THE CAUCASIAN. IF YOU WOULD LIKE To 2urrac!c!o wlti abont ta ihon.ia of Um Uvi coont pwp!"ln tji'i nrtlcm of Horti pMoliaa thin do H through Cs eolucxMofTim CAUCAttAS. olhor In ihi Tbtrd 0. r-iiLl'ET VERT TItt'MiAT, fey 3ASI0.T BUTL1R. CTimr and Proprietor. SUBSCRIBE! Show this Taper to your neigh bor and advise him to subscribe. 1 If VOL. X. CLINTON, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1891 SnbftCfiptfoit lrice $ 1 J0 IVr Tear in dvancx. No. 2. aoU-cuIaUob. - . . m i, i m , i n m . .. ii - . ll - - -"i n ' .. "' ... - , " '"-"'... . -i. i , i, - ' r'"i, ' '"'"'" ii I. w ... immm in ,m , , mi, , -- , :. t; ,,. '" ""in- 11 I 4 4, Alliance Directory. KATIONAI. . AHMKIIK' ALU A OB AXtl l.NDL'STKI Al. UNl'C. rrvniiil L. l'"lk. N'otth tar. lina. Addif. 3ii 1) .S-r -. t, X. W., Washington, ). V,. Vice-Pro-ulrnt--H. II. Clover, Cam bridge. Kan-aa. .tTctar) nndTrcnurer J. H.Turn ot, Oeorgin. Addrcs. 229 North Capi tol Street, .N. W., Washington, D. C. Lcitnrrr -J. II. Wille'K Kna. KXKC'L'TIVK HAHI C. TV'. Mi.cutic, V asl.!nyio:i. i). C. AlonjwWa-.'nll, Huron, South D-'kobi. J. F. l it in.iti, Palmetto, Tennessee. JtJDICIAKY. II." C. Dimming, Chairman. Isaac McG'raeken, Ozone, Arkansas. A E. Coir, Fowlervillu, Michigan. NATIONAL 1.KOI3LATI VH COUNOII.. The" Prr-hler tn of all the State organ izali'iit wi'h L. L. Polk cx-oflicioCnair-nitn. KOKTII CAROLINA FAHMKR?' 8 TATE A IXIAXCK. President- Marion Rutlor, Clinton, Xorih Carol inn. Yicc Pre id. r.i-T. B. Iu, Ah- Tillr, N.C. Sr nrtniy-Tm.mtvr W. b. Barnes. KnlvicS, . C. lecturer J. J. T 5 -" 1 , I'ratowL, N.C. Meard . C. WritrU;, (ihwj, X. C. hapliiiu Hev. E't-kiim I'vy, Clialic Lnvrl, X. C. Doot-Kecper W. II. Tntuliuaou, l'a ettcville, N.'C. A-fistant l)o) -Kwjmr II. . King, Transit. N. C. 3ercant-it-Atm--J. S. Holt, Chalk 1 vi, X. C. Siafc lupines Ai'cnt W. II. Worth, Rnl'Uh, X. C. Trustee Bin nc Agency Fund W. A. Graham, .Mucl, pel di, X. C. KXKCUTIVK OiMMIITF.E OF TUB SOUTH CAROLINA FAKMKlw' ni'ATK ALLIANCK. ft. IS. Akx.ndir, Chailutte. X. C, Ci iiinuftii. J. M. Mew borne, Kington, f . C. : J. S. J-hnlon, Kuilin. X. C. fATK ALI.'ANCK JUDICAKr OOM- MITTKE. ! On, A. I.unzcr, N. M. Culbreth, M. ii. lftK"r, Win. C. Cumuli. I'ATK ALLIANCE LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE. R- J. l'oncll, lUloiIi, X. C. ; X. C. Knulinh, I liniiy College; J. J . Yoiun?, r If nt ; II. A Forney, Xcwlon. X. C. K'KTM CAltOLINA ItEFUKM PRE89 ASSOCIATION. OfT.iers J. L. B.iinaey, I'rrsidcnt ; w arion Bu ler, Vice-rrcsidciit ; TV. fS. Rarnrft, fcrelary. PAPEK3. The CAucasiox, Clinton; Pro-Crf.-asive Farmer, Raleigh ; Rural Home, Wilson ; Farmer's Advocate, Tarboro; Hallshury Watchman, Sal isbury; Alliance Sentinel, Golds b. ro; Hickory Mercury, Hickory; 'I ho Rattier, Whitakers; Country JiWo, Trinity College; Mountain Home Journal, Ashevill. Fach of the abfvc-namcd papers are i quested to keep the list standing on the first nage and add othtrf, provided tke3 are duly elected. Auy vaPer fail- intr to advocate the Ucala platform will be dropped from the list promptly. Our people cn now see what papers are pub- iipiie i in mcir interest. IUIOPESSIONAL COLUMN. W. K. ALLEN. W. T. DORTCr. A LLEK fc BORTCII, -4-JL ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Uoldaboro, N. C. Will practice In Sampson county. rob'i7 tf A, M, LEK, M. D. I'll VClAN,SlJ UOEO AND DeHTIST, ) Tico In Lee's Drug Store, je 7-lyr rr E FAISON, i S Attorney and Counsell or at Law. Office on Main Street, rill practice In courts of Sampson and jutlolning counties. Also in Supreme Go'irt. All basiuesa intrusted to his care will receive prompt and carefa a tent Ion. je 7-lyr 1 W. KERR, JL-ia Attorney and Counsellor at Law. -, Office on Wall Street. Will practice in Sampson, Bladen Pender, Harnett and Duplin Coun ties. Also in Supreme Court. Prompt personal attention will be j;Iven to all legal business, le 7-lyr T71RANK BOYETTE, D.C.S. JL Dentistry Office on Main Street. Offers hi services to tho people 0 Clinton and vicinity. Everything In the line of Dentistry done in the be-it style. Satisfaction guaranteed fcSMy terras are strictly cash . Don't ask me to vary from this rule R etf BARBER SHOP. Whn yon wish an easy shave, As fccc-j as barber ever gave, Just call or. us at our Baloon It n.orning, eve or non; We cut and d res the hair with grace Td suit the contour of the face. Our room is neat .nd towels clean Scissors sharp and razors keen. And everything We think youtl fln'l To salt the face and please the mind A ruIl our art and skill can do, I u Just call, we'll do for you. ( iJbp on Do Vane Street, oposile Court House, over the old Alliance Headquarters. PAUL SIIERARD. The Clinton B : rfeer REMOVAL. ! J. T GREGrDUY Has removed his Tailoring Estab lishment from his old stand to his office on Sampson Street, neit to the M. E. Church. The great and orignal leader in low prices for men's clothes. Econ omy in cloth and money will force you to give him a call. n: sLatest Fashion plates-al way a nana, v T j une 7th. lyr. THE EDITOR'S CHAIR. HOW THINGS LOOK FROM OUii STAND IQINT. The ODlnlon.Of The Editor and the Opinion of Others which we Can Endorse on the Tarious Topics of the Day. Wa.ch n.r4p4er3 that will not make Ovirrectioea wben t&e IiQth eonca out. A apcr that abJiru a raiarepreeenta- tion and will it b-ariia the e aato ine Mea-toirr last ine if it w infav r of Go'eraM-nt ceatrol ftf ih rrK of trotion an! com- mnWi,m. TImi diMr rUe.1 In a - i I , i (ler-eral way Lt i int fcoswer ar qirtidon. If tfco feUMucrr la laravor of t!ie eovemut ontrollinc theao lnstrutuents of coounobM, , then it ia a -t r. 6r for it b (t-f A iiiiiSw it control all tt 1 M"-'U(r-r ii cpfofl fcj if :he Gurrnifssnt r-itroi then let It tmj hi order thnt th- poiut that ia at isntti my t d e8ed ou its merits. 15t tbo inscmuble will of I'rovilraco Gt'tTOacvY grain crop wrj almrt a eom pitta fnilnrj this y-ar arid ours s tbr lartjrst for yenrs. Tb Gfnnan ufilcials coating r- t foi r'jtr.e ni-thoi to chtap en Aaiortcau grain to 'iwnian coucum ern. innTTRht 01 reraoiiTc the rttity od Aal-Iicr whoat. As Btn as this wa dof:e nv jitopcr. Urn Linrrison claimed tt r cn-dit lor it. It b now rfficWtj an ounufi'i as another "g'at di) lnm?ic trluuirti f ;r tie aSniiriis'ratjon,'' hich i 10 be crtdl'trl to 4 reciprocity," the i-rtaM t IIow1ug 'Tr wheut to como iu rcc in re urn for enr admitiing their b-v t fogar free. Their btet sugar has b-eu a-rtii'ird fn-e rvvr elnoo the sngar v.rdnle ol He Mi Kii.'rj tariff bill ncvt t-i i fi' . Whkt a tangled eb t Ley weate..vc. ALLIANCE DEMANDS. Economy. Low tariff. Free coiuape. Graduated interne tax. No alien ownership of land. Abolition of National Banks. Mure money a..d cheaper money. Theie are tbe Alliance demands, ab- so'utely stripped of detail. If any one deairs that these principles are proper ot them take issue with as, Tne 8 b Treasury is not mentioned because it ia a detail of the lxst propo sition. If yon agree that we should have "more money and cheaper money'' and object to tbe Sub Treasury aa a mr rvnn of sec nri nor it. then von should ' W - ingg-8t and wotk for your plan If it is less ohjctionable the Sub Treasury will no longer be demanded. Is that fair? Weekly Toiler. DR. MACUNE ON THETARIFF. Let these who have been misrepresent Ing tho position of Dr. Macune and tbe National Economist read the following editorial from that paper of October 10th. , . "When ono of the Dartles eet in' un- der fxistiug conditions it must ooudoot its administration anu - legislate so upon nnanciai mn lers as not ioatiei.ace toe vote of New York, and so upon tariff questions aa not to alienate me vote 01 T r 1 . JT- 7 P'0; taiI. The people are Uniting to d? mand truth und itiRtice. not rxtii. and thev will enforce the demand ' The object of this great motement on the part cf the rtArtnlA in tn npftnrft trnth. ni4 riffht find justice; for this purpore any party may. 09 useu. rany is oniy a metno-a 10 icii srr;rv:"":s :rr r uivu ;u m ot,v.vuuai j liuuoiuyi a iui v 1 courBe, any party to be available must adopt thp reform principles demanded 'Ptx?. f K t n rva r.Atr Ooam nlocir and ror fti ir .w,, . Ifirp.k triA nn.iriAiDl nnlinv fir t.hia enw C:n 7JZ?t of a few or a favored class; it must be a brca'i, libera! and-just rin that treala all alik and shows favor to none. " Sec .v'i .vr;r pense of aTiothtr." The Newa aud Observer and other pa p-ira Jid not eee this, yet they copied from some o mmunication in the same paper. JARVIS' VIEW. The Sute Chrcnicle, ia i s report of Ex-Goveraor Jarvis' speech before the Dtmocr&'ia Executive Committee in Rilelgh latt week, says: i.l rr,t iiK V.i- .,i and admocition but he showed that the dnfV Of the fVmDorfttifl rrtr m tn n.1. vocate, with all its abili'y, both the re form of our financial system aid of the tariff n0 did not believe that either ihe tariff or the financial question alone would bring relief, but that both must bo secured bv the Democratic party and both mast be gade prominent in the Democratic platform and canvass. PUT YOURSELVES PLACE, r HIS If yoa were tbe President of the Alli ance, and tbe Democratic pre?a was making war upon you on that aoconnt. wonld yoa .not standby thosi rwho were S pffMoViB t' wcu!d do if you were in his plaoe f It'a ,u 7 . mm nol work l1,ony- !r than , anv oth ; hnr,MA' ,n Democrat or ltrpubli can,- would do an - der the same circumstances, and Alii- aacemen would be unworthy ol .the name 11 luey cw no nana oy mm ana Hfnfl him'from th onit mA nn - cu him. Webster's weekly. s ?an Tf It . F to bent, rome Bgfct evenings and culling buttonhole uerti is m mean MU ill . I bouquets. Do you know. Miss Danveru, NATIONAL. IlANieS. Dot few penpie hxre otrtf ully cjosI- der;d tt entree oiethoda of banLlnjr; booe o ffiauplo may be of some im portance. Mr A. b At $1,000. which be drpoaita ia bis hick, tor which ba re ceivre a Cfrt'fiJti of depftt. tfr. B wi.bee to burro . moa.y. U loaned ?50 of Mr. A'a depo:l, aad $50 i pat one side by the bank aa tfce rrqured I reaerre. Mr. B cava tbii moner to Mr. 0 on a drbf . and Mr. C deposira tt in thr name and deposit $187.50 is pat as reaerre. Mr. D pays Ur. i;. a dcporlt, ct $421 S8, and f 140 i etc wnn toe reserva. air. r pais a dert to Mr. (i. who in tarn drtosHa ib? nAtrnt tn tSa amr bank. Mr IT aanta ' m mnr.i .nrt I lr.ar, lbr.fnnrlh-4 - I of the money dcpoeitod by Mr. or 5316 41, and f 100.47 Is laid a lde as reserve. !Ir. H paja hi moc?j to ?.lr. I, tto neposita it tbo same t4 the otLera . i m. r u v uav. Now eotnoa !lr. I, who borrows three founbs cf Mr. V (Sepc-sit rr 123 C 31, and $79. iO ?oc 'O tho reeerve fund. Mr. j. pars nis cio'n to Mr. h., wno ra- turns ibe nme to the bank on deposit. Mr. L borrows three fourths of 1. ai the others tivij, 'or 17 .'Jo, ana ice ovht-r oue-Iourlb, $59.33. 13 held m re.-rve. ilr. L pays tais to Mr. M, uo likov:se dp posies it iu the same manacr. ilr. N ni ds Kime money, and lorrows thrve- fonnhs of Mr. M's depysit or $133 49, and afctiiu $44.49 is put with tie re- eerv. M.r. N rays Uto Mr. U. who iu turu deposits it. Air. P, aa has the othorf, trrows thrte-fourtb of Mr. 0' depwi v 8K 012. and $33 37 is held as reserve "Mr. P pnjs his dt bt to Mr. Q. bo puu it in the b-u.k bir. H Ar rows three-'ourth of 'Mr. Q s d posit, or $75.C9, ruJ $25.03 is put -ih the re serve fund, it pys Mr. S, and Mr. 5 deposits the saoi", and Jlr. T borrows tbree-fourt'is ol it, $56 22, and &18.77 1b ( uC v. Jth the reseive. Tbe sevtril tiau. actiobs rernkit-g from th3 repeated loans vi iuv ongmhi u got;ii wouiaeiaua as follows. A's loau O's loan i.nk u ri .n'm mnnm I from tho snares sot Tor iiim by every orii i Junng nw lilnesa had awakened u loneJ thfM ronrth of the 1750 a y?an3 mLm tno neignoor- neing tne tenaerest emouona or " " v j 1 1 . ... ... i.. .. cu oj r. u, or cuu ow, buu firmly mad up my mind that I would f $250 00 187.59 V loan 140.62 El's loan 105.47 79. 10 J's loan L's loau N's loan 59 33 44 49 P'b loan 33 37 It's loan T'a loan 25 03 187 7 ToUl $2,831 10 Total $943.68 Multiply this transaction by 100 or 1,000 cr more, and the I usiceea cf au aversge bank ia ascertained. Consider well theee figures. On A's deposit oi $1,000 tbe bttDks have loaned $2,831.10 and have $943.08 iu cash remaining cn hand. Unon this totter in a foundation I mata eira hno!.,a i r,nntr I i. -. u WMVVUVI.V UUlUk Jl krH) WUUll J . Tbe deposit fcocount ia as followE: Mr. A $1 000.00 750.CD 562.50 421.58 316.41 237.31 Mr. C Mr. E Mr. G Mr. I Mr. K Mr. M 177.98 133.49 Mr. O Mr. Q 100.12 75.09 50.32 $3,831.10 Mr. S Mr. U Total Htre is found cer.ificates of deposit outstanding amoaiitirg to tbe abov sum, and only $343.68. to meet them L, ' . ' ' , wuuuer vue oaonera ay the; con fidenoe . ia i.ctcc d tooie than money. '- Senator Colauior, ,cf Veimcnti in dia cowing the banking act, said To imlnce the pccple to take $300 000,00 3 of bonds 0Q inters to set np v"toc o, 4 u. uu mwr crcnjation st ft ''national carreEcy," and we guaian I : i . 'a n-n. - ... itjoimpajujenij vvnertm is tnat any I. khan the greenbect? I will ask gentlemen to put that question to ihem sriver . is it any beitei? Wbnt is it j founded ot? UniUd S'a'CS crpditf utcd states bor.d,? whom do the oill-holders look to for their final redemp ttoi? Tbe Uoited States Trraeurj! Wt cay we will redeem therr. Tte rulim has no or.her foundvior. All thoe fictit ious contrivances about the res, o" eioiity ot ina.vijia! st-xknoMrra a moun 8 to just nothing. As to the i u position to retain 25 per cent out of tbei oircnlation, tbey can p;it tbst" iu tb i po:kfla whenever they please, and there) is nooojy to qnesuoa t&J-m. , It is aia- I w1tt nfil aliiikln 1 .3 a a I rlJ wutueu upon puoilC reaponavbUity , and Mr. 8U?riuan . thinks tb at i arreat fnatnra of i, n!lnM nstea;! of circnVing that amount of TllI1 ,.nrrannv IuU' 0WQ "eacy, upon onr own respon- 'bl,l'J. Qd pay:r;g nothing, we ro o hire these banks to circulate that a mount of our ourreucy;" acd pav-them t.i.a mn;nn. au . j el ve millions of dollars a year, for do 'ug f . lauB fs x am, i am unacie to perceive how.it is possible lhat it can be a good trade f .r tp, rr how ; aay shrewd man wool4 think of enteting into an agreement of tht kind.. . - - Johu Thompcn, . Viee-Pretident Chise National Bank! New York, thu d-cnbeaourconditionlRhodesV a f baakirg, ApriL 1888. ' The b-inkin instltufbas of th5 Unt ted tatei are to day liable for demands 1 Dh could be m1 upon them to the j extent of $76.19 per inhabitant, and ..to pRy which they wonld have -only $12.20 nli l would be short currency to tho extent; $750.00 Reserve 662 60 Reserve 42 1 86 Reserve 316 41 R- eerve 237.31 Reserve 177 98 ReMTVe 133 49 Iietcrve 100.12 Reserve 76 09 lieseive 66 32 Reserve $2,831 10 Total (Continued . . on - Fourth Page. FLAW MISS 15ARST0W. "Lucille, who hal callUl ben:Vif Miss Danvers (her middle name), did as Mrs. Lamotte requested, and that lady began: "I am a widow, as of course you per ceive by my mourning. My p or Arthur died fivs years ago, and left too this es JShTSTbhEa tate and a comfortable income. 31 j only winters in the city, but his summers with me. I expect him here next wsiek. He Is wealthy and much sought af Ler, and I haTe a timo protecting him j firmly made up my never have another, There shall be no the very of Pinning a row oa my brother a coat! (Jf coursg i itaid iror a month's salary in advauco anl Kent her Oil. 1 am oungea to nave a f?overne.9S ji t : i. . - : . n lur m lwu lr uaiugS, u Bu nevftr be Raiil that mv onlv brother w.13 sacrificed on my account to ono of those Uly. deep, rretty covemes3ea. No, I have had enough of theia. I suffered m "er? aPxrehension ail th tlm3 Miss Garfield Wi here. Another week . . . . ,v broth- the sly thing would have been my; broth er's wife." "I don't think I shall trouble hu rxiaae of mind," said Lucille languidly, in wardly laughing at Mrs. Lamotto's tribu lations, "i am sure we will not wander in the garden and pick toto together." "Oh, I aia sure there i3 no danger with yon," said Mrs. Lamotte. Several days went quickly by, Lucille being charmed with her new life. She completely won the hearts of her two little pupils, and found both interest and amusement in teaching them. She had now regular duties which she was obliged to fulfill, and fonud lifo inuch more bearable than at Barristown. One morning when sho entered the breakfast room she started, back a3 if 6he had seen an apparition, for there in an easy chair, his handsome head oa his hand, his blue eyes bent on tho carpet as if in melancholy dreaming, sat Geo'Iruy Wayne. He was evidently enrirely gfi. home, for, hearing a footstep, he looked up, saw Lucille, and rising from his chair came forward, saying: 'Miss Danvers, I am sure. I arrived very late last night, and saw my sister . tell vo -J Mand and 'Willie bear you." He did not recognize her then. Why should he? She had been in full dre33 at both places where they had met, and her hair had been dressed with flowers and sprinkled with gold dust. Of course sho looked vastly different now in a plain dresa of dark muslin and her luxuriant hair in a simple coil. And of course, too, Geoffrey Wayne would never think of finding in his sister's governess the si3ter of his fiancee, whom ha had been told was at Barristown. Before Lucille could collect her thoughts sufficiently to reply Mrs. La motte entered, evidently not at all dis turbed at finding her handsome brother and lifir homol v rmvprnns t.nrrrt.hfr T.n- ciue by the WJ,y Bhe joked and laughed at Geoffrey about matrimony and the snares Bpread for him that she nothing of his engagement to Em Mr. Geoffrey Wayne had come to pass the summer with his sister aa usual; but to the lady's astonishment he did not enter with his usual zest into her plans for croquet parties and archery matches. Lucille noticed that ho waa grave almost to melancholy, and when letters came from Emily would go off to the little arbor at the foot of the garden and sit for hours smoking gloomily. Lucille was sitting alone on the front piazza reading one evening when little Maud came running excitedly to her. "Oh, Miss Dauvejs!" she cried, almost out of breath, 'com to Uncle Geof frey. A horrid horse kicked him in the leg, and it is broken. Peter and, Sanx carried him -into the paaibr, and Peter gone aftor a doct) Lucille hardly waited to hear all the child said, for at the first intimation she received" that, Emily's lover had been hurt she started from her neat and hur ried to the parlor. - Geoffrey was lying on a sofa with his brows contracted by pain, his handsome face white with suffering. Lucille, tak ing a bottle of cologne from the mantel, drew a chair close to the sofa, and began r ""s ouiuijr atiu gsuuv. ne aia not open ms eyes, nowever, ana it was only when his sister came running in wild with excitement that he 6poke. Then ho begged her to be quiet, and said his accident would not amount to much. But Mrs. Lamotte would not be quieted, I an wept and moaned until the doctor'. coming Bent ner ironi tna room. n professed herself utterly unable to nurs j her brother. . "I feel like fainting when I go into a darkened room," she said. "My feelings completely, overpower me when I see him lying there so white and still. Miss Danvers, help me in this. . -1 know I can trust you. I am sure I am 'not doing a dangerous thing. You are not pretty and sly like that horrid Miss Garfield, and you are the very one who can "read and doBo." Lucffle. with a bitter Dane at her heart I 1 xl 1 A Al a. -r T ti s one mougut mas jxirs. wunoiw coiuu indeed her tojay to Emily's finan- ai, wnuon.no neeueu. But Mrs. Lamotte was wrong in think ing it not a dangerous thing to throw these two young people so much together. As Geoffrey felt the touch of the cool, soft hands on his head he learned to ad mire them. "As he listened to tho low, sweet voice, which appeared never to weary whea reading aToud to, him, he learned to love it. As he saw the hun dred diff erentefforts. Lucille made each day to interest him and render his con finement to one room . less dull and irk some, he "learned to worship her. He forgot her plain face, and contrasted her character only with that of Emily. " : For . he no longer loved the" girl to whom he had" bound Mmself. He had been ; infatuated with her marvelous beauty," caught in the coils of her shim mering golden hair and musical laugh, and he believed , bis -infatuation to ke love,; But when thrown constantly with her whom he had believed aa perfect in j character aain face' he had discovered 1 her mind to be shallow, her one passion to be the ieader -. of society, r She was vain, exacting 'and selfish, and had. ho ecl krve for &e man she had nromi.vi I h(wl. i had onfl wrattv irorernesa. ana 1 - fnut lla waa nriariv well, im.i Misa Clirfifcld to marry. But Git-Srey U-lk-vwl his Lior dananJ3 Ciat Lo hhunl J f i.l'il to ti5 letter tlio row bo tad tba welding wa3 to taio p!aco in Oeto- He had matlo no effort to break hid Is'tens, thyn-li they hod frro-?m s- gU- He li.nl thrown a-ii'ie nil pra-Iencf, listened nut to tho vico of naui, jxal & asked Emily to niarry hitn after &n tiqaaintancw of barely sis iTef ks. Tho knowledge of GtjIIivyis luve for Itfjr camo npon Lu?iIlo lika a thunder ip. Thinking of him only aa her ris- ! tcr's betrothed, cho had never imagined that her gl.ntle miui3tratiou. to Um into lxis waa ritang in tko twilight one evening wiira she entered the room, and not perceiv ing in tho gloom a chair directly before iter, Bhe Ettimbl,:Ml over it and fell to the lijor, striking her he:ul with consider able force against a Email center table. With one bound GeoiTrey wa by hex r de, and lifting Ler in his nrmd he cned: - "Jly durli ; ray darling! tea ne yon a?o not hurt. Speak to me, LucilKs, my Cearefit, tell ine? yon are nut hurt." His voice waa hoarse with emotij. and bet iisses fell upon the girl's brow au ,hj pressed her to liij breast, forgetting Ltnih. honor, ev.rylhing, lm& ik;tt ha loved this littlo governess of his-sister's. "Ston," c-Tiol Lucille, whoa rho could speak from ainasement and excitenientd and tho freed herself from his 01nbrr.ee. "IIow dare yoi epeak to mc, Geof frey Wayne, when at thL moment yoa &re engaged to anotli?r'.-" "You know of my rn,i;:neut, lLon? But it matters not boV von have It'ijrued of it, for if is true. But us Keawii hears me, I love you only, nu.l wish with ail sincerity that rey hand could fullow my heart." Lucillo staggered bauk against the wall, and dropped her head iu hor hands. One instant sho stood thus, and in that instant the knowledge came to her that sue loved tab man who was to ba htr fcistcr's husband. Oh, "what a cruel wrong she had done Emily! yhe raised her face and locked at Geoffrey through her tearn, so haggard," so wild, that ho was startled at the change in her countenance, and thou fiod from tho room like a frightened deer. They did not meet agahi until the next day, and then both v.vro cilm, and avoided being left alwna togetl.tr. Emily wrote to Lucille, thiiAing her still at Barristown, urging her to return homo to act as bridesmaid at her wed ding, but Lucillo wrote that she could not, and Emily was forced to be satis fied without any explanation of why it was not possible for her only sister to be with her on an occasion of so much im portance. October in all its red and golden beau ty cime only too sooa tor u-eourey, wna would willingly have deferred his wed ding liad it been possible. But it had been arranged to take place oa tbo 10th of the month, and on the 8th ho left Wildwood Park, unaccompanied by any one, for Mrs. Lamotte, much to hr grief, could not leave homo ou account j of the illness of her youngest child. And sho was a faithful mother, even though a silly woman. She was greatly re joiced that Geoffrey was to marry so well, and talked of nothing but the wedding from morning till night, until it was almost a relief to Geoffrey when the 8th of tho month came, and tho day when he could leave tho Park. On the evening of the 10th Lucille went alone to the littlo arbor at tho foot of the garden, and throwing herself upon a seat, leaned her head down on the little rustic table, and gave her mind up to painful thoughts and memo ries. As sho recalled Geoffrey's avowal of love, and pictured the scene in which he was even now indulging, the wedding display and the beauty of tho happy bride, her tear3 fell fast, and sobs shook her slender frame. A tempest of regret was sweeping over her, and sho cculd not. cared not to, stay it. "LaciHe," said a grave, maul- voice, "Lucille, my love, my darling, look up, and tell me if you really caro so much for mo .is to weep like this." Lucille started to her feet, bewildered as sho saw that it to Geoffrey who spoke, Geoffrey who stood beforo her, hi3 face illuminated by love. "Emily!" she gasped. "Where i3 Em ily?" ... ; . - . . "Sho gave mo my freeJom, Lucille," was the reply, in a low, almost sad tone, "Sua cared not that we wero to be married this evening. Sho eloped last night with tho Count Lazano, whose aunt,died barely four days eince, leaving him a handsiorae fortune." "Oh, my cister, my sister!" groaned Lucille, covering her face with her hands, and sobbing more violently thao before, . . "Your sister!" repeated Geoffrey." "You do not mean"- "Imsaathat I am not the poor gov erness you thonght ma, but Lucille Dan vers Barstow." "What a wonderful tale! quite ro mantic! But, Lucille, 1 must kiss you once more to sec if von are really bef ora me. that I am not dreaming"- A sudden crackling in the bushes about the arbor prevented Geoffrey from carry ing out his intention, and Mrs. Lamotte, purple with rage, appeared liefor3 the lovers. "A second Mia Garfield ! cried the widow in a shrill voice. "So the homely as well as theorettv trovernesses inveigle my brother into making love to them. I i thought better of you. Miss Danvers; as ; for you, Geoffrey, I believe you wonld make love to any girl" , 'Stop, Jannette I" cried Geoffrey, wheso indignation had prevented his checking his sister's tirade before. "Stop, Jan nette; you do not knew or whom you are speaking. Let me explain why Mis3 Danvers came here and who "the is." .He then gave a brief explanation of .why Lacille had become a governess, .and told her relation to Emily. " Mrs. Lamotte would hardly credit her ears, and almost fainted from surprise. But when Geoffrey had ' finished his story she no longer, upbraided him or opposed his . love, but offered her eun gratnlationseffusively, "hoping Geoffrey would succeed in getting married the next time ha invited her to -his wed ding." And he did succeed, for six months later cards were out "forjth? marriago with "the plain Miss Bartow," and this time the bride did not elope. Boston Traveller. . A SAFE MOTTO. Tic State GhrouLIs eaj3 hat itasat to is : . - - . M do right." Bai For Eternity SUBLIMK IJvSSOXS TAUGHT KY THE (JIHIVT rvnA MIDOF (JIZKH. Ir. Tal; ij;e Itoitii a Sorlo or Sermons I-ntitlod "From the ryraiiilds to tho .Ucoix- Iis," i'nfurclnj atul II lu.strr.tin.tr tlie Truth 01 Scripture. Br.pcKLYS, OeilS. The- vast eon grcgition at tho Brooklyn Tube made this iLor;ii:y waa culijj'.ited by rji ex q.ilite rendering, by lrofc-or Henry Lyre Browuo, un th now organ, of Diiiicra !3.)i:d tnaU iu ii. Dr. Taliiia.Te's E-nuj.-n h first of a scrU-j he Intends mit aching on hla er.?t eru tour, t nti. nvi, "IVoni the Pyronilds to the A-.ro.!k or V4bat I Raw In f oif:r-n;itory of tbo - Ser'h)tun His text I&dah xix, D, 20 : "In that nay.xh.-iil there l a idtar to the Lord in th' nad. t of th. land cf Egypt r.atl a piHnr.t the brir-r thereof t V.u Lord. And it shall 1k for a sign and for a witTcss" I ni tii r.o do;:1t here refers to tho great pyramid at Gb'eli, the chief pyra mid of Egypt, 'ilio t.xt Fpealuj of a pillar in Egypt, and thid ia the great est pillar ever li't.'d; and tho text tays it x be at th and tliU pyramid tho land ; and the bcrdtr of the land, is at tho border of text pavs it f-hall bo for a wit n?-s, r;.nd -tho f;bj t of this pyramid !vjm:on is v.itnesFes. to ivll -what tah This hcrnion is the tirt of a course of sermons entitled, ii'oin if t'in I'yrauiid-J Vv'lie.t I Saw in to the' Acropolis, or ..gypt and i .ee Con- inaxory oi the rc i :ptu'.- S'. We had, ou a morning i f Boceuibcr, idvJ, landed in Africa. Amid the Lowl ine boatmen at Alexandria wo had come ashore ;nd taken the rail train for Cairo, Egypt, along tho banks of tbe most thoroughly 4 iarnosscd rfver of all the world the river IS'iltJ. We had, at eventide, entered tbe city of Cairo, the city where Christ dwelt while staying in Egypt during the Herodic persecu tion. It was our first night in Egypt. No destroying angel sweeping through as once, but all the stars were out and the skies wero filled with angels tit beaifty and angels of light, and tho air was balmy as an American June. The next morning we were early awake and at tho windo w, looking upon palm trees m iutl glory ot leaiage, ana upon gar dens of fruits and flowers at the very season when our homes far away are canopied by bleak skies 'and tho last leaf xf the forest has gone down with tho equinoctials. Bui; how can I describe the thrill of expectation, for today we are to see what all tho world has seen or wants to see the pyramids. We aro mount ed for an hour and a half s ride. We pass on amid bazaars stuffed with rug3 and carpets and curious fabrics of all sorts from Smyrna, from Algiers, from Persia, from Turkey, and through streets, where we meet people of all colors and rJl garbs, carts loaded with garden productions, priests In gowns, womerJin black veils. Bedouins lb long and- seemingly superfluous apparel. Janissaries in Jackets of embroidered gold out and oTT toward the great pyrainid; for though there are sixty- nine pyramids still standing, tho pyra mid at Gizeh is tho monarch of pyra mids. We meet camels grunting under their load, and see buffaloes on either side browsing in pasture fields. The road we travel U for yart of tha way nnCe.r clamps of acacia, aud by , long rows of sycamore and tameiisk, but aiier awhile it is a path cf rock and sand, and vo find we have reached the . margin of tho desert, the great Sahara desert, aud we cry out to the dragoman as wo see a huge pile of rock looming-in sight, "Dragoman, what is that?'' II!:- answer ia, "The pj-r.-v-taid," and then it oecined as if wa wero living a century every minute. Our thoughts and emotions were too rapid and intense for utterance, jnd we ride L on in fri leuco unal wo corne U the loot of the pyramid spoken of in tho text, the older t structure in al! tho earth, four thousand years old at IcsftEt Here it is. We stand under tbo thadow of a Rtruetaro that- bhuts out all the earth ar:d all the sky, and we look up and strain osr vision to appreciate the dis tant top, and are overwhelmed whila it'-a .v.,o-:.;,n T!i r-B".ti.5il! i J j , . M ..... , ; - . "AJTHAJD OF THAT WUICU IS IliGIL" I ivid stoned ill f.t morning with tho determination of nscaiiding the py-a mid,- Or.e of my chief objects in going to Egypt was not only to see the base of that granite wonder, but to stand on the top of Ii. Yet tlie nearer came to this eternity in stone the mora "niv. determination was shaken. Its altitude to we was simply appalling. ,great height has always been to me a most disagreeable sensation. As we dismounted at tho base of the pyramid I said : 'Others may go np ft. but sot. I.. I will satisfy myself .witn a view from, the base. The ascent of it would be to" me a ftoihardy undertak- IQg. . But after I had given up oil idea of ascending I found my daughter was de termined to go, and I could not let her go with strangers, and I changed my mind, and wo started with guides. " It cannot be done" without these helpers. Two or three times foolhardy men have attempted It alone, bat their bodies eaine tumbling down unrecognizable and lifeless. Each person in. our party hadatwo or three guides or helpers One of them unrolled his turban and" tied it around my waset, and ho held the other end joI the turban as a matter of safety. Mny of the blocks of stone are four or five feet high and beyond any ordinary i human stride unlaae assist!. But, two Arabs to pull and tvo Arabs' to I found inyw! rapidly axvndltt frnru blK!t to hei!t, and h to altUada trriflo, ajd at bwt at t!w Up top we found jrcbi ua m krel ;vwr of Thro the cWvt aum w 1 "ikst t.T up-m the dfpcrt, and off ujik winding Ml. usl tff upon ! tiiSpalnx with lu fctun of ttt- Ivtlni? ton. yonder wprn tlw inliiaret of Cairo glittcMinir In the aun. I ard yonder upoti Memphis in rulca, j and off np.m lit wrwk of empire and. the battknc4d of tigr, a radio of vww enough to fill tha tain I and ruock tlio nerves a 1 owrwhdm one't entire J Atur lviug around for awhile, aod a Ittxlak imtl pletnred th cmod I descended. Tbe dent waa moro tryin.thanUient. fovdUuUn, you netdiKtaee tho depth lKnath, but coining down it was impoibld not to see the abysms below. Hut, two Arab ahead to help us down and two Arabs to hold us back, we wen- lowemi hand hand until the ground waa In- wkThiw. iliJL vitmgly near, and amid tho jargm of points to prepare an addr aad laan the Amba wo were safaly landed. T1mi it to tU Dmcvr(ie jny of ifc Htat; camo one of tho uut wonderful feota E. FmJlh, T. J. Jarvta, 8. U. Alaao of daring and agility. On of tlie Arab dr, Ellua Oarr, O lb Wauoa, E. A. aDlicite.1 a dollar, aaylng ho would run up and down tlio pyramid In aaven minutes. We would rather havo given hhn a dollar not to go, but this aaoent and descent In seven minutes he determined on and no by tho watch lu eeveu iiiiijutea ho went to tha top and was buck again at tho bau. It wna a bloodcurdling Pcrtacle. -I baivl tliedoniiirant color ( the pyr mid was gray, but lu certain lights It seems to Hhake off the gray of rent urlca anJ beiiua a blond and tlio silver tarns to the golden. It covers thirteen acres of ground. What aa antiquity I It wus nt least two thousand years old when the baby Christ wax carried with ia sight of it by bis fugitive parent, Joseph and Mary. Tho storms of forty centuries have drenched it, bombarded it. shadowed it, flashed upon it, but there it stands ready to take another forty centuries of atmospheric nttack if the world should continue to exist. The oldest buildings of tho earth are Juniors to this great nenior of the oen- turies. Herodotus wiva that for ten years preparations wero being mode for tho building of this pyramid. It has eighty-two million one hundred and cloven thousand cubic feet of ma sonry. Une hundred thousand work men at ond time tolled in its erection. To bring the stono from the quarries a causeway sixty feet wide waa built. The top stones were lifted by machin ery such as tho world knows nothing of today. It ia seven hundred and forty-six feet each side of the square Chiptl" buidlcg, iLicb Ixs IwQ fd base. The structuro is four hundred cently rtniotloM by Mr. Wortb, f f Wd- and fifty fct high, higher than tbo cathedrals of Cologne, StrHburg, KoHcn, St. liters and St. Paul'a. io surprise to me mat it was put at . . 1 1 J x 1 rd T.lta called tbo "kins'-rfmmber" and another room called tlie "queen's clmiuber," and tha probably is that there are other rooms yet unexplored. The evident design of tho architect was to make these rooniaa inaccoa- j aiole as tOkSi Die. Alter amae worit oi ... 4. yM Wi Ml , i; i n . v, j: " expiorauon uuu u uw u.u.6 I.lu4ir.,. If wr.uM 0nill tllOUA lll. 1 , ! v.t-rnnrw.iis rtHiIIlH VOU TrinHt CTO thrOlllfll I a passage only three fiet eleven Inches hiu'h and less than four feet wide. THE QKEAT KIXO'TURSKD to jjujjt. i . A sarcophagus of red granite stands I down snder tbia mountain of inaaonry. f The sarcophagus could not have been i after tho pyramid was built. drfiw bu tuAu.xe a"a Imaginary pic lave bee:i put thero beioae tho . ... , . wasreared. Probably in that tare of tic fa urc U. -poke of the carneu in auer iuu rauuu -naa uuui. It must have .f wirtf lira -nnhnmiH ono lava wooden coffin -o I containing a dead king, but time liax I destroyed tlie coffin and destroyed the best vestige of human remains. - I For three thousand years this sepul- J chral room was unopenea, ana woaia m - 1 I . . i .t 3 1.. , 1 1 I nave been unta wxiay pruuui7 un- :ETZ , ""I T " uZSTZ r,vr.mkl wa ft lied with silver and irokl I and diamonds, and under Al Maraoun ari excavating party went work, and having bored and blasted through a hundred feet of rock they found no opening aheaL and were about to give ud the attcuiDt wlien tne woratnen heard a stone roll down into a seeming; ly hollow place, and encouraged by that they resumed their work and came into the ondergrourid rooftj. The disappointment of tho workmen in finding the sarcophagus empty of all silvep-and gold and precious atones waa so great that they would have assas- sinated Al Mamoon, who employed them, luid he not liid In another part of the pyramid as much silver and gold aa wcrnld pav tbsia for their work at ordinary rato of wages and Induced them there to dig till they, to their sur prise, came upon adequate compensa tion. I wonder not that this tn-juntaki of limestone and red granite has bef o the fascination cf acholara, of ecieuthita, pt intelligent Christiana In all ages. John Herschel, tho a.tronoiBer, said he "thougjit it had astronomical ainifl- eance. ijie wlso men nun r.wunjjr wed Nanoleon's army into Egypt went into profonnd .tndy of the Ryranuo. In I8C6, Professor Smyth and lia u Uved in tlie empty tombs near by taa pyramid that they might bo as oontin- upusly as possibl close to tlie pTamid, which they were investigating. Tho pynunid built more than lour thousand yeam ago, being a cemplot ceometrical figure, wiae men have con- eluded it must have been divinely con- Etrncted. Man came through thou - aandw of years to fine architecture, to music to painting, nuciais wna periw at the world's start, nd God mast havb'dfrectedTlt.v:'AU astronomers and geometricians and scientists say that it was scientifically and mathematically sonstruotod before scicneo and mathe matics wero borp.. From tho Inrcrlp Uons on tlie pyramid from Its propor tions, from the points of the"', compass reoognized'in its structure. direction in which Its tunnel. V i Lvin tho relative position of tlie bltv?; that I Continued on Second Page.l m ' ' . - - - -- - - ' .V : r- ' 1 - Till; WORLD'S NEWS l WTIILILSPAY.CAU r ULLY A880HTK1 AVh w m w CONUKX8UD lm IIUSY Ir. Ceo. T. Win.ton waa niogrhd Pia;Jct of tha p- neirera (y oa Utt rLar i ,rM. ptiate cftramonia. j V 3 cotameneea In Cos V . .r' ... 10a ruca "7 i?"'.1 ft1, J IiilfflSSj title, far damaNi mouailo to ow $100,0110. Twaivanf AvbnU-Va leading lawyer are ciaploywi in thw cum. .. .... ' " " . ."1 "J. A. W. M. iteb ru J, H. "La u A wtocr. Colootl Walter L Hue!, 1'rmident of he Tt-e He Manufctuf io OotonaUT U Honkina b vniul f H-viiiaiom on laa Frirtay, i.g t Ci jotr. lie m burn In i?3 J, ktu i to th u io!atme in IMS waa a tnetutxr cf forgru. fr,.m 1K7C to M snd vm op K.f ti? m-t tcla ctitl mrR in ttW!a Ho m a graduate i of tha IToivprMty .f Nutlh 'tolloa. anl at tti time or bia dtath wita itmlt tn&nof t!:e boari of UuMera of LU Alain Mater. MATloWAU W. II. T. Le. atcnt.ritnn r,f (.Vn It V. Lr d.xi at h'a home la Virjiaa on htat Thuradny, aged i4 ywu. H bad fAith- fully rrproM-titcd tbli li strict for a ate- ocd term ia Oougm, and rasa nam- b:r-o!ict of the ntxt Ocar. iltIHIIr;NT WINKTON Iiiiui-tirnt4't!.--Illu Day ut tbr LMl-irdty. (Special CormpciiiJont.) t ujrsi. Hux N. C, Oct. 14, 1601. An hor of the toivrit)'a granI dfjehjufc. ttAM.1 that will be Ion rtmr cbcred by all prcaect. The U'.vetMy bun a largw nombr of Mvdeuta than for tn-vrral yeara. To-dity tbe inauKurtt'0!i of Preildnt (i. T Vtnton toil :tu in tto "old minglou. The houa waa callel to or- Mcr b Col. Tbos S. Kratau. bo. ia a jeW gtoeea traarlf. cxrUincd tbe ob- t ,( ,v . A4;ft- - iu VtfJr- Thtn tbe College cbolr aang "The Old Belt." Afterward President G.lman, of John. Uopkiua, In a few 'ouchlng remarks, ex- tended to Preaideot WlDetou the hearty w -..in- nt hi. nw ffl. Atrn'.a Col. Kwnin r.m fnrmKrA anil in drsei virar compliments introduced to B wiyjiiuiiu m iuiiwuivu l tbe'audktce Mr. W. II. Pagi. tdilor of v l oiuin. r. aagoa- apcicir waa I.l 1 . . 1 . 1 . A - I . r k r 1 1 1 . i tuougauui, ruienaiuiog ana ormiani. tcuchtng every University boy with the wannest aerse of arprecinf ion He con- Lj lto prwcnl wllu llie pMt aw monejea cudhici oi ice raenj asa en- .. i i. : -i. i 1 1 ... j . it . ulSil1 "5" i..yn iuwh extent. Not fa Cat olina'a eon may 6rtr be found ranking ainccg the f cresost braina of oar country. n6 cll0ir ,hetl 14DK Ualverdtr of Nortb , then mad a abort .petcb, bS gvte thrcugb. 1 Dr. Wi-a ou resided with an In- augural audita t of tLlity mii.ateff after which the cboir bg that long cherished Losured roig, "Ihe Oil North Dr. Qeweil, Prtidcnt of B. F. Acade my, dUmbrtd th- rroad itb the bene diction. - Amo.) the pnmioti.t gnrrt prteect J wcr Prof. Ed Ai If raac, Dr. Orowell, Df Trinity Oolfcge; Ja.wpt.u Daniels, of utt.Cnroui-.-U-; Pr-.f. Potcat, of W. p ,kllmt, i A g" d 'j any r-f thj l l Alamni were preecot." Tbo cifrcbfcs ! t d b nt three bonra. O. . WALL jmtEET GEITISG IN ITS WOUKM. Gradually tui urU tbe Democratic j tciiuciaox r 0iiftu.w ar? -f run--free j fcoiuge It ia reaiarfcabla bow eeaily :t f-e.-ie n rrpteiscET-iiiveaetiangetneir. '--r " uoavcimuB par.j ,,.ua u-- ;lff;b-ve far different t Wa., is ta, jg fif u jg n.,.Loda witb tb ftiUj) j rgcct P;onitEt ; Democratic papers are new cutrpt-km against free ooinrge, and both Bccatora and Con- gTf-semsn are cer tailing agimst is or kftp-E? qaict Kith ba few exceptions, " ptewni ppcarCD0 tie L people - IVl 1 f &jm xtej m n Xh J hanjs of . a Bepublk-an Congreaa.-- i National Ecouomist. - THEY ENDOBSE IT. P;caident Bntlcr staled ia hie speech Friday wbatnin7 fiw percerifc of tb. Alliance men in orth Cohn do en dorse tbat the AHicce M not osg to be eide-tracked bJ?7J Ia n can see tbat H,to J . jSnb rreanry, and notil . then tbey wiU. tand by U and to:e for no man who op poses this demand.- Burai Hoae. 4 J c 11 I.

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