WELDON, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1892. NO. 7 VOL. XXIII. THE ST. LOUIS PLATFORM WHAT C(). I.lVINdSTOS, PRKSIDKNT OK THE (IKOltUlA STATE ALLIANCE, SAVd or IT. Col. Livingston in n speech at Atlanta a short tiiuo ar'o gave his opinion of the St. Louis movement In the ourse of his rotnarks ho mid: "What about this St. Louis conven tion? What nbout. its platform? In the first place tbero lit hardly a straightoiit Ooala plank in it. I challenge any man of you to read the Bmuiciul plank and find its r ;al meaning. It may mean one thin;. It may mean another It may be good for tho Alliance of the South; it maf b.; letter for tho Nor.h. I cou fess I have never bjen able to understand .it. "But lot's run on down the list to the twelfth phnk at that Union soldier's pension plank. Col. I'olk will tel! you it's not there. They are all trying to make you think you an! not voting fir a Yankee pension plauk. Well, let's see about that. Here's a little b jok entitled "The Platform of tho People's Party.' (Col. Livingston held up a littlo pam phlet.) Guess where I got this little book. It was given to me by Congress man Thomas K. , well I won't call names. lie sent it to my desk and he ought U know whether it is from the true source or not It's genuine. We goto tho official democratic platform book for Democratic planks. Why shouldn't we go to Third party books for Third party planks? Here it i:" (Col. Liv ingston read the twelfth plank.) Somebody asked, ''Isn't that a rcsolu tion not a plank of the platform, Colo nel?" "Is ii? Well, that's what Colonel Polk will tell you, but let's see. The evidence is that I was in the con vontion myself. Tho next is a letter from Frances K. Willard, who was there and a member of the committee to frame platforms. (Col. Livingston read the letter, which stated plaiuly that the pon sion provision was a part of the original platform and not a separate resolution ) The evidence is conclusive, what more do you want? (Applause.) "Again, I wrote to Mr. Powderly, who has been for a loug time graud master workman of the Knights of Labor, who was also there. A telegram from Wash ington reached me at the Markham last - night stating that he affirmed that it was in the platform That isn't all. Here's an editorial iu Mr. Macuuu's paper in which he s ijs the twelfth plank has been taken out and made a resolution since the convention adjourned. (Good gracious! Great Scott! and other exclamations were heard all over the house ) Is it there? Yes, my dear, deluded friends, they'ro fooling you away from the South. They are leading you ' astray, and you are blinded. Will you follow them any long er? ' "No, no. We're done with 'cm was the loud chorus. "That isn't all," said the Colonel, div ing down into that valise for more evi donee. "Here is an extract from an editorial in the National Konomitt, Washington D. C, dated March 12, 1802, which ex plains how tho present platform as pul hshed in l lie South cume to differ with the origiuul platform as adopted at the tot. Iiouis center nee: "The division into three planks his biea doue since the ailj jurument tf tli convention. The plan of di viding tho platform into three plankg was suggested to the Economist by Marion Butler, president of tho Norlh Carolina State Alliance. Your Hlood Undoubtedly needs a thorough cleansing tbis season to expel impurities, keep up the health tono and prevent disease. You should take Hood's Sarsaparilla, the best blood purifier and system touic. it unequaled in' positive medicinal merit. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, per fetly harmless, effective, but do not cause pain or gripe. Be sure to got Hood s. Or you 1:1 ill v no t. :! ?oot i.irnoth- It tf. gi'Mt'.lMl.)V. 1-T J.KUHV.' ljai ,v r limns. It Will curt jyu. demus your liror, aud jlT h gOuvt ji;l-tiH. HIS PARTING SHOT. THE Dt'.ACON rtKD HOT kxpkhiknce IN A 1TKKISII 1IATII. Cltfciyo TiUmiir. The two young men had induced the de-icm to take his first Turkish bath. They had gotten him propel ly attired, or rather unatiired, and had conducted him into the hot room. The deacon didn't enjoy it, but ho was game, lie rolled around nervousiy on his cot, and every time he moved ho seemed to strike a hotter spot. But he stood it iike a man until the perspiration made rivulets innumerable in running off him. Tlu-n he lifted himself on his el how, and said, plaintively: "Let's get nut of this." But the young incu only laughed and toll hint to keep quiet; thai it was just g..'ttiug comfortable. When he finally absolutely refused to stand it any longer they led him into thc steam room, and sat down to gossip and njoy his discomfiture as ho felt himself lowly boiling away. And the deacon seemed inclined to loso his temper. It was aggravating to be so extremely uneoinfortabo when they were apparently enjoying themselves, and would offer him no means of escape, that would, to say tho least be dignified. But there was an end to it; he got out; and as he looked ' more in sorrow than in anger" fniu one to tho other theiii, ono asked: 'Well, deacon, what do you think of it: The deacon replied solemnly, and with all due dignity, but rather pointedly : It's a good thing, young man; it's a remarkably convenient thing for some people who need to suitably prepare themselves for the hereafter, but for my part I am glad to get cn the surfaco of the earth asr iin." A CHILD'S EAKLY INKI.UEXCKS. Nothing is so easily spoiled as a child. Walk with your little babe a few nights when you wish to put it to sleep; or accustom it to rocking, then attempt to put it to sleep without this habit, and see how difficult it will be to get it to sleep. Tho parent must from the beginning of the child's existence do those things to which the child is to conform. It is allowing children to have their own way during the first few years of their lives that makes them so hard to control. Before they are able to talk they aro being molded by the actions of those around them. It is therefore highly important that from the beginning the best influence and example should be about the child. It is a serious mistake in parents to commit their children wholly into the bauds of a nurse. No parent can afford to do this, even though they have a very kind and careful nurse. Every mother desires that her child bear the impress of her own imago. This cannot be when it is with the nurso moro than with the mother. Few people have any idea of the x tout of the part performed ly nurses in the information of society. Many ( mother wonders where her sou or daugh tcr learned these things, or formed that habit, or heard Fuch and such an ex pression. Let her lisleu a low minutes at the nursery door and all will be made plain. Forest City, April C, 1892. Messrs. Lippmau Bros , Savannah, Ga.: Dear Sirs: We take great pleasure to add one more certificate to your long lis. We can truthfully suy that Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium Compound, P. P. P. is one of the best sellers that we have ever set on our shelves since we have been in business, and every person we have sold P. P. P. to says it is the toss blood purifier known. Yours truly, WlNTHROP it Co. When you w-int to buy ,-ood goods cheap, eaii ut the store of ho 51. F, Hart Company. ' HARRISON WORRIED. TIIK LACK OV INSTRUCTIONS CAUSINO THE I'll KSIIIENT-CANDIDATK UNEASY MOMENTS. Tho President and his friends aro growing uneasy over tho uetion of the Republican State conventions being held almost daily. These indorsements do not satisfy thcin by a long shot. What they waut are instructions, and they are not getting them. For the first time the President is himself alarmed at the situ ation, for he is too good a politician not to see that there is a formidable minority in his party opposing his renominalion, and all that minority needs to make it dangcr.,us, if not fatal to.hU hopes, is a leader to rally around. He feels that if a man can be fuund who will uni'o his opponents ho is doomed to defeat. His only hope is that they cannot concentrate their strength upon any ono mm to oppose him, and it looks now like that hope would b j realized. Tho Blaine enthusiasm is also causing the President many wakeful moments. The man from Maine is in fact tho only person Harrison fears, but his uneasiness in this direction seems well founded. The Blaiue talk becomes more dangerous, too, from the fact that tho Secretaiy is now enjoying good health, and is seen on thc streets and about the departments, looking wonderfully like the Blaine of old. Whenever t lie President becomes more man usually Inglttened at tlie operations of bis political opponeuls within thc party, he begins to hedge a little aud to intimate that he is not so certain that he cares to be a cm lid ite at all. This semi occasional piriiug aside of the crown was aguin gouo through with to-day, and the statement was made in an evening paper that tho President has not yet determined to allow the use ofhis naun. No well-posted man in Washington, however, whether Republi- can or Democrat, expects to see any letter of renunciation emanating from the White House at present. It is apt to come only if B'.aino withdraws his letter of last winter addressed to J. S. Clarksou, aud the latter contingency Is what haunts tho President's waking and sleeping dreams at present. HOW TO DltlNK A KIR M. Bob Burdettc gives this simple recipe : "My homeless friend with a chromatic nose, while you are stirring up the sugar in a ten cent glass of gin, let mo give you a fact to wash down with it. You may say you have longed for years for tho free independent life of the farmer, but have never been able to get money enough together to buy a farm. But that is just where you are mistaken. For some years you have been drinking a good improved farm at the rate of a hundred square feet a gulp. If you doubt this statement figure it out your- self. An acre of land contains 43,500 quare feet. Estimated for convenience the land at $43.56 an acre, you will see that it brings ihe land to just one mill per square foot, ono cent for ten square feet. Now pour down the fiery dose and imagiao you are swallowing a strawberry patch. Call in five of your friends and have them help you gulp down that five hundred foot garden. Get on a prolonged uj.rc" ''o viy; "O'l hio h'iw I.iii u re quires to sv i low pasture land enough to teed a cow. Put down that glass of gin; there is diit in it one hundred feet of good, rich dirt, worth 843 5G an acre." Is l.K'e worth Living depends on the liver. If suffering with Indigestion, or troubled with Malaria, that tired, worn-out feeling, you will col sider life worth very little. But wheu relieved of these by taking Simmons Liver Regulator you will count life a blessiog and keep the Regulator on hand for any sudden attack of Biliousness and Sick Headache An aetive liver makes life a delight. Don't forget the Regula tor with the red Z If you feel weak and all orn out take BROWN'S IRON BITTERl FLORIDA LANDS. THEY AtlE WORKED WITH MIXES SNOW SIIOKS. O.N A large part of lower Florida is sus ceptible of easy drainage. The land, at its highest point, is only seventy two feet above tho sea, and it is cut up by such a set of lakes and streams that a small amount of dredging will give tho water a natural outlet and vast tracts can be reclaimed at a small expense. Thc rich ness of this land can hardly be conceived. It surpasses in fertility the valley of the Nile and thc soil is a jet black or brown muck, which is from thrco to sixteen feet deep and and which is mixed with a natural phosphate, so that when cultiva ted it produces most wonderful crops. Geo. Busk tells me thc soil looks like peat and is made of the rotten vegetable matter of ages It contains so much fertilizing material that some of it would Bill for $10 a ton, could thc nitngen in it be brought to the market. Some of the land has been cu tivated, and there are several thousand acres of it in sugar cane and about (!,0U0 acres in rice. It is very valuable for the raising of vegetables, and among those wlw aro making fortunes ly working it are two young friends of Aleck McClure, tho editor of the Philadelphia Times. These boys had gone west and uau tailed there in UUMuess. llicy eume to Mr. McClure for help and advice and McClure had these hinds, lie told ihu boys ho would give them the lands if they would cultivate them. They ac cepted thc gift and went South and be gan raising tomatoes They made last year, I am told, something like !jtiil,(IIIO off their tomato crop and ihcy are getting rich. I asked General Rusk how these lauds were werked; aud he told mo that the ploughing was douo by mules w ho wore snow shoes or mud shoes to keep them from sinking into the muck. These shoes are round thin steel disks, each eighteen inches in diameter, which are fasten to the hoofs of the uiuhs, and which work exactly like a snow shoe. Tho mules do not like them at first, but they soon get used to them, and it is found that the ploughing can be done in this way. KISSES. HOW THIS UN EXPLAINABLE THING IS SANCTIFIED BY LOVE. Mimic ami Dnnnn. Whatever a kiss may be, there is but ono thing that sactifies it, ono thing that should permit it, ono thing that should demand it, and that is love. Not neces sarily the love of a sweetheart; it may be the love of friendship, providing it be not a fiL-udship between man and Wv.man tho love existing in a family. Is not that kiss a mockery which one woman gives another wheu meeting. when but a few in nnents before she had been gossiping about the one she now salutes? We are thankful that ut last fashion has takcu it in hand and frees us from tho gushing woimn who salutes us on all oc.asi ins with a kiss. We are !ad that the custom of presenting the cheek in preference to the lips is becoming popular. It is a custom brought home by the foreigu school girl and theconveut bred giil of our own laud. The girl who has been taught to offer her cheek upon all occasions, who has received a kiss on her brow, as a great In -ir. will not h- apt "'v" her li". in the first knight win c. ones a wooing; (be first man who flirts with her. She wiil know that her 'i s should wily be kissed by one that she is sure lows b. i lone, and to whom alone she has given her heart. We are told that th- j:!iu flr-V; uiaJe his wife eat inii ms li.:i'ui'c . v.vui from home. I wonder if she made him smoke cigarettes, dtink beer and eat cheese wheu he went on his wanderings. But truly the old Greek knew how to protect his wife's lips. One-half the pleasure of a kiss is in its fragrance the illusive sweetness that makes a child's fiee so tempting and alluiing. "The flowers that bloom in the Spring," are not more vigorous than are those persons who purify their blood with Ayer's Siir--apari'la. The fabled E-ixir Vitae'! could 9eareely impart greater vi iui i to 'be e uiiit.-ujncetb.an this wo;-- deiiul uie lieina. PATRIOTISM. TIIECOL'NTBY WHERE PATRIOTISM DOES NOT RULE 18 DOOMED. Patriotism is love of country and has all the unselfishness of love. It is a vir tue which may virtuously bo a passion. Where it exists it cannot be attributed to the size, riches, power, refinement or history of tho country; it is independent of these and flourishes grandly in spite of poverty, rudeness, smallness, feebleness and insiguilicance. It is not thc exclu sive privilege of any class or condition of men, but may glorify the lowliest and adorn the highest. It is an essential iu gredient of good character of true man hood. No nation can flourish or exist without it, no institutions of any worth can survive its absence. The couniiy where patriotism does not rule is doom ed. It should rule in legislative councils and laws; in pub'ic administrations; in judicial decisions; not less should it rule in the hearts of business men and in their business. The question whether the busiui.s men of tho country are palriotic is f immense importance to the country, 1 cause their number is great; they are MuiiKiniling intelligence and force; thc -ith the power of money and thc exte; 1 1 which their business operation affect tho welfare tf multitudes, giv; them immense influence. Shall this in flu nee be ruled by luve of country or bt only or chiefly mercenary? Shall one be a patii-t freeman or a slave self-sold? Tin work of the historian is to properly set forth tho patirot. The orator reaches his loftiest flights in descanting upon his devotion. The pout finds his most in spiring theme in the patriot. And in spiration wrote tho Old Testament to set before all timo tho splendor and worth of patriotism. No more uncongenial task is before writer or orator than to desciibe the treasonable work of an Arnold or the indiffereucc of those who fail to discoun tenance it. Yet there is somewhat in businei-s, as it has often been seen in all nges, which for the sake of self slays patriotism. The demand is sometimes made that opinions be given up as the rrice business. But he who yields deserves neither country or business. In this country where the citi zen is sovereign, patriotism requires po litical duties which, for the moment, seem to inerbrs with business. A larger view would reveal that there is no such interference. But if there were, what manly man would sacrifice patriotism ou so mean an altar f Prejudice against public measures pro posed and agaiust public men with other of the faults of partisanship, may make one wound bis country at a vital point Prejudice is the fou of patriotism. In our country tho patriot should be large minded enough to see the good wherever it may be and appreciate it by whomso ever pn ff re 1. His cry ih mid be My country! All lor my couutrj! WYOMING'S WOMEN' DLI.I.O ATE Mrs. Theresa A. Jenkins, one of the two women eloc'Pil by the Republicans of Wyoming a" ultertmto ilclepites to the National Convention , i handsome an J noo'it twwitv-nve years old. Mie wa. horn in Wisconsin, and h.is a husband and three children. She lias, duriii: SItecu years' resideiiee in Wyoming, tak i-n aa u.itivu inter 'St in political mulirrs. She is a forcible and vigorous public s'leukcr, and at the fit ltchutid rclehr ni.ni held here ill 181)'.! she di livure 1 ihe titu.-i oration upon thai oeeiiyi in. If e: lied no on ut tho National Convcri'ioii she v.i'.l be prepared to speak upon woman Mit' fr.ise i r any other curicm poli'.icti ipi s lion. Mrs. Clara G. Carleton, the other al tomato delegate, in a briliiiti t woman who has been active in business in Utah and Wyoming. She studied law in the office of her father, HUliup Snow, of S il' Lake City, and was no ii. Im d to prac ice in tlie Utah cuit She is fifty years old and has a husband. Sin it is now a well established fact that caiarih is a blood iiioeas.', mtdu al men are quite gencra'iy prescribing Ay er's Sarsaparilla for that no st lmiili'ioi e complaint, snd t,m ' ot, in ne.-r'y very in-'tan-.i., jiovis iU. ivisdoiu of their id-vice. ADVERTISEMENTS. Is Life Worth Living? That dependa upon the Liver. If the Liver in inactive thc whole (sys tem is out of order -thc treath is had, digestion poor, head dull or aching, ' energy and hopefulness gone, the ppirit is de pressed, a heavy weight exists after eating, with general despondency and the hlues. Tho Liver is the housekeeper of tho health ; and a harmless, simple rev.edy that act3 like Nature, does not constipate t.i'terwards or require constant taking, does not interfere with lmsiii's or pleasure dur ing its use, niakcs Sim mons T.ivi.-r 1'eguhitor a medical perfection. I iisv.i t.ti.-i itt v.itucf! nersnnnllv. and l:r.mv l.';-u im:- svi'riwm. Jiiiioinu'is e.nd 'JV.-.il 11 1 1 1 t i ieU- Ci- tl: wovi.ii". er r.iv:. Have tne llorty rf': ii-i;..-.:it'S lie! ore tMinmons Liver i . umi-e. .:ii-: r.cor- i i t'.H'iu pi mom t ' j t I f I ' t UtU ator V .: IV! iv."l l.iiteinvil. u. I:, ji.i.is. ivliicuu. Ga. WHY IS THE L DOUGLAS S3 SHOE CENtm,rN THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY? It Is a wamlefti shoe, with no tack or wax thread to hurt the feet; made of the let fine calf, stylish end easy, and btcause we makt more shoe of thit grade than any other manufacturer, Itctjuttli LaiiU- o lu iiioun utJtuug i nil ii gi.ww .r.w fijff OOUenuiuo llaud-nrweili the finest calf iff 9 shoe ertr offered for $5.00; equals Freacb Imported shoos which coat from $3.Hto $12.00. viJt V" imnn-rofMVtHi ttcu iioe, uua can, wYa BtvllGh. comfortable aud durable. The bisc slirw pvpr offyrefl nt this price ; same srado as CU torn made Boot's cotl!tg from Si-(J to frj.ut. CO AO Folic Short Farmera, nailmftd Sfl tPwi aud Letter Carriers all wear them; flue calf, seamless, iiiiooia Inside, heavy tureo aulea, exteu fllon edge. Due pair will wear a year. 0 50 flue cnlf) no better shoe erer offered e atYdfaa this price; one trial will convince tuoao who want a shoe for comfort and wrvlce. CO i3 lind Workinsman's shoe HfMm are very iiroutf and durable. Those wtio hnve given them atrial will wear no other make. RfiVC9 nil 1'7. school shoes ara DUla worn bv tho bovaeverT where: Lhevaell cn theTr merits, ns tho Increasing wile show. I QfiiOC v'f,,'u unmi-eewea snoe, oesc bClUlwD DoRuola. vervstvllsh: euu&laFrencli luiroried shoes costing from $4.uu to (U). KndieV tinri 1. 7 3 shoo for Missus are the best flnw Ixmtfola, stylish aud durable. t'nuiion. ee that W. L. Douglas' name audi prioti are suunpod on ihe bo twin of each shoe. nrTAKK NO KlTliSTiTL'TE.-! lnsldton local advertised dealers supplyta yoiu W JL. DOL'tiLAS, lirocklou.Maas. bold by W. B. 1ILLERY, Weldoo, N. C. 1 I 0. 1)1 ALKKS IX RlfiHfVMHil VA. S. H. HA WES & CO,, Pealers if PLASTER, Richmond, Va. tiySl; 5 1 TOiiPft