Newspapers / Spirit of the South … / Sept. 3, 1892, edition 1 / Page 1
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flu ! I ill II! i 1 L.1 til r f V T2.00 phi tmufi-m tjotitiiytron: Free! Independent! FonrlcNH: "TIIREEL'O.lTilS, 60 " CEBTS-CASH 13 ADVAKSE VOL. XX. NO. 34. ROCKINGHAM, N. C, SATURDAY. SEPT. 3. JS92. WHOLE NUMBER 10 H Reports from savings bank" Ui New England and the Middle State sho:v aa increase in deposits, without the corre j pooling demand for fundi. The Farmera Review says that tha X'aited States produce 300,000,001 pound? of wool per annu n sad ua twcs chat amount. Aa Atobison (Kan.) bride is not only supporting her husband, but is paying something every : month on his first wifejs funeral expenses. , The aim of the University Settlement Society of New York is to aid the citl. jeai of a neighborhood, 11 without la. fringing on their self respect' and no patronizing airs are assumed. The New York "World cites as an in stance of the vastneia , of the insurance business- that the premiums paid in Louisville, Ky., alone this year amounted to $1,000,000. ' Trance points with pride to its Tunis ian colony, where there are now 32,000 French citizens and persons claiming French protection. Great results are ex pected from the opening of; the harbor of Tunis next year and of Bizerta the year following. " There are at present In the Gobelin's manufacture two large State carpets valued at $50,000 and $40,000 respec tively at least. They were made during the Empire, ort being ordered by tho Italian Gjvernment and the other being Intended for the palace of Fountaiue lleau. , Housekeepers know 'boneless cod da," and now a member of the United States Fish Commission announces that the boneless shad is in process of evolu tion and well advanced toward comple tion, lie does not lose his bones in the same way as the cod, to wit, after death, but by careful breeding and crossing. The Secretary of the Treasury his re quested tho Secretary of State to in struct the United State coaiular o.Usjrs everywhere to refuse to certify invoices of goods on and after September 1st ua leas the merchandise is invoice 1 after tha metric system. This action is takea of information received from the consuls at Paris and Lyons, who say that th aune" system of measurement now it use in France on invoices of goods ia tended for the United St its, facilitates frauds on the Custom House, and thai the metric system would greatly simplf j commercial transactions and facilitate a Oomparison-of invoices and prices. Says a well Known architect in tht rhilajelphiaJPress: rhe days of tow ering steeples on churches and public buildings will soon be droppeJ, and well they should be. For years a tall steeolo on a church was only a mark of compe tition to enable the next congregation if possible to erect their steer.le a peg or two-higher. They are very crpermvo things at best, and in a fevvye?rs become very dangerous and are always target for the highest winds and the lightning stroke. Many serious accidents have oc curreI In t'aeir repairing, and a first class sky high ornamented steeple costs oftea as much as one-third o! the whole build ing. How they originate 1. is a matter of some doubt, but the general belief .is that in the curliest days both in this country and'iu foreign lands, the church steeple was the lookout tower to watch tin; enemies of the tU.Ts f,r miles A man up from Venezuela. wbre Uey have been cutting one another's throats in a revolutionary matinee, says of that unhappy country's warriors: FaUtatf's ragged regimiat wasn't in It with the soldiers down there. They are the hungriest looking creatures you evoo saw. I've given pennies to them on the street. They wear linen breeches and aa undershirt, and when they come into toTn- they wrap their blankets around them to cover their nakedness. Taoy carry old flint-lock muskets. There are a few Remingtons and Winchesters, Vut mighty few. They have machetes. A machete is a sort of big butcherknife without a point. It is about three laches wide and thirty inches long, and pretty heavy. They cut wood and kill snakes and enemies with machetes. Some of them have shoes, but the most of them wear a leather sole with a strap acrois the heel and- toe. The bare heel aad toes stick out," TWO CONGRESSES UU BITTXS CONTRAST BETWEEN THE i nrTr-riR9T and rimr-sEoysD cox- GBE'SES INSTITUTED BT EX SPEAK ER I EED. ' t " Ex-Spakcr Thomas B. Reed makes a ecathmg irraignment of the present Dem ocratic Congress, in his article on "Two Congress Contrasted," in the North American Review. He says: f Wheiiever an army is like the famous army of : Cerxes, essentially barbaric, it matters rot how far the ranks stretch across the field of vision, or how far off on the horizon's edge they pass glitter ing out o r sight. They are useless alike or conquest or for slaughter. The num bers onlj emphasize the failure. They hasten its downfall, and serve only to astonish' hildren. in story books that so many co ild be conquered by so few. Wberevei j discipline or unity of purpose is lacking j numbers may be one of the elements jf disaster. No army can fight the enemy if it must it the Fame time fight itself. 'Whei the House of Representatives of the Fi ty-second Congress met, it met as a mot; and has kept up that inter esting form of organization ever since. Of !cours I the Republican leaders could have driren the enemy into compact shape; co re red them with reproaches, forced them to train, and otherwise have made an army of them. Then there would have been 'much glory won by the said leaders aciong the unthinking, but the exhibitior would have been lost to the world of Democracy, as it really is a hopeless Assortment of discordant differ ences, as incapable of positive action as it is capa le of infinite clamor." He spec ks of the cause for surprise at the electron of Mr. Crisp lor Speaker in stead of jMr. Mills, "then supposed to be the emjodiment of Democracy," but "the det rmination of the leaders that the! paity should enter the next contest remember id by principles pushed Mr. Mills to tlie wall." Of the continuance of thit "policy of noncoramittalism" by the! appointment of Mr. Springer as Chairman of the Ways and Means Com mittee, he says: While Mr. Springer has at all times formad acd expressed a great variety of opinions m a great variety of subjects, he has never been, by his friends or his enemies, regarded as in the least degree History has justified tae con fidence which the Democracy have in Mr.' Springer. He" has been a Democrat. The party! can contemplate his work of this session with the cslm certaintv that there is no intellect so suotie. no mina . . . mm so broad, no sympathy so delicate as to. detect therein the slightest trace of a principle of economic science or a system of revenue, and the Democracy certainly do enter It the next campaign unembar rassed byn their immediate past, and with greati power of being natural; that is, of bein all things to all men." The his ory ot this Congress, he thinks, will nresent all the dead level of a Dutch landscape.! a I , "The oirv picturesque object which will break the sky line will be Mr. Hol- mad draped as a statue of Economy, standing d n the railroad-crowned summit of the Law renceburg embankment trying h a spy-glass to find any trace i f in vain wi of tht i tended to and the view. s ver tne emoanKmeni was in- bontine. Indiana, however, appropriation will be in full . " Vhen the House met great Hopes were enteiiaineu mat smii. v.uuv.u; would reijrn. The man whose reputa- tion as the hignest was p.uceu iw head of tbe Committee on Appropria tions, and the great duty of reducing to an honest level ail tne expemmures oi the Government were entered upon. Mr. the Gove Holmau, the great high priest of the new ' dispensation, disappeared irom mortal vie k for many days, ana nnauy reappeared with a calm, 6tately, and self-denyiig resolution proclaiming the principles they Lad were, for of honesty, just as luougu been newly discovered, and he first time in the history of to be put into practice. It the world, was a sole mn moment. xjTcijtyvj that the high-water mark of human vir- leen reached, and, unuer iuo i . - J - awe-inspirW impressions ot tnai uaj, they were treated as scoffers who sug gested that after high water came the ebb. I bate to tell the sequel; but, alas, the' scoffers were right. Never since that hour have the Democracy looked so CTand, g omy, and peculiar as on that Pentecost d day when the II ol man proc lamation i economic virtue was ad mi a- i.m. and thev resolved how ntherl had been, and how good they themselvek would be. It is sad to r .k U rid that now, after the re J!v,- f"irVifHl- we find that suits cava i Lite- the squandering Republicans approprw .. Ifii lr,;ilions at the hrst session of the Bilion Congress while the economic Democrats have apprur.n over 500 millions at the first session of a Congress that certainly cannot be called a Sicke' Congress. Would it be in the uatur s of insult to the fallen to pro pose to tl e Honorable Sir. Holtnw, of Indiana, i sum in the rule of three! If the exper diture of 463 millions made us .iwl csttv-first Conirress rascaU, what pretise epithet woui? ao jun, .t--r-I -r annroDnatei 503 mii- those who rcally begins to look as if this lions! I country fas too big me hall bushe'.s. to oe mesiuica tu After review ia t.ie condition the Filtv-firt C agres. tic ac- fronting cumulat; U .t .v, ...-,!- .if six veAM that PU i tjrecedinlr Democrat tic Congresses had not aone, and the necessity that it houI3 be done, 3Ir. Reed remarks, with par donable exultation, that the Hook, "amid Shouts and outcries which already teem strange and incomprehensible, broke down the barrier of custom and re-established the right of the majority to rule. This was it greatest achieve ment, for which it will hava a name in history. "Having thus assumed the reins of power, the majority became responsible for what was done. They became re sconsible for the act of 1B2Q raiin the purchase of silver. Whether that act, isolated from all the circumstance of 1890, was absolutely wise, is mors than I know. That it then and there saved this country from the free coinage for which every Democratic leader wai then clamoring, and on which they are dow so silent, I do know. If time shall show that it oaght to be repealed, that will in no wise militate against the wis dom of passing it in 1S90. They be came responsible for the refunding of the direct tax, a just measure, which, among other things, saved from bank ruptcy the State of Kentucky, most, if not all, of whose representatives voted against it. "They became responsible for that latest revision of the tariff, which is just now rising so high above the slander which two years ago poured upon it as if the foundation of the great deep had broken up. ; Free sugar, larger exports and larger imports are fully justifying the bill, and increased manufacturing results will soon add their quoto to the returning prosperity of the country. "They became responsible also for the meat and cattle inspection, which took away from foreign Nations their last ex cuse for refusing to receive our food products, and enabled our able Secretary of Agriculture and our foreign minister to restore to us in some measure the mar kets ot the world for such products. "They became responsible for t!ie destruction of the Louisiana Lottery. They redeemed the honor of the United States by making provision to pay it honest debts. They opened up to actual settlement many million acres of pro ductive lands, and gave a suitable form of Government to vast areas of the terri tory of the United States. "They became responsible for pension laws which the Democratic House has not dared to assail, and which, however much they may be covertly complained of, were but the assurance of the Nation that the soldiers of the war and their de pendents might be forever sure that the bountv of the Nation, which it was w honorable for them to receive, ehould stand between them and that taint or dishonor which, whether justly or un justly, has always attached itself to local and parochial charity. "But it is not necessary to again enumerate the acts passed by the Fifty first Cougress. The catalogue already givtn of duties pressing upon the Con "ress at its commencement is also a cata logue of duties done. The House of Representatives of the Fifty-first Con gress met every responsibility without exception, and gave the judgment of the representatives of the people upon all the ouestions which the peoplo put before them." 1 ' JUMPING FOR LIFE. The Bier Hotel at White Sulpaur Spring Destroyed AsnEVii.i.E, N. C. The Belmont Hotel, at White Sulphur Spring, five miles from the city, was destroyed at mid night bv a fire which broke out in the launlrv and spread with great rapidity. There were nearly 200 guest in the house at the time, many of them jumped from the windows. Mi. Dr. Von Huck. nf Abbeville, was badlv iniured. and died Thursday morning. Charles Green, of New Orleans, bad a leg dislocated, Cierk Henderson also had a le dislocat- ed, and a colored nurse a leg broken. A few others were slightly bruised, but none seriously hurt. All the guests lost their bitgirsge and some of them other person al belongings. A good many diamonds and a nood deal of money were lost in the fire, numbers of those in the building pr nmnff onlv in their niebt clothes. I n puest inide'theirway, asbesttney could. to Asheville, where they, were made com fortable. Th hntpl nronertv was owned oy a cornoration and leased to Dr. Von. Ruck. The buildine was erected at a cost of $65,000 and there was insurance of $22,- 500 on it. To Invite Senator Hill to Topeka. V TFrom the Kansas City Times. Topeka. Kan. The Kansas Democrat ic Flambeau Club id Topeka at a nuet ing voted to invite Senator David B. Hill ofNew York to visit Topek this fall and b their gnest For thi purie the following committer on iovitatioa wis appointed with orders to repor: at the next regular meeting: Judge John Mar id. Mayor It L Cofran. C. K. Hol- lid.iv, Jr.. Eueuc Hagan. Kugene Wolfe, S B- Is.-nhart. the Hoi M 1 leery, Ran kin Mason, John 3!;lehm, and A. J. Arnold. ! m jx ndiana Scamp in South Carolina. Rockville. Im Js H. 3Iorrow, a nell-known horse jo-: key of Washington, a as arrested and lodzcd'in jil here rim-red with producing itbortiou UMO I VM man at Columbia. S. C some Mntl.s azo od from l.ich it i rep:trd he died. A letter ws receive 1 by the au thorities here some ek to keep a lookout for him. a he hsd been tud:c:ed f.ir the offence at Columbia. The South Carolioa authorities by Ulegraph. he been notiStrd THREE STATES BRIEFS. Telegraphic DlspaUhes From Many PoinU of Interest. The Fields of Virgin a, Ncrth and South Carolina Carefully Q leaned For News. VTKOINIA. There are about 1,000 miners ut on a strike at Pocahontas at present. The national archery tournament tva at Old Point Comfort Thursday, an nearly all the club in the United State hate representative present. Col. John M. Brockenbrough died at bis residence in Richmond. He ws 02 years of age and a native of Kichmond county. He commanded the 40th Vir ginia regiment in the war up to oettvs burg. 31 rs Ye, wife of the Corean secretary. has not been well for ome months j ast. and will leave Washington September 5th for a visit to her home in Core, to lnca country she will be accompanied by Miss Davis, of Abingdon, a., who will go as missionary. I hey will sail Beptcmlxi 17th from San Fiaocisco. A fa'al and singular accident occurred on board the train alter it left Quantica for Frederi ksburg Saturday evening, by which a colored woinau had hr Deck broken She was on her way f r m Wash ington to her home, near Brooke station. After the train left Ouantico the nt- tempted to pass through the ar, when by a sudden lurch of the train she w as thrown viol ntly against the pack oi one the stats and her neck broken. NOBTH CAEOLINAi The residence of Sheriff R. D. Ros at Asheboro was burned Tuesday. The Rowan County Fair will be hel i in Salisbury October 4-7. Guy Maxwell, aged 23, was drowned in Lake Forty th at Charlotte, Fridy A yourg ladv. Miss Kate Pat'er, w killed by lightning at Fanner's Turnout, Brunswick county. The aggregate valuation of the prop crty in Forsyth county, as shown by tht taxlisters, is $, 09,318. I he propcrn held by the white citizens is rated t $7,456,593, nd the colored people at $122,723. Dr. Kemp P. Battle, of the State Tn iversity, has accepted an invitation to deliver the historical address at Raleigh' centennial celebration on October PJth His subject as assigned by the cemmitUt will b "The First Hundred Years of Raleigh." The convention of oyster grower wa held at Ocracoke last week. Resolution- were adopted and ordered to be present- id to the Legislature next winter that the ovstertnsn were oppzed to sera pi eg . . i ? j . or dredging oi any kids ou oyiirr grounds. Two Second Adventut, a man and his wife, have been conducting a meeting at Christian chaple, in Lenoir county, for about three months past. Their churrh now has a membership of about 140. Ihc meetings are very sensational, the people falling on the floor in trances, etc. Thret young men of that section have been or dained ministers of this church. SOUTH CAROLINA. Charleston lias quarantined against tht cholera. Lieut. Commander Wm. W. Rhodo has been ordered to duty at the naval sta tion at Port Royal, S C. The acreage of sea island cotton in the State is 12 to 15 per cent, less than lat year. A little boy named John Meld w was drowned in Colonial Lake at Charlesteu, Thursday. Fairfield county fair will be held at Wincsboto October 27-23. The Rich land fair will open at Columbia on Nov. 15. The Geo-getown Rice Mill has recently put tleven Knglcburg rice hulters i i its mill a; a cost of $4,000. The acreage in rice is increasing. OTHER 8TATZ3. A coroner jury at Nashville, Teon , investigated the killing of J II. Tajlor, a horse thief, and returned a verdict thst Sheriff Hill was justified in killing the roan. ( A man at Maton. Ga., has a $10 note of tho State of North Carolina, printed in 1788. While he is rather proud of his treasure s a curiosity he cannot h ip cal cula'iog the compoood interest h lost by the money lying there uneuip oeL Two Road Didn't 8ign. Atlanta, G a. The Southern Steamship and railway Association adjourned after nearly all the roads of Virginia, the Car olina., Tennessee, Georgia and Florida signing, the Cincinnati Souther and the Alabama Great Southern aving failed to ign the agreri-ent. Msjor Fek has even days io. which to make up his mind The impress oi among the members is that there will 1 a bitter boycott t tbee toads unless Major Fiok gtv io. jin Away "With Hi Kother-in-Law. Saxxm. Va. A citiien of this p -c has been placed in a curious predicament by the action of hi aoa in law. T.r latter, who lives with hi father :a : and works at the mines of the .-lai Furnacce Company, returr.rd home few nighU ago an.i eloped writh his inotrri. in law. The father-in-law hss id itutfd a suit for divorce a the v1"3,1 1,: 'u' aertion. UacRaa Aaaociata Justice. ZlALZtKB. N. C Gov. Holt ha iK.in ted James C. McRae. of Fayettesit.e io le "Associate Justice of tbe urctle trt I1 the vscanev caused by the . eslh of Jude David Davia A ROMAN BULL. The Pope Dismisses Cardinal Kc giero in Disgrace. All Germany Son Must lam the Art of War. Saya Enpror William. Rome, Italy. Great excitement Ls been caused ly the dimisal of Cardinil Ruggiero, Prefect of Ficascia! Affair of the IYopaganda,and vthoh been looked upon as the probabV urrv r of Pope Leo XIII. It i a:d tLat the Pope hint self orderel Rtiffgiero dismissal. lin convinced, a a n-i;lt of inquiry, thtt Ruggiero, and net Monsignor JrVlchi, was the really guilty party in connection with the umiavestxnent, to use a mild term, for which Mocsignor Folchi was dimis ed from the Papl service about a yer ago. The dimisjwd of . Folchi brought about, it is said, by Csrdinsl Ruggiero Folchi was Vice-Chamberlain to the Pope, and had control of the Papal Hinds. It was alleged that, in the wicter . f 1800-91, Monsignor Folchi, supported by Prince Buoncompagni and Bn n Lazzaroni, resolved, in order to save tLr Banc di Roma, in which the Vatican held 10,000 out of 12,0C0 share, besides other securitiis, to establish first in Paris Mtid London, and afterward in Rome. Berlin and New York, a syndicate of Catholic banks, with the object of al so bing the financial societies of Rome tht were known to be in a disastrous condition, and to restore them to vitality, while at the stme time raising tbe valur of the depreciated securities. Above all they wanted to save the Ranco di Rom. intcnding.as they eventually did, entirely to reconstruct ft. The scandal arising out of the affslr has already been rr.d public. Later investigations appear t hive exonerated Folchi and implicatr.1 Rupgiero. There is creat excitement in church circles, and it is generally t irvcd th-tt a tremendous acandal .matting disclosure. Bkhlix, Gkiimant. It is announced frmi-otliciallv that the Kmprrs ptc!i nt the Kier.r Fran Josefs bsmjurt lis been misUo!ed and litor:ed, and thst the declaritti n thit he ha been cretlitr'i with masins- agsinst Caprivi'a military bill was only a conditional one Wl. the Kmueioi really aaivl was that th. Cterman people could not espett ti bs the ervicf-term rcducrdto two yct m Us thfy were w illing ti py fr it. Th" nuniirk.il increase of the army, in ecct-rd aace with the two-year service plat, must be accompanied by incres? of p propriationt, otherwise the ctHciency ! anny would be impaired. If ihc prlr refuse to grant such nn iccre.se tl e l.m peror'a preference was fer an army tf the present si. rathr thsn for one of tiH.ie men yet with inferior equipment and dis cipline. A CLOUD-BURST AT ROANOKE Over $100,000 Damage Done and a Man Drowned. Roanoke. Va. A cloud burst "over this city at 9.S0 Mondsy night and rain fell in torrents over four hours.filliog cel lars and lower floors of business bouses nu Campbell and Satern avenues and Nel son, Jefferson, Henry and Commerce streets. Doors were burst open, windows ciushcd in by floating debris and pod svashed away. The loss in gocnls dam r.'ed will reach $HO.CU0. Mauy build ings are seriovsly damaged by the ua il-nniniiig of foundations. Barney Smiths n trsing to cross Salem ... ... . : - avenus iltitK inio aa ririiua iui t i t : sc er ana was urw.cvi. i wihtiuu Iik lot his footing there aud fell to and was pulled out insensible. It is said that other people have been drowned, but the report cannot be vcriSed. Men . rid horses travelling the flooded streets were compelled to swim. The electric light station was flooded. The electric can are not runnirg. ana it will be a week before liehu and pwer for the operation of machinery in n:ny establishments can be supplied. The storm was routice t principally to R auoke. Six milts westward thrr was only a sprinkle. Frrue two mile South of the city were pl.-ughioir. and north anl eat the rainftil w & very bht Waa Af'aid Hd Be Elected. JacasoH. !Ct The Rev. J. II. Gambrell. th" I'apt t n4init!er who was tome weeassii.ee nominated for CVngreaa in this . istri.t by the IV ple's party, baa withdin He rs the strange reason that he tLi'.ks he v ill le elected if be re mains a candidate He sats le cannot afford to gie ip hi chu-ch Coi irr. and tr.t hi f-rratr and go to e. n lrdacy was fui reform t:.e J 'if j - t:,ovrm ..r It atiog t His rrason ia is the ths theme of ruuth tiivtrs criticism T7ed Her Dr to Take Her Idfe. Nr. York, N. Y.-Mary B-rtt. aged ,.fi fhristie street, was arrstei a ;th a tv f 1 . irrri tub i . . . nij;ht for teicg drurk . i s rurTlv. rje ' - f rdfTlv. sh : tioa htue ar,d this rr.crr.icg wa I dead. She bad torn hr dress iato .U aad bscged benclf to the t ars r f ! . rti:.dos A Xountain Cave Hospital. MLuriu. Tx. A c.al f r u t -Crrek s mouotiicf r arri.ed there lricgi:'g irfrmstioa .f the dUo eey -f a ho ia the rrouatain a few rn.s frta I --al Creek which the misers base :m rod ioto a cave, He says be saw 21 dead belies there ,ni a Ur-e si-rbr w.u?:li To Pi fwi H-gif;ng Girle. ,f u t '. - Matthews tl i i :. Ii. a; ke d B. si " !. iii 1st t f to for hu.i, --rls the at.'tcJ ALLIANCE READING. Preiident Patlers Acil M-f To the North Carolina Stat Alliance in Session at Ornsbcro. TaX. C. Frr a::i BasrrnRt5 : One setr pj'vJ your baaner in my, fcs.n 1 i i in K frwnl of the N C. it. -"rd '.t-- d the great nstioasl arrcs cf rrf r:r,- rs. It was a position of tre juenda ; a sibility and I truit I frit in a V de gief the gravity of tbe ;t-to- It aj at a time when thf ofi:i-itia tu'.tr im th mot rritivl tril i it :- te&CA a time wbea w aa.l our j were to lr suSjrctr-d to thr t crucial tet The year L l-rrn st. .cf. Kvery Uy, aa liys nclu i fire of th rneray hs ltn juro.l us with rocrviless forcr and ia an scrupulous mARtsrr. Th iiiv sry p has left lujftonr unturned to ciu'Ij moteuirat and d wn tte cry of t!,- t!.e Sfl for uirrcy eu-l the Ufrati ju-tire1 Today wt v. t mx.r. if frrt r.." I't M m'hait hsslwa -rtn.p!i tit Vresat statvis af the ura-Jir stioa sr.w ht is our dutv in the fat arc Lvf! reform movement h fts viri a t'i growing and development Msny those movrmfnts s.nT Of Istrr rr id the st;e of diintrgrti n and drvsy This hts liern the cs-whta th? cv: has bcxn slight or 1 ral r trtnp tmT . i when the proplc fsilM t fla I t!. caue for a real srr;. and thrrrf.-r could not apply the true rrnit r. 1 !. cause of the present raj erne is drtj ftK c-vl aad sutf srrrad. It at or.e ti.si in a laf ileivt- isec'.s a'.ske every UN rn .and wealth producer t( the w !. rou-ttr A p rtion of tlue .:! r:' fr aa 13 t blighting llrcts .f s.-merest csuevl tlieai to orxnie t- i. :u ly c sittistioti. I hev I rir.el tl.e:n ; t a K,cl i;'t'ni"" oninuMtf t- M-r.-h the cu-, a cue thst rnsdr thrra j -while each worked hsr lrr iretrd r weal h. a ca xse thst hs tat.le j r (I T- . ' re t! f : r. 1 f " f t I idile h lbr hs ms !r ti . r c e i trv r.c h. Since this ru ! i J this comi tiou evited in rut, J tj the c rountry. the or-v.o - "i Ke- Lilt " .:.,"! I : r I..- i to rt -u STrl osr tie x4 - - . : r i ear th riii" r rtht t.t i . Urn .M r.r --r. i studied flm M :u" t4 t!.tit. fr..ni the lakr-s t the l a s or part f the ,uvs wn- f. 1 whole rMfjton Trel :t t;,t ::, u'die gct rslly acre 1 th .t t causes e isted. We tLca appri" th law ntskers of the c -it.try Irs edy. Grrat sympsthy was r i; : f or or condition, hut ro rrt.rlT oflered. The oigmiratiwa t:. a forr--at.d i! own rem dies for each c"ie a: apieaed to the law makers to gie th-se lemedies. Thee f--i. I fi iltw. our remedies. We then !ert.s:.-levl ti.it they should give th d? t:.su !' J t r sr. rat :hing trlt-r TLstw. f s;r. ' : if the wrongs nit. if ujut ar. 1 t p rr sive lavas are ua the statute I k. it the duty of our law r.akrrs to gsve x. relief, to K',r u renitdy T a lttrr oce Up to date jMrople have Urn leUt e.f th" m .n the Uio.ey tjwe the tic :..-. Is c f tl. - ic-'Te'd. while etrry j. t r p.rt.w -.s ar. J -rt a aLrrtel to. We hae i it rra.'ued the organization esmr ti Istr f. r ;-' to be p.t tea by jtitioa. tnt. uaLcion cenatjira. Ua April 17th I called a c r.frrecce cf the AUieace uf the SU!e thr rh :.r ieprretitativr frra each ct-uty. I tl 1 it ia the ir.tere-sts f our j nr-t ie at, J the cause of rf rtn While at t:r..s si r i ig the year rnsny f u (tLvj;!i i u.( ia thought) have d.:T t I io ju -::-:.'. ss to rr.t thl. yet tt-lsy th- t-rsr.ixsti -a is pt actually a unit to &. : at w i J at thuht. 1 belitve that the ga. litre cf a tlivine haod has turced whatatt.'t rem"d to be iintsk-s. iato t .r ,-s llur seeming err .s h e pr jvrl to t-e t.' -eseace tf w js i .ra, f r by whit n.fth!t c ould we Lave have 1 -een strt r get t haa we are tIayl Thertf. re Itt at s I timea Lave that hany wf j-.t-l a fer each Itnthtr, for we rc.y 1. r.et :y that we bate a right to eipett frem ei i other brother. t'Csin or ecu reia. During the year tbe orgar.ixat. i . a s ttoaal as wcu aa Mate. la s..:;fr reparable lo, aad ear h rr t:A-i a sore le.rtsvc ra-tt l v the i.t;.' f t 4 ' i . t-f our grat aed l-tloied I'lff, C" 1 L I. I'olk W- h!r iesr a ? r. a .rrr can. o.t Las any t rgar. : t."a escr I -. f r. blessed with a r.. .re rde.!. dete'e-J I l-val leader, set h. thirst? toaar 1 th ; w ha ui"f rru wi;n tirrj .i . la f p i a z , :, i w ari th L j Lis spirit of fairceu t-' oted him was al:a His area, work aa 1 hie araple lites after him iaspirstioa toes.ry Courage of his e . on tb- wc.rk t h . st su:e t h rr. a. tr.st.if.ee'.t x ' a- 1 ! i t h.te ' t Let ..s ir f : -bis t h e r, - aad heroically l-j f " , tttirg raGuratit to hi- crtalcst twL...ui .i ' h ds in the hearts t.f Lis last words evr t-e bocr, D jcur duit. Tlichmcsd Cnataber cl Cm: .ere. Il! Hw3D. Va. Tl t .s cLaa-.tr ci roma'i.': IM- aic fria at o'. - a . J .. . . "., Ti Ire of Masots a; p w C a r.-rter Msia at i N-rth. ih Its-p'ar actitg s v ! :s w ieei I r tell io -r a'.f f 7irat Froat in N r CaMOtI'. X H s frot of th -n j -. cieity this rwe.r - It m 1,1 if . 1 a
Spirit of the South (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 3, 1892, edition 1
1
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