THE CAUCASIAN. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. MAlUON lttJTLKU. Edllor & Fropr. 8UISKCRIITI0X 11ATKS. OKEYKAK, MX MOKTIW. tl.W If there ia a better pajer in the State than The Caucasian for one dollai, then take it if iiot then tak. The Caucasian. N .,tW m,, m North Carolina j BEFOBR PBESS FCSTSCRPTS. ku cur ihcreaaed in circulation aaj rapid jr ad The Caucasian has for the! last four months. There ii a caue for it What id it? It i because the pajr is utUring the truth and turning on the light, ikcause it is making a brave and buid fiht for the jxrople. Hereafter we will publish larlya firt claa continued See the first chapter of a line in next week's iiine. rt-cu- rtory, fitorv A great many papr cu3 and abuse The Caucasian, but why don t some of them thow that what we cay is untrue? Cleveland hm appointed Mr. Hcruy Thurber of Detroit, Mich., as hU pri vate Secretary. Mr. Thurber U a law Mariner of Mr. Don. Dickcrson. who was in Cleveland's cabinet before. "My Lady Tongue," an in teres ting continued fctorv by the charming Atnelie Iiivcro, w ill be commenced in the next i.ue of The Caucasian. See pros pectus of fctorv in another col umn. A subscriber in Western Carolina writing ua a letter a few days since said, "we reformers up here aie very fortunate. If it id a boy we name it Marion, if it id a irirl we name it Maryann." Do you want a paper that strikes straight from the shoulder and tells the truth (that the majority of the papers would not dare to tell) which can not be contradicted? Of course you do. Then The Caucasian is the paper you want. A lady writes to know if the editor gets up the "Voman's Sphere" and "Children's Corner" Well, it U hard to tell, sometimes it is done by the editor, then again it is done by ".Miss Mary Ann." We are contemplating putting her in full charge. We will send a bundle of sample copies to any Postmaster or subscriber who will send us a postal card asking for them. Let the people see The Caucasian and read one copy and they will take it. Everybody wants some newspaper. The Caucasian is willing to stand or fall on its merits. We suppose now some of the par tisans will be drawiug their money from the Business Agency Fund. Well let them do it and a "gentle riddance" to them we say. They can't cripple the Business Agfhcy, for every dollar they draw out will he supplied by another dollar, placed there by a true reformer. Wre haven't the space or the time this week to give you an account of our Washington trip. In another column you will find a clipping from the Washington Post about the "Sil ver League." In our Washington Letter, from our regular correspon dent, you will find something about the Reform Tress Association etc. Reports of hew Alliance h!g?5 organix-d and of new members initi ated in old lodges are coming in f rom many quarter. This U good, it is gratifying, l'ueh the Alliance work everywhere. Ix-t us show a blind partisan legislation that the organi zation w ill grow and propter in spite of its cowardly attempt of assume i na tion. See in another column an account of the final action of the legislature with reference to the Alliance char ter. They were afraid to rejw.-a! the charter after we had offered to do all thev asked, but the animus be hind the matter was shown in the kind ot amendments they passed to the present charter. The amend ments are published in full in an . rm i mi other column, l he people win umi endorse any one who is guilty of mean act. There is nothing little about The Caucasian. It will give the pub lie the news straight as it is, without any dodging or warping, without re gard to what party it helps or hurts, We tote fair with all parties and give them full credit for all they do that is right. We challenge any man to show that we do not do this. In short we challenge any man or any newspaper to show that any state ment we make is not true. WTe are all liable to make mistakes, but if we make one, we have enough man hood and honesty to say so and cor rect it. We are simply fighting for truth and justice and will not com promise on less. .fcK iation- Kxrmrjt mikkm a v JlOM) HIIKME HIIX - UK- Poor campaign ta riff. wbvrv art thou! With tariif laid on the backbelf Our reader will remember that a j w tkc l U Ir 1 THE SES'ATE FO'JSO ITSELF N A HOLE AND D.D SOT DARE TO ScFEAK CHARTEL, THE TKUE PIIEACIIEH ries. ckrk hire, nrej I 1 Con tinned from fjh pgr. few weeks sinee Senator Sherman in- j ties.'' trod need a bill to repeal the present silver law. He did this at the request of (irover Cleveland. Senator Stew art and other iker aenntors fought thi bill which would have contracted the currency and brought the country down to a gold basis. We published Sherman's peech in full. The bill was defeated. Hut the gold bugs nothing daunted at once put another scheme n foot and got Sherman j to champion it also. When the ap- Wuu-ler how the Democrats now like the man who is hi party? The Alliance corpse terrible nightmare to legislature. C9" than his ha, btvti a tlw prewiit If the people rule, then the rulers f lis countrv av poorer than tb-ir servants. Show this paper to your neighbor, no matter what his politics is. If he is a Democrat or Republican all the more important is it for him to see it. If we are telling thetruth,then he is wrong and ought to know the truth; if we are wrong then he ought to see what we say, so he can tell us where and how we are wrong. You and your neighbor ought to agree and vote together, for your interests are the same. When we see the mo nopolists pulling together and legis lating in their own interests, how sad it is to see those of us, who are bled by them, pulling against each It is a scheme to make weep. Come let us reason other. angels together. Within the next few months rare developments will take place in the political world. The Caucasian will keep you posted. We will hit some hard licks, but they will be in the interest of truth and justice. If we are wrong let those who are deal- mg in abuse, expose us. We willing to stand by the record. are Probably the most important mem ber of Mr. Cleveland's cabinet is Mrs. Cleveland, whose official position will be "Queen of the W hite House." After next Saturday she will be "the first lady of the land" for four years, so we place Iber picture this week in the centre of the group of cabinet officers. But we have decided to suppress baby Ruth.'' A bill has been introduced in the Legislature to amend the election law. If the bill prevents stealing votes, stuffing, ballot boxes and throwing out votes hy the whole township, then it is safe to say that this Legislature will not favor it How could they do it consistently when many of them hold their seats procured by such methods? "The best paper in the State." "The best paper I ever saw." "The Caucasian is a hummer." You are publishing a paper of which any man or any State might feel proud." The best reform paper in the South." Such are some of the expressions in the hundreds of letters we have received during the last few weeks. We greatly appreciate these kind words. No other paper has ever had more kind things said ahout it by its friends, and more mean things by its enemies. But praise will not tiirn our head any more than will abuse dampen our ardor or discourage us. We shall keep in the middle of the road, and do what we think is our duty to God aud man, and let the consequences be what they may. WTe deserve no credit for do ing what we think to be our duty and all the depths of wrath and abuse cannot drive us from the path of duty as we see it. We are in the fight for justice and for humauity and we will never give up the fight or turn back till victory is won. Let every man do his dnty and justice shall prevail. ARE YOU If not then free gift to See the mat- A few weeks since, we said that The Caucasian must have five thous and subscribers. We got them and are now hearing ten thousand. For the last eight weeks we have put on our books from 100 to 200 new sub scribers each week. Last week we broke the record. We put on over 300 new subscribers. Now listen! Before the end of the year we must have 20,000 subscribers. Let every body help and it can be done. The letters we have secured from the boys, girls, women and men for the last month saying how much they value and enjoy The Cauca sian would fill more than four pages of the paper in solid type, we are striving to do our duty and to give the, people a first class all round complete - family newspaper, and it is highly gratifying to know that we are succeeding and meeting the approval of the people. . A subscriber? this copy is a you. Read it ter that it contains and the truths that it tells. If you want to be an intelligent voter, you cannot dD with out it The Caucasian be longs to no clique or fac tion. It swings a free lance. It turns on the light and tells the truth, no matter if it hits the biggest man or the least Send us one dollar and read it for a year, and at the end of that time if you will write as and say that you have not gotten more than a dollar's worth of truths and facts we will return you your money. THE ARE AIX DEAD. (Cor. Hickory Mercury.) Are there no good men, or wise, except dead men? I have read in Democratic papers for twenty years that Blaine was one of the meanest men that ever lived. From the obituary notices in all the papers, I infer he was, in reality, a good and great statesman, one of the most brilliant men of the century. We notice that several of the Democratic papers say that he should have been President-of the United States, yet these same papers vilified and abused him as corrupt, dishonest and unworthy of confi dence when ho was a candidate. Ed. nronriat ion bill was ur before the! a - senate lait week, Sherman offered "a little amendment in the interest of economy and hoped there would be no objection to it." Theainendmen passed the senate before anyone kne what it meant. It slipped through like the bill to demonetize silver in lh7;5. The National Reform Press Association was in session in Wash ington at the time and immediately appointed a committee to investigate the nature and effW-t of the amend ment. The following is the COMMITTERS ItKl'ORT. Your committee, to whom was re f erred the matter of the further is sue of bonds, beg leave to report the following: Whereas. The following amend ment to the sundrycivil appropriation bill has passed the Senate, to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to pro vide for and to maintain the redernp tion of United States notes accord ing to the provisions or the act ap proved January 15, 18o, entitled "An act to provide for the resump tion of specie payments." $50,000, and at the discretion of the Secre tary he is authorized to issue, sell, and dispose of, at not less than paf in coin, either of the description or bonds authorized in said act; or bonds of the United States bearing not to exceed 3 per cent, interest, payable semi-annually and redeemable at the pleasure of the United States after five years from their date, with like qualities, privileges, and exemptions provided in said act tor the bonds therein authorized, to the extent necessary to carry said resumption into effect. And whereas this amendment is not only ambiguous and subject to a forced construction in addition to the plain preposition of a further issue of bonds and a consequent increase in the burdens of taxation. And whereas there is in the Treas ury of the United States at the pres ent time $108,000,000 in gold and about $190,000,000 of silver, the en tire aggregate of which can be law fully and justly applied to the re demption of United States notes. And whereas this position is sus tained by the following eminent authority, to wit: Hon. Ld wards Pierrepont, Attor ney General of the United States and minister to England, in a letter to the New York Times of April 18, 1884 says: ihere is not an outstanding bond coupon or greenback issued by the United btates which may not be law fully paid in silver. Not one of them on its face or back, or in the statute authorizing the issue, or m declara tion, or in resolution of Coaerress. has any provisio that they shall be pain in gold. And the act of Feb ruary 28, 1888, directing the coinage of silver dollars, declared that such dollars shall be a legal tender at their nominal value for all debts and dues, public and private, except where otherwise expressly stipulated in the contract. And whereas, this position is furth er strengthened by the following resolution passed by the United States Senate, January 25, 1878, and the House of Representatives Janu ary 28, 1878, by a vote of 42 to 20 in the Senate and 189 to 79 in the House: "That all the bonds of the United States issued or authorized to be is sued under the said acts of Congress hereinbefore recited are payable, principal and interest, at thw option of the Government of the United States, in silver dollars of the coin age of the United States, containing 412J grains each of standard silver; and that to restore to its coinage such silver coins as a legal tender in payment of said bonds, principal and interest, is not in violation of the public faith nor in derogation of the rights of the publio creditor." And whereas the amount of bonds authorized by the refunding act have been exhausted and there is no law authorizing a further issue; Th u""! icsuivcu, oy me iveiorm j Will somebody name a legislature the present one? bLr'er farce than Persecution will not kill the Alli ance. It will prosper in spite of discriminating legislation. Where is the "disinterested, vis- statesmau?" IIa3 he fallen into "innocuous desuetude?" ltlllg Q. In what country are the ants" richer and more than the rulers." A. United Srates. serv- iniiueiitial IT SEFUSE3 TO ACCEPT Ot K AiIEXI JJEKTS TO PRESENT CHARTED. HIT rAMk. SOMKOK IV OWN 1 MA t SHOW Tin; MKA AND cou.ikhi.y AMMIS UKHINUTHi- 'IHLK .rr.wu. Tl t"fin-r Klnglml Out l"u.oal aad la I L-llatlou llrv i-U at Their published hist week the bill the House parsed n-jvaling in t! two lance. unit nd- I i. hiii it-r, wiiieh we W len Cleveland dbui t; 1 1 j in . tv f 1 mugwump, goluoug party lonueu, where will the southern aud western Democrats be at? How much better is the infamous national banking system when you simply change the name and call it a State banking system? Will any of Xorth Carolina's con gressmen desert free silver and bow their necks to Cleveland to get the distribution of patronage? Mr. Cleveland should remember that while he holds the patronage of this administration that the people hold the ballots for the next. The LegislMure found that the Alliance was a live . corpse that re fused to be buried. The corpse will now bury the would-be undertaker. Wrhat have the politicians done with that "good country road'' racket? lias it served its purpose and fallen into "innocuous dessuetude"' already? When Cleveland and Harrison ride down Pennsylvania Avenue together on next Saturdav, Wall street will be even prouder of the latter than he former. We which the charter f the S;.u We also pubiis nieiitc to the ol Oilered the Senate, that Covered every complain, that had been made, even by the unknown cowards who are behind this attack upon the Alliance. This put the Senate in hole. It did not dare to iepeal the charter after we had offered to do all that was ask ed. IJut our amendments were not accepted. uhvr because it was not justice that was sought, but mean and partisan desire to slab the Alliance w;t.s the inothe power be- hind the whole business. N), alter a weeks delay, the Senate, on last Sat urday, passed the following amend meats o the present charter: carrvinir on said rent.. txe. wilarit Sec. 6. It thall be unlawful fori the sid trustee or any office!, ant ' r employe of the aUi basinet arencvor State Alliance or -county, or uallianee to uo or permit to , W ued any part of wild fond or an i i t t .;.! r(nfV. coanty oi .oUisnee directly or in- j on the inform SlT directly for any purpose not em rim or CupUst or Mcthodwt preacher. Wed in Mid aet oPf 10, or in .hi He did act j cession. Ho beheveJ In that wider, truer Sec. 7. Any violation of any pn-! church univerwL 11U oul waa truly vision of thi Act by the .aid Trus- great roul.and for that nh"i" tee or Busines Agent, or any em- capame oi ema "f""- t TnuiM nr liusiness ouHt of man . .. . . narvxnent. It ptruiBed toward the Lwt. bat it did hold him. IT ?u rath econsh to believe In the broad b?i of fraternity of spirit and of heart, and it did not ahoc Mm 10 mi with man. of church Agent iha 1 work a forfeiture ot the ; again cuun u.m - -- 1 1 1 n. ajT&lU&l JUtW U" Bitvumuv v. charter of the State Alliance. Sec. S- It shall be the duty of the Atorney General, upon satisfae tory proof of a violation of any pro vision of this act to bring an action in Wake Superior Court to enforce the forfeiture of said charter. All law or elf. uses of laws in conflict with this .t are hereby lepealed. This act shall be in force from and after its ratification. By reading the above enactments ainan chine. For t hat reason wnall men neTcr liked him. Small men. whose oula felt secure Riap!y within form, never agreed with his i-oiicieu or hU principle or with bis methods of enforcing hi thought or his life work. TUK TKIXY ORKAT BOCL. Great souls are never capable of small thoughts. You remember when Jenny Lind gave an entertainment in Leipsic, On one occasion Mendelssohn was i res ent, and they w ere given a great ovation. for tbc suteaiett tUt tCT ered a remark!!., u. . till.!!.. , lion ef music. rt tr nf intruetion t f "''r'c, third tW.aailtu, music from uat runofej the audience mtt h. Z a hole through each took a woouen rl 8I and amendments to charter, you will Th(J great thundered its applause It may be interesting to the ma chine politicians to know that "the aw of supply and demand" is gov erning the rapidly increasing circu- ation of The Caucasian. Press Association 1st. That we consider this amend ment as a covert attempt to obtain authority under the false plea of economy. 2nd. That we look upon the pas sage of this amendment as a crime against the people of this country, an attempt to fasten the shackles of industrial slavery more firmly, and an open challenge of money against manhood.. 3rd- That we urgeutly request our Senators and liepresentatives in Congress to do all in their power and resort to every means known to legis lative obstruction to defeat the en actment into law of this monstrous piece of financial villainy. 4th. That a copy of this report be sent to each Congressman and Sena tor. N. A. Dunking, Chairman. J. H. McDowell, Marion Butlee. The bill is now before the House. The reformers and friends of the peo ple are fighting it. If it fails to pass the Reform Press Association will deserve the credit for sounding the alarm. OUR ILLUSTRATIONS, On the first page we give you the pictures of all the Presidents of the united fetates, with a short sketch i i . , uuuer eacu; on me tnira page we give you the pictures of Cleveland's Cabinet officers. The Caucasian is a live and progressive paper and will not be surpassed by any other paper in the State. While The Caucasian is centering its energies and forces on the great reform fight, it is not blind to everything else. The Caucasian shall stand in the lead as a complete family newspaper.' The Legislature has tried to de stroy the Alliance by passing some mean and cowardly amendments to its charter. On Avhich side of this question did Gov. ltailroad Carr stand? The honest campaign speaker, who swore that Cleveland was for free coinage, and who has enough seuse to now see that he was fooled, should lose no time in purging him self. Not a free silver man in Cleve land's Cabinet. Where are the Democratic speakers who talked to you about free silver in the late campaign? Were were they lying? thev fooled or Wrhat is "me too" Carr doing for the people in whom h claimed to be interested, when President of the State Alliance? The railroads should not have all of his tender attentions. Has he forgotten the motto "equal justice to all" &c. The subscription urice of The Caucasian is very low, but it may be news to the partisan democrat to know that it is not caused either by "overproduction" or "underconsump tion." But strange to say the supply is hardly equal to the demand. The Legislature should not ad journ till it has amended the charter of every railroad and corporation by providing that their, cnarters shall be forfeited if any officer fails to do ms uuiy. ji mis is wrong, then it is wrong; if this is right, then it is right. The House boldly slapped tha Al """- iaue imuKing it was dead. This was the act of a bully and a coward. The Senate finding out that it was not dead slipped up under cover and gave it a stab in the back. This was the act of a dema gogue, and a sneak. "jm-uiuc democratic papc-rs are too hard on Mr. Cleveland. We are sure he would have selected Democrat for Secretary of State if he could bave found a man in the party who was honest and compe- iuu " i resident ought to get the best men for important offices3 if he has to go out of the "Dear old Party to do it Cleveland must have felt sure that Gresham did not help steal votes at the late election. FniKNDS OF THE CAUCASIAN TRIBUTE. CON- WAKE COUNTY. J. Penny ROCKINGHAM COUNTY. Town Creek Alliance. $1.00- H.00. Subscribe to The Caucasian $1 .00 per year. A BILL TO HE ENTITLED AX ACT TO AMEND CHAPTER 10."), PRIVATE LAWS OF 1SSU, ENTITLED AN ACT TO 1N COKPORATE THE FARMERS' STATE ALLIANCE OF NORTH CAROLINA AND SU11-ALL1AXCES. The General Assembly of Xorth Car oliua do enact : Sec. 1. That chapter loj, private laws 1SS9, be amended by adding at the end of section 2 of said Act, the following: Provided, that no indi vidual stockholder in the Business Agency Fund of the Farmers' State Alliance of North Carolina or in any other business enterprises conducted or in any way controled bv the said State Alliance or by any County or Sub-Alliance; and no member of such Alliance or Alliances who is not a stockholder in siid fund or enter prise shall be individually. liable for any debt or obligation contracted by the Alliance or Alliances, or by any officer, manager, agent or employee thereof. Sec. 2. That section 3 of said Act of 18S9 be amended by adding to the end thereof.the following: Provided that the amount of salary paid to any officer or employee of the Farmers' State Alliance or any County or Sub Alliance shall not at any time be in creased from and after the ratifica tion of this act; and any amendment to an Alliance constitution or by-law passed hereafter foi the purpose of increasing any such salary shall work a forfeiture of the charter of the State Alliance, County Alliance or Sub-Alliance passing the same. Sec- 3. That section 4 of said act of 18S9 be amended by adding to the end thereof the following: Provided that from and after the ratification of this act any person who shall hereafter contribute or has contribu ted any amount to a fund raised by the said Farmers State Alliance of North Carolina for the purpose of carrying on a State Business Agency or any other business enterprise shall have the power to withdraw from such fund the amount so paid or contributed to such fund, whether such amount can be proven by certi ficate or not. provided that the per son holding a certificate shall for ward the said certificate to the trus tee of the business agency fund or to any person having charge of paid fund before recovering the amount paid into said fund; and any person not holding a certificate shall before recovering the amount paid by him send to said trustee an affidavit made before a justice of the peace stating the said amount, and that said certi ficate has not been transferred and has been lost. Upon receiving the said certificate or affidavit it shall be the duty of said trustee of said busi ness agency fund or othei person having charge of said fund to send by mail to the person sending such cer tificate or affidavit the amount contri buted by said person, less the postage required to send said amount. That any person who has contributed or hereafter shall contribute any amount to any county Alliance or sub-Alliance, and said county Alli ance or sub-Alliance has paid or shall hereafter pay any sum into the said business agency f und shall have a right to demand of said trustee his proportionate part of the sura so paid by said county Alliance or sub Alliance. The proportionate part of said sum due such person shall h ascertained by dividing the sum so paid by said county Alliance or sub Alliance, by the number of members of said county or sub-Alliance at tv, date of payment of such sum into the said fund. The affidavit of any such applicant stating the number of members of such county or sub-Alliance at the time of such payment and that he was a member thereof accompanied by the certificates of two members in good standing of the Alliance for the county where the applicant resides, of the truthfulness of such affidavit shall be sufficient proof of sch membership and of the number of members of said county or sub-Alliance at the time of such payment Sec. 4, If the said trustee shall for the period of sixty days after the application of any person und at- act for repayment fail to pay said per-' ouj hub oy virtue of this act, the said failure to pay shall work a forfeiture of the charter of the said State Alliance. The busi ness agent and the said trustee of the business agency fund shall each give a bond for the faithful per formance of his duty, payable to the armers State Alliance with two or more sureties. The bond of said business agent shall be for the sum thirty thousand dollars and the bond of the said tiustee shall be for fifty thousand dollars. The sureties of said bonds shall be justified as re quired by law as the sureties on the bonds of an administrator and shall be deposited in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County where the safd business agent co trustee respectively resides. Sec. 5--It shall hA tWi the State business agent to pay in the months of May and November of each year to the said timet 4.L n . . . " an the profits ansing from the opera tions as such business paying- all necessary' expenses of see that the object is to cripple the Alliance and to rind some excuse to destroy the Business Agency. Kead section 2 carefully. Look over all the laws on the statute looks of this State and see if there is any such provision in the chartei of any railroad or other corporation. There is no danger that the Alliance will, or is there any desire to pay anv of the officers of the Alliance a larger salary, because we are opposed to larger salaries, but the meanness of the thing is what we refer to. Why not amend the charter of the Wil- mingtou & Weldon railroad by put ting in the same provision? liead section 4. Does the char ter of anv railroad, after setting out the duties of any oflicer of the road, say that if said officer shall fail to do anv of his duties that the charter shall be void? WThy do the Trustee and State Business Agent of the Al liance give a bond? If thev fail to do their duty their bouds are liable. It is outrageous, and unheard of be fore, to pass a law that the charter of the whole organization shall be for feited, when the bond is amply suffi cient to protect everybody eoncerned. Why not amend the charter of the Wilmington & Weldon railroad by saying that if any couductor'fails to make any connection or to put pas sengers to a given place on schedule time that the charter of the whole railroad shall be forfeited? We havn't time now to comment on all the sections of the bill that are full of subtile meanness aud cowardice. The Legislature wanted to repeal our charter outright and crush the Alli ance, it uiun t have the courage to go on rtcord, and has passed a bill under which they hope to be able to trump up some pretext to have the Attorney General and the courts to do what they did not dare to do. If these amendments are just and right then let every charter in the State be amended the same way. If we had been in the Legislature we would have fought these amendments to the last and have dared that body to do its worst. We challenge the Legis lature, or any one, to show that the Alliance has ever violated, in the least, a single clause of its charter. Uur organization believes in "Equal rights to all. and special privileges to none,' and so does a majority of the voters of the State, but the Leg islature does not, Men who hold their positions by means of corruption and fraud, are mortally afraid that the Alliance will prevent them doing the same thing again. Here is the secret, The majority of the people can be trusted when they see a thing plainly. They are in favor of fair play. They do and will not endure the action of the legislature. If the Alliance- dead, thousands who voted for mem oers oi me present Jjesrislature. would T .1 . . o . ' couuenin the action of the body. A QUESTION. Will you kindly' exnlain roitip things that puzzle me? I am country- ored, consequently I am to the mar. row of my . bones in favor of the irarmers Alliance. If farmers and laborers do not know what legisla tion they need to render their lives less burdensome and their labor profitable, who does know? Hickory Mercury. The Caucasian would also like to hear this question answered. You can all ans wer at once if you want to. "AS OTHERS SEE US.' KIXI WORDS FROM OUR KDITOUS. BROTH EH Brimful of of Solid Matter. Hon. Marion Bntler, President of the State Alliance of North has moved his paper, the Caucasian, to Goldsboro in that State. Bro. Butler ha3 enlarged the paper and" is sending it out brimfull of solid matter. If that paper fails to wake up the nou-partisau element in that State we are mistaken. It is the duty of the reformers of Xorth Car olina and elsewhere to give the Caucasian a liberal support; it is worthy of it National Watchman. Haye lou XoticedT Have you noticed how the days have lengthened out now, and that the dark mornings and early sun downs are things of the past! Now it is broad daylight at 7 A. M. and light until nearly that Jiour in the evening. Now that Lent is here and after next month comes April with its Spring showers, we are rapidly approaching that blissful period so doted upon by the long-haired idiots, who write alleged poetry for the newspapers-the glad springtime. Baltimore Critic. and continued until Mendelssohn Raid to Jenny Lind that die must go forth and say sometliinK to the people. She said the would if he would go and make the tpeoch. So Hiia in arm there two ?reat musicians came before the pcopla WLen the tempest of applause which greeted their appcarani-o had snlwided, MendeU Fohn in the most graceful way paid the highest and most delicate compliment to the great siuer and proposed that the cheers of all Leipnio should be given to her. Then, while the building echoed with one of Mendelssohn's nongs, they went back to the room behind the ros trum. There was no jealousy between two such bouIs. A great many small musicians that play the second fiddle, that just know how to wrape a little, are mighty in jealousy, but great souls are never jealous. So of this preacher. Small thoughts were impossible to him. lie saw the good in all churches, and he saw good outside all churches. lie was a high priest of the race. lie saw good even in these low, evangelical churches that, from the high church point of view, are very low. Phil lips Brooks even held old fashioned re vivals in Trinity church. He preached about a church outside the church, and the most eloquent, most powerful pres entation of that church outside I ever heard from mortal man came from his great heart. He was the bishop of this great church universal. Third Not alone to his catholicity, but also because of his proplutic power, his success is due. The true preacher of God is a propliet, not a priest. It was his peculiar func tion to prophesy. I do not mean to predict future events. The work of the prophet of old was to give new views of God and of truth. The Aaronie priesthood ended with the Christ, and from the Christ went forth the line of those who should prophesy, and who in his name should unfold new views of God and of truth New theology? Yes, his theology was not only new: it was the newest theology. And to get from him a sermon was to get from God's own life a new breath, a new revelation, a new view of truth. HE FORESAW TUK BETTER TIME. He was a prophet in the true and hhrh sense of the word, and therefore he was progressive. He did not 6tand still or bow down to dogmas. He would not limit himself to ecclesiastical conclusions of councils or great men in the nast. With his great heart fixed upon the spiritual realities of truth, he pressed forward, onward ever, from day to day, never pausing in that upward march to ward the summit of truth, toward the full revelation of God. If you want to mow what a preacher m the 20th cen tury will preach, study the life of such a man. Fourth His success rested on another thing his tremendous earnestness. No body went to sleep while he preached. Mis intensity of soul was such that it rwept him along outside of himself. The human tongue could not utter what his heart felt fast enough. I have 6at before hira and watched the play of divine passion cross his face. flushed with the tumult of great thoughts struggling tor utterance! Words could not be born fast enough. And through those great eyes, as through the windows of his soul, I could see the beatinjr. of angels wings against the prison bars of language! He was in dead earnest, and only that kind of men can move the world. Martin L.uther was a man of tremendous ear nestness. Ignatius Loyela, who led the Church of Home against Luther, was a man of tremendous earnestness, and such was his power even on Catholicism that Jesuitism at last absorbed Romanism it self. Savonarola swept Florence with resistless power because of that mag netic, indefinable power that displayed itself in his earnestness. Beecher was a man of power, an epoch shaping man, a man who made and unmade theologies, because of that divine spark of charac ter. Earnest men in politics, in religion, in history, are the men who make his tory. In a man like Blaine, who could impress himself upon his generation and have so enthusiastic a following through the years, there slumbered the inherent powers of a great personal earnestness and enthusiasm. Fifth Phillips Brooks' success, too, rested on another thing namely, that he had faith in and love for his fellow man. THE BROTHERHOOD OF MAN. He loved his fellow man, and any man that loves his fellow man is going to make enemies. There never was a sweet er soul than Brooks' tender, earnest, kind, loving. Yet how many little ec clesiastics in all this big world hated the sound of his name and would go posi tively into ecclesiastical jimjams when his name was mentioned! He really so intensely loved M . mmmm VUV TT "-T1 1 1 from the nudia- Uh ,IjH there was pivrn , i music on the riar.o U-uZ 5 4 above could War t'..... " by that l i ve i.f W(Xki , i could not heir It. TVo .r" violmon una tUt j iw 1 instantly t!mt buly cr-. VI of thf Huao K-rl.iw ... perfectly. thtt tU k-."! every note. Thry f the same rvsulu. Then are great mmU ty seems to iuv the he very throb of , l T t k - 1 I tfc.t 1,1 . ana inai along that, whether it clashed with ecclesiastt cism or not, he t poke out of the great love of his heart what God had put there. Think of a man of that charac ter, that temper, being hounded by here sy hunters! Yet it is true. For years before he died the ecclesiastics even within his "liberal" church had out their sleuthhounds hunting through every forest hunting through Ma great ser mons nosing, here, there, yonder, get ting together everything that might pos sibly bear on the question as to whether or not he were walking along the way that their fathers walked in the past. He not only loved his fellow man, but he believed in man, made in the image of God. That was one of the cardinal principles of his life. In the lowest man, the beggar in rags, the prisoner in stripes, he saw the image of his Master; he saw a child from his Father's house. - Sixth Another reason why his success and power were so great was that heiad a vital grasp of spiritual truth. With him "God is spirit," That was the theme that he voiced, and therefore he found the inmost depth of man's souL The peculiarity of his preaching was that he seemed to tell you with a spiritual intuition the things yon had been thinking about. He believed in the world of spirit as against the mat ter, which is its mere shadow. - He was a conductor of the divine spirit on Irish to men. . Trodall is authority spirit world! Therefore faith to h:a theme because he belicw,' KliriA. All f,i... l1 that believeth" what tenco from hU lii o-u v' C . 1 . 1.. I T - UTBl ISUUl III HOW tfcrt openrti oeion nun wln a u ptwsibl to hi?a that U-hwv . preacher, no man wLo iha tho heart of (Jod can & j. Uevuig great thuipk that ( for man to do all thicks, J spirit is the real thing, 4 , tho shadow. FAITH WORKS W0XJtj A vessel whs going alt.r.s t the 2-lth of hut Dfcmlxr. i countered fearful gales. LaJ Jamaica, lound fur IVt was loaded vith logwtxi riblo storm the hip prnr t and began to leuk. Tlw c relieve her by working h,x at last began to deKiwur. American steamer approach signals or distress. Tbe nv. alongside, and the captaia t; abandoned the ship. Tie tx this steamer, looking on Ui vessel, said to the captain. "IWj Bhip can be saved and carrwi J bor, and he atkcd jH-rmuttotc tain to go alioard of her kI , men. Both captains triiJ t him, but tho prize wmt pt, ueved it could bo duuo. So J cut away from the steamer, n on her way. And workinjr i and main they got those puE? rect order and righted tbetl. brought her before tho winded bor of New York, where all kO belonged to those three brsTt' believed that from the hmW ttxi iimv euip couia ue urovgii. The man who believed it m made it possible. It was this great thought tk of tho keynotes to his minkrj lieved in man and had faith is i this great theme of faith and x power to transform and ffici lift up was one of the uiightj'J his great soul. Such a man can never die. i guisbed art critic said that be ture once in an art gallery dpiti misery in a faraway dewrtof Bat realistic was tho picture that through his whole life a thoraov were made because of thai. E see it reDroduced in even life if ing that came before him; Et uovji nun uveu buu ucub had powers to think. That is what a canvas ct i world it can live and lira is will we say of those spiritni that the great artist painted ib God, when he saw his eten Kill that picture? Destroy tbtq died? Impossible! He lint 4 lives orerer. So live those pi God's revelation, of man'ideci xou know the old story Brahe, who in 1572 savrail pear in a certain constellatx! shone with such brilliancy, th mer tells us, that it could k day. They watched it with tf hearts until they saw it s month fade and at last disappi star had been lost from the co& of the heavens. So theprac the point of view of the wort1 how great men of the worli?! but such a man as this doc notf Death for him is but the lit V clouds that obscured the s'jr,s ing away of the mists that the earth, and when thn vsSi the star gleams in thkjj Master, "They shall thine forever." When rflntnriet N rolled by and your children' shall teach their children, th j gleam in tlte skv. and macf it boy comine over the seas d i catch its rays and find harba man never dies. He lives truth, in God's life. LOOISHKI. A Fatal Tragedy In Kuncom ISpecial to Tub Caita Last Tuesdav eveniDir, fc' Februarv. about 3 d. Brochus, U. S. Deputy rested one John L. L-ua Buncombe and Madison on the Buncombe side. Bauk's Place, ifor illicit I of his cousins were preseo'- Liuallen had surrendered t ting on his clothes to go ficers. when his father b and some other narties. there drinking, advised Tfj 1 - . XT , j a Va ' iea to resist, lie uiu bv officer in the leir. think' him off. but the officer ret ft re, onH a Viattla hocrs.ll. & than one minute twenty-fiw shots were fired. The o ed fourteen bullet-holes u1 coat and four balls in hi was fatal and he died the 1 Youncr Lulllen received c, . , V. 1 wounds one supposed w "J the doctors. He was shot 1 ach. Old man Luallen ryj shots, one through the mustache shot off. Op' vi VAiaivnJ a fatal Vk st ill no chance for him to jt at a house, where ne The law can't hang when a murderer is pot 1 1 tentiary the Governor VB rT to get the political inflf lawyers. The towns na. V full of lawyers, and tioWJ their meat and bread, bJ blood. The election ia, conducted by money sb?. and the men who deal h?i , informed that they shouw bothered and all went a we see the re suit. ' , Xotl ifT mailt iA i .rwl H snre W . J hn and two cent dej tion. Please don't send stamp md and two