t. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: (CASH IN ADVANCE) One Copy, One Year, $1.50. ,W. G. BURKHEAD, - Editor. 4 NOTICE TO CORRESPO N DENTS. All correspondents are hereby -notified t to insure the insertion of their com anications they mast furnish us with eir bona itfe'narae and address, which we jligate to keep in strict confidence. Wriie Jy otybne'suk of the $hett. . ' I The Plant is in n wise responsible for 4-j views of its correspondents. 0 Address all communications to , THE TOBACCO PLANT, j j j Durham, N. C. THE SONG OP THE SHIKT. "With fingers wearyjand worn, . With eyelids heavy and red, A woman sat, in unwomanly rags, Plying her needle and thread Stitch,! stitch! stitcfi! . In poverty, hunger, and dirt, And still, with a voice of dolorous pitch, She sang the "Song of the Shirt !" "Work! work! work! i While the cock is crowing fcloof! And work work work! I " Till the stars shine through the roof! i Ifs oh! to be a slave r Along with the barbarous Turk, ' I Where wonian has pever a soul to save, s If this is Christian work! I -:,? -jj .-" : - 4 "Vork work work ! ' -,L"T Till the brain begins to swim ! Work work work! I Till the eyes are jheavy and dim ! - -. Seamj and gusset, and' band, .ir-f Band, and gusset, ahd seam, r ;; Till over the buttons I fall asleep, ; . And sew them onj in my dream! 4 "Oh ! 'men with slaters dear! . Oh! men with mothers and wives! - It is not linen you're wearing out, , I But human creatines' lives! Stitch stitch stitch! In poverty, hungfer, and dirt, j Sewing at once, with a double thread, ,f A SHRoruas well as a shirt! I "Hut why do I talkjof death, That phantom ofgrisly bone? : I hardly fear his tdrrible shape, I It Seems so like rjiy own it It seems so like myjown, Ikxrause of the fast I keep: i I) God! thai bread-should Fe so dear,' I And flesh and blocxl so cheap ! ' - - ' ' "Work work work ! - My labor never. flags; And what are its wages? A bed of straw, A crust of bread-j-and rags: A shatter' d toof and this naked floor l A table a broken chair And a wall so blanli, (ny. shadow I thank : For sometimes falling there! ' ' ' i - ' . "Work work work! From weary chime t eliinie; " "Work work work! As prisoners work for crime! .Banjl, and gusset, ajid seam, Seam, and gusset and band, Till the heart issick,ind the brain benumb'd, As'well as the wearv hand! I t i j , "Work work woj-k! ; In the dull I)eeepiler light; Ami work fwork-4work!. V hen th6 weather Ls warm and bright ; While underneath jthe eaves i The brooding swallows cling, As if-to show me their sunny backs, ' ' And twit me witji the Spring. "Oh5! but tolbreath the breath Of jthe cowslip arid primrose sweet ; With1 the sky above my head, And the grass beneath my feet : . For only one short iour j To feel as I usedjto feel, j Before I knlew the jvoes of want, i And the walk that costs a mealj i "Oil! but for one short honr! ; A respite! however brief! ZSo blessed leisure tor love or hope, But only ;time for grief! A little weeping .wjuld ease my heart Hut in their win? bed ' i Mr tears must stop! for every droj iiinuers neeuie anu inreaa: ; Witlr fingers wearyj and worn, I With evelids heavy and red,! ; A woman sat, in unwomanly rags Plying her needle and thread ; ! Stitch stitch stith! ! In iwvertv, hungier, and dirt; ; And still with a voice of dolorous pitch Y ould that its tonejeyuld reach the rich : Nie sung this bong 01 the onirt! - i i: 3 : : IHOMASIUOOD, "ACELDAMA." Ir. Talraage's Sermon, Preached Simrtav Morttinsr, Nov. 7tli "Acelrlama, that is to jsay, the field ol blood. Acts 1:19. r , j ! i The money that Judas, gave for surrendering Chr&t was used.to pur- eliitse a graveyard. . As the jmoney I- was blood money,! the ground jbought I bv it was called Iii the Syriac tongue 1' Aceldama- meaninr "the field of I blood.!' Well, there is one word I want to wrte to-day over evexy race course! where wages are staked and every poolrtom j and every gambling saloon, and every table, public or private, where men and women bet for sums ojf monby, large ;or small, anu mails a woroj uicaraauuiu wnn f the life of innutnerable victims Aceldama, j The gambling spirit, I which' is at; all times a stupendous ! evil, ever and anon sweeps over the COUniry 11KC-ull t-piucmn.-, piuatiu,- ting . uncounted thousands. There has never been a worse attack than that , from which all the villages, towns and! cities lare now sutlenng The farces I recently enacted in our Brooklyn courtroom, by which 1 was nroven that 1 in the city I churches, there is- i VfYT FVOITOHlMORAE, FORC I to nut into the! penitentiary the j ganrblingjHckeysjwho belongUhere, is only a jspecirheiv of the power l earned by this abomination, wnicn 1 is brazenl sansuinarv. . transconti- I nentafand hemispheric. While arnong'mV; hearersare those who haveL passed; on into the after- ; ternoon of lite, and the shadows are lengthening, &na the sky cnnisons with the Iow ,of j the setting bun, a large number ot Jtnem are in early I life, and the morning is coming down out of the; clear, sky upon them, and I the bright air is redolent with spring blossoms,1 and the stream of life, kmm?l and erlancing, rushes on between flowery banks, making mu sic as it goes. Some of you are en gaged iri jmercantile concerns, as clerks and I bookkeepers, - and. your .whole life is to be uassed in the ex citin? world of traffic. The sound jof busv lilfel stirs Ivou as the jdrum stirs the fiery warhorse. Others are in the mechanical arts, to hammer 'and chisel fyour way ' through life, arid iucc3await.ynii: "Some are Wrenarin for nrofessional life1, and grand opportunities are before jyou nav. some4 of Vou already have ! buckled on the armor. V But whatever your; age or calling, I the subiect of iramblms:, about wnicn 1 1 sneak to-davl id nertinent. Some. tvears aro. when 'an association for i i SUPPRESSION OF GAMBLING was.organized, ari agent of the lass piation Imfe to a prominent citizen and asked him tq patronize thesoci- ty. He said; " Jso, I can hate no Bm mmm punt - : j " - 'j. ; l ; '. " I ; VOL. XV.--NO. 46. interest in such an organization. I am in nowise aflectn-d by that evil." At that very time his son, who was his partner in business, was one of the heaviest players in Heme's fa mous gambling establishment. An other refused his patronage on the same ground, not knowing that his first bookkeeper, though receiving a salary of only one thousand dollars,, -was losing from fifty to one hundred dollars per night. The president of a railroad company refused to patro nize the 'institution, saving : "That society is good for the defense of mer chants, but we railroad people are not injured by thfe evil ;" not know ing that at that time two of his con ductors were spending three nights of each week at faro tables in .ew York. Directly or indirectly this evil strikes at the whole world. Gambling Li the risking of somee?.Re and TtrmTrit. The pfb -. thing, more or less valuable, in the hoi pe ol winning more than you haz d. The instruments of traniintr ai mW differ, but the jrincijilei is the saiHe. Tlie sliufHing and dealing of cards, however full of temptation, is hot gambling unless stakes are put up ; while, on the other handV gambling may be carried on without cards, or dice, or billiards, or tenpin alley. The man who bets on .horses, o'n .elections, on battles the man who deals in '"fancy" stocks, or con ducts a business which hazards extra capital, or goes into, transactions without foundation, but dependent on what men call ''luck," is a gambler. It is estimated that one-fourth of the business in London is done dis honestly. Whatever you expect to ;et trom your neighbor without oller- ing an equivalent in money, or time, or skill, is either the product of theft or gaming. Lottery tickets and lot- ery policies come into the same cat- eorv. airs lor the ioundinii ol lospitals, schools and churches, con ducted OX THE RAFFLING SYSTKM, come under the same denomination. Do not, therefore, associate gambling necessarilv with anv instrument, or game, or time, or place, or'think the principle depends upon whether vou play for a glass of wine or one hundred shares of railroad stock. Whether you patronize "auction pools," French mutuals" or 'book- making;" whether you employ faro or billiards, rondo and keno, cards or bagatelle, the very idea of the thing is dishonest, for it professes to be stow upon you a good for which you ve no equivalent. This crime is no new born sprite, but a haggard transgression that comes staierin down under a mantle of curses through many cen turies. All nations, barbarous and civilized, have been addicted to it.- Before 1838 the French government received revenue from gaminghouses. In lo67 England, lor the improve ment of her harftors, instituted a lot tery to be held at the front door of St. Paul's cathedral. Four hundred thousand tickets were sold at ten shillings each. The British museum and Westminster bridge were par tially built by similar procedures. The ancient Germans would some times put up themselves and families as prizeg, and suffer thernaelves to be bound, though stronger than the persons who won them. But now the laws 01 the whole civilized world denounce the svstem. Enactments have been passed, but only partially enforced, and at times not enforced at all. 1 he men inter ested in gaming houses and jockev clubs, wield such influence by their numbers and- amiKuee, that the judge, the jury and the police officer must be bold indeed, to would array themselves against these infa mous establishments. The House of Commons, of England, actually ADJOURNS ON DERBY DAY to go out and bet on the races ; and in the best circles of society in this country to-day, are many hundreds of professedly respectable men who are acknowledged gamblers, j Hundreds of thousands of dollars in this land are every day being lost and won through sheer gambling. Says a traveller: through the west : "I have traveled one thousand miles at a time upon the western waters, and seen gambling at every waking moment, from the commencement to the termination of the journey." The southwest of this country reeks with this sin. In some of those cities every third or fourth house, in many of the streets,: is a gaming place, and it may be truthfully averred that each of our cities is cursed with this evil. ; In themselves, most of the games employed in gambling are without harm. Billard tables are as harm less as tea tables, and a pack of cards as a pack of letter envelopes, unless stakes be put up. But by their use for gambling purposes they have be come significant of an infinity of wretchedness SIX HUNDRED , gambling saloons in New York when last counted. ' ' Men wishing 'to gamble will find places just suitedi to their capacity, not only in the underground oyster cellar, or at the table back of the curtain, covered with greasy cards, or in the steamboat smoking cabin, where thebloated wretch, with rings in his ears, deals out his pack, and winks in the. unsuspecting traveler. Eroviding free drinks- all arountl -ut in gilded parlors and amid gor geous surroundings. This sin works ruin, first, by un healthful stimulants. EXCITEMENT 13 PLEASURABLE Under everv sky and in everv age men-have sought it. The Chinaman gets it bv smoking his opium, the Persian by chewing hashish, the trapper in a buffalo hunt, the sailor in a squall, the inebriate in the bottle and the avaricious at the gaming table e must at times have ex yri n r-Ksn h w rates for "HERE SHALL' THE PRESS citement. A thousand Voices in our nature demand it. It is right- It is healthful. It is inspiriting. It is a desire God-given. But anything that first gratifies the appetite -and hurls it back in a terrific reaction is deplorable and wicked. Look out lor the agitation that like a rough musician, in bringing out the tune, plays scj hard he breaks down tle instrument ! God never made man strong enough to endure the wear and tear of gambling excitement. No wohder if, after having failed in the game, men have begun to sweep off imaginary gold frorn the side o." the table. The man was sharp enough; when he started at the game, but a maniac at the close. At every gaming table tit on one side Ecstasy, .Enthusiasm. Rouituuc- the frenzy of ioy : and the other side, Fierce- . clonal gamester schools lumseli into apparent quietness. The keep ers of gambling rooms are generally fat, "Tollicking and obese ; but thor ough and professional gamblers, in nine cases out of ten, are pale, thin, wheezing, tremulous and exhausted. A young man having suddenly in-herited-a large property, sits at the hazard tables, and takes up in a dice box tlje estate won by a ;- FATHEk's LIFETIME'S SWEAT, and shakes it, and tosses it away. Intemperance soon; stigmatizes its victim kicking him out, a slavering fool, into the ditch, or sending him, with the drunkard's hiccough, stag gering up the street where his family lives; But gambling does not in that way expose its victims. The gam bler may be eaten up by the gambler's passion,-yet you only discover it by the greed in his eyes, the hardness of his features, the nervous restless ness, the threadbare coat and his embarrassed business. Yet he is on the road to hell, and no preacher's voice, or startling warning, or wife's entreaty, can make him stay for a moment his headlong career. The infernal spell is on him ; a giant is aroused within;, and though' you bind him with cables, they would part like thread ; and though you fasten him seven times around with chains, they would snap like rusted wire; and though you piled up in his path, heaven-high, Bibles, tracts and sermons, and on the top should set the cross of the Son of God, over them all the gambler would leap like a roe over the rocks, on his way to perdition. " ACELDAMA, THE FIELD OF BLOOD !" Again, the sin works ruin by kill ingndustry. A man used to reap ing' scores or hundreds of dollars from the gaming table will not be content with slow work. He will say : "What is the use of trying to make these fifty dollars in my store, when Lean get five times that down at BillV's ?" You never knew a con firmed gambler who was industrious. The men given to this vice spend their time, when not actively em ployed in the game, in idleness, or intoxication, qr sleep, or in corrupt ing new victims. This sin has dulled the carpenter's saw and cut the band of the facforv Wheel, sunk the cargo, broken the teeth of the farmer's har row and snt a strange lightning to shatter !the battery of the philoso pher. The very FIRST IDEA IN WAGING is at war with the industries of soci ety. Any trade or occupation that is "of use "is ennobling.: The street sweeper advances the interests of so ciety by the crcanliness enected. I he cat pays for the fragments it eats by clearing tho house of vermin. The 11 v that takes the sweetness from the dregs of the cup compensates bv pu ntying the air and keeping back the pestilence. But the gambler gives not anything for that which betakes. I rucall that sentence, He does make a return : but it is disgrace to the man that he fleeecs, despair to hi: heart, ruin to his business, anguish to his wife, shame to his children and eternal wasting away to his soul He pays in tears, in blood, and agony, and darkness and woe What dull work is plowing to the farmer, 'when in the village saloon in one nignt, he makes and loses the value of a summer harvest ! Who will want to! sell tape and measure nan keen and cut garments and weigh sugars, when in a night's game he makes and loses, and makes again and loses again THE PROFITS OF A SEASON ? John Borack was sent as mercantile agent from Bremen to England and this country. After two years his employers mistrusted that all was not riffht. He was a defaulter for eightv-severi thousand dollars. It was found that he had lost in Lom bard street, London, $29,000 ; in Ful ton street, New York, S 10,000, and in New Orleans $3,000.. He was lm prisoned, but afterwards escaped, and went into the gambling proles sion. He died in a lunatic asylum. This crime is getting its lever under many a mercantile house in our cities, and before long down will come the great establishment, crush ing reputation, home comtort and immortal souls. How it diverts and sinks capital may be infered by some authentic statement before us. The ten gaming houses that once were authorized in Paris, passed through the banks annually three hundred and twenty-five million francs Where does all the money come from ? I The whole world is fobbed ! What is most sad, there is no conso lations for the loss and suffering en tailed by gaming. If men fail in law ful business, God pities and societv commiserates; but, wherein the Bible or in society, is there any qo,n.sola tionfqc te-gambler? From What tree of the forest oozes there a balm that can soothe the gamester's heart? In that bottle where God keeps, the tears of his children, are there any tears bf the gambler ? Do the winds THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAIN, UNA WED BY INFLUENCE DURHAM, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, that come to kiss the faded cheek of sickness; and! to cool the heated brow of the laborer, whisper hope and cheer to the maciafed victim of the game of hazard ? Wlien an honest man is in trouble he has sympathy, "Poor fellow j" they say; But do GAMBLERS COME jo WEEP at the agonies of the gambler ? In Northumberland was oine of the finest estates in England. Mr. Porter owned it, and in a yar gambled it all away. Having lost the last acre of the estate, he came dowjn from the saloGrand -ot into his carriage, Went back, put His horses and carnage aiid towrf hoLoe and played. He threw, and lost. He started home, and on aside alley met a friend, from; whom he bor rowed ten guineas, went back to the r.:vi -it t l. i . i Ulll V 1 V 4.1 ill V uu IT 1UH, JllHl rie men msi a oe-f. gar at St Giles. How many gamblers felt sorry for IMr. Porter? Who con soled him oh the loss of his estate? What gambler subscribed, to put a stone over the poor man s grave Xi if fine ' ! Furthermore, this sin is the source f uncounted dishonest'. The game )f hazard itself, is often a cheat. How many tricks and' deceptions in the. ! DEALING OF THE CARDS The opponent's hand iounu out pv iraua. uarus are i l it f t- Cards marked so that they may vbe desig nated from the back. jExpert game sters have their accomplices, and one wink may decide the game. The dice have been ifound loaded with platina so that doublets come up every time. These dice are in troduced by the gamblers unobserved bv tho honest men' who have come into the plav, and thfe accounts for the fact that !! out of 100 who gam ble, however wealthy when they be gan, at the end are found to be poor, miserable, Haggard retches who would not now be allowed to sit on the doorstep of the house that they In a gaining house in once owned. ban Franci co a young man having just come -from the mines deposited large sum upon the? ace, and won 822,000. Biit the tide turns. In tense anxietj' conies upon thecoun tenances of all. f SLOWLY THE CARD.' VENTj FORTH. Every eye is) fixed. Not a' sound is heard until the ace is revealed favor able to the bank. There are shouts of "Foul! fdtil!" but the keepers of the table produce thejr pistols, and the Uproar is silenced ?and the bank has won 89.000. Do'' vou call this a game of chance? j There is no chance abou But these ; it. : dishonesties in the car the game are nothing rying on of when compared with the frauds that are committed in order to get money to go on with the nefarious work. Gambling, with its greedy hand, has snatched away the widow's mite andt the portions of the (orphans; has sold the daughter's virtue to get the means to continue the game; has written the counterfHt signature, emptied the banker's money vault and wielded, the assassin's ,dagger. There is no depth of meanness to which it will! not stooix There is no cruelty There" is at no which it is appalled. WARNING OF i GOD that it will not dare, j Merciless, un appeasable, fierce and wild, .it blinds, it hardens, it rends, it blasts, it crushes,-it (jlanins. t has peopled our prisons apd lunatic asylums. ' How many railroad agents, and cashiers, and trustees of funds has it driven to disgrace, incarceration and suicide r ltness years ago a cashier of the Central; Railroad and Banking Georgia, who stole Company of $103,000" to carry on his gaming practices. ltness the 40,000 stolen from a Brooklyn barak within the memory of ihany .of; you and the $180,000 taken from a Wall street insurance company for the same purpose, these are only illustra tions on a larre scale of the robberies committed for the purpose or carry- ing out the designs of gamblers. Hundreds of thousands ot dollars every year leak out without observa tion from the merchant's till into THE GAMBLING! HELL I i A man in Ijondon keeping one of these gamblin houses boasted that a nobleman a day ; saloons of this land he had rumea but if all the were to speali but, they might utter a more infamous boast; for they have destroyed a thousand nobleman a year.' 1 . Notice also the effect of this crime upon domestic happiness. It has sent its ruthless plowshare through hundreds of families, until the wife sat in rags, and the daughte s were disgraced, and jthe sons grew up to the same infamous practices, or took a short cut to destruction across the murderer's scaffold, j Home has lost all charms for the .gambler. Howj tame (are the chil dren's caresses and a wife's devotion to the gambler How drearily the fire burns on the domestic hearth ! There must be louderj laughter, and something to win, and something to lose ; an excitement Ho drive the heart faster, fillip the blood and fire the imagination;. Nq home, how ever bright, can feeep back the game ster. The sweet cajl of love bounds baqk from hi;i irpn soul, and all en dearments are i ! - j CONSUMED of his passion, will go after all IX THE FIRE The family Bible other treasures are lost, and if his crbwn in heaven were put into his hand he would cry, "Here goes;- on nqre game, my bo's. Qn this one throw I stake my orowh of heaven.!" A young man in London, on com ing of age, received i a fortune of $120,000, arid through gambling, in three years, was thrown on his mother for support. An only son went tq New Orleans. He was rich, intellectual jind elegant in manners. His parents gave him on his departure from home their last blessing. The sharpers gVrt hold of him. They flattered him. They lured him to the gaming table and let him win almost every time for a good while, and patted hini on the back and said, "First-rate player." But fully in their grasp they fleeced him, and his $30,000 were lost. Last of all, he put up his watch and lost that. Then he began to think of his home, and of his old father and mother, and wrote thus : "My Beloved Parents : You will doubtless feel a momentary joy at the reception of this letter from the child of your bosom, on 'whom you have lavished all the favbrs of your declining years. But should a feel- -Hn? ot iov tor a moment snrai? nn . . n o .. . r----o -r in your hearts when you should have received this from me, cherish it not. I have - FALLEN DEEP, NEVER TO RISE. Those gray hairs that I should have honored and protected I shall bring down in sorrow to the gnjve. I will not curse my destroyer, hilt, oh, may God avenge the wrongs and imposi tions practiced upon the. unwary in a way that shall best please Him ! This, my dear parents, is the last letter you will ever receive from me. I hunu ly pray your, forgiveness. It is hiy dying prayer. Long before yoii will have received this from me theicold grave will have closed upon me;forever. Life to rue is" insupport able. I cannot, nay.l will not, suf fer the shame of having ruined you. Forget and forgive ii the dying prayer of your, unfortunate son.'! The old father eaine to the post office, got the letter! and fell to the floor. They thought lie was dead at first, but they brushed" baek tin white hair from his brow and fan ned, him. He had only fainted. I M'ish he .had been dead, for what is 1 n , t i . l e. i nie worth to a lather alter his son is destroyed ? Aceldama, the field of blood !" When things go wrong at : "Foul! a gam Foul !" of the ing bible they shout: .' Over all the gaming tables world I crv out: "Foul ! foul! in finitely foul !" ' j "Gift stores" arc abundant through out jthe country. With a book, or knife, or sewing machine or coat, or carriage there goes a prize. At these stores people get something thrown in with their purchase. lt may be a gold watch, or a set of silver, a ring,; or a farm. Sharp way to get off Unsalable goods. It has filled the land with fictitious articles, and covered up our population with brass finger rings and despoiled the moral sense ot the community, and is fast making us j A NATION OF GAMBLERS. Tlie church of God has not seemed willing to allow the world to have all the advantage of these games of chance. A church fair !opens, and toward the close it is found that some of the more valuable articles are un salable. Forthwith the 'conductors of the enterprise conclude that they will raffle for some of the valuable articles ; and, under pretense of anxiety- to make their minister a pres ent, 6r please some popular member of the church, fascinating persons are dispatched through the room, pencil in hand, to "solicit shares," or perhaps each draws for his own ad vantage, and scores of people go home1 with their trophies, thinking that is all right, for Christian ladies did tlie embroidery, and Christian men did the raffling, and the pro ceeds went towards a new commun ion set-. But you may depend on it, thaas far as morality isoncerned, you might as well have Won by the crack of the billiard ball br the turn fof the dice box. Do; you wonder, that churches builtj lighted or upholstered by such processes as that, coinq to great finan cial apd spiritual decrepitude? The devil says": " I helped td build -that house; of worship, and si have as much; right there as you fiave ;" and for once the devil is righl Wei do not read that they had a LOTTERY FOR BUILDING THE CHURCH at Corinth or at Antioch; m for get ting up an embroidered urplice for St. Paul. j All this I style ecclesiastical gam bling. 31ore than one nian who is destroyed can say, that his first step on the wrong road was when he won something at a church fair. The gambling spirit; has not stopped for anv indecency. There transpired in Maryland a lottery, in which people drew for lots in a bury ing ground ! The modern habit of betting about everything' is produc tive ot immense mischief. 1 he most beautiful and innocent amusements of yachting and baseball playing, hav6 been the occsion of putting up excited and extravagant wagers. That which to many has been ad vantageous to body and ' mind, has been to others the means of financial and moral loss. The custom is per nicious in the extreme, where scores of rhenj in respectable life, give them selves tip to, "betting now on. this boat, now on that ; now on thi4 ball club, now ori that-. Betting, that once was chiefly the accompaniment of the racecourse, is fast becoming a national habit, and in some circles any opinion: advanced on finance or politics, is accosted with the interrogation : "How much will you bet on that, sir?' This custom may maej no appeal to slowj lethargic temperapients, but there are in the country tens of thou sanda of quick, nervous,! sanguine, excitable temperaments ready to be acted upon, and their feet will soon take hold on death. For some months, and perhaps for years, they will lin ger in the more polite and ELEGANT CIRCLE OF GAMESTERS, but, after awhile, their pathway will come to the fatal plungei Finding AND UNBRIBEDSY GAIX 1886. themselves in the rapids, they will try to back out, and, hurled over the brink, they will clutch the side of the boat, until their finger nails, blood-tipped, Will pierce the wood, and, then, with white cheek and ago nized stare, and the horrors of the lost soul lifting the very hair from the scalp, they witl -plunge down where no grappling hooks can drag them out. Young man ! stand back from all styles of gambling. The end thereof is death. The teripin alley affords the best of physical exercise, and many an hour I . have passed in some such place getting physical invigo ration ;. but many of the tenpin alleys are now given up to gambling prac tices. Husbands, brothers, fathers, enter. Put down your one thousand dollars all in gold ! Let tha.bov set up the pins at the other enu 6r'-?!c alley ! Now stand back and give the gamester full sweep ! Roll the first there ! it strikes ! and down goes his respectability ! Try it again. Roll the second there ! it strikes ! and down goes the last feeling of hu manity ! Try it again.. Roll the third there ! it strikes ! and down goes his soul forever ! It was not so much the pins that fell as the soul ! the soul ! FATAL TEN-STRIKE for eternity ! "Aceldama, the field ot blood. Shall I sketch the history of the gambler? Lured by bad company, he finds way a into place where hon- est men ought never to go. He sits downto his first game, but only for pastime and the desire ot being thought sociable. The players deal out the cards. Thev unconsciously play into Saltan's hands, who takes all the tricks and both the players' souls for trumps he being a sharper at any game. A slight stake is put up just to add interest to the play. Game after game is"-plaj'ed. Larger stakes and still larger. They begin to move nervously on their chairs. Their brows lower and eyes flash, until now they who win and they who lose, fired alike with passion, sit iwith set jaws and compressed lips. and clenched hsts, and eyes like fire balls, that seem starting from their sockets, to see the final turn before it comes. If losing, pale with envy and tremulous with un uttered oaths cast back red hot upon the heart ; or winning, with hysteric laugh, " Ha! ha ! I have it !" A few years have passed, and Ife is only the wreck of a man. Seating himself at the game, ere 'he throws the first card, he STAKES THE LAST, RELIC of his wife the marriage ring which sealed the solemn vows between them. The game is lost, and stag gering back in exhaustion he dreams. The bright hours of the past mock his agony, and in his dreams fiends with eyes of fire and tongues of flame circle about him with joined hands, to dance and sing their orgies with hellish , chorus, chanting "Hail, brother !" kissing his clammy fore head until 'their loathsome locks, flowing with serpents, crawl into his bosom and sink their sharp fangs and suck up his life's blood, and, coiling around his heart, pinch it with chills and shudders unutterable. Take warning! You are no stronger than tens of thousands who have by this praotice been over thrown. No young man in our cities can escape being tempted. Beware of the first beginnings! This road is a down grade, and everyinstant increases the momentum. Iiunch not upon this treacherous sea. Splint hulks strew the beach. Everlasting storms howl,, up and down, tossing unwary crafts into the hell gate. I speak of what I have seen with my own eyes. I have looked off into the abyss, and have seen the foam ing and the hissing and the whirling of the horrid deep in which the mangled victims Writhed one upon another, and struggled, strangled, blasphemed and died -the death- star of eternal despair upon their countenances as the waters gurgled over them ! TO A GAMBLER'S DEATHBED there comes no hojMJ. He will prob ably die alone. His former associ ates come not nigh hia dwelling. When the hour comes his miserable soul will go out of a miserable life into a miserable eternity. As his poor remains - pass the house where he was ruined old companions may lookout a moment and say: "There goes the old carcass dead at last ;" but thev will not get up frc m the table, grave, there, Let him down now into his Plant no tree to cast its shade for the long, deep, eternal gloom enough that settles there is shadow Plant no forget-me-nots or eglantines around the spot, for flow ers were not made lo grow on such a blasted heath. Visit it not in the sunshine, for tha wld be. mockery, but in-5 the dismal ' night, when no stars are o,ut, and the spirit of dark ness come down horsed on the winds, then visit the grave of the gambler ! Ou His Native Heath Words of . Welcome. , New York Star. The presence in New York, after a long absence, of Mr. James Gordon Bennett gives rise, to considerable pleasant comment. . The general hope ii that his coming home indi cates an intention to resume his resi dence here. No man in the Uruted states holds in his hands so, great a power, and the Star thinks that it is a power whioh ean be effectively used only by one who lives in New York. Mr. Bennett is now in the maturity of his faculties and experience, and the jress of the whole country will glad y yield to hirn. the precedence and eadership which no one else can claim. $1.50 PER ANNUM. Thanksgiving' Proclamation. North Carolina, ) Ejrecutive Department, j iieiievmg that God Almighty the source of all power and authority is in civil government, and recognizing Him in the person of His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, jas the Saviour of mankind and the Giver of everv good and perfect gift. I, Alfred M. Scales, Governor of North Carolina, by virtue of the authority in me vested by law, do appoint Thursday, tlie 25th day of November, as a day of special thanksgiving to Almighty God for the large share of. mercies and blessings vouchsafed to us in the past year, and of devout prayer that He will continue to us His'guardi anship and tender care for all time to come. A mi I respectfully urge upon all, in accordance withari hon ored custom of .our people, to remem ber liberally on that day tlJb helpless orphans that we have "taken under our charge. Done at our city of Raleigh, this the 6th day Nevember, 18S, and in me one nunureu and eleventh vear year of our American Independence Alfred M. Scales. By 4 the Governor: C. H. Armfield, Private Secretary. If a Man Smokes or Drinks, Him Pay For It. Let Philadelphia Record, Democrat. Our distinguished fellow-cittizen, Judge Kelly, still adheres with Ko man tenacity to his programme of abolishing the taxes on whiskey and tobacco as a means of avoiding the reduction of the tariff. He ask: Why not tax cabbage and oats .as well as compel American citizens to pay 554U,tAl,uXJ lor the privilege ot smoking and chewing American- grown tobacco?" The plain answer is that cabbages and "oatmeal, like salt, rice, coal, blankets, flannels and many other articles that are taxed, are necessaries of the family, while whiskey and tobacco are not. Tlie taxes which the consumer pays for his drink and moke are voluntary ; the taxes on clothing, salt, coal are compulsory, for these . are articles with which the family cannot dis pense. J udge Kelly falsely assumes that th tobacco tax is paid by the producer, and he fervently thanks heaven that he is again able to raise his voice against the "iniquity." The producer of totnicco no more pays the tax than does the distiller of whiskey. The distiller and tobacco grower merely collect the taxes from consumers as involuntary agents of the government. A Southern Brig-adier's Find Echo. Words New York Star. Governor Gordon, in his inaugural address at Augusta, gave fitting ex pression to the universal sentiment of the South, regarding the renewed and perpetuated unity of the States of the republic. No voice will be raised anywhere in the Federal union to dissent from his eloquent declaration that, " Nowhere in this republic are there either disloyal cit izens or disloyal sentiments. But everywhere all hearts, voices and arms are ready for the preservation of the general government in all its constitutional vigor, as tlie pledge of our peace and safety." Truly, the Democratic party has reason to congratulate itself on this happy result of its constitutional and fraternal policy. As soon, as the Southern States were relieved from the curse of Republican carpetbag rule, prosperity revived, loyalty was renewed, and tlie world witnessed a realization of the glory of " a union of hearts, a union of hands, a union that naught e'er can sever." rlie Nevs & Observer's Sensible View of the Position of the "New Element" in Politics. Whether it will always throw its weight, as it . has done this time, against the best interests of all the people of the district, it must, of course, itself determine. It is to be hoped that it will realize before it goes too far, that its own welfare is bound up with that of the rest of the people, and that it will thus take a more rational view of general poli tics. Once let any class in this country undertake to run candidates of its own for office regardless of party lines, and dire trouble will begin immediately for that class as well as for the people at large. Something Everybody Know. Does Not New York Star J It may not le amiss in this con nection to explain what everybody doesn't know, the exact meaning of the . word "honeymoon." To be etymologically correct, a bride and groom ought to extend their honey moon, or trial trip, to four weeks, the exact period of a lunar month, a custom I "believe, that is more hon ered in the breach than the observ ance. The honey part of the word comes from an old German habit of drinking metheglin, made from honey, for thirty days after the wed ding, with a view to promote sweet ness or stickiness, I suppose. Cham pagne and Burgundy are the popu lar substitutes nowadays. Ilead and Ponder, Ye Anti-Civil Service Men. N'ew York SUy.J The cleanest sweepe in the removal of federal officers were made in Vir ginia aad Iodiana. - Yet both States were carried by: the Republicans, while Massachusetts, where the sweep was hardly observable, gave the Democrats several additional Con gressmen. A hit, a palpable hit, for civil service reform. ADVERTISING: 1 inch, 1 inch, I inch, 1 inch, 1 inch. ne insertion,..'. $ 75 Tift mnnfK 1 " , -zw nree months 3 00 t months, 4.00 6.00 pne year.. . J colum three' months,. 10.00 i colum six months 17.50 one year 3000 colum column, three months. 17.50 30.00 55.00 coiumn, six months, . . , column, one year column. thrp 1. i -4u""m au.w column, six months kk ha 30.00 1. i A vAj. yjyj column, one insertion c at columns, one inirTi m nn I i 1U. v, Spacel to suit advertiser rLrj cvnmyvic im Hoove rates. PEOPLE TALKED ABOUT. la Deny s torch has crone out. 1 1 1 1 1 1 Who will srite her a litrht ? President Cleveland is busilv en- fe.j--v i'h- Mini" ms message to Lon- ress. unept Henrv GeorrreV friend ; accused of ioririii": a check on the '"Georde fund." Mr "hoebe, the opponent of Mr. in the recent election, will Mr. Carlisle's seat. Sharp, the New York briber Carlisli contest! Jak vC is having his turn before the courts. J ustict The fore th sharpe law is low, but, we hope, sure. Kvill of Samuel J. Tilden is be- courts and the lawyers are lung up their wits on "will President Cleveland was given a grand reception at Harvard. See our N ew 1 ork letter in another column. 1 , It is said now that Chinese Gordan is aliv VI' somewhere in the equatorial regions of Africa. We wish we could believe it. . The J apanese Prince and Princess, ave been making a tour of who this mntry, sailed for home last , Thursday. It i has tt reported that Mr. Powderly graphed the Chicago strikers to aba hour 1 fid on tlie strike, that the eight iw is at present unpracticable. Hon. John. F. Andrew, whom the Democrats of Massachusetts came so near e ectmg, was .special escort, in behalf of the Boston people, to Pres ident Cleveland. , , . Mr. Blaine stayed in NwvYork'a long time, and was supposed to be making a still hunt for the nomina tion in 1888, although he refused to discuss politics. Mr. Justin McCarthy is in Mon treal. He was treated with consid eratioi by tlie Irish National League, the nit mbers of parliment, commer cial corporations and the" different banks. "He was dined by, J. J. Cur ran, member of parliment. Bert ram Boyce Rodway, an Eng-! lishman, wrote a note to his young and es ranged wife to meet him in Centra L Park.' She met him, and he shot In r. She is lying dangerously wounded and he is locked up. Cause unkno n. He seems dazed. Jami's P. Fish, the partner of Fer denand Ward in the defunct Marine Bank, is in a pitiable condition. Hia health has been failing for months, and now he is nearly blind, and cannoi stand or sleep with comfort. The w ly of the transgressor is some times cry hard. The Autocrat of all the Russians is mee ing open defiance in Bulgaria, and th j New York papers think there is pror lise of active hostilities in tho Baikal States for the assertion of Russia 1 supremacy. Turkey is also threat ned and a i'rent eastern war - . . is amo lg the possibilities of the near future. Pror bet Wigging has a rival, one Prof. Foster, who predicts a great storm eriod extending from Decem ber 4tli to December 17th. Heavy snows md blizzards and high winds will impede railway travel. Tele graph : nd telephone lines will be in terferes with by "energetic electrical disturbances." Look out! Mr. lenry George is still in the eyes of his admirers. Last week he was di ned, and complimented on his ver- large vote. His supporters have gi ven notice of their intention to obta n controlling representation in the constitutional convention which 1 las just been ordered in New York. And if they get control, a new system of taxation will be born. Mr. Ienry Watterson has como home. lie was interviewed upon ibis return by a Herald reporter, and gave ut erance to many sensible ex pressioiis. He says the Democratic party must meet the issues of the day hon estly, take courage and stand up for jrinciple that is right. No party cajn long survive unless founded on principle. Spoils wont keep it together. ' M. I eLesseps has returned to France. Just before leaving he was given cablegrams from his family. The mother and seven or eight of the children sent him much love and best wishes for a speedy and safe homeward voyage. "He is a grand old man, hale, robust, full of intellectual and physical vigor, and has done many wonderful things during tie many useful years that have been his. General John B. Gordon on last Tuesday Was enaugurated Governor of Georgja. His address is full of strong gfkxl sense, his sentiments meet the approval of all right think ing men.1 The New York Herald after quoting a few extracts from his speech goes onto'say : "If such senti ments as these represent the South, the occupation of certain republican orators is jkone. Their whole capital in trade, at 'bloody shirt,' will be con fiscated arjd they must needs go into political bankruptcy." Mr. Gladstone is still in earnest about Ireland.- His letter to Lord Walverton 6ays : "Nothing can be done toward closing the Liberal breach until-we know the Govern ment's plans respecting Ireland. They have already taken six months to prepare them: If we all agreed that at the end of this rather ample time they should be produced, let the dissident Liberals use their in fluence with the Government and require theii production. They will then at the right time appear, and nobody car at this time say that we" must go to loggerheads upon them j DUu ine mere iact 01 uuuv;uiiiug m thinking they ought to be produce! will be a step in tie right direction,,"