Bessemer City
VQL‘ J1- ___BESSEMER CITY, N. C., SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1896.
HE HITS THEM HARD.
WHAT IP CHRIST CAMS TO
CONdRKMf
lknnw* Dafsada Ranll Again** the
ALluki Of Ik. 11*11 ir*Rl rm* W4
Toimtm Bat ih* Bum of h|M aa«
Oorropl UglihUM.
When a man enter* ooagree* he must
chooie one of tv* thing*. It he *l*h»
to be courted end feted by Washington
eoclety. If be deelree the
prelee of the plutocratic proas,
U ha le looking after fat
place* for hla relatione aad friend*. U
hla heart long* for the am Ilea of aris
tocracy and the faemlag of eyoopent*.
be has only to be the willing tool of
plutocracy end all tbeeo thing* are
within hi* grasp. If thne he ehooeee.
hi* future pathway 1* strewn with flow
er*. end for him thwe le the purple aad
line linen of Dire*.
On the other hand. If he champions
the eenee of the people, and Hand* up
for the nation'* toller* and antagonises
Shyloeks who are enlisting the hone*l
yeomanry of the oountry, he will b*
called a eraak, an agitator and an an
archist.
He will be scorned by society, ma
ligned. abused and ridiculed by the
plutocratic press and treated discour
teously and snubbed by Lhoee In power,
and given to understand that ha has no
Influence with tho administration.
Tht* condition confront* every mi*
who Is chosen to represent the people
aad he mast become an ally of the
aristocracy of wealth aad desert the
people or stand up for the rights of
the people and be hated by the money
power. Surrounded by lobbyist* and
oomptlonlata. with unlimited moasy
to purchase vote*, with avenue after
avenue to luxury and «aa* continually
open to the mental vision, surrounded
by vice and profligacy, la It to be won
dared at that so many of our pnbllc
'men fall victims to the temp tat Ion, end
forget the poor tollers who labor la
tho mlnae and factories, the vineyards
aad the ft*Ida and who ere looking to
their leaders with such Intense, tearful
suspense? Her* lies the great deagar.
This 1* the very root of the evil, the
aouros of all our Ilia.
Bo long u the trusts and monopolies
bald ruch unlimited power. just so long
will our legislation become more cor
rupt and vicious. The greedy, unscrup
ulous grasping, trusts haw catered the
balls of congress and they hare pol
luted the men whom the people have
true ted, end Instead of a government
by the people, It la a gowmmant by a
money oligarchy. The oapiui etty of
our nation Is reeking with rot tenets;
corruption and bribery stalk hand In
hand with luxury and licentiousness.
The man who sells hie rote lose* his
honor and becomes the prey of rlcloua
habits Onoe started om the downward
road there la no stopping sad he be
comes the eaay tool of the money pow
er. Thus It has come to peas that the
congress of the United Btatea la ever
ready to foster the robber trusts while
the people are starring. We talk of
reform along certain lines, we hold
monster meetings and petition congress
far the passage of certain laws la the
interest ef the people, and we watt and
fondly hops for good wholesome legis
lation whan the very men who are to
pass the laws bare sold themaelree to
the money changer*. W# mutt break
the hold whloh tht money power has
upon this nation ere we cea hope for
reform. We must scourge the Shylocks
from the capital even as Christ eooirged
the money changer* from the temple
and w* must turn out the unfaithful
ear ran:*, and with them the corrup
tionists, the lobbyists, the rogues and
prostitutes who make of the greet eap
ltol building at Washington a veritable
den of tblawe. if we would bare the
stream pure we must purify the bead
waters, so If we would hare lost laws,
passed In the In ter set of the men and
women who hare produced the wealth
of this nation, we must work a reform
ation among those who gars as tbs
laws.
M«ri to rtTMU to
th* Am*rlean people tbt* moat shook
lag state of again aad to show than
th* soars* of th* gnat daagar which
msnaoto ba 1 wrote «*y book "If Christ
Game to Congraas." Th* pictures
than draws are no donbt vivid and
startling, hat this la baeaua* they an
troe—takas from real Ills. Th* plato
oratlc praaa all over th* hoaatry is
boeplag aboas aad vltnperatloa oa me
for drawing aslds the veil ao that th*
voters of this country might look upon
this shocking 00*0* of corruption,
shame aad dehaaehery, and I have bees
threatened with ostracism by Washing
ton eoetety aad axpslalon from ooagrea*
kaaoaoe of th* rovelatlooo and expos
ora I hav* mada, hot la aplU of an this
I propose to wield ay pea aad rates
my rolo* la behalf of the honest taller*
who hav* sleeted os to ecagrma, aad
to "ary aloud aad spar* not" mill
. every man la th* Usd than be no
qaalatad with th* true attention and
stirred to aetloo
Lot me ooaelod* with a platan of the
eloelng eeeaes of the aeaeton of con
areas which aspired March 4 u was
th* hcly 8a b bath day aad th* ah arch
belli were rtngtag merrily orar th*
city la th* capital champagne flawed
like water. Committee rooms becamo
temporary brothel* Woman of Ut-ro
pate swarmed th* narrldorp tad aaag
ntp la th* public restaurant* with
Inebriated ooognasmen "I hav* sev
en ty-flve dosan gleaeee awt,” mid Toes
Marry. tk* dtegasted caterer *d the
boom roeUoraav "That tell* th* atewy
•f th* aommlitee rooms batter than say
ward* I “aid vtlei
ta frost of th* mala door la a perfect
•loud of goatlomm tetermted la lag
pi-**— Bom* of (ho team or* familiar
• * . •
•am. Thousands am] baAdfada'**
of dollars ara to ha won
* *o*l within tfcs naxt faw hoars._
Aroand at tha other door are- mors
lobbyists sad among tiwi ars some
woman. Backed op against ths marbls
Pillars arsrywhars ara mamban bat
ton-holed and on tha defensive, flems
of thsaa women are notorious. Tha
vary faot that they are brought to boar
upon any ttao of legislation la enough
to stamp It with condemnation.
There ara poker games la ths com
mittee rooms, and the elde-boarde are
stocked with tha bast liquid refresh
ment which could ba bought with tho
contingent fund. There were the house
sad senate bars where every one from
tho moat respected cltlxen to the low
est strumpet ooold obtain a drink.
An scad senator paaesd Into a private
room with a hilarious member of tho
deml-mondo an each arm.
A ooAgreaetaan was carried away fay
friend* Agfa ting drunk, a woman, with
bar daintily booted foot elevated on a
committee table, and a glam of oham- i
pagas elevated la her hand, was sing
ing a marry song, while a dotsn mem
bers and thalr frlenda eat around amok
lag and enjoying tho society of the
real lady. But this Is enough. I will
c**a*. All of this beaaatb the Jeweled
dome, between the marble walla of tho
temple of liberty, amid tha royal sur
roundings of art axpraaaad la bronao
and marble and tha szpalsite touch of
tha painter's brush.
Ood pity the people when such scenes
“ those are possible. 'When the
wlckad rule, the people mourn.”
Boas of elro# who bled for liberty, ba- I
ware, for oven sow, if you will only
Ilatoa yon may hoar tha clank of alav- 1
ary*a chains which are being forged for
you and your posterity.
Totters of America this la a goodly
land, w# are vastly superior m numbers
to tho hast* or Shyloek. so 1st ns go up
and pcaaiaa It
Ere It la too lata let os vot* for frae
B®»- hi. W. HOWARD.
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
The old party papers are not saying
much about many Populist vlotorlea in
cities and townships at the lata spring i
elections. The returns, however, are
oomtag In by alow freight. Pueblo,
Cola, city of *4,000 population, elect
ed Populist mayor, while LaedvIUs,
with 11,000 population, elected a Pop
s'1st City ticket Molina 111., with %
population of li.OOO elected s Popultet
mayor by 400 majority. In Illinois tbs
Populists elected a large number of
county supervisors throughout tbs
stats. Many small towue throughout
tbs eouatry were carried wholly or la
part by the People's party. These are
straws
• • •
Tba lata municipal sad township
si act! one throughout the country have
demonstrated In many places a sur
prising strength to the cause of Pop
ulism—the People's porty carrying
many towna and cltlaa. where the Pop
ulist vote waa light before. This la
most enoouraglog to the old parties.
• • •
The average gamings of labor In IMS
was |150; In U44, It dropped to |1*5, and
the prospects are that the average for
18*5 will be Kin lower. On the other
hand, millionaire Incomes are In cross- j
lag, and oOclal sals Ties climbing. Are !
you going to be foolish enough to vote
for a continuance of a system that
mikee such coidttlona possible?
• • •
It Is said that nearly 17,900 children 1
are unable to attend school In Ben
T ran cisco. How can the ao-called
humanitarians of to-day. who ehnt their
eyee to the environments of the poorer
classes, expect to build a noble man
hood and womanhood where the great
majority of the children are denied
proper education?
• • e
It li estimated by Superintendent
Byrnes and KTbrldg* T. Gerry that
there are 40.000 proeUtotea In the olty
of Now York. It la tale to say that a
large per coot of these unfortonatea
ore driven by poverty to a life of
shame. What a fearful responsibility
1* resting span thorn who are forcing
sawaant conditions upon this eoontry.
Poverty, emeh aa la forced npon one-half
the A overt can people to-day, tai have
so other than a demoralising offset, tbo
worst fsatnres of which are to bo real
ised
* • e
At a late delegate convention held In
Chicago of Oormon labor organist lions,
eeveaty-flve German labor anions
formally adopted the People's party
platform. That la wheeling into Uno
by battalion a, regiments, brigade* and
divisions
see
The tariff question has gone glia
mo ring—given way to tha universal cry
of “ssamrr "masoyr “moDeyr The
PwaloUat demeads of the People s
party sag continued agitation of tha
taanoo question finally forced It to the
front, la spite of the ihaa light be
tween the two old ponies oa tbo tariff.
Truth and ) net Ice will prevail If we are
faithful to tbo canoe of reform.
see
The effort to aide-track the People s
party aa a single plank platform boa
boon mot with such a storm of appeal
ties sad condemnation nil aroond the
country as to paralyse tha Bobemera
sad has had the farther effect of unit
lag Urn People's party Harass mare
strongly than ever before
• • •
Rad eggs wars thrown at Ctrl frowns
at Masai Ties. 0.. recently Browns la
Oarer'S lieutenant, having charge of
the has da aarteru far the distribution
of tha gaad roads literature aad tha or
gantsatton of goad reads leagues Whan
rvaart to rtUtt cess m ib irfi>
B*Srt they prove noueloatvoly that they
are without ggy ethers
*
THBY BOTH DO IT.
la fell snil to nootTm tha Initia
tors la MlMoort, Gov. Btono recount*
soas of tli outrages perpetrated la tha
large cities of that state and recom
mends the passage of lavs that will
prevent their rsenrrsaos. He says: “In
the preservation of a free representa
tive government nothing is so Import
ant as the purity of elections Generally
throughout this state I am confident
•loottons are characterised by high In
tegrity. But, unfortunately, this la not
true In the large cltiee. It la known
that groaa frauds have been oommlt
ted la those cities. The Inducement
and opportunity for oorrnpt practices
In large populous manlctpalltlaa are
great, and experience proves that dis
honest men of all parties have not been
slow to debauch the elective franchise.
Not a few consummate and dastardly
outrages have been perpetrated. Can
dor will compel a general admission
that the dtagraoe of election frauda la
fairly divided between the adherenta
of the different political organisations.
The truth of this statement la mads
evident by tha fact that both repub
licans and democrats, no called, have
been recently Indicted lo gt. Louts and
Kansu City for participation in inch
frauda In ana of tho wards la w*-—
City, which has a "boss" so oooapleu
one and potent that the ward U cur
rently referred to aa hie ward, there
are twloo aa many voters iwglutersd as
Lbsra are adult males residing therein.
This ’'boas" la a noted republican poli
tician. In the asms city It la wall
known that election returns have bean
fraudulently changed In the otgoe of
the recorder of voters ao aa to alter
tho roeult at tho polls as certified by
the Judges of election. The officer un
der whose administration the crime
was perpetrated was a democrat. When
■nch wToage are not only possible, but
ere actually and boldly It
la evident that tha public safety Imper
atively requires such changes In the
law aa will not only terminals existing
abuses, but prevent their repetition In
sheets the rights and interests of the
people of the entire atata almost < at
vitally aa It does tha people of the elttei
Immediately concerned. Whan we re
flect that about one-fourth of the total
population of tha atata reside la Bt
Louis and Kansas City, sod consider
tho tramandona Influence which those
cities can exart In tha election of an
tloDal and stale otflclAls, and on the
legislative policies of the stats, no
thoughtful or patriotic cltlasn can be
oblivious or Indifferent to tha para
mount Importance of vigilantly guard
ing the be Hot boa against every de
scription of fraud and crime.
During the recent run on the \J. B.
treasury gold supply (which waa a put
up job to affect legislation) the gold
eoln belonging to the government gnv«
entirely out On Feb.l. ns we under
stand the statement of the treasurer,
there was not aa eaeoh gold oeln In the
treasury as was deposited by the hold
ers of gold sertlfleatsn. Tbs govern
ment bad used all tta gold oeln and
about fl.OOO.OSS mors la redeeming
greenbacks. There won some gold la
bare, bnt greenbacks are not redoem
abls In bar*. Laoard Prams, one of tha
New fork banker* who w*r* pulling the
gold oat of the treasury, waa reported
In the dispatches la the fore part of
February to kava taken gold to tha
treasury and deposited it. This wee
IlketT to make good tha overdraft The
gold reserve waa wiped act The awful
calamity, the "lorn of ersdlt,' "going
lo a silver basis,” “silver dollars worth
but M esnts," etc., etc., ns prophesied
by the geld bugs did not happen. Hare
there was greenback money te the
amount of |Xt»,000,000 end not a dollar
of gold to redeem it with. And yet
the greenbacks continued to go at par.
They were resting solely on their legal
tinder power and reoatvibillty for
taxes and dnea. That tha “rninf la
a faree must be apparent to tvary ena.
If the greenbacks can rest aa* day oa
no coin whatever, and all tha time-on
only oea dollar In three, four or flve.
would they not be last as good If there
was oo reserve at all—If they were not
redeemable In other nosey! Look at
tba allear dollar hew U stands alone.
It la not redeemable la any other Mod
of money and yet everybody Onelsdlng
go Id bugs) will give Just aa much for It
as for a gold dollar. H adeem lag one
government dollar with sooth* Is a
great humbug. It Is that false Idas of
money that deprives the masses of the
poopls of that prosperity which only
a few enjoy .---Omaha World.
Whar. DM Tk*y (M TV»—T
W« rlaa to remark—and our Unyniy*
la plata-^whar* did tha organiaara of
th* bimetallic party pat th* namas and
addraanas of Popullat nommtttaaman
aod ortaalaara all ovar tha Dnltad
Stataat Bvaty promloaat workar la thia
country kaa raealrad blank pollUona
»Dd forma far wgaalklnc Popultat* and
otbar* Into aloha of thin now party
which atarta ant with a daetnraUon
that tha Paopla'a party mnat b* dfa
baadad.
W* ramambar tha fata of Dr. Ha
ouaa. who. It In eltnrpnd. allowed hi*
mnUlnc Mat la ba oaad for a atmllnr
purpaa* by tha donoaratt.
Thar* U n nl*«*r la tha wood-pu*
• od tha aooaar ha la aaaakad out tha
bauar Whan tha Pnapba’a party Bata
raady U rarraadar U want* tha )*b
dona apanly and nbor* board—Kan
tachy Popnllot
Tha prteaa of farm prodnats haw* haaa
gradanny dropplny art *. k|W Tha
; * . r
THE WEIGHT 0? IT. •
DISASTROUS UltMILTS OF TWO
YSCABS OF nRHOOKAOY.
« _
Ballway Racalvanbtpa, Baak Sas>
passion* and Sk Kaluga la ladae
trln Repraaant boasts ad BUlUna
—Rational Prosperity Hae Baas
Stlflad By Frse Trade,
Yarioua eat imatea have been wade of
tliaooet to tba country of tba Fifty
third Oongrtw, and of tba preeeoi Iras
Iraile Administration. It la difleoM
to arrive at a trua estimate of tba loaa
that tba pto to have aaSared through
thalr folly . Xovtabar, 7892. This
period of < nr history hat bean eon*
eiaaly rimribed by lTimn Clapp A
Co., tha New York banker*, is their
weakly circular* On Horawbar 11,
1892, they aaid:
"Tba reoent clasUos abew* tba
people want to speculate."
Four month* later, os' Karsh 17,
1*M, shortly after the iaaagsration of
l'taairirmt Cleveland, they <atd:
"Tha ah ad [nr of senaral liquidation
falls over tha door atop of Satinaal
prosperity.”
Tb.w* month* later, ad J«sa M,
Clapp's Circular aaid:
•Tha credit paain appear* to hairs
_m tma o* a.
crowed iht continent, and awtlj
four Months bars paaaad and a bflBoa
of TapraaafitaliTa aaoamj ha* diaap
ptarad,
la thalr lwt aouTcntr. they show
that tha aaranty-llra railway raaairar
•hlpa rendered -—m>ij that year ln
ToWad so indabtadoaaa mnoaAtiaf to
fl.aU,91T.08S, and tha total Kahili
tlci of banka aaapaodad WN 8*10. MS,*
808. Tha bosiaaaa shrink*** In tax
til* trade* wta almost WO, 000,000
and in other indoatnaa arm 800,000,
000.
Adding tha raoord of to* trade (all*
area they found that the -*1*—rtm
broaght upon tha a oaa try by tha traa
trade party daring 1*M was “equal
to aboat twenty-fir* par ant of tha
aannal prod action srartga for tha
oonotry daring tha past daoada.”
Oar artist has explained tha actant
of tha disaster for tha two fall Tiara
from March. IMS, to March. 1884.
According to tha record of tha bank
clearing* the abtiakag* In btuinaac
was 88,658,000,000, daring tha first
six month*.only that thia saw tariff
ha* been in force, balow the attonot
of baeiaeee dona daring the first sfat
months whan tha MaUnley tariff was
in operation. ,_
Wheat Scefia Prtoectlaa. .
Free traders sad others era already
■t work trying to iarant oxooaaa for
the cheap price of wheat, attributing
it to any eaoaa bai tha right one,
which ia inoraaiad production in tha
worlds supply, aa oaa be eacu from
tba following figures of the crop* far
mi end 1894:
*wx woaiD1* wnaer nmn
Earopa. l.MMJMOO
. «>!£•?2 ‘7,M*,*aa
Aammiwaa. XMJVXW *M*0,0e0
North A merles . 1)1,AM (MS
South America. . MNIOto JMCW
Tomb.
Itm wheat hair** of IBM wu 220,
000.000 bn abate larg* ‘h«n In 1891,
the inarm* in Barop# being 880.
000,000 ba*hnl% nod In Booth intri
<m 63.000,000. In A*U and Africa
th«r. waa praetleally no change ia tha
■apply, bnt ia Vorth Amariaa there
waa a deer eeac of nearly 20,000,000
buahala in Oaaeda, and orer 100,0 Xt,
000 baahala in the United Butaa. Haft
wlthataodiag the fee* that the North
American continent prod need 178,
000.000 b aabaU laaa wheat in 1884
than ia 1891, tba an port priee of wheat
fall from 08 easts a Mahal in 1891 to
031 eeata la J ana of 1894.
Onr par capita eonmttnpHnp of
wheat In 1881 waa 4.80 bnihala; la
1802 it incraaaad to 6.81 baahala par
bead of oar population, bat in 189 J it
Ml i|tla in 4.66 bubal* per capita.
This manat a am alter home market far
oar own wheat by 70,000,000 baahala
ia ISM Utaa wa bad ta 1891.
Whan tba coaotriaaoataida at North
Amariaa Inaraata tkahr wheat aappliaa
hy 400,000,000 baahala within torn
aaaaoaa, it la rcry aridaat that tha
United State* crop i* beaoadag lam at
a factor ia the ragnUtloo of prioa;
also, that wa ibaU not only faal tha
affect of tbla Increased foreign growth
in a depreciation of ralnaa, bat tba*
wa may alao I oak far ooaal datable ta
pci r tat I os, at foreign wheat. as laaa U
ta aialadad fro* omr Imartma mar
kata by a tariff that wOl afford ample
protection to tha AaMtiaaa farmer.
If oaroonasmptiaa of vbaat ahoald
etUl farther dawn* by theeletlag off
*t 7 wool** factor**. for 1 a atari*. and
the id laaa* of tha b**da> tha far* am
wlU aMIl more faal tha at* af trm
trade apoa tha priee of wheat.
_—a
Aa Object Lama*.
Hare is e littJaotyeet laaaou ia aarsa>
tioa. Mote that thaaa tea *—rriirra
oitlee ate prosperous, aad than dis
cover. wovea through them all, tha
myatia thread that eloquently talk the
■dory i
PHILADELPHIA
nocuoNu
(«wu»
tAnr loom
I’ROVIDf MOB
KAC CLAIRE
HOCHER I KE
lSDIAXAFOLtl i
*■ TOLEDO K
YOAEEM
Tile very day at high anoa a larra
<•■1 inter ol gee tie men retired le the
•Vl.e dee of private lit*,” aad alt. ha-.
<miu* they would persist la "snip
ping” at this vital thread with tha
sheers of bogus “reform."
Has bare what oooora ia thaaa asms
ten el ties with protaetlou wiped out:
YOEEEEIt
. Mount
• EAUOLAIEB
OSWXUO ,
PROTIDSVCE
PHILADELPHIA -
TOLEDO
1KD1AEAPOLIE v
XOCETOBS
SAINT LOOM
How aaeemary it ia that wa who lore
oar ooaatry first should stand aa a
solid phalanx against tha inatdiooa
and unpatriotic attempts which hare
been, are being aad will be aaade to
effectually lower tha proud *—-ol
protection aad trail nta the dust.
Oh, rasa of Ataartaa. ye who am uaNtre
X® seetheMghtdewmd a mem hopeM
aland Ira for psofuEVu. and eoaa yoall
tfmoTH
IW geod tfama hare tout hash sod ecus
track tc Uay.
—OTjuam Qswni Waft*
That Banter* Itett ONw.
IIU routing to obaarr* how lntedy
lb* fra* trad— crow one th* tew
loo— in warn which baa* talma
place tine* the 7Tart* Steam" Can*
grew adjourned.
W*gm an going op in gib of the
Democratic party aad it* fra* trad*
UrIC Altar the alacttcna of late No
rrobm lit* conn try began to Ukc
boy. It aw th* beginning te the
and of Daawaratia rate. 6tiU then
•m bo rimhie taiywoeameat to bate
n til ITT Bpwud ninTani—11» «m«c
It required the recolt of thaiprtM
elcctlona to aoadrm the pee pie in the
belie! that th* nateten had aom* to
teay. That* an few who do not now
baiter* that the Republican party win
be fully returned to power aart yuan.
Then te hope for th* future, and *d>
raoeaa In wage* an th* tnuti of that
hope. Tb* real turning paint in the
great depreaelon waa th* ftnte adjourn
men* of th* Ooagraaa that paaaad the
WfleoaWriC The Den —Hi party
had dona it* want and bean repudia
ted by the country. Th* Nation has
re turned to tte aaaata and hatenate i*
obo* mere on th* an grad*, from
till* tim* on w* teay look for gradate
advance* in wag**, and M thay aom*
thay will b* hailed with gia dinar and
aauafaation. It wiQ taka nai tltaa
before thay are rattond to th* high*
w*t*r mark of IBM.—Pttteharg
IPsan.) Oommantal Oaaatta,
fret*te— Idaaa Ah—.
Euglieb nawapapan an urging the
farmore of that aasntiy to aratein tn*
Uaaiv* farming to laaaan tho importa
tion* of urate* aad aaaata from Amar*
iea and Aster*Ha. It la* naafllli pot*
ley and ahewa what panattaal bsteaaaa
eon ee will do for any oountry. ' It ia
the fundamantal prtnatpln aitrnmted
by th* BapsblMas party ferthada
Telopmoutaf thahomahatanteaof th*
paopla of the Halted Banian. » to
wholly a miatakan Ida* that tha So*
psbliaan party la rotemtttifl to a pol
loy haring la rtew meatey tha darsiop*
meat of miastateari* or thabaOdtag
«P •« pr*
taaMoa wfli aara far arrry gas mil tn.
tante of th* Msntry,—BsrUngtom
(Ilk) Hawk-Eye
b*
Tba Imperii al waalaa km gaod*
U ltawTeak M* TM,000 aqoara
yard* duiiu tha Im ball
jw'i oparatioa ol tka Ht Ml tbaa
rlarlng Ik* amrmyaaIHm moath* a
yarn earlier. 01 smlnUi Ik* im
mm m (,100,000 yotak
Mkklto It
Tf w* do oar work at h*mi onr labor
at k*ma will k* m|lwil aad lb*
w*f*a paid ad tmi win ha aaaai at
bom a. Tkia ia tk* pMMeapfcy of pro
taotloa, sad it aiwd ba ahaadoaad,
amaadad aa abated.-Oomram Vo
XiaWy.
rMtcmnmtmdHy LbkWUt
At Fan*iinla, Via., Mat. wnha«a»« <a
mam hy u«bmu* *• ahap tm aa w«d
aaadla aad waa Hlld. Ba aaa mndlay by
a . . ’• . .
RALEIGH I0HO1ENT1
raniMD nr m or
Work at
i Urn Xn hvawhtii^MTtr
btoMfi Mm 014 Xortk btata and tha
aarliato banana of tha ; auo
foand tha aanttal etty aatir, a day
paaaadiiriotStory a* a am: aona.
tha rwrafltag od tha uSSi
to har aoUiar tad, aad aiaatha oo
eaaion of perhapa tha iaatgaaaral Stata
ra-aaioa of tha aaninn af tha war.
Many old Want sat mah othac
tor tfea Ini Una in yaara, and
parbapa Car thalaat Maw baton all
•aawm tha final rad oalL la met
Mom tha wnr hat drawn tpgathw in
thntStaka anah agroatnuabar at Ooo
ttrm tu'nwoMmwdLaTWaMh
•jjtajtj lohU^lpOPt tha groat
la thatr handiwork. tha tatMbnoohdor
iboir low# for tha daad aoldUas and
tha aanaa far whiah thaydtad, and It
waa fitting thnt thayahoald ha than to
aaa tha ahaat Ml away, and ta aaa for
tea tat data, God's analight teas tba
tovaring abaft aad ita aUaat aoldiar
that ara to perpetuate tea lava and
raraaanaa of a natefal people lor their
borate dead. Tba noroilosi vaa ro
markable, too, far tba mas oil mill
gat baring of teilttarT aad Braatrn.
It is teobast display aCcMaM aaldtery
aaaa in teia Bute data tba vai.
Special teaiaa oama in on all tea rail
John Cotton, of Ttaboro, vaa
Tba IIIll Tti*r^lfi °l ^
bogm nt It a’aUab, SSkpimhS
to now at naan. At tea moan meat,
vfatah la loaated at tea vent front of
tea oapttal, Dbidm Km B, vhieh vaa
oompnaad pf Confederate Tatoraao an-,
dar oommand of Opt. T. P.Dvwau,
vaa located on tba SaMtbvry atraot
aornar of tba agnara.
Tba military oompoaad DWidoa Ho.
1, aad that vftb Dhrfdoa Ko. S, ooa
poeed of oiril orpaaiaatioM, and Dirl#
iaa Ko. 4, enclosed of In anmpaaiaa.
vaa atetioaad on tea Tilhlnm street
teat Tbaapaakaraaad diatinaniab
ad gnaate, vftk Xn Btoatvrll Jack
son and bar grand danghiar. Jalaa
Jaidaun Christian, ooonpiad plaaaa an
tha platform around tea movamaat.
It vaa aa lmgc satire, and teitnUg
.