THE ST&HDARj LARGEST "PAPER PUBLISHED IN CONCORD- BARB WE DO ALL KINDS OP j-oi3 "WOEk: IX THE NEATEST manner AND A T TlIK LOWEST BATES. YOL. IV. NO. 5. CONCORD, N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1891. WHOLE NO. 163, THE STAHDARD. Y Stan I'HATTAIX ABLK. The sails we see on the ocean. Are a white as white can be, But never one in the harbor An white as the sails at sea. And the clouds that crown the mountain With purple and s;old delight, Turn to cold pray mist and vpor Ere we reach its topmost night. Stately and fair the vessel That comes not near our beach ; Stately and grand the mountain Whose night we may never reach. I. A I.. BY MKS M. L. RAISE. It was iii that birthplace of color, the region of valley which lies alone the Chattooga river, that the humble cabin home of " Moonshiner Jim " wh located, resembling, in its red roofed isolation, a flowing ruby m a Betting of emerald green. (July by contrast, for the red roof was so low it nested in the tender verdure of the rich tiel is that hid all its defects Biid exasperated all its beauties. Just beyond wan another accentua tion of coior, the blood-red blossom of the cotton held which glowed in ruady verdure all along the bottom lands, like mimic reas of flame. Over all this gorgeous vegetation arched 0 sky of Neapolitan blue, the mid dav skv of Georgia, cloudless, and with a dome of endless perspective. Nature had wade shift to surround her loneliness with a beauty that compensated lor the lom of Human companionship. As far as the eye could reach there was oiijv this on;- liHimaiiou.withits red roof sunken to the ground, But in the low doorway was something fairer and of more exquisite work manship than the blue skies, or red blossoms, or sweet uelia of living green. This was a young girl in a tattered dreBS, through the rents and rags of which her lovely arms and satmsniootb skin were plainly discernible. She was pleading with Moonshine Jim. " Dunn make me dew tnet agin, pappy. Et ain't liken fur me to be put to sech chores, no how. 'Tain't gal's work. At yer tole ner as is gone yauder you wouldn't nevah ax lae no mo'. I ca n't seeui to stand tu-ir agin, no how." "Shet up. Lai," sail the long, shamming mountaineer, as he cut a round from the bar of plug tobacco in i.is hand; "it ain't enuy cous-uin of yourit, only to dew ez yure bid. Aiu'l I er pap? Doan I tVeds an' ciose yer" all the yah rown? Iain poin' ter be 'sprised by no reveuios along of yer laziness. N w yer git, or I'll everlastingly talk ther strap till yer." "Pappy, I kin keep a lookvout from thwdure. Et do be everlastiu'iy not to stand yonder, likens I were a rooted till the yeath. Tain't like folks yeahabouts ter be informiu'. and I kin see a revenoo miles and miles fur off. Ef Rod Hawkins heaUs as enuything were a foot he'd sartinlv lidedeown fur to tell uns. Yer kno' as how he would, pap." She hang entreatingly on his arm, looking into his ugly guarled face with tne lovely eyes that her mothei bad given her, and the rough moun taineer father for a moment relented, urn! then was ashamed of his weak ness. He gave her a rude push as he turned away. " Ef I doan see you thar by th- time I git to the still 'il be the wuss fur yer, Lai, when I git hum ter night. Yer ain't wuth ver salt, nor yer mothah warn t afore ye. Wifh that be turned ivi;y. mid La never knew now sorry no was ail that, afternoon, working secretly in hia hidden stwi son y fcr his rough speech; nor how the spirit of her mother Had been witn mm, anu boh ona hia heart, so tha he had re solved to be kinder to his motherless child. , .. "Her air a bit lazy and tnflin, but I 'low as Rod Hawkins have axed her, her rnought as well hev it easy fur a spell. I'll send her to git some book larniu' and her shell hev a new caliker gown. Lai ain't bad ter look ut. She do favoh her mothah. But the moonshiner's resolve cune too late. That same afternoon two young men, each carrying a rifl rode along the vallev naat Lai's home. One of them was ltod Hawkins, a young athlete in mountaineer garb, Ihe other his dress did not betray his profession was a young revenue officer. "No, indeed, mister," Rod was saying, " there ain't a still on this Bide of the Chatoogy river. Them folks yander air planters. The man is waitin" fur his craps and puts in his time huntin'. He ain't no fam'iy to speak on, his wife bem dean i)u him!" The last words he said under his breath. They were inspired by something he saw at tho moment a hum t-breakiug vision of Lai pooi Lai! Look at that scarecrow," sa u the young revenue oflietr. " I thiui. that object might scare ail the crow in the country. It i ready u nitei niece of ait." Rod hud seen, and deep iu hit he rt was Hoping that his companion Lad not. Now, lie grouud h.s strong while teeth together and Ins biui eves flashed with a steely augei, ilut he nerved himself to sptak quietly as he changed tue couvtrsi tion. "Ef yer stay yeahbouts we kit show ver a coou hunt by moonshiu- hi.iI it barbycue and a dance-down. There's a heap of iun in em." His compauiou did not answer, Ri.d Rod turned jealously to look at turn. " Hi !" he shouted, " look out thai Mr God ,: He was too late. The young offi cer, in a spirit of fun, had rained hif rille to his shoulder and taken aim at the fluttering, scarecrow that stoou sentinel in the soft green of the rice held. Simultaneous with t .e report of the rille rang out a woman's cry. and immediately after the echo of a second rifle shot, and the gay anu fanciful youmr revenue officer lay proce on the dust of the road. Anc Rod Hawkins was runniug for hie not his own life to the poor flutter iug scarecrow in the ragged gowi. and limp sun-ibounet. "Tell papas he were'nt tei blame, gasped L.al as she lay 11 Rod's arms, "he Rod mo:hah ' She lifted one small brown hand. and Rod pressed it to his quivering lips. "Air ye hurted, Lai? I've killed nun as did it, like be were a varmiut Mv Uctla T.ol urn vt h-.rtjrl?" liut Lai bad spoken her last words on earth. Detroit ree I'ress. The Standard is a hummer. NOME THOUGHTS, From a Prsrtlral Ticher, on the Bliibek Speller. EditorJStandard : The effort to belittle the Blue bnck and banish it from the school room is a senseless undertaking, and the educators engaged in i ought to be ashamed of themselves, if they have found a better way of begin ning the ascent of "the hill of knowl edge," why do they not content themselves with showing the merits and idvantages of that way, instead of using their time and talent to depreciate the tried and beatn way: i$y raising a hue ana cry against the use of the Ulueback hev do not and can not convince the friends of this speller that it is worthless and should be discarded iu the work of the school room. Teachers of thought and sense are competent to uecide for themselves on hearing what can be said in favor of the ''word method," but they will be slow to adopt it if the chief argument for its adoption is abuse, or depreciation, or noicule ot tne Blueback. It cannot be denied by the most fierv and enthusiastic advocate of the "word metnod thit the Blue b.i. Ic has done a good work in the education of past generations. It is a patent ami well known fact that in the hands of progressive and wide awake teachers it has been success fully employed in laying a solid edu cational foundation. How senseless then to condemn it is having lost its value and potency as a factor in the early training of the pupil! Every sane person must admit that by its proper tivd faithful use the same progress may be made now that has beeu made in years gone by. The oortion of the Blueback most savagely criticised is that found at the beginning. It is said that in tnis part ot the speller there are combi nations of letters tnat spell notmng and mean nothing. We admit that tnere are some combinations of this sort, but when we are told that fifi pen or twenty nacres are thus faulty, we must ask permission to sav in our most allable manner that he statemeut ia an unwarranted exaggeration. The truth is there ate not more than two rr three pages that contain the combination so offensive to the zealous advocates f the " word method," and all of these with very few exceptious are fouud s syllables in reputable words, or olav a nromineot part ia the forma tion of such syllables. We think we can hhow this to be the fact. Take the combinations. CHA, CH, CHI, CHO, CHC. I HA IS the first syllable of chaos and charade; CHE, 01 CHELT ami CHEMISE; CHI, Ol CHIROGRAPH Y and CHICANE; CH'S of chorus: chc, of chcet; chy, of cht laceous. lake, also, qua, que. qui, quo, qvy. Qua is the first syllable of quaver; que, of quehy; qui, of quiet; quo, of quorum. b'it we must not overlook scra, scrk, scri, scro, scru, and scla, sole, scli, sclo, sclu the combinations that are rolled out with such vigorous gusto at Teachers' Institutes by certain cranks in education, to create tin impression that these are fair specie mens to be met with on every page of the first filteen or twenty. Why even of these scra is found in scra per; scre. in screamer; scri, in scrib ing; scro, in scroll; scru, in scruple, scla, in sclavonian; scle, in scle rotic. We have not counted the words on he condemned pages, but we do not believe that out of pro bably fifteen hundred there can be found twenty-five combinations that are not used as syllables or parts of syllables. In tnis connection it 19 not amiss to state that our best readers have " Exercises in Articulation, and we will noiico in examining these "Ex ercise a that tney contain very queer combinations. What is the object of these cpmbinationsf lhey spell no thing aud mean nothing. But do they not serve a good purpose? We fear that our educational lights are disposed to strain at a ga e but find no difliculty in swallowing a saw mill. B. A. L. The Revenue Men Come Down on DUtlller. We take the following from the Salisbury Herald: On Tuesday Mr. J. 15. Lanier is. sued a circular letter to his custom era announcing the fact that owing to "circumstances beyond his con, trol " his distilleries would be closed. The "circumstances alluded to, while not Btated in the circular, are that Mr. Lanier is being singled out by the revenue department as a spe cial pet upon whom to bestow all the favors possible m the way of im posing unreasonable and unjust re strictions. A Bhort while tince Mr Lanier was notified that in future his largest distillery ivonld be ;ts- et:sied 'Si gallons of spirits to each bu6hel of corn, and more recently ie was notified that his ottir-r distil ierv woiru ue assessed at gallons per bushel. Heretofore th a-ses-innit upon these distilleries has been 2i gallons per bushel, and as uo othe d sti.ler in the district was placed under such restrictions us Mr. La nier, the injustice and malevolence of the action was shown at one Some one was to be oppressed and deviled by the revenue spies, 11 ud Mr. Lanier was selected, ht beiDg the largest and most prominent dis tiller in the district. But for once the revenue folks got more than they bargained for. Mr. Lanier deter mined that he would not submit to such treatment, being singled out from all the distillers in the district for oppression, and accordingly when the officers called upon him and no tified him of the fact that they had come to assess .the capacity of his lower distillery he very promptly told them that he would work no onger. Both distilleries will close if ter this week, and a big slice of money will be lost to the department. F e glory in the spunk of Mr. Lanier. An attempt was made to impose un usual restrictions upon him, and he very properly resented it Whether or not the distilleries will resume work depends upon the action of the department. The House committee a'lows 150,000 additional for Baltimore harbor improvement. WILLIAM WI5TDOM. "illim Windom, late Secretary of tha Treasury, was born in Bel mont county, Ohio, on May 10th, 1827, of Quaker parents. When he had completed his educa ion he studied law and was admitted to the bar at Mount-Vernon in 1853. Two years later he emigrated to Winona, Minnesota, where he practiced law until 1859, when he was elected to Congress, being re-elected for four successive terms. In 1871 he was elected to th? United States Senate, and re elected in 1877. He left this body to enter President Garfield's administration as secretary of the Treasury, but resigned after Gen. Arthur's accession. He made an t x cellent secretary, showing both wis dom and courage in his successful efforts to refund the high interest bearing bonds at a much lower rate. He was conspicuous by the reliable conservatism, which is the soundest capacity in tha world for a financial head of any government. In the memorable year 1883, Mr Windom waB again a candidate for the Senate, and was apparently the choice of the Republicans of the State, but he was bitterly opposed by M. H Dunnel, member ot Con gress from the First Minnesota dis trict In caucus Mr. Windom re C6ived eighty-three vots out of eighty- our ne-essary to a choice Dunnel fo .ght him openly and se cretly, and th deadlock continued for some time. Finally 11 break wa made and Dwight M. Sabiu was elected. After his defeat for tin- Senate Mr. Windom spent most of ins time in iew xoru with hib fami ly, but always nut in an an enrance in .Minnesota before each general election. Mr. Windom has been interested in s me railway schemes, aud is be lieved to have died a wealthy man. His administration of the treasury was infinitely creditable and most useful to the country, and our funds were safe in his ban Is. Til F.TREAfcritER'M REPORT. We are indebted to Treasurer Bain for a copy of his bi-ennial report, from which we gather that if there be no increased appropriations there need be no increased taxation. Whether there are to be increased appropriations is then a mutter of concern. His estimates are for the penitentiary, f 250,000 ; Insane Asy lums, $172,500; Deaf and Dumb and Blind Institute, $50,000; for interest on the 4 per cent, bonds, $123,000; for pensions, $93,000; public printing, $20,000; for other items, $252,000 ; making a total of 1960,400, not including the interest on C per cent, bonds, which will be met by railroad dividends. The estimated revenues lie states a3 follows: Penitentiary earnings, $215,000; State tax of 25 cents, $53',750 ; the 3 cent tax for pen sions with ! cent poll tax, $84,000 ; other taxes, $110,000; total, $954, 750. The treasurer has a balance now on hand of $34,408.97. An appropriation of $10,000 is proposed for the Normal School for girls; one of $25,000 is asked for the Agricultural College, and it may be that other new appropriations will be made. Besides, more old bonds are to be funded, which will increase the interest charge. There are outstanding $1,570,000 of old bonds, which if funded would increase our four per cent debt $400,000, entailing an additional in terest charge of $16,000. The Bu l ean of Labor Statistics is to be pro vided for by a separate appropria tion, as we understand. The fish interest has already involwd some expense, and an ppr-'priation of not less tarn $25,Oou ought to be mule for that, although so much may nor be needed. There i- a 1 robaility of add ritni.il appiopi i 1 ion-beiin' in.de to berwe-:. $'.0.000 a ! $100,000. One ut of i-.x wil ra $20.uu0 of income; and it ;ks a- if n addi iohhI ;axof 4 cents win -e requisite if the S:ate is to do ba tdi- mgh b do. Then there is a demand for ncreaied echtiol terms, which if fa vorably coMsidtTt-d will require an dditton to the school tax. Govern ment is neces-arily expensive, and while the State ought to do w'-at is necessary in the way of fostering her public interests, the Legislature ought to be careful that no oppor tunity is afforded for the people to susrect their representatives of ex travagance or a want of due econo my. News and Observer. And Abont all lie Doe Know. We know of a drove of fine Vir ginia horses that is heading for Con cord. Now that the Standard maa has lost his railroad pass he had bet ter set himself up to something, that, for speed and comfort, will rival the R. & D. vestibule train. China Grove Durt. It is very doubtful whether school teacher Brown knows a drove of horses from one of Texas steers. Treasurer Seeberger, of the Chi cago World's Fair directory, says the directory never expected to run the fair on a ten-million-dollar basis. It was all along contemplated, he says, that fifteen millions would be required. UNCONTROLLED TEMF.PRS Cnnae Two Maid to Quarrel and fight and the Dignity of the Law Reap the Benefit. Since the fall of Adam, way back in the early history of the garden of Eden, man has been getting mad and his fair neighbor, in a dress, in response to the rulings of an ungov erned inheritance, gets mad, too. This is an angry world, my friends ; brure and man, alike, in moments of some grievance, some wrath and perhaps an imagined wrong, go to gether battling fighting for a cause. The bickerings, the quarrels, the spites, the scratcbings and fightings oh, it is sad to recall. All these things, in a boasted age a glorious time civilizing civilization in the land of the free, the brave aud where right is preached and taught. It is a made Btate ! A sorrowing picture, strife, contention, it is ! Two heated tempers steamed up, boiling, scorching, burning im agined wroug ; they quarrelled, the young girls did ; one gave the lie the other struck the blow, vv ith a soft hand doubled into wrath. Ah, it is bad to see the gentle ones "lose their tempers," forget the pe culiar charms and graces that belong to them, give the lie and strike, like men do ! The eye of the law sees it sees straight, sometimes and the young maids surrender to the law's de mands. They are fined ; they con tribute, each, $4.35 to the wounded dignity of the law. That settles it? No, no. The fine is paid, the young maids appeur in His Honor's office, the blow and the lie were given these are the facts. It is not settled I If the scar was not there : if the $4.35 removed the scar; if the! "making of friends followed all would not yet be right. It is the sorrow for the wrong, the resolve to control the temper and the execu tion of the resolution these consti tute 1 he healing, the betterment, the good. But such is life' It is a nir-an, mad, fighting world, this is. - m Tbe Standard Gel Mad At the way some kickers make remarks about things thaf do not con cern them. To see fashions change before the garment is worn out. To see a man let a golden oppor tunity pass by ; and ihe same fellow have occasion to criticise some one else for doing the same thing. To hear the "Industrious Alexan der" positively assert that he could have told you so before. It is pro ductive of a weary feeling to hear a man say "I told you so." But the woods are full of such cattle these days. To step into a dry looking place on the pavement, and th'U mire down over the shoe. To find no one else abont Mount Pleasant to catch in our subscrip tion net; the trap ha9 caught nearly every man in that neighborhood. But then, when they get a railroad down there, it is probable that some immigrants will go in they will be "yanked in," too. To see some would-be Christian men or things that call themselves men cry down and sfep on a fellow mortal and roll him in the mud when he fs already downed, possibly forever. To see a man try to be cheerful and happy when he has the tooth ache light bad. When a lazy, poky son of Adam remarks about the luck of enter prise in a town that he can't keep up with. To hear men regret an awful oc currence before there is any sign of it except the ground-hog theory. Because the stores don't close ear lier and allow the clerks time to read newspapers, good books and study their Sunday-school lessons. And it makes the Standard mad because it haj notning e se to get mad about. American Cotton g Ntill Ahead. Since Southern mills have begun making a good quality ol the coarser gihdes of cotton fu n ic aud th pro tluctiCH iuisshowua teady inci ease, Ne Ei'ghtU'l in tii'ifaciui'- rs hny turn d then- atte tion to in iking the tm 1 gi. iM- . F--I tdat. puip se thy Uhw uiicu-rtaKen t. nun a neap r si. i. ramie id se 1 inUml cotii-u. Kgvpti -u ci itit l.a. been tri d ami i fit iu some it pecis saiisfa loi v. iim lhey hnd mat curnliing machines m Me-eerNary to woi k it with That nas probabiy prevented the adop iioti .f it ueyond t'venty mill.s or bo Stiit those mills have -een consum iug a good deal of cotton. In Egypt the average cron is about 450,000 ualeH of about 750 pounds weight. I hey do not manufacture any there. Most of it goes to Enu laud. In 1885, however, 4,553 bales were brought to this country : 111 188G, 3,815 bales came; in 1 87, 4,700 bales; in 1888, 5J)i bales; in 1889 the number increased to 8.430 bales, and last year the aggregate was 9,000 bales. This shows that the imports have steadily grown from the beginning. Only a few days ago the largest sin gle importation of it ever received in America arrived iu New York. It Nggregated 2,150 bales, valued at $350,000. It was a good grade and was well handled. But even those who use itconfess that the best of it is far from the equal of the sea isl and product. bt vannah .News. Moscow, Feb. 5. A terrible fire occurred in an orphan asylum in this city last night. The building was burned to the grouni and most horrible scenes were witnessed as tbe youthful inmates were being rescued. As it was nine children were burn ed to death and others so seriously injured that their lives are despaired of. 1 Extremely cold weather prerails over theJNorthwestern States. LITTLE DROPS OF Tar, Pitch, Turpentine and Other Tar Heel Product. Inspector-General Cameron re signs. Mecklenburg farmers cancelling mortgages. lialeigh electric street cars arrived Wednesday. Episcopal convocation at Fayette Tille this week. Charlotte May Festival promises brilliant success. Lowest temperature in Wilming ton during January 29.52. New and extensive cottage im provements at Wright8ville. Crown cotton mills run day and night, and behind on orders. New Hanover people want impo sition of $500 liquor license. Paleigh colored people raised $300 more for the State Exposition. . Confederate pensioners propose a summer reupion near Asheville. Greensboro is negotiating for the Hammond Manufacturing plant. Droves of mules are prohibited in the streets by Charlotte ordinance. Paa planting m fall blast through out the trncking regions of the State. Wilmington had 13 cloudless days in January ; highest temperature 75. Wilmington January cotton re ceipts, 18,594; 11,223 same time last year. North Carolina railroad directors declaie 3 per cent, semi-annual divi dend. Wilkesboro votes the 14th inBt. on issuing $5,000 bonds for improve ments. Capt. Piatt D. Cowan has charge of the uptown railroad ticket office. Asheville. J W. Rutledge, of Stokes, has lo cated iu Greensboro in the tobacco business Re ard of $200 out for Charles Williamson, of Cleveland for killing his brother. Durham Globe : It is stated that a company will be formed in Dur ham to bore for petroleum. The Commonwealth Cotton Man ufacturing Company, of Durham, begins business at an early day Miss Dora Hill, of Laurinburg, a beautiful girl of 17, has gone blind from the effects of the la grippe. Hereafter the partridge 6hootinz season will begin November 1st, and end March 1st, in North Carolina. North Carolina's increased tobacco production and improvement in quality is most marked this season. Governor Fowle has rnditioned Sidney Smith in Columbus jail on requsition of Governor iillman, of South Carolina. Charlotte Alderman vote 6 to 2 to submit a proposition to the city to ters for issuing $300,000 local im provement bonds. Kinston's new knitting mill em ploying seventy operatives, adds one- third more machinery, and has or ders three months ahead. The Chronicle objects to the name New Wilkesboro, for the twin to f n on the rsorth side 01 the xaakin. It insist upon the name of Gordon, or North Wilkesboro. Carpenters and painters on the government building at Charlotte struck, because the Superintendent put on a negro mechanic, which the laws of their union forbid. Stockholders, all practical work- ingmen, have organized a sash, door and blind manufacturing company with $25,u00 capital at Cnarlotte, $13,000 already subscribed. The New Berne Journal 3ays the Beaufort Canning Company is using bushels of oysters per day. This is the only packing house in the State owned by .North Carolinians. The Progressive Farmer is in fa vor of working the roads in North Carolina by taxation, and we hope the present Legislature may take some action in that direction. The New Berne Journal says: Yesterday the steamer George H. Stout, of the Clyde line, took out .-. part of hei car-o 8,755 l a-vs c n laiiiina 210,120 t ans of oysters, the toral weight ilf waich was 150 tons Mr. E K. P. O.-borne, who la'elv faiied in Chariot e, has jost recov rtd fiom a severe ill Mess, and now gives a mO(t encouraging report of his situation, and says notwithstand ing the reports about him, uot a sin gle person will lose a dollar by him. Same Facts Abont Wanamaker's Sto 0 More than 14 acres of floor space. Thirty-tiv hundred to five tnous and employees, according to the sea son. Eleven boilers, aggregating 900 horse power. . Seven steam engines, with a com bined power of 625 horses. Four hundred and seventy-two arc lights and 550 incandescent lights the lar jeet private electric light plant in the country; besides these there are 4.550 ga ie s. Sixty delivery wagons and 120 horses, delivering at times as many as 20,000 packages in a day. Fifty-three merchandise dpart ments, of which dress goods, millii nery. furniture, house furnishing, books and linens are the largest retail stocks of their kind in the country, while any of the others will compare favorably in size and com pleteness of assortment with any retail store devoted exclusively to the one branch of trade. The dairy has a seating capacity of 800, and th average number of persons served daily is upward of 3,000. Near Camilla, Ga. , there is a j u slice of the peace who uses the oath to witnesses as follows: "The evidence you shall give in this ease shall be the truth, the whole truth, and pay all costs, bo help you God." THE ARIZONA KICKER. Home Kicks Worthy of a Kicker. We extract the following from the last issue of the Arizona Kicker: A "Wise Man. The deadlock in the Common Council was broken last night by the absence of Col. Taylor. J. he colonel couldn t help b unir ab sent. Some of the boys had him oat in the suburbs, under a tree, with a rope around his neck. It was either hang or break the combination, and the colonel decided to help break it. We want to Bay right here and now that if there is anymore " fussing in tbe council we will move to im peach the whole gang, and if we can't get 'em impeached we'll head a body of outraged citizens and clean 'em out to a man. They were elected to do public business, and the publ c is in no humor to put up with their peisonal quarrels. Col. Taylor ex hibited wisdom in coming down off his high horse, and we trust the lesson he received will not soon be forgotten. A Wobd to the Mavor The mavnr of this town hasn't tha decency of a wolf nor the dignity of a monkey. tie nas been drunk at least three times a week for the last month, and he would as soon pub hair with a half -breed as to argue with a gentle man. We've trot tired of his caDers and we now give him due notice that unless he comes to a right -about-face we 11 give him dead away and rid the community of his presence. An in dividual about bis size is wanted in one of the Eastern States for cow stealing, and while we don't want to be pizen mean, we owe a duty to this community. We have got our eye on the mayor. Stand Up, Tom Hartweix. Tom Hartwell, City Marshal, you were appointed as a guardian of tbe peace. now have you iulblled your mission! On numerous toccasions within the last three months you have been drunk, aud jou can befounl in a saloon oftener than on the street. You i.ave set a bad example all around, ard the idea that you ae a guardian over anyt ing except a whiskey jug makes us laugh. The Kicker has given you a fair show, but you would not in-proveit. Open your ears now, Thnm s! If you do not res gv 01 brace up the boys will call on you within the next fort night, and when they do so it will be too late for any excuses. You'll be taken out and made a pendulum of, and the grave will be shallow and the obsequies mighty brief. If you want to cull the wild cactus when the springtime comes again.Thomas, we have pointed out the way. Ii you don't, theD the boys will cull you. Come Out, Jim! While Jim Kaniff was not elected mayor of this place on a tempeiance platform, the pub lic expected him to be decent about getting drunk and whooping up and down the streets. It is with sorrow thai we announce the fact that Jim is a complete failure except as an old soak He hasn't drawn a sober breath in six months, and bis official career has been enough to shame a wolf out of the country. We have kept quier. on this matter, hoping Jim would brace up, but tbe time has come for a little plain talk. We say to him in the most friendly spir t that he must come out of that and brace up. The boys are muttering and growling, and if His Honor con tinues his present career something will happen within a fortnight. He'll be waited upon by a committee, mounted on a mule, and the mule wi-1 be headed towards the hills and told to travel. His Honor will keep going and never return, or if he should be foolish enough to refuse, the boys will plant him and proceed to sign a call for a special election No Bed Tape. We learn that a gentleman named Scott is coming here from Ohio to establish a bank. It is good news, but we feel it our duty to utter a few words of advice to the new comer. Remain sober during business hours. Don't be too anxious to pick a quarrel in order to show off. Have a back room where the boys can sit down and discuss financial matters. If any of our people want $50 tor sixty days don't demand that the whole town shall indorse Make your rate of interest a reasonable one. Treat every faro bank tlike, atd show up in oi.e sa loon as ften as in auother. By paying attention to the custo s and chaiacteristics f our people y u wil do a rushing business here and be elected to the Legislature. The other road lea-is to certain failure and a midnight departure. Detroit Free Press. Death of a Centenarian. Mr Iluichison lay lor, the oldest man in Union ctmvty, and in a.l ,-robabilit tne eldest ii' the Siate, !id at the home of his son, Mr. John Taylnr, two and a half miles from Monroe, a few days ago. He was said 10 be 115 yean old. He was a native of fStauly county, and lived in that county until about 15 years ago, when he came to this county, lie was a .eighbor and playmate in his boyhood days of William Whitl. y, the Stanly county centenarian, who died last year at the age of 117 years. Mr. Taylor was only a little younger than Mr. Whitley, making his age about 115 years. His death w3 very sudden. His health was quite good, considering his age, and on the morning of his death he ate a hearty breakfast. During the morning he went to his room and lay down on the bed. Here he was found about one o'clock, with his hands folded across his breast and apparently peacefully sleeping, but upon closer examina tion it wps found that he was dead. He had died as gently and calmly as a child goes to sleep, and death was doubtless a painless transition from this world to the next His health through life had been remarkably good, and his eyesight never failed him to an extent re quiring tbe use of glasses. Monroe Register. Mr. W. R. Taylor, Jr., and Mr. W. E. Brandon, of Virginia, arrived in Baltimore and told of the disastrous failure of an American farming I colony in Paraguay. THE SHOWMAN That Gave Tp Here in l- T-.-III Touib-KtoneThe Account of II in Last Daytf-Hin Wife Koine Be lief Abont the HatterThe Nhowiuen Do II in .Memory Honor. On the 7th of November, 1827, George Yeaman, the showman, gave up his life here in Concord. He fell the victim of death, the inva ding and stern power that tikes, sooner or later, every one, whether willing and ready or not. George Yeaman was a Scotchman ; be was a young man ; he chose the life of a showman ; in the duties of his profession he cut short the ties of his earthly life he simply died from the effects of a fall. All that was mortal of young Geo. Yeaman, the showman, was buried in the old cemetery (Presbyterian) near the Episcopal church. A Standard man, prompted by cu riosity and a desire to learn what could be ascertained, visited the tomb of Yeaman. It is not magnifi cent, neither is it well kept, but it is a tomb, and the tomb of the only showman that ever departed his life in this town. Though dead for 64 years, unknown to us a stranger in a strange country a reeling 01 sadness mingles with that of curi osity as one looks at the slab that covers the spot where lies the dust from Geo. xeaman s mortal parts: Geo. Yeaman Scotland 27 years thousands of miles from native home it is this that touches one. To know his history, to know what killed him, and the circumstance attending his death here is what causes curiosity. On the slab, supported by a frJl foundation of crumbling brick, bears signs of thoughtless and unskilled sculptors other than the original in scription. " In memory of " forms a semi-circle, and beneath it in a horizontal line, is "Geo. Yeaman, Scotland." 'hen follows this: "Equestrian, born ii Edinburgh, Scotland, Jan 13, 1801, departed this life Nov. 7, 1827." Below, finishing up the original inscription, is: " Fare thee well, and sleep forever, Fare thee well, my husband dear ; May guardian angels o'er thee hover While on earth I linger here." Since the slab was placed, other parties have cut with chisels and knives their names. It is said that some of them are those of showmen that have come here from time to time with other shows. Some are not showmen's names, they are other parties they ought not toiave been put there, neither the names of showmen nor those of Cabarrus peo ple. But the slab is filled with sig natures and initial?, executed rudely, to be sure, in various ways, designs and in as many positions. We give some be'ow. Who knows that one of these parties may not yet be alive, or his son or daughter may be ? But should it be caught up by a special friend or relative well, it's all right any way. Some names found on it, among many others: "Gill Robinson, Frank Robinson, Christie F. Ashton, C. J. Parker, W. T. Lynch, T. Burn ., J. T. Ray, J. D. Irwin, J. Mills, Ned Howson, C. Val landt, J. Riley, 1880, jugler (this is in a square border), Jas. Pay, W. Yeaman, J. Oliver, G. Holland, W. Johnson, John WTeaver, C. Morrison, 1857, J. F. Fox, 1880, M. G. Gaston, J. Holland, C. A. Peterson, J. Sher man, F. Rine, S. Neave, J. M. Hutch. F. F. Holland, E. W. Dawe." THE CAUSE OF HIS DEATH. George Yeaman was an equestrian (the finest ever in this country, as is claimed by many old men and wo men, and the boys assert it, too, from strong faith and confidence in the reports handed down) and while in Salisbury, during the exhibition of the circus, Yeaman fell from his horse and received injuries thai proved to be fttal ones. He wa brought, to Concord ihe following dtv (which was on Wednesday, ac calculation shows), this being th i.ext point for exhibition. The only hotel then was what is now knowu as the "Foard House," near the Lutheran church ; it was kept by either a Lilly or a Moss, this beinjj unknown exactly. The house being so much crowded and the ncise so great, Yeaman was quartered, in his serious condition, in a house diag onally across the street from the ho tel. The house is now the property of Mrs. Hettie Li taker. It was in this house George Yeaman's life took flight The noted equestrian, though young, lay cold in death. His wife was with him in these sad moments. Devotion of associates, watching and caring of his wife and the skilled nursing of physicians, all failed to successfully battle with the grim monster, death. He died. THE snow. The death of an important actor did not prevent an exhibition. It opened doors as if nothing had hap pened. Mrs. George Yeaman was a leading figure in the exhibition at other points. Here, when her time came, she stepped out. She was at tired in mourning habiliaments, and wore the first long black veil ever seen in this section, made a " nice and tender" speech to the audience, and left the canvass, the heroine of that immense crowd. She went to the hotel. THE INTERVAL BEFORE BURIAL. Before the coffin was made, George Yeaman's remains lay upon a board ; over the still form of the dead hero CONTAINS MORE READING MATTER THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THIS SECTION. of that day a white sheet was spread. During the night, among others " sitting up," was the clown, named Crayton. Tin y were sitting at the opposite end of the house from the corpse. Abont 1 (midnight) clown Crayton saw the white sheet move, lise and sink, ns if the hands and arms were moving. The alarm was given, the "sitters-up" rushed for the door, and Crayton grabbed a hatchet that was lying near him and drew back to throw at the corpse, but, thought he, "1 shan't do that, if he's coming to life we must help him;" so he chopped the hatchet into the wall. The mark is there yet to offer testimony. At that moment a large cat appeared from under the cover. It was the cat that moved the sheet, and not the showman's hands. OTHER TOIXTS IN" THE LITTLE niSTOKY. Several parties thought they re membered to have heard that Yea man died from consumption, but this is doubtless untrue, for the tes timony and evidence all point to the showman's death due to an accident in Salisbury. One party said that Mrs. Yeaman " married one of tho show crowd a few days afterwards." This is too uxkixd to think of a woman. The shows that have come here since send representatives to the grave. They have even leaped, turned somersaults over the grave and rendered music. Yeaman was a Master jviason ; the sauare and compass are cut in bold and plain lines. They are prominent upon the slab. There is not enough superstition now-a-days to fancy that his spirit ia seen around the house where he died it's too far gone. But George Yeaman's dust lies in Concord; his grave needs some attention; the tomb is sadly in need of repairs. His is a memory i Yeaman was not a hero. He may have been a good man, who knows? He may have been a poor, sorry fellow ! Well, if he was, he was some mother's boy ; he was once soma woman's ideal. His remains are in a foreign land ; let's see that his grave gets some flowers in the Spring; let's see that his slab is repaired and his grave kept green. Who knows but that George Yeaman, the Scotch show man, had a good heart ? But let us see to keeping his grave as it should be. TheXegra anil .IiiKtiee in aMonlhern 4'wurl. Letter in the St:its Chronicle. Concord, N. C, Feb. 5. It has been charged for many years, espe cially during campaigns, that a negro is not only debarred from voting as he pleases in the South, bat also that he stands 110 chance of justice in our courts. At the session of our Superior Court here last week, Judge Graves presiding, we had a cr,se that would put to shame such men as Hoar, In galls and others. The case was that of two old negroes, man and wife, vs. , executor of , de ceased. The plaintiffs are old, fee ble, uneducated and dependent, do not own uny property or exert any influence in the community, even with their own race. They brought Buit against said executor, who is one of our wealthiest and most influential citizens, for $800 for services, viz: 100 days at $5 per day for attending the deceased during his last illness. Able and learned counsel were employed on each side two each. The case was tried before a Demo cratic Judge. Every member of the jury a democrat. All the lawyers Democrats, and Judge, jury and lawyers all white men. The trial consumed a whole day, dnd we have seldom, if ever, witnessed more earnes ness or greater effort put forfh by counsel than in thi3 case. The Judge's charge was fair and ithont exception. Verdic: in favor of the plaintiffs for SIX HUNDRED AND FORTY ($040) dollars. No appeal. I will add that the jury was at least equal to an average jury sev eral large property holders, a county .ommissioner, an ex-member of tho House of Commons, among them. All this occurred in the Demo crat ic county of Cabarrus, a county that has been continuously Demo cratic since 18G.". Can there be any more convincing proof of the fact that all men stand equal in our courts ? C A 15 A RHUS 1 ) K M Or R A T. Xewiter Men of Tly. the " typical newspaper man " of today is a young man. He is college, bre t; becomes from a good family and is a gentleman by birth and breeding. He is brighter, quicker, hns broader knowledge of men ami affairs, and he makes and spends more money than his brother who goes into " business." He is well dressed, well housed and well fed. He has learned that bohemi mism, as exemplified by irregular hours, infrequent baths, and incessant rum does not pay, and he has left that sort of bohemianism to chronic bummers and greenhorns. The tone, the morale of the profession hae changed within tho last twenty years, and the public is only just beginning to find it out. Educated people, who keep their eyes open, realize that their notions of the, " typical newspaper man " are sadly out of joint, and they are revising their types. The profession is slowly moving towards its rightful place in public estimate n, and the time in not very far distant when it will stand, not on a par with, but ahead of the law, the pulpit, medicine ana the other liberal professions. In tho meantime we will be obliged to en duie with what grace w may tho would-be brilliant sketches of play wrights and novelists and the unius tentionally stupid conclusions of misinformed outsiders who see in every whiskeysoreheaded scribbler a typical newspaper man- Printer's Ink.