LIGHTED FOR THE ILLUMINATION OF TAB HEELS, BOTH NATIVE AND ADOPTED. VOL. 2. SOUTHERN PINES, N. C, SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1888. NO. 37 SOUTHERN PINES REAL ESTATE AGENCY. Buys and sells choice and reliable property, Valuable information for investors.. Correspondence solicited For "Circulars and Price-list address P. POND, Southern Pines, N. C. PROSPECT HOUSE, Southern Pines, N. C First-class and homelike accom modations. Tables supplied from the best Northern markets. OPEN fire-places; spacious GLASS- ENCLOSED VERANDAS. Rates: $2.50 to $3.00 pet day. Special rates by the week and month. Wm.R. Raymond,; : Proprietor. Contractor & Builder, Southern Pines, N. C. I am now prepared to take and ex ecute contracts for building houses and cottages in the latest styles. None but competent and thorough workmen em ployed. Suggestive plans, drawn by skilled architects, furnished at short notice, free of charge. FAY'S Water-Proof Building Manilla. (Established 1866) This. w&ter-Droof material, resembling fine if nthpr. is nsnd f oi roofs, outside walls of build ines and inside in place of plaster. Made also into carpets and rugs. .. . S. N. Rockwell. Agent 45t7l G. N. Walters, - FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILOR, ' RALEIGH. N. C. Has the largest stock of Foreign Cloths, Cassimeres, Cheviots, plain - and fancy Silk mixed Suitings, Shark skin Suitings in all shades. The latest New York styles . for full dress Suits. Dress suits from $40 to $85 Business suits $30 to $60 Samples furnished on application. 26t52 ; ' ..... Rubber Stamp 23 Yisiting Cards and INDIA INK to inark Lin en, only 23 cts. (stamps.) Book of 2000 styles free with each order. Agents wanted. Big Pay. THALMAN M'F'G CO., BALTIMORE. MD, A Brief Respite. There will .be an interval of two weeks, possibly three, before the next issue of the Pine Knot. The editor will be absent in Boston and New York during that time and feels sure that this brief respite will be grateful o his constituents as well as to him- self. Since the paper started the editor has not followed the almost universal custom of this section, to ake holiday vacations. He does not now take a vacation, but simply omits for the present two or three issues which will be made up to subscribers at the end of the year. Nothing will be lost, and perhaps much may be gained by this temporary cessation of the usual routine. Both editor and readers will perhaps have a heartier appreciation of each other when they get face to face once more. Not that he editor expects to be seriously missed, for in these- newspaper-pestered times one journal the less is hardly noted but he thinks it proba ble that future issues of the paper may be made more valuable, and the interests of all better served, by this brief recess. Americanism is getting many able advocates land exciting much interest. The weekly America, of Chicago, is doing a great work in that direction. Some of its facts, figures and deduc tions are startling and deserve careful attention. Some newspaper man, a lover of his kind, uttered a vigorous protest against punning on the name of Judge Fowle, the Democratic nominee for governor. But it did no good. . Hard ly was the result of the convention made public before the air was full of sickly puns. If Fowle is elected we hope he will make a recommendation to the Legislature to pass laws for the suppression of bad puns. The hawk ing of them ought to be a peniten tiary offence. We suppose one reason why we lost the election last Monday was over confidence in the strength of the temperance sentiment in our midst. The no-license vote started off so wel that it seemed as if temperance and decency must carry the day. But by a free use of liquor at the polls enough men were bereft of reason and sense to vote the rum devil into power for another year, but his day is short. Evil shall not prevail, and we look with confidence to the righting of this great wrong a year from this time. Meanwhile we take comfort in the nought that though whiskey is sold in th township it is not sold in our own. Let us see to it that this curse is kept from our midst. We are glad to state in justice to the good j people of Manly that the white vote within a radius of three miles from town' was four to one in favor of no license and that the best' element of the colored people was for no license. The same can be truthfully said of Winder and vicinity. Not a single merchant in Manly except the bar room men voted for license. Whisky in unlimited quantities was dispensed by ihe rumsellers among negroes, and the results were disgraceful and sick ening enough. Let the blame rest where it belongs, and let all honor be given to the business men of Manly who made a bold stand for the right ! , - Boys Gambling For Pennies. The luxuriance and magnificence of he gambling establishments of Monte Carlo, Baden and Aix have given the idea that they are the most costly gambling houses in the world. This may in one sense be true, but there is a building in this city which cost more than any of the gaming establishments . & daily used by gamblers. Players are daily cheated there by chance out of their last penny literally and are forced to leave the place without enough money to buy a meal. Where is this great building and who are the gamblers'? you ask. It is the Federal building, the United States post office in this city, and the gam blers are the newsboys all around it. Who has hot seen them? From early in the morning until it is too dark to distinguish heads from tails, between the buttresses of the postofiice, along Mail street and all over the sidewalk, can be seen knots of these little street gamblers anxious ly trying their fortune. They have become one of the institutions of the city. It is just as natural that a news boy should pitch pennies as that he should sell papers, and no one thinks of disturbing him. He has taken possession of the Federal building presumably with the knowledge of the officials, and he considers it a trespass on his rights when , a pedestrian pushes his way through and interupts. his game. He puts his entire capital into the venture, and many an enthusiastic little gambler, who never dreamed of systems and who never broke a bank has been compelled to sleep at nigh in some uncomfortable doorway be cause he lost his little all at pitching Den rues. To be able to tell those who are in terested and who do not know all about this game a reporter hunted up a little chap the other day who had "gone broke on der pavement" and who was anxious to sell all his know ledge of the game for a small consider ation. There are, according to this boy's story, two ways of pitching pen nies. TEe first game is called 4 'liner,' ' and it may be played by from two t eight boys In this game a line is chosen and the players stand ft' certain' distance off and pitch their coppers a near as possible to the line, but not over it. If five are playing they all pitch. SuDDOse three of them r.nt heir coppers across the line and two his side.. - The pennies beyond the ine are lost and must be divided be- ween the other two. The one whose penny lies nearest the line takes all of the pennies, shakes them in his hand and- drops them to the pavement. The heads belong to him and the tails to his opponent. Another and more difficult game is played, and is called "crack." It is played just the same as the "liner" game, except that the penny must first be thrown against the wall and made to rebound to that part of the pavement where the chosen crack i situated. This requires more skill than the other game, and only those who are expert ever attempt it. Another favorite game of these little chaps is called "crap." It is played with a single die and is shaken in the hand, and the opposite player calls 'odd or "even" for the number of spots on the face of the die. As superstition is to be found also to be found among t:he penny pitching newsboys, and it takes some queer shape. Not a lad of them who sens papers will pitch a penny until he has made at least one sale, and the little fellow with the box is just as determined and will not try his fortune until he has had one "shine." Again, nearly all of the boys have their favo rite pennies, in which they believe, and they cherish them just as fondly as the late John T. Ravmond did his pretentious 1804 dollar, and these pennies are often the one thing about the boys that are kept scrupulously clean. Another, and probably the most peculiar superstition, is that they believe a woman brings them bad luck. If, in playing on the street, a woman passes before a boy who is about to pitch, and between him and the crack at which he throws, he can, if he likes, refuse to throw, and the game is given up and another crack chosen. Why a woman and not a man should be chosen as the omen of ill luck does" not appear, but "Dey alius bring de rocky wid 'em." Neio York World. Mrs. Maria E. Beasley, of Philadel phia, has made a fortune by the in vention of a machine for the construc tion of barrels, which, up to that time, had been made almost wholly by hand. The machine is worked by three men and turns out more than 600 completed barrels a day. Mrs. Beasley was born in North Carolina, of wealthy parents. She possesses remarkable mechanical genius. Her first invention was a machine for hooping barrels. It will hoop 1,700 barrels a day, and is used by the. Standard Oil Company.