J, r Wil "Our Aim will be, the People' Right Maintain VOL- 12. WILSON NORTH CAROLINA. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1893. NO. 21 M son MERRY MORSELS. aHD radiant reflections by henrt Blount. punctuated with Pungent Points and Spiced with Sweetest Sentiment When the heart is full the sbul speaks No man can die wrong who We are never so strong as w thankful. tives right. ien we are Life without sorne shadows Would be a painful glare. Belief is the rudder by which the ship of our life is directed. Repentance never comes tod late, if it comes from the heart. Everything requires rest. Even storms must have their wreck-creation. It is said that cranberries will cure dys pepsia. That's sour opinion tco. The boy who sprained his a nkle had a lame excuse for not attending i school. Flies want to make spectacles of them selves when they light on a man's nose. Yesterday is a scholar in and today should profit by its Did any one ever see flour wild oats which people sow in days? experience, teachings. made from their young This is an exacting world for when we 4o write we even then rr.ust for it. do penance Tea and coffee and sugar and molasses and such things are luxuries of the grocer kind. The fellow who is continual!) informing you of the direction of the wind is a vane man. Now Eddie wants to know to what geo logical formation does rock the cradle be long. A boy with his mustache does not feel down in the mouth. His down is not long enough. A successful architect may not be an honorable man, but he certair ly has good designs. It is the hammer of custom which welds those links in the chain of habit that are so hard to break. Love is that golden latch key which tiangs on the outside, and lets in happiness to every heart. Don't be depressed by misfortunes. Tis the blackest storm which gives the loveliest rainbow Evil gossip is the slimy and poisonous channel through which flow! the foulest and blackest water of meanness and de pravity. The unknown is an ocean, and con science is the compass of the uuknown; bought, meditation and prayer are the $reat mysterious pointings of the needle. In this wintry life the presence of those we love is like a gleam of sunshine through the cloud, lighting up the shadows and giving warmth and lustre and loveliness to all beneath the ray. Joy is the happiness of lov;. It is love exulting. It is love aware of its own fell c"ty, and resting in its riches no fear of exhausting. It is view of the treasures, and which it has love taking a surrendering rtself to it without foreboding!. The earth is every day overspread with the veil of night, foi the same reason that the cages of birds are darkened, so that we mav the more rapidly see ahd apprehend the higher and purer and sweeter harmo ni of thought nd reflection amid the hsh and stillness of darkness. Though our world has been defaced by the blighting influence of sir , there is still m"ch left that is beautiful Wo It In the first golden fias.h of mdrning, in the ured strength of merldiah dav subdued glow of evwil nor. ng down the western way kde the rich nanner. of decending day, aiid night with vwu uiaaem, lights her "er, and trails her robe of through the skv. fetarrv chand- blazlng jewels Only An .Empty aieeve. On one occasion a fond and idolatrous mother, with her only child, was on board of a fine steamer that was furrowing with its flying keel the briny bosom of the foaming deep. The day was bright, and looked like it was basking in Heaven's own glad, sweet smile of loving approba tion. The air was soft and balmy and bracing? The passengers were bright and merry and joyous. The mother worship ped boy attracted the attention of all as he ran to and fro upon the deck, for he was as f ulj of glee and brightness as the decend ing sunbeams which fell in sllverest light upon the sparkling waters, and mingled their radiance with the glistening foam of the gently throbbing bosom of the deep. In a moment when no one dreamed of coming calamity, a cloud of dark dismay shot across the recently radiant scene, art agonizing cry of horror rent the air, a mother's heart went out in a scream of wildest anguish, for that little boy had fallen overboard and had sunk out of sight forever. The mother caught at her darling boy-as he went over the railing, but she only grasp the sleeve, which was torn from the coat by the sudden plunge, as the boy went down into a watery grave, lost to her forever, while she only held in her trembling and phrensied grasp the empty sleeve. With a heart torn and shat tered and writhing in bitterest torture that agonizing mother walked for hours to and fro in wildest grief, and made all heatts tremble and quiver with the wailings of despair. Finally her reasons was de throned, the mind was lost in chaos, and the, mother with eyes flashing with the wild fierce, appalling gleam of the maniac's delirium, still clutched and hugged to her bosom In wildest delight the empty sleeve, still believing that she held the worshipped idol which God had taken from her idola trous embrace. Reader, listen : that moth er's worship and idolatry and aspiration and aim and soul desire and finally over whelming agony and torturing despair sug" gest to us what we only too often find in other relations and experiences of human life. How many love this world, and in their Idolatrous passion grasp its garments, and hold fast with all the energy of their natures, and amid all perils, until their eyes are opened at last, to find that their idol has passed fiom their reach, leaving only the empty sleeve to remind them of their vain struggle, and to stir their souls with unavailing agony. The grasping af ter wealth, after honor, after a name, after renown, after vain pleasure, is only grasp ing upon the belt of what proves finally to be an empty sleeve. How often the last hours of human life are filled with experi ences like those of the agonized mother. La bor lost, aims deceived, hopes disappointed the future darkened, the heart wrung with anguish. On the shore of the world are an unrecorded number of empty sleeves, left to testify of too short reach of hands and a false confidence of a hold upon merely the belt of ths garments of objects. The mother's was not upon her boy, but merely upon his garment. Ours is too seldom on realities, and to often upon re semblances and outward things. In sober trnth, the world and all it contains will soon be washed from our grasp by the billows of time, leaving us utterly alone and miserable, if we have no hold upon things beyond. In the final wreck of all things here below, and it is sure to come to us all, what shall we have? We can carry nothing of this world in our hands Shall we then have a grasp upon what is living and enduring? Shall we have the pledge and joy and life forever in our hands, or shall we have only an empty sleeve. High Praise. We feel good. Life is not in vain. The earth seems brighter, the flowers emit a sweeter fragrance, the birds sing more beautifully, for we have received praise far beyond our deserts, and it comes from the polished pen of Sir. Hubert, for Col. John D. Cameron, the veteran and brilliant and able and scholarly and versa tile journalist is kind and generous enough to sav : (I am much gratified at the handsome tributes paid your speeches this summer. It is something to expand State pride to find a North Carolinian who Is at once the orator, the poet, the dramatist and the hu morist a combination of excellences which you possess and which is r s rare as it is brilliant." Saturday Night. Saturday night is the great mnemonic summing up. On Saturday night the present resigns In favor of the past. On Saturday night memory turns the light on her darksome gallery, and snatches the veil from ten thousand pictures. It is on Saturday night mostly that we sigh for the touch of the vanished hand, and the sourd of the voice that's still. And on Saturday night with those who have wandered away from the good and the true, the things that they thought were dead things, become alive with a terrible might. For on Satur day night we sum up the good and the evil alike. Saturday night is symbolic of death ; and some how it seems pitched over against the borders of eternity. We can stand in the door of Saturday night and conceive snatches of music, such as ear hath not heard ; and we can almost get a glimpse of the gilt spires "on the other side of Jordan." On Saturday night the murderer remembers his victim, the wid ow her husband, the maid her lover, and the heart its benefactor. On Saturday night the white-haired patriarch realizes that he Is fast hastening toward the valley of shadows, and memories of the lullabies his mother sang, come fluttering back to his cracked and juceless heart, like wound ed birdlings to a long forsaken nest. God bless Saturday night. It is only the black ness that borders the light. By and by when the shadows have a little longer grown, the Saturday night will settle on us all, with its gloaming and its deliver ance. Then we'll go to sleep here and wake up there , then we'll get sick in this world and wait to get well in the next. For there are bluer skies and brighter waters on ahead, even if we do have to walk through the dust and corruption and worms to get there. Some evening when the Arch-angel who upholsters the Heavens, comes at eventide to hang red curtains of fire around the windows of the setting sun, he will let down the golden ot the sunset, and usher us out of the Saturday night of this world into the Sabbath such as we never saw be fore. Then we shall see the King in His beauty, and on our vision will burst on the light that never was on the sea or shore the light of perfect day. There the Sab bath morning has neither moon nor night. It is the only Sabbath, and only the holy inhabit It. There the sun never sets, and the flowers never fade; every day is a poem , every sunset a picture, and the fu ture beckons and brightens at every turn of the path. There the soul will sit witnln walls of sardonyx and chrysopasus and sapphire; and about it will be a cataract of colors, a sea of glass, and a city like the sun. ,lAnd there shall be no night there.' His Experience. George Stallings came up yesterday morning with that sheepish, guilty expres sion upon his usually sweetly blushing face that unmistakably indicates the perpe tration of a most awful, naughty thing,and we knew something ailed him. At last he began to snicker and blush,and we knew it was coming. It seems that he must have had a most skerumptious time, judging from the following rhapsodic flash of the divine afflatus': I put my arms around her waist It felt as good as cake, Oh dear says she what liberties You printing boys do take. And then upon her blushing cheeks I printed a caress, Oh dear, says she, I kinder like, The freedom of the press. And with that hint, "to press" I went With all my might and main, And when I thought I'd broke her ribs. She said, "just try again." I caught her then and made a squeeze, As strong as Vulcan's stroke, When all at once I gave a sneeze And my onlv "gallows'' broke. Too Fresh. "Where are you going my pretty maid?" To salt the cattle, sir," she said. "May I go with you, my pretty maid?" "You might absorb i sir," she said! For Boys. The Democrat says: Aim at perfec tion in everything; they, who aim at it and persevere, will come much nearer It than those whose laziness and dependence make them give it up as unattainable. There are no rivals so formidable as those earnest determined minds that reckon the value of every hour, and that achieve em mlnence by persistent application. Do the best you can whatever you undertake, if you are only a street sweeper, sweep your ''level best.' He who does best, however little, is always to be distinguished from him who does nothing. Persevering mediocrity Is much more respectable, and unspeakable more useful than talented in constancy. Activity is the law of life. Patience is power in man. Faith in our own ability is half of every battle. ''A living dog is better than a dead lion." Character is a man's real worth, reputa tion is his market price. A good charac ter, good habits and iron Industry are im pregnable to the assaults of all the ill luck that fools dream of. Genius, after all, Is only the power of making an effort. 'Ge- nlus, unexerted, is no more genius than a bushel of acorns is a forest oak." Do not croak against genius, or want or opportu nity. If your opportunities are not good enough better them. It is cowardice to grumble at circumstances; the persevering men rises above them. Opposition gives him better power of resistance. Kites rise above the wind: No man ever worked his voyage in a calm. A head wind is bet ter than no wind at all. No man ever achieved renown who was too lazy to ex ert himself. It is more noble to make your self great than to be born great. There Is no genius in life like the genius in energy and activity. We cannot go to sleep beg gars and wake up millionaires; we cannot go to bed dunces and wake up Solomons. We mast work and wait. We must win if we want to wear. Every detection of what is false directs us toward what is true; every failure is hut a step toward suc cess; we should profit by the follies of yes terday. The young man who distances his competitors is he who masters his busi ness, who preserves integrity, who pays his debts, who lives within his income and who gains friends by deserving them. 'Stick to your aim; the mongrel's hold will slip, But only crowbar's loose the bulldog's lip; Small as he looks, the jaw that never yields Drags down the bellowing monarch of the fields." The Bachelor. We NV not a bachelor; He leads an MT life, Yet he deserves no PT for He ought to CK a wife. If he is YZ he will not wait, Until he's in UK But now SA to find a mate, Who'd come in Love's RA. He CZ he is foolish too For in the ND's dead, Without one sweet RT can woo. And then so EZ wed. No dainties nice to ET gets, Nor NE soft caress: In KC's sick, no angel pets Him LA distress. It's RD finds to cook his steaks And says AG's no doubt. And eat the KK a baker makes To EK a supper out. He has to wash and IN, too, And mend his CD clothes; Ilis IC lodgings make him blue, When there at EV goes. Of course in IC slumbers well, In DD finds delight To hear no cherub AB yell, With NRG all night. . But in old age will be sad, His heart will AK lone, No fam LE will call him "dad," And E will die unknown. All Play, No Play. I like to look upon a scene Where music soothes and charms; It seems to drive dull care awiy, And all my trouble calms. But there are times when I would turn Mr face the other way, And that is when the organ man Take 'round his hat for pay. True Religion. It is the hidden treasure of. religion that enriches the family circle with all the lovely virtues of moral beauty and purity. It is this that makes home a paradise of domestic bliss, over-arches It with the be nignant smiles of Heaven, and waters It with the crystal streams of tender sympa thy, making It redolent with the blooming fragrance of mutual love. It reflects Its high mellow radiance on culture and In telligence, and impresses every heart that comes within Its sacred precinct. And the Gospel Is the treasure of earth, ft en riches Its wild deserts, a the river Nile does the barren plains of Egypt, causing Its stertlle wilderness to blossom as a rose." Whit would this earth be without it? A barren, Icy winter, without the blushing of Spring without the green glory and splendor of 'Summerwithout the yellow fruit and rich abundance of Autumn. It would be a world without a sun to throw the bright rays of day over the sea and land a garden without its floral beauty a home bereft of .the smil ing divinity of the parental lore and care. But the chief glory of this treasure Is the power to enrich the endless ages of eterni ty with pure and substantial fidelity. Drop ped into the endless stream of Immortality it makes its water clear, sparkling with joy, and reflecting the bright glories of Heaven torever from Its tranquil- and storm less bosom. Brightness Beyond. Though the clouds hang Hark above us, and our path is lost in night, Over there, beyond the darkness, stUl the sun is shining bright, As in distant hills the rainbow falls from out the flying storm, So beyond, o'er bright, green pastures, Hope's new glow is beaming warm. , There are ne'er a cloud but drifted! ne'er a sun but shone again, Though Its beams fell not In places shad owed by the olden pain . 1 Still somewhere our fett shall falter fal ter in the face of light, And the vUtas of the future stretch, illu mined out of sight! It is always bright dear comrades, on the other side the cloud. All beyond is pure and golden, though we cannot pierce the shroud. Soon sweet joy shall turn the fabric;, and the soul shall wear, at last Royal, glistening robes of gladness, for the sackcloth of the past. ' Lovely Nights. We have never seen lovelier nights than those of the past week. Air mild and bal my as ever sighed o'er ArabyJ the blest Skies unclouded as those whose blue arch, bends in crystal purity above the eocbanted lake of Como or the gleaming Neapolitan waves. And moonlight bathing hlU'val lev, rock, rivulet and cascade, city and wild wood, in a flood of radiance rich and silvery as ever illumined the romance-wreathed courts and towers of the Alharabra, or sin less bowers of primeval paradise. And yet in the face of this glorious light and beauty, people will still court the shadows of earth and wed their miserable gloom, not once lifting their heat U and heads up to that ever gushing fountain of life from which comes that pure and chastened spray of mellow light which ever follows the noiseless current of the downward flowing moonbeams. God's Good Gifts. God has given us so much to make life hippy, so much to make earth beautiful o much to evoke our praise and. adoration; and yet many walk through earth with a growl and a snarl upon their tongues and lips, for their vision Is so near sighted and contracted they see no beauty and no glory 4 and no splendor in the blooming flowers and sighing brooks and golden sunsets, and all the perfume of the flowers and the wordless songs of babbling streams and lulling, muilc of sweet toned birds are lost to their dull and cold and dumb and unap preciative senses. Like Breeds Like. Jimpon says he loves the sough of the forest trees." -Well Jlmson is something of a hog himself." CSr ft 7 (: .