The wi lusdp MaeeM, "Our ulim ictfZ 6e,j7ie People's Might Maintain, unawea by rower, and Unbribed by Gain." WILSON. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNSDAY, JANUARY 4. 1888. NO. 42 i VOL-VI. POETRY. It ELEVATIWO AND ESWOBMJf , Lifts the Thoujhto lo Higher --ri sMter Scenes. We love poetry. We love it for its sof and refining influences its elevated I W and tender pathos. It is and ever uien the great civiiizer of man Long Sore letters were invented, or music as in story of Orpheus, claimed the passions, dnting caught the fleeting visions, pce n trembled from the lips of the wander :;bard and softened the heart of the rude Parian. The giant angels of Hebrew first told us in majestic verse of God's aierous love. The , poet has passed through the unfolding veil pf futurity and on the brow of eternity, we nas wandered r'ththe Peri through the bowers of nature, . ...:k Vi cnns And snheres throno-h noveu wil" "- ""v -r- pace. watched the rosy light of Aurora, i i . rwed the gorgeous cioua pictures, s-pped himself in the sunset draperies of eve,walked 'mid worlds of golden fire, and risLn still higher, has opened the gates of '(e celestial citv and floated back to earth or the melodies of his song. The poet, as fbv divine right, has ever held the golden kevs to the enchanted chambers of knowl edge. Dante, Tasso, Milton. What an Immortal triumviry! Dante, the first great poet of the Reformation, depicted in lan zzz unequalled for music and power the corruptions of the papal hierarchy and told of the hope and redemption for man in his Divina .Commedia. Tasso, the flower of chivalry, saw two great armies marching across the planes of Palestine,the one fight ing under the Cross and for the recovery of the Saviour's sepulchre. How grandl) he describes the scene and how proudly he waves his banner over "Jerusalem Deliv ered." Milton, the great, high priest of sor.g, teHs m deeporgan tones of entrance of sin in the world "with all our woe, and loss of Eden. He tells of "Paradise Lost," and then standing of the ramparts f time flings his lyre into eternity and akes Heaven echo with the music of Paradise regained. These three were of the christian order. We now describe an- The Old Mother. will go fur for you than You cannot other trio totally different and so grand, jet, perhaps not as brirHant . Byron, Bnrasand our own Poe. Byron, deformed by nature, was robbed of domestic happi ness. It has been said that he makes us war against ourselves and our fellows,and that he kves in cloud, as darkness rolls away we e the summits of the loftiest peak upon eh. Burns, the plough boy poet, the peat author of the Cotter s Saturday Kght, he who crowned with undying ilory the barren heaths and winding loches wyond the Tweed, yet whose glory, like Cwpatra's pearl, was dissolved in dissipa-Jon- Poe, poor, dissolute but brilliant How sad, how short his life! What ever be his fate in the great unknown," we that is fame will ever be carried tt-oss the ocean of time oh the dusky Rs of the Raven. False religionists, ttenng monkeys, drivelling idiots, ex hm m tones of pretended piety that JTerblilliant these men were they are red with the lost and the damned. t ve U nt.God's mercy is unbound- He tempers the winds to tho shorn N and perhaps thse men who have so much for civilization, refinement bVTUre' WiU n0t forev?er barred frc 1 gatCS r Heaven We believe Se men who started such a grand ' "on earth wilt at last, be called to etestial choir that chants the eternal Monies sublime. Tie Difference. ' 41"f5ermet a coal dealer on a lonelv an. d stopped him. -Your monev o'r ' said the robber. "Who' are manSd Cal dealer- 'rm a hiSh tin d the man "Good enough," eih the Coal dealer i "Vm a low Andtran Shake-we shbuld be friends." e.y ere. At The Ball. Ier face was fare 1nne!-0HndmPare- nje haughtiness supreme; J thought, and vet thinVsanntfor&et, ' fhr rareJ-v what thev em. ?,!rils he spoke, idwX:hl5" like the str - n fragrance rent mv dream. s ou dance?" I said,' i. .ne turrit 1 i , ' uance!1" I said, ds?5niturned her head, .answered,"! should Honor the dear old mother. Time has scattered snowy flakes on her brow, plowed deep furrows on her cheeks, but is she not sweet and beautiful now? The lips are thin and Shrunken, but those are the lips which have kissed many a hot tear from the childish cheeks, and they are the sweetest lips in the world; the eye is dim, yet it glows with the soft radiance that can never fade. Ah, yes, she is a dear old mother. The 1 sands of life are nearly run out, but, feeble as she is, she ther and reach down lower any other person on earth. enter a .prison whose bars can keep her out You cannot mount a scaffold too high for her to reach that she cannot kiss and bless you in evidence of her deathless love when the world shall despise and for sake you ; when it leaves you by the way side to perish unnoticed, the dear old moth er will gather you in her arms and carry you home and tell yfru of all your virtues until you almost forget your soul is disfig ured by vices. Ixve her tenderly, and cheer the declining years with holy devo tion, for there is no one else as true and as good as mother, and you will realize this some day when you stand, as we have done, at her grave in Maplewood. The Sarcastic Woman. t Have you ever met the sarcastic young woman? No! You will find her every where that the ice grows luxuriantly. She is a cross between a tarter and a tarantula. She is a pest. The giddy girl, the lacka daisical miss are not ornaments whose loss would cause the world grief, but they can be tolerated. The sarcastic maiden should be suppressed by law. The school is growing.. Nobody likes the sarcastic girl; everybody fears, and many hate her. I Ier stock in trade may originally have been satire, but has long ago degenerated into impudence, and with the degeneration has slipped awajr her ability to see the differ ence between what was and what is be tween satire and impudence. She has been fostered in the family circle! and gen erally stays there. She began with mild criticisms of her friends, and ends lam pooning them. Now she has none, and caricatures her acquaintances. Her pa rents applauded her early efforts, and she retaliates by staying on their hands. 1 The family thinks her brilliant, young men avoid her, and what the world knows as a sour old maid is generally thus created. Remarkable Discovery. It may not be generally known that some very remarkable discoveries have been tnade in . tbis State which tend to prove a state of something like civilization ages ago. One of these discoveries is of recent date and is located at Chronly, on the line of the Charlotte and, Columbia railroad. It consists of the wails of a building one hundred by sixty feet, built of well burnt bricks As far back as 1780 a wall of rock was discovered in Rowan county and it has been traced for several miles. Since the latter war a wall has been discovered in Halifax county, and another was recently discovered in the vi cinity of Asheville. All of these walls are under ground. The foundation of Hope Mills factory in Cumberland county, near Fayetteville.is partly built of sandstone rock which once formed the "Indian Walls," a solid structure found in a creek in the vi cinity of the factory. The discovery at Chronlvwill be thoroughly investigated. GENTLY nOCKIXG. scream. On the porch a maid is sitting, Gently rocking: And he watched the rythmic flitting Of her stocking. s On the porch together sitting, Interlocking, Sweetest foolishness committing. Gently rocking. In the year the lady's knitting Him a stocking. And he's by the cradle sitting. Gently rocking. Tbt Seats at the Circus. The seats at the circus are getting nar rower every year," remarked a young lady the other evening- "When I was told where to sit down there was not a sign of a seat anywhare, only the laps, of two gen tleman." - "Did you 'sit down?" "Why, of course," and there was a lapse in the conversation. A MIXTURE. EDITOIXIAI ETCHINGS EUPHOKI OUSLT ELUCIDATED. If nmcrtm Xewsy JJTotes and Xfany Merry SXorsels Paraffraphieally Packed andPithlly Painted. Conscience is the pulse of reason. In search of change a begging tramp. We cannot 6ing the new song -with the old tongue. Make children love you if you wish them to obey vou. mm You will never have a friend if you must have one without failings. War is anticipated in the Spring be tween Russia and the allied powers. The infant, as well as the politician, is generally "in the hands of his friends." Life is not all sunshine for the tramp. There is a good deal of dish water thrown in. Another Indian outbreak is reported in Arizona; it is whooping cough this time. - A woman's scorn is not to be trifled with. Especially when vou sU'D on it in a W A crowd. The pen is mightier than the sword, but an argument from either is likely to be very pointed. Intense cold weather with heavy snows is reported from the West and Northwest. A reception will be given to the Presi dent and other distinguished Democrats in New York early in January. Col. F. D. Grant's friends are actively at work to Fecure his appointment as quar antine commissionc at New; York. Cornelius Vanderbilt ha $75,000,000 of assetts, and he wants to make it more; just as badly as he did when he had but $10, 000. "I thought you took an unusual -interest in my welfare," remarked an unsuccess ful lover. "No, indeed," she replied; "only farewell." A man will do almost anything to in crease the happiness of the woman he loves except to leave her when she wants to. get rid of him. Col. Higginson his written a paper on a new kind of bonds the "New England vagabonds." They are coupon bonds cut off from society. The critic who said "this rare little vol ume is well done" may have known what he was talking about; but we don't believe he knows -what he said. The messenger boy that went to Eu rope has returned. He could not walk, but had to come on the boat, which ex plains the quick time he made. Among the amusements that seem to be dying out are jim-jams and rollar skating. There is a distinction, but not much difference between the two. Duluth's new Congregational Church will have a stirway so citizen and strangers can climb up under the spire and see the city from the religious point of view. . Uncle Sam's navy is not the only one subjected to ridicule. The Pall Mall Gaxette calls John Bull's war ships "Our Crockery Bulwarks," they are so fragile. No, Ethel, when you hear of a young girl having made a good "match" it does not signify that she got something that will get up every morning and light, the fire. A dry goods clerk who has been receiv ing a weekly stipend of $4.00. recently eloped with the daughter of a minister. Her father will be obliged to minister to him A Kentucky negro made a rush in the night on what he thought was a calf. It turned out to be the back end of a mule, and the negro "will always remember that it was, In order to get ahead of all contempo raries we here bid Mr. Shakesphere a long farewell. Here after it will be "oh fay," as they say in Chicago, to write "as Bacon truly said," etc A little Burlington girl who dislikes arithmetic was asked to give the sum of nine cows and seven cows. "Fifteen," she r.rliVH When informed that this was A scientific exchange asks: "What is rotary motion?" Why, it is that expel rienced by a drunken man when lying flat on his back and clutching the sidewalk for fear he'd fall off. Girls who can play "Gospel Hymn" on the piano, with the windows open Sun day afternoon, are greatly wanted In the Western mining towns. At least they are not wanted here. 4 What did the Puritans come to this country for?" asked a Massachusetts teacher of his class. "To worship in their own way, and make other people do the same," was the reply. An egg shell is said to be 6trong enough to support a man's weight, but the man who puts half a dozen in his coat tail pocket and steps on a bananna peel cannot be made to believe it. Nervous lady passenger (in the train, after passing a temporary bridge) Thank goodness, we are now on terra firma! Facetious gentleman Yes, ma'am less terror and more firmer. An exchange says: "A potato ,that weighed eleven pounds was raised by a man in Lawrence county, Ark." The Arkansas men must be "powerful weak" if this is considered a remarkable feat of strength. The best explanation of the phrase "between the two horns of a dilemma" is a boy on the top of an orchard wall, with dog patiently waiting him on one side and the owner of the premises, with a cowhide, on the other. "Did you ever," said one preacher to another, "stand at the door after your ser mon and listen to what oeople said about it as they passed out?" The other replied: "I did once" a pause and a sigh "but I'll never do so again." Judge Martin, the reputed Texas cow boy, is in Congress and; some newspaper man has set the story afloat that he was so green he blew out the gas. Texas is laugh ing over the report, and Martin is fairly "sizzing," he is so hot. , ' ' "What did you marry my son for?" fiercely demanded an old gentleman of a clergyman who had just united his luna way scapegrace in the holy bonds. "Two dollars, sir," meekly replied the dominie, "to be charged to you." - The chief event of the Christmas tide was the strike of some 4,700 employes of the Reading railroad. Happily it is no settled, the railroad making few if any con cessions so far as appears. Still a settle ment has been reached, and all right-thinking people will rejoice in the fact. Mr. W. W. Corcoran, the aged mil lionair of Washington, celebrated his 89th birthday receritly. His mind is perfectly clear and he is in fact represented in good physical health though he is somewhat weak in his legs from the effects of the paralytic stroke-of last summer. He. has given away seven million of dollars. The funeral of the late Hon. Daniel Manning, ex-secretary of the treasury, took place Tuesday afternoon in Albany. President. Cleveland and all the members of the cabinet, except Secretaries Whitney and Endicott, attended it. The coffin was borne to the hearse by the foremen of the mechanical department of the Argus, Mr. Manning's paper. If taxation is not reduced the surplus for the next twelve months will amount to $140,000,000. There is no sort of legiti mate use for it. It robs arid bleeds the people to that extent. It takes from the currency of the country that great sum and locks it in the vaults of the Treasury. Is not that stupid? It is that and much worse. It is a "crime." An old man ramed Dan Stillwill, ot South Pittsburg, Tenn., froze to death Christmas night in a field near his home. He was returning from a business trip when darkness set in and a blinding snow storm followed, during which he became bewildered,. lost ais path and perished. It is the first case of freezing to deth that has been known in east Tennessee for many vears. The silly Republican slogan of "pro tection to American industry," has lost its efficacy with the tax-ridden masses, and they will not listen to it any longer. They will regard it in its true light a the deceit ful song of the siren and it will beguile them no longer. They will recognize it as the same old "word of promise" which the rong, she petulantly exclaimed: "It 1 Republican party has been holding to the 1 ! doesn't make any difference (get the milk." if we only 1 ear and breaking to the hope of the Amer- I ican toiler, for all these years. PRIZE RING. axxehicjlx xxrscxjs again tsi. UXIPIIA3CT. Jake Ullraln, the American list XXeeta Jens Smltn. the Chans ploa ef England. France, Dec. a ut The great battle has been fought Jake Kilrain and Jem Smith met yesterday in a twenty. four foot ring on a small island in the Seine, oppo site the historic forest of Vernon, and for over two hours struggled manfully for the fistic supremacy of the world. It was exactly 2 roo o'clock this afternoon when Jem Smith approached the square inclosure in which he was to battle with Jake Kilrain for the world's fistic cham pionship. The Englishman was attired in full figting rig, and a warm woolen coat was spread over his massive shoulders. There were fifty people gathered about the ring, and forty of them gave a genuine British cheer for England's mightiest man. Jem grinned cherrily and shied his castor, as became a Briton, into the ring. This evoked another cheer, and Jem smiled again. He was in the pink of contion and tipped the beam at 182 pounds. Almost instantly the, redoubtaolc Jake Kilrain followed. He, too, had on his fighting regalia and by his side trotted Charley Mitchell with an overcoat in hi hand. He tossed it about Jake's shoulders just before the stalwart American leaped over the ropes. As Kilrain entered the ring the small coterie of Americans pres ent gave a lusty cheer for the brave American lad who had journeyed three thousand miles to do battle with England's greatest gladiator. A dozen or more En glishmen 4what loved a" mill" followed suit. Kilrain bowed gracefully, and evi dentally appreciated the compliment. He was remarkably cool, and the air of quiet dignity with which he deported himself gave evidence of a calm, manly confidence, He evidently felt that he would win the battle. He was in fine fettle, and pulled down the scales at 196 pounds. Contrary to general expectation, Kilrain assumed tne part of aggressor from the start. He maintained this attitude through out, and had the Englishman beaten al most to a stand still. When Smith saw that Kilrain was his superior in brawn and science, and that it was only a question of time when victory should perch "upon the brave Yankey's banner, he pursued a sys tem of tactics common to the generality of English fighters, -he 'dropped every time Kilrain drove him over to his own - corner to avoid punishment. Upon all sides were the highest encomiums passed upon the American's splendid fighting abilities. The referee pronounced him the manliest fight er he ever saw;, and many fair minded En glishmen present personally, congratulated Kilrain upon the magnificent form he had displayed. These same Englishmen roundly hissed Smith when lie resorted to his dropping tactics to avoid punishment. Fate and an English referee, however, were against the American. He outfought the Briton at every point in 106 desperate rounds, displayed a generaUhip that laughed to scorn the attempts of his adver saryj to hold him, and even held his own with the Englishman in that branch of ath letic art in which he was supposed to excel all other pugilistsX-wrestling. As night came on the unfair referee de cided the fight a draw. Why He Wept. A San Antonia darkey was on a trial for stealing money f rom'a house on Soledad street. Julian Van Slyck, the attorney for the prisoner, in his address to the jury, said: "Gentleman, my client U a poor man. He was driven by hunger to take this small som of money. All that he wanted was sufficient money to buy bread , for it is in evidence that he did not take the pocket book containing $500 that was in the same bureau drawer. If he was a professional thief, he would have certainly taken the pocket-book." The eloquent attorney for the accused was interrupted by the convulsive sobs of his client. "Why do you weep?" asked Judge Xoonan, who was on the bench. Be lease I didn't see dat ar pocket-book in de bureau drawer," was the reply. Everybody laughed except Van Slyck, the attroner of the defence. ' 2 y