r
THE CAUCASIAN.
'UVElt EVERY TIIUB8DAV,
Bj MABIOX BUTLER,
Editor and Proprietor.
AirrENTiox.
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ruro Domooraoy axuc! V"fcIxtto aupromor
VOL. VII.
CLINTON, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1889.
No. 62.
Listes 800 subscriber In
188; 1,603 to-day.
GA
G ASIAN
TUB EDITOR'S CHAIR.
,I0V THINGS LOOK FROM
OUR STAND POINT.
SCHOOL ORGANIZATION.
A papT read bvProf. Iham Tloval. ('mm.
ty Kupt rintendent of Public Inntruciion of
i Mmiwon County, ln-fore th Institute Aug.
12th-lth. 18S9.1
Continued from last isue
In many country schools the
pupils study whatever they
nlrtasft.
The Opinion of The Caucasian and rents may dictate, and the teach-
the Opinion oi omerswmcn we er Is compelled to use such
Can Endorse on the Various books, as are on hand, or the
Topics of the Day. parents choose to buy. The wri
ter oi mis paper nas visited
some schools, in which there
were fifty or sixty pupils, where
the teachers were wearing them
selves out, not in teaching, but
in hearing recitations, for this
was really all that they could do,
with "a half a dozen "different
kinds of readers, the same num
ber of arithmetics, grammars.
geographies, and perhaps as
many kind ot spellers.
Now the question naturally
arises, How are all the.se per
plexities to be remedied? Who
is to do it ? The teacher? The
Board of Education? Or must
the law come in and prescribe a
MAX MUST THINK.
PRESIDENT J. F. CROWELL'S
STRONG PLEA FOR THE
EDUCATION OF BOYS
AND GIRLS
Every Soul Must Rise Higher To
ward Cod or Sink Lower To
ward the Devil.
The Sampson County Alliance
lias put a movement on foot to
start a canning factory in its
county. TW4s-a good plan Xox
by this means thousands of dol
law will be saved to the f arm
ors each year by marketing
their fruits that would other
wise rot in the orchards. Then
too such an enteiprise success
fully carried en would not only
cause fruit saving but would
stimulate Iruit and vegetable
raising Cotton is a failure as a
money crop, in lact in the ma
jority of cases it is a debt crop,
and t-ooner or later it must be
abandoned for something else
which we believe will be truit
Rowing and stock raising.
Would it not be economy to
change our mode of civil pro
cedure so as to dispense with
the "appearance term"? At
every term of court there are
several parties present with
witnesses and a "feed" lawyer
expecting trial according to
summons. Rut find that they are
present to file an answer to the
apeciflcations of the plaintiffs
and that the case will probably
be tried next term. Would it
not be better to have the spec!
ficatious to accompany the sum
mons and let the defendant file
his answer before court and
then let the case be tried at
once. This would greatly re
duce the cost of a suit, and bet
ter enable the poor to secure
justice.
PLAN TO (JIVE THE CHILD
START -THE GREAT "PRO
VINCE OF THE MOTHER.
On Sunday, the 29 th nit, Dr.
Crowell, President of Trinity
College, delivered a strong lee
ture at Keener's Chapel, in this
county, for the education of our
boys and girls. No thinking
parent present could fail to be
deeply impressed and put to
thinking as regards his duties
course of study, as it has done ? to his children who are growing
up to bo Ignorant and useless or
and enforce the use of books
prescribed? These questions, I
will leave for others to decide,
with the exception of one rem
edy, which I will propose, and
that is to secure tb3 services of
permanent teachers in all the
schools, or in as many as possi
ble. Let there te a prescribed
course of study, then let the
teacher or board of education
select a series of books to be
used to the exclusion of all oth
ers, and require every pupil in
school to procure these books,
or let a supply be bought for
the use of the school, and lent
to those who cannot or will not
buy, with the urderslandiug
that they are to be returned, at
the close of the term.
The discipline of the school
should be left entirely with the
teacher. He must tach and
manage by his plan, the product
of his own brain. With any
other plan he will make a fail
ure. If the teacher is not able
to get up a plan of government,
a system of recitations, and a
proper arrangement of studies,
without the constant direction
of some member of the school
committee, and following the
advice of Mr. A or Mr. 13, he is
a failure and he has no business
i . . 1 T 1 .1
in tne scnooi-room. x wuuw
educated and useful according
to their training. He said :
Food, raiment and shelter are
all the things that the body of a
human being needs. But the
soul has a very different set of
needs of its own. The needs of
the body are material; those of
the soul are spiritual. The ma
terial waats are supplied out of
the eaith, the soa and the sky,
that is, out of the world of na
ture around, above and under us.
The spiritual wants are suppli
ed out of the spiritual world
within us. As we dig into the
earth, search in the sea or seek
the free breath of heaven to
keep the body alive; so we have
to search in the sjuI to develop
its rich treasures of affection, its
traths of thought aud its strength
of will to supply the soul with
what will not only keep it alive,
but cause it to grow into the
full stature oi spiritual man
hood and womanhood. Just as
by commerce also the different
parts of the world supply each
other with what the body needs,
so by the intercourse of mind
with mind does the soul get
what it needs. The child in its
years at home feeds and clothes,
Its soul with the thoughts, tne
suggest for the ordinary country feelings and the purposes which
school, about JO or .Jo pupils, the its mother and others give it
following studies: spelling. These are food to its soul-life.
reading, writing, mental and But when it grows up to riper
written arithmetic, geography years it need other food; it calls
combined with history, English f0r more than the home can give
grammar, ard drawing; one ses- jt ami the school comes to an-
sion of three hours in morning, bWer it3 needs. When its needs
another of the same length in can no longer be supplied at
evening, each divided into two home or in the school it steps
Sherman, the old house burn
er, in a speech recently in Cin
cinnati before veterans of the
army of Tennessee, paid
They (the Confederates) consent
ed to the amendments to the Const!
tution as a point of concession for
not being otherwise punished, and
thy came back into the Union with
a five-fifths vote for their represen
tat ion in Congress instead of three-
fifths. It isn't right; it isn't honest;
itisuit honorable. (Cheers.) it is
not what a soldier knight would do.
Therefore those negroes must have
gives them, or the States must be P" cuuurwi ju tiumta iuai UCJ an anuniii
' - '. . - . Am.... . . III A
leprived of that proportion of their have Deen over, man iu uuu mem tentipeni
representation in Coneress. (Up- ahead or themselves. When-
roanous applause.) That's a legm- eVer a child is put in a study,
parts by an intermission of ten
minutes.
In arranging classes great care
must be exercised. All oi the
same grade whould be classed to
gether, and no one should be
classed too high. It is Detter to
mate result of the war, honest and
honorable, and the war won't be
over until that is done. (Cheers.)
What doe? the old fool want?
What's the matter with him?
Is he sore-headed beoause the
negro as a citizen has not been
the God send to the Radical par
ty that was expected? When
the epitaphs of such men are
written, this Union will be bet
ter and happier.
CREDIT SYSTEM.
Why was the miserable and suici
dal system of credit ever established?
Why should the honest man be
made to pay the debts of the dis
honest? Yet he does. Every man
in business calculates on so much
loss on account of bad debts and the
wares that the honest poor man buys
are marked up to a figure that will
cover that loan. Is it right? Is it
just.
- The credit system is bad in many
ways. It encourages improvidence
and extravagance on the one hand,
extortion and usury on the other.
It makes theft respectable, wrecks
friendships and ruins homes. It
should be abolished.
If every man in business got his
dues 1Y0M4 those who were able to
pay, he could afford to give to those
who were not and still realize
handsome profit. The majority of
our large financial failures and the
periodical stagnations in trade and
enterprise are due alone to this des
tructive system. If a man is afflict
ed, in need or distress, relieve his
necessities and put him in a' way
to earn an, honest livelihood. Never
allow him to open an account, never
allow him to anticipate the fruits or
enjoy the procieds' of unperformed
labor. '.'Sufficient for the day is the
evil thereof." Let us all take care
of the present and the future will
take care of itself Orphans' Friend
Remedy I Let the merchants
adoptthe, Vpne price , cash sys
tem." Let us learn to be incte
pendent by making bur home
supplies and living' within our
before he makes the necessary
preparation in other studies, he
becomes discouraged, and his
kno .vledge becomes superficial,
and again if a child has too
many studies, he learns nothing
well.
The teacher should be prompt
and punctual in attendance, and
require the same from all the
pupils. There should De no
yielding on the part of the
eacher, but he muof stand nrm
in the beginning, and require a
prompt compliance with all his
regulations, but not in a tyranni
cal manner, and when his school
is properly organized thee will
not be much trouble either in
teaching or governing.
How to secure a regular at
tendance is one of the most
perplexing questionswith which God.
out to take its place in the great
world of citizenship in which
are to be found the fields for the
aspirations which the home has
guarded and the school quicKen
ed into life but which neither
can satisfy. If man were only
he would find" con
ii having the mere
wants of the body satisfied, like
the ox in the pasture. But he
has a spirit, in that he is en
dorsed with the attributes of a
God.
The aspiration-: a soul hav
ing its destiny in its own hands,
will lead it in one or two di
rections, lead it higher to ba
come like God or lower to be
come live a devil. No other
routes are open, no other possi
bilities exist lor a human na
ture; no other inevitable desti-r
nies await it : "Godliness with
contentment is great . gain," is
Paul's theory of life. To him
it was sufficient for the body to
have food and raiment. All
that man r.oul( gain over and
above that was to be devoted to
Godliness, which means God
like-nsss, to the service of the
spirit iu making it more like
a teacher has to contend, and
without a regular attendance, it
is almost impossible to retain a
regular organization and a per
fect classification. Many pa-
Theie are two other theories
of life : one is to gain the whole
world for the body and lose the
soul. The other is to gain just
as much of the world for the
rents entertain strange notions body as is possible without lo
with reference to sending child
ren to school. They think
that they can place them In
school, the second or third week,
after the school has been regu
larly organized, and then keep
them at home, one or two days
in the week, and that they will
learn just as much as those who
attend all the time, and thus
they save money. This is mis
taken economy. Sometimes we
find In our public schools 50 or
60 pupils one week, and the
next week only 10 or 12. We
often find for the whole term an
average attendance of fifty per
cent or less.
How aro the difficulties to be
remedied? They are very dis
couraging to the teacher, and he
is often blamed for the ignor
ance of children, when it should
be charged to other causes, the
only remedy that I can suggest
- - j
ing the soul; o.- to do the very
least that is thought necessary
to save the soul and devote all
the larger balance of the energy
we have to gain as much of the
world as possible.
Paul's theory is the only right
one enough of the material to
satisfy the needs of the body
and the balance to be devoted
to the development of the spirit
to a higher and nobler life. Ma
terial comfort may be increased
but it must be only so far as it
will contribute, directly to help
man to live in the spirit Man
was not made only to toil; he
must think: that is bis divine
prerogative, his imperishable
right. The man that never as
serts this right by exercising it is
doomed to sink toward theleve
of the ox and the ass, to com
rjete with mere brute force or
be a mere machine.
The boy of to day, who neg
lects his education, goenf ut into
the woild to compete with other
boys who are educated. The
two have an uneven start and
the educated boy is the man who
takes tho lead. This is so in
farming as well as in the laudt
in the ministry, or in tfhy other
profession or occupation. An
education which trains the mind
to think and the whole man to
act better aud nobler is the only
education there Is. That is what
your boy wants; that i3 what he
gets. Your boy has more need
of an education than you had
when you were as old as he. The
world into which he must go is
a tie iv world, very different from
tho world through wlichyou
hav1 come. He needs other
teachers than yourself. He needs
the guidance and training of
those who have grown up just
ahead of him.. He will get it
in th 9 schools. But you say you
are too poor to educate your
children. Give them a start
with some inspiring teacher and
they will educate themselves
with the little help you can give
them and the power and deter
mination they shall have to
keep themselves.
But you say that there is a
mortgage on the farm and you
cannot spare your boys now from
working with you. Then call
them to you arid tell them your
financial condition, and promise
them that you will try to givo
each of them an education if
they will join with you to work
off the debt. Give them to un
derstand that after paying off
the interest and part of the debt
each year the balance of the in
come of the farm shall go to
giving them an education, onow
them that in. this age they need
an education if they would d
well in lite. I can assure you i f
you have treated your boys right
they will respond bravely to
help you and each other to an
education
Its better to help your sons to
an education than to try to leave
farms to them. Farms may lose
their value but an education will
increase in value every day of
their life. Bad crops may in
volve their farms in debt and
the sheriff may take the land?
you left thorn. But not so of an
education. With an education
they can look the world over
and see what is best for lb em
to do; with only a farm they are
doomed to stick to that and may
fail iu everything else.
It costs about as much to keep
i i . -t j
your sons at nome as n, uoes iu
send them to college. For $150
to 200 a year you can send them
to the best colleges in tho State.
At home they will want horse
and carriage; at college they
will not. You have to board
them, lodge them, clothe them
wherever they are at college or
at home.
You should seud your boys to
college to associate with and un
derstand how to get along with
other young men. At home they
have their own way to a consid
erate exieut But in the outside
world into which they must soon
go they will find that it is very
different. There is no better
preparation for. life than the
associations and the rivalries of
college life, here each young
man learns to adapt himself to
others to struggle hard to vie
with competitors in the race and
fn win victories in tiie face of
suDerior strength and advantage
And as for the. gins, tney too
must be educated, hot the lg
norant girl will never be marri
ed to the educated ooy unless
th?t boy is fool enough to mar
ry and raise a family oi dunces
As the mother is so is the home.
She makes it the heaven of earth
filled with the sweetness and
ight of her educated heart and
head or she may make it a mere
resting place aud feeding place
or those whom God ives her
to train ionuuuuruu me. axauy
a noble mother lu our country
homes has educated herself
when there were no schools for
her to go to in her younger davs,
but in this day of schools there
is no excuse for leaving a single
THE VETERAHS I
The following is & list of the
veterans, by companies, who at
tended the re union at this place
on the 26th of September, 1889 :
Company I, 46th N. C. Regl-ment-lst
Lieutenant OP White,
2nd Lieutenant J C Wright, 3rd
Lieutenant Thomas Owen, Pri
vates A T Herring, Wm. Spell,
VT II McLamb, Jacob Caison,
Hardy Royal, Daniel Holland,
Archie Royal, Burrell Warren,
Philip Autry, Stephen Hair,
Henry Hudson, W S Thaddock,
Owen Lockernian.Thos. Cooper,
W O Howard, A J Cooper, John
Butler, James E White, W N
Lockainan, Isham Royal, W C
Jackson, Thos. Gautier, Josiah
Baggett, J B Ezzell. W E Crump
ler. Alexander Pope, Isham Mc
Lamb. Daniel Hern, Hurman
Honeycutt, Daniel McPhail.
Company F, 20th N. C. Regi
ment Capt. O L Chesnutt, 1st
Lieutenant J W Wright, 1st Ser
geant J A Ferrell. 2nd Seremt
W A Peterson, Privates J B Au-
dress, W J Balkcum, J C Bu lor.
George V Bennett, W J Benton,
Raiford Gnce. II B Giddens,
J BoonIIerrlng,SchoolfieldIIall,
W R Ilighsinith, W II Jone3.
David Jones, John Lucas, James
McCulten, V J McArthur, Thos.
L Owen, Josiih Pope, William
Sessom, Theophelus Sessoms,
Duncan Tanner.
Company A, 30th Regiment
N. C. State Troop3 W E Bass,
C Howard, J M Crura pier, V
II Johnson, Judson Hobbs, J T
Hollan'l, G W Rackley, E N
Butler, J-M Parker, Alex Pope,
Stephen Pope, Reddin McKin-
sie, J O Rich, G C Butler.
Company I, 30th N. C. Regi
ment J L Daniel, James Jack-
son, J v Jacuson, u n jacKson,
N Tew, J W Andrews, R T Carr,
Robert Tew, Charley William
eon. A Hall, W S Hall, J E Car
roll, C II Hall, A C Garris, Ray
ford Royal, .1 H Pugh, Daniel
Autry, J F Daniel, L II Carroll,
Thomas Holland, Robert Hall,
J W Wrench, R A Jackson, J D
Rackley, D D Treadwell, R E
Mathis.
Company D, 38 th Reyt. N. C.
Troops W J King 2nd Sergt.
Privates J W King, WD Stevens,
RobtShipp, J A Weeks, J R
Caison, Ii A Weeks, Sampson
Weeks, Fellais Jackson, Dr. J II
Darden Assistant Surgt. Kegt
Company C, 38th Regt. N. C.
Troops Major J T Wilson,
Capt. O L Chesnutt, 1st Lieut.
J II Benton, 1st Sergt. Samson
Warren, 2nd Sergt. J D Lindsey,
Privates, Ephram Shipp, James
Shipp, John B Sutton, W R Sut
ton, Ben Sutton, Lewis Sutton,
Wm Strickland, Richard A
Smith, Geo W Hobbs, Haywood
Butler, Sol it Daughtry, Wm
Jackson.
Company K. 51st Regt. N. C.
Company U, 20th X. C. Regt
Abel Bass. Joseph E Ba&, J M
Jackson, W. II. Hlnfon, Ganey
West, Garry Weeks, W 1) Haw
ley. Capt A A Moseley's Baitery.
LHut. Alonzo Thompson, Pri
vates, J B McKlnzie, D B Jones,
W K Ik am an, J T Da won Jesse
Farmer, J C Has., Samuel Sim
mons, T L Lockerman, Melvin
Bass, Boaz Lewis.
Company C, 61st N. C Regt.
D B Alderman.
Company A, 30th X. C. Regt
II SBoney.
Company E, 36th N. C. Regt,
Reddin Williamson, Henry
Lucas, J L Butler.
Company E, 24th K. C. Regt.
J E West.
Company II, 36th N. C. Regt.
O C Jackson.
Company I, 27th N. C. Regt.
Felix King.
Company G, 3rd N. C. Regt.
O McCullen.
Company E, 2nd N. C. Rent
Jacob Williams.
Company E, 20th N. C. Regt.
J C Killetl.
Company C, 3rd N. C. Regt.
II R Giles.
Company H, 40th N. C. Regt.
W R Johnson.
Company A, 36th N. C. Regt.
Love A opell.
Company G, 3rd N. C. Regt.
James Hollingsworth.
Company C, 7th N. C. Regt
II C Cannon.
CUMBERLAND NEWS.
REUNION OF A CAVALRY
COM'Y FAYETTEVILLE
HAS ANOTHER FIRE
AND IS IMPROVING
HER DEPARTMENT.
OL'K YOUNU FOLKS.
Something lnterMtlus to Yours
ltderof Tt Citralau.
Waterworks to be Erected for the
City.
TrpprfJ rcl -k hr W. A. Jon.
to ixmi fcll siwttttirUfl&f 1Ukt for
UU column boid b ndtlrvvwil.
Ilteg. Oor. Caucamas.1
Faykttkviixe, N. C, 1
Oct. 7lh, 18S9.
At a meeting of tho North
State Improvement company at
uremsboro last week Mr. John
D. Williams of this city was re
elected President and CoL
Julius A. Gray, oi Greensboro
Vice-President.
Capt J. A. P. Conoly.of Lum
ber Bridge, Robsoit County, ex-
captain of Co. D., 2nd Regiment
N. C. Cavalry gives notice ot a
reunion of his company in this
city during the centennial. A
committee has been pamcd by
time to provide quarters.
Mr. Julian S. Carr, the chief
marshal elect of the centennial
ai rived here last Thursday af
ternoon to confer with the dif
ferent committees as to the pro-
pram Ac. A commitieo com
posed of Capt A. B. Williams,
Z. V. Whitehead and Henrv L.
uompany t, 24th fc. C. Regi- Cook, met him at the depot and
ment, J. R. Core. escorted him to the Hotel La-
COinpany l 2nd a. U. Kegt. Favette. where a larce crowd of
J K Uraughon, V M Draughon. Htirnns with n. enmnt tmnrf
13 b reterson, Laeut. It Ii Holll- greeted him. Henry S. Cook,
ay.
Company II, 67th N. C. Regt
N A Dudley. H Bass.
Company D. 3rd N. C. Regi
ment Lewis Allen.
Dompany E, 2nd N. C. Regi
ment John Rench, John Dud-
lep, Joe Nailer, Raiford Autry.
Company B, 2nd Battery N. C.
State Troops W A Boyette, J
D Williams, II II Lewis, R L
Lewis,E Coyer, M C Simmons,
M J Ezzell, D Ezzell. William E
Crumpler, Cicero Turner.
Company C, 7th N. C. Regi
ment Allen Carter.
Company A; 3rd N. C. Regi
ment Lieutenant Robert High
smith, Privates O L Herring, G
W Hlghsmith, G F inrrnus, K
W Kerr, William Warren, D B
Alderman.
Company A 2nd N. C. Regi
ment. Junior Reserves Jordan
Sessnms, John S Autry, N B
Barefoot, J J Holland,Love Jack
son, R A Draughon, J G Bullard,
J A Hall, W H Sessoms, Har
prey Faircloth, Nathan Fair
cloth, John Horn, R.W Howard,
J A Beaman, D W Tew, William
Page, Reddin Honevcutt, Uriah
Sessoms, Furel Purvis, Frank
Rackly, J M Spell, J W Butler,
H C Yrest, W Barbary, Gabe
Royal, Oliver Butler, Daniel
Lockaman,W A Draughon, Owen
Hollingsworth, R A Murphy,
Esq., welcomed him to the city
in a few remarKP, to which Mr.
Carr replied in graceful and fitt
ing terms. He pledged his best
efforts to make the occasion a
grand success. Three rousing
cheers were given him, and
while the band played Dixie
many people walked up and re
ceived an introduction. Mr
Carr complimented Fayetteville
on her patriotism and enterprise
His selection was fortunate.
The joint meeting of magis
trates and commissioners takes
place to day. Many have im
Dortant questions to decide
Most of the large tax payers o
the county are in favor of anew
ouut thnuse.
The "Royal Knights of King
David," colored, had their anni
versary parade on Tuesday
headed by the Howard Brass
Band which has' new instru
ments.
Tuesday night an alarm of
fire was given about 8 o'clock.
The fire department responded
quickly, and in four minutes
af tor the alarm the horses won
hitched to the engine, steam
was up, and ten boys ready to
battle with the fiery element.
The alarm was caused by a
lamp explosion in a store on
the corner of Dick and Person
streets. The men now receive
BR0THEK AXD SISTER.
There aro a few classic ex
amples of very close and preci
ous relations between brothers
and sisters, like th Words
worths and tho lAmlw for in
stance; but we are glad to be
lieve that In the ordinary walks
of life it is possible to find many
such instances. Here is one
fcbout which the United Presby
terian tells t
.Jenuie ai d Jim or twin, and
nseparable companions. Thet
walk to and from school togeth
er, they play together, they pore
over the same lessons at night
loth rejoico In this close com
panshlp, and neither dreams of
forsaking it for new ties.
"Come, Jim, come along with
us," called cae of tho boys, as
they issued from schtval on a
snowy afternoon. "Don't hang
round there waiting for Jennlo.
She can take care of herself."
"Perhaps she can." said Jim,
stoutly, "but she shan't, as long
as I've got an umbrella aud she
lasn't"
"Then leave it for her and
come along with m. I'd be
ashamed to go round with a girl
under an umbrella 1"
"I say, Jim" paid another. "I
should think you'd get awfully
tired of that sister of yours!"
Jim had been growing moro
and more crimsom.' He teemed
tp consider whether he should
rosort to words or blows.
"I tell you what, fellows," he
bur.t forth at length, "I'm not
tired of her, and shouldn't be if
the days were twice as long, and
there were two of her Instead
of one."
"Surely, no declaration could
have been more effective.
n WHICH IS W0BSE?
A little girl came running in
from her play one morning, and
going up to her mamma, said:
"Which is th worse, mamma,
to tell a lie or to steal ?"
Them other replied that they
both were so bad that she could
not tell which was tho worse.
"Woll," said the little one,
"I'vojbeen thinking a good deal
abo ut it, and I think that it's
worse to lie than to steal. If
yousteal a thing you can take
and if you've eaten it you'ean
pay for it ; but" and there was
look of awe In the little face,
"a lie is forever." What do
youthink(of;it?
Chesnutt Blackman Hair.
Company B, 30th Va. Kegi-
ment. Pickett's Division T D
Smith.
Company H. 3rd Va. Regi
ment, Pickett's Division I R
Weddicg.
A FAL.SE CHARGETHIS JUST
ANSWEU.
the
the
V-mrxsxrxj T ami j To rcn TfT 5 l
Jordan, M L Bradsha w, Wiley i, "U1J ,BU" P r ea"" ni e- uroP hammers
Pope, Wiley Goff, II C Giddens, J " , " " are to do pioviueu ana uie ae-
M B Tew, E II Holley, Win L
Godwin, I, P Royal, J T Brad
shaw, Richard Fann.
Company B, 51st Regt. N. C.
Troops J B Williamson, T J
McArthur, L M Parker, J H
Boon, Thomas Bell, Wiley Pow
ell, Alvm Hargrove, Jage Wil
liamson, Jacob Springs, Owen
Brown, D J Blanchard.
Company C, 51st Kegt. IN. C.
Troops R II Merntt.
Company C, 5th Ret. 2m. C.
Cavalry Oapt.C Partrick,Lieut.
James Moore, 1st Sergt. B Math
ews, R T Moore, A C Peterson,
M C Peterson, W R W eeks liea-
son Faircloth, Geo Highsmith,
Luther Matthis, J F Warren.
Company E, 5th Regt N. C.
Cavalry Guilford Daughtry.
Company E, 2nd I. C Kegt.
H J Lockaman, Loftin Hall,
Raiford Andrew.Jacob Williams,
Jonn Dudley.
Company C, 7th N. C,
R W Smith. II H Cannon, U U
Coats.
Comuanv D. 33 th N. C. Regt.
J W Tmdall.
Company A, 36 Lh N. C
fsaac Bass. J O Bass. Neill Mc-
A Northern paper makes
following reflection on
Southern people :
"Uutil recently the few cotton
factories that were in operation
there contented themselves with
making only the coarser grades of
cotton cloths. This was due to the
lack of enterprise in Soathern cap
italist, who have been disposed to
ero on in the easy path of their fath
ers, leaving to outsiders the worK ot $750, with
partment put on a good basis
The cadets ot liingnam s
School and Davis' School are
coming to the centennial. It is
hoped that many other schools
will come.
Mr. C. G. Cain, Clerk of tho
Superior Court i.sued letters of
incorporation, last week, to the
Fayetteville Water Works and
Improvement company. We un
derstand that the water will be
brought from Glenville pond,
two miles out .The tower will
be on the arsenal grounds.
This morning at 5:30 o'clock
the. ra3idf net, of Mr. J. A. Byrd
on Grove st eet was burned.
The adjoining property was
sived by hard work 'ti tha p&rts
of the fierceness. The loss Is
insurance.
Some Question for 0r Yeuag Friend
to Answer.
1. When did .George' Wash-
ngloudio?
2. How many national tho'i-
days are there audwhat are they?
What State has produced
tho most Presidents of the
United Slates ?
4. Who was carried to Heaven
aliva ?
5 How long did it take to
cross tne Atlantic mty years
ago, and how long does it take
now ?
Regt.
Regt.
improvement. The influx of North
ern men has wrought a marvelous
na.An tn.iin Ansi luAlAvn wv n
chinery is no being put h. many of charged with spoiling
imit I OA, nuiu tur. -J iv .a uii tp
Call. D M McKinnon, Blackman
girl or boy grow up in tbedarK- jackson Furney Pope, J W Pa"
ness of ignorance that will rest te- Linton Sutton, H'uti.i
like a
homes.
shadow on their future
Regt.
A YOUNG CAROL1S IAN
ARKANSAS.
IN
The Public Sentiment, pub
lished at Eldorado, Arkansas,
says : Mr. James Marsh, late of
North Carolina, has located here
and will take up the practice of
law. . He will be associated with
Judge Moore for awhile. He is
a promising young man and we
wish him an abundance oi suc
cess.
Hifalutex Negro Confabu
lation. First negro (at picnic):
"Will you opadildock thatcake
down dis way?"
Second negro :,; "Certainly,
i with the greatest agriculture
Pope.
Company E, 36th a. C.
O J Riven bark.
Company I, 1st N. C. Cavalry.
T W Merritt, H Stetson.
Company A, 43rd N. C. Regt.
J J Pearsall.
Steven's Artillery Company
Calvin Boyette, Wm Boyette,
Capt. Bryant's Company, wm
Lee.
Dndlev's Artillery. G B
Draughom J R Mathews.
Boney's Company. J A Fer
rell, J P Parker.
Bradley's Company. J L But
ter. Henrv Hudson.
Company A, 18th N. C. Re.t
Lieut. Chas A Ackermau.
Company A, 36th N. C. Regt.
W C Jackson.
Compauy 1, 18th N. O. Regt
JLPigford.
the cotton milk.
A Baltimore paper, in reply
to the above paragraph, gives
the whole truth in a few word.-:
"Arc Northern papers never going
to learn ? Can they not lor once ad
mit that it is Southern energy and
enterprise wnicn nas maae posajDie
the present era of progress? That
Southern men built and run the cot
ton mills and the furnaces that de
monst rated the possibilities of- this
section, and then Northern capital
ists. auick to see a good thing, loi-
lowed in their lead. A more utter
ly absurd paragraph than the above
has rarely been ienned. lhe oouin
bids a warm welcome to .Northern
men and money, but it must be re
membered that Southern brains and
Southern enterprise laid the foujda
uou lur mis Krcai ucvviuyiucui.
and are to-dav the most wtvnt fac
tors In it." ,
A white man by the i.ame of
Johnson was put in jail last
an
nftr
Duun. He wan bound over to
the Superior Curt.
A negro jri'.tclK-r is in jai
charged with an attempt to
poison a colored runily near
Wade. It I s.ifd that he p u
strychnine iu their food. Th
did not eat however. -
Rev. "W. B. Oliver pieached
m nis puipit yesterday to
crowded house. His congrega
tion are pleased with him. He
is quite an orator, aud is cer
tainly a brainy young man.
The time approaches when the
extravagant you?h realizes that
be can't trade a linen duster lor
an over-coat. Merchant Travel
ler.
ENIGMAS.
No. 32.
nv II. E. K.
Am composed of 22Jetto:s.
My 12. 11, 10, 13 'is to cripple.
My 8, 13, )9, 22 is a festival.
My 14, 15 is a preposition.
My I, 2, 13, 6, 7, )3 is a irirl's
name. .
My 17, 20, 7, 18, 1 is a garment
My 2, 3, 6, 4, Is a lare quadruped.
My 5, 9, 4, is a number.
My 17, 6, 11, 16, 21, is brtad
toasted.
My whole is one of Clinton's
largest buildings.
Amm-rrn t (hieKtiona tnd Enigma in
Last Usuf.
1. Gov Gabriel Holmes was a
native' of Sampson county, and
s burt. d near the residence of
Mr. O. P. White in Llttlo Cha
ri township.
. 2. Bonapaite died on the Is
land of St. Helena.
3. I he 1 first settlement in
North Carolina was at Roanoke
in 1668.
4. By Robt Fulton in 1807.
5. P:of. Mo"rse7 in 1844.
6. The Chinese invented gun
powder.
Enigma, o. zu uray s eiegj
in a country church yard.
Enigmi 30 Mar.on Butler.
Enigma, No. 31 Then I die
happy. ,
It begins to look a though
Sullivan was after a seat in the
Senate and had goue into train
ing, Marquis ol Riddleberger
rules. Jew Ycrk Herald.
The author with a hand book
is the fellow who is destined to
make a success , iu literature.
Rochester Post-F.xpres3.
"Meet me on the corne tonite,"
he wrote, and dew not fale." And
she answeied him, '-There is no
In France a man cannot be a
i lawver and own a newspaper at
. - - - i ,
: the same time. The people pro- Bucn word as-iaic. iawrence
I pose to have a little rest. 1 American
We have received answers from
the iol lo wing .:
Laura Harris, Owen ville.
Tate Lain b, Ingold. s
H. B. Howard, Huntley.'
E.R. Wilson, Bass.
Lnla McArthur, Clinton.
Ida McAithur, ' -Georgia
Cooper, Owenyllle.
Eula Register, Clinton. '
means. - - -
Continued on the Fourth Tagc