, as be, stood pointing proudly to fifty-three bales of good enow white tour hundred aad , fiffy pounds to the bale of , cotton, re marked, ui made those on forty -one now y vears old.' She was alone, and had come all the way trom ; acress." Scotland, after waiting all these. "How did you do it?" vears, to meet her lover and t i "I iKKight the land three years ago, "married. Truly her faith was and made the first year T twenty strong. 'bales on the forty-one-, acres. The On the dock, eager ami anxious, ! second year I pnt it in oata, and strainine his eves to catch a made sixteen hundred bushels, af- siimnse of the fair face and form 1 ter which I sowed the land in peas. he knew so well, stood Andrew i 'Williams. They caught sight of? nn lif.-nl lliv i-p k was broken : but it is not certain whether the each other at the same moment, fall was the cause or the result of and their meeting was indeed a his death. The first supposition happy one, and brought tear to was that the fall killed him ; but j the eyes of those pasencers who; it is now conjectured that he mav i witnessed it aud knew their secret, have died sudden Ir or a disease of Preparations were at once raa.ie the heart before he fell. for, the marriage at the Miners i ' Arms riotel. wheie Andiew wasj ball Tha lMUiorh "rmur uml M Utonnin?. The mamaire ball was tiin ir iiiii r..i- ! nl iooH in routines, ami amid a ..rihin sitate has n.iri i inrerA comnanv of English friends, birs and seventi-fife, cent,,jmnar the nappy pair wri r uimcii ai ru , (wumio DHiui. t 4sw ; Tuesday night. A general jollifi-' eleven dollars land trty-three rntlnvMl and Mr: Hamilton. 1 cents. makihlT A totj of eleve 1,01 itru w v --t I ' ' tha ninritnr of the hotel, was the dollars and eight cento an acre. T 4.f" i-r . - - . Iu the fall I turned tbem under. In the spring I laid it on" in rows four feet, opened farrows and put in two thousand pounds of compost and one bundred,.ponds soper phospatr pi acre, mixed it well on the land and laid it out level. My formula is twbnadred - pounds stable mannray tvojiandred pounds kainit, two Jbtwdred pouBds acid phosphate, par hundred ponadi cotton seed meat, costips nt d' $200 from the HJentury Magazine" for an article on the battle of Chie a manga, and has been engaged tp wiite on two other battles. bc parsons 1 or the eeneration be fore tbem. It was good for the world and good for religion that Methodism thus arose as a spirit ual force in Christianity. With its high standard of personal piet.f with its abiding sense of man' personal responsibility, with iu lotty ideal or divine holiness, with its restless enthusiasm, with its nntiring missionary zeal, with its knowledge of the needs and ca pacities of the common (eople, and, it may be added, with its re ligious bonhomie and sunny views of, life, it soon became lioth in England and, America one of the greatest religious agencies of'mod. era times. , Nor is the work of Methodism to be measured only by the results in its own communion, great and im portant as these undoubtedly are. Methodism as a religions system has reacted for good upon other, bodies of Christians, even upon th venerable and rp.Knctl Church which is now free to con fess that it has erred iu treating so harshly the greatest religions leader since the days of Lather, and thus forcing him to take Methodism' out OI" the Church. The reforms which, Methodism ad vocted and the fervid gospel which is preached soon leaveued the whole lamp of modern Chris tianity; and even .- the great Ox ford movement within the An glican Chnrcb which -began in 1832 is in a certain ' sense the le gitimate outcome of the marvel- Inn.q ralipinua revival nreachfel Kr Wesley. X. Y. "Tribnne." nr.. j. II. I. ..It. nu n.. Of all the 'letters received bv Presidentelect. Cleveland since November 4th, we bear that none of them took him more by surprise than one from "Boss' Keagaji, of Wadesboro. Mr. Reagan address ed a letter to Mr. Cleve'and last week, in which be said: "1 have always Iteen a good democrat, and was a Confederate son her, but I do not want office. My first bal lot was cast for Buchanan and the last for you ; and as I see by the papers that you wear the .ante number of hat as 1 do, and sup posing that yon will get a new one to tie inaugurate! in. i worn a tie mnch obliged to yon . for yortr old one." Mr. Reagan has not receiv ed an answer to hi letter as yet, but. is confidently expecting the President's old bat, which he sayo "I will always keep aud then band it down to my children."