THE CAUCASIAN. PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY. mXwoFbUTLEkV K4ilr jTPror. 8UB8CKI1TIOS ItATKH. OXEYEAR, fl.00 SIX MOXTHfl. - -j. SO fEnterwfat the I'ort Office at OoMnboro', X. C, as second-clans mail matter. Chapters oi a v.. Great Serial ' Appear in thU Paper. -' THE HIDDEN CITY equals In dramatic power and weird favcina tion "Tht Fair Cod," "The Lost Atlantis," or th Arabian Nights. You will be missing one of the greatest stories of the day if you fail to read it The extraordinary session of the Senate adjourned lat Saturday. In next issue we will publish the remainder of Tom Watson's master ly review of the situation and hi clear utatement of the difference betwen the Dcnionratic and Populist parties. l)on't fail to read it every word. What will the politician do for double-extra Ilobbin.sT They ought to be merciful enough to the State to send liimto Home foreign country. It is true that he is rather a back member and is poverty-stricken with qualifications for any public trust, but yet wo feel for him in this the supreme hour of his distress. Read Tom Watson's interview taken from theAtlanu Constitution in this issue. Not only read it but study it, and get the points on your tongue's end and you will bo ready to meet any opponent of good gov ernment in argument. It is conclu sive and unanswerable. It covers the whole ground. Memorize it. We will publish only half of it in this week's issue, and will publish the re mainder next week. It is long, but it gets better the further it goes. Some of tho partisan papers are saying that we charged that Judge Brown suppressed the facts in the Gideon Band trial. We did not say that, for the facts did not begin to come to light, but we said that Judge Brown and Solicitor Pou were re sponsible for the facts not coming out- They could have granted the motion to go into trial and then the people could have gotten all the facts. We did ask and ask again why it was that they got so anxious to shut up a matter that there seem ed at one timo so much desire to ex pose and ventilate. A member of the little hide-bound partisan papers are abusing Tho At lanta Constitution for interviewing Tom Watson and publishing his in terview. But these papers are foolish, The Constitution knows what it is doing, and it will succeed in doing the reform cause more harm than all these little howling papers put to gether. The object of The Con stitution is to hold its county readers who are in favor of reform. It now publishes an interview with Mr. Watson and will talk reform to hold the confidence of its readers and when the next compaign comes it will advise the people to vote the Democratic ticket even if not a sin gle reform, it has been advocating, has been given or promised Xy the party. We see it stated that Col. H. C. Denning, of Hamsburg, Pa., has loaned to North Carolina his splen did collection of gems to be exhibi ted at the World's Fair. Col. Den ning is Treasurer of a mining compa ny, that owns a very rieh gold mine in McDowlell county this State. The gems referred to were found in this mine. Col. Denning, has done much to advertise the wealth and gems and mines in this State, and as a token of appreciation on the part of the State Gov. Scales ap pointed him on his , staff in 18S5. We visited the mines in McDowell county last fall and referred to the matter at be time. Col. Denning is a prominent Allianceman and is a member of our National Executive Committee. His enterprise, and capital will do much toward devel oping and advertising Western Carolina. The Staightouts of South Carolina are demanding of Cleveland and the departments, that the Alliance con gressman fiom that state shall not be recognized and allowed to distrib ute patronage, they charge that these men are not Democrat. Now the question again arises, what- is meant by "Democrat!" If vou mean a man who has no convictions of his own, but waits for the bosses and party manipulators to tell him what to believe and then obediently swear mat those are his convictions and yells for the party and votes the ticket straight, right or wrong, then no true Allianceman can be that kind of a Democrat. But if by Dem ocrat you mean a man who is in fa vor of honesty in election, and of equal rights to poor and rich alike, then that man cant help being an Allianceman whether he ever joined a lodge or not. MONOPOLY'S MOUTHPIECE. If the editor of the News & Ob server is not a willing tool acd mouthpiece of monopoly, then lie is one of the most pitiable qtecimen of quite a large class who are eystem matically duped by monopoly, He id either a blind ictirn himself or else is knowingly striving to make victim?. And whether be is on this or that horn of the delemma, the tendency of his par (if it has any effect at all) is to increase the mimljer of victims. The following is the closing sentence of one of his editorials in which he laments the fact that the South and West have joined hands to protest against pres ent conditions: "And so it apjH'ars to us that the present pular tendency is of fear ful import, and is by far the most dangerous outcropping that this country has ever witnessed." lie sees no danger in the evil con ditions of which the people complain and from which the people suffer. lie sees no danger on the corruption of legislatures and congresses, of the centraling of jKjwer in the hands of mono.'lies; he sees no danger in the contraction of the currency and the concentration of wealth in the hands of a few; he sees no danger in stuf fing ballot boxes and depriving free men of their votes, if done in the in terets of the Democratic party. But he sounds an alarm and thinks it "most dangerous" for the people to begin to meddle in the government and organize to demand justice. Yes it is dangerous to monopoly, it is dangerous to all who fatten from the overproduction (?) of labor, it is dangerous to the politicians, but it is salvation for the people, lie says in same editorial that if the people were to get their demands, they would be disappointed when they found that prosperity was not mauk for them. That is true and the edi tor unwillingly pays a high tribute to the modesty, fairness and honesty of the people. For to have pros perity made for us we would have to demand and get special favors, but the people simply demand equal rights and an opportunity to pros per by their own labor. So when the people get their demands onl) those will prosper who work and they will prosper according to the work done. But every trust and mo nopoly will have to be supwressed before this time comes. If monop oly does not support a paper like the News & Observer, it ought to. THE DUKE DE VERA QUA. The event of last week was the arrival in New York of the Duke IVYeragua, the direct descendent of Christopher Columbus. It is safe to say that no foreign prince or emperor could have received such a hearty welcome or have created such excitement throughout the country. The plain AmericAu people are not inclined to any great extent to hero worship nor do they pride themselves in a disply of royal pompt and grandeur. But there is deep down in every American heart a feeling of reverance for the man who first gave to the world the magnificent domain now called the American continent And this feeling of genuine respect naturally decends to the living re presentative of the great explorer. While the Duke De Veragua is not wholly an insignificant character on 'his own account yet the fact that the blood of Columbus flow's through his views is his greatest attraction in America. In his own countrv, Spain, he has been honored by po sitions of the highest trust, having been minister of State and having held other prominent positioni. Undoubtedly m whatever part of this country he may travel he will receive the most cordial and sincere welcome His prime object in his visit is to be present at the World's Fair which is in commemoration of the discovery of his illustrous an cestor. WHO IS "REX." Our attention has just been called to a newspaper communication at tacking the editor of this paper, written by some one who hides be hind the non de plume of "Rex." There are certain ear-marks about the article which would indicate that it wa3 written by some preacher whose toes are more sensative than his conscience. But we can't believe it was a preacher, unless he is an uncon verted one, for a man who has grace and is consecrated by God Almighty to minister to other souls, could not write such an article, and in the next place, such a man would not select a paper published by a' common liar and a contemptible scoundrel for his mouthpiece. If Mr. Hex, let him be preacher or layman, will give his name, we wilfreply to him if 'he is worth of notice. :: PERSISTENT MiSREPRESENTATiON. There has been a persistent effort on the part of the leader of the i party to misrepresent the action of the legislature in regard to the Al liance charter. The truth ought to 1 told. The only thing the Legislature did about the charter was to provide that auy man who had put money in the business agency fund could draw it out if he desired to do -so. That is all." North Carolinian. Now Mr. Carolinian stand up! Is that all? Have you told the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help your nartv? Are vou ignorant of the facts, or is it possible that you arewilfnlly dealing in "persistent misrepresentation" yourself? Yes "the truth ought to be told." You moralize well but you should act up to your professions of fairness. Have you in your professed fairness ever told the iwple how the House after much secret caucusing rushed a bill through in ten minut s by euspendin every rule for fair play, to repeal the whole charter of the State Alliance? Have you ever told how this bill wa3 rushed over to the Senate to be passed there in the same unfair and indecent haste without giving any body a hearing? Have you ever told how that body at last granted a hearing after get ting scared and half-hearted as charged by Joe Caldwell? Have you ever told that after we had offeied to accept an amendment to the present charter to allow all who desired to draw their money out of the Business Agency to do so, that the Legislature would not accept it, bu t seeing that they were put in a hole and that it would be death to them not to repeal the charter then, began to caucus on the matter? Have you ever told that they pro ceed, d, after caucusing a week, to add other amendments which showed that their real object was further than what. they professed? Have you ever told that these amendments says that alliance should increase the one of if any pay of anv ollice that the charter shal be forfeited? Have you ever told that another of these amendments provides cer tain duties for certaiu officers and says that if these duties are not done in a certain time that the charter shall be forfeited? Have you ever told the people that another amendment says that even if any employee of the Alliance or of any of. its departments fails to do his duty that the whole charter of t'.ie whole sttate shall be forfeited? Have you ever told the people that another amendmant lays down and prescribes how the proceeds arrising from the Business Agency shall be used9 Have you ever told the people that tnis was not only unusual but that it was unfair and unjust? Have you ever told the people that no other corporation, even if it had violated every term of its charter, was ever treated thus, while the Alliance has never violated a single clause or term of its charter? Have you ever told the people that the real object of the Legislature was to kill the Alliance and that it got chicken hearted and tried to ar range for the courts and the Attorney General to do what if did nqt have the courage to do? Mr. Carolinian you will be re spected more by even your friends if you will stand up like a man and tell the whole truth instead of trying to conpeal jt and appeal to partisian prejudice. Have you rpajued that your sheet is getting to be verv un reliable? Dear reader, do you remember the men who were begging you so earn estly and pathetically on the stump last fail to vote a certain tjeket and save the dear old party? They talked about the great principles of their party and told you how much inter ested they were in your welfare. Where are those men now? Every one scrambling and pJarnorjngforan office. Is it not just possible that selfishness prompted them to go on the stump and swear that they were greatly concerned about your wel fare? Wonder if they were not then thinking of the office they would get n you snouia vote tneir way. J udgf ing by their present actions tbev thought very little about the people and very much about themselves. They are running up and down the road between their homes and Wash ington telling how much they did for the party and begging for some of the milk from the public tit. In fact, Washington is full of these fel lows now and has been ever since the election. Is not this the worBe kind of paternalism? Did not these fellows swear that they were opposed to pa ternalism? Well, they are opposed to it for the other fellow, but in fa vor of it for themselves. HE IS TROUBLED. The reports from the meeting of the county Alliances Thursday, have the same familiar whereases, now therefores and resolveds as of old. At the July meetings we shall doubt less have the accustomed "demands." It is evident that the Third party has begun again just where it left off last fall. Charlotte Observer. Joe Caldwell seems to be troubled about the whereases, therefores, and "demands." He will soon be trou bled much more about an over-pro duction of the votes of the people. WHAT GOOD HAVE THEY DONE' The Southern Governor all Dem ocrats have met and dispersed. Their meeting will amount to noth ing, we fear. Jc truth, they do not represent the plain people, the farm ers ana laboring men. The Demo cratic party, which has placed these governors in power is to-day rua by its worst elements and is a machine of fraud and oppression, organized to benefit the aristocrats and monop olies and hold the offices. The Democrat machine bosses cheat the people in the elections, al though they are loud in their pro testations of friendship for the wage-earners and tilkrs of the soil. This meeting of governors "resolved" that they were in favor of immigra tion! They thought no one could see through the thin disguise of their hostility to the ople. But all the world knows that machine rule is maintained and conducted to bene fit the few at the expense of the many. The bone and sinew, the hard working men and women of the Uuited States, and of foreign coun tries, do not care to come under such rulers, an so they stay away. Governor Carr, of North Carolina, who has not yet condemned the frauds of the late election, offered resolutions at the jrovernors meet- mg. All of these related to immi gration. Their language was what might be called exceedingly grand and high-sounding. Papers were read, setting forth the resources of dif ferent Sou them States; and finally an address was issued to the people of this country and Europe, setting forth the agricultural and commer cial advantages of the Southern Com monwealth. It will be all in vain. So long as the South is dominated by political bosses, who care nothing for the peo ple, no settlers can be counted on. If any should be fooled into coming, they would go away in a little time. Unitl there is a material change in the Southern methods of intolerant and high handed fraud, it cannot be expected that those used to free dom will submit themselves to auto cratic authority. The census of 1890 shows a de plorable lack of foieign-born citi zens in the South. The rush always has been to the north and northwest. The census statistics show how it is. There were, accord ing to the census, more than nine millions of foreign-born citizens in the United States. Only about three- quarters of a million of these are lo cated in the South. Missouri has 234,809 and Texas 152,956. It may be uoticed that the large foreign populations are in the most thrifty of the Southern States, where there are also big cities. Great towns draw largely upon the foreign el ement. But look at the purely agricultur al States of the South. The fore:?n- born population of North Carolina is but 3702, out of a total of 1,- 617,947. South Carolina has 6,270 foreigners and a full population of 1,151,149. Virginia 18,374 of the former in a total enumeration of 1,655,980. Georgia has 12,137 for eigners and a total population of 1,837,353. Mississippi has 7,952 foreigners to a wholo number of 1,- 289,600. These figures illustrate our mean ing so far as the South is concerned. Let us look to the North. The im perial State of New York, with a full population of 5,997,853, has 1,- 571, uau foreigners, Massachusetts with a population of only about three thousand more than Texas contains 657.137 forei Q 4111- nois has a population of 3,826.351 and 842,347 foreigners. California's population is 1,208,130, with 366,309 foreigners. This proportion is main tained in the other northern com munities. Emigrants are filling up the States of the North and are making them rich and powerful. It is because those States a?e really free, and wages there are good. Men who toil, escaping from the despotisms of the old world, do not intend to throw their living away in States where wages are low; where there is neither free thought, free speech nor frep political action. They do not fancy those govern ments which do not prevent their small boys from pelting strangers with stale eggs, and whose leading politicians ao not rebuke such ill manners. These are plain words. The eov ernors may as well bare remained at uurc four uuiy ro turn on the light. If our readers deserve pros perity let them frown the partv which denies to the people a free ballot and a fair count Disposers the despots of their political power and immi grants will come hither fast enough. COUNTY UCCTiup - h-1 UIVJO. The reports coming n from the meetinc-s nf tha AAnnln An: it o - wwutjr Aiiianoes an over the State are most encouraging. The reports from the sub-lodges show a Trarlrorl inn.. . .uvicaee in member ship. In fact the outlook for the reform uiiguunng every where, and we have only to stand by our principles and push the work of education through the lodges and the reform press to win alweeping FutnrI n la the HOWLING HOT ARGUMENT. Vrr B-mlra wo bar A taAon T-enfilflt. ing the election law. We have been showing un its unfairness as inter preted and uad by the Democratic a - machine ia the last cam pairn. l)ur- ing the time not a single paper in the State, that we have seen, has even tried to answer a single argument we hava produced agaust the law, or a single charge we have made. We thought probably they were shutting their eyes to the truth and were too prejudiced to even rend it But it now turns out that they have been reading what we said, but seeing that they could not answer it they have kept quiet As a proof of this we note the fact that when we quoted from the majority decision of the Supreme Court as delivered by Jus tice Avery, and the minority opinior, as delivered by Justice Clark, ou the registration clause of the election law, in the case of Harris vs. Scarborough, they raised a howl. They then 6a w their opportunity to appeal to preju dice without producing arguments and trying to answer our arguments. The North Carolinian whines about us spitting venom at Justice Avery and stabbing him in the back and such rot If that paper had wanted to be fair, why did it not reproduce our editorial and let the people judge for themselves. We quoted the language of the decision so that the people could see whether or not we were right We are induced to think that the Legislature that passed the law is more at fault than the court in passing upon the law. In fact since we have begun to investigate the mat ter, we have discovered that the Su preme Court formerly, in the case of Peebles vs. Commissions of Davie county, construed the election law, and that their decision did not please the politicians, so they demanded that the legislature amend it so as to overrule the Supreme Court and when the present law was passed the Legislature no donht intended tW . o the Supreme Court should decide on the registration (if the matter came up) as the court did decide it As to J udge Avery, we have much more confidence in him than some of our T , nr i i i . ouages. we nave Known him to take the side of the people in more than one matter on political ques tion. But to revert to the decision from which we quoted, if the courts is right then it shows that the law is a very bad one and should be amend ed. The North Carolinian wants to know whv we did not have it amend ed when we w ere in the Senate in 1891. If we could then have seen the abuses and frauds which have been committed in its name, we would have fought to have repealed or amended it as hard as we fought to pass the Railroad Commission and have all corporations to pay taxes as private citizens do. But the law is something like John Sherman's "An ti-Trust law." It was passed appa rently to suppress trusts, and the politicians and partisan papers so told the people. But the real object of the law has just now, after mauy years, come to light when Judges Kicks and Taft made their decisions the other day under it against labor and in favor of trusts. The real hidden unfareness and meanness of the election law did not sow itself till the last election. But the man who drew the bill was preparing for just such frauds when the immen gency should arrive, as was commit ted last November. BAREFACEP MISFTPRESENTATION. The North Carolinian referring to the criticisms being passed upon the Legislature for trying to repeal the Alliance charter says: "The i party men are mad because they cannot use the interest on the business agency fund to, prorogate their false notions and continue their deception of the people. This is the milk in the cocoanut" This charge that th funds of the Alliance had been used for political purposes was first made before an4 while the Legislature was in session. But the State Executive Committee of the Alliance the State Trustee of the Agency fund gave the lie offici ally to every such charge and proved it Dy the books. This charge was made to fry to bolster up an excuse iorine legislature" to tamper with our charter, and The Carolinian now repeats it to try to excuse that body 1W "auniairana unjust action. The Carolinian must learn testate the tacts as they are before it can with impunity charge others with trying ' - ""v. J-rcvllC PR. CTRUS THOSIPSQX, SUte Wtarer of thTwth droll. Facm. ' Stt AUUnc. SVKU at the oUowing times Bushy Hill, (Iredell County Alli ance) Thursday, April 13th, 1893 Taylorsville, (Alexander county) Saturday, April 15th, 1893. Boone, Thursday, April 20th. , Lenoir, Friday, April 21st, Monroe, N. C, Tuesday, April 25th Wadesboro, April 26th. Lumberton, April 27th. Tar Heel, April 28th. - - Elizabethtown. April 29th- - JtRecived Anheiser Bash, St, Louis Pabst Milwr.v v l ' Uokthcaousamhiisik H0 S0M 0F TH HUNGRY PPI-L CANTS ARE. lUa-'.J V..-. Mrfcl- .!-erf-Th W llk KlIrlM '"-" IW..I Wit M J th Wll.lBt. rIHlrl-Tfa Pel Ar. rth C.rollo-O't w r From all accounts "the fellows who saved the party" in this State lection, and tu White House, and their misera ble tale-of-woe face haunt the De partments daily. From hotel to boarding house and from a single back room on the top floor to the lunch counter has been the order of retrogression since the early days in March. It is a pitiful tight to see those big. strong men playing the jo litical mediennt. It reflects dicml it ami shame on the State. Why is it allowed? Wiio is responsible? Why not pay the reward they claim or send them home to tluir dependent families and honest work? Is it be cause Hansom aud Vance are ignor ed by the administration? Is not Mr. Cleveland big enough to forget Ilansom's treachery at Chicago? When Ransom said at Chicago and else where that Mr. Cleveland's , nomina tion would cost the Democratic par ty 40,000 votes in North Carolina and turn the Stafe over to the Peo ple's or the Republican party, he jit tered a great truth, which Mr. Cleve land ought to respec1". him for. He meant what he said, because he ex pected that a reasonably fair election would be held in the State, lie well knew that a fair election meant a victory for the people. Every day of the campaign, from the gloomy begining to its demoralized ending, demonstrated the truth of Ransom's Chicago prognostications. That a different result was declared was due entirely to the most glaring and shameless election frauds ever perpe trated among a free people. But ..I. ..! :i...i. i A""louul "iau uu&uiku uj a, louS of artful political di- of plomacy in sendinsr an anti-Clevc muu ucirgai iu vyiueugu. ji was a monstrous misrepresentation of the land delegat'on to Chicago. It was democratic sentiment in JNorth Car lina. It was a machine made dele-J gation, and its one avowed purpose wo, tnjyuuuy ucai wieveiiiuu. Onlv nn nr t arr nf f oii was, "anyuouy to Deat uievelanu sented the moral couraere to stand to - j IUCU WUTil.UUlia ClUU III UIIII1 IUI Mr. Cleveland they reflected the sen timents or nine-tenths or the JJemo crat8 in North DaroDa. We despise iiypocracy ana treachery and we do not wonder at Mr. Cleveland's "in- ocuous diguetude" in considering North Carolina appointments. And particularly is this the case when the applicants themselves are considered. Who are some of the applicants? Gudger, who is closely relaiied, is Vance's candidate for Collector of the Western District It is the most lucrative office in the State. G udger was an outspoken auti-Cleveland man, and three weeks before the election he abandoned the campaign and gave up the State. Billingsgate Glenji, whose vulgarity, irreverence aud bulling disgusted intelligent people, everywhere in the State was a violent and vehement anti-Cleveland man. He begged the State Con vention to make him a Presidential Elector, believing at the time that Mr. Cleveland would not be nomina ted at Chicago. Glenn is Vance's candidate for District-Attorney for the Western District Vance is a courageous rhan in some things. lie says boldly (since Cleveland turned his back to him in the White House recently) that he will not recommend any man for appointment who was an "original Cleveland mm." Wo admire courage, true manly courage, out we ao not aamire the "sour grape variety." Vance ought to have taken this position at the outset, or Mr. Cleveland ought to have snubbed him earlier in his snoils-hnnfi no- madness. Now the gracious and diplomatic Ransom operates on a different line. In the case ot the District Attorney ship he endorses the "oHorinnl m land man" and recommends the an- nn.nl L .i fit. 1 . 1 puiuuiitsub oi uienn oecause he says with niitinno , i ' sentiment in the State favors Mr. uienns appointment" And again with the most thono-btf 111 rlAlinQAir he saved Mr. Cleveland a serious em- oarrasment and himself a nniKU snubbing, in taking the irrepressible "Buck" Kitehen w iV. a. , , . " . J "c Oi. tilt! o " " " vi mc faght for tne Collectorshin of tbP Eastern District The office, it is said, was literallv forced man bimmons, and his acceptance ii. i. J "uluuoa 01 me trouble mreatenea Kan so m with in stant and irreparable rjolitiel . tinetion. So that Simmons will be the Collector. Graimrer. nn f v, opposing candidates, General Deputv Sinn KlfstVinn T . . . x" - J -piucu .uctenue Agent: Mr. Cleveland ought to appreciate the dexternty, of such manipulation, and V ance ought to take a lesson or twn m Ransom's School of "Practical Politics." But brilliant as this achievement is it pales hy Ransom's master-pieee in settling the conten tion over the Wilmington Collector ship and Postoffice so far as results are concerned. The arrangement gives Kenan the Collectorshi over that old war-horse of Democracy, Ool. Kerchner, and Morton the Pos omce over Oldham onnn. , ana disabled Demnrrf in Ti seemed a very audacious thing, ea- f J otuuiflenj so stronz, iy condemned it Knf to or thought he saw, four Ransom members of the Legislature in the deal, it was an alluring picture, calculated to dazzle the crff tFest ma nipulator Of Pedfiral V goods will neYer be delivered. The people are not political vassals and serfs m North Carolina. The haSu Political tricksters and traders w take notice. t . . . " f"aJ who, vulture like, are hovering over Washington, are becoming desperate. TU r HiiimWinfr at the doors of ii... n.-mhittttl and courare reprcjsen of an tinpurcha.eu ami uupuiywua ble people, ajid M. W. Kanaoui uaj are numUnd by the inkrvi.ting da vs. . ' On tho hand President I ke land U met by Ul-oomistll a!tw and denunciation on the part of Vance aud Ins friends, on the other by the bo1 of tin-little machine who distribute the Federal patron age with the nmlisguwHl :irpte to iiervtuate his own political aovn dei.ev. What must U' Mr. CKe land'js opinion of North Carolina and North Carolinian? We can readily understand whv he is not breaking his neck to give" the ttule fotne prom inent appointment. THE POWER OF A JUDGE FOR GOOD OR BAD. The remarkable decision of Judges Taft and Rich ug.iint laWaud in favor of capital eiv diseused the IT. S. Senate last wtvk in ron nectiou with a resolution instructing the Committee oi Interstate Com merce to inquire into that and other subjects, ami ijuite a long and inter esting debate resulted. We are glad to see that t here are some Senators who have the manhood to condemn such prostitution of the jover of the courts. Senator Voorhees inclosing his speech reviewing the facts and law in the case said he had only this to say in regard to the judiciary: -That when bad laws are enactvl, when mistakes are mad?, some judges are glad to mitigate those laws and to show no pleasure in their enforce ment, but there were other judges who grasped after power, who loved power for its own sake, and enforce it rigidly. Jefferson, the great JwjM).slle of popular liberty in this country, fore seeing that danger, had once said that the Federal judiciary were the sappers ai.d miners of constitutional liberty." and Mr. Voorhecs added, "so lhey are, such of them as have with 1 A 1 J .1 a grecuy inirst ana hunger to en- . .1 . i . 1 I 1 , .1 iorce laws oi mis kmm io their ut most limit. I think that the Com mittee on interstate Commerce can not be better employed than in in quiring into this dangerous question He are delighted at the action o me senate, i he newspapers and politicians that are controlled by monopolies have labored systemati cally for years to throw around the courts a kind of bogus halo s.u sanctity. They have tried to teach il ... l i lit .i yie people to iiom the courts m : i . i i eiHiatiuii anu awe. Aim when a man has dared to condemn uu un just decision they have jumped on him and criticised him for not hav , i i ii mg iroper respect ior the juUicia ermine, and all that There has been method in all this, for in the meantime the monopolies have striven harder to control the courts than they have Congress and Legis lature. It is time for the people to realize this and stop dealing in sen timent A Judge is simply a "man and too often not a model man. He is poor weak human flesh and is jus as liable to err as another man, be sides he is as susceptiable to tenipta tionas the average man.Wheu a J udge makes a decision clearly unjust, pub lic opinion should at once condemn mm. When such is the rase the Railroads and other monopolies wil lose their influence over the courts. Are you in favor of giving a man a chance to vote his convictions irre spective cf his book learning or the C 1 1 it . ncjyiit Ul ins pOCKCt UOOk.' Jt SO you are in favor of the amendments to the election law which we publish in this issue. Keep every one of these papers for use and reference at the next election. YT71. , 41. V...l rt . if ueu uiu 4orin Carolinian sav mat we ever begged the legilatu.ro to adopt or even agreed to the amend ments passed by that bodv it i-. t ther crossly lif Horn Tit rr u-il f n11 w- f C - v ' - tf III UiiJ states an untruth. W amendments that covered ever nro vision laid out in preamble of the Din to repeal the charter. They then proceeded to caucus for a week and did not stop till thev nut cirri, amendments to the charter, some or tnem the most unfair and un just enactments that ever stained the statute books of the Rfnt Nothing done in the "dark days of 'G8" under the ea"rpet-bag-rule" can compare with its cowardly measures. A STl'UEKT A1 A GROWING MAN. Mr.-W. E. Faison. of D..I.'t, ty, is to be promoted to Chief of Consular Kureau in thp Stafo tw-. ment,vice Dr. St. Clair, who will be iciuuveu oecause ot the suppression iciauug to tne case, of a vy""sut .1U Germany who was remov ed for irregularity in his cccounts Mr. laison enteral tho Sf . ment throuerh the oivil erin i now holds an $1800 place. He was y.vuWCUi mai ne acted for a short time as solicitor of the Depart ment, and would have been promo ted if Secretary Gresham had not determined to give that place to Mr Dabney, of Virginia, who won Sec retary Gresham's confidence and re gard by the abilitv shnn u ease. Air. Faison ow9 v.: tien solelv tn mci-it tt . dent, and is a growing man. North Carolina has reason to be priad of the record he ban nflo .. tit. -i ington Correspondent of North Caro- We are irlad tr o w nr ttt. i terUaison is to be promoted. He deserves it. But he is a Sampson boy. though his wife is one of Duplin's charming daughters. -Ed. VVAKT A TEACHER. The people at Boomer, Wilkes Co.. want a School Teacher. Address. WORLD'S HEWS is Mr. J. If. Mm.., Ver, sustained a . v earlv vtcrda i - - . Ihvu oontimsl . j, , days with ilm;!,,.: time after miilni-i , of 8iuiiatnbulii;, Sllbjtft. Ji;iss .1 i, the Central II,.;. twtvn th lo wn, . and walketl on t. t ; kitchen from w l,;, jKived baek ya.'d, i , oO feet. He a- ; :u m. and carried t,. Uegister was suiiii:.. his hose broken ai, ; no external e i.. , Chariot tc U!.s, ,. KteiiMe foe ren county hae I . buildings, many -n, and out bi:ildif--buildings, grain, household furnaiin. at la.OUO. M;i:,. burned to deat h a severely injured. The forest tires ; have done great tine industry. On trees all of whk h I; 4 V ar. U !' hole districts th a waste, what w r now blackened stum or b:irk. 8afe robbers hav oiisk ousiuess in im !uvt;.. ern Carolina. At Lulu;;, ami other towns sal. open and rilled. W. A. Hlair, K j.. tl : will deliver the iiiriii .ri.ili Statesvil'e. llev. F. L. lleid li..s a,-, presidency of the t;n-.-n!;-College. Announcement lit- l. that the State Chronicle ;: May nth. Mecklenburg COlllllV lu- ton mills with 51,imh. ..j,;.,; Two .loiirnallxt ;( l. It n, lloiiia-. Washin(jt)v. Ami! Hugh Watson, editor ami f of the Trinity Herald, of J .?Jer La., and William II. Larb lisher of the same paper. . jr. been in Washington t lit .fr night seeking ollice, (tlicf. f piring to be conm issinnero: tion and the latter to a j.I govefnment printing nllicr tired of waiting and liave i! walk home. They will k at 8 o'clock Monday mn. the route they will take;: Itichmond, Danville, Atlan. gomery, Mobile and Xrn a distance of 1 ,:. miles. L exect to acconiili.-h in finii. The DtNlrlct .1 ml ,' .Nomina; WASUIXUTOV, AjiA U 1 resident sent the f Aiej- n,j nations to the Senate to-i!; 11. Alvev, of Maryland, to lustice and JMartm . District of Columbia, amis: ard, of Texas, t o be as.sociav of the Court of Appeals of trict of Columbia; Lucius Iimar, of Mississijpi, w the General Iind Ctl'uv: i;. Cillespie, of Tei)in.-c, ! clerk of public lands in the Land Ullice. Whole Town Moui-il I)in hj (V'lo"'- A terrible cycloin' n-; Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska, Ka Missouri on the lltli hist. The whole town of Akrot former State was wrecked field, a few miles distant. demoralized. The storm with great velocity, tour,-, hundred miles between Page, Neb., which wai ' with loss of mauv lives, in 1 and a half. The meeting of Southern nors, in Iiichmond. Va., c?-- week. The (Jovcrnors f themselves well nleascd -: worlc. It was ordered v i -1 .1 Covernor issue an address ! ceeding 6,000 words teWr4 the advantages his Mate p; Kach State is to be u-xid " defray expenses. The Holmes oil factory, f ground, was destroyed tv day with 28 freight carsi ot oil cars. The lire &w engine dropping coals in u.-hir in a little ditch. The protectorate over tbe I ional government of withdrawn bv the L'di authorities and the An'f nnes have been ordered "-f their ships. a 14 i i t : llinl year oiu oo) " , J N. 1.. committed suicide little girl jilted him. Arrestl on SaVir' PARIS. Anril If. V UJ0 Dunrat nn.l n w-.mnn Dl U'O O mfVACw I tfrdflf picion of having caused t uua aiicctvu - . r sion m Hue Des Bon3 w November, when five l" killed. If the rvYt.fiM01s S01 press arc so opposed to rf Whv don't tbpv ilenounc decision of the courts y iucks ana others, l1" say inas tne ffovernni jV . 1 mm . rK - o Mr. ugiiv ttuu ougnc to iafc i he men vrhn wnrt fnr'C' and fnroa ftiam In ir0r thev want to or not " " paternalism howlers are J oysters, it tne decisis plied to the corporations tl - ..ii i.- i. i: , Tf. tb a ... i ...:n w for family use. at B. Lehman & Co. John S. Fuuqesson, Boomer. N. C know the factsand the trntlw vigilance is the press of