The Chronicle, WILKESBORO, N. tC t x - BILL ABFS LETTER. Atlanta Constitution. The cry is still "they come," and U36 V1CU.IHB WUtlUUC lW niiiv , i-i-ivy iwx sympathy. I am sorry for them, "but I am amazed at their stupidity and cre dulity. Now here are two clever, needy women in this community who sent $25 each to one of these fakirs and each sent him a list of twenty-five names not subscribers, - but --names. The women knew very well that no body, wanted the; pape? and so they begged or borrowed or made some sac rifice to get "the money and went dili gently to work writing letters and send ing circulars to other women at other places urging "them, to.join the scheme and get a year's employment at $20 a a " a " .asm t mis Ttrfi r r ma tsw month. And these last women sent $25 and each, go to. work writing to a third set of women, and so it goes on and on in an endless cnam, gro mug longer and longer and widening and branching out as it goes until, if it keeps on, it will embrace the continent and then cross the ocean and chain up all Euro ne. That is the principle on , v illi . 31 1 1 are based. Of course the chain will - break sooner or later, and I am pleased to learn that one of - them says that he will have to surrender, but that he will protect his agents. lie cannot do it. His last circular tells his agents to stop working in North Corolina, South Caro lina, Georgia, Florida and Alabama, for he has pretty well covered these - states with agencies and now they must work up the western and northwestern states. And so I continue to receive letters from Arkansas and Texas almost every day asking about the scheme. A poor woman writes me from Colora do, Tex., that her little children picked cotton tor raise the $25 for her invalid sister who wanted to work and get the monthly salary. She sent the money and a list of names, for she could not get a single subscriber, and the fakir sent her a dollar and that is all she has ever received, and she asks; "Is it pos sible that any human being is mean enough to rob a starving woman and her little children? Is it possible that. Bill Arp would raise up a boy like that ?" No, he cannot protect his agents. It would take Aladdin's lamp to comply with his promises. He got $50 -from these; two women in this town. I don't know how many at Kingston and Adairsville. He has promised $175 to each, which makes $350 for one town. No doubt he has 300 agents in Georgia and it will take over $50,000 to pay them. Then mul tiply that by four other states that he says he has already covered. Of course he can't pay his agents. But he pays enough to get a few credentials. One lady writes me from Milledgeville and defends him and says he has paid her and she believes he is an honest man. Another writes from the same county and say's he won't pay her any thing and will not answer her letters. It is to be hoped, however, that he will refund $25 to 'each Itgent. But take another view of this wonderful scheme. There are fifty of his papers received here at tnis office and not one of them rep resents a subscriber. Our people took them out for awhile, thinking they were some of these sample copies that . flood the country. But they have found out better and refuse to take them out, for they do not want them and fear that somebody will be calling for the money. Now, if our county is an averagp, there has been sent xrom the state to that one town from eight tr ton fVirnTaanrt Hnllnra unn crnt. hnrb- - nothing that anybody in Georgia wan ts . Another paper writes me very tartly about its scheme and advises, me to let things alone that I do not understand. The? publisher sends to me copies of his circulars and asserts that it is nothing like the other plan. Well, it is more liberal, for it asks only $10 to get ten subscribers and an agency and start the chain and promises $24 a month for every five agents secured in a month. My wife had already received two let ters urging her to take an agenc and ' make $24 a month so easy. Of course she declined, for she didn't care to beg any one, tonake a paper he didn't want, nor: would she send- her own money an A . liflf. rvf nomoa a.nrl wrif.A in nthp.T women to come in the scheme. ' I will not say it is a fraud, for I have reason to believe that the publisher is "' honest and conscientious, but the scheme is a delusion and a snare and is in very bad company. The agents can't get genuine subscribers and will ' send their own money and a list of names. ; And there, .comes another scheme from another. Georgia town. It says: Send us $20 and we will employ you at $20 a mOnth for twelve, months to write five letters a day and get agents to '1.' J 111 . AO i (TVi& 'Vi uo auu TtXXX t?aJ TH aiCk.vlut iwt -each over five in a month. Some of - our agents get from ten to fifty new A i - i kWf A agents joaontniy ana mase irom juio $110a month.- It whTtake only a few minutes every day to write the letters." That,beats the original. I reckon they - gia-getting $20 a month. That takes - $240,000 a year to pay them. Does anybody ' believethat ? And jet this investment company does not. seem to have anything to sell, but will get you a sewing-machine, a gold watch, a byke 1 or a , gunThey. refer you to a long ar ray of references : . . But Jiere. is one from North Carolina, where the cherry trees gfowti ' 'Greatest monemakihg'plan of the twentieth century. -v. ' - . . . r '$5 per day made at hofne mailing circulars. . It breaks all records and the mo ney comes rolling In.' These l&re the headlines of "the offer. The body of the circular is too- long And too . fas- j cinating to copy It might injure A t- T lanta's shoe "trade to spread this kind of news in your columns. " A lady writing to me from Thomasville says her neighbor, a good,"- sensible lady, was induced by this circular to send $3.50 to another lady, who was an end le3s ."chain agent for this North Carolina party, and got a pair of shoes she could h ive bought at home for $2.50, and she had to pay 45 cents express charges u xn them. I have hunted for this li tie North Carolina town all over the nap and have not found it yet. I reckon it is some little town that is yet in the woods. I am not through with these endless chain frauds or delusions or snares, b it will close with the most amusing li :tle fake that has ever transpired in this . region. A planter who lives in o ir town says that one of his tenants g 3t a circular- that came all the way from that pious country where they Used to sell nutmegs made of wood and sed oats made of shoe pegs. The cir cular said that any one remitting a money order for $1.79 would have sent to them a handsome set of oak finished furniture. The credulous man would not consult his landlord, but sent it, abd as the circular said: 'Please men tion the color of the upholstery that you prefer," he wrote that he wanted green. In due time he was notified that the furniture had been shipped. So he waited about ten days and then drove ik with a two-horse wagon to receive ii and haul it home. On inquiring at the depot he found a little box and in side was a miniature set of furniture for a doll. The bedstead was 8 inches long and the sofa 6. On the outside of the box was 75 cents for freight, But the upholstering was green and the man smiled a sickly- grin and said: iKjKJ am. J- s Now, if there is anything for which have a particular dislike it is a per sonal controversy with my fellow-man. was forced into this one to protect my name and secure my peace, but if ii shall result in protecting the depend ent women of this land from the greed ahd trick of strangers, I shall not re-gi-et the controversy. The government will take a hand in it after a while, but that will not refund the money. A Inderal court has already got the cherry tree man in limbo. j The United States postal law declares that no newspapers shall be carried as second-class matter unless they are for legitimate subscribers who with their own consent have paid or agree to pay the subscription price. Lat the law be enforced. Aill Aep. I P. S. Later from the front. Since ijpenned the above I have Teceived an other letter that caps the climax. Winsboro, S. C., Jan 2. To Bill Arp: I used to admire you and banked on your letter. You had my respect and confidence to that extent that I gave my daughter $25 to send to you and get the monthly reward for writing letters. That was more than two months ago and you know the rest, yjou grand old fraud. I hate to think as meanly of any man as I now think of you and your son. If you were worth the powder and lead it would take to kill you I'd have you both arrested, you two-faced old hypocrite. If you ever come tnis way, you old sinner, what we will do for you will be a plenty, etc., etc. - J. D. L. That man had better refund that $25 or run away. B. A Tne Scarcity of Good Horses. Gharlotte Observer. . j The local horse dealers say that good hprses and mules are getting to be scarce and that' the price paid for them is higher than it has been for the last 2D years, notwithstanding the high price of corn and other horse feed. They explain it by the fact that the govern ment has exported so many to the Philippines and that England has also drained the country to supply the de mand in South Africa. They say that good horses and mules are higher in the West than they are here in fact, that tney are as cneap nere as in any part of the Union. T I Timber hunters have committed vast depredations on the State lands during the past 10 or 12 years. The State, un der-the fusiorr regime had given an option at 50 cents an acre to a man by which he could pick out the best tim bered lands, sell them and only pay for what he sold. It appears that he sold s(jme at $4 to $6 an acre and also a con siderable part of the 3,000 acres of cran berry bog. He sold the pick of the timber land in Tyrrell county, what is left to the State being of little value. The State Board of Education forced the holder of the option to surrender it, but in order to avoid suit gave him leave to sell 10,000 acres in Tyrrell county and 55,000 in Carteret county. His option covered over 60,000 acres. The chapter of the United Daughters o the Confederacy, of .Lexington, iiy., are entirlev warranted in their request to the manager of the opera house there that he do not permit the production oi UACle Tom's Cabin'; in it. it should not be allowed to be played in any ofera house in the South. The novel from which the play is dramatized is a lie in essence, designed without regard td facts, to inflame the Northern mind and neither novel nor; drama deserves td find any comfort south of the sec tional Une. Charlotte Observer. Rev. J. T. Bagwell, D. D., has moved td McAllister, Indian Territory. Dr.: Bagwell Was a leading minister -in the Methodist church: prior to his removal tq Arkansas some years ago. Latterly his health has been poor., f f j Charlotte News : Mr. B. K. Blair, who has for several years, -owned a half interest in the Albemarle Drug Com pany, at Albemarle, has disposed of his stock. Mr. Horace Armheid Mr. air's partner, is 'sole "owner of : the business. ' 'r ' -; - o? 3-;; r -' ' . LESS. ' That coatless man puts a careless arm - Bound the waist of the hatless girl,. As over the dustless and mudless roads In a horseless carriage- they whirl, Like a heedless bullet from a hammerless gun, By smokeless powder driven, They fly to taste the speechless joy v - By endless union given. .-.-Though the only lunch his coinless purse Affords to them the means Is a tasteless meal of ooneless cod With a side of stringless beans, He puffs a tobaccoless cigarette, And laughs a mirthless laugh When pap tries to coax her back . By wireless telegraph. Boston Herald. HOW TO GET WEALTH. Early to bed, Also to rise, y May make a man both healthy and wise, But if of wealth He'd gain the prize He musn't forget to advertise. HIS PROPER FATE. The man who complains of his victuals And all his wife's cooking belictuals Should be starved till he's thin As a wooden ten pin Like they used in the old game of skictuals. GOD IN THE SCHOOLS. Stroii a: Plea Against Effort to Expel Religions Instruction Prom Tnese Institutions. Richmond State. Really the effort to expel God Al mighty from the public schools is being carried too far. We note that some where out West, in Chicago, we believe, violent objection is made to the use of the Lord's Prayer in the schools. What offense there is in that invocation for Gentile or Jew, Catholic, Protestant or infidel, we are unable to understand. Nothing can be more sublimely beauti ful or more appropriate for all kinds of men than the appeal to "our Father" the father of all of us weak, erring children of His, stumbling on in our countless different ways into the dark ness of the next hour, hoping and fearing, enjoying and suffering and the strongest and proudest of us needing help so often. Certainly all may unite in the prayer to the Unseen Power that His name shall be hallowed, His king dom shall come, His will shall be done; that we may have each day our daily bread, that our trespasses may be for given as we forgive and that we may be delivered from evil. It would be better to have the ten dency in the other direction. The fact that the schools are for all the people must be recognized and it is not right that the children f any creed or form of religious belief should be given cause for offense or influenced against the wishes of their parents. Yet there are certain fundamental beliefs and senti ments in which virtually all American people are agreed and these should be encouraged in the minds of children instead of being excluded. There is a common sense line easy to find between religious freedom and no religion at all. Because some citizens choose to believe or try to believe that there is no God is no reason why God should be banished utterly from the schools their children attend. The fact that we have some Turkish citizens should not prevent us from teaching that Mahomet was a false prophet and that one wife ia, the proper allowance for one man. In these days of liberal thought aDd mutual respect of honest men for each other's opinions, it is not impossible that eminent Protestants, Jews and Catholics may some time get together and agreed on some religious teaching that all will be willing to have their children instructed in. The theory is that this matter should be left entirely to the parents and the spiritual guides chosen by them; which is a very poor theory. As a matter of fact we are raising a larg crop of trouble in many parts of the country in the shape of children who are taught to know a great many things and the meaning and beauty of nothing, who have minds equipped after a fashion and souls as empty and barren as those of the most depraved heathens, and we graduate them into the world with no motive, hope, thought or conception higher than the dollar or the passion, to be rich men without bowels or an archists with or without bombs. Heart of tnis Slan on Ills Right Side. A man with his heart on the right side instead, of the left has just been discovered by the medical board of Bloomington 111. The man is George W. Hurst, of Lexington, a veteran of the civil war, who recently applied for a pension. - In the course of the physical exami nation the physicians made the remark able discovery that the applicant's heart was on the right side, instead of the left. Hurst says that he never experienced any discomfort or inconvenience as a result of this unusual location of his heart. The pulsations are as even as those of an ordinary man of his age, and there appears to be nothing unusual about the heart except its location. It is normal in every other way. The physicians say that the case is extremely rare, and only a few are known to the medical fraternity. The President Is for Peaee Now. Two Boston men who called on the President last week took occasion to say that they had heard that there might be trouble with some foreign countries over the Monroe Doctrine, and they felt that they should express the hope that the President would endeavor to preserve peace. "War? exclaimed the Jf resident. 'Do vou think I'm going to have a war while I'm cooped up here in the White House? Well, I guess not." George E. Graham, war correspon dent,' who i was aboard the . Brooklyn during the Santiago battle, is to write a book entitled "Schley and Santiago." He will show that Sampson was not in the fight.". , , . A VICTIM OF RETRIBUTION. Atlanta Constitution. There is something pathetic about the inglorious climax that has come Co the career ,of Franklin J. Moses, one of the reconstruction governors of South Carolina. Once the chief mag istrate of a great and proud original state Of The union, thirty years after wards we find him pitifully pleading to a police magistrate in Boston for leni ency, but sentenced to four months in a penal institution for a petty swindle His downward career has been constant and punctual with pretty crimes and police entanglements. We recall the incident not purposely to exult over the misfortune of one who was a conspicuous and malfamous factor in the oppression of the South ern people . after the civil war. Our reference to him is necessary because he is a type. He was one of that motley and malignant tribe that took possession, by the grace of congress and the power of bayonet-bearing batal lions, of the state governments of the south and organized misrule, plunder and political oppression into a system such as Christendom had never known before, and that finally revolted the conscience of the American people. - Moses is an illustration of the retri bution that moves with the certainty and inexorableness of divine justice. "The mills of the gods grind slowly, But they grind exceeding fine !" And he is the latest, if not the last of all, to come as a mangled, broken, helpless and hopeless grist from the wheels of that awful machinery. Scores of his colleagues in the disgraceful his tory of that era of southern humilia tion and spoliation have preceded him in ruin and been consigned to the obli vion of the ages. While their season of ribald power, luxurious riot and shameless rascalities was brief, gor geous and amazing, they were finally forced to flee from their f eastings and take refuge in such safety as the places that had spawned them would afford. Even there they mostly found ostra cism and suspicion and shrunk into pauperism, vagabondage and shifty! criminalism. If- it were worth the while we might here recall the names, once despicably familiar in southern affairs, of such as have fallen upon such miserable conclusions. It is enough "to point a moral andJ adorn the tale" to say that nearly all these fellows met their full measures of misery, odium and punishment, not in the south, where they had earned their infamy, but among the people from whom they sprung and who once thought them most fit and desirable masters for southern people, upon whom they were foisted by radicalism and fastened in power by regiments of troops. It is a sufficient vindication of their repudiation and banishment bv the south that they could not And welcomes and honors at home. There were some of the leaders of that epoch who were not evil at heart. They were mistaken, but not malig nant. When they realized the true characters and purpca?s of their co partners they pulled out from the as sociation and many have since become useful and honored factors of purer retrimes. But Moses remains the ulti mate type and illustration of the men who sowed hate and have reaped sell havoc wherever they went. Going: to the Coronation. Baltimore Sun. The President has selected Mr. White law Reid, of New York, as the special ambassador of the United States at the coronation of King Edward VII next June. Mr. Reid is the editor of the New York Tribune, is recognized as a yery good friend of Great Britain, hav ing long exerted his influence to pro mote cordial relations between the two countries, and will for this reason and doubtless for many others be persona grata to the British people and the Court of St. James. Gen. J. H. Wil son, of Delaware, will attend the coro nation as the representative of the United States Army, while Captain Charles E. Clark, who commanded the battleship Oregon during the war with Spain, will represent the American Navy. Captain Clark is a gallant officer, well worthy of the honor bestowed upon him, but why should Admirals Dewey and Schley have been overlooked and why shonid Lieu tenant-General Miles have been forgotten when the corona tion honors were being distributed ? Rip! Tear! As President Stepped on Wife's Gown. At the dinner given by Postmaster General and Mrs. Smith at the 'Arling ton in Washington last week President and Mrs. Roosevelt arrived a little late. In his hurry to reach the elevator the president stepped upon the beautiful trailing gown of Mrs. Roosevelt.. There was a sound of ripping and tearing and and then an awful silence. Mrs. Roose velt gave her impetuous husband a re proachful look, but not a word was exchanged except the "Pardon me, dear," of the president. With the as sistance of a maid the robe was ad justed. Mrs. Roosevelt's gown was one of the most exquisite she has yet worn. It was of fine French lace, with the design outlined in silver and pearls. Panels of turquoise velvet covered the skirt and the corsage was of blue. . V Three negroes were blown to pieces and seven others hurt ina dynamite explosion at Karthaus, Clearfield county, Pa., last week. The explosion occurred in one of the shacks occupied by negro laborers. They were thawing dynamite at a wood stove board Air-line, was run over by a shift inir enffine at the Charlotte passenger depot on the 16th. Bothi legs were so badly mangled mat amputation was ecessary. xae pauent was .. batten to private hospital. ' . SOUTH OUTGROWING NORTH. For the First Time In Hie History- of the Country tlso Soutli Is Growing Faster Tlian tlio ftortli. The Director of. the Census an nounced last week the percentage of increase of population in different parts of the country, showing for the last decade a rapid decrease from the - pre vious rate of growth of population in the, West, a less marked, but decided, decrease in the North, and a, slight in crease in the South. For the first time in the history of this country the popu lation of the South has increased some what more rapidly than that of the North. The East, geographically, is included in the term North. The. rate of growth in the North, West and South is far more nearly the same than it ever has been before. The official announcement divides the country as follows: West, from the Pacific to the eastern boundry of Montana, Wyom ing, Colorado and New Mexico, North and South, the respective sides-of a line formed by the Potomac and Ohio rivers and the southern boundary of Missouri and Kansas. The percentage of increase from 1860 to 1880 was 61.9 in the North, 48.4 in the South .and 185.6 in the West, while in the last 20 years, iu-iyuu, it was 48. y in tne North, 48.5 in the South and 131.5 in the West. Prior to the civil war, the Northern States nearly doubled in population with each 20 years, while in the South ern States the increase of population was only two-thirds as many. During the last 20 years there has been no substantial difference in the rate of growth of the two sections. The per centage of increase of growth of these regions during each of the last two ten year periods follows: 1880-90 North 24.8; South 20.1; West 71.3. 1890- 1900, North 19; South 22; West 31.9. ii tne comparison is limited to tne States east of the Mississippi river, classing Minnesota and Loujsana with the Western States, the result is slightly different. It would show the increase to be: 1880-90, North 10.1: South 16. 1890-1900, North 19.9; South 17.7. When the Trans-Mississippi States are omitted, the rate of growth in the North is slightly greater than that in the South, but the present difference between the two sections in this re spect is about one-half what it was be tween 1880 and 1890, and less than one seventh of what it was between 1850 and 1890. The frontier as a large erea of rapid but intermittent growth, is no longer an important factor in the prog ress of American, population, and the rate of growth in the several great areas of the United States is now nearly the same. ' Closet Boom, Kansas City Journal. A man who is building a new house at Kinsley tells the local editor that he is going to have enough closets in his house,' or know the reason why. And thereupon Senator F. Dumont Smith, editor of the Mercury, discourses as follows: "Who has not gone to a closet to find his best trousers, and after a wading through for or five layers of feminine garments finally given up the search in despair? The writer lives in a house that has seven closets, besides two small rooms devoted to storage. In all this vast array of closet room we have but five wardrobe hooks to which we pre tend to hold any sort of title of indi vidual possession, and they are more often than not invaded by garments wholly foreign to our complexion and build. It is idle to storm, swear, beg, plead or cajole. The calm, sweet, smil ing obstinacy of the eternal feminine moves resistlessly on it3 way, absorbing all the closet room, all the shelves, drawers, cupboards, bureaus, dressers, chiffoniers and even the floor space. The only way that Mr. Hetzel will get his rights will be to build a burglar proof room, with a fire combination lock on $." A Kentucky Man Sees a Strange pic ture on tlie Moon. Inez, Kyr, Correspondence. W. B. Copley, a prominent planter and magistrate claims to have seen strange pictures in the moon. On the last full mdon he awoke before daylight and saw the picture of a headless man in the moon, ascending a mountain and carrying a cross where the head should have been. From the descrip tion of the mountain it was an exact picture of Calvary. He aroused his wife, and she is a witness to the jsight. He firmly believes that had it not be n for the passage of Scripture which says that "no man shall see the face of the Lord and live" he would have had a complete view of Calvary and the cruci fied Savior. . The Rock Hill, S. C, Herald says: While Southern patriots are going wild over "Philadelphia's Liberty Bell," the Pennsylvania tourists pass in full view of South Carolina's King's Mountain without raising a hat or remembering that what Gettysburg was to the Army of the Potomac Kings Mountain was to the American army, whose achieve ment at that historic mountain made the clanging of the old bell a possibility. Reference made in this paper to a report sent out by a staff correspondent of the News and Observer to the effect that the late Solicitor Rush, of Ashe boro, died of smallpox. Mr. W. ,C. Hammer, Mr. Rush's successor. ? in office, wires the Salisbury Sun that the report is not true. He says Mr. Rush was exposed to the smallpox but that he had been vaccinated about a year ago. , . . - Gen. Wade Hampton is still ill, but his physician states that there is no immediate danger. Gen. Hampton is 84 years old and has .been in feeble health for - some weeksr , It is believed, however, that his present illness is the begining of the end. . : i , i GEKEB4L NEWS. The expenditures of Harvard Univer sity, for the last college year were $321, -579 moire than its income. By a unanimous vote the House agreed to give Mrs. McKinley the free mailing privilege during the remainder of her life. It is said the President is hearing evidence f both friends and foes of Schley before making his decision on the latter's appeal. . . President Roosevelt has maddened the republicans of Mississippi by ap pointing the body servant of Jefferson Davis to a good position. i Mrs. Susanna. Pennock, of St. Louis. who is 21 years old and is now a patient at the City Hospital, has given birth to three pairs of twins in her brief life. A poll of the Senate shows forty in favor of Considering the Panama canal, and thirty-one in favor of the Nicara guan route. Senator-Teller alone is, opposed to any Isthmian canal. i Cleveland and Chicago capitalists have secured concessions to builcT trolley car lines from Cairo, Egypt, to Mecca, . along the Red Sea, with a branch line to Mount Sinai. The medical students of Grant Uni-' versity, a negro college at Chattanooga, Tenn. , demand the retirement of Prof. R. J. Cooke for his attack on the Daughters of the Confederacy. The Democratic caucus, of the Ken- tucky Legislature has nominated ex- Governor James B. McCreary for United States Senator to succeed Senator - Deboe; this-is equivalent to election. The President last week sent to the senate the name of David Aiken to be postmaster at Geeenwood, S. C. Aiken has been dead three weeks - but the department had not been notified, and his application papers received favorable consideration. Reports from a large section of south west and central Texas tell of heavy rains, ine drougnt had begun to be destructive in much of the -territory covered by these rains. In Neuves county the downpour lasted for 16 hours, the first fain in more than a year. Ex-President Grover Cleveland is so far recovered from the effects of his re cent attack of pneumonia as to have arranged for a hunting trip in the South. He will leave his home at Princeton (January 22, for ; an island . off Georgetown, S. C, where, with a party of friends, he will remain several days. -'' Mrs. Ralph Webber, wife of the superintendent of one of the depart ments at the cotton mills at Lynchburg, Va., was outraged and her throat cut by an unknown negro Saturday morning. The crime was committed shortly before 7 o'clock, before it was good daylight, and after her husband had gone to the mill. Her throat was cut almost from ear to ear, but is thought she will re cover. A Pennsylvania Railroad official has compiled statistics showing that 150,000 freight cars were built in this country last year. Notwithstanding this enormous addition to the transportation facilities of this country, it is estimated that the railroads have lost more than $30,00Q, 000 because of the scarcity of freight cars. Every railroad of importance in', the United States has complained of a shortage of fright cars. A dispatch from Cleveland, O., tells f the plans for an American company to build electric lines along the Red Sea to connect Mt. Sinai and Damascus. It is added that already trolley .cars are running from Jerusalem to Galilee, and Lfor some years a steam road has been in operation from Jaffa to Jerusalem. It is also possible now to inspect the pyramids of Egypt from a seat in a trolley car manufactured in America. One of the best-reared girls of Rich mond, Va., was yesterday sent to the House of Good Shepherd, in New York, as incorrigible. The girl is only about 16 years old. Her parents thought it best to send her to, some such institu tion as she has just been committed to. The jToung girl went away under the charge of a policeman. There was a stormy time at the house when the officer went for his prisoner. She would not consent to go until he had threatened to call the station house wagon. Metnodlst Almanac. If you need a cq mplete and correct Almanac, and a full and exhaustive Methodist reference book, you will find both in the publication which lies before us. It is the "JNorth Uarolina Method ist Handbook and Almanac" the first , of ta kind ever brought out in the State. We notice that in addition to a vast fund of information, historical, biogra phical, doctrinal, financial and statisti cal, it contains a complete roll of Methodist Sunday School Superinten dents in the State. If we have ever had one before, we are hot aware of it. The Handbook is adorned with numerous half tone engravings of prominent men and buildings of North Carolina Methodism. What strikes us' especially is the picture of the oldest Method ist preacher in North Carolina,, who is nearly one-hundred years old, and the picture of the house near Loui8burg where the first Annuual Con ference of organized Methodism in the whole world was held in 1785. The cover is of special electrotyped design; Send 25 cents for a copy which - will be . sent postpaid. . Address T. N. Ivey, Editor, Raleigh,. N. C. ' S . Misstress: "Mary, I saw the milkman kiss you this morning, shall take the milk in myself to-morrow." -: Mary: . "Lor ; muml . It wouldn't work. S'E wouldn't kiss you, anyway.' - r: . ... ;. i-