ss-THE TIMES -- STEAM BOOK AND JOB OFFICE We keen on Jiand a-ull stock of LETTER HEADS, tJOTE HEADS, STATE y MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENYEL- opes TAGS, VISITING CARDS, wed ; DING INVITATIONS, ETC., ETC;' ; THE COMORO WEEKLY UliES imi ismma caesura CSTA0U6MCO INIITI. U$pn havr nntthlr;; to n. kt GONCOR0, I N. C., THURSDAY; FEBRUARY 1. 1QOO- Volume XYII. Number 81. GOOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS THE C0NCl)RD TIMES; . John BherrW, Editor and Owner. : ,r : JTJST, AjpA NOT;.V:- " SLOOa lar, in Admnce, It is an III Wind Taf Blows Nobody Good, e. That small ache or pain or weakness is the 4 ill wind' xHtnr"mn tn aW LCLl KA II W W yv ww a w a the necessity Ot- punfytng ' TJr-r1-' 1 . J,WTWWU "wl" "VVB 1 Sarsaparilla. Then your whole, body receives good, for the purified I blood goes tinalina to 'every craan. It is the great remedy for all ages and both sexes. Dyspepsia " Complicated 'with Irverland kidney 'Jrovble? I suffered for' years from dyspepsia., tveth severe pains. , Hoods Sarsaparilla made me strong and hearty." -J. B. 'EmeHon, Auburn; Me. j r fir-" -7 -a Hood'i PI1U care Htm iUa ; the non-1rrftatln and onTy fratlntrticto uka with Hood' frarsapariUa anything yon inyent or improve : also (ret CAVEAT.TRAOE-MARK, COPYRIGHT or DESIGN PROTECTION. Bend model. sketcli.orDiioto. 2 ior Tree examination ana aavice. i - BOOK ON PATENTS fee before patent. 0 n. oirniaf 0 in to uiHigiiviri auui Patient Lawyers. W AS H I N GTO N . D .C. tMHMwjaAa4U stii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 n 11 u 1 1 it 11 1 2 m T!i: : Tl:.. UlI Art ' I g AH ufUgglblb. initrl.UU. r miiii it i nun mini 1 1 1 in in 1 1 in i in 1 1 1 1 1 ruin l Wb hA-rn o a booJt,' I on, which T preparen especially "or yoa. we man free. 1 treat nr h stomach disorders worms, etci x everv CtllM In llnl tn oh r..- J - ' '- - IfJM. 1 Verinifui a lias been snceeDRfnliv nani or b fan centurv. 1 1 . f -' I t Om l "Mm by mail for ol : ft A S. I T, Baltimon, Bd. THIS Gdncord With theJatest approved1 form of books, andjeyery taclllty for handling accounts, FIRST CLASS 1 SERVI E TO THE PTJBIiIC. Cnijitnl, : ! - -I'rokil, . - i -Individual responsibility -$50,000 22,000 : shareholders, ;- 50,000 Your Account with Us. iftefest naid as airreed.i Liberal accomrn datjon to all our customers. i I J. M. ODELL, President, ! . I D. B. COLT KANE. Cashier. CONSTIPATION " t have gone 14 day. at a time wlthoi t a aovtaent or the bowel, not belDg ftbl to raoye tnem except by using hot Vater Injections. Chrentc eonuipatlon for seven years placed me in thlsfterrlble eoDditlon; during that time I did ev erything I beard of but never found anv relief; such was-my case until I began using OASCARKTS. I noW have from one to three passages a day. and If I wasrlch I would give 1100.00 for each movement; it . 1 Boh a raiiex." ; atlmeb l.. hunt. , , 1688 BusseU St.. Detroit, Mioh. feasant. Palatable. Potant. Tanta Onnd Ttn UOM, wever sicken, weaken, or Uripe, 10c, 20c, 50c. i.. CURE CONSTIPATION. ... I B sassy Csapsay, Cklcus, XoatrMl, Toriu SSS COUGHS AND GOLDS I Ycry valuable Remedy in all f directions of the 1 THROAT or LUNGS & ' Large Bottles, 25c. j DAVT3 & LAWRENCE CO., Limited V. Pron'a 5f Terrv rvniHa' Poir,TT7ii. 1 ' ' , ' ' " : ; :: . . i . tarry Cheaply ! 7e don't mean marry a cheap, no account in. but to let us print your invitations at m for nrst fifty and f I 25 for additional nf ty .Includes outside and inside envelopes. ' Ht riMbS UONCORD.N C- LUfitS WHtRt All HSf fAll R. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. TJe I in time. Sold bv dmueistn. ! mam I Rheuniacide I CURES J TO StAY CURED. il Ui tthk 1 fm 0? Km 1 ViN ' CANDY - 1 HBBBBBBHaw p '3 - - IA JTA J T 9 vwnv-vnflTto MAS Y IIKAR SAHJOSKI. A Stroma: Appeal Knr Jnt Trtmi Wotnaa Baltimore Sua. A' throne of neoDle that filled the laree auditorium of Music Hall turned out yesterday afternoon to bear Kev . - , . ' - . Ev;ry - 8eat in the place was taken, the staee waa crowded to ita utmos cap lty and hnr.drlaitoodnDintheaiflleacd in tho galleries. Seldom has euch a large audieDce aegenlbled at Music Hall, cot ezceDtioz tboee at politiCitl meet- iog io the warmeet part of a hot cam paien Mr. Junea was introduced by lier Harry D. Mitchell, of Bethany Metho dist Episcopal Churcn, and made an earnest appeal for funds for the Cntten ton Mission,- eay ipg that h waa ' qoite familiar'with the work which it wa do inz arid that at least $5,000 should be given to it by thelarge audience before him. "No matf;' said he, "occupies the right relation to his fellowmen unlu be realizes that every woman in the . world is either a mother, a daughter, a wife or a sister, and treats her as it sue was one of his own relatives. The elevation uf man will come when he will not. do anvthice to anv woman he would not do to his own. . You neeun t be airaid that you can get hurt by helping. the poor, fallen ones who live among us. You can't eet hurt by helping them, I tell you; but you can get hurt monkey ing with the damnable scoundrels who ruin d fenceless women. You uuder- stand that, don't you? . mmm. .'a 111. Tnere s many a man wno nas list ened to me, let me tell you, who has gone away saying that he didn't agree with me; but none has ever gone away saving! tbht be didn't understand what 1 meant Let every lady and genteman in the audience give to this great cause I don t care wnether tne rest give or not it don't make anv matter.. You who got here early and got into the good front seats, I want you to get into your pockets and plank , down lively Those who don't want to wait while the collection is . being taken up can go hdme. We don't want them, nohow Hear me 1 Some people don't mean to giye. lney are deadDeats. it mere is a woman here who ouly has a penny, let her giva that. That- ia the widow'e mite. But I am after you rich old hogs who dig up a measly 25 cents. How long have you been a widow, anyhow, Mr. Jones text was taken from the tenth and eleventh verses of the third chapter of the Epistle' to the Philip piaOS. A8 1Q IIJUBl OI U19 BerUlUUB, UC Uid not cling very, closely ta the Uxt, but talked upon matters which struck him as most timely and most fitting to the surroundings. , 'There are three grea t questions be fore us just now," said he, among other things Who is Christ? Where is Christ? and- What is Christ ? The sal vation of our souls depends upon the answer to these questions. Neyer have greater minds been working upon these questions, greater tongues speaking up on them and greater pens writing upon them than right now. Through all ages men nave been groping m tne darkness for their God. - If you see a Methodist, a Baptist Or a Presbyterian who has not got the sense of the indwelling of the divine Christ, you see a Uniarian who has got into the wrong church. " There are lots of them around today, too, who have only got a historical Christ. You hear me ! The preacher who knows only the Christ of history is nothing but the president of a literary society. "The free fellow in this country is the fellow who preaches the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth mind, J tell you. Some people have said that they have run me out of places because they didn't like what 1 said or the way I said it, but its no such thing No, sir: I have never run in my life. I reckon I've got as cowardly head, arms and lees as anybody, but legs won t run I like the straight kind of talking. If the fur is going to fly, every fellow is going to bej there to see it fly, eyep if he has to furnish some of the fur himself In this world the freest and happiest and contentedestl man is the one who loves the truth and - practices it every day. . Gentlemen, hear me now. know that I am going to live lorever. know it just as sure as 1 know I am standing here on this stage. I know that God never made a nsn with nns without making an ocean fur him to swim in, and that tie never maue a bird with wings without making the air for him to fly in-. And 1 know th t God never implanted the hope of ever lasting life in the human heart without first making a. Heaven for that soul to live in forever We have cot lots of subtle theories in the latter days of this century, such as f higher criticism' .and 'theosophy, and lots of our preachers have got mixed up with them. There are manv other little fellows dabbling in 'theoso phy' who remind me of a tadpole in the ocean. The tadpole knows he is there, but the ocean don't, Ob, neigh bor, I'd rather go to. bell than go no where. I don't want to go out like a candle when my time comes to leave this earth. . 'What we n ed is to fall on our knees in penitence and prayer and take Christ into our inmost soul. We have got to' have more .religion, brethren, and that's all there is to it. I never was madder with the devil in my life than I am today, and I'll never stop fighting him. He's done us all some mighty dirty work. Your preachers say they are running him out but -they are doing it like I saw a dog running a hog-pnee. The dog Was ia front. - ; "Hear me, we've got to wake up. Let the Divine pc wer come upon the cuurch- rm aV.-A . .m 4. Ti'n h v ati-iA n Qdtin v i ime.talking about it. We've got to the J nlan whfr wp are ohli A to do some- thin?. I notice everywhere I eo that ,h mMt;nn, m hfl rhnmhp, r " ftv"' ' marla nn nf fnnr irnmcn tr (mo man. What's the matter with you men?. Flave you quit going to church, you old hniin.l !"; Tf tv.o fathcra a av nwv fKo anna - arill 1 1 rt 1 r frillriuv tHom ' T ' 1 1 bet that not one in fifly of the young men in this city will be in church next Sundav. To be a drunkard is an awful thing; to be a debauchee is a homble thing, and it is terrible to be'dishonest, but Jhe very worst thing of all i to de ride and scoff at the diune tainet. "I want to impress thU upon you all, my young frieoda.. Lote of you tike to bum around talking about what you believe and what you don t believe. You iig-headef little deviL you ain't crot no sense. Somebody ought to spit on you and drown yoa 1 I got religion 2 years ago, and I've got it yet- I know I got it because I was there when it happened. A preacher said once that if be had ever been converted be didn't know it. and hia congregations said the Same thing about him. ! I nhriatian Rxltimore won't not out I the saloons because they help to pay I the taxes and 'bring prosperity ! Chns- I tian Baltimore reminds me of Judas I Iscariot. I lore a man who's got a con- Bcience. and Jots ol you have, but you won't fight. Shoot, Luke, or give up vnur pun ! We need a religion that 1 will make men go right on doing their dutv without counting the 'cost.' Your Baltinore is called a city of churches Youv'e got many Methodists, Baptists and Presbyterians .here, and the devil has got lots of you, but thank God be hasn't got much! Mr Jones closed his sermon with a reference to the late Dighi L. Moodyt saving in part: '"The greatest preacher, ot this century Moody was not a preacher at al?. He wouldn't have any reverend' or any doctor' in front of his name, but wanted to be plain Mr. Moody. He was an illiterate, unedu cated man, judged from some people's standards, but be wag-the divinest powei for good that the world has seen during the last 25 years. God bless the name and memorv of Moody 1 America is poorer for his death." When Mr. Jones asked that everyone who would like to see a great religious revival in Baltimore this year rise to their feet pr. ctically the entire audience arose. ' "If a place be provided for such meeting." said he. "some time before May 1, and if you want to command my services, I promise that I will come and help you." Bachelor aad Fllrta. Some old bachelors git after a flirt. and don't travel as fast as she doz, and then concludes awl the female group are hard to ketch, and good for nothing when they are ketched. A flirt is a rough thing to overhaul, unless the right dog gets after her, and then they make the very best of wives. When a flirt really is in love, she is as powerlees as a.mown daisy. 1 Her imprudence then changes into modesty, her cunning into fear, her spurs into a halter, and her pruning hook into a cradle. TheCbeet way to ketch a flirt is tew trav el ther way from which they are going, or sit down on the ground and whistle some lively tune, till the flirt comes round. Old bachelors make the flirts, and then the Arts get more than even by making the old bachelors. A majority of firts get married finally. for they hev a ereat quantity of the moat dainty titbits of of woman's na ture, and alwushave shrewdness to back up their sweetness. Fiirts don't deal in po'tfy and water grewel; they hev got to hev brains, j or else somebody would trade them out of their capital at the first sweep. Disappointed luv must uv course ve all on one side; this ain't any more ex cuse fur being an old bachelor than it iz fur a man to quit all kinds of manual labor list out uv spite, ,and jine a poor house because he kan't lift a tun at one pop. An old bachelor will ' brag about ; his freedom to you, his relief from anxiety his independence. This iz a dead beat, past resurrection, for everybody knowe there ain't a more ' anxious dupe than he iz. All his dreams are charcoal- sketches of boarding school misses; he dresses, crease-? bis hair, paints his grizzly mustache, cultivates bunyons and corns to please his captains, the wimmen, and only gets laffed at fur his pains. , I tried being ah old bachelor till I wuz about twenty years old, and came very near dying a doz3n times. I had more sharp pain in one year than I hev had since, put it all in a heap. I was in a lively fever all the time. Josh Billings. Reflections of a Bachelor. New TorK Press. It isn't a man's fault that he was once a babvi but it always makes him ashamed to think of it. When a woman wants to get another woman mad Bhe giyes her some fancy thine: that the second woman gave her last Christmas. Every woman spends a lot of money every Christmas buying presents for people that she would be a lot happier if she didn t know. Nowadays a man has got to give the girl he used to give a 70-cent diary to a $7-dollar lamp shade, or all the women will call him "old-fashioned." Probably every girl you meet over 18 has a book down in the bottom of! her top Dureau arawer mai. bub ib airaiu iu leave out on the table for f eari her mother won't let her read it. , Thejr Have No Use for Dentists. Nobelsville, Ind.f Jan. 25. John Leonard and his entire family have the distinction of being toojthless. Mr. Leonard is over 50 years of age and has passed this much of hia life sound and healthy without the assistance of a mo lar or a baby tootb. None ever grew. Twenty years ago he married a lady with a fine set of teeth. They had four children, ,all of whom are helthy, but who. .like their father, never had a single tooth. Their gums, however. come down much further than is ordi narily the case, and are as bard and firm as bone. Mr. Leonard can cra k nilta hariDnAn hia sanra nrtthAnr nam Q nn i v 1 7 S " P086886 a u. 8" poststswu a iuii set oi teem, lue iami- V .? nP a.8e I0r. Qenusts ana is never , tr.-.nrilorl writh aihM rar na m . I 1 " i Bukie'a Arnica salve. . Has wordVwide fame for marvellous : Tt BnmfljKM Anv ni.w aaWe. V- v-inti nintmpnf. ra- ruilm fnr c-ntx rma Burns, Boils, Sores, Felons, Ulcers, Tet- ters, Salt Rheum, Fever, Sores, Chap- ned Hands. Skin Eruptions : Infallible for Piles. Core guaranteed. Only 25c. at Fetzer s drag store. TOO J AS SXITIM. BUI Arp TIU mt ta. Prplaltr tm CaL Pleasure, surprue and bewilderment combine give a cariooa expreeaion to a man feature. One of our boy tl a doctor io Jackaonville. Fla. The other day while visiting a patient be received a telephone; mewtge from biawife, "Come home at once; a telegram from your sister Hattie aay , your latnw ia dying and to come at once.' Imarjne bit feelings of distress. Hurrying home be found bia wife in tears, bis viuiae packed and be bad only half an viour to make the train. Alt the long n!ght he grieved and sighed, as be tried to sleep but could not. Next morning at 10 o'clock be reached Cartemille and hurrying up to the paternal ' mansion met me and Hittie'a husband- driving merrilv to the poetoffice.-w He couldent speak. He couldent undereUpd. Pleasure, surprise and bewilderment filed bis eyes and every feature of bis face.- He had traYelled 400 niiU-s in baste expecting to find me dead or dying, and here I was capering around as lively as a yourjj colt in a barley- patch. He couldent stand nor under stand, but sat down and said : "There Hhas been a mistake, but thank the Loid 'you are well. I never noticed wt.ere the telegram cams from nor to what Dr. Smith it was addressed, bat sup posed that Sarah knew and I came at once.' Lt me go down-to the pince and wire her. Poor girl! she will be so anxious."- j In due time he received an answer, "Message not for you nor from Cartersville." Well, well! How much mental distress and tiresome travel would have been saved bad be carefully read the telegram. He was dreadf ally mortified at his own blunder, but we were all 'gratified at his unexpected visit, and as we happened to have tur key fur dinner, all went happily and the day was a glad one. The trouble is in the name. Dotors ebnuld be named Galen or Hipprocrates or Abernathv or Valentine Mott or Westmoreland. But smith is so common and besides there is a colored son of Aesculapius in Jack sonville and not long ago our boy re ceived a telegram that was intended for the colored brother, and it said: "It s a boy and iNlirandy is" doing well.' There is a good deal in a name. There was nearly forty dollars to my sonf in this instance, for if his name had. been Vauderbilt or Rockafwiler or even Sque zelfanttr, the telegram would , not have been miscarried. Tbe Souths; Jones, B.Ovvns and Johnsons ough to stop multiplying the name and take a new start, like they do in Mexico. When a couple mate in Mexico the first thing they do before they marry is to agree upon a family name. If the girl ia humble and submissive, she takes his oam; if aha is woAUhy-or-arlstocfif ic and he is not, he takes her name, If J they are of equal rank, they make up a new name a Kind or mixture 01 both family names. .For instance, Mr. Brown and Mies Jones would be wedded as Mr. and Mrs. Brojon. My wife and I would ! have been Mr. and Mrs. Hutcharp, for she was a Hutchins, and then our ; Aesculapeon- son would have been Dr. Hutcharp or maybe Dr. Keely, after his wife, and have Bayed, that long ride and forty dollars. But airs well that ends well, and we are still calm and serene. One of our little grand children,! a three-year-old, thinks it mighty smart and great tun to call me as I pass and say, "Hello, major! Hello,! Bill Arp! Hello, grandpa!" There is a good deal in a name. I like strong names like Webster, Cal houn, Washington, Macon, Lamar, Mcintosh, Bayard, Buchanan, Gould- mg, etc.: but it must be a serious con-; Bideratiori for a pretty girl with a pretty euphonious name to swap it oil lor a disagreeable or peculiar one. I knew. a miss Goulding to marry a Mr. Turn seen, and I always thought Bhe must have loved him mighty hard. Charles; Charles Lamb tells a story about an English girl who was good and hand some and nad every virtue, but ma name was Hogsflesh. She loved him but she couldent bear to think of being called Mrs. Hogsflesh and she refused bun for three years and would have kept on refusing, but he went before parliament and bad his name changeq to Bacon. That is ho w the name Bacon oirginated, and I reckon our eenator came from that stock and it is good stock, i So I have come pretty near reading my epitaph again for there was a news? paper mn around when our doctor left Jacksonville and they are given to anticipating bad news and if he heard I was dying, of course he could- put it in that I was dead next morning. Re? porters are death on bad news. When the original Bill Arp died in Texas it went all over tbe country that it was me and I had to retire from tbe field field for. a time and wait until the people learned better for wherever I went I was a-eappect and pronounced a fraud: but 1 read my epitaphs and was satisfied. Mr. Ward, of Birmingham, introduced me to an audience not long ago and said a lecturer or a writer tqf humorous sketches was of no conse quence until be took another name-r- that Charles r . crown wis unknown. until he took tbe came, of Arteritis Ward; that Henry Shaw was nGbodj until he wrote over the signature of Josh Billings; that Samuel Clemens wis never heard of until he became Mark Twain : and so Francis B- Harte became Bret Harte and Dickens became Borf and Mtlville Landan became Eli Peri kins; i aad Alfred Townsend became Gatb; and Goodrich was Peter Parley; and Locke was Petroleum V. Nasby'jf and John Proctor was Puck; and Maurice Thompson was Doesticks; and George Harris was Sat Liveogood; and Ben Franklin was Poor Richard; and eo fourth and so on, and last of all herel 18 oor InQa ful.Arp.' 1 . - - rn who had to dis-f card a good Old 1 card a good old honest name and t ssnme one thAt w is never heard of the beaveq8 above nor the earth I .. , . i . .1. DeMBi DOrm-lUOnitiouuwa wibkuiu Saakeepeare says that a rose by any? other name would smeu as sweet, oui-iieiore starring on tne last campaign l these authors, whetner wise or wuty.&ongnt a quantity oi namberiain'B are afraid to risk their thoughts without a new cnnsiemug. i Now, I was ruminating about what Christian aciene wouia uo wuu euiu i i'C se as our son coming up here 400 miles with a belief that I was dead, or, rfIn-iViU Ka ImafiAA k.vatJ'l kiM I tenter. I am not diapoeni to nuke'. M 1 cannot aodervtana bow we cn I ? ' m .... . - - I rsanoisctare fsilb to order, ana tome- it has to be manufactured to that it must ftrtin the mi- iocry powerfully. I was meodio a UU table yecteday ftr our grandchild ftd the nail slipped and the hammer Cijme down on niy thumb and made a ftcpud blister before I had time to think ident hurtme according to Christian but was ooiy imaginary. I iff -you it did hurt Oai and 1 doa't tilieve the science would have pre V oted:it. ' alaybe bloo-i blisters are excepted, try ought to be, and so ought stumped ts and burns and all other very en tuiDri that don t cive f.itb time (o work. Bttx A bp. r 1 ' A-- .j . Qlcago Inter Ocean. ;, When Jumbo was struck bv a rail road engine and ktlld at Loudon. Ontario, in 1885, P. T. Btroum at dnce telegraphed , to Prof. Watd, a taxidermist, of Rochester, N. Y., to superintend the aaving of the akin and boaefcf the big elephant. Mr. Smith waf one of the butcher 4 employed to assist in the work. 4I t-xk us five hours to remove the akin," said Mr. Smith, "and then we worked hard fifteen hours more cutting the: flesh from the bonea. It waa the hardest day's work that I ever did. but kefwere well paid, getting a dollar an hour. ,vf In Jumbo a stomach we fund an ifgprtment of odda and enda that would iave gladdened tbe heart of a juok saler. There was about a neck of Itonea as large as ben's eggs and a col section of coins, in which a mnj-rity ot gne civinzeu nations 01 the eunh w,r' 'presented. Theie were French francs, jhrman-. marks. Austrian tbalera' ijuglifh shillings, pence, and farthings, tjil American half-dollars, quarters, Ltines and nickels. Uesidi-s tnese there were a large number of lead car seal that the big ' traveller had "doubtless acquired as souvenirs of railway trips. Ttere was even an English policeman's whistle in the cipacious paunch." ' Populist national Con-rent tun. Washington, Jan. 24 Senator Bat- ler of North Carolina, the chairman of the People's party, to-morrow will issue call for a meeting of the national committee of that party, at Lincoln. Neb. The date has not yet been defi nitelf" settled, but will be about the 15:h of 20th of next month. The committee wil) decide upon the time and pi ice of the next Populiat national convention ' Senator Butler declares that there is no significance in the selection. '"i asKea me members or the national committee," said he ip-day, "where tfcey would like to meet, and I .felt lkind, of coarse, to abide by their de- Jion. There was no majority vote for 4iy once phce, but tbe p!ur,-.l ty vot ffa in iavey 01 incoia. 1 tin iK tuip I 'due to tnelfact that the Populist St tv (jmmitteeept out word that it would f f ' glad po entertain the committer ffi(ere.v ; i'Tho action of the Populists, it i- yirned is without the knowledge of fcr, liryan. 11 is Baia tnat tne nrst in ligation of the proposed action Will jue to him when he reads th call fiich is to be issued today. If A majority of the national commit tee, it is learned, now favor holding the Populist conventiou some time in May, pr early June, in order that Bryan may pe nominated before the Democratic convention is held. No consideration ;has yet been given as to his running mate upon the ticket. "j The People to. Determine. The Legislature has performed its pa!rt in preparing and passing the pro posed amemdment to be voted on. It now remains ior the people to 'say whether it shall be ratified or not. If a maiorty of the yotescast shall be against it lhat ends it. If a majority shall be tor it then it win become a part of our constitution. So the whole question and responsibility is now with the peo ple. It :b for them to eay what ehall b3j done with it. And in making up their minds and arriving at their con cisions they have ample time to con sider this great question. in all its bear ings upon the -future policies and Interests of their State. Much will prob ably be written and spoken for and against the amendment before the day ofjj voting c mes. ' It will.be well for the conservative, thoughtful ppopte to take these arguments and reasons, consider them and then vote a3 they be con vinced is for tbe best interest of them selves, their homes and their State. T J. Jarvis. ; 1 Eacoaragiag Ambition. : 'Yes, we get into county jails occa sionally," . said tbe tramp, "but the txpuble is they don't keep us long enough. A jail is a home-like place, with plenty to eat, no work and good treatment. We are generally sentenced fur three months, but after about four weeks tne. sneriu picks out three or fiur of us and says: , .' 'Now beys, them iron bars on that winder is loose and it's goin' to be a dark night. Hev some ambition about you.' "An old tramps knows what, lhat means, and be is tn miles away before daylight, A teoderfoot fingers to stay on, and next morning the sheriff comes "n md finds bim there and says: " 'What, hain't' you got co ambition! Ib3n I'Ji give you some!' and he boots him out into the yard and sets him to pro-neuadin' around with a log fastened f his leg." Head By British Soldiers ia Africa. Capt. C. G. Dennison is; well known inlall over Africa as commander of the bie-f' forces that captured the ! famous rebel rtbGalishe. Under date of Nov. 4, 1897, from Yryburg, Bechnanaland, he writes: "Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. j um mjwuca uwuwia bowel complaint, and had given to my pen, ana in every case uprovea most -beneficiaL For sale by M. L. Marsh Co., Druggists. Tthv tm ta taatwatay a m KaUa4 Irw.ptfM', PtwrVlpa, R. L, JowraC The addrra ti Pruferiiof (ior loo He Cab, t i RichiBObd, Va., dhvmd Ijl Friday vuioit at lb New K,lao4 dinoer io ?ie Ywrk, raut4 tbe rrat eat eatbuaiaam of tbe tvn-oinc. It aa an rlx)-aot In bate to tb & utb aod to tbe ptria by the tKipW t4 that ertkm of um oouatry 4 th mq ftflrtt of uob?i diog octk-tion that rbarctrr ae4 the New K igUad ptlxritua, lrof. McCit delar4 itoaV wbea lb ritil war waa our the &xtlh axv4ed th "eu-ra arUUamenta of tbe aarofd, the piulea Umpc oi tbe bear i r IwiuUuOa, at tettlirrg at once and forever the prac tical tuterprcttuon of the eouatituUut, but refood to drcUr that it had cuu aciourly done wrong in oji;.ing the North. It had iuewn ideaf, ita own notion of the siirnihranr of tne Union rbetween the $uu. It unourted thr on the battlefield and gave moist liberal ly of it Mood aud mom-y to eaforce ita portion. When it waa compelled to deUt ita farms and town were in ruins aud ita induMrtal aytUm was d?trojed. Tbe North frced it to remain within the Uaion and to acq Jeace in the opin ion of the majority aa to the binding power of the repubi'ic, one -and iuat-par-able. Bat we could not make it admit that ita attempted aecensioa waa mrong A wiser ge ermtion has agreed to let the pH bo past. If the Hculb wiabe to lu-tify its action to itself, it ia at lib erty to do so. We at the j North may aay, at this distance from the heated iiacuariona of the aixtiea, that one tac tion of the country was moved aa much by patriotic impulses as the other. The differeu'je waa' that the North took: a widrr view and made the whole coun try the patriotic unit, while the South was loyal to a segiment of the whole, lying on one side of Mason and Dixon's line. ; , .Considerate N jrtbernera are cartful. at least in the presence of Southerner, not to speak of. the ''rebellion. It ia as; easy to'say the "civil. war," and there is no reason why we should not grant ao mucn to tne aeieaud tcc ion. . it would be unreasonable to expect men like Trof. McCabe, who fought in a gray uuifornv, to look upoi thenaaelves aa traitors, or to do otberwite thaii cherish the memory of the htroes of that loat cause. Prof. McCabe said at New York: "It may well be, that when thia gen eration eh a 1 have passed away, and the motives and convictions of men shall be apprehended without passion, that tbe young American treading some one jf those stately avenues that lead to our national capitol, shall pause 'opposite the presentment in bronze of Grant and Sherman, to gaze upou the heroic fig ures of Lee and Jackson. This may seem an impossible dream to those Northerners who participate in the civil war, bnt iu the early j ears of the twentieth century such a thing may come to pass. It is the old ques tion over again.. Siall we teach com ing generations thftt rebellion against the flag is right And honorable ? On the other hand, , pii aii we wittihqii trom conscientious Atnericio eoWiera, who earnestly' defended a great principle, recognition of their vilor and sincerity? It is perhaps too soon to solve a problem like that. But of one thing we can be assured. The S utb isioyal now, and would support the goveri-nenUvahantly in time of net d. Prof. McCabe told bia audience at New York that "ere the first call of arms of our commou country shall have died upon the breeze, you shall bear tbe tramp of our legpns as they wheel iuto line to touch elbows with the stalwart sons of New England, eager to keep time with the cadenced step to the mus.c of the Uoion aye, to hedge round with stubborn steel that Starry tsanner that symbolizes once more to us as to you the nnjsty .of American .citizenship and the inde structibility of republican institutions When .we remember the deeds of men like Hobson, Blue, Wheeler, Lee, Bjg- lep and other loyal Southerners since tbe declaration of war against Spain we feel that Prof.. McC tbe wta speak ing truly, and not for mere rhetorical effect. Con and mm What is an extra dry ubjct? mummy. Whatiart of speech coniurction. is kissing? What is a lawyer's favorite dial ? Suet pudding. What is the oldest tree in America The elder tree. Whit crows bigger the more yoa contract it. A debt. Wbo is the oldest lunatic on record? Time out of mind Why is a. crow like a lawyer? He likes to have his caws heard. How can guns . kick? ttey nave no lega. With their breeches. Why is love like a canal, boat? BeV cause it's an internal transport. Why ia a dog'a .tail like the pith a tree? It is further from the bark. Why is Canada like courtship? Because it borders on the United States. Why is a solar eclipse like a mother beiting her soi.? Becanse it Lj a-hiding of the son. i It is easy to eat tire wedding break fast, but not so easy to eat the week day dinners that come after. Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards tie food against al Alam baldn? powdm are tfegrcatest menacera to health of the creaentday. mm to tb bat td pfxlicUty that H taaalr J Utn ttr:f at aiiitua, I ra f dr,c mod ffttjraJjtv.' U aata. kairl thnfty aat m jawml at ty -ry Kptf trMabOfirr c4Uri bit WiV 4 Hit Kml-ry a pfutrtlr, Tto ' loirv -'i le 44.t j rti41 AtRenran 'vitta .tf in irxnu ar ruUra t Ut tntuu vt . hTpucrttkal aimtfOK. fo th ccvu4 Ume the Prrwdeet baa ,at im an antual mtf aithit oaatwwd ol waruing aatuat t tUavatnv. lit ta, ia fact, the chief ad rurata aad nvttf f cttmtasor. And a'l tK 4rtafV meuu are iubin up turif . tauioatw. Tbe Attortrfy tieorf al mjte that Ihe atari of Federal jdi b viact. od rWrrtary Hay . wtta I nit! tUlra Mieuteia aod IVkw!i Ml iJ. We. calmly ta! now of a mm- ttonaj expenditure 4 MVHWMmi, aj. though t&0,b00,W waa tlwnilht a' friabifu1 aunt 2ij jearaafo." Una u a natural reauu ot lh am- trmpt if Uie .ConaUtution, whivh t came the rbarmctrritic f the lUpuUi can iarty from iu formation. It tn bent on effecting tvrUtn t tecta that were unconstitutional, and all thnufth the Civil -War and during th.e rerun atructum era that f.Jkwr4 camjl tTontentodly ouUide the Owattlution. t has ended at length in aulaututing 'manuVat deatiny," aa Mn by tuch political mk ra aa Preaideht UcKlniv and Governor Rooaevelt, fur the tunda- mental law. "What bLthe Conautuuon among friendf ' ThU h the rrj.roacn ful queatioa tbat ia put to every con servative objictor to new rourani at variance with the teaching of the fathers. Not ouly are "'State right" denied and hew powers aaaumed by CougrcM at every scaeioii, but beyond our borders new tiolitnea incoosiateot with American inatitutiona art put jn practice. Our Nebraaka contemporary complains of tbe exeniivcimt (4 the ajest devMopments of Republican policy. No doubt, imperialitm U a costly affair. Tbe same ia to be aaid of tbe earlier ' extravagance., such aa 'protection," penaioo' bill coating flW.000,000 a year, ahippihg aubidia, and the like. Hie grtn of theae thine is oyer 40 years old. i - Ka Taralac Baeltwara Sow, We have put jour banda to tbe plow and we will not turn backward. In 8'JJ we unfurled the Democratic ban ner to tbe breeze emblaxoned with tl rallying cry of "White Supremacy," We volunteered under Uiat banner to the end of the war. We have wn the outpotta of the enemy, we have driven them back in disorder, and they -are making one last deaperate stand rt form ing their broken linea behind the breast works of prejudice and demagogy. 'They orm in vain. The traJitiona of North Carolina Democrats are filled with glori ous achievements; their courage it of the best, their determination ia unyield ing, their certainty of victory arvounta to inapiration. For peace, for prosperi ty, for universal education, for that day when, the race issue is forever nettled. we can have an. absolutely free ballot and a fair count for "tbe glorious privi lege ot being independent," for general toleration of honest if mistaken opin ions, we renew tbe conteat. Iet the banner of 1898 be again unfurled. Let it still be inscribed with the motto. White Supremacy," but above that let there also appear as the aim and end of white supremacy good government for all, absolute justice before the law and unquestioned liberty of opinion. C. B Aycock. ' ' Tbe Passing af ths Aegra In Pollilr. Tbe white people of North Carolina will never again submit to negro domi nation, nor that tbe negro shall rule the white man in any part of this Bute. lhis waa the irrevocable decree of November 8, 1898. For thin reason tbe Republican party can -never hope' to re gain control in North Carolina, so long aa it continues under, present influent, ior it ia manneat mat ao tong aa it o continues negro domination in certain parts of the State ill inevitably follow ita success, and tbe influence of the ne gro in politics will of beceeeity be ex erted and felt in everv part of tbe State, it is l utile ior Kepubucana to longer de ny that tbeir party in North Carolina ia controlled by the negro an J that gov ernrnent by it ia neceaeanly government under negro influence. Y.rll. Sim mons. Hrotaer Ulrkrr'i PailMpbr. De wori tu'na roun once in a" day but de bea' way fer folka ter do i t ia ter keep right on en never tu'n roun. De rich man can't get to beavt n thoo.' de needle eye; but be never baa no trouble in gettin' a lift over de fence. f Leaven wuz any closer dan what it is some people would complain dat de aingin' eij de aueela waa a nnitance. You can't go ter w lory io a chariot er fire dese oays; but mua' foka'U atrike de fire atter dey gits dere all right enough I don't want ter be po'f en I don' want ter be rich. I dea wants U-r keep ten- muea anead er de vigilance com mittee. Ula Poeala JMaao aaac. J. U. bherman, the veu-run editor of the Vermont (Mich.) Echo, haa disrxv- ered the remarkable cret of keeping old people young. For years be has avoided Nervouanem, Sleiletiitnewi, In: digestion, Heart Trouble, Constipation and Rheumatism by using ESoctric Bit ters, and he writes : "It gently atimn latee the kidneya, tones the atomacb aid difreKtion , and gives a aphaodid ap petite. It has worked wonders for taj wife and me. It 'a a marvelloaji remedy i or oia peopie a computots." Only 0OO, at r etzer a crag store. A L.'. LI- 1. . I . . a uurgiar woo naa erjierei a minis ters bouse at midnight waa disturbed by the awakening of the occupant of the room iu which be was in. Drawing a knife he aaid: "If . you atir, you are a ce A man. I'm hunting for money." "Let me get up and strike a light." said the minister, "and I'll hunt with you." Women as Wen as Men Arc Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. WA4- WHam aHti ta. vst r' vll-- anay ttvli V taal Mr x wwamia li ft ifcai m W t4a asrsaJ wttJi araaa aO My. If iNattaMsvrta mm im riM ti tt na a tea t h ue tfcOJ raacKaa a aa aa ft Xli l Cu tha rMf. V ta y ajnc4 Utut-:c , e4 . tv tvm 4 .nwiy u V'tey ttaH aM Vs ftrH tep aiwM N t?arj tM tr!rhat el Umww tmjwU6t mp. tia tf4Mftt t4 ta 4 te u4 twtimtm el tKa U&mr aa4 kWJw aai a U feabn a m pecf-ia arpoa, , Wcmaa aa aa ituna ara mM wo, ratw arfi.lt kt4y a4 tWU teoaUa, Tlba POf pea im Mima rraal twnaJ. mH4 ar4 iSa tmrnaaia aftaca al Swanp.Roo u oaa raUi4. y tfrufrWa. ia Ji"y- crt aa4 eim eVlUfi Yi m hava a j aamela be.!tk V mail fiaa, auM pampaiei ten. a , Mf all abs?tt , itKluiitxg ,majf 4 the . thouaA4a el leaftmonul lrtea raeafvad from iuftervt t c&f4. ta trreie Or, KUmer 6t Co.. Bificuutjti, U, U wa a4 maatida ttu paper. ' PROFtSVCtil C48DS. H. c HerrjncC DDmSr DR. COW COED, W.0.v DR. W. C HOUSTON. . - eoavoaD, . c. .. 1 pri rl U do all ain4 4lmA aork ta l Mt aiprt l mmunvr Li,'T. HARTS ELL, iiionuHi-ui, COXrCO&D, rf OSTXI -OAXOUftA I'rntnft at tiiii.n ttn uf all hatiiuw. ftuw m Mwrria luil(llntf. r.tcjKtt tl.a mm buUa. w. .uu.T. a. a. - amrtwittf. m. a wvm m oWi-r thrtr 1-rofMM.ional arvlrw io tl eiii- of ui.irl AM4 ifhtnltr. All ealie irtnitf aitetrfftlda or uisi.t, itmranl rNMtnc mi fc iiMt street. hiuiui 'rmbvVfflan rliurrlt. . . xorraouiar. t, lkiobowsi. lOITGOlERI a CBOWELL, Ittorseys tad Cotsselors-tt-UYs coxooBn, n.cJ Aa rtartnra. will KrartW law In Tntiareiu. HUnlv anl ailj.ilnlnif -.untl, in thm mipm rvr and tUtfrwum ( ourt r ths Mats and ia lb Kwlorai (Vmrta limun ltri4 atrrat rmrtu-9 lMirlnir to U-ml w.m. mi It Willi u or j.Ijm- It liK onrxrd Xaii.al liana tor ua. tliil we wilLii4 tt to . ri ea tat aotnifttv rr of itri- in Um fmlAr. w mak tliiruh otaniinailon ol title to land rTerl aa Mwurlty r kona. Mrtairea furre itituut eaM to our tjf aaiue. Hoaatut n f ALU ui. m, a ifk tmr CALDWELL 4 STICKLEY, Attorneys at Law, Offlre. h.t Amtr to M'irria IIcmim. ' TiebtM, r4: fiUVS A N "Eight Day Clock, v; Wahmt or Oat, Fully IVarranted, y 't. ,4 .V - 7 A 3 It ta aim an a mm FOR 12 r1ONTH0, AT 4 I W. "C. CORRELL'S. Flue Witcniort md Esfni- n H i Speciiltj. 4 J y.v x t'ATEI.-rVeraI brtrtef m4 brm pr- n, U rT'lTro-ut o a Manaevra ta Ibia an4 ekne br wwitbnt Maiarjr fmr and rxirn. atrairht. tma M,nonur, M U-wrn aalary. Ymnu,h fwrtnanent. tw frt enree. mat & la anr ttrwn It to mainly office work rtM4mtm at. noma: hMmrw. KnrW aetr-ailreaMd tamfwl eavektMi. Itm ItomUiiva toiu paoy. iMrpt, a. CllOcaaw. PATEfJTS! as to r.TtmMLrrv P,firr" la tnTua A" DiIXaX-4 ; -Hw to Attain huttt g 9m auvbvst. HofetRlpateattaajtwra. 1 ntm aU-ictiT cMfiaalltL irtiitaaa 1 - f- 6. SOCCERS, rata Larw. WaataaataaTe. 1. 1 - -V- BOOK AGENTS WANTED FOR Pulpit Echoes aw tiviva Tarrrwa rB Rtiaioa arraarr.- lr (wmm. r mill rntmau,il 1 (m i n in i , Bi D. L. Moody im if WMt tmmfUm httmrmfmMV bf tU. CM aa V. Ummm, haa W tU tUutr m4 m Uwlfi ,f U. L lit JXlJt2l tktxTt arr-W- 4 f rr mmm i, , UM ACMM- a itrmi mm. a.aa wHtmumimn a cw. m l i Mm i if