"Our Aim will be, the People's Right Maintain. iKw,eu uy jrovcer, am vnonoea by Gain. NO. 16 ..ts-t T7TT ' TA7TT QTvT -NT-T-imTT a 1-Z" . zzr Vui- in UAKULINA. WEDNESDAY. JULY 4. 1888. - - 1 . T I - - THE TO fSAv WOMEN, BEAHINGLT ttBllXlANT, BEWITCniXLY - BEAUTIFUL. , star that (iemmed the Brow of wisrht DIpiy rurer, xucner -l-hl, tnmn uavamcu Within those Eyes which. Paled the Bloom inff Jlionigm bhics. re are told that when Meranon, the worshipped son of Aurora, was killed by Achilles- for having killed Antilochus the son of Nestor, a grand and imposing and teautiful statue grew -up out of the very ground whereon he f til, and it is said that its germ found its vigorous growth and vitalizing powers in those refreshing dew mos which were said to be the tears that urora shed o'er the grave of her wor shipped Mem non. And it is further said that every morning precisely at sunrise this statue would respond to the inspira tion of some sweetly wooing agency, and under the touch of some unknown power, would send forth the sweelest and most thrilling utterances that were ever heard. So potent, so inspiring, so soothing, so thrilling and so enthralling w ere these en npturing sounds that even the wild beasts, hearing such strains of beauty, flocked to its intoxicating shrine, and under the magic spell of such sweetly flowing music they forgot their, passions and wild natures .and knelt in willing homage on the harmo nious banks of this rippling stream of song. And on Tuesday night, as we sat in Mamona Hall, and listened in spell bound rapture to that exquisite ry thm of melody that floated in such entrancing wavelets upon those angelic currents of song we fancied that even the strains of music which Memnon's statue did o'er the bosom of Morn thus pour, and make the Seasts their beastly tastes forgo, would have died away in plaintive insignificance were they but near the sweeter, purer nobler, grand er, sublimer flow which rolled in grand, majestic roar, and almost seemed like God's own waves of melody beating in sweetest ripples upon eternttjTeTeTBeW shore. Yes, indeed, they would have surely softened and subdued their own en trancing rivulets of melody to listen to the sublimer strains those angel voices mur mured, even as the little brooklets hush the songs of their own pure, glorious rip plings, as near the sea they creep, when Neptune's grand musician sweeps the oc taves of the deep. The music on Tuesday night indeed was grand, glorious, gorgeous, heavenly. We wish we had the language to depict in graphic terms the rich and sumptuous and felicitous season of enjoy ment, and describe that lullingr and trans porting ecstacy and delight that were born m each sparkling ripple that danced upon those murmuring waves of song. But we 't, for scenes and emotions like these wordless. The brilliant quiver that trembles in the flash of lightning, the va negated tintings that adorn the rose,the ex quisite colorings that make up the irides cent promise that God gave birth in the wedlock of the sunshine 'and the shower, and made it the roseate and gorgeous off s?nng of storm and cloud, cannot be de nbed. And neither can we describe the appearance of our beautiful maidens, for e never saw them more beautifully jessed, more exquisitely sweet, more ra UI beautiful. The whole seen blushed with the richest bloom of richest beauty, 0r each one indeed was a full blos $omed flower of sweetest witchery and en chantment. Yes, indeed, the ladies were ltchinSlv resplendent in their countless health of radiant charnls, and their witch- rL filled eyes looked as if thev were jd in the glimmering sheen of .Night's e'rSt Puient drapery of brilliancy, for ev- heart aimed glance flashed as brightly in thf"V had cauSht an were then nurs finS those indescribable sparks of brilliancy out from the clashing of falling star-Pa!-?? l,he-v 8 on their nightly errand to Te the sky with jewels of light. nseitmertainment opened with selec- mhp r lne "Little Tvcoon," and a of spirited airs were rendered with f?d will and effect. The.dexter pgja flexible vocalisms of the several feE?61"8 showed artistic culture in its eacj 0 state ot development,, and proved $te!at5ne lo be a radiant star in the c6n were v 2 nBm A'nd the chorusses tho HFy ' for lhe excellent voices of otib, ,ave.n tuned singrs blended in har med Unison and their mingled notes reathiraWa n one mellowing, peace river o?' care IuUing, rapture "freighted Mhich x0 that Srand ocean melody in rnusicai tl lU angel voiced s vm phonies imttiortaS lnunderings upon the shores of tiW',.,ThevocaI sol "When the csn was most sweetlr and beau- by Mrs. Ed Barnes. whr nas a voice of exquisite purity and tender r.ess, and whose every note seemed like the distanced mellowed echo of some ce lestial harmony. The vocal solo: "The re turn of Spring," by Miss Lizzie Barnes, was as redolent with the perfume of rap ture, enchantment, delidousness and de light as is, that vernal season of joyous beauty with the odors of its blooming flow ers. We were gloriously surprised and most, felicitously charmed with her adml- raDie and faultless and most exquisite ren dition. Her voice showed wonderful pow er, wonderful compass, wonderful elastici ty. Every transfer was skilfully made. and every note was as pure and as sweet and as exquisite as the radiant loveliness of her own bewitching face. Yes, indeed, her voice was as sweet as the blue bird's low note, in those morns when the cold of March is abating, and each note had the thrill that you catch from the throat of the bobolink joying in May and the mating. In the difficult solo of "Solo un Bacio," the superb and finely cultivated voice of Miss Mena Branch arose in full orbed splen dor, and flooded all hearts with the drip- dings of its sublimity. In deference to a hearty encore she gave a beautiful lit tie love ballad in which she most felici tously interpreted the delicious tenderness and thrilling endearment of those exquisite little experiences, which are but as pre cious little buds to the luscious and full blossomed flower of ecstatic emotions and which are but the rapture written prefaces to those blessed volumes of wedded bliss which make earth so sweet and beautiful. And she breathed out this exquisite per tume this odor of the heart when the spring of love is in its richest bloom and verdue with such bewitching expression and delicious piquancy that every heart was thrilled with the intoxication of rapture and high delight. In the vocal solo of "Ernani," Miss Lily Gay made a thrilling and dazzling flight into those empyrean heights where Pareppa and Nillson and Lucca and Malibran built their thrones of song for the delectation of thg'atTgmiarrd there,' w 1th a s n eetness and a purity that is indescribable, her bird like carohngs came from her music lined lips in waves of delicious rapture. And while she did, in her bolder and grander and sub limer sweeps, stir and quicken the pulses of admiration with her meteoric flights of sub limity, yet when she touched those divine notes angels tuned-she breathed out their celestial creations in tides as soft as the spray of star waves which fall upon mid night's shrouded shore, and her notes of melody baptized sorrow browed spirits in a stream as soothing as that which flows through the grottoes of sweet elvsium, and drowns all care in the murmur of its ripples. Her lute like voice doth sweeter grow, and purer streamlets from it flow; the tides which ebb through her pure lips, are sweet as odors Heaven sips ; each note did ripple sweet and pure.as flowers bathed in morning dew; all felt her spell, all felt her power, and dreamed of Heaven's sweetest bower. The concert was interspersed with some delightful recitations which proved fra grant isles of sparkling radiance in that beautifully throbbing ocean of entrancing harmony. Gertrude Blount, in her brieht. e w vivacious, sparkling, piquant and inimita ble way, pictured very graphically a bald headed man and, an inquisitive boy on the cars. Miss busie Simms told "Whatmv1 over said," and we never saw a prettier picture. Her recitation was perfect. Her gestures were poems of grace. Her utter ances were rhythms of melody, while the roseate blushes, which deep feeling had kissed upon her cheeks, w-ere as beauti fully becoming as the variegated tintings of the flowers she wore upon her breast. The recitation "Sister and I," by Miss Hat tie Kincaid was a magnificent triumph of dramatic power, and revealed the richest ustre of artistic excellence. It was very ender and very touching. Her voice was as clear and smooth and musical as the softly dying notes of a mellow and sweet toned bell, and it came on that deep tide of patnos which melted all hearts in its ten der current. More than once we felt a thrill deep in our bosom start, and this of tt-r 1 X U 1 . I A. A. A T-l I iiscii suuwcu i iiiii our preiiy miie menu was standing at the very fountain of the A MIXTURE. EDITORIAL ETCHINGS EUPIIOXI- OUSL.Y ELUCIDATED. .numerous Kewajr Notes and Many i9YT7 Morsels Parafc-raphlcalljr jraeuea and Pithilj Pointed. Noted down Eiderl To the point A wasp sting. Faithful to the end A dog tail. Egotism is only a weakness of the I's. Truthfulness is one . of the great vir tues. A moment of time is too precious to waste. Leprosy is spreading at a dreadful rate in Russia. Thirty cases have been official ly reported in Darpat alone. Baltimore has a nice scandal in mon- ey aristocracy. Mrs. Swan sues for divorce on serious grounds. ' The English government think thev have discovered a Fenian plot to assassi nate Irish Secretary Balfour. We pass our lives in regrettine the past, complaining of the present, and indul ging false hopes of the future. The Farmers Alliance, introduced into Mississippi in March, 1SS7, has now 1200 lodges and 40,000 memblers. Is not he imprudent who. seeing the tide making haste toward him apace, will I 11111 juost great words are accomplished sleeo till th" slowly. I JL . ! The success of Booth and Barrett in xnirr.een boston churches are without tragedy has led to talk of an actin o part- pastors. Simplicity and huury are equally en joyable. The boy playing marbles stoops to conquer. Rough on rats The kid-glove manu factures The best of prophets of the future is the past. The Alabama State Treasury contains $400,000. Never be contented with a bubble that will burst. Interior decorations Puddings, pies and things. nership between Jefferson and Florence. The next session of the Presbvterian General Assembly will be held "in the F ourth Avenue Church in New York in 1889. With two exceptions Tohn Ouincv Adams and Martin Van Buren no Presi dent ever nominated for'a second term has been defeated. , m Alabama boasts of nineteen cotton mills, represention'an investment of nearly $2,000,000, and an annual production of over $1,500,000. Secrets are but p jor property : If vou circulate them you lose them, and if you keep them, you will lose the interest on WAKE FOXIEST COLLEGE. And! Allen Parfei The largest cabel read in the world is vour investment at St. Louis. ' . Europe is conforted by the assurance A s.range disease has appeared among that there xvill he ... 1 xir..,,s. rr the Texas cattle. lie j . . . "vcu .emperor in September. Claims for sidewalk injuries in Detroit Thanks for that much. aggregate $100,000. everv nublic inters w 1l i - 1SV.W11 71 VtCULCUf and the qeality of all our citizen hefnre soon overtakes him. . the law. without I' O VI 1 has been steadfastly maintained. accumulated wisdom. No man's life iR free frr. and mortifications, not even the happiest. V b,,t ;veO' one may build up his own hanpi- earthquakes, ma'am." - -v 1 - I X E:Senator foe McDo5aldsaW I man rin r-irr,. f I In Balfimre it trX-A'ZSA.jt ll'lf'! ..j n.uwua. A big fire in Panama destroyed $300,- 000 worth of property. To young men : It is better to be fast asleep than fast awake. "Christian science" has driven a Cin cinnati young man crazy. In three months Germany was ruled by three different Emperors. -In Baltimore ft rsopsetuOT'' Vhou!fe2ne to'aduate at a a m ter ooxes on the street cars. This will bring a letter to the postoffice from any part of the city in half an hour. Ella Russell, the American singer now in St. Petersburg, Russia, was recent ly presented with a rose of diamonds dur ing a peiformance of "Traviata." ' Bobby Newcomb, the well known fa- once song and dance man, is dead. He The 40,000 Bohemians in Chicago are was one of the neatest anH mt ti ... . , I f,ia,ui preparing to become citizens. performers on the soedaltv sta A Cape Cod man, now a Bostonian, is In everv branch anH n,rf f a director in 57 national banks. the Government under nti, trol the rights and welfare of all the neo- 100,000 and is rapidly growing. pie have been guarded and defended. 1 Ex-President Hays is teaching one of Meet difficulties with unflinchingperse his sons the trade of carpentering. The pride of Kingman county, Kan., is a bull that weighs 4,250 pounds. Mackayi the California millionaire, has a dinner service that cost $195,000. One of the men-of-war at the Brook- yn Navy Yard is sold for $10 to a iunk- dealer. No man ever offended his own con science, but first or last is was revenged on him for it. verance, and they will disappear at last; though you should fall in the struggle, you will be honored; but shrink from the task, you will be despised. The French are acknowldged to have j me nnest guns and projectiles in Europe. Their Ferminy shell has been shot through an armor plate twenty inches thick, and come out with its steel point uninjured. A Republican Senate for partisan pur poses delays action upon the confirmation tt I j uow,t. x unci. 11 me i resident -Henry George a verj--able thinker had taTe appointed , Republican We notice a dispositon on the part of some of the newspapers In this State to critlrise the Board of Trustees of Wake Forest College for their so-called refusal to grant a diploma to a young lady who had completed the course of study at that insti tution. Believing that much of this arises from want of Information as to the facts In the case, we HI say a few words in reply. In the first place, there was no request made by the young lady, or any of her family, that she be allowed to graduate and take her diploma with the class. Thus it U an entirely mistaken idea that the diploma was refused; for how could it have been refused when no application for it had been made? Furthermore, degrees are conferred bv the Board of Trustee "only on recommen dation of the faculty." In this instance there Mas no such recommendation; not even a mention of the youns ladv as enr?. tied to certificates of proficiency in the va- f . - . nous scnoois in which she had studied How then could the diploma have been re fused? This college was founded for the educa- tion of young men and for them only. There are other i where ample provision has been made for" the mental training of women and where they could enjoy advantages fully as great' as those which they could obtain by attend ing the male college's. You answer the objection that the charter makes no men tion of the graduation of girls by saying that the laws of North Carolina are silent concpag giving license to women to prac tice Taw. Are the cases parallel? Does not the law affect all classes alike, male as well as female? If so, then it is but fair that women, since they are under the law, be admitted to a share in its practice. In this case it is different. Wake Forest does not in the least concern or exerciae centrol over the women pf the State and as its ob ject is to reach the young men onlv, we see no reason 'why any. lady should be al- 10 weajo .grad uate. f would have been i weeks. confirmed inside of two heart, and was pumping into the eyelids some of those crystal waters which bubble out of its hallowed Jeeps of feeling. No actress, who ever visited Wilson, has sur passed her in the power and compass of her dramatization, the graphicness and realism of her characterization, or the intensity and subtlely of her emotionalism. Her passion was as deep as the soundless depths of old ocean, and- her tremors of feeling were as the waves that furrow the bosom of the deep,, when the w inds bid old Neptune to murmur and to weep. Foraker, in a speech in the Chicago Convention, said, that there would be a gentleman in the White House next year This he intended as an insult to Mr. Cleve- and political writer, is out for Cleveland and Thurman. Ex-Governor William Tohnson. nf Kentucky, died at his home in Bardsfovn at the age of 71. The lone fisherman is angling in pret ty deep waters, but his smile is as c mpla- land, who, as everybody knows, is to Fora cu as ever oeiore. ker as "Hyperion to Satyr." Opinions alter, manners change, creeds Levi P- Morton, of New York, the re rise and fall , but the moral law is written publican nominee for Vice President, is at on taoiets ot eternity. me nead ot the banking concerns of Mor Mr. Villard, the famous American ton' Bllss & Co of New Yo-k. and Mor railroad financier, is orcranizinsr an exrjedi- ton' ost & - of London. He was min- tion to the South Pole. : That was sound advice given bv a sage to a voung writer. Think much, write little, publish less. Thus far in 18SS, 30,000 Italian immi grants have reached our shores. German v alone has exceeded this. Nine thousand pictures have been sent to the Roval Academy for exhibition, in eluding 3,000 landscapes. Fabius W. Rix, a crippled war vetei an of Marblehead, Mass., has inherited a millicn from a rich uncle. The New York World's editor and proprietor, Mr. Joseph Pulitzer, has entire ly lost the sight of one eye. ister to France under the administration of Prensident Arthur. The surplus in the Treasury is increas ing at the rate of $100,000,000 a year. These figures repiesent the great sum of money that is taken away yearly from the people for which there is no need. It is unconstitutional and unwise to do this. Freemen, what will you do about It? The triumph of Wise in the Monopol ists Convention at Chicago is temporaiy in its charter. It does not guarantee a tri unph of his faction in Virginia. He whipped out the little traitor at Chicago. but being tarred with the same nasty sticl ..11 couege in wnich she was not a student? This young lady was not and has never been a student of Wake Forest. She was neither subject to the performance of col lege duties, nor was she amenable to col lege discipline. Her name was not on the roll: it does not appear in the catalogue. She was allowed to recite with the clases under the various professors by the courte sy of the Board and out of respect to her father who was connected with the college. She herself fullv understood her position and never expected a degree. Those who have taken up the cudgel in her defense seem to put the Irishman's Interpretation on that old saying, "One good turn de serves an other," and 1 think that since the Board of Trustees, as a mark of special fa vor, allowed her to persue her studies un der the supervision of the faculty, they are now under obligations to go still farther and grant her a diploma. For the young iaoy herself, for the talents and energy which she has manifested, we have the highest respect and admiration, and yet we see no reason on that account for breaking the rules and regulations enacted for the government of the college and for making an exception in her case, especially when she is not even a student. Gallantry is a quality always to be admired in the male sex but we fear that some of our widower and bachelor editors have allowed their es teem and love for the ladies to obscure their ideas of what is just and what is ex pedient. With regard to the proffessor who Iiad spent his life and broken his health In the service of the college, Prof. Simmons, there was no action taken in the matter of continuing his salary, but it was deferred until the next meeting of the Board on the 19th of July; so that remarks upon this af fair are to say' the least premature. T. M. H. Davidson College conferred the decree bf D. D. UPOn Rev. Samuel M Cm!th of Washington, N. C. He is a younz man of excellent education and superior parts. Col. J. W. Alspaugh, President of the Board of Trustee, of Trinity College, say the prospect of endowment is very encour aging. He says there are four new Professors. A letter has been received fiom Minu ter Jarvis and himself continues so bad that thev are cnmnelbr1 - t t :i i , , .... . I ' r..- w .wii ujiuiiaiiu ne nas yet to. develop his ability to clean I mav be expected tn - 1 1 - nuiui vujwunj Out lne Mahnnp rmiA-A if VmA --w Ctfc 1IV111V. this summer.