THE CAUCASIAN 1'UI1MI!K! F.VEICY THUKHHAY UY THIS CsrCASIA rtinUsHUKI CO SUBSCRIPTION RATES. 9 NIC YIAH. 8IX MONTHS TURKS MONTU8 ..ll.UQ .. .to .. M K.ntcrtd attbw I'ostOHlce m Kaleigh N. ;. a second-class, mall matter Tonight Ji IMiK ll.AKk'B NI'KtX'H. We are sending oat as a supple ment to thin issue of the Caucasus the speech of Judge Walter Clark before the convention of Hailroad CommiHsioofra recently in session in Denvttr. It is a masterful presenta tion of the railroad o,uestion a document which should be carefully studied and then laid away for re ference. Judge Clark speaks iu be half of a great clientele they "who pay the freight'' " the patrons of the road the humble individuals who are treated an if they had no right tit irRn their opinion on snch tteriouH and intricate matters as rail road management, yet without whom not a car wheel would roll not a magnate would draw his salary.' And while Jude Clark is of tho opinion that a more rigid control of railroads by the national govern ment should bo the next step toward curbing the abuses which exist in private management of railroads ; yet there is no oue who is familiar with the futility of pant efforts in the way of legislative restriction or rather the subserviency to the interest of great railroad combina lions of those to whom power has Wen given to execute laws, but who must see that government owner If jo'ir liver w out of order, causing UiliotifWM, f?'wk Headache, Heart burn, or Constipation, take a do of Mood's Pills On rttirinz, an-1 tomorrow your di ffftive organs will b- rfulati-d and you " bright, active and nady for anr kind of work. This has Yen tli" tx-r-nrf of others; it will ) your-. 1:h)IS PILLS are sold Lv all mcdifine l'alers. 3 cts. TIIKV WANT AH AHMT FOST. In Cleveland, Ohio, the home of Mark Ilanna, there has recently been a big strike among the street car men, which resulted in some damage to property of the ear com panies. For instanoe, some friend. whose purpose it was probably to break down all sympathy the people may have had for tho strickers in their efforts to redress their griev- i t. a ences ami secure nigner wgi placed dynamite under one or two street cars, with disastrous results. The nse of dynamite eo enraged the people that a mass meeting was held by the business men and ten thousand dollars were subscribed to be used in apprehending the man who threw the bomb. This same meeting also passed resolutions in favor o! the establishment of an army post in Cleveland. It is very likely that the chief ground of those who so vehemently advocate a large standing army in this conntry is for the purpose of placing sok'iers in the large cities to suppress the labor element wherever they boconio disatUfied or protest against any unjust or brutal treat- . . 1 A I 1 1 - ship coupltd with govenment con- men lueJ J receive ai xue uauua trol is the only real corrective of of their employers. Behind all the clamor for a large trol is the only these abuses and thai, sooner or Inter it must come and the sooner the better. Kay that we had a state and inter state Commission that would do their duty under the laws author izing them, of what avail would that be as long as the bench is filled with men like Shnonton, to issue injunc tions against execution of such laws, and as a last resort construe the laws under the icfluence of "the bias of training' TIIK HI MIX ItATII) I'AKTV OIMIANI.A TION SI .i;KftTKI AM A Hll.t H OK STATU ;oVMNMKVr. increase of th9 standing army can be seen tho monopolist and plutocrat whose creed for eain has entirely hardened and chilled his heart to all sympathy for others trials sufferings and distress. There is no place in our country or the manwho settles bis grievances by the use dynamite, nor should there be any place or nse for the man who, like a demon, seeks to crush out of existences his fellow- man by depriving him of a just share of the fruits of his industry. During the latter part of Decern ber, 1S9 just before the legislature assembled, and when there was much speculation as to the sort of ditfran chining legislation the legislature would enact, the editor of the News and Otserver went to Washington to interview representatives of those Southern States wLich have a limi ted suffrage, upon the different plans of disfranchisement operative in these states-, and these interviews he had published in his paper for the information and guidance of the in coming. Legislators. Among the in ter views was one from Senator Mc Laurin, of Sjuth Carolina, in which Senator McLaurin, speaking of the South Carolina amendment and the primary plan of election in that state said: Oar elections are nearly all settled in the primary, and if a man desires to exercise any influence in govern mental affairs he mast go into this election and take his chances. These primary elections are protected by an Act of the Qeneral Assembly, , providing that they shall be conduc ted in accordance with the Constitu tion and rales of the Democratic par ty, and that illegal voting in them shall be punished. It is needless to say that a majori ty of the voters of North Carolina, would not for a moment, tolerate such a plan aa thii ; and if the Dem ocratic patty were to come before them with the plain and open propo sition that that organization be le galized to conduct all elections "ac cording to ita constitution and rales," that such a proposition would meet with signal failure Uutitis with this idea in view, suggested no doubt by the South Carolina plan, that the News and Observer in its issue of Saturday, under the caption "Legalized Pn mariea kill Boss Bale" editorially, advocates this plan. It says in part When the amendment eliminates the ignorant negro vote, a nomina tion by the Democratio party will be equivalent to an election. In order to make that condition permanent it is essential not only that every voter have an equal voice in the selection . of candidates, bat to make it impos sible for any party machinery to de ny him that equality of direction to which be is directed. The expe nence of the Democrats in those Southern States where the negro vote has been eliminated is that the dan ger of division and formidable inde pendent movements can only be aver ted by a primary Having all the safe guards of a legal election. North Carolina ought to profit by the expe rience of its sister States and provide a legalized primary at the next ses sion of the legislature. Which simply means that as iu South Carolina the Democratic party should be clothed by law with the power to throw around all of the vo ters of the State "all the safeguards of a legal election" and to be in po sition to avert "the danger of divis ion -and formidable independent movements." Here is simply another evidence of the injurious effect of the last cam paigu as shown in the loss of respect for the boasted love of toleration ' and spirit of fair play which has characterized the masses of North Carolina for such a inggestion would never have appeared in the eclomns of any paper North in Carolina prior to the last election, not even in the News and Observer, and it comes now only npon the pre sumption that manhood is no longer a characteristic of the voters of the State. WHAT DOES THIS SI KAN ? rv TRACT SHOW JVfHiK CLARK nrr.KCH bkiokk mk eeisvKN- TIUX OK KAILKOAD COMMI SIOXKK3 AT UEKVEK From the golden mile stone in the Roman Forum radiated those mag nificent roads whieh to this day tell how Rome built for the ages. Along them poured tb tide of the Repub lic's and the Empire's commerce; over them tramped her legions, and as the (icd Terminus successively re moved further and further the limits of her domains, these magnificent viaducts carried to the remotest ver ges the art, the literature, the laws, the civilization that was Roman. In deed biT roads made possible the vast extent of her dominion and bound together for so many centu ries so many countries iu that Ro man Peace which created and main tained the civilization and the learn ing withu r wnich humanity would not occupy the advanced stage that it does to day. Suppose for a moment that those Roman roads, the arteries of the em pire, had been owned by private companies of millionaries, that not a wheel could roll nor a man move along thrm, nor ten the legions ex cept cn terms dictated by the corpo rations; would not those corporations have had the empire by the throat Would they not have appointed con suls and pro consuls, every senator, every general and every jadge? They would have been the government It is a universal maxim tnat pn vate property can not be taken for private uses, but only for the public use. Yet no railroad can be built without the appropriation of private property. It results that the real question and we are race to race witn it is whether it is practicable to contro theso great forces, these immense ag gregatiens of c ipital, by Commissions and ov ttatutes, or shall it be neces sarv to take the absolute ownership of them over in tho government. In all tho countries of the world save Great Britian and the United S'ates. the answer has been that government ownership is indispen sable to a safe and just control Accordingly in almost all other coun tries, including even the Australian and other British colonies, the rail road?, or at least the controlling lines are owned by theii respective governments. In the United States and the contrated territory embraced in the British Isles, the experiment fo government control, without gov ernment ownership, is on trial. Oae of tho greatest evils of the present system is the proneness of these corporations to intervene in politics. Realizing that a govern ment by the people is only possible when the government is kept un touched by the power of great mon eyed combinations, there is nothing which arouses public indignation more than the almost unconcealed interference of these corporations in C0LONLZ&.TIOH OF THE NE GRO RACE. NO. 3- tHE OSLY RATIONAL HOP IOB THE Political, Koctal. mad ladaatrlal Reaeva- tion of Narta Carallaa. kud ef I ha goalh. Will be Foand la tt Uradaal lepar1a tlna and Kttlemat of the Afro-Anrl-ean. loa Kotna Fortiau at I ha Iatllc Domain. Oatalde th Liiutt of h l ul led Stat, Where They shall b Frra to Ciovarn ThcnMltn, t'udtt the NaUanal rett ctorate. -A BOHSTHOUS ABSURDITY. ONLY 01 CURE- ' rest ttMFUUL From the Conoord Daily Standard of July'JCth, we clip the following the nomination and election of legisla editorial paragraph: When the county has a fair sprink ling of the suspicious white vote that will risk any injury to the country rather than abandon prf jadices so inimical to patriotism it is time that we eliminate as much of the danger ous vote as possible from whatever point we can. What does toe Standard mean when it speaks of the ''Sprinkling of the Suspicious White Vote," and fur ther on argues that "it is time to eliminate as much of the dangerous vote as possible from whatever point we can t" Does the Standard make bold the assertion that it is the purpose of the machine to "eliminate'' a large por tion of the "dangerous white vote of the State by the adoption of the Con stitutional amendment T Is it the purpose of the amendment to deprive a large element of the white population of the right to vote! It would seem from the bold utter ance of the Standard that it really desires the disfranchisement of that portion of the white vote that will not follow or submit to the dicta tion and domination of the machine. The machine should sumarily squelch the Standard, otherwise that paper might give away its secret plans and purposes. One of the most suggestive car toons we have seen for sometime appeared recently in the Washing ton Post. It represented McKinley as a Farmer on his way to mill (second term) with a sack of grain labelled "McKinley Popularity" on hisback, and in the sack were two holes through which the grain was rapidly spilling. One of the leaks was " Cuban Government"; the other "The Phillipine War" and so great was the leak that McKinley's popu larity sack was rapidly becoming empty. Every day of the horrors -of the Phillipine War and of America's stultification in still maintainiug military government in Cuba, de creases McKinleys chances of re election. It is needless to call the atten tion of our readers, to the commu nication of Capt. R. B. Davis, in another column. Never before. Der- haps, have there been collated so many and such highauthorities in support of a single proposition as of the one which he advocates, and tors, congressmen, Governors and United States Senators. Their con tributions to Fresidental campaign funds is a National scandal. Worse' than all is their influence in the appointments of the life judiciary of the Federal Governmeat and recent evidence given before the Industrial Commission shows that they are not above tampering with tne nomina tion and election of State judges chosen by tne people. - a a The crucial question for solution Is whether the interference of great corporations in politics and their secret discrimination in rates, where' by trusts are created and sustained can be suppressed without resort to government ownership. These evils must be eliminated. The hope of America lies in the very fact that our people will not submit to such abuses much longer. - In all the countries of the world I believe except this and Canada, the telegraph and the telephone are part of the post office system, legally as well as logically, for they are simply methods of communicating intelli gence. 1 nave always believed as a lawyer that under the provisions of the Federal Constitution which re xuires Congress to establish postoffi ces and postroads, it is its duty to transmit intelligence by wire as well as by rail, by electricity as well as by steam or pneumatic tubes, and as this power vested in Congress is held by the United States Supreme Court to be an exclusive power, that the oneration f telegraph and telephones for hire by others than the govern ment is as illegal as tneir running the postoffice would be. Great Brit ain wnicn alone nas stood witu us against government ownership of railroads, has had to leave us on this matter for there the telegraphs are a part of the postoffice department. This forgotten man the patrons of the railroads elects .no president. superintendent or board of directors but he has to bear whatever burdens they see fit to place upon him. He has no voice in fixing the salaries, many of them as high as or higher than that of the President, of the United States, but he pays te them the last cent. He rarely rides in a palace car or upon a free pass but he pays the fare of thesa who do. He has no hearing as to the tax which shall be levietl for the movement of himself, his produce or his purchases, but be pays it more surely than he does the taxes for the support of his ciry, State or Federal Government, for the Station Agent, like that oth r tax collector, the a TT AM -a tustom uoose omeer, extends no credit or delay, but requires cash in hand. - - - . Editor Caucasian. 1 In your last lssiu- I quoted. In support of the above proposition, the opinions of some of the sages of our revolutionary era, and most largely those of Thomas Jefferson for the reason, that he has had the singular good fortune to be recog nized as an authority by all parties Canonized, even before he wag dead, his name, since then, has stood al ways first in the popular hagiology. And so true Is this, that the found ers of every political party since bis time, has taken some distinctive doctrine of his. as the corner-stone of its political creed. Thus flenry Clay, treading in the footsteps of this apostle of hu man liberty, took up the cause of African Colonization where Jeffer son had left it, and pressed it with a zeal which was the more honor able in him since he consented, for its sake, to sacrifice the Presidency of the United States. Addressing the Colonization Society of Ken tucky in 182'J the Great Commoner had this to say If we were to invoke the greatest blessing, which Heaven could bestow upon this nation, it would be the sepa ration of the two races of its popula tion, and tbeir comfortable establish-. ment, in distinct and distant countries, if this is not done, who can contem plate the future without the most aw ful apprehensions ? For if tbia pro miscuous residence, of Whites and Blacks, is to continue forever, who, without shuddering with horror, can imagine the wars, and carnage, and crimes, that must be us probable consequences? And Abraham Lincoln following, as he professed always to do, the leadership of Clay upon this ques tion, in his first annual message of Dec. 6 1801, submitted the follow ing I recommend that Congress take steps to colonise all slaves, that shall be confiscated for having been used for insurrectionary purposes, in some place and c iraate congenial t tltm. It might be well to consider too, whether all free-born negroes could not be included in such colonization, so far as they may desire. To carry out the plan of colonization, may id volvethe acquisition of new territory, and also tne appropriation of money beyond that to be expended in territo rial acquisition. And if it should be said, that the only legitimate object of acquiring territory is to provide homes for white men, this measure effects that object, since the emigration of black men will leave additional room for white men remaining here, or com ing here. Andain his second annual mess age, of Dec. 1 lobz, when his Eman cipatlon Proclamation was suspen ded, and just one month before it was to go into effect, and while it was still open, to the acceptance of the people of the South, he said I can not make it better understood. than it is already, that I strongly favor the colonization of the negro race. With his Deportation, even to a limit ed extent, enhanced wages of Mie white laborer is mathematically certain. The price oi labor, like that of other com modities, is regulated by supply and demand. If therefore you reduce the S. S. S. is the Only Remedy Equal to this Obstinate Disease. There aredosanA of rexnedi roramcod4 tor Scrofula, voxne of them do doubt twiof abl afford temporary relief, but 8. M. S. U abaoIuUly the only remedy which completely curm It, Scrofula it one of the mmt obstinate, d p seated blood ditoaacn. and i beyond the reach of th many to-calicd purifir and toalca beeaoae aoma thine more than a mere tonio ic rcauirad.. 8. 8. A. is equal to any blood trouble, and nTer fails to cur 8roiala, beeaus It goes down to the seat of the disease, thua permanently eliminating trace of the taint. The serious consequences to which Scrofula surely laads should impress upon those afflicted with it the vital im portance t waiting no time upon treatment which can not possibly effect a cure. In many eases where the wrong treatment has been relied upon, complicated glandular swellings have resulted, for which the doctors insist that a dangerous surgical operation is necessary. Mr. II. E. Thompson, of Milledgeville, Ga., writes: A bad case of Scrofula broke out on the gland cf my neck, which had to be lanced and caused me much suffering. 1 was treated for a long while, but the physician were un able to cure me, and my condition was as bad as when I began their treatment. Many blood remedies wer used, but without effect. Some one recommended S. 8. 8., and I began to improve as soon as I had taken few bottles. Contit.uinc the remedy, I was soon cured permanently. and have never had a sign of the disease to return." Swift's Specific S. S. S. FOR THE BLOOD is the only remedy which can promptly reach and cure obatlnat, deep abated blood disease. By relying upon it, and not experimenting with the various so-called tonics, etc., all ullerers from blood trouble can be promptly cured. instead cl enduring years oi sunering which gradually but surely undermine the constitution. S". 8. S. is guaranteed purely vegetable, and never fails to cure Scrofuli, Eczema. Cancer, Rheumatism, Contagious Blood Poison, Boll, l etter. f impies, fcore, u leers, etc insist upon H. a S. ; nothing can take It piaecv .Books on Mood and skin diseases will be mailed Ire tw any address by u) Swift Specific Company. Atlanta. Georgia question , to that spurious thing. which insults us with the name oi Democracy in North Carolina, if 1 had not done so already, and receiv ed so decisive an answer. And this brings me to speak of the character of that answer, and of tho circum stances under which it was given. But this is a matter of such grave importance, as to deserve a sepa rate chapter. K. I J. Davis. $100 Reward $100. The readers of this papur will be pleased to learn that there is at least one areaaeu disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only postive cure now know to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a coi.stitutionil tr-atment. Ilali'a Ca tarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoun surfaces of the system, thereby de- storying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by bunding up the coirstirunon and as sisting nature in doing it work. The All tho Trafltr Win Hear." Fruit Trade Journal. There are thousands of miles of railroad tbroughfout th country that could not pay expenses were it not for the products of the soil. There are hundreds of towns on water navigated by our steamers that could not contribute a good sized cargo in a month if fruit and produce were barred out. Then, under these conditions, why do tran sportation companies persist in de manding rates that prohibit the shipments of these products! The bulk of watermelon on the market this week sold at $10 per hundred. The number of melons in a ear range from 000 to 1,280. This equals $90 to 120 per ear. Freight is from $70 to 12T per car, according to woight. The transportations com panies have demmded thu freight guaranteed, hence the commission merchant and grower are the direct losers while the transportation com panies are reaping a rich harvest. Iu all business transActions mutual (interest must be recognized, and proprietor have no much faith iu its'- ,i:r,ti tn tllo nt - curative powers, (hat they olfpr one . J . . Hundred Dollars for any cae that it l'""''"" companies, (.rowers am fails to cure. .Send for lu-t of lesti receivers tha- rates be reduced on monials. melons at this time. If the condi Address F.J. CNKXN EY, Toledo, O. tions existing the past week continue, sold by druggistp, ac watermelons must necessarily be Hall's Tills are the best. barrtd from this market, and tran sportation jompauiea will rea'iz . that thy have killed the goose that laid the golden egg. A reduction of rate3 of transportation will put melons within the reach of the massef; consumption will be in creased, and growers, receivers and carriers will alike share in the gen eral good results. Hard Lark nt An Elit"r. From Jerry Simpnon's liayonet. Here" are some of the terrible things which, according to a country exchange, are likely to befall a de linquent: "Last week a nelicquent subscriber sa1 that he would pay Saturday if he lived. He's dead. Another, I'll see you tomorrow. He'a bliod. Still another one said: 'I hope to pay ym this week or go to the devil.' He's gone. There are hundreds who ought to take warn- (il.'orioua ew ing by these proscrastin&tors and supply of black labor, by colonizing j P&y UP theic subscriptions now.'' the black laborer out of the country. you win, by precisely so much, in crease the wages of the white laborer. And U. 8 Grant in the last chap ter of his Personal Memoirs dictated from bis deathbed at Mt. McGregor, has this to say of the treaty which he had negotiated in 1871 for the annexation of Santo Domingo, but which was rejected by the Senate, and, with blind and besotted igno rance, was denounced throughout the South, as the "Santo Domin go Job," and for no other reason, than that cotton, at that time, was worth ten cents a pound ine conuition or tne negro race, within our borders, may become a source of anxiety, to say the least. It is possible that the question of a con met oetween races, may come dj in the future, as did that between freedom and slavery before. And it was looking to a settlement of this question that led me to urge the an nexation of feanto Domingo, during the time I was President of the Uni ted States. The island was offered to us almcst without price, is situated up on our snores, is very nmie. ana is ca pable of supporting 15,000,000 of peo ple. 1 took it that the Negroes would go there in great number?, so as to have an independent State, governed by themselves, but under the protec tion of the General Goverment. Here, Mr. Editor, I finish these citations, that might be multiplied indefinitely. But in bringing them to a close, I ask if there has ever before been presented, in de fense of a proposition as clear and sound as this, an array of authori ties so strong and convincing as these In makicg choice of Frank lin, and Jefferson, and Clay, and Lincoln, and Grant, I have selected those only, who have been the re cognized moulders, of the thought and action, of every political par ty that has left an enduring im press upon the nation Federalist, Kepublican, Democratic, Whig, and Republican again, And I have giv en the preeminence to Jefferson, because his name . since the hour of his df ath, has been the rallying cry of them all. - The best exponents of the People's Party are accustomed to call them selves "Jeflersoman Democrats," and may be said to have adopted, at the iiirth of the party, his first Inaugural, as the party's creed. Have I not therefore the right to "For the Sake of Fun, Mischief is Done." A vast amount of mischief is done, too, because people negiect to keep their bio. id pure. The mischief ap pears in eruption?, dyspepsia, indi gestion, nervousness, kidney diseases, and ether ailments. This mischief. fortunately, may be undone by Uh faithful use of Hood's Sarsaparilla, which cures all diseases originating in or promoted by impure blood. Conies from Dr. I. B. Cargile. of Washita, l.T. lie writes: "Four bottl-s of Electric Bitters has cured Mrs Brewer of scrofula, which Lad caused her great suffering for years. Terrible sores would break out on her bead and face, and the best doctors could give no help; but her cure is complete and ber health is excellent." This ebons what- thousands have proved. that r.lectric Bitters is the best blood pun tier kuown. It's the supreme remedy for ccieins, tetter, fait rheum, ulcers, boils ana running sore. It stimulates liver, kidneys and bowels, expela poisons, helps direction builds up the arrengm. iici) u cnts. Sold by all uruggist uuarauteed. Hood's Pills cure irritating. all liver ills. Non- Oar Democratic friends are still hunting around to find an issue or issues that will insure their success m 1900. Why not find Cut what will help the masses and what has a great moral underlying it, and then adopt that for principles' sake, whether success coiuess to it or not! Free silver, 16 to 1 and oppositions to trusts and combines and to declare for a better system of fiaan.'e will do it, if you can unite the voters who favor it. The other side will be united, and the man or set of men who tries to hope differently, will be as badly deceived as the man who hopes that some may be provided for him to get to heaven without re generation. Bryan had the right issue in 1S9G, and his plan is the only one that means success. Times Mercury. Ex-Senator John J. Ingalls has written for The Saturday Ever.it g Post, of Philadelphia, two valuable papers upon the later career of Presi dent Gai field. These articles, writ ten by a man who knew Mr. Gat field in bi3 youth, and afterward saw at close rarg his public acts, consti tnte what is perhaps the rncst dis- passionato and judicial estimate of the man ever made. Mr. Ingalls brilliant pr Jse, enlivened by mecdote and strengthened by first-hand knowledge, is well worthy of his subject. In connection with these papers, fac-gimdes f unrutlisbed letters trem Mr. Garfield's physicians will be printed. The first of these papers wdl appear in the Post of August 26. In the same issue will be found contributions by Ian Maclaren, Har riet Kiddle Davis, Julian Ralph and Charles liattell ixomis. mt Kta4r4-f ta C ii.UmcI Aaaaaal I1 Th eorrrspondeat f th Char lotte Ubanrver, ritinr t tb Pr frwm Fayetteviil. under dat H March 4th, sjs: Tbt Observer cotw'lj gug-1 -lie entinm.t in throwing nt a word of warnlnr agin taking for graxi cd th carrying t the ballot box o! the suffrage constitutiCBal amend ment. It will nqoirv baid witk fro the rank and file acd leader of th party. Tbtf i certainly n clool on the title of tte Cap rr Dni ocracy to orthodoxy, dot th itti is surprised at th cnmbr ulitad in? Democrats whom he mets or poavd to the amendment- Tliriaus about the "grand son of bis grand father" is fcially drcried as a monstrous absurdity. The Suffrage amendment referred to above, which was adopttJ by ttr last Lrgiflatute, is as fo'losr: Section 1. That Article VI .f the Constitution of North Carolina l and the sam is hereby rcpa,lrd. ao in lieu thereof shall be tnbtitt-d the following Article of Said Constitution: AKTICLC VI. Suffrage and Eligibility to OCie (Qualifications of an K1k tor. Section 1. Every male re rsoa born in the United States, and every mal person who Las been naturalx-l. 2! years of age and pofKcssing the juai ificationa set out in this Article taJi be entitled t) vote at any election b; the people in the State, except as herein otherwise provided. See. 2. lie thall have resided it. the State of North Carolina for two years, in the county aix months and in the precinct, ward or other elc tion district, in which be effers to vote four months next pr ceding th election: Provided, That removal from one precinct, ward f otb-t election diMriet to at.othT in tir Kamt chanty, shall Lot op rait iu d--priv any person of th right lo vt in a precinct, ward or other t-ircti t. district from which he has r aior d until after such removal. No perron who has been convicted, or who hs confessed bis guilt in open court upon indictment, of any crime, tN punishment of which is, or nj-y thereafter be, imprisonment in tt.e State pi'uor, hill be rxrnittilr vote nulss th fai l ern thall first restored to citix nali. iu lit manner prtscrib. J by law. Sac. 3. Evtry person offering t- vote shall beat the time a Really registered voter as herein r-cribd and in the manner hereinafter pro vided by law, and the General As sembly of North Carolina f tall enact general registration laws t? carry in to effect the provisions of this At ticle. Sec. 4. Every person yrtetutitg himself for registration shall be able to read and write any section of tie Constitution in the English langna ; and, before he hall bo entitled to vote, have paid, on or before the fWt day of March of the) ear in wliihb: proposes to tote, his poll tax, a pre scribed bylaw, for the previous year. Poll taxe shall be lien oulj on a sesstd property, and no process shall issue to enferco the collection i f the same except againtt assessed property. " fetor's Bus: C:! ft Ctaaaa, V EaLritai W. S. BAPM3. General M&n.cr. Oarbrsadt r"Iai w ':;' Wntno. 'Farmera tW .(..- -K.-Gaaaar4-B.lf And fi -;,. aJCT M larsnars tf.r-. g. farwrfV price. A fcoa tt ii ; j tt 4 vol IB a irvU ' wr rir r, sjed exrelled. Positions Secured . . . H aid ttoa ml as t t v pcMtiioas; ria t ice rla: ". '') , tnriit. Ware-real- a dettitt employees within month. It re M ! Civil Mlrr la-ti 121 Klftb Mreet N I Vau,.i, KEY HiftiE TRY THE m - U T 'a lW MMf write fob obcdubs r:; v:.e5 Saarlar MvHtwi wra at - ' yrwaa lafi-f JTa furc !" !:. r Thc retw Mowc m(hm co, aaua. m. m rvrtr rn, a v . rvv " - - a la I aaa tr. a . i:. J SEWO CS OE COIUH r;rr.r. -.: l . ao a aaatkiat .i una M a ' - a - TV A. - . W a. raCriffa t aa4 tmt a , SSSra'.' u V S Si .a mm f alia me. a, sita aa4 mmrrr r v ran TOVC CAlAlOtbt rasfvaa. Tblta la ia Va. S, l 1 IiUHIi ai i twa ! U , r.aaayy aaaaaa rnu-. Iai - l)a liaa4 aaa 4or.hiiiU"a. a- I i ' - tatlaai aaa flaMnma l r- ow-i VMaabHMiiaMlr.kMMU.Hii. l.f ' . WM.,M. M.n.l.itHI. . '....-41 rw, a, hmW ,Mira im,ii. at i , . IM ttiiiu mn mi "1 r"'- a w, , m yarfal" mt MUiti.t. i i ... rtmrrr r"aa c aa-a a vt. ti . i aWMjf ( mi tr aai fntk.. a. . a. SCStl, KOtSUCK A CO. ..... hx laaaa. ia S la aa tM aj; ru Hum I KM! ... . a IN lJl. Hi.h ln.l.a at ,u a tt if i c ' t MI til,., , . t J '"irtll 0-a--. ;..!. '" a J'V 'tkat-. J . all 4 rM..iMri1 !' - ' ,n ''"' Ima. ,t rT at iu tlw ". t i -tnM..a li"la walk at I. ..ic 1 -"r aa Ukutaief ri '' ; 3 '"'ln' MMMiliiil lacluitrK i, ti. t i t . . aaC iim tntrrettK '! ii.,iii'.V a . at rrad arth ll4 iwliit'W'il' a a . 1 pm, ati 4 . tn 1- m -.a a- .U iHajSratd. S.n J ' n - M ka. . aatM. AAAm .H.-. rl-i'" a. iv.Wa ". I Mt M vit t ' Meaii la U1om I . dean IJvxl uMti a lti -..m. St Uutyitl-ut it. t'aatania. j wi lie rin 'r t .Io 1 at) 1 1 11 '. rt-irnriit i tle irf !; aifl it ivit.f ail im- Iunli- Irvm ijm-, ld'. I'-" t-ly Mfiiah I'itnj lt. kUk, LliiCirt-, M.' 1 a'la. and that k l.Jr Nlams vimtt U ki t I - tjiatarrta. layiuly fur f ai'i ti. Ail '!' DR0PSYSS Cl tr D ar ta 1 - Mav aafaa t . aval SATS ailaaatwattt.4 I . ; .amaa e-i TaaimnaU an 1 TFS t?kli .tnia. K. . a. aaXXV'f SC1S K. Al J.a.aa The masses of our fellow citizens are intelligent and just. They have no hostility to railroads as such, but only to their abuses. They recog nize the immense value of railroads. one too that seems to be awaking their indispensable assistance in the V bt tne first wiue-tspreau inquiry at present. I vwmcui ima wuul. jy m From week to week, the wri- Ji'idual, city, county. State and Na w ni I tional subscriptions they have aided 0 F""B tne construction of the railroad sys ne Deiieves lie Has establish- tern in tnis country. They have seen ed, to his solutions of the con- individual stockholders 'frozen out;' tney nave ditions that environ us. In his next number, he promises to have something to say of the attitude of the Democratic party of North Car olina, in respect to this question. Democrats Put la a Negro Policeman. In the city of Hickory, a town with only a few negeioes in it, not over a fourth of the voters, a town that the Democrats boasted of carry ing last spring, yet since then, has had a negro policeman in it. Is this truef If so what do yon think of it' white manf .seen city, county and State holdings displaced . that great manipulators may become the own ers of these properties. They have seen the more than $500,000,000 of National aid given in lands and bonds, disappear "ljke the baseless fabric of a vision'' and leave scarce a wreck behind. These thine they have endured and would even for give if the present management of tnese systems were fair and just. The specific remedy for troubles of the blood,: kidneys, stomach, liver, is Hood's Sarsaparilla, the great blood purifier. ; to embrace a measure, which more than all others, he had at heart? Whether they will have the cour age to do this, the sequelwill show. The modern Republicans, in like manner, profess to hold his mem ory in religious veneration. But if they have now lost faith in his guidance, are they not willing to trust to that of Lincoln, and of Grant? This question I address, in all seriousness, to the acknowledged leaders of that party in this State, whom I know to be men of reflec tion, and forethought.: And tley, with equal seriousness, might ad dress it to their negro following as fast as education shall enable them to conquer, . that Israelitish fond .ness for the Egyptian flesh-pots which conceals from them, their present and future condition. The Appetite et a Goat Is- envied by all poor dyspeptics whose Stomach and Liver are out of order. All such "Btiould ktow that Dr. King's New LiTe Pills, the wonderful Stomach and Liver Remedy, gives a splendid appetite, soucd digestion and a regular bodily babt that insures perfect bealtb and great energy. Only "Joe at an urug stores. . Cnrioua Ails, nf London Curiously worded advertisements, lie Ftfoled The Surgeons. All doctors tc!d RerJck Hamilton, of West Jefferson, O, after muttering 1, months fr m Rec'sl Fistuia, he would die unless a costly operation was per formed; bat he cured himself with Gve boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, the surest Pile cure on Earth, and the Der ea!ve in tne world. 23 cents box. Sold by all Druggists. Tha Sultan of Sala. America has one friend over in th ftiilippines. It is the k;ur of the Sulu islardj whose friendship eosts Sec. 5. No male pnon, who was on January 1, 1867, or at any time prior thereto, entitled to vote und-r the laws of any State in the United States wherein he then resided, and no lineal descendant of any such per son; shall be denied the right to reg ister and rote at any election in this State by reason of his fail sess the educational a a preecribwi in section 4 of this Article. Provided. lie shall have registered in accordiance with the terms of this section orior fo Dec. 1. 1003. The General Assembly shall pro- ride for a permanent record of all persons who register under this sec tion on or before November 1, 1908, and all such persons shall be entitled to register and vote at all -lctioni by the people in this State, unless disqualified undtr section 2 of tbi Article: Provided such persons abali have paid thnr poll Uz as r quired by law. Sec. 6. All elections by the peopU shall be by ballot, aud all eWtion; by the General Assembly shall be viva voce. " mm .... ... a m 4 -,.- r.r 1J tu:M at wm la ti 1 . a Jtl Mr.la. . l(t a . a f ra S IHI stlaVaata laIWa IMv aa 1 Kaa fEfitlYROYAI. IMLLS U -CWV -lraalaa4af C-al v f 'ft U-'aA wah aa -V.fc.ai . - ' TfcSJaai aaa aiia .ta 1 '7 uuretopo Ifc gSZ&ZiZZLr-- jaiificat ol. A;j.xr;-.-- .t.:- a." t a, aa 1 aa war-. ' 14 1 1m n "a -it i.at ax.tr -at ' ' I cult Vobau. m 7 tC ' attic, fjj f Jile. it an1 ;.- '-t 1-. tUfl a oa-v-r worijrr. H at i- a. nf DcnkVt aat aur pir r-. ."'! auxtlac Meaaaie Ctov. CmMJM ' kr t e n t i o n! The 1899 ( no 1 -3 AAA . : . L iL . .L.. c n . . , u ia.vw jrii wiia kB EUrtltfa lul al iUUil Wltuwu. lliieai are I that ha skall ka 1a alvno J7 ..1. 1 - mum. w c?a aiyuv av mto LUt5"1 lRland as he pleases. A late cable gram says, the Sal tan of Sain has issued a proclamation in which he sayt : common in . the Liondon papers. Here are a few examples : "Furnished apartments suitable for a gentleman with folding doors.' "Wanted, a room by two gentle men about thirty foet long and twenty feet brod.w . "Lost, a crllie dog by a man on Saturday answering to Jim with a brass collar, round his neck and muzzle." 4,Boy wanted who can open oysters with references." "Bulldog for sale; will eat any thing; very fond of children." "Wanted, an organist and a boy .ro mow tne same "1 have met the Americans. Thev come among us aa friends, not to in terfere with our religion, rights or government. All those who love tbeir conntry or Sultan I warn to be friendly and not molest them. The Americans are like a box of matches, you strike one or two and they all blaze up.' A Sultan, who can get off such a profound state paper as that, ought w auie to convince even this ad Wanted, a boy be partly out-' !?"i"Uon hl is cPbl u.vu auu tau avusoro we allotted salary. Ind't, American. side and partly behind the counter. Ex. ' ,v - ' " Mo Place to Seat. Williamson It was never intend ed that a lzy man should reach the top of the ladder. : . . 'Henderson I suppose no; there's no place up there for hi in to sit down. Town Topics. - The reason some people suecetd so And I would address the samel min& thrown businesa is. If the Baby la tatUna; Tetk. Be sure and use that old and well tried remedy, Has. Wihslow's Sooth iho Stecp for children teething. It soothes the child, softens the gums, al lays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. 25 eta. icr uuiue. TV Never judge the judge by the ju- Sec. 7. Every vUrin North Car eiina, exc pt as in this Art. die qaali fied, thall be eligible to oflice, but before entering npon the duties of the office he shall take and subscribe the following oath: f jo solemnly swear or affirm, that I will IJET7 upponano mamUin the eonstitu IFEA tion and laws of theU. S. and the TUBES constitution and laws of aorta Caro lina, not inconsistent therewith, and that I will faithfully discharge the duties "of my ofiiee as .... Rn help me God See. 8. The following -i.... persons shall be duqualified for of- THEY w . P"0" who deny the being of Almighty God. Second, all person, who .half have 'been con vic- ijfM0!?8 eir tiilt on indict ment pending, and whether aenten eed or not; or tinder judgment sua- . ui avny treason or felon v. SOUDAN Bicycles. 3 inch droo to litzt FlatcrackF, 2 riec SttDrocke, BaRetainen. Felv waihen . Thmnb Screw Jjctfr. H&ADerfectfit'grbf' Tool tteelconea. Stand comparison, Are attractive, Art euynmnicg, Are durable A a a fall mn A a a0 'j git glauci . Are r egantl?. EniEtel- Wonderful vU agent in ev 150. We wtt't. B y city'or countj. THE SOU AN MFGCO 4HS Carroll Are, Chicago any vther crime f- .ii.i. 'ir"J'vl a . 7 . PUB' a: 7 ? "Pnaonment in the ZStt tizen. w- VUIKU OIUM. M aoa a. I aa. ... j . vviiupuoo aaaaaaaiaa xmrmwm SisoInaU bfr0.!68 ncb Be"tifnlly colored Memorial Cardi MtoSZXZS 14x22 of Deceased i cmxen.hip a manner presenb- J.rrnx-. Ifyoahare had any ct See. 9. The at .h.ii t - relative to die ard desire ons eft b were is no competition.--rx.