BEBMBEB! j --THE ADVANCE- J-FOB ONLY- ONE DOLLAR ABD FIFTY CEHTS -WBBI PAID FOR Gash! in Advance. BILL AKFSJJSTTER ,u, uiiITE MAN MUST ASP HILL RULE. Ti is the aum Total of Whole Race Problem. the Leu a man writes every to the public and dis- s lii-rauduiii thoughts it is .abiej to suppose that some e vfuU joiu issues with ( )f course they will, for ,i't all see alike, and so ii right to be offended L receive letters that ion rhy positione or deny uiciukiuns. Bat I receive i iiiainy letters that make el sara and helpless and tiscojUrages my hopes of nizpig our Northern reu. Some of these letters t' a e a-iouvluous aud scandalous I vindictive aud go into the ii ,vitliobt thought. But some :icerely written with, good nt only snow now inor l aud fiolusiou can make a i oi a good hearted man. i e following is a fiir sam ef yime that have been :ii us otilate, audit will ex- iii why! I feel helpless . Wood-CRN, Iowa. Bill E r e'eral years I have r a iiug land enjoying v letters, and your Abp Deen your mor izing ujon the common at ;r- ut life. But when it comes t the negro, or the nigger, as y .u call him, you seem to be entirely unable id see a man t a dark skin. Do try for tu jke of your influence with your people to raise above your iuh&rited jprejudiees. From the j osition ypu seem to be taking, !;erojbas no rights which a white man is bound to re Spect. Dp you want to fi,bi i. out on that line ? You don't seem tq realize the changes that thirty years have made, or you wuld shudder at the conse quences ojf a conflict on such grounds. Did it ver occur to you how ridiculous it was for your people to blame the negro lor theft.jwhile you are steal ing .ns vote, l implore you as a trteud, do not stand in the way t destiny. Many of our uuion soldiers would be glad to sen tro id homes provided for your poor soldiers, but your cut tiiroaits and your lawless ses tJhrottle down every . : nerous (impulse. John Newsome, Old Aimy of the Potomac. I believe that Mr. Newsome at heart a good man. He is i.ue auionb the thousands who are just ks clever and just as ignorant, and that is what is the uiattepr. Northern politi ticians aujd Northern newspa pers havejso long deceived the masses thiat we cannot unde ceive tnem. They still believe tbat secession Is treason, and that the negro is awfully op pressed, apd that our society largely mixed with cut throats and assassins. Mr. N : wsuinef begs me to rise above my inherited prejudices. Per haps he would be surprised to learn that my father was a na tive of, Vermont and was rear ed i:i Msjsachueetts, and that his prejudices were all against th s uthi when he ventured h re us a , school teacher, and that he married a Southern girl and eventually became an owner of slaves. If there ever lived a better, purer, nobler man than my father in his hu :nble sphere I never knew him. He Outlived his prejudi ces, and wjas so thoroughly a s intherner that his influence and his money brought nearly all Lis kindred and many of his Xe,w Entdind friends to Geor ia, and they, too, became slave owners, i'hey did what they on Id to civilize a barbarous race, aud it is. our comfort to know tbat those who were our slaves are not found in the jails nor i chain-gangs of the South. : Prejudice means a -'judg-ment befdire" that Is, before investigating the mstter. I v as born and raised with ne-i-'roes and have known and -uidied them as a race, indi vidually and collectively, from my youth uutil now and can have no prejudices. Mr. New some had ino such experience; perhaps he never saw a huu dred in j his lite; perhaps he never hired one or worked with one, or befriended one. He lives' a thousand miles away from them. He never had to ' id his children to school w here there were negroes work ing in the; fields near by where his daughter had to pass along, lie knows nothing oi the ap prehension that parents feel' who live! in the country and have to send their girls to school o? on errands to their nabors, 0r who sometimes have to lexvp wife and daughters , unprotected at home. Only two weeks ago a "cut-throat" was lynched near Madison. The sweet and innocent child of on ly tweve summers was found in a deep ditch where he had outraged her and then cut her throat! from ear to ear, and af terwards confessed that "she hegged him mighty hard not to kill her but he was afreed she- tell ojn him." How did our hearts beat widly and grieve ) over the agony of that poor child. I Hardly a week passes that our newspapers do not record a similar case somewhere The VOLUME 20 ---not so heart-rending, per haps, but always brutal and' fiendish, and always perpetra ted by the new set that have grown up since the war. These things are ever before us in memory and our vengeance, smothered and ud spoken, is burning in the Southern heart. If the conflict comes that Mr. Newsome seems to threaten, woe be to the negroes and their Northern allies who take apart iki it. When only seven hun dred brave men under Sam Houston defeated Santa Anna and all his army, the cry that nerved their arms and gave them victory was "remember the Alamo," and so when the conflict comes, it it shall come, oar people will have a battle cry in almost every communi ty. If I was a negro preacher, or teacher, and loved the peice aud the welfare of my raco I would preach and teach to them continually theeiorml tv of such crimes, but they do mot. They had rather teach and preach the outrage of lynch law, and make pitiful ap peals to their northern friends, but lynch law will go on never theless, and neither Governor Gordon nor bis military com panies can stop it. Lir. Austin Phelps answers to a!l this : "Why doh't you edu eate him up to the level of the Republican ballot," and Mr. Newsome echoes the same sentiment when he says ': ''Let him vote and do not stand in the way of destiny." Well, we have been educating him with all our might, and he has been voting the Republican ticket with all his might, and yet our penitentiary records show that eighty per cent, of the colored convicts who have been sent up Within the last ten years can read and write and were never slaves. Now, Mr. Newsome, let us say to you and your sympa thetic friends in all kindness and good will tuat we know that the negro, as a race, is not fit to govern our people, and we do not intend that he shall. In this region he votes as freely as I vote, and without intimida tion, but if his vote would put him in office he should not hold it. and that is all there is about it. In the black cotton belt and the sugar region, where they number nye or ten for one white man, we are willing for them to have repre- entation in our legislatures, but even then they come rather as petitioners than law makers. We are going to govern this oart of the country, conflict or no conflict. Our salvation de pends upon it. If the negroes don't like it they can go to Iowa or Vermont. The masses of them have but little to keep them here. We know thous ands that could go to wood burn on an excursion ticket for ten dollars and leave nothing behind them. They could just put out the fire and call the dog and go I would be glad if the 'next negro who is sentenced to the chainging in our court was given an opintion by the judge the option of going to Wood- burn and deliver himself m good order to Mr. Newsome The question is will Mr. New- some send the ten dollars, aud will he take him and hire him land let him vote? I fear he is like Mr. Roche, the New York merchant prince, who has re cently visited t lorida ana in terviewed a negro - politician and wrote a letter about it to the New York Tribune, in which be said he was well and pleased with the high intelli gence of this negro, and that he invited him to visit New York and call on him at bis store But the nbgro said he could not go to New York, for there was no decent hotel in that great city for a gentleman of bis col or. There was an oppoitunity for Mr. Roache, but he did not embrace it. He only invited" him to hie store. Mr. New some asks why it is that can't see a man under a black skin. Yes, I see a man, a ne gro man a nigger, it yon please sometimes we say nigger, just like we say injugs for Indians or yankees for northern people Our negroes call themselves niggers very of ten quite as of as we do, It is a very proper word negro comes from the Latin word "merer" which means black. I see a man under black skin just like I see an In dian under a red skin or Chinaman qpder a yellow akin 1 see an inferior race a race without fitness to govern them selves much less the white race We know his good traits and his bad ones. They have our regard and sympathy and most of them look to us for protec tion and get it. But there is a line they must not cross. Mr. Harrison will find it oat sooner or later. Southern Democrats ard Southern Republicans are a unit on the race question all except a few unprincipled office seekers like Buck and his sate lites. If the votes of the negroes elect a white Republican to of fice we submit with as much grace as possible, but we will not submit to the election ot a negro except In counties dense ly dxk neither shall they be our Judges or our jurors, nor hold any judicial or ministerial office. These are our sentiments all over the South, and if any-. body says to the contrary, lies, and he knows it. The solicitude of the North about the negme's vote is amaz ing. He had rather have some thing to eat or to wear. With the masses every where it is a matter if business. Up North, in the manufacturing districts, it means a continuation of em ploymentwith tens of thous ands in their eities it means a dollar or two dollars for a vote. With the average negro down South, in the cities and towns, it is a drink or two drinks to the voter, and fifty or a hand red dollars to the negro preaeh er who controlls them. This is politics a debasing, corrupt thing, and the negro is better riff t K a i( But I must forbear. Let me conclude this letter by com mending to our Northern breth- ern tne speecn maue in me MississiDDi Legislature two years ago by Hon. L. W. Moore- the colored representative of Bolivar county. He is on of the six colored members and they presented the speaker, Mr. Madison with the silver tea service. The speaaer saia , i was born in Mississippi but raised in a Northern state. Associa tions up there led me to regard southern white men as our foes but associations here have elim inated those prejudices from the mind of the feeble sex and for them I speak. If the spirit manifested by this body pre vails through the State, it is a certain and sure solution of the race problem in Mississippi. This has been called the Jeff Davis legislature because the Republicans all voted for the confederate monument bill and the large appropriations for the white institutions. But we re garded the voting for these bills as a feeble but sincere manifestation of our race grati tude. As this tea service glitters against the brilliant chandeliers of our hall may your nseful ser vice as a statesman glitter in fu ture counsels for peace and good will. Then take it, sir, as the permanent bridging of the race chasm in this state. Take it as guarantee that no blasting apprehensions are entertained by the colored people of this state. This democratic house has shown itself to be our friends not our enemies. Then consign tms numoie toaen to vour domestic archives as a memento ot your conservative course as a distinguished courte- ous ana impartial speaser oi the Mississippi house of rep resentatives. When the bill eame up to make an appropriation for the confederate monument, Mr. J G. Harris, another negro over sixty years of age, arose and was recognized as the member from Washington county. He seemed very feelble, but soon gainea strength from nis own earnest eloquence, and drew in spiration from his subject. He said: "Mr. Speaker, I have risen here in my place to offer a few words on the bill. I have come from a sick bed, and was forced to struggle no here leaning on the arm of a friend. I stand here in considerable pain. Perhaps it was not prud ent for me to come. But, sir, I could not rest quietly in my room, sick though I am, and allow this discussion to pass without contributing to it a few remarks of my own. I was sorry to hear the speech of the young gentleman from Marshall county. I am sorry that any son of a soldier should go on record as opposed to the erec tion of a monument in honor of the brave dead. And, sir, I am convinced that had he seeu what I saw at Seven Pines and in the seven-days' fighting round Richmond, the battle fields, covered with theman- gled forms of those fought tor tneir country ana tneir coun- try's honor, he would not have made that speech. When the news came that the south was to be invaded, those men went forth to fight for what they believed, and they made no requests for monuments to commemorate their brave deeds and holy sacrifices. But they died, and their virtues should be remembered. Sir, I went with them. 1, too, wore the gray, the same color that my master wore. We stayed four long years, ond if that sad war had gone on till now 1 would have been there yet. I know what It all meant, and under stand the meaning of my words when I say that I would have been with my countrymen still had the war continued until this good dav. I want to honor those brave men who died for their convictions. When my mother died I was a boy. Who, sir, then acted the part of a mother to tbe orphaned slave boy, but my 'ole missus V Were she living now, or could she speak to me from those high realms where are gathered the saiuted dead, she would tell me to vote for this bill. And, sir, I shall vote, for it. I waut it known to all the world that my vote is given in favor of the bill to ereot a monument in honor of the brave confederate dead." Now, will Mr. Newsome be lieve that, or had He rather be lieve it a lie. Bill Abp. - y- WlLSO "LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM' ST AT, BE TSIY COIINTRF'S, TUT GOD'S, AND TRUTHS WILSON, FOR THE FARM. MATTERS OF INTER EST TO TILLERS OF THE SOIL. Original, Borrowed, Stolen and Communicated Articles on Farming. PUSPOSES OF THE ALLIANCE- The Views cf OcL L- L- Polk, Presi dent of the National Farmers' Alliance- editobial correspondence. Washington, D. C, March 3. -Having an unoccupied hour this worning I concluded to pay a visit to the headquarters of the National Farmers' Alliance. I found the President and Secre tary of the Order comfortably located at 916 E. street, If. w. The President ot the National Alliance, Jol. Li. u. roia, a na- tive of North Carolina and cit izen of Raleigh, looks as much at home in his apartments as when addressing a gathering of honest farmersn Old Fields, Wilson county. I found him and his private Secretary, Mr. Rittenhouse (a North Carolinian by adoption) both busy, but not too busy to give me a "Tar Heel" welcome. After a pleas. ant chat, I went with Col. Polk over to the National Economist. This paper isltbe official organ of the National Alliance. It has large and improved presses and is printing the Alliance al manac and all the blanks for the Alliance. In the business office of the National Economist are young ladies and good looking ones, too. One of them is from North Carolina. The Economist is a strong, vigorous and able-paper, and its utter ances are heard in every State of the United States. Since the St. Louis conven tion, the Alliance is growing rapidly, It has sub-Alliances in twenty,hree States and or- ganizers at work in six other States. Col. Polk Is coming up to all expectations and is push ing the work with his accus tomed vigor in this broad field. He contemplates taking a tour through the Northwestern States in the course of the next month, and addressing gather ings for farmers. He will please them with his eloquence and largely increase the mem bership and influence the Order throughout the West. I had a long talk with Col. Polk under economic questions and Alliance matters, and obtained the fol lowing interview ior tne unron icle: Was the bill recently passed by Congress requiring the census of mortgage inaeDiea ness passed at the instance of farmers' organization ?" I asked. "The various farmer organi zations of our country," repli ed Col. Polk, "demanded its passage, notably through the National convention held at ot. Louis." What are some of the ad vantages that you think Till be derived from its passage ? 1 continued. . ' Ool. Polk replied : "The most important advantage wilt be to demonstrate, as we believe, the deplorable financial condition of the farming interests throughout the country. Com plaints are made, but we have learned that they are not ac cepted as facts or arguments by the legislators. We believe If we can present the true condi tion of the American farmer in the iron logic of facts and fig ures, that it win arouse tne public mind to the realization or the alarming and perilous condition of this great aud im portant interest. Suppose we show, as we be lieve we will, that the mortgage indebtedness of farmers should be eight billion sof dollars. The average iuterest on this indebt- edness cannot be less than eight per cent. This would the aDDilling drain on the farmer in the single item ( of interest alone of 640 millions of dollars annually. This is at out twice the value of the wheat in the United States for the year 1888, aud nearly as much u th entire croo of cotton and wheat, and one hundred and twenty-five millions more than the total export of domestic agriculture for the year 1888." "Has the alliance," I continu ed, "any plan for reducing this enormous indebtedness and thereby relieve the people ?" "Yes," Col. Polk said, "and our plan is to be found iu the bills introduced in Congress by Mr. Pickle r, of 8. Dakota, in the House and by Senator Vance in the Senate. The prominent features briefly stated are : The establishment of government warehouses for the storage of j grain and cotton by the farm- ers, thus enhancing tne tarm products, and by the govern ment loaning money to the depositors at one per cent, in stead of eight on the products so deposited. The value of the corn, wheat, oats and cotton crop of the United States for the year 1888 was 1,500 million of dollars,and at one per cent, tbe Interest on this enormous sam would only be fifteen and a half millions of dollars, thus saving the farmer on these crops alone one hun dred and ten millions of dol- NORTH CAROLINA, lars in interest. Under the bill the farmer is allowed to draw only eighty per cent, of the amount deposited, and this al lows the government a margin of twenty per cent, to cover fluctuations in prices. We believe that no safer security could be tiven for the government to issue legal tend ers on than these crops which must be consumed during the year. We believe that the government shoaid issue its currency on products directly to the producer, and not through the ruinously expen sive system it ixu-r employs the banks. We believe tha fccovernments alone have the p ver to create money and that they should alone exercise ;e power to control or regu its issue. We believe that ali issues of the government should be based on real value and not on evidences of debt. This sy stent we freely admit is revolutionary and con trary to our present financial system, which is both unjust aud oppressive unjust because the credit of the government is loaned to a class, aud oppres sive because that class obtain, through the uecesitiess of the people, usurious rates of inter est. And it is not an untried experiment. Germany and France have botli used it. The former built up the empire through this plan. The latter saved the Republic in the last gieat trial by its use, and so admirably did it meet the exi gencies of the situation that France adopted it as a perman ent financial policy. The world will never forget the readiness aud ease with which France piid the enor mous indemnity of 100,000,000 imposed by Germany in 1870, and the marvelous rapidity with which she recaptured notwithstanding the loss of two cf ber richest provinces; but the world has been slow to learn the secret power which she possessed. That power was derived from her system, and we now present the same plan to the American Republic. Its most valuable and commend able feature is that it gives us a volume of currency exactly adapted to the demands of trade, and better than all, a flexible volume, which expands or contracts as the necessities of the people require. I need not elaborate this system further, as it will be uppermost In the minds of the American people for years to conm, and will be more thoroughly discussed than any similar quest) m ever pre sented to the pu ui' mind." State Chronicle. A few fowls v. are'more profita t number neglec all cared for ie than a large j. This has been fully demonstrated. A good crop of both corn and weeds cannot be rown on the same ground at toe same time any more than two railway trains can pass t ach other on the same track. Farmers report tbal a great deal of wheat was hilled by the cold weather last week. The blades and scalKs were cut down almost to the ground.-: Newton Euterprise. What is going to be the result of the wheat crop of this sec tion cannot be auticipated at presont. Much wheat that was in joints was cut down' by tne com snap ana ine outcome is extremely uncertain as yet Lincolnton Courier. If you wish to raise a few su perior potatoes, go to the woods and collect all the rotten wood and leaves that are available nil the furrows witn tnis veg etable mould, and you will pro duce the huest potatoes you ever bad. This is the opinion of an agricultural editor. Hen derson Gold Leaf. Have Yon Teen TdV-r- ? "Backward, turn backward O time in your flight, give me that nose that I breathed through last uiht. Bring back the smeller that two days ago knew not the torment of a con tinual blow. ipe from my moustache the moisture of sneeze, put wooden splits on my poor weakened knees. Bub my red nese as you oft have before with tallow, dear mother, oh, it is so sore. Backward, turn backward, O time of the nose I am so tired from my head to my toes. Tired out with mop ping and coughing and sneez ing, weary from handkerchief continually sneezing, I have grown weary of sniffle and snuff, of wiping my bugle until it is rough. Stick my poor head in a high pillow slip, and sew it up, mother, I have la grippe." Atchison Globe. Some of our most promineut citizens have beet theiimatism by pain-banisher S 25 cents. "Wbv Jones, you have iu your raised it from head. I've too u "Well, like cnr Oonzh Syrup v, cured of chronic hat wonderful ivation Oil. Price wh.it a bo(a)rse hroat !" '-Yes, I col(d)t in my ich lire stock." - like ; Dr. Ball's II cure you. The Bull will quickly scare tbe ho(a)rse away." Advance. MARCH 27. 1890. NEWS OF A WEEK. :0:- -IF HAT S II t PPhSISG 1 I HE ft ORLD A ROVD US. Condensed Report the Nete From our Contemporaries. Florida is said to be overran with i?oi them tourists. A Stanley county man is the father of 32 children. Mr. J. B. Doke, who has bem elected preaide: t of tbe American Tobacco Company, draws a salary of $50,000 a year. This perhaps the largest wl.i-y ever paid to any man competed wirh the tobacco trade. A. L. Fat red has bought a halfs iuterest in ihe Raleigh Evening Visitor, W. M. Utlry retirtug from the paper. Til, Southern Educational As sociation and Express will bold its animal meeting at Morehead City, N. 0., July 1 to 6. How are cities built f Iu one word, it has beeu done end can only be done bv nsing printer's ink. Southern Ledger. If Chicago does hold the World's Fair she can show tbe nations of the earth tbe American hog in all its glory. Retdaville Review. We have Men no somaiarcial retttliser on tbe Banford market ahd the farmers have not up to this bought mncb San ford Express. Some people;, eava the Orange Observer, never have their prayers answered, because when they pray for bread it's pound cake they want. . The Black well Durham Tobacco Woiks, of which Jule Carr is Pres ident, have beeu sold to an Eng lish sy i 41 o-te for between three and tour milheus. . , The Pittsboro Record tells of the burning to deatb of two negro children. They were It ft alone in the boue by tbetr mother with the too often result. Tbe Sunday School Journal is the name of a new ' nominational paper published at italeigh and devoted to the interests of tbe Sun. day Schools oi tbe State. Commercial men and the leading papers are predicting general pros perity throughout the country during tbe coming spring and summer. Henderson Gold Leaf. Ten t honsand acres of land in Columbus county have been sold by the State to Forest IRobinson, ot Michigan, who will erect mills thereon and taw out tbe lumber. Tbe Morganten Hera'd has been informed that there is a probabili ty ttist Rutherford OoHege will be inored to Margauton if tbe citizens of the town will supply the ueccea- arr buddings. The Fajettevilie Observer sayi About twenty negroesjalmont en tirely from SeventyFirst town ship, left here via the Wilson Shortcut R. R.on Friday morning last their destination Arkansas. Gladstone has published 299 books and pamphlets. This does not include his magazine articles or any of his speeches, tie has all bis life been assimilating knowlegs and giving out ideas. Mr Walters, Manager of the W. & W, R. R. will be here about the middle of the month in regard to bnilding a branch road to this place from some point on the Scotland Neok and Greenville branch o.' that system. Washing toti Progress. Mr. T. D. Mailer is exhibiting some very fine specimens of iron and copper ore discovered recently noon the farm of his father, Mr Ca'vin Mailer, in Du'cbville towu ship, this count v. Tbe find ap pears to be a verj important one Oxfoid Day. Solicitor Bower seni in a bill against the alleged Morganton lynchers, as Solicitor Long did in the Lexington case, and result was tbe same as at Lexington. The grand iurv failed to find the bill a true one. Several promiuent truckers in our locality say they will plow up their peas thin week and replant. Others say tbey will plant otner crops Fruit errowers sav tbe early crop is all killed, but the later varieties will be benefited by the recen frost Elizabeth City News. The Charlotte News says Mr. C C. Moore lost a fine colt in apernv bar manner. The colt got tangled in the halter in its stall, ana in Its struffeles to free itself fell and broke its neck. Mr. Moore had re fused three hundred dollars for the colt. A In tie child of Joe Henderson who lives on Mr. Lewis Skpp's place, in Mallard Creek township was burned to death yesterday Th narents of tbe child were cut in the field at work, and the child was alone in the cabin. Charlotte News. Tbe meeting in the in terest of the Oxford Female Col lege last night was encouraging and it is now very likely the re. mainder of the shares in the pro. posed company wUl be speedilly placed and everything satisfacto. rily arranged to placed the school on a firm basis. Oxford Day. Tbe National Summer Normal School for Teachers and Sperinten dents will honor Asheville with its presence between the days of July 28th and August 9th. The insti tute holds a session of two weeJkB each in eight different cities, and tais is the only city in the South which will be visited. Asheville Citizen. The body of Arthur Davidson, ten -year old negro boy, was found yesterday morning in a pile of oof ton seed, at the Oliver Oil mill. Abont a week ago the boy was seen playing around tbe mill, and dig gine holss in a pile of eotn seed bolls. We was driren aw iy, aud was not seen again until bis dead body was found yesterday morn ing. Chailo tie Chronicle. Mr. L. A Lawrence, of SphIpk vllle, Rockingham conntv drop ped dead while sitting inao'iair reading He was in usual health, and bad just been at woik. It was a case of heart disease. He was sixty five years oh'. The North Carolina Steel and Iron Company base s. cured the handsome office iu the National Bank building. Bad Washing ton street, and will have it proper ly furnished and opened for busi ness at once. Greensooro Work man. The reading ceik of the Ohio House of Representatives died ofdiptheria rbuisdt.y. His wife bad died less tbau a week before immediately after tbe death o f four children, making six deaths m the family within little over two weeks. The geld mica known as the Saures mine, about oce and a half miles from High Point, and belong ing to Piot. Chas. G. Mann, has been sold to an English geutleman aud we learn that tbe work of res openiug tbe miuo will oe begun at uuue. .uexiugiou .uispatcn. The Ohio Senate passed a bill providing that railroad employees who, have been on duty twenty- frtnr' consecutive linnra Jthnll nnf. resume until they have had eightitrJ hoy at hl8 fit party hours rest. Twelve bums are to constitute a dayns labor. Tbe fine for violation is $150 iu each case. Tbe bill passed iu tbe Home some time age aud is now a law. The Vance Guards have recently had an additiou ot ten soldierly looking uew recruits. During tbe thunder storm last night the old Bapist cuuich caugbt tire from lightning it is supposed. The lire was put out utter considerable damage was doue to tbe floor, win dows, ifcu. Heade! sou Tomahawk : That remarkably old man of Stauly couutv Billy Whitley is dead at tne age of 113 years, tie is said to nave been lao' last su;s viviug subject ot Kiug George HI. He was buru iu 1775. It is doubt ful whether there is in Great Britain or us colonics a surviving Representative of George Ill's reign, -iiaiiloid Express. Tbe Carolina Spoke aud Hanole Factory, operated lieie by Caraou Brothers, has tor in i ce years past been shipping tiue grade spokes, handles and runs to various points in Germany, and has never yet tn able to get ahead of its orders. The Charlotte factory ships goo5s to Germ any, Australia, and, in fact almost every party of tbe world. Chailo'.te rsews. Tbe report of tbe bureau of labor statistic id iu me bauds of the. priuteis- It is alwajs interesting. Commissioner Sea boioiigli has devoted pai ticular attention to it, and there are some new ten lures. Farm wages have steadily decreas ed, while wages of other kinds of employes hae as regularly advanc ed. Agricultniists are pietty bad ly lu the soup. State Chronicle." We learn thai lheieis a move ment ou foot in this county to raise an Atncau emigration party. Some of the colored brethren bae talked to ns on the subject, and express themselves as satisfied with this county aud willing to live and die here, despite the in timidatioa and suppression of negro votes as howled about by Northeru famines. Rutherford Banner. A mass-meeting of negro Re publicans is called lor Gnilford on the 3rd ot Apiil. Siaiultaueonsiy meetings of the same sort are called in all the other counties of the Fifth Congressional District. They have bad little or no recognition Irom the administration, and are thoroughly indignant, and for pos litical kicking, aie expected to shame the annual that invented that kiud of calistbeuios. Salisbury correspondent of the Charlotte Chronicle? Ihe Salis bury Cotton Mills are now making from e50 to $60 clear pront per day. The Knitting Mills are rnn ning on full time with sufficient orders ahead to Beep them at work . for .several months. The Salisbury Gas Company hasieccnt ly put down 7,000 let t or new rr.ains. and placed half dozen new lights in the suburb of Brooklyn The output of tbe company has increased 50,000 feet per month for the past two or three months. At Wilson's, Mills, this morning on the North Carolina railroad, B. M. TJpcbnrch baggage master, was ruu over by a shitting train, and received fatal injuries, He was uncoupling cars while they yere in motion, and got his font caught between the track and a guard rail. The car passed over him crushing the lev which was fasten ed : nd in. arm almost entirely oft. His home was in this cifv, and he was brought bete this evening, but died while beincr carr'ed from the depot to bis home. Raleigh D:s patch 21st. Rockingham Rocket- Jtorii Bracksville, colored, who commit ted a most atrocleus, cold beam d murder near Laurel IMI, this conn ty, about (our years ago and made bis escape from jail while under sentenoe of deatb, was recently captured in Roherson county and is again in jail at this place. He was was tried in tne Superior Ccurt, found eniltv, and sentenced to be banged. He appealed to the Su preme Court, and pending the ac tion of that tribunal he effected his escaped. Of coqrse be will have to be re sentenced by the 8 Court afrer the former verdict has been confirmed by the Supreme O U!t. Why !ei rhe'b.iUy juffer and prp haris die, when a ortle ol Dr. Boils Bab-, Svmp weald om-e relieve it and effect a cuic. Onlv 25 cents a bottle. Pt-raonf! or pedoninry habits, and overworked fl.xl in Laxador a spe cific for want of apoetite, palpita tion, debility constipation aud many other ailments. At all drug gists. Price 25 cents. NUMBEit 10 A FASOUS SOUTHESNEK. Some 2Tc:es and Eccentricities of "Uncle Beaut-" Atlanta, Qa., March 12, 1890 Yesterday afternoon I was stand ing on Whitehall street when I saw coming along a very oom monplace, CDuntryfled looking man. There was a country pros dnce wagon standing near me, and I supposed, at first, that he had gotten out of that. It was a bright spring oaj, out be had on a thick overcoat a very old and rasti one it was, and the rest of his clothlDg coincided with bis over coat. He carried a good sized hickory stick in his hands, and bis general appearance flavored very much of a genuine Georgia "crack er." Bat us he came nearer 1 dis covered that it was Joel Chandler Harris, tbe famous author and editor. Mr. Harris stands at tbe bead of Southern litereture. His oooKs are reaa, not ouly all over tbe United States, but tbey have besn translated into several laugu ages. Bat Mr, Harris does not know be is famous if he does he certainly does not show it. -He is one ol the most unostentatious men I ever knew. And he is as shy as a coun He ill stand ont on tbe platform ol a street ear rather tbau sit near a woman. He is one of the Atlanta Constitution, and by far the ablest and wittiest of the staff. Tbe editorial squibs of that paper babble over with his wit. 1 in stance it by quoting one from to day's issue: "Col. Robert Iugersoll says he will smoke as he lives. Afterwards, we suppose he will suzle." It is not a rare occurance that literary loving people from a dis tance who have been charmed by his writings, when in Atlanta, call to see tbe author of 'Unofe Uemna une atteruoon l was sitting in the editorial rooms of the Consti tution, when two very distinguish ed l piking loreigners came iu. They walked up to tbe table where he was sitting, aud said, that tbey desired to see Mr. Harris. "That's my name," he drawled out. "Ob, but we want to see Mr. Joel Chan uier narris, tne author, ' tbey re plied. "Well, that; is my name, be said, continuing to write. Aud after he finished what he was do- iug, he returned to them, and in very prosaic, bnsiDess'manner, in quired their business. Mr. Harris is about forty years old. He was boru and has lived a great deal in the country. And his residence iu the city for tbe past .several yearn, and bis fame have not changed his maunei ef liv.ug and working. He gets to his office between seven and eight iu the morning, goes to dinner promptly at twelve o'clock, and 'knocks off" in the evening at five He believes in working by dav light. Auother one of his country hab its that has clung to him is his love for persimmon beeb. He is about the only citizen of Atlanta who keeps on hand this delightful and old time country beverage. Cats or pictures of Mr, Harris are seldom seen. He has an aver sion to having them taken. And for this he is not to be blaimed. A. H. M The Feminine Ems Doomed- The brilliant editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal does not confine his reformatory ef forts to the tariff, but strikes out boldly for a kissing reform It riles him all through, this wilful waste of labial sweet ness, when he sees one woman kiss another, and he boldly de clares that the buss feminine must be busted and no longer tolerated in civilized countries, 1 1 -rr- i m ah masculine nentucsy, re gardless of party, will stand by him, as it should. Wilmington Star. Where was the Cat- A cook who had burnt piece or roast veal weighing four pounds threw it away, and afterwards explained to he mistress that the cat had eaten tbe meat. "Very good," said the lady "we will see that directly." So saying, she took the cat put in on the scales, and found that in weighed exactly four pounds. "There, Frederick," she said "are the four , pounds of meat but where is the cat. Kolner Tageblatt. An English Medical Authority affirms that the best regimen for ptcserving health may he summed up in the maxim, "keep tbe head cool, the feet warm, the bowels ac tive." There is a world or wisdom in tbe observation. Cbstlnate con stipation or costiveuess, is an ex citing canse of other diseases" ; and, with many sedentary habits or oc cupations, this inaction of the bow els is a source of constant annoy ance, prod uc leg piles, prolapse of the rectum, fistula, and various dyspeptic symptoms. All these are warded off, and health is main tained, by the use of Dr. Pierce's Flea8at Purgative Pellets. All medical authorities agree that catarrh is no more nor less than an inflammation of tbe nasal air pass ages. Nasal catarrh and all catarr hal affections of the bead are not diseases of the blood, and it is a serious mistake to treat them as such. No conscientious physician ever attempts to do so. It in held by eminent medical men tbat soon-l am " I.-,...- ' X ... I r . 1 i imor i 9fnuHlu Will DO lOUQu for every disease from whieh hu msnity suffers. Tbe facts justify us in assuming tbat for catarrh at least a positive cure already exists in Ely's Cream Balm. FOE ALL XlNBg OF JOB WORK- SEND TOTJB 0BDEBS -TO THIS OFFICE POLITICAL. THE BEST- THOUGHT LEADING EDITORS. or H htU f of the Xation SV of Politics. Epitaph on the Blair bu Talked to death.-BeidsTUls S What tcdo with thA mi.. ti will aoon be changedto "What to it. get another surplus Wash. Stai. . 7 Tbe Harrison adminisrratiaB is a success in one rAant t v turned the rascals in, an- one of tha main objeotior ii ' 8.vanuah News, Dem. It it evident that tita uuwor will naairura u . that will strengthen its aavase warfare on the StatAn ut 75. ibertlea of tbe nannlA Berne Jouenal. , A f entlemau lost In from Vfitk. e II informs us that there is some ol ot the liveliest kicking going on " xMspuuiicans in that eounty just now that has ever been. luorpauiou neraia, President -Harrison, wha thtnv that "fitness and not nartv smtvIm should be the discriminating test." utiru o,oou nartv serroi-a ints postofflees during his first vast Phil. Record, Dem. Is all the States in whieh tion have recently held the TVm. ocrats have been vitorions. tm hi not accidental, bnt it is the nat ural result or education, organisa tion and efficient management. New Bern Journal. Brower and Ewarl have been washing their dirtv linen before the public gaze. When Republican Congressmen fall out honest men may get their does and even the Devil himself secure a settlement longstanding back accounts. Reidsville Review. Never before in the history of tha Democratic party was one-half a much level-beaded, carelul. efficient work being done for perfection and building up tbe party organization as is going on at the present time. Washington National Democrat, Dem. Hon. John S. Henderson tells the editor ol tbe Raleigh State Chronicle that "the 51st! Congress ill be historically famous or in. lamons as the most wasteful, the most extravagant and the most costly representative body which ever received tbe suffrages of a free people." The St. Louis Globe-Democrat, Republican, after interview 1,626 tanners in Missouri, Illinois and Kansas, has come. to the conclusion that what the farmer ont there are suffering most from is a want of capital. When we come to think that Kansas farmers are burning corn because they can t afford to buy coal it does look that way, Wilmington Star. ' Scoop a Little to ot-" About the time iku Daniel Drew began bis Wall stieet career be was up in the country one time to visit some friends, and two farmers called upon him to decide a Case. One had sold the other five bushels of wheat, and proposed to measure it in a half bushel, and sweep the top of a measure with a stick. The other objected, and Uncle Daniel was asked to decide. "Well, legally speaking, a bush el is only a bushel,'' be answered. "And can the measure be swept cflt" 'I think it can." "What with V "Well, if I was selling wheat I should probobly use ball the head of a flour barrel." "Which edge of it?" "Gentleman, that is a point I cannot now decide on," sighed the old man. "If I was selling to S widow or a preacher J am certain that I shoaid sweep the measure with a straight edge, but if I was aelling to a man who pastures bis cows in tbe road and bis pigs Is tbe neighbor's corn, I'm afraid I should use the circular side and scoap a little boot.?' Wall Street News. . A Worthy Example- We know a yonng man of eighteen summers who is a capital telegrapher. The know ledge of the art cost him close application and study, and no money. He now commands a salary of $40 per month with the probability of doubling la soon. The boys of the land shonld note this and parents should call their attention to it. There are always good place and good pay for those who know how and are willing to work. Statesville Advocate. "Like sunshine in a Jhady place,' The poet called a woman's face That gladdened all who saw its beauty. A face, no doubt, tbat gleamed with heaith, And lightens every daily duty. Oh, how can woman whose life With many a wearing pain if rife, Escape the grasp of such afflic tion , And be a power to bless and cheer 1 The answer comes both swift and Pierce'a Favorite Pre scription. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrtps tion is the only medicine for wo man's peculiar weakness and ail ments, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from tbe manu facturers, of satisfaction being giv en in every case, or money refun ded. See guarantee printed on bottleN wrapper. x