ASD . GLEANER . TIE . - ' ' - - "" IVOL. 3 r A K EI? 7 N OltTILVMPTOy COUNTY, X- V., THURSDAY, JUNE 2G, 1891 IsT0. 23. jjOLD DRINKS! MRS. LTDIA E. COPELAXD. JACKSON ACADEilY. COLD DRINKS!;so,Ii:NT1IE,.FEaaK-iraE -'-- - Jk. CIU " .s ADDRESS. Yon d" always get Old" S.da Vater of all Favors, j.-mon aul Lime? Ales Milkshakes. ' . pineapple kud T,eran hheibet, lart ice, S.f Til, ACTKR OF ONB OF NO UTII AM" TON'S FORCOSTTEACnkRS The death' of Mrs.Xy.lia E Cope- , . - . The Secret of Good Govern-! Where Does the Teacher ment at the University. Stand? The special committed appointed J ''Mankind it exists in commau- by Gov. Carr to invest:gate the con- j ities. may lie divided into two great !.! t-.i. xr.la A inr".pni- under ' . ... r. Ceo, U$C rfacMin..v-:-' land, wue oi tf- i. .i. u, , , IuaRa.ea,nt of that well kro dition and government of the Dni- The eomraencement exercises of jversity made their report at the re- i m r cx y r a. o iri4 hum :l v ziv . v - - i . a i s..i:il. - .-...... - : j competent gcnllctnan wu -ob. . munitT .wUIshwiU be d.Bwlt P LeitncM.ite-l.cW t! -iiri..k. iiuallv served :it a "-Jw wern more widely kno-vn arm, - - . , ii -ui" - . ' . . ' iiliv June lot l, lost, aii h in lae aiLcintntu v,r.- , yi mi-io Carry , i t .j.Utionerie and Fancy Oro-'othcr par.a of our State than Mrs. .:,;.-. Tobacco am! Cigar, -r . Conetand. -Aunt Lydia" as she was V;-14-:?m j J BURNETT . familiarly calted by many l uer Jjick-on, N - V. intimitP fr enrts find oii suint-m-s. in the afternoon the people began to assemble at the Cou-i, house and by 3:30 a large crowd had assembled. The stae, which had been beautiful DR. G. M. BROWN, WOODLAD, N. C. Teothcxtractei.1 without paiu. . THE .; CLSVSLAND HOUSE! . .. i i. o,.rMfp,1 with flowers aria ever- i (fiinsidorcd one of North Caroli- na s mnpt wiccewful ar.d exper.enced o ; . . I. ( 1 lltill ICU li''ul ' j ; eincators. S'.ie recc Iier edocation in School now ever kind h-ared and true, was cc KM tfce greater, pnrt . . , ofator of lhe 4iy. W. t Now G'aniPii tioarn-j w . , . . v Mil i rii. ; m - v. 1 - J. S, Grant, Proprietor, jacksok, n. c. Tatics wplied.; with the lhc ni'rketft afHtrd. . Livory .stables attnebe'd. ' Special rtcs to (Jcunty Oncers. 3 J.D.IUddiclc&Cx). Commission Msrchants, 401 Crawford St., POIITSMOUTII. VA. 'AKK a specialty of Eggs, iiams - and i'oMltrv. Quick sales . - I'rompt rcturrs with check. Corres potvlcncc solicited. . Ufb-reuw, Peopled FanW. . 14-tf. Portsuionih, Va. Rev. G. B. Ferry. Dr. HW. Lewn and Gapt S. N. Buxton. After sing inrr The Gentle Whisper' by ttie ladies and gentlemen who had been ho lev ted for the occasion, Rev. G. B. Pcrrv opened the exercises with a licautiful prayer for the advancement of the cause of education. Dr. H. W. Liwjs then came forward and in a short, but well adapted and appro priate speech, introduced to the au dience the speaker, of the occasion. W. J. Peele, Esq.. of Raleigh, 17. C. Mr. Pecle then addressed' the audi ence -'for about one hour upon the subject of "The rights of the State urder the Const ilution. After the address was concluded Prof. Leitner announced that '.the conmienceinenl exercises would be continued in tl e evening at S o'clock, and long be- Whau you vrant . . School SundvyBchool and almost before attaining the ag of worn anhofid she was a teacher in that insliUilton anl rendered it val uable. -service' for about six years. Shortly before the war she came to Northampton county to visit her two sisters, Mrs. William J. Brown i t "Tmp W. Cooeiand. She was persuaded to vw4n here where l,o entailed in teaching public school :vmi afterwards married Mr. Hurrison Futroll. Mr. Futrell, like raanv others, was drafted into the A before its close died f Pneumonia-leaving Mrs. Futrell and two children, Cora and William. The former died in early childhood, and the latter is now a successful lawyer in Philadelphia and has many ,tovtod friends in this community. giown up since the late war ttv real ize what Southern mothers and wid ows hd to eneountor during that dark period. But Mrs. futrell s ea uoaWn consisted in knowing Ikw to woik w!tb her hands as well as with her head.. And during the war and afterwards siie to.icu oay ana u.u-, - ..rramtue. as it 1 u i rj l I iv I ' Cxulhur time, however, to educate her. ;, t i,oy, bo hs been heard U say tnat tl editctttio.i and sul-ccs, which he is aid to Ijave aonire 1, are largely d.ie to the .early training of his mother. A few years later she was called to take charge of what was then known as the "Monthly .Meeting" ITfc cxw snpiilF all rour wnts in our 8C lo,,(stmisea near ivi.i y line !y return train. Special . : . t f a evstem of l MIS " I schools under the care and control of. the Society of Friends, but to which were admitted members ot all " ' m religious denominations. 1 his school anr also the regular subscription schools' she taught successfully sev eral years. It was here that many of' our most prominent citizens re ceived the solid foundations of edu cation, and they ever maintained the ... . i ! highest regard lor -their teacuer. Many of her old students canrccall the time when even a look from her was snrUcieot to quiet any : disorder. tier dignified manner, firmness of character aud Cliristian fortitude ex- KC&TSAHiPTflSt A33 BE&TrOSll SAaSCAU t erteti au inlluencc not easily to le forgotten. -About uns uuic u. Futrell was married to Mr. B. L Gelaiid. After her second marri age she taught school, at iutersals, it the urgent request of her friends until finally she completed her twen tieth ycV in this noble service. from this rni Commencement. The commit tee was composed of Rev. J. iL. Stewart, o( Clinton, chairman. D. G- Wortbe, Esq., of Wilmington, Lieut. Gov. R. A. Daughton, Jndge .W. IT. Faircloth and R. T. Gray, Esq., of Raleigh. They say : " ."After careful enquiry and inves tigation the conjoint ee confidently llieve that at no period in lhe his tory of the Uuiversity has the gener &1 deportment of the students been better or their habits of .study more commendable. In this connection t ives the committee great pleas ure to say that drunkenness has al most entirely disappeared. r They were assured by a number of per sons of extensive obser-ation that hey had not seen a ca?e of it for years. It seeis vo me tuiamiiwc that these good results come chiefly from three causes : , ' 1, The Character of the Univer sity Government. , 2. The influence, direct or indi rect of inter-collegiate games. 3. The induence of the Young Men's Christian Association. -The gover nmemt of the University seeks to induence the student to govern himself by appealing to his sense of right' and to his ambition for a fair name, discardiug espionage in all Us phases. Such influences must tend to the development of a h 4h type of character ; and, in the classes those that exist for them selves and thoe that exist for oth ers. As ""oar civilization has ad vaoced, the latter class is steadily increasing; it is lhe distinguishing 9 & 11 m w Miscellaneous Send your orders to Alfred Williams & Co., RALEIGH, N.C. ifc 'can snjtplv sUI your wants in our raU-s to teachers aud ileaters. Send for catalogue. lO-J9-tf J. B. BKXTTG2F. .successor to.BKlTTON & NICHOLS, im& PRODUCE COMMISSION MERCHANT. Personal 1 attention jriveii to tbc fate .f K-rjr-, rdtry, Peas Peanuts, Live Viock, Potatoes Fruit., TiAJlttS, VTegtj all S stud ait Country Produee. 2i Cmmcrce St., Norfolk, ' Va. Ih'feicn.ct',- B:tk of Cumuierce. Wy fore that Imur the crowd began to re- judgement of the committee, have assemble at the Court house ana ny reSultcd lu the gooa oroeruw t. h the twjuse was full, but still j ulent. ii.Ptr mintinued to corr.e, and kt 6 :30 i resard to the effect of the inter. the" exercises began, consisting l j collegiate game upon the habits o ,w.Umt;rns bv the tKvvs.and music atudv and order, sonie or tue com hv tho choir selector for Uie occa- ujittee had entertained grave doubts sion. We regret that we cannot Ls to whether such effects was whole was, som. Pet bans this view extensive but sultlce it to say v-uau 'fc 1 ly prevails in iuc cv;hc. - .- - ..ir..wi;,i Tiia whs ... -..finnt ;n am n invcfilisauou x f!,f. !uv had been carefully Ma Avt.pn9ive as could under ttiecir traiue,!. ao,l Uy a compete.t leacUer. W" . ino ,nr, nroM V and ai COtulu.ti,W yj - iue uiusiu L..j . , , .a tn lf .j.p ntroduction ana en - i. il... I niouwiu v. nropriatc, and adaed mucn to tuc l.Mliratrpmpnt Gf these exercies. ,....oin Thft whole was pro-1 t frt the financial raanage- uounced by all present a "Grand mcnt the committee say : -The books Success" Alter the commencement of the Bursar have been faithfully success. Alter M nrf accurate v kept. No evidence exercises were concluded, oapt o - extravai;iince r mismanagement N. Baston and Mr. J. M. l'lytue a"; J al,j,earStN.""Q. Chronicle. dressed the audience in the interest, of the school. and the cause of cdu cation. The com me nee re em, txei- QUARTER CENTENNIAL cisos V Ibo JacU,,n Ma.e Xm or TOE ' mi il - 1 -- will be long rememoereu oy iue pew elrmient of a Christian civilization that no man whatever is to live for himself a!ne.' That communit3, ia ranked high in the scale wdere no one is overlooked ; whsre each one nves some thougltt to the twei fare of another. And in Uiat community those rank the higttest who are most devoted to the well being of other. The individuals of that community might.be arransed on a scale, a sort of Spiritual thermometer might he constructed, and a measure of each man he. 'made according to the stand ard set up by the Galilean eighteen centuries ago: Whatsoever ye have done for others denotes your rank. iWhen Pestaloizi set out on his enterprise at Stanz, gathering about him the Hcore of children made or phans' by the horrors of war, he thought only of doing good to them, But he was an educational genius and while carrying on his benevolent itleas maoe a remarkable discovery that as he said "turned the ear of ed ucation round." WThen Horace Mann set out to rescue the common schools of Massachusetts from the degrada tion in which they were plunged by th; ignorance and neglect of the peo ple, it was with a humanitarian heart and not with philosophic opinions. When David P. Page undertook the 'reat work of lifting the teachers of New York above the hard mechanU cat ways they called teaching he ap pealed to them on.; the" .side of their..' sympathies; he pictured out th probability that the uneducated would fxllBto degradation, niisery and; crime. No roan ever pleadcl the cause ol childhood more eloquent ly than tie; it was as champions of the children that his early graduates went forth ; like knights of old they were willing to Jay down their lives, if need be. - . ; - Is it not true that these who would do the highest work as teachers, moat do it sacredly ? Is it not true that the teacher ranks in proportion to the effort he makes for the good of bis pupils? That brings us around to the point that charnctcr is not the only end the teacher must seek but he must rank high when that is made the object. School Journal. will ne lon reuifuiwicvi i"-" , , . w"1 ,e p , , ' , Thp North Cand na Local Mi. us- .,1, of Jacksoa ,nd roa.agco.m wa9 ,anizca at rnunity. Pnf. Leitner, who has Durbam twenty five years ago, with charge of the Academy at this place, jjrantly York, D. D.. as President, . i i. L.. o vtnptont l oi-i Unnson as Secretary. For f Liirn iPars the Conference cnanged acher; s,..g .PVv-- KinsU)0 , lll0 Ea9l t1 i.io nfo in thft school-room he knows Je"J." . nA nu 11 1 o at " w TIME TABL1V , In clVecf 8.:i0 A. U., April 1G. IS04. 'Daily except Sunday. V NoUTlt BOUND. Ia':v ics J:ick?on. N. C. Mowdol J. - A n ive Gtaubci rj , it Train N'o.134. A.M. i 8:50 t):30 s 'Train r2:l5 I 3:15 what the duties of a teacher are, and does not fail to discharge his duties in the school room, and we feel that we are not amiss in saying here that parents who have boys thatthey want ' . 1 I ,. I .In to send to a gomi acuwii well to send them to the Jackson Male Academe and certainly as long as it is under the teaching, manage ment and control of Prof. Leitner. A Citizen. I desire to announce to my friends Ashevilte in the West. Many of the local preachers and lay workers at tended fiotn time to time and became interested, so that much good has been done by'way of inspiring hcal and unpaid missionary work. In 1886 the Conference again wiet at Rutherford College, built aTaber nacle. and elected that as the place r..nonniinnt incctinil. In 1800 the College was burned, and the Confer ence heid in Iti'M at Trinity Park, Durham. It was then decided to hold the tweuty-tifth se?sion-the Quarter Centennial hack at the old Taber- A divine lienediction is always in visibly lreathed on painful an-1 law Oil diligence. Thus, the scivant tnployed in making and tdowing the fire (though scot away thence as too as it bur nelh clear) oft times gettctU by his pains a more kindly aud coa tinuing heat than the master him self, who sittcth dou by the fcame; a n!d thus persons ir.dustriously oc cupying tliemselves thrive better on a little of their own honest getting, than lazy heir on the large revenue lea unto them. T. Fuller. J If- M. .tw. U. P"c gon. raUy U.t I Uavo i'.Vo.4L Leaves (Jumbo i r y, K . G . ' P. M. 1-2:15 12:55 1:15 Train No. 3. P. M. 4:5t 5:10 5:30 Afier her retirement n .i.1.i l In htM " V: Ino pened a branch ofmy business " ul S1. and hence the , young icacuvi - CnoW.rd N. (' and am nrcnarea , . T ProncherV Conference htruclim.. Aud her o)mious, n-tt . tinds of coach making, by uame. s, far as known, anywhere oniy Uxhi .uv. ' blacksmith worfc ano repairs-. concermn;: questions of genera. ,n- j. . 1 , st)A ti'-rest --were a ways received w ith . l -111,ia J. SixtUrDarias the latter! - n,ce Hoe o ..g.es. , , , i:r .' u m,if,.rer ndure, etc., etc. part 01 ucr in . oui -- F. Kell, Gein Mgr. -Chci;.. Klulnit, Ac!. buj't. tliA u. rtrld 1 The Quarter Centennial is to be. 'celcbratol with much enthusiasm, l and a great Camp meeting is to be 1 held aacr he olden style. Un j local -preachers, are expected, aln TvAn ivreaihers and dis- succumbed to the latter disease cn Woo,lcn and Metallic burial cases tinguisbed ministers of olUer deooa. n.K incf The community I t..0 r cfL- mourns her toss, but rejoices that sii rcceatty Gttcd up anew W - , Uespectfullv. I W. P. Willi a us. Pres. from Rheumatism and Paralysis and j Undertaking a Specialty. For Sale or Bent. I ofter fur ale or rut, on easy termf, oiy Horloae uud dttelliug at th dv jKt at Rich Square Will mt or. tent, one or bolh o ibcui. Addri or call oll J. W. Weaver, Ilkb Sahr, N. C 16 rilK XAMC of, a full line o .SHOES iu ieu, LaUi! and ii!Jru, wer rr- autred all lllcr, soitd toW. lived to sec the fruits of a bus, use ful and Christian life. Virtue U its ou rcward.-irior.' ap.5-3m jtuatioa. . 1 n-,,t. cj-.tarcctdrbruted., Rrmnubcr l ftom Connelly SiriD0s depot TrvalIr. Tl.eptices UUur. ithc W. . C U. I- . j 4 pj VTOV i CO- w. P. Willi a us. Pres. pn j. a. rL.iu.i 31. D. LHarris. Lin uhan ou sy.