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EiI?KSUED IN 1878-
HILLSBORO. N. C. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 1.
1900.
TH3 NUVISERED STONES.
NEW SERIES-VOL. XIX. NO.
T!.h is th"
'i'-ii- it
Tle-; ,
T.V ,.
JD ' ,. .
'-"'i l glory,
Jh-M of fame"
k. -.'ri'.'.cil iukI gorr,
.Villi tho buttle, .'ia.-ne
the vanrie fminorta;?,
'- t!:.t fr ty, !
!.:,''! ur 1 thy r-ortal".
eternal '1 iv!
I
irasr?.
v -r I it.
.! s'.ia. your r m. i -? a t
i'i jour '.dmrd-i imug inuti?
VO'I
h
th'i i r i i-
' gh t'.rL-t tli: ria-iit'l",i.
vraj.t wiiii earthly shroud?
MORGAN'S SPEECH.
He
Discusses The Amendment
Question :
''1 wjear hings,
" . r
About a year later t raet Air. Kia
the editor, on the street.
"I had a strange dreara last night,
belaid. "I thought I was dead, end
that you said you had known about it I
long ago. What lo you think of it?" '
He tried to smile, but I saw be was j
cared. Death daunts all when looked J
at face to face. !
"I don't Lave much faith in ' ,;
r LaL;e&'".T w CNilED STATES SENATE.
j n.. .j "
you -would welcooie death as a
change."
One eaya these thiols to others but
they are falsehoods. I fear death.
VX'tried to eefc you on the rirbt
road to'aucceed in literature, but voa
! tri'iiU!Vi:it trains
'i'' ' .v.l's .!.?., hryathin- ! wouldn't f..!!n-.v mv ?i.K-;..o
- ) T - . . , ' ' L ' 1 ' .
Some of The Extracts From His
tireat Argument on Pntchards Rt
' ',
solutions. '
r .-ii f t r t.i tj -? .
w . .. . '
-vi. ! i
1 ! r j ..-,i- jM. -1 i j i ''
' i r tr.'i .ij.h in li- r,ut:
! K iri!:-r-. plTyia?,
r; i .
"Ui"
.'i.-'-i 1
1 1 i
'J !,
,n -.,
i fi", ?j f r ii t h'- n,
:i: i l h i .li'ft-n ! -
I i.'i- '.y.-t il-t urn?
vit.i ll
n i..!-u;:
' a !:'. a;
t!i :iir';t i- a ja-j
' t! oT !.;il f -js
! u;v nil 1 t!i-y won.
r -vi r- f .r l.'iyiu-'
Miih t j f.wn
: lor ly in
a ii'iiui-rjj t !i-!
U'v-itoR I'il '.
"How could I? Am. I to ,cro on kill- ;
inc; i)eojIe in fiction, and llndiu !
corpses behind doors, and ma'-ryin ;
po jr girls to rich men, and all "that j
f.ort of horror, just to amn.-e a lot of !
idle or weary mortals, and earn per- j
haps two dollars a week in money ? It's j
all wry well for vou editors, who hav i
a r-0':i!ar .salary, hut for us outsiders,
it's rough riding."
( .... i:u! . i..
j iwu iiiue kiidw oi tue trials o: an
j editor's life if you think you have all
I the bitterness of a literary career,"
j retorted King, gloiuniiy. -VlJetween
the ijraetica! joker who want's" to get
j up a piarrtd with any one, and the
i evauk who is driven livjistmncp innfl.
Short extracts from the great speech
or benator ilorgan, delivered in th:
United States Senate January Sth,
In turn to paralyze the efforts of th?
people of North Carolina to escape
from the same' hoirible condition.
"Several of the other Southern States
urged by the younger men born sine?
1S47, and many older men, are moving
under the same imputeo, in the same
direction. They have not yet de
spaired, "In Minor vs. Happersett ((21 Wal
lace, 192) it is decided that cit!zenship
of -the United States does not carry
with, it the right of suffrage and that
thfr Constitution of the United States
does not confer the rierht of suirmee
upon any one. That power belongs to
A STRONG ARGUMENT.
I upon their brutal desires and fills the I
j country with .horrors that defy de-'
j senption and a retalllatory vengeance i
. that infuriates, its inflictors with a ; Negro Suffrage The Re5ult of Milltarf
WHY HE SUCCEEDS.
Dtffrreuce
Tic Chatham Record contain on
o. the ei.toriils on the a-xend-
BiOm
ment that has bea published showing
that the negro w.13 given the ballot ir
:er to hu-
That. iikmetime9
1 1 . 1
"It' Is Often diffirnlr m .r,,. ax. , U". t13'-' "'."1 n O!
ference between the men who ucc; ed ! ?hX lV'C
and tho,e .ho fail," says a critic. A
man may try to console himself with : permanently Republican. Ii:s:eid of
uueuon mat ues m tre belie that the enrrar.ch;s,ent if the slave In-
Pritcharu's. resolu- t
1000, on Senator
t inn
Mr. Morgan complained that Senator :
Pritchard's resolution, if adopted, i
would not have the force of law. It is
not an enactment but merely the ex- i
pression of an opinion. There are no I
penalties for its violation, by either in- i
dividual or State. It is merely a ful-
mination and will have noeffect on ;
subsequent congresses. !
"The honorable Senator (Mr. Pritch-
ard) would doubtless have presented
a bill that would reach and prevent
1 the alleged wrong or evil lie inter, 1
j , V? iu ucari iu.i. i cuij j,4:ea ir. en 1 or tae slaves ln-
jtie constitution and Uws of the States. ' - au 1UCK; t-nat one Eau was. born j juring the swh and the Dcmocraiic
"In William vs. Mississippi (173 U. . 5:e sufccssAil ' and ' anotner to fail, j P? it inert asc.i tc;r powtr iu na
S., 213) the supreme court hoids that The average man cannot even deceive ; tlonal politics. Th Repub'.ic.ins notv
'the discrimination that is violative himself to that extent. He knows. I adit. evp Tourgee among thecn. thit
of the constitution as amended must generally, where the trouble i Ob- ' univPrs:1' r.rgro uiffrage was a grea;
appear on the face of the State law or serve two men who apparently V-in ; :nil:lk(k- lf A mistake, why should
a necessary intendment from it an.! ! with I not the mistake- be rectiHM in th
...... . vijuui au till .1 L t V. ! Ill fflif.II
the i ranifni i-nW i orucr.y an! lvg.il way proposed m tho
-,,.v.. iimss eiuse aunmua was v.. i i ...
1 r . . . . 1. . ...
hjc Hum nie manner in wnica
State law is administered."
"In all these decisions we find that
Congress alone can exercise, the powr
to protect the negro against discrimi
nation in respect, of the right to vote, j
iiiti.1. no uuuer iae lour
teenth and fifteenth amendmeat? i
confined to this sole purpose.
It must also be such a discrimina
1 ijcuu 10 tneir respective careers, vou
j might hot perceive the difference in
j them. One pute a little more rush intn
he voted on in Angus:? The Record
makes that: point clear a n4 enforces it
b th !v.A:'il r' fi'".ii-v h- iiiu -v
his work; he is never satisfied with bearing to-day. I: siys: ' .
If negm suffrage was a nw ques-
nfnTnrtlicIiin 1 . . v. - . .
j vv.Uuij,iiOUinS uiiiy fcu iiiucii us is ex
pected of him. He is a little more ac
commodating to his patrons or those of
his employer; he manias', more de-
ness to 'pitch in' to somebody all the ! s."PPress or Prevent if could have
coerce a State to amend its cotstitu-
t h Rejecled Manuscript
1 iy C
time, there is less peace and less sat-
iTia-.nu.i i,i "lining uiau in any oiner f ,v,n ,,r,,i r ,t e , . , .
e t -. iion under the penalty of being driven
; ; t 1 1 " t . 1 v ! troiu the Union or
in- oi taking a sea voyage.- representation in Congress o
1 wished to warn him of the danger ! plf fin.-:ii rniiwa "
! iili ii n niiffi Knf iiTi .1 T . t-rt.- !.... 1 ......
. S ,P"f 0I? t?9 f thC laW votion to stalls; he -s mnxa prompt.
aL tr'aceaicoLfrnd relate I is not afraid of gettihg to the office too
uiuue to race, color, or nrevions rnn- i .
dition of servitude. It nonou Mr!y r of thcm t0 H
to invoke the interference of Congress I makes a stUfly of wa5's.to improve his
that such discrimination is possible, mmd and nlar?e his capacity for serv
or even probable under the administra- ! lcP' whethf,r to his own direct better
ticn of the law. It must found in i "nt or indirectly, through having
tion in this
would favcr
negroes had
e rv
Thit is
lu :e:o!
row
. if
persons
ignorant
voted in
that governs in these matters the de
sum a change, but could 1 - say ; But such a measure , would abolish ine Mississippi cas?. is ..on-
that bis fate might be escaped on land t the sovereign nower nf tho .tntr nn.i clu--1e t( Enow taat the text of the
. better thin spsiv : rpmnni it tr. t-r. ,.An,nKn ! Louisiana constitution is not a leir.il
discrimination against the npgro on ac-
dty of bein driven T 1 iuusl e louna in iv . vote very :ov pf r.-ons would thin
r of beingefused ' fhe lcgal construction of tho law and in j benefited his employers. Right here it j that the prosperity and best m tores:
Congress or in the ltZ' legal cffect- In this viev of tho law j. might .be well to consider the problem : of North Carolina would bo b -st pre
North Carolina ther- would bf very
ftw person- in f.ivur of .now giving
them the right t. vote. If thy had
not been allow, d to v,de heretofore
very few pr.--. ns- would now !. will
ing to give th ni; that -right. If they
had not heretofore Ih i n allowed to
vote very few ner.'.ons would fliink
-S
t
2) .
U L K 1 X( I, t he editor, wa i
icii: 1 '- Kiugii to explain to i
in- why my coutributim:
w i !i it u'V-eptable. Jlis
)'f i-'o.is were e'Kc-lIen!. and
j - -
v were what
I felt t!ia tie
to 1
. ne
1
was not pa,
at t i ; : i';i to
m true; but I
i-'. r partieula!-
liave t,u. fJVtai Kiit ,,f c,.(
regard t-. length of lii
that n
wi-ml I .i
wit !i in w. ve
LI'
1 n
i)'
I t i !
neami in
death ertii
excellent
oili.-c wt.rk exhibit, the quality of
I'll '.eiiiies which is rm.,,,i.,t.i,t t-iH.
his words.
U'.l hlL'ilt in
iff, and f sa.'
s from this world
As t ; t ho eaii -ie of
ay. He seemed in
w, ihoiigli not of
i. ,i ,
i n l; 1 1 1 of life, yet many live
Id af. 1 was lilled with e.
. i t . i i . i
I'n . nu iii' m;:i oei u'e me.
,1
miiid
to good
si rang-:
so fair-
!!i'i".i't and. in his v.hv
f- uttraeiive. Vet j could nut say a
W" rd of h i-i s'l trt e.'U'e'U-.
Tins git? i .iiih.-.;lt to describe. I
v 1 h it 1 po -s.'ss it. Ilv ex-
I'.u uie 1 to guess bow
Dl:
I"'
He
t.t
i;
v,:,
V-
i:i
"t:
ly 1
ir any pcr-m is to tu'- -olution and
:kVi" d -hi . society, for I dread 'a
' ,:- !'; r !. it: :n or woman.
"V-.ur stori-s, Ab-ott," the editor
''viu r, , huvi. m(ra! jurpose,
': i-di-m, a b.-!i. f- iu high motives,
''''Mi"!!. The people who read
uuv better than at sea?
"I've a good mind to go with you,"
I remarked.
"Come on," be replied with alert
ness. "As a writer you have your
defects, a too caustic pen, but as a
compaction de voyage I would 'chooso
none more desirable."
It was some months before wo
started upon our travels, first to
South Africa, then to Australia. Mr.
King enjoyed the best of health. I
tried to bcliev.j I had deceived my
self. 1 resisted the temptation to lly
from his presence, to forsake iiiia, iu
spita of- Urn dread which a coming
death always excit es iu me.
We reached San I'rauciscn jj-j safe
iy. We started east across the con
tinent. One evening as we sat at dinner in
the dining car a gentleman ap
proached us an 1 asked me politely:
"Is ibis Mr. King?"
I pointed to my companion and
rea-diel for the salad disk.
"Vou aro the editor of King's
clout hi v."
mi
'i
l i .
1 ::;
Wl
I u .
'l- t.i (
. . i -
i .
To
i
M
IV,
le u :t u t that
i ! i "amu ;c:u'
he
(ii.
i ' i
tl.t t
id
the'
at
M'lVrs if rich.
!,' ii lias been
foster agreeable illu-
remand it to the condition of our ter-
; ritories, all of whose laws may be re
J pealed by Congress.
, ."In his original resolution the hon
; orable Senator distinctly took this
: ground as to the duty and power c
j Congress in dealing with any State
! whose constitution violates the fif-
teenth amendment when he asserted
; that such a State, has not a republican
j form of government. On further rcflec
; tion he endeavors to get away from
; this dangerous ground and to retreat
i to a position that is apparently less
! strenuous, somewhat less heroic and
j less dangerous to the State and Feder
al Union. It is evidently intended by
j this substitute to declare in another
i form of words the same, principle and
the same appeal to the power of Con
J gress to deal with a State, as such,
that is only more distinctly expressed
j in the Senator's original 1 esolution."
i
I The substitute resolution of Senator
I Pritchard is not true in point of law,
j Senator Morgan contended, and part
of his close, logical, double-edged, Cal-
houn-like argument follows:
! "It (the resolution Tint 1 rl?Cfv'r
"I am," replied Mr. King, with j ination of race, color or- previous con
dignity, "the editor-in-chief. We , dition of slavery, unless the act ex
have a number of departments and j eludes them by its terms, or necessary
each has its special editor." j intendment from its terms, for such
"Perhaps you can tell me whv this I causcs- The exclusion of certain per
story was declined?" " .sons or classes or their descendants
He. drew a rather , bulky package i can be 1:nv'fl''dy made in many ca-es
from his coat pocket and opened it ' ?n,d for man' rcarn tha have no re
besid.: the editor's plate. 1 lat;.n t0ace or ('olor or Previous e ;n-
1 f- i n i dltlon of servitude."
XO RACK DISCRIMINATION.
''In Vni'ti, j... .
I . . , , - - . , . . . - . vxv, lV-l.jrH lit-
tanv in- manuscript more atteuuvoiv. "Uiiv. . fnrp tho Ticmd,
- - L' ' - I ' - .
one moment from the employer's point
of view. "He is utterly lost to grati
tude for good service; utterly selfish,"
you say. Granted but it is fortunats
for you that he is selfish. That gives
you a point of attack. When you be
come t-:o necessary to him that he will
be suffering a loss by the discontin
uance of your service you are in a po
sition to demand a better position or
bigger: salary and his selfishness will
not permit him "to allow jou to go.
Observe a different instance: A young
lawyer who lias just been admitted to
the bar will go into a town, where sev
eral before him have failed, and by en
ergy and maniy, b'tsiness-like meth
ods soon succeed 5n establishing a lu
crative practice. Instead of eitting
around the office, like some of his pred- ' ?t0 wa?t'
oi t of tiling. They
:A, for emotional ex
ceed by approba- j nearly a year," began Mr. King,
cheap generosity ' Then he stopped and looked at the
( COUl'.l
0
1 ; . p -mdl. rousing mvself
. " I have heard that, but I
Ina'
ori of clit
A!
Ii
: be
. . i
lco'ie
'it. M
em, the
art. It
a v-.uct, in a phiiosipher
T i 4t,,, r T T I. . . . i : . . ? 1 1 . .
ino ; -i. ivijuuig s stories. ; tne proposed amendment of the eon-
said, "It's a lie! I wrote it myself," ex- i stitution is the same insub.-tenee f it
i claimed the stranger, suddenly dis- j Is rot identical with that, which is rm
l playing great excitement. i bodied in the constitution of Louisi-
"Vou may have copied it. Yes. that ana-"
i is the way of it."
Mr. King tried to assume an air of
genial humor, at the same time sig-
eouni, oi a is race, color or previous
condition of servitude, and the act is
valid against the power of Congress
to interfere with it. .
"If the republic includes two dis
tinct races the highest and the lowest
in the scale of intelligence and capac
ity for wi-e and good government
their respective representatives can
not be equal in ability and influence;
and this fact destroys the possibility
of equality in political power. One
class of representatives will dominate
the other so completely that the idea
of free and equal government will be
banished, and the results will establish
the race that is dominant over the
others as a subordinate, thereby con
verting the republic into a practical
autocracy.
"If the races are nearly equally in
numbers, continual warfare will b the
result.
"The history of the republic of Santo
Domingo, where the contest is between
the negro and the mulatto, will become
the history of our Southern States if
the basis of voting remains as it is,
ar.d the finale will be the expulsion of
the negro or his extermination.
.
"It is the experience of the voung
er men. arising out of the effort to
work negro suffrage into our political
system as a harmonious element, end
not the prejudices or resentments of
the former slave holders, that have
prompted this strong and decisive
movement in the Southern States. It
will never cease unless it is held down
"r wiiuiuij ijwttii. it ij u auuii t'vii
as well as political, and the "cost of its! co"tributor of Tit-Pdts. Even taking
suppression win not up counted bv mu"tiu examples, one or tne treasures
ecessors, with his feet upon a table.
telling- stories and chewing tobacco
while waiting for clients, he spends
his epare time in studying his law
books and adding to his general infor
mation. He goes into society, gets ac
quainted with the people, is always on
the lookout to improve any opportuni
ty that comes in his way. and finaTy
makes his way to the top of the ladde".
pro
moted bv now giving them the richt
to have a vote and voice in its govern
ment. "Does any Intelligent and unpreju
diced man doubt this?, Does any un
prejudiced and intelligent man be! lev
that the white nun of North Carolina
would now vote to enfranchise- th? ig
norant negroes of this -State if they
had not heretofore been enfranchis
ed? ,
"Why. then, should they be allowed
to continue to vote? Has the expeii
encerof the past thirty-two years prov
ed thfdr fitness for xhr- proper exercise
of the right to vote?
"How and by whom was that rifcht
given to them? Our older citizens well
and bitterly remember bow that was
done. They remembrr .anil wdl nevr
forget r.or forgive hew our po3r old
military distiict
PENS WITH HISTORIES.
Occurrences M"hlch Have MaCi Them
Famous and Valuable.
Many of tne pens which have signed
with its command'' r's hri Inuirtcrs at
Charleston, and how a pretended elec
tion was he'd by our .military ruler's
(Gen. Car. by) appointees and tho re
turns of tint e.'-et'nn made to him ?nd
the result declared by him. How. at
that elc-tion, twenty thousand of tho
best white men of North Carolina
were not allowed to vote," and rvt-i y
ignorant negro, recently otnanc'pate 1
from slavery, was allowed- to vote. Ail
this is still fresh in the minds of cur
older readers, and tlu-y can never for
ge t how ne gro suffrage was force 1
upon th South.
" "And why was it? Was it. for the
best. inter."4s of ti ' r."rro or for the
best, interests of tl:e South? No, for
neither but only
, . . .. , . . ... lie.tJif-r oil oa
great treaties, documents giving life h t1
tlU'
or dealing death, or which have put in
black and white books which
through the centuries, are still In ex
istence, said one of the greatest anti
quarian authorities in England to a
South and perpetu:
'- i i
t ' r- rr ft,,.
purpe.pe of
;i'- of the
powe
o!
".l't
want
"US U(
philosophy, naling to me to get assistance
fr.
i tht ir n - ; both recognized the crank whose iu-
p "lii ie, and their phi'.os- sanity takes the form of believing
Vi'iv r;cu
;.i tne
1 hou!
current ta
d 1
li a i
t
'. ,e
1
V.
tu u
Y' u th.
not y
l'.icaey
-r.e:ny
scienct'
J't'opt r.
.- pic
thai A-
11 tJ V
lill!'.i. U C'tlVt"
' ! .'':l"'iil lv I .dl
t
::r
o:i
an .'
an
if r
v.' That
i'.ui. Mean
i e iiow vir-
1 h.ov mucli I deserve.
a u--t as iikeiy a
a bank or wius
i ac ' or kills a i
p.i'om ot con
Th it i-'n't
teat.
cro rd
a hi'i-.M
i never a t
afterward ,
coi " an
;; : r x
t-t make (ii shone.'.
: e
r sins and show
lor:
n i; .it
i ion
: a '. ,
an -
world.
a'
rv
Is there
Ve
I
r .
3"
I.'-,
r.
1:. '
ft '.
1.
ie-i t" 1 'i.'lt (int Hie n-fit-
s'Ut'cc but if it scorns
to you. if y.'u d.u't caro t -
,v xperi uicc, uuv let it
"On examining the full text of the
Louisiana constitution bearing on thf
question of negro suffrage I am satis
fied, contrary to my first impression,
that its legal interpretation discloses
1 M r -i r , "u Junius;; iu U.S( 11111111110 UgUinSt fl IT V
V V '- V , ! Person claiming the right to vo t
rug to dispose of copies of published any election on the- ground of hi o'
stiuues of celebrated authors as his j her race, color or previous condition
owy.. j of slavery.
lijit tbo madman suspected the ed- ; "The groat body of the voters in
itor's iuteivtion and sprang upon him, . Iouisiana who have ordained this con-
oemuiig ins head backward and aim- i MluIi;tra nre men under ..0 years of 1
nig at his throat witii the first knife i ae an(1 wpre npver slave holders. Thev
Ins baud could get hold of. Before I I ai? not afTjeted by the relations tha't
could come to mv friend's assistance'! .XI-tea "etween former slaves and
all was over, and tiie assassin had es- !
eaped to the eud of the car. A chasm
sever l hundred feet in depth was be- !
side fue track here, but into this ht
leaped with a cry of triumph at hav-
itig revenged iiimself upon his fancied
euemv.
w;''i 'M-r an eh
V. , , , . 1
rn
. this and succeeding generations in yct remaining to the terribly bereaved
connection with r testions of material j ex-Empress Eugenie is a 'pen made
prosperity. cujt of a golden eagle's feather, and
"No great body of white people in : mounted with gold and diamonds,
the world could be expected to quietly I which was used by the fourteen pleni
accept a situation so distr-sdug and, poentiaries who signed the treaty of
. demoralizing as is created by negro! t.,Lie 0. 5tl.
... c ... . . f"c oil ativi cjeuLt was contain. ,
, suffrage in the feoutn. It is a thorn nl . . .... Pf-
the fiesh and will irritate and vankl. ' Z T Kl penoas' aRa ine g what ,ve
in the body politic until it is removed ! m JchCUTt-down qul11 which he pricr to
; as a factor in-government, it :s not I Wrote ' Wavferley" is still. in existence. : "Ar:l -why
necessary to go into the details of bis- !'ut 1 miM say that there are score3 oxp-rie ?.( o.'
; tory to establish the great fact that I r jrcPrtant colle
negro sufirage in Louisiana and other ; Ppns?. such as the pen
: Southern States h3S iieon one unbred:
i en line of political, social, and it.dus-
jlve , the Republican party!
forgo ton tn.tt
could not
:tate, where of
intelligent an 1
!. Cp t the
nth emancipated
l HI t.i ,- x" given t ti
ne zt' suffrage h id b'" i
"It should nev'r
prior to that timrt negri
v o t e i n a n y N orthern H
course they wee mm
fewer than in the s r
timri thit tlio recr-
right, to v;
defeated in evrv N orrio-rn Slat
T f
hod
fhoull no a' rffi'.."- to
ne groes t o oe we wo
N rtb
:i it qu";t.io:i
tli Carolina
iznornnt
aid i.n!y b
::i SM'to
do-had
of historic
with which
t tiitpcn rnToKo, r.i 1 .v. .i . f !.
rant of Mary Queen of Scots. This was
trial obstruction to progress, ar.d a con- I taken awav hv a noh!ennn hisrh !b
I stant disturbance of th? neaco in a vast i office.
; region of the United States. I sors. who riinnse,i' nf it mnnv vVr
showo I that
governed " wi
ing? j t
cr(n.-ber th!.
next A ugu t
bf-lie v-s t h i :
h';-:: 1 we net? His thrt
the ;ii '. tirrty-two yf a
ur S; r.;- cm h - hl.vs '
i ig no rant r.gro'R vot
ry go- l ciiizet. seriously
ou' - t. rit;d r.swcr
vhether or not he rallv
i.i r sti;- can be hctv-r
goverrc
with ir without
he vote c
"No historian will ever be able- to
their masters, but are confronted n-it
a race question that is maintained bv i of that distressing history
IiniU .r.,,,. . ...:; . - i . I A.
jyiu i.ices v. iui constantly increasing
inu is already a settled aversion
igo. There is in existence, too, the pen
ignorant negro
wounded bv
ly pii
Oulv two
lid oulv pirv him
r was wo;u loa hv mv
a:i l i
. " Too iunl !
or t " i l v o i
.." t tue to imitate Kinling?"
IVtision for llritNti Odrerji.
Iti the future wounded British of
ficers will be provided for in a more
ouuit.ible manner, the Queen having
recently approved by royal warrant a
change in the existing pension rules.
Her Majesty orders that:
at i
' i "An odicer who bq rpcoiro.l in nn
., , , v. . . v vuia reefs arm i- irrevocaoi i
:;g '.UMuts beiong solely ; tion a bodily injury, certified by the the work of div-e w :s,'oV V ' - rA
- iVjiAicv1 uii i i l a i j) j mi. ci i uc C
in.
vigor
attended with Ill-concealed bitterness
jealou-sv and harred.''
THE AVERSION OF BLOOD.
"There is no pes-ibb- relief from this
condition except to draw the lines, of
political separation as clear and a
deep as is the line of racial distinction
between them. It is the blood of the
races that can not lawfully mix. and
no marriage tie is possible to' create a
lawful or tolerable union between
them.
"The separation is for the good cf
not a races and i-s irrcvciMMo lie" .'
collect a hundredth part of the facts -m, t L .
- i "-v.i "iinu iAiiu .osliu iiiaue ui ii.
I entries in the log of the Victory, and
j Fens used by Napoleon the Great on
; various historic occasions. Even in
; siK memory pens have brought very
end is not discreditable
it
nun rciorm, it ' severe, though not equivalent to the ' "In rhysieak mental, social inver-
ios oi a iimt may, at the discretion five, religious.' and ruling' power the
African race holds the lowest place.
1' u
YY
tp for mo. that'? a rood i of our Sferetarv of St-ifA h' llnw,l
' "Vou can't imagine ' a gratuity of from three to twelve
t" touch a thing I Lave , mouths' full pay of the appointment
i re.ul it over again, t held by him at -the time of the injury,
gr ovu cob!.' If at the expiration of the period for
nev -;r make a sneeess of which the gratuity has been awarded
VOU. iiet over th.ir I the ininrv h &Ti f! 1 n. lil-.-.lt-
if
V
n as
dnc-i the world has had a
history, and it is no idh
force t
tion of pal: tics 1 equa
that the
. T';-i
t
ili.o:
ia v-ctiid a iawver araonr.r ha ri,rmr.r, in it e.tc i
;5 ' t ii"? out a jury by 1 may be granted a temporary pension
a i actor, or, in fact, any at half the rate prescribed in the scale
ii man ; l.ut mitliors seem
ye.i
wdnte race houl? t.-e highest
his lowest stratum into a pos.:-
v with the hirh-
ect is only to clog the progress oi
ail
mankin
in
march, ever strenuous
and in proper order, toward the high
est places of human aspiration.
and
ti
.ii
t
t.
1 v,.
- ; i'.
.' . .C --
. i e
v cati sav a turner once
tvorbl at ib.eir feet."
; U.l i to
t o; oe.a
m' Co k my. . .f how long am I
and ai I cannot see mv
laid down.- Such pensiou shall be
renewable from ve.lr to vear at the
"I owe them nothing but good wdl,
but I can not include in that dfmt the
sacrifice of the honor of the white
race or the destruedion of its prestige
and hard-earned institutions of gov
ernment, either to flatter their canity
or to reward roose with power who
have cursed this country with their
o-nf creed presence, or those who em
ploy that race for the oppression of
my native Southland.
"Armed with the ballot, on the pre
text that it was necessary for ihc pro
tection cf their rights and as the com
plement of their manhood, it hes af
flicted thorn with social aspirations
that are impossible of realization, and.
in their disappointment they have con
stantly persisted in seizing by fo.-ce
eg? that they vainly strive
to attain to. a? grotesque decorations
of their liberties. T'nder the license
which they include in their notions of
liberty, desperate crime ha; been very
often resarted to as their means of suc
cess, until there is no real safrty for
women and ehiidren exposed to their
brutally even in th? suburbs cf Washington.
"tMe News Note.
The reqo r-'-' which come in as to
small cr-in f rorn t.h--- I'l'-dmont ootm
varge prices among -collectors. One of
Charles Dickens' pens a well-worn
gold one, which he had used for
eral years fetched ever 40; and
quill that was a favorite with Char
Lamb was. bought for 10 guineas
an American. The pen last used
Ixjrd Beacensfield h used a quill
the last before he died, was sold
HO guin-eas, and an old-fashioned r
-rid holder for tfce pocket, belonging to
Robert Burns during his errbe days,
could not be bought fcr gslf
sev-
a
le-s
by
by
to
'or
en
ties are as
None (if th- r
ficers ha' :.s yi
tto-m whi( h w-f-r
are in the print
Tif."-i,o :
reports quite an
lun.b i - unty
th r .''-T.h .h ! n e r' - net
the moor r.i tier
were in ambu-h.
rub favo-ible.
The Rrohfstf-r Democrat and Chron
icle i.4 i rompt-d by the fiirr-' of
svents in Se,nth Africa to ask the :.a
tie-ns bevond the sea thi
the ortce-r.-.
fled.
AR "tt Hur t
-hr. an-! ki'b:
Pef-r.bure. V
a-quittd th-r
d.-f .-r -j--
J,Or. ef the folate C-f-
ajee :rd. but all of
- to he made for lkM,
hands.
:e Co!bt'.r futfon
-xri:ir:r time in Co
Faturday n;gh. A
fi was ca-'u"1!. aftr
;:. 1 his grie.nds, who
had fire-.' Ix hot at
Th n V." r:;o--f hln'-rp
of
J J ;
.. Ch
f r
. V. i.. who
Parrl;h, in
, day.
ground
fr'df-
pi'-sUon: If a tirt-ela-
po-.v. r
-re-sT;u
kk
ire-at Brlais. ith a broad
n Sou'h Africa, -bar,
2 fnading a xf-$'s little eiit
:k th- Beer Peuldi.'. "kat
ici: wo'.il-i f.tr.f-r nrv?.ci-
"The people of Louis'an
iortv vears oi tf-rritio
get away. The very
u i s t u r b s ui It
aft"r r.eany
experience.
eefui method'
i-ft open to tnera to rid t,iemseivc
cf th;s 'fatal evil and irju-t:ee, f:-r
which they were never- in anv sense r.
srons'ble: and the hr-rahle S n't'r
V S ; i I IU fatiid t.1 lie3tioilii::'l COTlti'n-.5 ! lonin ma Tr ha inn. frfWI North r9f!rni ' h?"d prs..---- var-
fii3 verted into a permanent peasioc. ! -ES to rivet the chains un-n ier, and
elf.
.uscretion of our eicretary of State, have taken the only p
accoruing ro sunseueni reports u
the regulated miiitay authority. Ii
the temporary pension is renewed for
nvi vcars. and the bodilv disabihtv
Tf Southern whit? men have falsi
fied election returns, they have -the
stronger, if not the better, reason that United
they are acting upon the same law? ft dgn
.r bio.
sr.! Lend
rr of
without iiny ArurfK-an fothoM at au.
h" Iikly to h:it- In invading an t-nor-
fio!'li-r and C'orjrtier.
isift Kited. f r.er ef Khar-'urn
straightforward
no: scorn
merit ?-a.o
:ly i.werfs:l
1
a
i.ke
tb
of sI.f -defense hat insulted the out-rg-d
human nature rescrt: to for the
pro'ectien cf homes acd fiinilies. wo
men and children, from a race that
sets at defiance all moral resxsaints
Stat-.
Powers i
gr-'
"trong'T rnt:t grow
; uat i n
re. son r.
, jx'doat with
h-tant
hv 12.
ndet tbi" query ?k-
Sam !s a tiiigbty tdiird U
To c-uituatc vnwlahlc re
him that he
licin eharrro
cr-on her
queen was curio:
pointed rjuet;cn.
lord.'" she
yet cared
ma.eetT"
fftie wr. h
1.0 .
Of
T t
-
!s a
r, rot tt does
::r..zz a carxpil
s -ig r. f aiJ
i;g3.C5t Sll
whn te iv-iti
AV-lJsdK the
ca?h to put a
st true, my
you hive never
Yes, jojr
tdrdar. "quite
Ah'" aid
the ro:--tn. ' UiCd ko U it:V The
sirdar U.wi "V.r n.'.i.tjr,'' said
na-
e:o
:td,
P hi
It: womsn
r-rlb -J rbe
ore xcc-pt:cn.