THE ST A H D A R D . v ; I..IAIJ. KINDS OK 1 . -IN T1IK V.'. 'VT MAXXER - AND A'i n!r jj)VEST BATES Will. 1 n ' ' 1KKT. VV II. S. KELLER. 1 ;,:; nut of debt, you know, u ,.i .,1 w il! he so changed to me ; , :i i u iiiir horse in tow, -'.-..zv !v the dimpling sea. , . , i ;; build an op'ra house '. T . : i a theatre or two ; ., nch'hhors all arouse v ;i nvy whi n 1 start to slew. v a A.-.Cd dross in garment gay, ' ,, ; ,- a carriage to herself ,v i- getting down I say ; , , .-.moil usages of pelf. the hr.ker will insist ; . ::lc fur l.i-t winter's bread; j , w li.i peddles milk won't twist v , Jit till 1 lose my head. i , ,,i!ite in the swim when I . . huded down with paltry dust ; , ; .,, I'll have to work it lly A;-,.'; i-'v niv grocer further trust. -. to Imiltl a castle up, h:u! in tear it down and yet uncui kind to drain the cup, w !iat vou'd do when out of debt. r - ii MOMIX SOI. Il FIl'S NTOUV. ,n "ii' Mel W illi Her Future 11ns i.hikI While Tliey Were Holli l'ritoiii'ru. . i,-',;-h'':i l'n-ss. widowed lady, M.s. Ella C. whose permanent home is t:ie j'i.:;iiris j'.io, old-time vil of I'mce Ftidnck, the eountv 11.1.- .a' low ! of I'aluTi entity, Mil., but :.o is making her summer resi . at a cottage oa Arkansas , :,;,e, Atlantic City, was the hero of a chiin of remarkable '-o.!i s in Ikt life from twenty-live thirty veais ago. Mrs. " Hastings was born in Xor ;k. Va . in 1S15, and was by birth i,' ,;V.:i- i't the same family to 'a Uh!i,vd Edward Ratlin, who ..ih-. 1 to have tired the first gun of . civil war, which was directed a confederate battery in n: lesion harbor upon the steam S ar of the West, sent in Feb :v. lt'il, bv President linchan- - administration vvun men anu j for the relief of Maj. Ander- ai.d his gallant little garrison, : s'.iut up in Fort Moultrie. Kuihas were all enthusiastic in cause of t. e South, and Ella :!!!. who was fifteen years of age outbreak of the war, was as :.-e iu her sympathies as any :,'i r of the family. Her two i iii rs early enlisted in the Con- n:o army", and bo'h vvvre killed :.. bat tie of Aatietam. Prior to : time her father her mother dead had removed to Rich :.! from Norfolk upon the fall of latur city into the hands of the pii forces, lie was too much of invalid for active service in the !. ai.d occupied a clerical posi , i.i the Confederate Xavy lk rr.i' ut under General Robert E. -. 1 he news of the death of his soi s inllieted a blow on Mr. from which he never re em!. It so acted on his un- cotistii ution that hr (lied , o ihivs aftei ward and hi -iaug'i t r v, ,ii left alone n lae world. win tl'o ii si-ven teen years old, tail and well developed for her age, liii-.i with patriotic impulses for tli. Confederacy and determined to ii oii,etliing iii its behalf and in re v enge for the loss of her brothers. A PRIVATE IN THE EAXKS. First cirting oil her long and 1. ix '..riant I. loi.de hair, she attired h'-r-'-lf in a suit of clothes be longing to one of Iter brothers, dis gaised herself to look as inn h like a in an as was possible and applied far enlistment into the ranks of the Fourth Virginia' Reg ment of In fantry. Physical examination of : i rials were not customary in the .so.,;!i in those davs, and she was r. a i.ly accepted, though as she says, sic- was in a tremor of fear while i.iol r the eyes of the recruiting oil: -. r, lest her sex should be detec !;, Rut she passed the ordeal .-afeiy, and in a day or two was sent of to join her regiment, then in Lee's army and encamped near Snickker's Gap, in the Valhy of Blue Ridge. This occurred early in October, 1 : and Miss Ruffin soon became a customed to the hardships of war an' I army life. She inarched and f ' luht along with her comrades a:, 1 acquired thi reputation of a go"! soldier. .She served all through :!; W inter of IS 02 -3, took part in tu- battles of Fredericksburg and hai.o llorsviile without receiving a '."in-l, ai.il was finally- made a i . -':.! at the battle of (iettys lur he was one of the detach :.o i.t si nt to Fort McILnry, Ralti-;:oi-, and while there made the aoo'iaint nce of Freileiick A. Ilas iti.s, the son of an honored Mary l.;.i fumilv livinz near Prince I V- I'crick, but w ho had enlisted iu tlie Twenty-seventh Virginia Regi i i' i.t, a part of .Stonewall Jackson's "l ijinal brigade, and who had, like ioiself, been captured oa the held of o-ttvsburg. Hastings had lelatives and friends in l'.altimore, and he proposed to his von. g companion that they should aib nipt to escape to them. Miss Kailin consented, and on the night f August iO, 1SG3, they dropped from tint low barrack windows, dipped by the guard in the darkness, t'.'i. a boat from one of the adji ( e:,t wharves at Locust Point, and he to iv dawn were in the city. Ere the .sun had risen they had applieed f -r ..d iission to the house of a Mr. loakelev, a relative of Hastings, living on -t. Paul street, and were warmly greeted. JIE OWE IJEH A EINO. 1'x fore escaping from Fort Mc Heuiy Hastings had given Miss Uuflin, who had enlisted under the l.auiu of Charles Evans, u ring, ul ich was to play an important VOL. IV. NO. 31. part in their future careers. It was a plain old fashioned circlet of gold, with a small emerald set deep in it. The two refugees remained in the Rlakely house all that day and part of the next. About noon of the next day Miss Ruflin incautiously exposed herself at one of the rear vv indows overlooking the yard. The family residing next door were named Huntingdon and were ardent unionists. A young son caught a glimpse of Mss Ruffin, who was still in a gray uniform, and prompt ly informed his father, who soon re ported to Colonel Fish, the provost marshal, that a rebel soldier was concialed in the Rlakeley reside.ice. Colonel Fish sent a guard to the place and Miss Ruflin was re-arrested and taken back to Fort Mc Henry. It did not occur to the commanding officer to search the house, and con sequently Hastings escaped re capture, lie shortly afterward made his way in citizen's garb into Canada, thence to Nassau, in the Bahamas, and by a blockade runner back to the South by way of Char leston. He rejoined his old regi menf, fought until he was wounded at the battle of Pitcher's Run, in the closing days of the war, and returned to his Maryland home at the downfall of the Confederacy. Meanwhile, Us. Ruffin had been seized with sickness upon being placed again in Fort Mclletiry, and was takeu to the post hospital, where her sex was discovered and her romantic story revealed. She was at once released upon her con valescence and became an inmate of the Blakley residence. Rut she was too proud and self-reliant to remain a dependent upon friends, and soon secured an independent support as a teacher in a private school. IDENTIFICATION AXD REUNION. Three years after the conclusion of the war, Miss Ruffin was paying a visit to Washington, and was at the Xational Theater one night Seated next her was a gentleman whose face seemed strangely famil iar to her, but she could not identify him. That was no wonder, for Hastings had grown a beard and "aged ten years since she had known him in the Confederate service. She noticed that he frequently glanced curiously at her, aud seemed on the point of addressing her, but the prudence of a well-bred man restrained him. Presently a gentle man with whom she was acquainted sat down in front of them and ad dressed Hastings by name. That was sufficient to permit her to identify her old comrade of the ptison, and mutual introductions followed. The party of four went to a restaurant for supper, and at the table Hastings asked Mis Ruffin: "Did you ever know a soldier named Charles Evans, of the Fourth Regiment:" "Why do you ask:"' she said. 'Because," he answered, -vou are wearing the ring J gave him wlun we were prisoners together in Fort McIIenry." Mis3 Rffin was not yet ready to disclose her secret, and she told him that it was probably a ring similar to the one he had parted with. Hastings appeared to be satisfied with this explanation, but as their inter course became more friendly she re vealed her story to him and informed In rii the she was the young conleuer at soldier who had gone under the. name of Charles Evans. Their wedding took place at the Blakeley residence in Baltimore on Christmas Eve, 1SW, and they went to live on the Hastings estates in Calvrt County. Mr. Hastings died in 1S74 leaving his wife childless, but in the possession of a consider able property. She is now a woman of -lb" years, but looks ten vears youn ger. She has commanding features and a fine ligure and as she told her life story under the light of the stars and to the mumur of the waves on tha Atlantic City cottage porch last Sunday night she produced the old ring, now worn thin, that she receiv ed from her future husband while they wore prisoners Tlie I nsU-st .'tilr. The following items will prove of interest to young folks: The fastest mile run by a railroad train was made in 50! seconds. The fastest mile made in rowing in a single boat took 5 minutes ana 1 Second. The fastest mile ever made by a running horse was run in 1 minute 35 i seconds. The fastest mile by a man on a tricycle was made in 2 minutes 4.9 seconds. The fastest time on snow-shoes for a mile is recorded as 5 minutes 39 i seconds. The best time for a mile by a man on a bicycle is recorded as 2 minutes 25 3-5 st conds. The fastest mile ever made by a man swi uming was done in 2j min utes 52 seconds. The fastest mile ever accomplished by a man walking was made in G miuutes Ji3 seconds. In running, the fastest mile made by a man was accomplished in 4 miuutes 121 seconds. Golden Days Asbeville Citizen : Y. Yos ioka, the Japanese lecturer, delivered his second lecture ill the city last night at tho Riverside Methodist church. The congiegatioa Llledthe church almost to overflowing- The lec turer ta ked about the habits and customs of his country, showing native costumes, and singing a Japa nese song. The lecture was highly entertaining and instructive. Mr. Yoshioka goes to Weaverville to morrow, where he will lecture. On Friday he will lecture at Hender sonville, and will return to Ashes ville on Monday. H LITTLE DROPS OF Tr, lMtrti Turpentine and Otber Tar Heel Products Charlotte New: Parties from Piueville today report that the Leitch meetings are the marvel of tho people. There have been 500 coaversons, so it is claimed. Henderson Tomahawk: The elec trie light plant has been sold at auction. The thing has been run the past two years at a great loss to tho stockholders, and was wold to liquidate its indebtedness. The in, vestment cost about lG,000,and was knocked out by Mr. A. C. Zollicoffer for $2,301. The hog n a promoter of health. Charlotte News: Mr. Person's cen sus of the pig stys shows that there are 358 hogs in Charlotte. It is said that in Ward 4, where there are few hog, there is more sickness than in any other ward. In ward 2, where the hog is most popular, there is less sickness. Troy Vidette: The most prolific, as well as tho tallest, oats we have ever seen, was brought to this office last Thursday, by Mr. Li. Ii- Lisk, of Onville, this county. Forty stalks the tallest of which is 7 feet and 1 inch aud all of which grew from one grain, produced 2075 well deveb. opeil grains. Durham Sun: The wacd" are get ting pretty rank about town, es pecially ou the sidewalks of the less frequented streets. We do not know, but it seems that the property owners aud the town should work together and cut them down. There is a great deal to do about Durham and it should be done without de lay. Greensboro North State: Days of great heat; usually considered from J uly :-frd to Aug. 11th. The Romans called the six or eight hottest days of summer canicalares dies. Accor ding to their theorv, the dog star or Sirius rising with the sun, added to its heat of the dog star and the sun. This is the best answer we can give to our many friends who have been asking us about the dog day. The Lenoir Topic says: The Queen City guards, thirty men, of Cuailotte, and a military company, twenty men, of Charleston, will soon go into camp at Blowing Rock and will be there at the time of the Veterans' Reunion on the 20th What a grand time ! Vivo le mili tarie ! Brass brass buttons, apanl ettes, fine feathers and proud soldiers ! If you want to have a good time, joiu the cavalry ! Jim Johnson, the murderer of the small colored girl, near Ivanhoe, in B.aden, on Sunday, was captured Tuesday night at Parkersburg, on tho Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley railroad, fifty eigth miles from Wilmington- He was taken to Wilmington Wednesday in irons, and for u while it was thougLt the negroes would lynch him. Fifty white aud colored men gathered mound Lim when he was taken off the train and they glared at him saying, "You are our meat !" Wilmington Review : A horse at tached to a rockaway, in which was ? eate.l a lady aud her two children, became frightened this morning at Princes? street depot. The driver managed to hold him in but finding he could not run he reared aud made a sharp turn wuich upset the car riage and threw the occupauts out. Fortunately, the lady and her chil dren escaped 6erious injur-, al though r lit y were some what bruised, and the vehicle was not materially injured. But it was a narrow es cape. Scotland Neck Democrat: Mr. J. Frank Brinkley, who has had con siderable trouble with one of bis eyes, was recently treated by Dr. J W. S. Lloyed, of Tarboro- The operation was quite difficult, but it was so successfully perfoimed that Mr. Brinkiey is now relieved of all i ii pun ana is seiaom conscious oi having had any trouble whatever. Dr. Lloyed is meeting with quite flittering success. He recently re stored to sight a colored man from Fayetteville who had been blind in both eyes for twelve years. Greenville Reflector : The Ocra coke visitors have all returned home aud the hotel has closed for the sea son. We are told that this is because the stockholders or hotel company failed to fill their part of the con tract with the lessees. There was room for improvement about the furnishings of the buildings, and also abot the pier and wharf, the latter not being considered entirley safe. Ocracoke is too nice a place to let de line as a resort and we hope it will come out better than ever next season. Last week's iss le of the North Carolina Baptist gave notice of the s;de of the paper by Rev. T. B. Newberry to the North Carolina Baptist Publishing Company, with Capt J. L. Autry, a prominent citi zen and Baptist, as president. The announcement is not made to this effect in that notice, but we learn that Rev. W. B. Oliver, pastor of the first Baptist church of that city, and Rev. Mr. McManaway are to be editors a strong combination, by which we "nay hope to see even an increase in the usefulness of this already remarkably prosperous re ligious paper. W.nstcn Sentinel: Two of the younges tobacco drummers that ever eft Winston were Messrs. Chas. Farrish and Leon Joyner of this city, who boarded the train with samples this morning for a trip south in interest of Messrs. R L. Cander & Co. Both are just fifteen vears oi a e. a negru uameu Jchn Ward, of Kernersville, now peeps out from behind tho bars in the jail. His offense is for stealing a wa, ch and chain from Dr. Morris, near Kernersville, a few days ago. The iiiolen property was found m t.hfi nossession of John and in con sequence he is now in safe keeping awaiting for a heariDg before the next term of Forsyth court. Charlotte Chronicle: Parties com i til' in from l'ineville last even inc brought news of a serious cut ting scrape which occured near there vesterdav. Two white tenants tuinird LudA-ick aud Thompson were parties involved. Ludwick it seems had forbidden Thompson to pass through his fields, and Ihomp snn not nnlv disreffarded the in junction but took his gun with him and firfid on Ludwick. The latter escaped unhurt- He went to his home, procured a knife, and return iusr to the field, attacked his assail ant and cut him four times, once in Hip hifRRh. in the 6tomach. the baclt and neck. The wounds were deep and may prove fatal, Standard CONCORD, N. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1891. A FOBTl'SE I'OR A WORD. What Evartw Once dot for Merely Maying "Yen." Fifty-thousand-dollars fees are common, says the New York Morn ing Journal. They are often paid by big corporations for legal advice, the correctness or f aultness of which means a gain or loss of millions. No lawyer will give his advice in an affair involving enormous sums of money or the existence of a great corporation without receiving remu neration in proportion to the amount or interest involved. The personal liberty of a wealthy man is often worth $50,000 to him, and a first-class criminal lawyer who succeeds in securing to a wealthy client his personal liberty, or hia acquittal, on a grave charge, expects remuneration in proportion to the wealth of his client He gets it, too. There are several" instances of $250,000 having been paid to law yers as a single fee. The most startling case was that in which ex Senator W. II. Evarts, of Evarta, Choate and Beaman, received a quarter of a million dollars for an opinion on a ticklish legal point. A great corporation sought his ad vice. The lawyer stated the case and added that the opinion of Sena tor Everts would be final with them, and they would adopt their future course according to his advice. He then put a question to which the ex-senator answered, simply : "Yes." His bill was $250,000. Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for just one word ! Yes, and cheap at that price. Had the cor poration gone to a les3 reliable law yer and received "no" for an answer, it would have cost them many mil lions. There is another unique feature of this instance. It is the only case on record in which ex-Senator Evarts is known to have ?aid 6imply "yes." His sentences are usually long and involved, but in this case one word sufficed, and he earned his enormous fee. Another fee of $250,000 was paid by the sugar trust to John E. Par sons for drawing up the agreement under which they reorganized un der the laws of the State of New Jersey. This was also a case that needed a lawyer who could not make a mistake. The smallest error would have been fatal to the trust. It may have been an easy matter for Mr. Parsons to draw up that ageee ment or it may not, but supposing that it as, the long years of tedi ous training and study which were necessary before ho arrived at the state of proficiency which enabled him to draw up a document that was fire-proof in every way must Ve taken into consideration in compu ting the value of his services. That the agreement was cheap at the price was abundantly demon strated by the futile efforts of the senate investigating committee to gain any more information about the trust's affairs than the officers of the trust saw fit to give them. An agreement of that sort is worth pay ing well for. Vane Mil Religion. Rev. R. A. Young, D. I)., of Ten nessee, 13 traveling in Europe ana met Senator Vance. He thu3 re ports the meeting in the Nashville Christian Advocate : " We are comfortably quartered in London at an inn where we have stopped twice before. At the table adjoining ours we have the company of a friend of my boyhood Zeb Vance, of North Carolina. He and I parted at Washington College forty-five years ago. With no intro duction or hesitation we shook hands instantly. We are both getting old, fleshy and gray. In the evening he sen up the foliowing card : " 'Deab Young: If not too late when you come in, let me know, and meet me in the ladies' drawing room for a talk. Vance.' " We did not talk about ourselves, but of the boys we knew long ago of their history, successes, defeats, death. Then we 6poke of the changes in religious history and worship. At the close of this conversation he looked me earnestly in the faee and said: 'Young, you have read the history of the church and have now seen modern Christianity in all its phases. Is not our good old country meeting-house worship the purest and best?' To which I replied, with emphasis, ' It is.' And then I delivered my mind on every species of Ritualism. Thi3 is the germ and cause ol all the evils that have crept into our beautiful and holy religion." Let the World Know Yon Are In II. It seems almost a crime for a man to " hide his light under a bushel." If he has something new that will benefit the human lace he should make it known. Old-fogy physicians tread the beaten path of their grand fathers, denounce advertised reme dies, and never learn anything new. Medical science knows no parallel to Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, rnmnnunded bv a nhvsician of skill 1 J 1 J . and long experience, especially for the maladies wmcn ainicc women, it effects a permanent cure of those fttronizine' disorders which attack her frail organism, and is an anchor of hope alike to delicate girls and suf fering women; contains no delete rious drugs. A guarantee on the bottle-wrapper refunding the price in case cf failure. Ut druggists, $1 The Montgomery Vidette is being moved to to Norwood, Stanly county. The name is changed to Southern Vidette. This leaves Montgomery without a paper aud gives Stanly 1 two. as kvi:k-i.ivi; ii kstio. Division 1'robnlile in the HlltlliS. Detroit, Mich., August 4. As indicated in the dispatches yester day from Chicago, there i.s one seii ous dispute which threatens ! mar the serenity of the present camp of the G. A. R. It is strange that after the organization has been in existence a quarter of a century it should be threatened with disiuption by the ever-living "colored question," but such is the fact. Men in the south ern states who were union men in '01 ars the one3 who now insist that the negro has uo place in a social gath ering of the Grand Army of the Republic. Col. George F. Hedge?, commander of the department of Louisana and Mississippi, is here together with several trusty aids, who have come prepared to fight the matter out. "Unless this thing is straightened cut during this encampment," he sa.d L'xlay, "there won't be a white mem ber of the G. A. R. south of the Ohio. The colored men are outnumbering sin our southern posts, thus put ting us directly under them. That we will not stand. Now w e want to rule ourselves and have the colored people go by themselves. Seven out of ten of the colored posts are in of it, but, as you know, there are al ways some kickers. "Understand a delegation from the colored post? are coming to fight us. We have received information that two of Chicago's most influential colored men are on the way to assist U8, and we think we shall gain our point. All we ask for is a division of the white anl colored members of the G. A. Iu in the department of Flordia, Lousiana, Mississippi and Texas. A dozen or more southern white men expressed themselves in a sim ilar strain. Colonel James Lewis (colored) administrator of the police and administrator of the public work3 of New Orleans, chami ion of the colored men's side in this matter. When asked what (lie trouble in Louisiana was, he said : "Did you ever know,! he time when there was not trouble in Louisiana? It was a Louisiana nnm that fired the first gun on Sumpter. It was a Louis iana man that beat Gen. Beauregard for administrator of public works, and I am that man, and I d d some thing the union geiu-rals did not do. The first colored regiment was raised in Louisiana. Louisiana was the first state to decide for Haves. The Italian riot was in Louisana, and now the colored trouble Is sprung there. Louisana is a! '.vavs in trouble. There were 2i,S(n 0 listed in the army 1' more than from all ;'-hi men en !n Louisana, ii-.r states to. gefhor. We were n juhirly enlisted, we fought as history tells you and then we were honorably discharged. With these things to our credit, we had all theriirht of anv man to form a (J. A. R. post. Wc'did this and we were recognized by Gen. Al r when a fight was mailt-on us. We have nine posts, with a membership of over 1.000: vet we are not recog nized by the commander of our de partment. We get no representation in the convention, and are ordered to report to the commander-in-chief. W e have prepared a strong case 111 the matter, aud all I ask is twentv-live minutes in whichtto present it to the committee or the convention itself. The department commander thinks we want social recognition, I claim the order is not a social one but his torical and fraternal." Murder Will Out. News comes from Laurinburg that McDougald, the man who so bru tally murdered his uncle in Rich mond county, a few months ago, and who succeeded in escaping from the State, ha3 been captured in Albany, Oregon. He was identified by means of letters found on his person. W hen McDougald made his escape photographs of him were sent to the ponce throughout the country, and he was recognized in Albanv-, Ore gon, by one of these photographs. After the arrest a letter was found on him with hi3 name on the en velope. A telegram was sent to the sheriff of Richmond county notify ing him of McDougald s capture. The telegram contained Gl words and cost $5.10. The sheriff of Robeson county and the deputy sheriff of Richmond left immediately for Laleigh, procured requisition papers, and are now on their way to Oregou. lhe rewards offered for the cap ture of McDougald were us follows : Insurance company, 1,000; State, 200, and Robeson county 100. The reporter understood that there is now little doubt in the minds of even his strongest friends but that he committed the deed. The Hit h Man' Son. The rich man's son inherits lands. And piles up brick and stones anil ;old. And he inherits soft white hands, And tender flesh that fears the cold. Like soft hands aud tender flesh, many diseases are inherited; espe cially tendencies to asthma, con sumpticn, bronchitis and stomach and liver troubles; but there is a remedy, known as the "Golden Medical Discovery," which over comes these diseases and cuts off all tendencies toward a fatal result. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, has put this remedy within the reach of all, so that even the poor as well as the rich can obtain it. It is worth more to you than " piles of brick and stone and gold." Ask your druggist for it It is guaranteed to -benefit or cure in every case or money paid for it will be refunded. I Send us your job work. TOWN AND COUNTY "There's a Chiel Awang ye Takin Notes and Faith He'll Prent Them." .nst i.x in -.i;. At the examination for Teachers St:tt,Mirti!icate, Miss Nettie Ander son undertook the examination just for the benefit. In the spelling ex amination she spelled US words out of the 100 given. This is the best record made anywhere in the State. Miss Nettie is very bright, and by her laudable ambition she is accom plishing no little for herself and reflects credit on her teachers. To TuUe IMiice in ( liic;io. Miss Fannie Treloar, of Char lotte, lias gone to Chicago, where she will be married on the 30th instant to Mr. Charles Foihush. Mr. For bush is assistant cashier of the Commercial Hank of that city, and stands in t';e top rank financially and socially. Miss Treloar is one of Charlotte's most charming belles, and has inanv friends and relatives in this county, being a neice of Mrs. i. Martin Roger's. They Are Improving. We arc glad to learn from the Gustonia Gaz?tte that the family of Rev. C. Robinson, who have been prostrated with fever, except Mr. Robinson himself, are rapidly im proving. Mrs. Robinson ha3 been tick about twenty-live days with fever, and is now considered out of danger. This is gratifying news to their numerous friends in Concord and Cabarrus county. Mr. Robinson is a Cabarrus boy of whom Cabarrus is justly proud. An Enjoyable Let-lure. Thursday at 3 o'clock D. If. C. Herring, president of the North Carolina Dental Association, deliv ered a highly enjoyable lecture before the Teachers' Institute on the sub ject of the teeth. His remarks were very timely, and showed that how ever free and independent we may be, ignorance on this one subject holds us in strong and unbroken ft Iters. At no distant day Ave expect to st e a study on dental hygiene re quired in the public school teachers' curriculum. I'.ai K From Use MouiMaiiiH. A party consisting of Mr. and .Mrs. John McLartv, of Mississippi, Mr. and Mrs. F.d. Rlack, and Miss Lizzie Shinn, of No. 10, passed through town today on their way home from a trip to the mountains. They enjoyed the whole thing, ex cept the rain, hugely. Mr. McLarty said that if some of his Mississippi frLiids could get up there, and get a whi;L- of the mountain air, aud a "horn" of 'mountain dew," they would r.evcr return to the laud of their fathers. It May Kill You. l'.ut You ought to quit talking about people who are as good as you are. You ought to teil your wife she is pretty and sweet every day, if you are a man, and that will save a heap of quarreling and may take the place of several new dresses. If you are a woman you ought to fell your husband he is brave and handsome and good. Of course you may have to stretch the blanket ou this, but say it just the same, and it vull spur him on to greater things. You ought to keep your lips closed on a l'Lw of tlie things to gossip on. ly shooting oil your mouth contin ually you will disclose the fact that you have more lung power than brain power. You ought not to just keep a man's umbrella because he loaned it to you to go home through the rain. He may have another umbrella, it is true, but he may have other frieuds that he would like to accommodate as much as you. If a man meets you in tho road and stifily informs you that he never trives the road for a rascal, you can coolly and gently inform him that you always do, and step aside. You ought to try to keep your chickens out of your neighbor's garden, otherwise a great majority of them may come up missing. The I.nlest Invention. Prof. John McAnulty was in town this rnoruiug and spent some time in dishing out his predictions for the weather. Then the professor beck oned the reporter to one side and showed us his plans for a new in vention, which it' brought to a state of perfection will revolutionize the coat industries and ice manufactur ing interests of the world. His idea is to make large vats cr sacks of cow skins, and have an attachment, which the professor claims to understand, fixed that will condense the heat in sunshine. He will store up the heat, and then in winter he will just let a little out to heat up the air in the room, thus saving the expense of buyiug coal or wood. 15y about the same process he will store up cold in winter, and then in summer he will turn the thing loose and give us December breezes in sultry August. The professor stated that he would have had his invention ready for use now, but hv did not get started in time, aud he knew it was going to be wet and therefore not enough sun chine to faol with. lie doubtlessly has forgotten that he predicted a famine this summer. But let 113 wait for Prof. John to revolutionize things and do away with extreme heat or cold. A man arrived iii town late yes terday evening with a promiscuous load of country produce. He had chickens, young 'possums, butter and eggs, hams, cabbage, and a good supply of "fat lightered." WHOLE NO. IS7. Srah-Eijlii Teachers r.J:oi.i.i.i Tiiiius vami.s am madi: TUisTHf; i:ik;i:vi IN stiti ri: i:yi:k nr.i.o. The A ill! reuses lv I'rol't. IliishpHnnil 4;rsilimii lr. ll-rriii-"H lull, on Tool li uNm v 1 In" l'.xiimi milioii lor Teachers" iMiilc) erlili- (111 OH, Vl The biggest thing educationally in the county was the Institute just closed. The Standard is free to say, and it voices the sentiments of the teachers, that much good has been done. It is that kind of good that will go out and make itself felt in the public schools. New ideas have been un earthed, the best methods have been discussed, school-room helps have been suggested, school government was ventila'.ed, and the teachers have been made to feel the dignity and responsibility of their work. Profs. Hughes and Graham are great workers ; they are not little men. Mr. Hughes, though youLg, has developed splendid powers as an Institute worker, and what he said was received by the teachers in a manner that showed deep interest. Prof. Graham is at home in educa tional work, aud he makes a good impression upon every one whom ho meets. He is one of those educators with a bright face and cheerful manners. There is nothing dead about him except a part of a skele ton he carries to the institutes and about which he lectures so enter tainingly and profitably. The number of teachers ui rolled is seveuty-eight,-and they were vir tually all here. The Standard man heard many compliments paid the splendid lec ture delivered by Dr. II. C. Herring on " Toothology." The doctor en tertained the audience, and the teachers were greatly benefited, and when Dr. Herring closed a great big round applause was sent up by the audience. The meeting on Friday was fine, indeed. A large number of com mitteemen was present, besides many others from the county and town. The courthouse was almost filled. The addresses were plain and to the point. Precisely ut 11:5 Mr. Graham took the platform and ex pressed his delight ; t the very large attendance on the last day of tlie Institute. He declared he had never seen a larger or more intelligent audience on a similar occasion ; rc ferred to the bright outlook ior the whole .South educationally, as evi denced by the increase of her enroll ment of pupils and school fund. lie claimed that we had much to encourage us in North Carolina schools, and to prove this gave a succinct account 01 town ana city public schools in the past fifteen years in North Carolina. Raleigh was quoted as having an enrollment at that time of o7o whites and one school building for the same race. Greensboro had 120 pupils and a small brick building. Salisbury a similar showing. The public schools in other cities were represented as amounting to nothing." In 1S78 Fayetteville, stimd up by a spectacle in her town hall, where a half dozen colored boys signed their natne3 and a similar number of w hite boys made their mark in sign ing affidavits in a justice's court, adopted a system of schools free to all white children. In 1SS1 Golds boro and Wilson followed. In 18S2 Rocky Mount, New Berne, Durham, Winston, Fratikliuton aud Charlotte, and in 1S8T Reidsville and AsheviUe. The speaker then contrasted Ra leigh's :J72 pupils and one building with the two magnificent new build ings aud her enrollment of over ',000 in 18'Jl. Attention was called to the fact that Concord, Statesville, and Shelby had recently adopted the city school system. Tho cost of moderate private tui tion was contrasted 011 the black board with the cost iu our public school a clear showing of three times as many children for one half as much money. In Columbia, S. C, private tuition for 700 whites at three dollars per month and private tuition at one dollar for 700 colored contrasted with the expense of 1,400 iu the public schools showed a net saving per annum of $10,000 to that cily. A similar increase of pupils and school buildings for our other towns equal to the showing made for Raleigh was claimed, showing au increase in popular tavor of the public school system in North Caro lina. These schools were cheap; they were also effective and thorough in results. The meaals and distinctions won by the students at the University and elsewhere were cited in proof of this. The country schools were discussed and the increase of the school fund was referred to as a harbinger of brighter days for ottr country schools. The plan of Major Finger for grading these schools was elaborate.! aud explained. The school . com mitteemen were called at this junc ture and showed u in full force. They were urged by the speaker to look carefully after this grading. He thought that it meant an advance over anything we had had in the past. He closed thanking his audience for their attention, and promised big figures for North Carolina in the next decade. Superintendent E. L. Hughes then closed the work of the Institute. He referred to the very gratifying attendance of teachers, citizens and committeemen, and earnestly insisted on heartier co-operation in the work of fitting the coming generation for Til' STAMDiRD LAHGEST PAPER -PUBLISHED IN CONCORD.- CONTAINS MORE READING MATTER THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THIS SECTION. the responsible duties of church, State and society, lie showed that all ranks and classes of society, all shades of political belief, and all differing creeds of religion should unite and work together for educa tion. Do you believe in the devel opment of resources ? What greater resources than the minds of the children of our country? Are you a patriot? The highest duty you can render the State is to help educate its citizenship. Are yon devoted to political belief or church creed? If your faith is the true one there is no better way to disseminate it than by educating minds to receive the truth. Do you believe in the brotherhood of man ? Here i3 its highest culmi nation ! From the standpoint of economy the public school is the cheapest; from the standpoint of efficiency it gives the greatest good to the greatest number, while in its work of educating all the people the best sentiments love of home, country, God and man which reign in human hearts, may find expres sion. Of those that stood for the State certificates the following were suc cessful: Misses Emma Black, Fan nie Stafford and Lucy Richmond, and Messrs. M. F. Little, II. C. Dunn, J. A. Wright and C. P. Sapp. This is probably the largest nnmber granted in any one county at a single examination. XOTES. Prof. Hughes plays the cornet splendidly, which adds to the musi cal part. Miss Eflie Barrier deserves and has the thanks of all for presiding at the organ. Prof. Graham can wake up any crowd should there be any dullness. His " Felow-Citizens" hasa charm about it. Cannons, Fetzer & Bell are power fully clever and nice to grant the Institute the use of an organ from their stock of musical instruments. The court-house ring can resume checker playing. It was too much interested in the Institute for play ing. McNamara furnished nice ice for cooling 'cm. The teachers were a body of fine looking aud intelligent ladies and gentlemen. m A Ilniiseroii lr !. Friday night there were two freight trains at the depot when the passen gers went down to go off on the train. One wa3 bound north and the other south. There were a lot of people there, and the yard and railroad was crowded with people. The passenger train came and left, and then the big crowd was all con fusion in getting their baggage and everything else together. The pas senger train just cleared the switch aud the south-bound train came bulging aioug with a pretty good speed right through the crowd. One man, who made as great haste as he could, had to turn after starting to cross the track with his carriage, for he saw by the headlight's glare that he could not get over in time to save himself. The short of it i3 that it is a thousand wonders several people were not killed. But then let the old lady go; there is no law in? the universe by which this monster is controlled. The Secret ol' Ills Wealth. A millionaire said "the secret of my wealth " is in the word S-A-V-E ; and the secret of my health is in the word S-A-G-E. By thi3 last he meant Dr. Sage, whose catarrh rem edy cured him of one of the worst cases of catarrh, and thereby saved him from much suffering and pre mature death, enabling him to make his millions and enjoy life. The cures made by this medicine are simply wonderful. Cotton rolled in today like an October day, cheap as it is. Tin; i;i.ooi is the life. So portion of tho human organism hits, within tho past few years, been submitted to more thorough and intelli gent examination, by medical scientists, than the blood. The result of these In vcntiations has been to clearly demon Ktratu that tins general health is more ih'peiMlent iijion the condition of the bl.-u.d than upon any other thing. In iiKikin ; a diagnosis, some modern r rartithmeis are not satisfied with iin-rely determining the temperature ef the blood: they test it by means of tie mien .scope and other appliances, to ;. eeiii.i.i if ;ui,y foreign bodies have in t oorre.l themselves among its niiuuta 1 i;-e!. - j. Thus, for example, it baa h en f e.in.l that ill persons affected . '-'.i :.,oii!, uric i'cid may always he de t . nil in ihebhiod; while the cause ot d; .-.orders has been traced to the 1 ;;e,. of i nn, or microlies. - . i-eovenes have thrown a flood 1 ;' . ,1 . :i the causes of disease; ami . : : ii..v. in the treatment of !., .; . eo!.-;.!.iiiifs,j;(, directly to tlie root 1 i t!:ev.i !.y endeavoring to purify the : ' i" 1 oi fMiiinating poisons. For I::" ; !!; i:i.f hingelse has been found v . in :;s the iodide of potassium. l.r.t the li. -t i-ifects of this drug can .-,!;. !.. obtained when it is used in -1 :'hn with other things, such as :.! .;'.!;. podophyllum, or yellow ii e: : nd A v 1 r's Compound Extract of u i;!.'. l..-:iig considered tho mottt i ii.id iiiii-.aof these ingredients known ! , . . is therefore most highly -: .e;,i:io!td. d by physicians. L. e'i if tlie iodides were not present, !l Honduras sarsaparilla alone, of .-. i.-ii .ivi r's medicine is the extract, woebl : MU'rh icntJy effective, in the i.i:-. Viity of ca.-es, to produce the most 'h- .iraMe results. IJut, "to make assur fiuee doubly sure," and to greatly facili i..r.! the purifying process, the iodide of j .,' Inni lends its powerful alterative a.-i 1 de'eruent properties to the rest. The distinctive value of Ayer's Sarsa- lia is that, while it is quite as potent f. r ino.it purposes as the iodide alone, it is safer in non-professional hands; for, by simply following the directions on tho wrapper, the patient becomes his own physician. Hence this medicine has lo-.ig been recognized by leading physicians and druggists everywhere as the standard popular blood-purifier.