tonje fioniti W^wer. ESTBLISHED IN 1878’ HILLSBORO, N. C. THURSDAY, APRIL 12, U 00. NEW SERIES-VOL. XIX. NO. 13. Rins forth your triumphs, Easter bells, jfill earth shall learn the story: veet is the news y ur music tells. He lives, the King of Glory! The Lamb, who was for sinners slain, Comes forth from death in might to reign. Behold, from winter’s thrall set free, The lilies fair are springing; Their radiant bloom, in holy glee The waking earth is bringing, A tribute to the Lamb once slain, Now raised in endless might to reign. Heliveg the rae« of man to bless, To banish care and sadness, All griefs to heal, ail wrongs redress, To till the earth with gladness. The Lamb, who was for sinners slain, Doth now for man’s redemption reign! Q500Q30QOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOGO fffi LITTLE HUMPBAEKEI! BIEL, g A Child’s Easter Story. 6 €3 Q0O0QOOO0OOOO3OOQQOOQQ3QOO OME over here, said Olivia, and I will tell you an Easter tale. There was once a woman who had an only daugh ter that was very small and pale and altogether some what different from other children. When she took the little one out for a walk the people stood an ' looked at the child and whispered among them selves. When the little girl asked her mother why the people looked at her so strangely the mother always re plied, “It is because you have on such abeautiful new dress.” Thereupon the little one was contented. As soon, however, as they returned home the mother would clasp her little daugh ter in her arms, kiss her again and againandsay: “You sweet little angel, what would become of you if I were to die? Noone, noteven your father, knows what a dear little angel you ai-el” Some time afterward the mother be came suddenly sick and she died on the ninth day. Thereupon the father of the little girl threw himself in de spair on the deathbed and asked to be buried with his wife. His friends, however, spoke to him and comforted him, and so he left his wife’s body, and a year later he took unto himself another wife, who was lovelier, young er and richer than his first wife, but by no means as good. And from the day that her mother died the little girl spent her whole time from morning till evening seated at the window sill in the sitting room, since there was no one who would take her out for a walk. She had be come even paler than before and she had not grown at all during the latter years. When her new mother came to the house she said to herself: “Now I will go out walking again in the city and on the beautiful promenades where the sun shines so brightly, where there are so many lovely shrubs and flowers and where there is such a crowd of handsomely dressed people.” For she lived in a narrow little alley, in which the sun seldom shone, and when she sat on the window sill she saw only a little bit of the blue sky— a bit not larger than a pocket hand kerchief. Her new mother went out nearly every day in the forenoon and afternoon, and each time she wore a very beautiful dress, much more beautiful than any dress the first mother had ever owned. But she never took the little girl with her. Finally the child took heart, and one day she earnestly begged her new mother to take her out with her. The mother, however, refused bluntly, saying: “You are not smart enough. What would the people think if they were to see me with you? You are a little humpback. Humpbacked chil dren never go walking, but always stay at home.” Thereupon the little girl became very quiet, and as soon as her new mother had left the house she got on a chair WAS HUMPBACKED. n looked in a mirror and saw 8 indeed she was humpbacked,badly « ^backed. Then she sat again on ^window sill and looked out into Come forth ye souls, in glad new life. This blessed Easter morning; With bloom of love and beauty rife, His grace be your adorning; The Lamb, who once tor you was slain, Doth bid you rise with him and reign. the street and thought of her good old mother, who, in spite of her hump back, had taken her out walking every day. The she thought again of her hump. VISIT OF THE ANGEL MOTHER. “What is inside of it, I wonder!” she said to herself.' “There must be something inside of such a hump as this is.” Many a strange fancy entered her little head and many an hour she wiled away in wondering why her back, instead of being straight like the backs of other children, was dis torted out of all shape by such an ug ly hump. The stories of fairies which her dear mother had told her came back to her memory, and in childish fashion she sometimes prayed that some good fairy would come and take away the burden that threatened to blight her whole life. Oh, if she were only like other children! Was there one of them who loved the sunshine and the flow ers better than she, and yet among them all was there one who saw so little of the sunshine and the flowers as she did? From her seat by the window she saw the little ones play ing in the narrow street, and as their frequent peals of merry laughter came to her ear, her question, “Why am I not like other children?” became ever more urgent. So the summer passed, and when winter came the little girl was still pale and she had become so weak that she could no longer sit on her window sill, but was obliged to remain lying- in bed, and, just when the snowdrops were beginning to peep above ground, the good old mother came to her one night and told her how glorious and. beautiful it was iu heaveu. The following morning the child was dead. “‘Don’t weep, father” said her new mother; “it is best for the poor child.” And the girl’s father answered no word, but simply nodded his head. The little girl was buried, but op Easter morn an angel with large whitt wings like a swan flew down from heaven, seated himself beside the grave and knocked thereon, as though THE transformation. it were a door. And soon the little girl came forth from the grave and the angel told her that he had come to take her to her mother in heaven. Then the little girl asked in a tremb ling voice whether even humpbacked children could enter heaven. She could not conceive such a thing possi ble. Yet the angel answered, “You dear, good child, you are no longer hump backed,” and with tho.se words he passed his white hand over her back and the ugly old ’hump fell off like a great hollow shell, and this left her a transformed being. And what was in it? Two beautiful white angel wings! The child spread them out, as though she had always known how to fly, and she flew with the angel through the dazzling sun light up into the blue sky. On the loftiest seat in heaven sat her good old mother awaiting her with out stretched arms, and the child flew stiaighi into her lap.—New York Herald. Origin of Easter Rabbits, One of the quaint and interesting features of our modern Easter carniva is the appearance in shop windows, side by side with the emblematic col ored egg, of a pert tall-eared rabbit, and those who cannot understand why bunny should have a place in our Easier decorations shrug their shoul ders and think it a trick to please the children. But the legend of the Easter rabbit is one of the oldest in mythology, and is mentioned in the early folklore of South Germany. Originally, it appears, the rabbit was a bird, which the ancient Teutonic goddess Ostara—goddess of the east or of spring—transformed into a 'quadruped. For this reason the rab bit or hare is grateful, and in remem brance of its former condition as a bird and as a swift messenger of spring, and of the goddess whom it served, is able to lay colored Easter eggs on her festival in the spring time, the colors illustrating the theory that when it was a bird the rabbit laid colored eggs, and an egg has always been a symbol of the resurrection, and, therefore, used as an illustra tion at Easter. The natives of the Philippines manufacture a very gauzy, transpa rent fabric for ladies’ dresses from fibres of the pineapple leaf. It is called pina cloth. FUSION CONFERENCE Leaders Planning to Unite Against Honest Government. THEIR SCHEME MAY NOT SUCCEED When The White Men of the State Register Their Opinions in the Com ing Election. Special Raleigh Correspondence. The Republican and State Populist chairmen were in conference (here last night. The veil of secresy was cast over the proceedings, but enough leak ed out to show that the situation was far from gratifying. With them some of the machine men of both parties, Revenue Collector Duncan, Marshall Dockery, etc., of the Republicans, Treasurer Worth, Auditor Ayer, etc., of the Populists. A Republican said there was no sign of activity in his parity anywhere in the East, so far as he could discern. He declared he did not know what would be done as to a ticket; that at Washington these things were regulat ed; that Senator Pritchard would really name the ticket. Another Republican said he would guess that a Winston-Salem man of prominence would be put out as the sound money and protective tariff can didate of the opponents of the Demo cratic party. A Populist who attended the confer ence said the Republicans would agree to anything the Populists wanted; that they were asking no questions; that they need the Populists and must have them. The fusionists decide to put on their “black list” State Superintendent Me bane because he favors the franchise amendment. The Republican machine men are all especially incensed against him. Chairman Simmons, speaking about tne blacklisting of Republican leaders era who favor the amendment, said that if that party takes the attitude oi fighting Republicans who favor the amendment it will array itself against a large majority of its leaders and best organizers in Eastern North Carolina, men who have always voted the Repub lican ticket. Chairman Simmons re marked that Republican leaders tak ing this view of favoring the amend ment are to be found in county aftei county in the East. Republican State Chairman Holton has issued his fifth campaign circular, a four-page affair, in which he dwells on what he terms Democratic pledges not to take up the franchise matter. He knows perfectly well that the Dem ocrats said they would do preciselv what they are doing, that is, leave the question to be decided at the polls. The local event of the week here was the trial of Thomas Jones, the negro extorter who murdered six members of a negro family. The old, old plea of insanity was the only defense. Judge Dorsey Battle, of the Eastern district criminal circuit, died yester day. The governor immediately ten dered the place to Charles A. Cook, o Warren. The latter has not accepted and intimates much doubt as to ac ceptance. It is stated on Republican authority that the legislature which elected can fill the vacancy in June, sc Cook would have only two months tc serve. The work of laying the foundation for the Vance statue in the capita, square is in progress. In ten days the base will be in place, but not until Julj 4 will the staute be placed upon it. The board of agriculture is sending out through the State veterinarian cloth (signs in great numbers setting forth the law that “no cattle infectec with ticks shall be allowed upon the public roads in any stock law or no- fence territory or be received in any enclosure or stockyard therein.” The White Man is capable of Self’ Governm nt. Centuries of experience have quali fied the Saxon race for self-govern meat and the government of others Through years of toil and trial, the\ reached the former; then througi. years of toil, and strife and war, thej reached the latter. The negro can no. reverse 'the order or close his eyes and blindly leap over centuries, of history He must tread the same paths. The guideposts are plain. First he mus learn to govern self; then he may hop*, to learn to govern others. WHY THE WHITE MAN IS SU PER! OR. The white man, whether educated or uneducated, knows as the average ne gro voter does not know that race and color in office and power will not hide his crimes or protect him in violations .•f the law. Negroes as a rule expect their race and even their party to pro tect them when arraigned before the courts. They mistake liberty for li cense and hence give their evil pro pensities full sway. “License they mean when they cry Liberty.” This is one of the principal evidences of white supehio-rity. Men way subscribe to the but to call them by name.” This was told me by the postmaster himself. To test this matter of the constantly in creasing insolence and disrespect to wards the white people I have fre quently in the last year called the at tention of flriends to the fact that in driving along the roads not one ne gro in a hundred met would speak first. They wait for the white person to speak first or they do not speak at all. I can give other instances in my own experience and from my own observa tion, but only mention these two to call the attention of the better class of negroes to the fact that the whole ten dency of events is towards a wider and wider separation of the races. It does not take a prophet to foresee that a continuation of this state of affairs will end in a clash between the two races. And it is then duty, and just as incumbent upon the negroes as upon the whites to endeavor to prevent this clash. As to who will be the greatest sufferers and who will be the surviv ors, the good judgment of the negro ought to teach him. The Bible speaks of the folly of sowing the winds. The '■harvest is reaped in the whirlwinds. FALSEHOODS NAILED. Who Are Entitledto Vote Under The Amendment. Wilmington Messenger. An examination of the 4th and 5th sections of the franchise amendment to be voted upon in August next will satisfy any one of ordinary sense that two things are clear, are apparent. First, all who read and write may vote under the 4th section. Second that all whites who cannot read and write may vote under Lth section. And why? Because it distinctly sets forth that “no male person, who was on January 1, 18'67, or any time prior thereto, en titled to vote under tne laws of any State in the United States wherein ho then resided, and no lineal descendant of any such person, shall be denied the 1 right to register and vote at any elec tion in the State by reason of his fail ure to possess the educational quali fication prescribed in section 4 o-i this article: Provided he shall have regis tered in accordance with the terms of this article prior to December 1/ 1908.” And that means simply that ail the whites can vote under that section for the plain reason that there is not pa single white man in all the state | whose father or grandfather could not I vote in the year indicated, 1867. There 1 can be no possible disfranchisement of the whites under that section, and all the liars in the state cannot make any other thing appear however much they may lie. In the amendment there is another most-wise, fair, necessary provision. It is compulsory to have each voter to pay a poll tax. This is just an® proper. All voters not otherwise ex empt should pay something toward.! the support of the state government. The poll tax is the best way to reach all, and, it is needed to carry on the state government. The law makes proper exemptions from the law gov erning the poll tax. All persons over fifty years of age and all persons who are exempt by the county commission ers will rot have to pay a poll tax. The whites "re the burden bearers. DC all taxes paid in 1898, 96 2-3 were paid by the whites. Surely the negroes who may vote should be forced by law to pay something for that privilege, for the privilege of citizenship, for the support of the government. They are Door citizens who do not help to sus tain public government in some way. No poll tax pNd no vote given. Here- ■tefore the regent as to poll tax eo’- leetirv in the State has been greatly abused. declaration 'that “all men are created equal” and yet not submit that it is with the meaning of either the De claration of Independence or the na- ional constitution, that a weaker, less ntelligent race shall administer their Ufairs, for at the promulgation of both those documents the negroes ved here as slaves and were just as "it for suffrage then as they were thirty years ago. THE EVIL INFLUENCE OF NEGRO SUFFRAGE ON THE REPUBLI ¬ CAN PARTY. The Republican party so (far as North Carolina is concerned is divided into two distinct and separate parts: West and East and Black belts. The average Western North Carolina Re publican, and in this respect I am sorry to say Senator Pritchard seems but little better inforimed than the average, but silly and incompletely comprehends the situation in Eastern North Carolina where the negroes, ignorant and insolent, ate entirely n control of all Republican conventions and where every effort to better the condition of affairs is counteracted by Jie opposition of some black-hearted white man w.th corrupt practices who sees in added intelligence and reput able work a diminution of his own unscrupulously acquired power. A1- Jioug-a (the Republican party has an excellent plan of organization it is scarcely ever followed on account of -he ignorance and corruption of the negro politicians who being numeri cally stronger preside over white men, call them to order at will and occas ionally consent for them to be elected delegates to a State Republican con tention. The white Republican, If honest, is entirely at their mercy and under their control; if corrupt he must purchase their votes and influence. Jhis is not an overdrawn picture. HOW OFFICE AFFECTS A NEGRO. The negro originals nothing; he merely imitates, and like most imi- cators he does not distinguish between .rue metal and the false and spurious. So in the administration of any office he loses sight of the responsibility and considers only what he- thinks is the added dignity and importance to him self among his fellows. This causes him to be impertinent and insolent to the white people. In office he is an entirely different individual as all the people who have seen him in office uno w. Lastly, but of supreme importance, s the effect the settlement of the race question by the adoption of the amend ment will have upon the progress cl he State. And every intelligent voter aught to regard it as a patriotic, and '.or a partisan question. Every voter—every white voter mows that the cause of good govern ment demands that the affairs of state ■e administered by white men because . heirs is the property to be secured,! .heirs the mind to originate, to plan 11 progressive movements and theirs he strong arms to uphold the State in lines of strife and war. SCME OF THE BENEFITS. To urge the adoption of the amend ment is not an attack upon the pim ple of majority rule. I believe in majority rule, but for the good .of all he people and the successful manage- nent of 'the affairs of State that rule oust be the rule of an intelligent ma- oruty. And to secure such rule for- ver what more potent than the incen tive to all. men to secure an education or their children furnished by the rati- Ication of the amendment. Knowing hat after 190'8 every man whether white or black, not on 'the permanent mil must conform to.the provisions of he article there is a neat stimulus to ill the children of the State to learn o read and write at all hazards when ' hey become of age in the governmen- al affairs of their State and country. THE NEGRO VOTE THE CURSE OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY. It is no secret that the negro vote s the curse of the Republican party in he South, the open disgrace of all itate conventions of the party and its rurehasable quality a source of shame wen to the great national conventions. Not alone, however, at the negro should the blame be directed, but also it his white leader, who in corrupting him or taking advantage of his corrup tion is more criminal because more in telligent. WHITE MEN CAN’T STAY IN IT. I will give one example which I do lot doubt may b paralleled in a ma jority of the counties of North Caro lina east of Raleigh. In this county (Pitt) in the eighties there were sev eral hundred white Republicans, "here can not be twenty-five counted now. A DISMAL PROSPECT. If it is not blotted out I firmly be lieve before very many years have passed away the memory of the South- rn white Republican party will be mly a dream, a hideous dream in .hich black specters hold ceaseless orgies above the grave of men once .romunent in the councils .of their .States and country. WIHAT WILL THE END BE? Cn.e of the postoffices in this county s kept by a middle age white man, a merchant and a substantial citizen. A hort while before the last electlion a .egro boy, son of one of the negro .chool teachers, walked into the pqst- iffice, and called out: “John, is there my mail for us.” The merchant asked he boy to repeat his request, thinking possibly*'he did not hear correctly, but the bay went off without his mail, •.nd soon returned with his mother, by .utterance a school teacher. She was very angry and demanded of the post master what her boy had done. Upor bis giving her a statement of the mat er she replied: “Is that all? That 1 'll right! I teach all my children not to ‘Mister’ the Joneses, the Browns and all these white people around here, Raleigh News and Observer: Con gressman Atwater is in the city, hav ing just returned from his home in Chatham county, where he made two telling speeches. “You may state that Chatham is in line and will give a ma jority for the amendment,” said Mr. Atwater last night. “These meetings did good. I am enlisted for the fight for White supremacy and am ready to fight for it anywhere and at any time. I expect to speak in Franklin county next month. MIR. ATWATER’S VIEWS. When questioned about his recent speech-making, among his people. Mr. Atwater said he had merely comedown to the State to talk to his constituents a little bit. He was sure that the boys were all right, 'he said, but he had been afraid' that some of them did not understand matters just exactly. So he had conversed with them for a few minutes from a speaker’s stand, and now 'there is no danger of their going wrong. “I told them the only thing there is to tell,” he added simply, “I gave them my word that none of the white men would be disfranchised, and I told them that the amendment only meant 'hart the negro would lie kept out of politics in the future. It seems to me that this is all that there is in our fight.” The most, in personal credit, that the gentlemen from the fourth district makes of his present position is to say that the boys called him away from .he plough to go to Congress. Some where—'at the plough, maybe-he ’earned simplicity and wisdom. In the great struggle that is now on the ’lands of his party he' begins and con cludes his part by saying to his peo- ole: “You won’t be hurt. We will ^et the negro out of politics. That’s UI.” And “the boys” in the fourth ’istrict go back to ploughing—satis- lecl, while their representative pro ceeds by easy stages to Washington to find ouE what the cor ressional boys have done in his absence.