r PATRON A T Vol, X. LASKER. N. 0, THURSDAY, November 17, 1892. , Faflore. The Lord, who fashioned my hinds for working. Set me a task, and It is not done ; I tried an4 tried sioee the early morning, And now to westward finketh the sun! UoUe tke task that was kindly given To one so little and wek as I Somehowmr strength ?ould never grasp . ':, - : ; j. . Never, as days n years went by. Others around rae cheerfully toiling; Showed me their work x they passed away; filled were their hands to overflowing. Proud were their hearts, and fiad and gy- . - ; Laden with harvest' spoils tbey entered In at the golden te oC their rest; Laid their sheaves at the feet of the Master; . - j .'- '.. Found their places among the blest ; Usppy he they who strove to help me, Failing ever in spite of their aid! Fain would tbeir ' love have borne me with (hem, : But I was unready and sore afraid. , Now I know way task will never be fin ished, ' i And when the MaSTEB caileth my . natui, ,' :i-''-.; " The voice wjl find me still at my labor, Weeing, beside it in weary shame. With ejmpty bauds I shall rise to meet .htm,; -' ; - ' " ! ' ! AuL, when He looks for the fruits of years, . '. : Nothing have I to lay before Him But broken -efforts and hitter tears! Vet when I call I fain would hapten Mine eyes are diai and their light' la gone ; ; ' ' . And I aiu asyweary as though I carried! A burthen of beautiful work well done. I will fold my empty hands on my bos - : otu, Meekly thus in the shape of His Cross; And the Lord who made them so frail and feeble j t May be will rlty their strife and loss. . The Month. LIST OF OFFXQPES MT NOBTHAMPTON POMONA OEASOE, P. Ot , f, H.. FOB 183. Master, A. E. Peeie; Overseer, Nez eie Davis; Lncturer, J. B. Brown; Stew ard. G. BSiuitli; Ase't Steward, 1L C Lassiter; Chaplain. J. D. '.Barnes i; Treasurer, K. Davis; Secretary. K. R. Maddrey; G. K., J. V. Griffin; Poiuo ua. Miss Mamie Smith; Flora, Jr, L. S. Griffin ; Ceres, Mrs. L. J. Lassiter, ud Stewardess, Miss Bell Lassiter. Xleetiag of SUte Gracge. The next session of the North Car Oin& SUte Grange, Patmns of Hus bandry, will meet at Nashville, Nash county, oti the second Tuesday in December, being the 13th of the cnoatu. ; All Graagers are invited to ittend. The railroads will be asked to give the ;asal convention rates, and, as heretofore, tbey will doubtless do so. Delegates going by rail will change cars at Rocky Mount. . ..' ' This is for You , it you were receiving The Roanoke I'athov at the time it was suspeiided, and have not paid the amount due for Cbe came. 1 again ea.ru etly ak all to raruj. It is right that you should pay aiKi'I-i.'-v,! tb? luoheyi. This is enough lo say xo those. "ho lutond to ty, and JL hote no one will refuse, if 5'ou do not know what the amount is plse let aue know. D. M. Bfiauc COUNTY COMMISSIONERS. rKOCfcEOINS Of" .THEIR SESSION illKLD KO VEiCBEE 7TH. The Bosrd of County Commission ers met in regular season Norember 7. Present: C. R. Harrell,chainnan, S. N. Buxton, J. A. Garris, E. Baugham and W. P. Vick. Frank Blaker & Co. were granted license to peddle oq ob J horse wagon for twelve months.. Louis Jacobson was granted li cense to peddle on foot for twelve months. i It was ocderd that th Treasurer pay tbe estate of J. W, Grant$7.40 for services as Connty Commission. ; 1 : - , - j It was ordered that Wo Grant, Chairman Board of Magistrates, call a meeting of! the Justices for first Mondav In December to consider the matter of selling the timber on the poorfhonse land and for such other basine8 as may come before them. Tbe following accounts were ap proved and ordered to be paid : B. T. Story, for 735 feet timber for bridge across Cordti&oy Swamp, $11.02. C. R. Harrell, supplies for pauper. $7.13. , J. D. Bennett, for lumber famish ed for election purposes at Hardings Store $13.72. R. S. Parker for labor, etc., for home of Aged and Infirm $25.00. Geo. Wv Deloatcb, for coffin for pauper $2.50. f John E. Moore, lumber and work on well in public square, $18 65. L. A. Outland, fees arid officer of Jury in cuse of State vs. Julia Gary, $7.00. J. T.Fiythe, account filed, $15.23. J.J. Burnett, repairs to well in public Square as per order if Sher iff, $400 ' E. B. Lassiter. repairs to Urahaw Swamp bridge, $459. , L. A. Outland, expences in arrest, ing R. A Caldwell $14.75.' J. S. Grant, for board of Jury during last term of court, $74.0. J. A. Buxton & Co., for fence around jail., $34.85. D. A. Jord ar, board of prisoners in Jail: for October, $97.05. . . R. S. Gay. servies as officer of Grand Jury, $10.30 J. A. Buxton & Co;, supplies for Home of Aged and Infirm, 151.96. J. M. FJythe, goods furnished jail. $961. John A. S.vkes, Jr., for conveying Dennis Rogers to jail, $2.40. Lassiter Dros.,for lumber, $46 02: P. W, Edwards was appointed tax cpteciprvfor'X)temeece;:-T9wu in place of W. 11. Joy her whi failed to qualify. I Mrs. Martha Pritchard was al lowed provisions from the Home of the Ased and Infirm to tbo amount of $4.00 for three months. Several persons applied to the Board and were relieved of double tax and many were allowed to list land and proerty which was notjlisted in June! Kiud Words. Who can appreciate the value of kind words? Those who are in deep affliction know best the worth of kindness administered witb real sym pathy for suffering. The heart must be hard indeed that can resist a spir it like this. Rerpoof may be met with stubbornness, advice with dis gust, and warning with indifference ; but all these feelings vanish before love that is without dissimulation. Hope arises undismayed, and take a new hold on life. Despair gives place $o courage, when we find there are human heart that beat in unison witb ours, and we think that after all, life is worth living. We read in God's word that if any man offend not in word, the same Is a perfect man, for the good reason that the lips express what the heart, approves. The clods of the valley cover those whom we have either cheered and encouraged to attempt new victories, or those who have be- come discouraged and dishearted. f Hard, cruel words are like poison ed arrows ; they leave the ncver-lo-be forgotten sting behind, and some times later are sure to recoil upon ourselves. Which, then, shsll we cultivate, , a retaliative, revengeful spirit, or the wisdom thai is from above, that is "first pare, then peace able, gent1 e and easy to be entreat ed, full of raercv and good fruits? The former dries up all tbe fountains of the heart, &ad leaves it sore and desolate. The Lord help us to man ifest tbe spirit that characterized the life our Lord and U aster. Sketches of Leading Educational Insiitctlgns of the ''Sooth. ; The opening. September I, 1802, together with the subsequent formal dedication of Trinity college,; Dui ham, North Carolina, marks the :be gtanlng of a new erajin the history of this institution. y' . . In 1838, the: late Rev. Brantly York. D. D.. established a grammar school, near Trl n ity, Randolph cottnty. North Carolina.! This was the 'iu. cleus of Trinity college. Four years latter, Dr. York resigned tlie manage ment of Union ihstitnte, as the school was then called, and the Rev, Braxen Craven, a youth of nineteen years, was elected in his stead. This position he held, with the ex ception of an interim of J two i years during the war, until tb time'of his death, November 7, 1882. Dc. Cra- . . f . ven was the real foun ier of tbe col lege. Beginning life in obscurity a poor boy, without friends, social position or influence for forty years Braxen Craven built his best life and manhood into the institution unden his charge and exerted a most powerful influence upon the educa tional affairs of the State, follow, ingthe death of its distinguished president, Trinity college Jcarrie financially embarrassed, its atten dance dwindled away, and its frencls grew dispoudent !At this juncture Julian S. Carr, J. W. AlspaugU and ! James A. Gray came forward tritrj j timely aid; improvements ,'were made in the curriculum, the number' of students increased ; and I dence in the future ot the institution began to be restored. I ', j i But it is of the new TrinityicoK lege that this brief sketch, Js me nett ed to treat. The permanrepajsi anceof the institution vS?f fallof 188.7 henJJte Jlld-l lin C rowel I, A. B, an mnus of Yale university was elected presi dent. Dr. Crowell is possessed of a tireless activity. He is a strong thinker, a forrcibie speaker, with the courage of his convictions, a keen logician, a terse and vigorous writer, and an earnest student of social and economic problems. He interprets with excellent clearness the com plex 3igns of the times, and his un relenting energy carries him into all fields of thought. It is to Mr Washington Duke that the' college mainly owes its removal to Durham. His donation of over $85,000 for that purpose registers the highest water-mark of education al benefaction eveF made by a South era man. Mr. Dnke, who is a mil. lionaire tobacconist of Durham, was once a poor boy. By the practice, of thrift, industry, and the saving grace ol common sense, his fortunes were built. He is plain, straightforward man, with a heart as well as a purse of gold a man incapable of flattery or hypocrisy such a man as Diogines once looked for with a lantern; in vain, in the streets of Athens. As usual with every great enter prise in which NorthlCaroIina is in' terested. Colonel Julian S. Carr, was one of the first to the rescue wL i tbe college called for aid. and after Mr. Duke, was tbe largest subscriber to the fund- and most earnest advocate for its removal to Durham ' Ten years ago, when the college seemed compelled to go down. Colonel Carr threw himself into the breach with a donation of $ 10.000 and when the removal from OId Trinitv" was proposed, he again came forward witli the offer of the present r site Trinity Park" containing 62J acres and valued at $20,000 acd up wards. Colonel Carrs educational benefactions are not confined to Trinity college. He has been a gen erour supporter of the State univer sity at Chapel HilU of which he is an alamos, and quiet recently he has made a gift ofa thousand dollars to Davidson college, thaleadins Pres- byterian school of ; the State. Col one! Carr Is a millionaire in a finan tial way, and a billionaire' in the true riches of the heart. , i The principal dimenskmaof the main building are 50x208 feet, three stories with basement. Tbe central part of tliibuildiDg.belD one-Uiird of tho entire length bf it. project for wards 25 feet, makJug-the width 75 feet one-third of Us length, and- 50 feet the other twoUiirds. Over the s ----- 4 principal entrance, at the center in front, is ta square tower 7 150 feet high, with h clock showing tbjree' di a Is, and a bell weighing 2.500 pounds The building is of brick, faced with' pressed brick and trimmed with ter ra, cotta- and Sanford brownstone. The style is Romanesque and the structure handsome and imposing.' , The interior is -fitted op with a view to secatin the best results, in light, heat,' ventilation, comfort, con venience auJ. appearance.' . The sys tem pf heating i.nd4ventilation is su perior to that t)f most -tjol Lege build Ings in the South. t ' v V; ft' -r- --. .f .... - lb5 .building -contains five class rhoms.'parlbr, president's offlceV'prU yte office, treasurer's office, library, faculty; room s, cbapcl, s and rooms for Students.' Tne-'vclassc rooms have" blackboafds In the separating parti- tions, t thus -admitting. the! greatest amount pfdignach'daisropjii." i?Tb6re are two other buildings not counting the reslcjlehce of. the profes sors, fb 'the" Park; viz.; the College fnn?;ls.utiful and capacious hotel al building, w hie . is t': 2. g'i ft, of- tbe president Crr fioiinrfX .hlji'dcceased teprscUj of the Methodist EpTscopaf 'Church, Soxtb, in North Carolina. The in stitution is under the control of the patronizing conferences, the North Carolina conference nnd the West ern North Carolina conference of the .Church'. Within the next few years the probability is that there will be three leading seats of learning in southern Metbedisin, -charged especially with theological education of the higher character. Vanderbilt university is one of these, another will be west of the Mississippi, and the third ought to be Trinity college. Dr. Tillett, dean of the biblical department of yanderbilt, has repeatedly expressed the desire that such sbould he the case, and offered to spend a summer stumping the State In the interest of such a school at Trinity college," The college now has in addition to the regular academic departments, a school of theology a school of histo ry and politics, a school of econo mics an 3 social science, a school of law and a school of pharmacy, each presided over by a, specialist. It is the purpose'of the president to give Trinity more of the university char acter that tbe institution may stand in different and less antagonistic re lation to the other colleges of tbe Met hodist denomination in the South. For the past several years the col lege has put itself in direct contact with the meet progressive thought of the times, dealing largely with modern problems, and with modern metho.ls of instruction and inquriy. The greatest need of the institu tion at present is an additional en dowment of at least $200,000. The Southern Kducator. A Poor Aulhorilj. Little Boy (writing a letter) Is trolley spelt with an e, nr without f Father (anxious to inculcate a good habit) Look in Webster. Little Boy Hnh ! What does Web ster know about it ? lie died before trolleys were invented. Good News. ihrifel Mrs.' Laura CrowelL y? AS TO Tflfi FUTURE J V OFFICIAL VOfEt OF TIIS ELECTION IN XORTjlASIPTOX CCUXTY, TCESpAT. 'NO VEX . BER 8, 1802. Cleveland, Democrat, ' Harrison. Republican, Weaver. Third party. , BidweluVrobibiUonist, 1 Cleveland's plurality, ''X .- -!': : ' . FORCOXORESS. F. A. XyoodardDemocrat, n. P. Cheatham, Republican, E. Al Thorn, third party, GUes Hlnson, Prohibitionist, Cheatham's plurality. J3G3 13G0 45T 45 5 1408 1472 32 G4 for associate justice of sutreme Court.-: James C. Mac Rae, Democrat, 1413 William's. Ball, Republican, 1447 i Bairs majority, ? - FOR JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT.." GeoASa'uford.Democrat, 1412 W. L. Norwood, Republican, j j Norwood majority. 1447 . 35 1 1 FOR GOVERNOR. 1 , Effas Carr, Democrat; 1435 D.;M. Furches, llepublrcan 1027 Wl pEum; Third party, 81, J. M.TempIeton. Prohibitionist, 38 ', . Cartas pluralltjv' s 428 FOR SENATE, 3RD .DiBTRICT. ' C. W. Mitchell, Democrat, -Wau H. Morris, Republicarf Jas. M. Early Third Party, j Mitchell's plurality, 1 'V yOIS .RKmESEXTATIVE. Cola R. Ilarrelir Democrat, , . 1473 982 67G 491 1482 Cbas. II. Williams; Republican, 9G7 " " Ja.,U. Grimo; Third party; ; - 665 'CbTrftton,ihib)tfqnls '' 38 CV? llarf eIia;pVarali ty, , -515 . "Co n n t y Odcersv ' . ' : - w, -v i ' -? , for REoisTEit 6f deeds. ' . " . .- v' ' "" K-'-;"r-'-M Jnpi W. Fleptwood, Deraoc'rat;143ilt 'tf. R. Deloatci Reubiraan ?:128 KW. J. Browt4 Thirds Party, ' . Ci)3 Fleetwood's plurality, 140 ; FOR TREASURER. J. A. Burg3'nt Democrat, 1491 R W. Rlanchard. Third party, 833 Rurgwyn's majority, C58 There Was no opposition to M. F. Staneell. E. W. Conner and Thos. Dukes, Democratic candidates for Sherilf, Surveyor and Coroner. Told by a Boston Dramner. 'There are fonie funny characters out west still. said a Boston driiiiiiuer at the Adam House, yesterday, And some of these preserve their 'individuality . in spite of their present surrounding. When I was in Denver, 1 met the editor of tbe Great Divide, and he U n cu rious combination. He wears a wild Cowboy hat, h is a gun on the de6k, anl when acompoMtor Hjle.ies bim, flren a shot or two at him to relieve hit mind. He can Sling ink, & he call it, with the best writers in the country, and has a pet rattlesuak in one of hi pocket, to entertain those who call in with x etry which U not up to hi standard. When his paper, the Gukat Divide, was started four years ao, he made all the necessary arrangements, but forgot to choose. a name. Nobody thought if this till they were all restdy to print, and then the foreman a ked what the name wa to ln 1111;' said this west ern editor, I had never thought of th it. fay, you chri'teu it.' The foreman could not think of a name aJ all went out and had a drink to Hi inula ti their imaginations. But it wa of-no.uie. Hnally it wa decided' to throw dice, and vv boever won, wa to name the pn per or be shot ou the a. The print er's devil won the throw and caid before th-re wa lime to hoot, -all it tho GiiEAT DlVIbK, and that t at how tho paper was named, fort he editor toU mo himself in Denver. 'The appropriate- nes Of tlie name was not t!lcovered until afterward." lio-toh 1 1 em Id. Friendship is the decree of ierft c tioa in sx;iety. Montaigny. Our undertaking department 1 com plete at ail time win fnu artujeiii of OJmxs ami CAKi., from the fiur et tiietalic to the c'MaJ tt woild. Or dera filled al all iine with ili.patch. livxms dcUAUuiiAi 4,, if