in wwpm MJIH TIMES JAS. A. THOMAS, Editor and Proprietor. THE OOTTZtTTir, THE STATE, THE TJ3STI03ST. ttlttLnEI: JU3 h? Til'. IrfcTf b Itet. SCHEIE 17. VOL. XXVIII LOUISBURG, N. C, FRIDAY, JUKE 10, 1SDS. CHUKCH DIRECTORY. METH0DI8T. Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Geo. S. Baker. Sapt. Preaching a; 11 A. M., and 8 P. M., every Sunday. Prayer meeting Wednesday night. G. F. Smith. Pastor. BAPTIST. Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Thos. B. Wilder, Supt. Preaching at 11 A. 51., and 8 P. M., every Sunday. Prayer meeting Thursday night. Forrest Smith. Pastor. l-'i-oiesiHioiia.l c?avls, S. P. UL'l'.T, ;LVCTICLG PHYSICIAN, Louisburg, N. C. , nli i' i" tl'f I OI"J Building, corner. Main 1 N;ish streets. l.'p stairs front. B. B. MASSES EURO, A.TTJRNEY A.T LAW. LOUISBURG. N. C. W ill practice in all the Courts of the State OUice iu Court House. c. M. COKE & SON, ATTORNEYS- AT-LAW, LOUISBURG i H. C. Wnl attend the courts ot Nash, franklin, flrai ville Warren and Wake counties, also the ?u, reme Court of North Carolinp, and the U. 8 circuit and District Courts. 1k. K. S. Foster. DR. J. E- MALOSE' .RS. FOSTER & MALONK PRACTICING! PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS, Louisburg, N. C. (dice in Building opposite Emory Hote Main Street AV. H. LIPP1TT, M. D , PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, FRAN KLIN TON, N. ('. I) R. W. U. NICHOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, LOUISBURG, . 0. gPKLTLL & PUFFIN. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, LOUISBURG. N. C. Will atten 1 the courts of Franklin, Vance Oranvill-, Va.rren and Wake counties, also the supreme Court of North Carolina. Prompt attttiiti'in given to collections, &c. rpHOS. B. WILDER, ATTC RNEY-AT-LAW, LOUISBURG, N. 0. Ortlce on Main street, over Jones & Cooper's rn W. EICKETT, T. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. LOUISBURG N. C. Prompt and painstaking attention given to every rn ittyr intrusted to his hands. Refers to Chief J ustice Shepherd, Hon. J ohn Manning, Hon. Root. W. WTinston, Hon. J. C. buxtou. Pres. First National Bank of Win ston, Ulenn & Manly, Winston, Peoples Bank of Monroe, Chas. E. Taylor, Pres. W ake For est College, Hon. E. W. Timberlake. office in Court House, opposite Sheriff's. M. PERSON, ATTORNKY AT-LAW, LOJHSBWSe, n. c. Practices In all courts. Office lr Neal Building. Vy H YARBOROUQH, JR. ATI ORNEY AT LA W , LOUISBURG, N. C. i Hfioe on second floor of Neal building Main Street. All lryal business intrusted to him -ill receive prompt andcareful attention. I) R. D. T. SMITHWICK, DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. Office in Meadows' Hotel, Room 9. iias administered and teeth extracted without pain. JjR. R. E. KING, DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. 0 ffice in Opera House Building Second Floor. With an experience of twi nty-flve years i'h a Buftfcif'Dt guarantee of my work .in all the up-to-date lines of the profession.! HOTELS. HOTEL WOODARD, W. C. WOODABD, .Prop., Rocky Mount, N. C. Free Bus meets all trains, Bj? $2 per day. FKANKLISTOS HOTEL FRANKLINTON, N. C. SAIL'L MERRILL, Prp'r. Good accomodation for the traveling public. Good Livery Attached. OSBORN HOUSE, C. D. OSBORN, Proprietor, Oxford, N. C. Good accommodations for the traveling public. MASSENBURG HOTEL J I? MaHsenburg; Propr HENDERSON, N. C Good accommodations. Good fare: Po lite and attentive servant NORWOOD HOUSE Warrenton, North Carolina W, j. NORWOOD, Proprietor. Patronage of Commerdal Tourists and raveling Public Solicited. Good Sample Boom. ' "f ABMT HOTXI, 10 STOBX8 AJTO CODBI BOVSM THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. ! LESSON XII, SECOND QUARTER, IN TERNATIONAL SERIES, JUNE 19. Text of the lesson. Math, xxviil, 8-20. Memory Verses, 18-20 Golden Text, 4 Rev. 1, 18 Commentary by the Kev. D. M. Stearns. Copyright, 1898, by D. M. Stearns. 8. "And they departed quickly from the sepulcher with fear and great joy, and did run to bring His disciples word." The women who in love, but not in faith, had come to anoint adead Christ find the tomb open and empty, the stone rolled back from the door and an angel sitting upon it who- speaks to them, with the result stated in this first verse of our lesson. Angels know when we seek Jesus, and they are glad (versejo and Luke xv, 10). They, like their Lord, would dispel our fears. It Is very helpful to make a special study of the "fear nots" from Gen. xv, 1, onward. Having believed, we are to "go quickly and tell" and the burden of our preaching is to be that Christ is risen and is, therefore, the one who fulfills all Scrip ture. 9. "And as they went to tell His disci ples, behold, Jesus met them, saying, All hail. And they came and held Him by the feet and worshiped Him." It is writ ten in Isa. lxiv, 6, "Thou meetest him that rejoiceth and worketh righteousness. " A little earlier in the morning He had met Mary Magdalene and had dried her tears and given her a message for the disciples, but He did not allow her to touch Him, be cause He had not ascended to His Father (John xx, 17). But now He allows these women to hold Him by tho feet, so that He must have ascended and returned since meeting Mary. I doubt not that He was ever ascending and returning all those 40 days until His visible ascension, since which time He has not yet returned, but He will, and it may be soon (Acts i, 3, 11). 10. "Then said Jesus unto them, Be not afraid; go tell My brethren, "that they go into Galilee, and there 6hall they see Me." The angel said, "Fear not; go and tell; Hegoeth before you into Galilee, '"and now Jesus Himself says just the same. If our message as His messengers is in strict accordance with His word, without adding unto or diminishing aught from it (Dcut. iv, 2), wo need have no fear but that Ho will indorse it all, but how we will be ashamed (I John ii, 28), if we have in the least altered or diminished His word through fear of man or for any rea son whatever. Let us, like Samuel, be lieve and tell every whit, that, like him, we may be established as the Lord's mes sengers (I Sam. iii, 18-21). Believing all things that aro written in the law and in the prophets, let Our unwavering attitude toward all Scripture ever be "I believe God that it shall be even as it was told me" (Acts xxvii, 25). 11, 15. "This saying is commonly re ported among the Jews until this day." That is the saying that His disciples came by night and stole Him away, which was a lie that the soldiers were paid to tell. It is still tru& that some people will lie and do even worse if they are paid for it, for tho devil has a great many children, and lying is part cf their business and a badgeof his service. He is a" liar and the father of it (John viii, 44), but he would have us believe that God is a liar (Gen. iii, 4; ii, 17; I John v, 10). It may bring a little money just for the present and pos sibly enablo one to do a little more busi ness for a time if we are willing to' lie and practice deceit as many do, but the end of such is tho devil's portion which is the lake of fire and tho torment forever and ever. 16. "Then tho 11 disciples went away into Galilee into a mountain where Jesus bad appointed them." He had said, "After I am risen again, I will go before you into Galilee" (Math, xxvl, 32), and it would seem that He had designated some special mountain where He would meet them. They will tell us some day what mountain it was, and we may also then know why He preferred to meet them in Galilee, but one great and precious lesson for us is that Ho always does just what He says Ho will do. y . 17. "And when they saw Him they worshiped Him, but some doubted." He has nowhere told us that all will believe, but, on the contrary, has plainly taught us in the parable of the sower the various results of the seed sowing. In the parable of tho tares He has further taught us that not all the gTain in the field will be true wheat. There came a time in His own ministry when many went back and walked no more with Him (John vi, 66); but He was not discouraged, is not now, nor ever will be (Isa. xlii, 4), and if we are "workers together with Him' there is no room for us ever to be discouraged. Until He come it will be, according to Acts xxviii, 24, "Somo believed and some believed not," but He shall see of the travail of His soul and shall be satisfied. 18. "And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given "unto Me in heaven and in earth." To John on Patmos He said: "Fear not, I am the first and the last. I am He that liveth and was dead, and behold I am alive for evermore. amen, and have the keys of hell and of death" (Kev. i, 17, 18). Through Jere miah He said: "Behold, I am the Lord, the God of all flesh. Is there anything too bard for Me?" (Jer. xxxii, 17). When in response to His question, "Whom shall I 6end and who will go for us?" we are led to reply: "Here am I. Send mel (Isa vi, 8), then our only responsibility is to go cheerfully where He 6end us, do just what He tells us and speak faithfully and lovingly His messages, sure that He will not fail to accomplish all His pleasure (Isa. lv, 11). 19. "Go ye therefore and teach all na tions, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." These are the three who in Isa. vi. 8. sav. "Xbo will-RO for us?" When we go for them, we may and should al ways find strong consolation in the blessed assurance that God is for ns, Christ is for us, the Spirit is for us (Rom. viii. 81, 34 26). What we are to teach is simply stftted In Luke xxiv, 47; Acts xiii, 38, 39, etc. 20. "Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you, and, lo, 1 am with you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen." It is therefore necessary to know all that Christ taught or we cannot teach the all things here re ferred to. To teach peoplo how to be saved is but a small portion of what Christ taught, for He taught from all the Scrip tures the things concerning Himself and told them they were foolish if they did not believe all the prophets had spoken (Luke xxiv, 25-27). Only those can fully enjoy the presence of Christ all the days who are in sympathy with Him In His great desire to give the gospel to every creature. That this world will end by being in some way annihilated is not taught in the Book (II Pet. iii, 13), but this age will end and another, and perhaps another, ere the new earth. See R. V., margin. Daring the summer of 1891, Mr. Chas. P. Johnson, a well known attorney of Louisville, Ky., had a very severe attack of summer complaint. Quite a number of different remedies were tried, but failed to afford any relief. A friend who knew what was needed procured him a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diafrhoe Remedy, which quickly cured him and he thinks, saved his life. He says that there has not beep a day since that time be has not had this remedy in his household. He speaks of it in the highest praise and takes much pleasure In recommending it whenever an opportunity is offered. , For sale by W, G. Thomas, druggist. , ; JEFFERSON'S MOOSE. IT TAUGHT BUFFON, THE NATURAL IST, A GREAT LESSON. Oar Patriotic Statesman Paid the FrctgM, and the Eminent Frenchman, As to and ed and Confused, Frankly Admitted That He Had Blundered. A curious instance of Jefferson's care t to correct any wrong impression or sen timent - concerning America resulted from a public dinner in Paris which ho attended late in the year 1786. Among the other distinguished men present ws the celebrated naturalist Buffon, then a great authority. The fauna of America was not well known at that time in Europe. Buffon himself had never seen the American panther, the elk and the moose, and ho held tho theory that all American ani mals were generally inferior to their congeners of the old world. With his usual positiveness Buffon expressed this opinion in tho course cf his remarks at the dinner. When he had finished, Jefferson rose, and with due courtesy to so aged and learned a man expressed his conviction that the great naturalist had fallen into grave error. He mentioned certain American birds and fish which compare favorably in ap pearance and size with their like of Eu rope and Asia; he spoke next of tho panther and bear, and then, passing on to the numerous species of American deer, described the size, weight and antlers of the elk and moose. His account of the moose, particularly as to the weight which it attains and the great breadth of its antlers, was lis tened to with general astonishment and with something like good naturrd incredulity on the part of Buff tin. Now, the matter was of some importance, for Buffon was then at tho head of a great museum of natural history in Paris. Jefferson went home from tho dinner determined to sustain his assertions. He wrote to General John Sullivan, then president of the state of New Hamp shire, to procure the antlers, bones and hide of a large bull moose and have the same shipped to Paris, as well as the heads of some other deer. Letters were then two months in transit from France to America, and Jefferson's letter reach ed Durham, N. H. , early in the winter. General Sullivan at once set about or ganizing a grand moose hunt. On the third or fourth day a herd of six was found in a well trodden yard, one of which was an antlered male. Tho labors of the hunting party had but begun, however. Tho place was 20 miles distant from settlements, in the midst of so dense a wilderness that a road had to be cleared almost continu ously for the rude sled" on which the carcass was drawn out by the woods men. When they reached Durham, tho head, antlers, hide and bones, along with tho heads of three or four, deer, were all put into a very large, strong, cleated box, which was duly hauled by teamsters to Boston, for shipment by sailing vessel to Paris. Freight was long on its way from America to France, in 177, and this big box unfortunately wont astray. It was not till the following autumn, in deed, that it arrived at Mr. Jefferson's door in the French capital. The bill of expenses for it had arrived in the previous summer and was a some what formidable document, consisting of many items, from the hire of hunters and woodsmen to the final charges for transportation across the Atlantic. The total was more than 50 or fully f250 of the United States money of that time. Thomas Jefferson was never a rich man, but he paid the bill with good humor and set tho item down to tho bad side of profit and loss. Nearly two months later tho famous box, now grown somewhat malodorous and well covered over with the signs and symbols of ships and custom houses, arrived, safe if not altogether sound, and was sent to the museum along with a note to Buffon from tho American donor. Buffon gazed in astonishment on tho mighty antlers, great bones and heavy hide of the New Hampshire moose and made haste to admit that no deer in Eu rope, Asia or Africa was greater than this uncouth denizen of the new world. "I should have consulted you, sir," Buff on wrote, with characteristic frank ness. "I could wish that I had known this before preparing my work on nat ural history. ' ' Many politicians of that time and Daniel Webster in later days used to tell of the "moose bill" as a good joke on Jefferson. But from the broader point of view the money was well spent and in a manner which bespoke tho practical patriot, the man who spares neither trouble nor his purse to score a point for his country. Youth's Com panion. Inspiring Soldiers. In military music the march occupies a prominent position and has been em ployed not only to stimulate courage, but also from about the middle of the seventeenth century to insure the or derly advance of troops. One of the earliest instances of 'the rhythmical march is the Welsh war strain, "The March of the Men of Harlech, ' ' which is supposed to have originated during the siege of Harlech castle in 1468. In England the military march was of somewhat later development, 6ays Chambers' Journal. Sir John Hawkins in his "History of Music" tells ns that its characteristia was dignity and gravity, in which re spect it differed greatly from the French, which was brisk and alert. And apropos of this subject, the same author quotes a witty reply of an Elizabethan soldier to the French Marshal Biron's remark that "the English march, being beaten by the drum, was slow, heavy arid sluggish." "That may be true," ho said, "but, slow as it it, it has traversed your master's country from one end to the other." Trashy Medicine3. Many soch flood the market. Botanic Blood Balm is a conscientiously com pounded medicine, the result of forty years practice by an eminent physician. It is the be6t blood purifier ever offered to the puMic, and is guaranteed to cure if given a f.iir trial. Try it for all skin and blood diseases, including catarrh and rhennratism n its worst form. One bottle of it contains more curative and building np virtue than a dossn of any other kind. Try "The Old Reliable." See advertisement elsewhere. For sale iby druggists. THE RIGHT RING. Speech Made by H. C. Wall. Br fore the Richmond County Demo cratic Convention. Rockingham Rocket We print below the speech made by Mr. H. C. Wall belore the county Democratic convention, which met in our town on Tuesday, 17 h irst. , and yet it is not the serch as he delivered it, for it is impossible 10 reprmtiKc such a speech as that was in a manr.rf to convey to the mind of the readir the el qucnt earnestness or earnest el quence, if )ou please, with which ii was uttered before the reprcsentaMvf white iei pie of Richmond counM . M. vc.11 . . 1 11 i r. Wall is not a ixil.ntian. He i uui iu v 1 1 iv. c secucr 'n any ene. r . . cc 1 . is the" largest iJi iuur n the counM.I and one of the wealthier men in . he ! State. This sjech, conu.ij fr m this o.n ervatie, disinterested I'trsmess nun has stirred Richmond to us bran' core. Mr. Wall, althooh a aeahhy nun stood bravely for Mr ) a n r d t he (' h c j go platform in ihc last camjiaign and in the corning campaign the people oi Richmond county have in him a fearless and powerful ch.nnpion. W hrn uch unselfish palr:o:s as H. C. Wall come to the front in our politics r will have good government. Mr. Wall said : "Gen lie rt, en of the Convent i t : "The Democratic party of Rrh mond county, as repreent.u ive of a large majuity of the most enlightened people of 1 he count y, is st ill con fo n ie1 in the field of politics by an organ it lion, the living principle of which a born and is nurtured in an opposition to good government and a ise o n duct of public affairs. This isa s'.ii.n: statement; and how do I prop.se r defend it? By pointing to the resulo of Republican rule in ih.s couniy. "A tree is known by its fruits," says Holy Writ, and I simply p"int you to the fruits of that tree tver since the firs seed was planted un'il now. "Whatever achievement in matter of national government the boasted Republican party may be credited wuh, we know that in Richmond count) 'hat party stands for principles aud practices which are at variance with good morals; at variance wuh high toned manhood and wuh the grnxl or der and well le ing of society. Wi j linow thai it i'.ands for corruption and ; venality in politics; us cohesive potri is found in 11s opportunities for public 1 plunder; it chuckles and gloats in n continued triumphs over respectability and decency in the l dy politic; r controls the ornces and tax- aim I power of the countv, and, doubtless rejoices in the qut st ionable method by which it gets and keep su h control It sets at defiance any and all senii ment that would enthrone virtue, and intelligence, and capability 'n the seat where now ignorance, nnmorility, pic judice and incompetency hold univrr sal sway; it would and does degrade the white man in us pursuit after the negro vote and influence; 11 has con verted our court house and oftinal apartments into a common stamping ground for negto loafers and lounger, until, but from public necessity, de cent white people prefer not to enter them; its control of the worst elements that curse our society lies in its ring power to "kill and make alive," in a political sense, according to the whims and ambition of that same ring power iis test of loyalty to ihe public good i loyalty to the Republican party, es pecially that part ot it represented by the Ring, it plays with juries negro juries at that and, through us manip ulation or the machinery of our Courts, a court session in our county is more like a farce than it is like a j'idtculi) grave and dignified occasion. "Yes, that party has subjected the white race of our county to the domi nation and 'rule of the negio sace by placing the latter in position! of trust and responsibility so that, for instance, an unfortunate white man, cast in Jul from whatever cause, must of nece?su be under the authority of a negro ja ler But is the negro, B.H H-iff .nan, jailer of our county, or has he been? S;nce thinking of the matter, I recall hs tinctly that BH H'fTnan, in the erf .rt to lift a white Republican friend out of, La very dark hole, did aetoally m-ke affidavit to the lact ard signed himself to the affidavit as ihe jailer of Rich mond county. As another initance, the law-breaking white man, in what ever particular he may have offended, is liable to have a subpoena or other paper served on him, if not actually arrested, by a negro duly depotiied by the high sheriff of the county. Whether Hamo Townsend boWs or did hold Sheriff Smith's commission as depot v he must have acted wch when hepfflM) went to a poor white man's house and, finding U was aUienl, leu wn gentkoan'i wife a notice of ux k7j 00 hts bog. Ii does Dot act well cm a white man's stomach, tod ner ca, to bare a notice of lev 7. tabpnrna. ar rest Of what MX, served 00 him by a negrii. True Sheriff Soaitk deatrd. in dr(.naotly, when ihc WkcWsboeo Met senger-IoteUtftncer lately accaard hiw o( having a negro deputy, but yon re member that in hm tetter 0 denial 0 the charge he drentrd hat when nec ery, or if opportunity fftred. he would no heniaie to hae a rwgm deputy or words to that rfTct. By the-wa jr, Jellow eii trns n 1 h da t coroioonly tpken u( at --.t hre 1 euy.ie that t n o.t apt to i.nVi without iedre at the hndof rwr . "fficaila. I d not p,.fevi i ! a vcr r ch man, nor do I admit tonR i 1 man in the common accept r Hit , 11 jjjany rate ne negro deputy woc.O not I lely hae come to my houtr id r e ib h'1 ofl "'' m m ence, 1 hrowr, that p(r into mi lr 'p or upon her vew ng table. S ' wi-uld he have g ne ihu to the h..uie of Mr. John D. Shaw, or Mr Hector i Mcl-ean, or Mr. Tom Leak. Wh do ay t ? In the first plac- the high ihenfT is not likely to have ihounhi i here a 1 he leaat how of preset .' not to saj necriity, 'Of it. hil the , ntgto himvelf aoald ripect that ;n ui h case, en her one of e i -r g-n le men aouin have 'Mo gone irirr h m i! out it. I don't tay ha! 1 m g ri 1 ' have rone, but I should ha.e ' K '. e irter him. " 'D.1 ouever hear whit wit hm I iy an old cu zm. lormerly a R-j.-.:,;. ' "n, but now alropr Dem ra'. wwer j he was told alout Hamp Towr.n .1 : he deput'red nejro serving paprt 1 hue folk-? "Well, well, well." u;! j ;le old genileman, am i this p r. r$ j he bottom rail on t"?'' Wrer, I heard it 1 thought of 1 ke (!ri j Hunc unte couniy neighUr ih ) m le a viMt to 111 Irishman friend of h ' n llalumore. When Sundty came t tv Irishman took his mouota.neer friend to ' v hurch, which, ot ciurve, was a R mn ! Catholic cathedral. When the deep j toned organ pealed forth, reverlr ating from pit to dome as pre! m niri to the highly ruualrst c ien.ee, int especially when the priest fired the aromatic incense that rose in rl - udt 10 the roof, the mountaineer turned to his friend, ar.d saul: ' Pat, don't thrt teat ihs den'.? " "Yes, be itn," ic plied l'i; "ihai'i the intention of ; " 1 Sj in injtr to the old mn' nierrj Ka'ory ab"'Ut the loitom rail, I x 'r. lr !ers, (hat's the .mention .1 it'" But 1 am sorry iut Sher iT Sm tr he Is an amiable uiin, and I know 1 is froui my acquaintance wuh h in He hat lieen 10 tr eble alut tvi nr I 1 tro deputv luinei. I venlv b-l:eie. and the worst of it n the negr.ies themselves are hard on h m treatise he , denies and would repudiate the chirje i of having a negro depui y. S you - e I his psition s that of betrg j Ijrei! le 1 twixt the upper and nether m .U'une The fact see mi to le t ha' Sner rT Srr. : rv Henri iKkery, CliUlc I.kery ir '! ' .oh Lng indeed 1 he ent ire ho : : n ' , ma'ch of the leaders are, m .re r 1 less, Ursaed by their negro co par: 1 ners in politics, Mr. Dockery, our L'nitid S. atni marshal, appointed ihit same Hurp Townsend to take charge of a capture 1 of whukey at Hamlet, either 11 1! watthman, guard or something, and there wis good pay in it for Hamp, j but hav ng forcible reason to appre hend that it was pot healthy (here for Hamp (you know that low country, south Hamlet, is ul j'O to milir.i he did't know how soon Hamp m gh' -drap t fT." so Marshal IX keri re moved him for Hamp's and hit ci-un I t v t 1 iry s good. Mr. l.ciery u '0 thai is, to his frends thai he ent Hirr to Hamlet lecauve ol h i feing '-ir old family servan' " N don't y; know he was "talking through hit haf when Ke sud 10 Democratic fnendi r wasbcrause Hamp was "an old fami!) servant" and, therefore, could be trusted by him thai he appointed him to that position al Htmle ? to you suppose he gave that as a reason to Hamp for his P' introeni, or told h party fri. nd that Hamp s pecubat ft ness for ihe place cooarsted in th fact that he was a faithful "dd UmiU servant?'' Not a bit of it. Fact b. the negroes are demanding recog nit.r of their party friends, and ai equal, with them, and their party fnendi ar. doing lor theoi the best that they dar. to do as yet; lateT on, douUlos thr) are told, the full fruition of their hope will be realised in legislative and con j ressional seats and other high effiors And who blames the negroes for mak ing tlefr demand? Not the Demo crats. We say the white Republicans have nursed you and coddled you and fawned upon yQ r rtw? take of ynor votes. They have pnfiVd you op wuh an exaggerated ide of your ow ian irtance as cttlsrn. Instesd of lor- 00 in a coo ten ted sphere as 1 peable, indusuioas people. Mtatficd that yw taper a d t he tra oer of ihn whole country shall tat ke aad ' eaecote r laws fx the g--1 r howanily, thry hare t harvard i jj (r the ply 0 putting the "tott. re r l OO top." We call roq nrjp-ri, you' Ua name, at hooorab to t ate ac at the bkm Cairt to w to m We bke the old naoie, rrgto o-m --, orr.1 people" .r n fret." A caa1- j da-e got up at W.l.ti") 1 - ,',rx'.f h mtceif tjf rrptewri.' a ' 1 1 e t 'r ; 1 , S'nt! f a! t friii 1 ! nr:i, Ts:erfu;. r h.ru. r m h m 1 Sum iVilr I .y me t me vt y r ( 1 . "( i lt 1 j :. if r. 1. i f e uc r. t ir I pit t rv 1 : f ' r - , ! ' -a -t ( 1 1 tv Kjnc.nj tl I V1 111, it ra ! at ii : ! tket 1 e'd .0 j r o- eif . i r if rtt ot k x '. r ; . t , : j ffh' ' fj: - -n f ,w.r A r. : rer j t n 1 -n :nvrrr J"- ri 1 j f t t ID k c, 1 ' T Iff v ' de.ica.e an'', reined ' -v. r . 1 '. t 1 irj ' n ( r 1 ,-. t school '.rarrvr, n-.tt n..'.f ar.d ',t ' .i r . t-. : oM f n r . t j ttte i- t r u ' 1 r a ' ' "jit ' : ( .. s-i- 1 'V 111 ; . 1 : : i - 1 j , a X . ' -. -r x I . I I" n ' 1 . ' - r-T H ar: h . . ;r'MT ke ; h M .-u ; . . : D .: rr. ; 1 ' r r I ' r t 1 r 1 r. r e r 1 x 1 e 1 i i a e 1 --i - ft' ;'i-f '' x-r -'at n f n a i i er. r -r. - v'.ni' on n -'- em po' ral r.''''ri 1 ol R c h :t r,d r n 1 it ; 1 he roci.i:- r, e'er-e'l . . j lion thrift' '.re d ret', , r nd 1jh-; re.'.- f Kep-j'. C r. : rr. r f at et'.a: r.e- t w'ei e d 1 tamed bi m: . I the lrg JL.d iwrw- 1 w n p)r;-rtri 1 e ; ir nr, 1 1 -fttfV 4-'- ' w 1 r.d .-. -. 1 i-.r-i ! , , - - ? v -, r. r '. ' e r. 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