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THE NEWS AND OBSERVER. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 24, 1911 tfhil VWa mtui OhlMTM KI CFK13tt IOTIl 1 our. dimkntixg voice. root nran iw whfrje anoxs fcAJft TO TRKAD. SAVOYARD'S LETTER A WORD FOR THE SOUTH. ' , " ) In hla ipMh al Oreensboro on 8n far heard from, thr ha f.- L Ammah Dfllt U.l. . ,. . .1 ,.. . w . , The b.w. remu from Ithaca. N. 7 ', ,1CWI Ca vunlitl A UUi i "" rrmrrni nmv(n, i,-:Mjeioij. wnr ! peen rum again.. (about Dow." If he were nominated for I the chivalry of the era. Tha Haiti T twelve, students of Cornall th third term, he would come bark to n.or. Hun Interviewed a number ..f ' organlied "the Itobert Ingeraoll . tteetl M. North Carolina and iruvke a fight for prominent woman In Xaw York on ' ,u" ,na announced n ss meir pur- lh lol.-ral volof the Stat. ll, tha guestloa "Which Ufa la worth i""" aiuoy, invesngaie ana crm- 1i fleoaU. complalnad that North Caro lina waa hard run barauaa of tha a-reai numbar of p&up'era aha had ben raqulrad to uatain for a (raat i Mim niHLB x i af ni ifir rvitftp a - . I 1 1 more. man or woman?" All agreed 'Bing religion r that jha woman and children should ! of ",,,v- vlw of reconetruct- Waahlngton, U. C. April II Be luw la a characteristic, sneer at tha South by tha standpat Rapubli iui Washington foat. and allow ma l-Ufl ASSOCiaieQ ITeSS HepOnS electoral vote wh.n ha ran for Preel In rellgloua thought and setting It Mr. Hoar. iiul.i i I,, i - . i jasnt tha u.u.nrf 11. k. i be saved flrat la) disaster Ilka tha Tl ....... vv,.'...-c..,(..s anam .... -.. . ... rou- ta-:mk"u,.i Kudu WM'v 'IWfi trcmirtiww ritnn Ma V. aa liml i WKTIXESDAV April I. I til Morning Tonic. Klbcrt lluhhard. t Would you have your nam atuall wet with the myrrh of remembranra ad chime melodiouely In tha aar nf ZfHture days, then cultivate faith, nut doubt, and give firry man credit for tha (nod ha doa. never seeking t at . trlhtt. baa moltvea to beautiful acta Action rount. Q1T0RI4. c Paa .truly aorry fur thr gaul who. Uar tollaotna day la aprnt. won't .... "Munr-i Sfuon u iJumt.'' or fotli - rrtniMt humtlln- 1 V gt-r. Tlaa Mrraltw ylaaaarta he will nWga: lia aaya: "I Imit la go la hMlg-a aa ut-dil guard. fWr 8aitlr; to-morrow nght I liair to i t aa Mabrr at a alwiw. nan . ..a- wJtrht I mmI a rally " Hl patlait twlfa mA Imaa . J.h Bnrf slim ' hrUy fr,H. )K-r e,e. and. -aid ...1 cUarmit--'tau--d. ahw mwrmaira now ami Ihaa: "I wlah that hHaltanda and thai kind of Mai, had nrirr brwn Inirulpd! I a-d to art my fanr-tr roaati, anil 4r1tird awn a happy liomr, with r-rmlng-a kmg and t-herry; alaa! my httftNUMl'a ttralna turn awr If ha maal atay. hrra half an lxur It .oral, ! "" """i n oaromlng th giant BMkra bm Vmaiji" rN pw-aaant , "",nnl''"y "t tha world, and hla cam rrawlnga by your aide pt-rhap. Uj-J"l'n now Deln "nanrad by tri yoa m. yowr britW- la yearning. J 0'r. W. Parkin., rormar partn.r of Una, and panting? Ilule! with her ; 't'rpont Morgan, and th fathar Moat-ad (irangii It will not arem a. paaalng at rang If ahe g-ora gallivant ing. Methlnk that many of the da gam who play IIm frantic auffragr gmr ara t he-pa by hnahanda dHren. who. whew they uwMlr hnaan at all. ga gaat-4i Ilka lanohin to hla aUlL to eat the grwb that 'a gltro. RIO MAN COMIM.. On of th big men In metropolitan Journalism is Mr. Don C. Belt, long with tha New York World, and one ef the brightest, moat original and In teresting speaker. In th country He has accepted an Invitation lo deliver n address before the North Caro lina Prras Convention at It ealon In July. It will be a treat to all Sdltore and other who ar fortunate enough to hear thl brilliant New Tork Journalist at the meeting at Morehead City Mr. "Bud" Flaher. th genius who rata tad the comic of "Mult" and "Jeff," I married. The young folk Who enjoy hla picture from Hv to fifty yeara old - will wlh him much happlaesa. but will wonder how any woman married hint. If aft read hla comics about the horrible life a mar ried man la compelled to live. If ah aw them he perauaded her that they ware given In the Pickwickian sen. or gh thought ah would Improve hla comic by giving him a knowledge of happy married life. In either event, here's wtahlng much happlne to tha treator of "Mutt" and "Jff." It waa ah eld time Radical row 'In th Waks County Republican Con vention yesterday "IJar" was ahout ed and uglier word. Plata . were haken under noaee and the police ware railed to tb platform. With two chairmen running a wrangling convention at th same time. It was tight to disgust all who bailer In decent politics And they tell ua that th Republican party la "reformed"! Whan Col. .1. C. U Hani th An drew chairman, ahook hi flat be neath the nose of lister Butler. Re publican Kxecutlv. Committee Chair man, yesterday at tha Wake County Republican Convention and gave ' th "dare", tt waa old time Radlcallam all light. Th cusalng was loud and lively. t Oeorg. Perkins of the Harvester "In,- who ' nnanctng Roosevelt' flBis!., laughs la hla a! save every '2ZZ!" Oeertt knows hla trust and th steel tragi got all they wMa4 when Roosev.U was President. "f they know they win get It again. ('.'Urernocrate are little Interested In ;, th light between Roosevelt and Taft 'Wa aaa defeat either of them. Th Montgomery Adrertleer thinks w oag ; bMt arastsr than taft, and ;ayat "law. them laminate 'th Col- east; wa ara atltl4 ts en easy si. (WT. satsc ths Rpwhllesa" - WVn Taft ths Nsrth Car. - !! KapobUosM la Oreeashare, h did ga m ths rsprasaatatlv af Rasa , a it And jret North CsswIlM Rspnt.. J"sjm demeanee th Mat sad thssw tp thslr fcata for ths rlaipa wh t ooaneed thsm. loeh It Worth Ca ', RepsbHcaitlsnit ' " e"- aaa"eipe. -r. " aiu haa sees gtvea- a IHIM i to tha raldiy( b4 m aaaa - wilt What Waahtaftsa sywsWt - t Grant essldat tut, JMM- t rave, will ths Mtk -' the Amarlaaa per . .. Jgg( T2gflstxj da larad thi honnM n,.b. -hul- ly ' t uaaia" , of It nd auppoalng truly;""' "dad: "Why ahould a man Ilk. . . l . l iIh for ftutt - Th. I'M M t. t.b. Ih. Tl Ma t, .. ...... rivht t h..v, thr rlahl ,,,. h. ,. . . . , , . . , K, to th wiDoort oT a.rv l-ir f tha,""" 0T l"t of airaat l;.hr Jakaoman l.amo.r-u, If th.ra ha. a haar. anv two man If tnata hata haan anv two man who w,r. ar in th. Whit. Iloua. .kn ....... ..,.1,1.. ti i. h... vwlt and Amlrow .ln kmm Whan tha aa-l'raatdant "rm oninianilad hlmaalf mom hlahlv ' lv pnltliiK hlmaalf In Ih luiai with old Hii korr." ha ahowad auprama i-Kotlarn and rapu diatad hla own Milmata of Jatkaon. whlrh ha mada In hla hook wharatn ha ...k varv aliirhttnirly of the hero nf New (illaailia Hlthotlfh ha now (iraJaaM hlrti in tha hop of fatting ! -! Anoraw .iHfkaon waj a (real I Mifhtar and did not naed to talk about It Mr Itooaavalt no douht haa phjra jhal ri.uniaa. hut whan It com aa to lohllal lonilillon and unaclhah de votion to tha public and vtgornua war- ' n would ha "aa walar MtUu wlna.' , I.. , I ha ureal monrv trust nuih to t on. ... inn ma f-ouniry ana in. .aiinnai Hank Ihraatrnad public calamity If Mr. .lackaon vtoad Ita rhartar. "Old I Hickory' rafuaad to ba frlghtenad and hit tha monay truat a blow bata.an llhavaya.- Whan tha at aa I truat da- man dad of Mr. Itooaavalt that ha par- 1 m,t " v",l"l ,h h" Antl Truat law and to approv lla purrhaaa of Ita . hlaf cortipatltor undar th. Ihraal of bringing on a panic, Mr Itooaavalt aurrandarad unconditional ly and gav parmlaaton to thla hlggaart truat to vlolata tha law. and navar par mlttad anw proaaruttnn of that truat. : or in, ttarvaatar truat. I Thla con I raat hat n A ndrew .lackaon and Theodor. Rooeevelt ahow the would-be third term Pre.- Idant up as unworthy of even o much g unlatching Old Hickory, r tne anno string, or in. h leas rlalmlng tha vote of th "heir of th. Jackaonian Democracy Tha Ihird term candidate has sought to win favor by advocating the doc trtnee mad popular hy William Jen- nluga Hryan. none of which he put In to practice whan ha was President and had thtt power. Beyond denounc tmj malefaiiora of great wealth and prosecuting those who did not come and eat out of hla hand. Itooaavalt has never done anything for tariff re duction or against privilege except talk about hla deeda, to put him In the same tins with Andrew Jackson. When he had nearly finished hi econd administration, there were many admirers of "old Hickory" who did not aee th danger of a third term, who urged him to accept an other term. Jackson was not moved by the favoritism of hi frienda. Hla political llf waa founded upon fixed prlnclplaa and the reply ha mad to those who wiahed htm to accept an honor, whlih Washington and Jeffer son declined, la commended to th. consideration of Colonel Itooaavalt In hla hop - aklp - and - Jump campaign waged on at eel trust money. Jackson wa the Idol of hi party and was mors popular with the whole people than any man who succeeded him In the White Houae When urged to ac cept a third term. Andrew Jackson, In a letter declining a third term, wrote these wis and patriotic words: "You hav no longer any cause to fear danger from abroad, your strength and power ar well known throughout the cMHaed world, aa well as th high and gallant bearing of your eons It la from within, among yourselves from cupidity, from cor ruption, from disappointed ambition and Inordinate thirst for power - that fartlone will be formed and lib erty endangered. It la agalnat such design whatever dlaguls tha actor may assume, that you have especially to guard yourselves HIS WORK KTDKIV The chief address that waa to have bean made last night In New York City, al th Mb and Rllln Forward Movement Congress, waa en "The World Peace." hy W. T. Stead ef Iinndon. He was easily ens of the foremost journalist In the world, a man of dynamic power, wh had touched th world to bless It In a hun dred way, and whose ability and pew ar made Mm ef world-wide lafliMSje. I rw - - .a. ni. il to heThlm a. -.ub, paid h.m hi tribute laat night, whan It met sad heard another In hla place. What th world loat In th death f thla an man waa worth Unfold anere than tha saving of hundred Isnaay Mir Stead's work la ndd, hat hla Influence abides In tha great hooka he ha written and In th contribu tion he mad t Ih wrld'a apllft A CAROLINA HKRA. Th Washlagtnn Star haa a picture J Mr. Oeear . Weedy, of Raxtiara, c- loat his Ufa aa th Tltaala, and aay "t peetmaster OanaraJ hag hn laferaaad tM woedy and hla tw aaaaeutss taseseaj t (ha last ta aav th ala.bi Mn putur M )h Tiunla, earryi., rh ami, U th Mi-r 4ok. Kara wa. . her. wh uly, dexvlag tktmm totnyea UU WH.M M men who put duty aawa Uf Raaaasall id pwt ka H raaavi Taft , a the aad eves aaaa svUa U 11 d swslag hla e- ! ' nation than ia a woman 1 h I. no aarthly u. a,,a, to l.n... I - " " "niy uao araPi to i.r.iiK i i ... Int.. tha world a lot of mrTt l;.hr- " " , 1 ilr fr..n takaa a vary n.rrow . v,'w a-ott-an that tha moat aondarful thing In tha world now and luya will b la niotharhood and that thaaa Immi grant woman of whom aha npanka of an allghtlngly, may gtva to tha orld aona who will turn It up.ida down. It la not from tha hnmn of tha ilh and thoaa who hava avary comfort, from which tha world'a (craataat pub lic aranta coma It -I. Intlad a tragody that haa tomhad tha world that a man of the tvpa of Major Butt ahould hava luat III Ufa on tha Tl . . , .... , ,K. ti tanlc. Ilia frlanda and tha nation mourn for him Ha wh. a at.ldlar raarad to fa..- ileHlh. and. If In that crtala ha hail fnrKottan hla training and had !an ontru to hla Houtharn rnurag. and to tha chivalry of tha aaa. how would h. h.va atood today In th. ayaa of tfia world? Ha amuld, hava aavad hla Ufa nnd lo.t hla char acter and raput. lion Of auldler It la true alwaya "TheW'a but to do and die" and tha aoldler who faltara and who fall, to protect the weak, haa brought dishonor to hla uniform. Major Hull not only roae to tha height, eipected of an American aol dler whan ha aavad woman and chil dren, and gave hla Ufa to do It. hut ha aaaumed a ptMilllon of command and authority when man wera loalng their head, whlrh ahowa that Kipling haa aio'h men aa Archibald Hull In mind when ha wrola hla famous "If you can keep your head and all about bou " II la not ao much whether thla or that peraon la aaved In a great crl.tr It la how the men demean them aalve. Ihi thay forget the chivalry which a man always owea to a wo- man All a man's whole life would be dishonored if he ahould, when th crtala of hla life come forget J everything but eelf and permit help lea woman and children to die In the sea while he aaved himseir. The Anglo-Saxon civilisation will perish whenever Ita men forget th order on th ve el "Women drat." AS IT LaQOU. Th presidential contest. In both political parties, la of commanding In terest . Mr. Roosevelt' big gain In Illinois and Pennsylvania have caused his partisane lo confidently predict J hy ,h rmy fnesrs is enervating and hi nomination for a third term. h tendency to cause th eflteera Clark victory In Illinois and WH- I to tr,'f" th ,0 th rnuoua anna In Pennaylvanla have chrlj1,f Visitors to tha White Houae. th. upport.r. of each. n.rmon.' ""Pna, feunll M.Jor aupport has been disappointing to hla aupport ara and surprising to hi oppo nents In Nebraska moat folk thought he would win because th Progress ives were divided between Clark and Wilson, but. with th aupport of Sen ator Hitchcock, Mayor Pahlman and the leading Ttemocrattc papers In the State, he wis 1 2.70 behind the vote for Clark and Wilson. All expected him to develop more strength. Mr. t nderwood has carried no alngl vote except In hla home State. Alabama, i and he la not seeking votes except In from four or five Southern Slates, one of the wisest and moat prudent of Iemocratio Senators from th. South. In a private letter to a friend In North Carolina, says: "It seem to m that bv the pee ress ef elimination. Governor Wilson' chancea to receive the nomination at Baltimore ar better now than they hav ever been. With Bryan righting Hahnon. I'nderwood being an Impoe atblllty. and Clark being unabl to e rur th New York vote on account of Hearet'a advocacy of hla candidacy unlesa Hearst can make a deal with Tammany and with the Bouth almost united against Clark. It looks very much Ilk Wilson I bound to get the nomination." There lan't a Senator or any other man who la In a better poaltlnn to know th altuatlon as It really I than the Senator from whoa letter th above quotation la mad. A MAN OK GKMl'g. Th Aaeortated Pres. never ren- dered any eerv u t th country that wa an anmirably . handled and a well written aa the new ef th Tl tanlo dlaaetor from the first word that oam by th wlr.lee I th last el. ata man! made by those who wer. aaved, Thar were eom. of th. papers that had arroneou raaerta In the early hour whan the nawa first came but Bush nswa did net eeme by Ih. A aoeiated rreas. That wonderful er ganlsatl.n under th direction nf Ms, Ifstvlll B. Btwne, who haa made himself the master mind ef the news of tha world, aaw te It that the papers aainff that servlc larked nothing ef detail, and In all the haete and strain a I ao aaw t It that tha accuracy waa aa part art aa th atari war tragic and Interesting. When the chief l set had osana la aad tha aervle had beea fawerakly cammented n all sver th oetrntry, Wr, Btoa gaw aU the credit ta tha eapahl aad pre gr is slv aa wh wer at Ih key board aad typewriter and wireless. Wa hear a (raat. deal a sent Presi dents aad aswernara aad Caataiaa af Industry. Thsss la aa aaaa la A exert as wh haa hi head aa Ua pals af tha warid aaaa plot ety M Mr, Man and n g a caws ha aad tha sthsr aa at gealaa wh ar aasscutad with that tM cirw ar tha Aa asolatsd rraw haa gw U hr tha laacwel pf this gssMsatlaa. k few t th Wasdtsw'vVa... a aataaaa. 8 aasxhbx U vdoUasrwt fcUlaiaa."--' '? rorfimltte and no doubt tha twelve I ballava that tha world la waiting In t ikmiwii (! it I n muni aiiu m i m i aa ,n ''"" n0 IT,V ,l " i . .. '! "aw rallgion. Young nian In rollaga a IVZ.'-Z ' " 7. ' "JZ ' -' not .... or.. ...... that collar. .lrf.nl. h.v. aouaht to h' " Tnartnaa. by und.rtakin, i V " . . . . .. . .v 1 ?;Qlanlula1 waa tha aJdaat aon In tha orllavlng that thav ara aruart anough I r.,n ... .. . .m.i ... . 10 improv. upon Pruvarb and to aa- tabltah a rallgion that call for no faith. Th. name of the club of thee, aalf-coristltut.d creed - makers ,1s enough to damn ll In tha aysa of th. world "The Kntiert O. Ingeraoll Club." Now, Mr. Ingeraoll wag an eloquent man, one of the moat alo- I . '" ' etoquenc enabled him to opaot th. faith of thoaa who wera not well grounded, but he died some years ago and what did he leave behind? Thoaa who accepted hi atickg upon reli gion found that ha waa a mere bril liant Iconoclast, seeking to tear down, but furnishing nothing that would gird men with etrength In tha hour of endurance .m- tetwh them how to live well and die well. lat us not taka too aertoualy tha determination of tha younr men of fornell to abolish the old rallgion and give na a new religion. They are young and thay will probably get ovar It, Jt may ba that th.y will follow 'th. eiample 'of two young men at Oxford, who undertook to prove that tha fhrlatlan religion waa not true, but determined to study the claim of Christianity with tha result that they both became con- v.nceo tnai u wa true ana Became noted he I lav ere and wrote good book In proof of the divinity of Chrlet and th. truth of the Christian religion. , . , . , -HOT HPOII.KI. BY eTiWrr. The movement la on foot to erect a monument In Waahlngton to Major Archibald Butt because of hi heroic j aervlce on th. Titanic Usually, the I world doea not look for heroism In the military men who are also aortal lion Major Butt had been assigned j hi duty at th many year and White Houae for .. . . i ,k.n an army officer who wishes this er- vie I regarded as too devoted to an easy Ufa Deed of heroism are not expected of such men as they ere j from men who are on the frontier or ! who have no taste for aortal llf In Waahlngton. Aa a matter of faot, th I ey life In Washington society led mitt a rnarming gentleman, witn taste and Judgment In handling crowd and he performed that ser vice so wall that th aortal world had connected htm more with the White Houaa functlona than with deeda of daring and awlf -sacrifice. HI con duct on th Titanic, however, ahowed that his llf of aa and pleasure at Waahlngton wa a .mere diversion, and that, when called, because of hla chivalry and courteav. to that duty by the President had performed It o delightfully that ha waa easily one of the moat popular men In Waah lngton. When, however, the time came for a man to ahow what sort of en vi fT there was In him, and to lay down hla life to aav women and chil dren and to display courage In pre venting men without chivalry from taking the place In th boat that belonged to the women and children, he showed himself every Inch a man and the American aoldler. The Amer ican people honor his memory and hla eervice brings glory and honor to tha American Army. Bonaevalt charged th Taft crowd with stealing votes In New Tork. Ia the Wake County) Republican Con vention Col. J. C I Hania and Charles I). Wilde, charged County Chairman Lester Bntlsr and his faree with having a fake oonveotlon and endeavoring to look th delegates vntea It Is a fraud f a party, I ' th P- A. and M. eontlnuaa te he all right It swept Waahlngton and tse off Ita feet yesterday In baseball by a score nf seven to five, Raleigh Is proud of the A, and M, boys and North Carolina la pseud ef them. Thay ara a Una at ef fellewe and their vtoto liea reiolce tha people at th Slat. Clnl Meesevelt eeattiruee t coas out th Pre dent ta llvary trm Th President la now thraatanlag te talk back. Will ha tiaa language thai will stick or will ha aaacely hand tha Colonel an sdmenlsbtng slap ea the wrist? Colonel Harris' teawentloa did net endoTss More head, but It will Und at th Kepublksaa Btats Convention that worn nallUoa csold haaw haaa Played whaa it aska for reoognltlen hp tha Mat Chairman. The retursa ahew that. Wwedisw Wllenn la gaining vote far th B4 Umnr CaevenUM atralght slang. R la th man wham th Dessjetcjata ahould asaaiaata fag t, aa h a lead M wtataap, : I a aS a t The Calsaat desiar that "When I ftght, I light," aa h ia haadlag Prealaeat Taft gaoh hat MM that It hw ua ha Mt H Ih Ightlag gafaxaaig. xtj.:. Wka awvaty win anUwst 1U asalt u th hamuaa Baaajauaaa aaaeallsa asswd last la KaJelgh tetJMAwdtaaitBsjt, , v iauj luiai rim in. blii iiftiiatn I'mittT or.ajiUad ona of ih. ,r-i " V! I , Ki.. TT-T.-rv. ... .J Italy. Arloato. wrola hla 'OrUu.do KUrlo.." ha mad. a fathar of Otan u rl Klearhl on. .,f th. .,.,..... Th. boy'a mothar waa M1a Dalla ltover. a nlar-. of P... i....... n th . fount of Lavag-na, HI fathar ad while tha aon waa atlll a youth, id th. mother devoted harwelf to th. dlad and car. of th. enormous property Into which Oianlulgl would come when h. waa of ag. He waa a manly youth, well trained In all aporta, h. waa very handaomo, and hla mannera wera faaclnatlng. When ha cam. to man's eatat. ther. war. few young noble In Italy who were ao widely known and ao general ly beloved. Fleachl lived superbly and enter tained lartahly. Ftienda were wel comed with cordial hospitality, and ha waa called the "Qenoeaa Alclbl adaa" Th. common people adored him, and tha prayer of th. poor constantly held hi name and they would hava given their Uvea for htm. Wh.n there cam. th. question of hi marriage, every noble daughter of Oaaoa hoped ah might b choeen to grace hla 21 caatlea and enjoy the splendid honor accorded hi nam. and atata. It waa I-eonore Cybo. beautiful, aocompllahed. and crowned with all th. virtue, whom h. mar ried when he waa 21, and their wed -ding waa tha moat magnificent ever aaen In ducal Genoa The year following hi marriage FTeachl formed a ronaplracy to frea I flenoe from th. nnm'.r rtt A r li r-.a rorla who waa nillng tha rapuhUc : for the Kmperor. .'harle V. Ynrh ruler had been driven out by Porta, and the people longed to have them return An nr wnj In a deplorable condl- , tion ravaged by wara torn by polltl- ' p1 'ay tlona and aectlona of It being iT" hnri','d bv, 0h""oun- trie. The onrmlracy of PI eta hi waa patriotic aw heme to restore to Genoa a I aamblance of political liberty, which . they had lost under Kpanlsh rule nhan all Klearhl plan ware made I and It came time to glv. the algnal for i the Innurrectlon he nearly abandoned hi Diana when hla young wife Im- plored htm to remember hi duty to her. Aa he tore hlmaxir from her arms ai.d swore to her through streaming tear that the memory of hla father called to him to free On- I noa she fell In a swoon at his feet, and so he anw her for the last time. For a few hours It seamed If the followers of Fleer hi would he success ful. The adopted on of porta was killed and Dotia himself escaped to his castle at Masnne. But the tide turned, fire brok out In th city and raged fiercely: robbers began to pil lage and hideous scenes of bloodshed made th night frightful beyond word At the arsenal. In parsing from on gallery to another across a movable sort of bridge. Kleerh) marie a misstep, lipped and fell Into th water, fully dressed In hla roat of mall. The acci dent was not discovered nntll It wras too late to aav him ' Hla lose ended the Insurrection. Dorla, more powerful than ever, had the Senate vote to banlah tha Klesr.hl family forwver: to destroy all thslr palaces and castle to cast Into the sea every monument or memorial of the family. nd to ronnerate all their propertv TOMORROW THE GrXPOWTJER PIaOT. KITCHrN CLI'B ORGANIZED. LewteUMi Volar Begin to Work for Their FsvorHe Candidate. (Special to Newa and Observer. ) I.wlton. N. C April St. A Kltchln club wa organised laat night with seventy 1 70) member and the following officer were elected: , Prealdont Dr. W. Mitchell Vice-Preal dent---". B Orlffln. A. T. F.ason. J T. Vaale. J V Haggard. J B. Saunders. J I. Harrington and Burgees t rquhart Executive Committee T W. Orlmn. Perry Basemore, J. M. Edward W. F. Morrla and P. V. Renfrow. Secretary B. V. Ilenfrow. The club will meet again on th night of April ?(th. when we hopo tn have some prominent apeekera to ad dress us and in the mean time hope to secure the nam. of every whit man In thla and the adjoining toen ahlpa Much atudy la a weartn. of th. flesh. Bccleslastes. xll. 12. 3 CATARRH Why Wast Time With Im possible Methods ? Breathe Hyomei and Ca tarrh and All Its Disgust ing Symptoms Will Van ish. Ther ia aty one wag te ours a tarrh. Meach tha raw, tender. Inflamed membrane that la Infest d with ca tarrh germ a, aad d astray th germ Tou cant reach th nooks aad orev. lea with liquid preparation and wa ter wont go down the windpipe yoa know that. There, la only ona way breath th sntlsspHo germ killing air of H TOM EI (pronounce It High o-m) directly ovar th Infested part HTOMEI eeataina aa opium, as eaina r other harmful- drags; It la aaad ef Australian ucalyptu. thy innl and ether Listerias antiseptics. It will and tha mktary of catarrh, crwapv oougha, cwlda aad catarrhal daafnees, U need aa directed. A eeannlsta HTOMEI eolflt. which Include hard rubber pocket Inhaler, a hstii f UTOMHI and aimpra In Btruptteae far aaa, cseta 1.M, Extra Wit If aftarwWda rwauKwd, .11 mats, at dragglsts vrywbr. iiibh eras, watta. aad hnalaaa la S.T. , - aaaaef Waca. banal, palm leae. Price Me. Aak ea"dragglat s aad Ua la auaiBS, tBrwwTB- H.OL I Heuator. a la fal Hrloa. In Uia raurua Mr. McImh la tha awn - " .-- a... i r of Th. Waahlncton I', at and pr and pre I tnda tn ha a Iwmncrit a U Tartuffa a aimiiiauon 01 a i nnaiu. Aftar a gib. that evldancaa much Imoranca aa malevolanca. ' '"- po-bla-dlrautad agaJnM tha nreaent DamocraUo Houaa of ! Praaantatlvaa ajid Ita waya ana Mmih Cun.mliiiK for faJlura to bring j ,n bl" modlflng Uia cotton arhedul. I o"" Uwr r " cotton nilila 1 al th" """th, Th. Poat haa thla any: Iron and Steel manufacturers. augar producer, the chemical trade. ool grower and weavera togetiiar with a multitude, of Interrelated In- duetrlea principally of Northern lo- cation and development, hav. been threatened with th harsh procea of revision, but th divinity that hedge the Bouth draws th line of demarca tion at the thirty-ninth parallel. Th. bieasinsa of free trade are proclaimed from th housetop It I true, but not for horn, consumption. Politically pledged to destroy protection, atlll th. South In practice doredly retains th. prlnripl. of protection of American industry In It broadest construction. "While It Is obvious that free trad. North and a high protection South soon would enrich the latter be yond tha dream of avarice. It 1 not at all clear that such a consummation demand th Northern CongreaamMi ahall beggar the welfare of their con stituent in order to boost the one sided gam a An Ignorant read would Infer from the foregoing that the South has a monopoly of the cotton-aplnnlng ell aa of th cotton -growing Indus- trv. though It la a fact that the out- put of th cotton mills of Maasachue- att alone la of a greater value than the aggregate production of all th. cotton mllla "south of th. thirty- ninth parallel" 1 worth. Nor I that all. Th. existing cotton schedul. is the conception and the handiwork of a Northern man. and that Nelaon W. A Id rich who saw to It that the bleach ed fabrics of New Kngland wer. b.t ter protected than the "brown sheet ings of the Carolina, and here 1 thla henchman of the "robber barons" of New Kngland delivering Itself of a pharlaalacal whimper for politics only Th cotton schedule I Aldrlch- , uvm In the green tree, and nobody out a real oemocrat ha a rigni, in ' decency or In moral to complain of a failure to rerorm ll ana Cleanse n ' of Ita Infame and It -aaft The laat paragraph of the article quotedU from the Poet la a gem that nobody hut a genlua could deliver hlmaelf of and especially la It forci ble In the light of the free sugar bill that passed the Democratic Houae by an overwhelming majority the present session. Turn back and read It, and 'then call to mind that for more than a century we have had a free trad South and a protected North, If I may borrow some "langwldge" from thla learned Theban and It I a thous and to on that from th same pen came the stricture on William Jen nings Bryan'a onion patch aom tire ago. One day at Zab Vance, making a powerful apeech In the iTnited States New : News : of : Yesterday The Only Man That Cleveland Both Liked and Dis liked. . (By K. J. EDWARDS.) I aupport a bill which wa practically a "drover Cleveland either did or did j hlh. Protection bill, at least 1n Chve not like a man aa a general thing. Hla ,, Tj . prejudice w.r. pretty strong either i well the result was that when way." ald th late Kanlel 8. La moot. Cleveland thought of the Oorman who who started out In public llf as j "d ion" bo much toward securing Cleveland's private secretary and rtlon In 1114. hi feeling were ended hi political career aa a mem- th kindliest sort. But when he ber of the second Cleveland cabinet, thought of Oorman a th Democratic "But to all rulea there la an eicep- lder who had helped to mutilate tion or two, and Arthur Pue Oorman Wilson bill, hi feeling wereany waa th exception .to the Cleveland thing but kindly. And In that double rule of liking or diallklng men. and Inconsistent menial attitude to- "Senator Oorman waa really the dl- i rectlng force of th. Democrstlc strategy In th prealdentlal campaign of 1114. He was a member of the Democratic National Committee and of It executive committee; he was s consummate master of strategy, and some of the thing which he did, when brought to, Cleveland atten tion, called forth word of high prala from th Governor. Cleveland was a good deal of an admirer of skillful political management. H. would not tol.rate anythln dishonorable and unfair, but he liked the game and waa fond nf knowing how to play It. "One day a communication waa brought to Oorman at the headquar ters of the national committee. He was told that It contained a atory Which, If published, would undoubt edly mak It Impossible to elect Blaine. "Oorman looked over thla atory. and when the man who brought It called upon him a day or two later Oorman aid. "I don t want It; I won t use It " 'But,' said the man, 'If you use It a a campaign document It puts an end to Blaine. " 'But It would be unfair fighting, Oorman replied. 'If w cannot win without publishing stories of that kind, then w deserve to loee. Furth ermore, I 'say to you that I know O ro ver iievaiand wall enough ta be cer tain that he would rather withdraw aa the Democratic prealdentlal candl date than permit the national com mlttee to make uaa of arurrillty of thl kind as a campaign article. It makaa ne difference whether the story I true or not. The two psrtles fight hard and light desperately, hut they ngni rair.' "Cleveland heard of thla action ef Oorman' and It pleased him vary murn. He caused word to b asm t German axpraasln hla high ap proval ef what Oorman had dona, I am sura that It waa recollection of inia incidant which disposed Cleve land after hla election te ass Oorman to Uke a aeat In hla cabinet. ThatH purpose, however, waa hot xmrr atrongly fixed in hla mind, a that h easily abaadoned It whsa ha wa told that Oorman oould net be pre vailed upon to ult th Senate to aocspt any appointive afnes. Th Ilk. lag for Oorman remained, however, all through th admlalatratlen and the four year f prlvaU Ufa that , the aacead Cleveland admlnl. traUoa the Wlleoa tariff MIL which had passed th Hens and which furry represented Clevelaad'a ideas fBpertlng th unit, waa mutilated Byond recognition ta th Senate, Cleveland regarded It aa se bad a bill thtt at nrusm t g M and M h fm a iw without hi aignatur. lie held Qoraiaa respsnaibl for werg. lag- la se-eaerattoa with certain Ite. BwvHcan teeaers a that a a tartly at th Seaat id h relied apes t menim-ant 1n ' than tn any other member of the en tire federated sletarhood." "Q." re torted Vance. "It la not our pauper at home who give ua concern and tm peae upon us hardship but It I th tariff beggar if New Kngland and other ia)unltlea of th North, whom tha law force u aupport, that keep th wolf at the door of North Carolina." That haa bean olng on ever alnre action of Article I of tb. Constitu tion of th Unllted Htatea waa dis torted ao aa to make It permlselbl for Congress to levy taxes on one man and bestow the usufruct on another man. Th. South being th Weaker j brother, th lunlor mu-tner. th ml norv rtockholder. haa been robbed under the guise of taxation In every protective tariff w ever had. But the thing would be overturned and reformed If the Houth w.r. not ln f eat ad with aom tariff beggars of her , wn who tr8 u rWr to mak ' money by law, rather than by work, j M any of them In New Kngland. or i Pennsylvania Ther. Is th fly In th. ointment, there the worm In th. bud. f , h milt mad a great mistake In put ting aruarar on ther fee ilat Instead nf that a bill could hav been framed that would get $60,000,000 revenue out of sugar, and pit mate every ele ment of protection--except ths merest Incidental now enjoyed by the augar trust, the cane-grwera and the beet grower. Kree sugar 1 a bluff, and woo, taxed And the Way and Mean Corn "un "v" orougru in a dim reiornung in cotton scnedule, which exceeded In Infamy by the wool schedule only. It Is true that the I tton schedule as It exists aforda j some protection to the South, that I "n Infinitesimal part of th Bouth th. cotton spinners while It affords (much more protection to the North " n rouon spinner or imvt section. One day the great lawer. Jama T. Brady, wa arguing a brief before the Supreme Bench of New York. IT knew that hi client, whomVe had not represented In the court below, had failed to make out his rase, and In his argument on appeal Mr. Brady gave a resume of the testimony, and when he had finished hla side of It. h Informed the court. "Her. the plain tiff rested." On th Instant Chief Jua tlce Church exclaimed In great sur prise. "Rested. Broth Brady? Rested? Why did he rest?" "That Is a matter your Honor answered Brady, "that given me much concern, and I hav pestered my poor brain, no little to conjecture th. wherefore of hla pause. Finally I hav reached tha conclusion that he must have been muoh fa tigued." Then followed a laugh and the dismissal of the caae. And I have pestered my poor Intel lectuals no little to aurmure why the Way a and Meana Committee rested before they fetched In bill reforming the cotton and lumber schedule and and hava come tn conclude that Mr. Underwood was so greatly fatigued running for president that he was too tired tn undertake a battle with the cotton and lumber robber viorman ne na remained ever aince. "I think It la the only case In all Cleveland' experience when h has both llkad and disliked the aame man" (Copyright. 1112. by B. J Edward All rights reserved.) Tomorrow Mr. Edward, will tell of "The Outaider Who Persuaded Grant to Stretch the Law." Mr. Harden Clesncnt a Candidate. (Special to Newa and Observer. ) Salisbury, April IS. Harden Clem ent, Rao,., one of Sallaburya well known altorneya, hasannounced hi candidacy for delegate from the Sth dtatrirt to the National Democratlo convention. Thl gives TJowan coun ty two candidates for the aame hon or Whitehead Klntts. Re., having previoualy announced hla candidacy The contest between the two promi nent young Democrat will b watch ed with keen Interest. CASTOR I A Tor IalkhU had CMldrtm. Thl M YeiEsTS Ahrsjs Et Bear th Blgpaatar ef I WALlCljVRK.Jr, Attorney-At-Law. stAZaBGB, HV CI Peculiar to your needs U th dlMtttM ' tataregM a yeur priatlag. - Pheaa wh tXlrCnnnoLL; rumen. iuixrca.xii
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 24, 1912, edition 1
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