- rni3 NEWS AND OBSERVER, SUNDAY DECEMBER 27, 1U05 ft . 1 4 . .... 5 CELE DIR. A TED, BIG CHEII CAL IS THE BEST3Y TEST NOW IS -THE i THEE TO y buy while summer , prices prevail; : , ; iLL PHONES. . .. . f CAPITAL CITY FUEL CO, If you want -special rood Music for holiday dances, or recep tions send for' Prof, . Levin's-Orch.ee-: tray The only professional orchestra In the State. .Reasonable r prices. -Special prices for out of town engage "jments. c- Adress PROP. J. LEVIN,.' BOX 374. Raleigh. N. C ' GiLDEirr c vuif e, c. e; CONSULTED Q - civil ekgeceeh . ..:('. ! : ;;i."iURnAM,-N.;, C. ' ' ;';y iy. Waterworks. Sewerage, Streets; Watet Filtration. Sewage Disposal;! Plan Reports, Estimates. Supervision .01 Construction, y v- ' -f ; , a . ; :. 'y. ' :"x' '- " ' ' i ' : ,; ' We are coins to sell fruit cake 20 cents pound? plain citron and raisin cake 20 cts.; oranges 10 cts.: dozen. Big reduction on canned sroods."Meal reduced to 25 cts..'- 'Meat -reduced ' to 10 cts., Raisin; and currants' teduced SbbbbbbbSBSBSBSSSSSSBBBSBBBBBI 3-tjto 10;cenisy J. B. :6rcoh Go, t t R Ktmcsw ils.easlly aii!ivvered,t U iypp ge Morris Chairs vEcoIX Cases, : a : parlor iGccdvr and hundreds of ;other picccs6f 'Fcrniturcr ; i-'t ?rlt-Ta3 to-day and have the best jMd largest "vltrie of furnl-' SYDHOR &I1UC3DLRY j Incorporated. I' - f. 11S eV " BroadJ Street, Chr r ; VARE YCUXE CF TCrlSE lNVESTCHS who secured seven T?er cent preferred - . stock tai only, -successful ; cotton pivn.ii4y m.uui ever yui vu cua max - ket? . u aot. vwrite now -to ? Johm.H. Thurman. t President Vacuum Cotton ; :jcricKixg -ziacmne o.. bu AjOUIS. mo. NOTICE. : t v The annual meeting of ;the share holders of the Citizens. National Baxk, Raleigh, TV. C. - will , be held In their banking rooms in this city, on Tues day, January 12th, 1909, at'12 o'clock noon." is-, , ' HENRY E.:XJTCHFORD, . -. rCashief. : I2-l$;nntil, ISVan, - ! r-y-sy:, VE HAVE EVERYTHItlG A; Voull need for those Xmas Cakes,-they are freslr. too SMITHrFORESTCO. 1 - Oialss TJoxv ner.rly l;- PLAJ73 .T?ARLY for BEST RESULTS , s.-;Cho!c3 Palms "and Ferns in great ;t variety. Wedding bouquets and fun era! decDrations a specialty. Cut flow ;rrr4 xt all kinds in reason. Mail, tele . grcpli and te!spone orders receive - . . A-: ''- 1. ALL ABOUT VESSELS 'WHICTI SAIL iYROUND THE 'BLACK CONTI- Tlio Big? Care liners and" , the , LlfeJ t- LTpon TlKni- Potato Races and Hu-1 Tnan?jCock f-Fights A Fashionable Crowd to UicLCongo ftnd :. the Gulf , of Guinea -Tlie Ships of Meditermnean Africa Travel oft " the RedSea ifo Australia Via Cape -Tottu. (Copyright,: 1908; by, Frank G. Car- ;,c-.'h;r : penteri-v-- t.-;-1 v.; wa&hlhgton, IX ? C.-Few people realize tbs? enormous- extent - of the present steamship travel about Africa. AU of ourVgreat Atlantic Hners now h ave-" Bhi ps which leave :jCew York" regular tjr far the lledlterranean. and hot a few of these call at Algleria and J nave branch r lines to Egypt. These are regular sailings" to Europe froib every African port; and there is a continuous-ilne of ' vessels' stretched like a.necklack' of .beads about : .the .black ' continent. r'r'-'''''1'':' -went ''from New York ta MorOctTo on . one of the big , steamers of the North German Lioydwhteh 1n eight days landed me -at the Strait of - Gi braltar. We passed by the Azores, almost .touched .Spain, .and. in com ing " into tiort. could see 4 the ' heights of . Africa over -te way. ' J -J crossed the straight in a launch to Tangier, vhich'is only e, few miles distant, and then coasted . the northern shores, of, the Meditterranean sea, incHidlnsr Al geria, Tualsia and Tripoli. t - After leaving the Land of the Nile. Ltooka'-shiD-thVough- the. Suez. canal and them went, down the fourteen hlmdred niiies : whith eomnrisA . the length of .the Red, Sea, eing t tofit through Bab-el-Mandeb to Aden, In southern i Arabia.-- From Oiat, port- naa one or .the steamers of the Indian ocean to earry me around the Great Horn of -.East Africa, and I went on other steamers southward along the east' coast, passing through the Mo? zambique channel to Beira, InPortu Buese 4omb Airica, . p rem' t-ape 1 own I Journeyed tip the -west coast of the continent ta the Maderla Islands, not far; from .Gibraltar, where 1 I ; had started Un. -end thence went on to Southampton, and home to New York. it will' thus be seen that I have cir cumnavigated the continent. I i have gone .over l the i routes of the i early f noenlclansr whoi were sent around -Africa about "560 Bi C: by an Egyp tian King, as described by Herodotus, and have touched nearly all the places umt.i vaaco, da Gama -and -Bartholo mew f Diaz discovered at About : the time -Columbus -came across the At- antic and - found -our nlyrworld. . -J I i Big Steamships to thV Cape. There- are now a half 'doses- lines or steamers 1 plying between England and' the Cape of 43ood - Hope;.'" They mane the voyage in . from -.seventeen 10 twenty-three ,days. :- and - there re otner ana -slower vessels which, jstop- ping at . trie 'various ports. Are a' month os so on .the-, way ' iK i. V some or these ships go down the east coast-by-tfay s of the Suez canaL and some sail baek -and forth" by the west coast alone. Thep.f there are ships -which go-to the Cape- of Good lTnrA. nn th1r vv in. ; & steamers ' whlcitail that way: for the tria, ardund ftha, coatinenL tart. mg xu :Vm &$e 'lna icjoinjng sJicl by' the other, and-Vice versa. - ' v -' tTb t fare i frm London to Cape To wit ranged 'from- J 1 8 to; S 2 1 bfattd tnere are -second-class rates "by which pne can go ,as pheapiy toCape Town as he can' travel first-class fare from &6W York toUverpool.vThe vessel upon o wmcn ti cam from -the Cape 5 hope to England .was one of ihe big mail steamers of the Unldrt J fjittla -"Urto-- .tr wilt vv.A'Txcir.v-n: t A 1 yesset of over .12.00 tons.... "We made the . trip in - Just seventeen , days, iand' were landed at Southampton at the very honr we were i told we would reach there before leaving V- t - v Tto Union Castle Line. , , The. Union Castle' line is one of the oldest of the African steamship com panies. "As the Union line, 'which was rounded fifty-five -years -ago.-it sent the first steam yessels reeulaf ly to South"" Africa. '"-There were only two of the company's ships -which ' then exceeded S00 tons. About twenty years- later- this line was -united j with the t Castle company, the two telng combined by Sir Donald urrie,-whe is still the president of the oraranlza- tion, f ; At that ' time the contract for A 1 V m . . -2- me ma.ua was paseq on a tnirty-sevr en-aay passage with a A 5 0 0 bonus 'for eVeryday under that.-and the postage rates were xme shlUingi. per -V : letter Since then Hhe 'rates have , been re duced to two cents, and the time to sixteen and . one-half "days. There are now about a-score of . these - mail steamers, and they 11 belong to the Union Castle? Company,' which? has perhaps , -dozen .or -so other vessels in jits African service. ; -' ' r -. n These boats carry all the gold and diamonds .that .come from South Af rica, their freight of that -kind alone being annually worth at ' least SliO. 000.000. - --- --.y . - Among (the other British ' lines are the- Aberdeen. . which sails - f romLftiri w don to Natal direet, rounding 1 the Cape of Good Hope and calling only at- the ports of 'East Africa.- These are ships lof from 3,000 to',000 tons. They .go down the' west coast,1 stop ping at the Canary - Islands, - and come first! into port af "Durban. From there they ? go to Lopfenco Marques, Beira, Mozambique, Zanzibar and Mombasa,: The trip-to . Mombasa cosU $220 'and" to NtaU $1S0. v .Then t there is the Bucknall steam ship lines; which -goes to Cape Town by way of (Madeira . and also calls at Natal. Its f area to Natal are. $100 and to Cape rTown $ 1 4 0. -The ships are of about six thousand ton each. The Natal line, to Durban direct, has smaller" vessels, but it H charges just about the same rates, ' while ' the British India line, which goes from London to the Suez 'canal and t down the east coast. ' costs v considerably more; -"Passengers on- the latter-boats must transship at Aden, and the ves sels are comparatively small. J The rate to.Mombiwa or Zanzibar (k $225, while to Delagoa Bay. the i port for the Transvaal, it Is more than $300. Life on an African Steamer. - Traveling on these African steam er is, it seems to me, - much more agreeable than on the great floating hotels which cross the , Atlantic. The ship which brought me from South Africa was .almost 600 feet long, 60 feet wide and more than 40 feet deen. The first-class cabins were on the up per deck, and ttie rentliaUon was such that we were" perfectly comfort- awe. When 'we crossed '(the equator. The ship rolled a bit. but only-a few of us were seasick, and ther voyage was enjoyable from- one tend ' to i the Other. . . :('; ; ,-y- v y- --. tLeaving the Cape of Qood Hope, we dId:cot etep. .until we reached Madeira,- fourteen days later. During this time the passengers became well acquainted, and all seemed anxious to nave a.good tinae. ; Shortly af ter leav- ins'ajcouection, averaging about $5 apiece, was v taken up from , the first and eecond lassassengerr, and this formed a pursa-- of ''several y hundred dc' --rs, which was used as premiums for frames and contests, into- which an me passengers entered. It was v- r::t ci.Olynpio anie3 hcli in raid 't:. .... ...v ocean, m :wtiicli both laaies andgen- ilemen joined. Thererwa8. consider able rivalary etween the first ' and second classes,'' and each , ' - had its en- champlons.,t . Among the sporty tered intoiiy " the rladlea'-wre the spoon and egg sprints and the potato race. In ihe spoon and egg race a hen egg is -laid on the deck ata.-cer-- tain spot and the girl contestant must iun ad scoop this up with, a spoon and scarry it. without letting it fail. baclc to the goal. -The distance f is thirty or forty yards. It requires bkIII to :et 'the I egg,: into ' the ? spoon and a -steady hand to carry it, F " in tne potato race " tn ree rows oj ten raw potatoes are laid upon f the deck, the potatoes of each row being three- feet- apart. There 4s -a4 bucket at -the end of each row. In" this game three girls can contest at one time. Each takes a row and attempts to gather' her potatoes more quickly than the ' others. The ' potatoes can ba nicked 11 r onlv one at a time, and eJl must go into the bucket- at ! the end of - the row. "The one who j fin ishes Iflrst. getting ? her whole ' ten in her bucket, is the winner. " $ .Another sport in which both sexes contested, was threading, the needle.' In. this the boy puts the tnreaa through the eye while his girl holds the needle. The couple which threads L first is successful. , -i-r-.:; . ' - ' As to games ror the ..men. tnese were " legion ' and some most rldlcul ous. One was marking the deck"with 'What waacaUed the bow line stretch, - Frank G. Carpenter. and another was a pillow fight con test In the latter two men baianc Jng themseiyes astride a pole with a mattress beneath' them, fought ekch ythet with pillows until; one f tras knocked on the mattress,' There were about forty contestants for .this prize and an Englishman won lt.'-:n'-i ,"Then there was the human cock fight, in which two ; men with their arms, tied over their knees and - fast ened there by a stick, attempted: to crowd each, other out of a ring! on 1 the floor by mean of 1 theiri toes.i and uiHt lire tunient .iu wo.wnu;cuuiu vhi. Miscuit or. drink a bottle of soda i 5For these "games fatti: eld- apd young entered; and S6uthAfrican legislator and colonels vied with ..tourists, gold miners ind engineers; to see ''who twas best There were also cricket match gB wbere the balls wierei caught i by TiAtd Ant 4in t H iMm f th di1r. and concerts and dances night after nighty. : Ji t Etiquette and Faslilon. Thefman-)rj womarf'whor jjbes: to South Africa with- lib more 1 baggage than he can carry in his or her- hat will feel much lout of. place. . Thefe is more dressing on those ateamers than onTthe biggest ships which cross .the Atlantic. On the way-from the Cape of Good Hope to Madeira" there: was not-a man in the ar st" class "who did not put on Tuxedo or a ' street pen coat and a stiff boiled shirt for dinner each . night, and most of. the ladles wore lovr necks and short 1 .'sleeves This custom prevails on all the steam ers, and on both sides of the conti nent There is full dress at all the dances and concerts, rand the party In .the saloon during the evening looks more like that of ja Washington par lot than like the rough, and tumble eroyrd" which one always ofjnds on the Mo Atlantic Unprn. .- ; : .i - 4; As to the meals '?n the ships, they are; 'excellent.- I had good .board even , -on tne . smau . Meniterranean coastal steamers andr on the -vessels along the east .coast The eating'-on the ships rrom thet cape 10 1 ionaon IS about as good as on the Atlantic, and there are four or five meals 1 a day. . Here for instance .is my-' sche dule forgone dayr; At: 7:30' a. m. the boy - entered my cabin - with ? tea ( .4 - Marks a new epoch in rcadvrmade footweat. v It is' a - bench made, hand lasted shoe; $how ; ing in' qualityj in-faultless , ntj in every line, the work of the expert shoemaker. , You find in the ; Steadfast the exact - features " that yoii "Y pay twice as much for in made-to-order hoes'. In its comfortj its individual styles and it -unusually' high grade of leathers, it is trj-day . . absolutely unsurpassed by; any footwear at - -any. price. 'Y Y ' . 0f 05 ''or-winter. includes .nobbiest ; line 61 footwear - ever 'shown Y v 'l-i ! 1 7 in this city. 'All "the newest leathers, tne newest' " tqes built according to the latest r Y ; dictates of " shoedom' ' : : We are exclusive ap-ents for ... . the Steadfast Shoe n yuutvrn mt wot southtrn Ctntlemmn r t lyasaesrg; . rC AA PEEBLES Q EDVAHES3, 12 EAST BLIKTIN STREET. r.dc!ih;II.a-..VY and a cracker, which I ate In bed. At 8;30 I had agood breakfast tn' the dining saioon: at 1 a luncneon witn soup and' dessert, at 4 o'clock 'tea in tne 1 saioon. : and . at 9130 ainner. ne latter meal ' lasted ah hour or more, and, in addition, there was a supper late in the evening. Steamships Wliich Go Around Africa. V I eahnot imagine a better health trip than a sea' voyage around "Africa. There are several ilnea which - go down one coast and up the other. One of -the best is a German African line byV which one starts at Hamburg and can go either -'east or' west. 3 If- he chooses the Western route he calls at Las Pal mas In the Canaries and then goes on to Cape Town, the voy age there taking twenty-three or twenty-four days. Leaving the - Cape or Good Hope the ship next calls vat Port -Elisabeth, the Liverpool of South 'Africa; .and .'then .- goes on :tb East London and Durban. th capital Of i.'NataX.'". vThe: ,twor next ;. stoppages- are In Portuguese, 'East Africa and then come' Mozambiaue. Chinde and Dar - es Salaam, the capital of Ger man East Africa. - : From ft there;! the ships - go on to iZanzibar.Tanga ""and Mombasa, and thence vnorth ' ,td Aden and on up the Red sea and Suez canal to-the-Meditterranean. They1 go from Port Sa4d - to Naples, and thence out back through the Strait of Gibraltar to Hamburg. v The whole trip, includ Jng board, costs just about 2400 first class, witn the stewaras tees aaoea. and it takes about; two months to make it.' ' 1 " If one "wishes to visit the ports of West Africa, the Wberman 'line, sail ing from Hamburg. 'IH ' take Vhlm along the Gulf of Guinea and down to the Kongo, and it has also ships td . Swakopmund, "in German South west 'Africa, There- are' some vessels sailing regularly 'from , Antwerp ' to the Kongo' ana 'others which go to Gibraltar and around 15 the -coast of Morocco." -The trip to, the t Kongo takes- nineteen' d ays and . i. he steamers leave for there every three -weeks. The land at Matadi. where lone can catch the railroad past the rapids of the Kongo to Stanleypool. - i . ; , There' is -also a Portuguese steamer which goes fromj Lisbon three ..times month' for 'Loanda, -Benguela, and the ports of .Portuguese West Africa, and there aref British steamers from Liverpool every other -Saturday ' for Sierra Leone, Accra, and Lagos. The fare' to -Sierra Leone is o.. These same ships go to Liberia. he fare there costing 2120. -The rate' from Antwerp to the Kongo is f ISO and to Lagos .t 150, - -' ' T - v Mediterranean Africa. . 'Mediterranean Africa is very easily reached ; from Europe. , The " Frenchi have a number of lines which steam from Marseille to Algiers. Oran.and Tunis, -and there are Italian ships which make - the same ' ports. One canv go almost daily in twenty-four hours Jrom France to Algiers, and the trjp' to Tunis is not much longer. There -are ships sailing weekly from Naples to' Tunisia, and there' i a line of vessels whichugoea Mrom t Tuais .to TripoliAcalling at Sfax and Gabe and thence goingn 1r way 'of Trtpoit t MSlta. These boats ure bf about one thousand tons each and af e 'rather dirty. -The -fares; are low. ' ! v ? K'--iAt, present tfie Gemjanihes are' trjing tocatcW the Ametlesn travel to Egypt and both , the Hamburg Anterteanand - North '(lernaig "Lloyd havo branch Hnes .from". Naples ; ,tb Alexandria. ' Within : the past' year 6r so tlte-Hamburg-Amerleanhas-pvt Ita own - steamers on the Nile and . they now compete with the mail . vessels1 of the - Khedive, and with lbose 1 of .Thomas Cook A ohi iWhtch ,ha ok A Son'iWhtcrthavd o J t r" - yHv,iue, long held. aTmdrfdpoly ofi, that trade. the small ships from there- aerbss to Tangier. o 4ie cas-star ti iiti Mar seilles' and come '"down ! the coast of Spain on; toey Frepch i - vessels', f to imu. vruea 10, Ja.uoruio mat way. ine liritisn nave a- Morocco line which inu&es a round tr ef all the ports on "the Atlantltf Trom Lbn- cost .Is $1 25; nd during; the 1 voyage one calls at the Canary IslandSi 'and the? Madeiras iand a!s iseven dif f eren , portsrf Morocco;' There Is a Hamburg cQmpany which makes somewhat Ihei Ssame ' Toute; ,ajid fa French line" which eoes from " Mar sellles? to Tangier three times every montn.. :? . " 5 r On die Red Sea. The African countries on the Red Sea can be reached by several lines from Suez and there are daily-steam era which will take you there by-way or tne canai. ,.The Khediviai steam ship ' line, 1 which carries" the rroyal mails of Egypt. Is now sailing from Suez - every -Wednesday evening .'for fort Sudan ana Kuaklm.- and 'every two -weeks t rom Massowah.rHodeldah and Aden. : One of.the stops of-these boats iscat Jeddah. where " Mother Eve-4s- buried' and -where the pilgrim-, ages start for Mecca. e'Maasowah is t! e port for Italian Africa. ?ahd Port Sudan - is ( the terminus of the new railroad which has just been -built across the Nubian 'deserts from the Red Sea to Khartum. i The-Italiana havea line to Masso- wah, and the Messageries Maritime, the great French lines, stops at PJbouti, which la the best , port for ADyssinia. xnere is a., fttue railroad there belonging" to the French,; which in this city. Yf ss,, - u ..- W y- V "a.vAY sW r mi..... t A S I t 3 j? tU takes - ens in and almost ' to . Ila rrar and from there all travel must be on camels or mules. ----- v ? There are -also regular steamers sailing -from Bombay to the ports of jast 'Arrica. anu -a. number or large vessels which make regular trips to Australia via cape Town. The.White Star Hne has such-a service .'composed of 'steamers of about twelve thousand' tons each; the New, Zealand Shipping Company and 'Shaw & Seville" have similar vessels. On these ships Hhe passage to ' Cape Town costs from $100 to $150, and to Australia perhaps $ 2 0 to-' $ 30 more.- Indeed one can make ah "oeean trlpTarpund, the .world- lni tnat - way, utKing.;i passage nrora. London to New; Zealand and thence going . on to England by , the Strait of Magellan. ( FRANK G. CARPENTER. ABOCATES 1 IIOMESTEAD LAW.) r (Aseville Citizem) ; : '- Ashevllle. N. C. Dec 21. 190S. 1 To the editor: I was surprised to note in a - recent issue of your paper ani -outcry against the homestead law. in j Yny opinion, one ofnhe most just and benign laws on our 'Statute books. How an .enlightened and liberal .Jour" nal 'which professes to be on then side of i the - people as against plutocracy; Tvhich claims to stand for-popular jus tice' as against the grasping rich, can advocate the ' repeal of this . .barrier against oppression, is beyond my coKiprehension.-! ( -'"!'.'.' If we were all like fish In a pond. the' little ones to be swallowed by the big ones, it would be entirely consist tent'to advocate a repeal of this be nign law. But since we -are all broth ers,' facing a common destiny.' mortal creatures with -h immortal souls.- an swerable to the same merciful - and Just God, it Is only befittinsr that we should show some consideration and benignity one for another-the strong for the "weak. In other wokjs. that we should live'and let tlve. The fact thatrny brother-has been unfortunate;' that in lire s struggle he has fallen be hind 'that he owes more than he can pay, even that he owes tne, is no sufll dent 'reason why I should Pe permit ted tp -etrin hlm of every vestige i-of property . and turn him." and perhaps with him: an entirely innocent . and helpless 'family, out upon." the - cold uncharitable world rwithout any means of ! suDPort You seem to assumevthat alt men : who are; protected by the homestead lawiare ."dead beats,; etc.. etc., '"whereas many; an "honest .-;man Has peea emeiaea irom .oppression and his wife and children savedfront want v xid suffering . by this bulwark against Human greed. ? (You seem chiefly concerned for the welfare5- of the' wholesale merchant who credits out his" goods, or the retail : merchant who -elects- to do a Ume business, but J oes not seem to occur to you that neither the -wholesale nor retail ?ner chant . is under -any,; : compulsion - to not own property in "excess of a home stead, dr who are not worthy of credit. The homestead law is "known r; of all men. -It enters. into every contract and none is mislead, or at least peed not bei ntislead -or deceived ty It r: ;, ! (ft You say this law fbars -honest mer-:i cnants rom 'getting .credit . ana aias dishonest men to get it" Thia etate mnt is,4r contradiction -on. 'Ijts face.. If It,-prevent. one , man . ' fronvt," getting credit how :can, itaid. another to ge,t. iti-hether lionest-or, dishonest?. The pact r,-i8f ythat- ..notwithstanding ; the homesteaa, law;., any -honest merchant caftvJret; ' credit, f.rnpre. credit in fact ) thin ie, ought to have. r . The, truth is anxious to sell their goods tha,t, they urge, and almost force theirwares on the litle pierchants and often. r induce IthantUe .merchants:' hbwfeveir honest. tq, buy peypna tneir capacity, or awnty a. 1 a i - -j.a a. - - . 1 payr .AJie,wouoie,is i,nav in sale , merchants' do not stop at; im portuning .honest retailers to. buy,! but take long risks, on 'dishonest .ones, "and then complain at. the: Insufficiency' of tne laws, . aa denounce . aisnonesi t tn slight proteCtfon-whicM ls giverf. tol the little man" who has 'been importuned Into buying beyond his j capacity' or abflityrto 'pay.y.: Oh. no,Ythefe. 4f n6 kind of trouble for an honest, man to , get credit, ' ...Often he; gets more Credit orj has ,more thrust upon him .(than Is for 'his good. Then again we have the ' mortgage system v hereby .any man ' can pledge or- bind his property below his exemptions, even to the-last penny's ' worth. if he sees proper to do so. 5 for'debts he desires to create. If a man has no ' property the aboli tion of the homestead dr the personal property exemption would add noth ing ttb pia credit and if he has prop erty hecan easily make It available as a means or credit by the simple in strument Of -a mortgage. It is ; true that the mortgage often works a hard ship, but ' no f greater t hardship than wbuld an execution, if the barrier of the homsetead -and personal property 1 exemption were ..taken ; away. , V 'Not very long .since 'I Darticlnaled In (: a trial in the court house wherein it was deve) oped .by .the evidence that a then prosperous merchant under ; . the power : of . a chattel (mortgage, had sent the sheriff armed with claim and delivery proceedings and .. had taken xrom a poor man the last ear of corn which'- he had .for bread, .and the, only I pig which were left for meat, and the onjy cow which rurnisned milk tor his if ive 'children, '- and. yet this mer chant "was acting within the .Jaw. When M tread your tirade against - the homestead I . thought "What a glor- ously prosperous time -this and. -like merchants "would have if your doc trine would .prevail !" If - the ' home stead Bhd ! personal : property e?emp Uon were abolished, - the poor v man could" be Just as. effectually cleaned 'up,! Just as-icompletely wiped off i the face of the earth, by an execuUon. as he pow can by means of claim and de liverv or foreclosure under a mort gage or deed o trust (.But you may say "let the poor man keep out of debt," but I say "let the rich man or the merchant keep his money orchis goods." He Is under no greater com-! pulsion' to make debts than : is-, the poor man to keep out of debt..;;, J Vou say "the homestead law should be repealed," . How are you going about repealing It - It Is not a statute -to bb'-wroed out of existence - .at "the whlmi of i a legislature. It la; embedded in our 'organic f law and can be bro- gated'-or amended only, by a vote of the ; people. -rThe consUtutiop itself provides that all amendments -thereof shall- have been agreea to Dy tnree flftha -af V each House -of the General Assembly, - and - shall be submitted M the next general election to- the quail fled voters vof the whole: State. At least nine-tenths of the ouaiifled vot ers of the State are in favor' of the. hymestead.?- You should as wen n Herts. Ice' to coniict Patrick -Henry i of sedition or George Washington .of treason by a verdict of the people of this State, as to-repeal this law-which. fcas been twtce embodied! in -our;coi-stitutlon ;bv 'two different conventions And twice ratified by the whole people oune aiaie. GEORGE A. A .A'Scrious Objection. yyr; That the "scoffers 'and cross-questioners of the Suffragettes often bring confusion upon -their own heads was welL illustrated at. a. recent meeting at wh ich -Mrs. Borrmann -Wells was delivering an " address, - A. v mant had asked several questions, and in each instance-received a prompt reply. His final- query, was:' ; .z-- 'h'-:--.? "Why don't you get married r. 'There is one serious obJecUon to your suggestion." replied Mrs. Wells, "and the objection I refer to 4s at pres ent standing beside this platform lin Ahvayc Gbrncihlnn tlzvj ATTRACTIVE SHO WHIGS at SPECIAL PRICES . y",--"''f r.;-r -r - .1 SEE THESE DETTEll "Many useful and serviceable articles for Chiistmas ; presents throughout our Store . v-131 Fayettevillc St., Raleisli, J57 Fall tine snutis Hats Shoes r j. - y Lttggins COLLARS. NECKWEAR HANDKERCHIEFS SUSPENDERS f ;.; .--TJ3fl5REXLAS ' . V Fayetterille Gtrcct. ;IIEAYY;.nAUIU;G DUUIIAI.AND HAiEIGII W.0.6 it-i mf:. iff A -.?.' '-'--r ' . rAoiryflest- of Evenilifci 'j.r ,: . ...voardtEsr and - ,! I i 1 ill ' I.' - GOOD SOAP, PURE WATER, 1IOBERN I LVCllE.EIlY, V v "EVTELLIGENT "HELP go a'lons way Ij tlie treatmcEt of ' v a garment to set it clean without wearirj the Lfe out cf it, f wafehlng . and scrubbing. f . . ) i , ffLet the Gold Dust -Trclns do your Hcuca 7crlsff -. "LET US 1)0 YClj?i MC?l'-y: ONLY- ONE KIND OF V70RK "THE BEST" IJptn Fiioues 74 J y4J N ly f s 0 M BOOKS IiristmaQ;roo!:G in .. Great Variety. V 1 - Call and inspect Qur stock or Write us t soronenc or. vooks xor gins ai boys xqu vm find on pur counters all Uie Your: orders 'solicited. ALFRED T7ILLXMJS c; C 01 ? A1TY. v v w.iu wuiw f itiu.wt u, r '. tXMIBIXED: COURSE! by purchasing your ySclmlarshJp bd fore JANUARY 5, 1000. J T I Jj' f-jTlilii: isa'scliool wltli a renutation. Tlie-oldwtyi irt .'i l.:.f MJiiege Journal and Special Offers fa 5th,: 1900." Address, X . y ' m -OnrFarKecIi Pieces nnnnifsK 1. Suits; Mvv $!urts, Sweaters . ... - . . - r .. and DlanMs. nivjll, C." Kext to New Masonic Temple. Noy -Complete 'GLOVE3 v rjoSTERY t UNDERWEAR' SWEATERS - ' . ' v" ' .... .V f. I. ' 'BELTS : CANE3 -4 i, Haberdasher - "riziz . cJ y Jg . ;- A 4 Livery Stables hi ' 7 HAVE YOU EVER. USED, L j u L j s; For. Wood y Work Floors, Furniture, Iin'oleaihyy Easily applied. JIakca a ( floor as impervious, to water as glass. VAXENE. V WAJtENE... WAXCXE.. iKoscnrsssc'coris' . ; WY THE BIG HARDWARE MEIf. -f - --Raleish, Xortli " Carolina. . i 1 JIAWjv. - . . for uliiit you would like. Lar- as 25 cents. y t - aewfictlon of note at.tl r Winter O km T i:t' -. , t , .. JZ , v ! i vi LLw. f j N V -V tV, -. "-' . f the per"i of ?r. Wells." . ; C!;:u: