Newspapers / The North Carolina Prohibitionist … / Aug. 12, 1887, edition 1 / Page 2
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IHHSl rCBLISHKD EVERY FRIDAY BY - Rev, W. T. WALKER, Editor and . Proprietor, lorne ' E. Market and Davie Streets Greensboro, N. C. -; tions of tho law und" then with : the most brpzen feffrontery . cry out, " Why, do you not see that Prohibi FKIDAY. AUG. 12. 1837. TERMS IN ADVANCE. ' ; ' Viieyear , , $1.00 ttlx months , .60 The Editor is not Leld responsible for the views of correspondents. " f&T Agents wanted. A liberal commission $iS b given. Write for terms. - The date on the label, after jour name, tu to inform you when your subscription xplres. . -If your name is written a cross mark will be placed there to let you know. If y renew before the expiration of your - time you will be credited from that time, o you lose nothing by it. yards of Cumberland; -. expressing it as his view that if the : Judge' didn't believe .'wine was intoxicating lie of it tinder . ought to get about a quart o Sa his vest.. SAM SMALL'S IDEAS OF CHRISTIAN place, and as a rule three meetings : a PAETNE&3 IN THE LIQUOB TKADE. da)'. . All the combination werepres - ent as Chippewa except Gov. St. The following is an extract fromtj0w who had frone back to;Illinois. Democratic Mr. v Small's sermon o w- nnmm;fti Wr,s ami fnnml stha.t had occurred in the tion does not prohibit?' Sure enou Prohibition does not prohibit. SUP- Tt is rlnrfhlv rmfortnnfltA 'f.W nrn pose we fill these offices with Prohi- hibition should 5 have, been thwarted (.tnogooclPeoPle ot uepiiDiican luinne- scarce abreak bitionists instead of the whiskyites m -Kaleigh where the experiment orapolis. wonder U it wouiu not oeuvhole round.; More than five weeks who now fill them and then- see - if "J1,1"-'"" auowaoie lor even a novenern uepno- of traTCl stood recorded, with a list Pronation will not prohibit, . EK PAETY SPIEIT. And fractions of dollars in, cent stamps. one and two has -been pointed I to as an example and has" been the boast of temper ance-people all over the State- Infighting the liquor powers as idgrning Mews, retrenched behind the forms ol the i his is but another evidence ot the land, many hitherto highly respecta- fact that if we would have Prohibi ble men for what they declare to be tion we must dig ; deep, lay our nTiB'ftntinns rpasona havft Rfipn fit to foundation broad and strong and abandon the" partv organizations with then raise the superstructure of some- which, they had formerly and per- thing better than hay and stubble. hana for n liffl iimn fVrithfnll v anted In other words, at we would have and Voted. All at once they are as- Prohibition, the legislative depart sailed by those whom they abandon- ments of our national and state goy- mprf-narHssns" ernments mnstf be given' into "the as ''animated by low party ' spirit," hands of; Prohibitionists, ..who. , will &c, &c; The latter term if -uttered enact laws and submit amendments with a sneer is supposed to have ex- that shall not be dictated by paid tit plosive force enough to annihilate torneys of the whisky interest nor anv norsnn amiinst. whom U is Trn- lobbied throusrh these bodies by the w . . ... ..The Nobth akolika Pkohibition irr w entered at the post office in Greens - boro as second-class matter. .': ADVERTISING RATES, v Space lmonth, 8mo.--6mo. 12mo, 4 Column 11.00 $4.00 $7.50 " - - $2.00. $5.00 $8.0(P-$15.00 $10.00 $16.00-$30.00 .$20.00 $32.00 $00.00 1 - " -i$4.00 ..i.$8.00 '1ST Advertisements to be inserted evert other "seeek and having special position wiS be charg ed lb per. cent extra. EDITQUIAL NOTES. -i-Kenew vour subscription to the Peohibitioxist. ' prohibition is expected to carry -sdl the , counties m Dakota outside ' the Black Hills next fall. ---The Austin YroJiibUionist prints . aliat of 1 72 Texas newspapers, 129 of 1ricli are for, and 43 against prohi bition. Bonfort'g Wine and Spirit Cir cular says : "The retrograde move mentof the trade is due to prohibi tory legislation The Grand Master of tne Ma sonic order in Missouri has ordefed fiie expulsion of all Masons engaged 4- In the sale of liquor as guilty of un masonic conduct Greensboro (Jourt House; toaid lie: in(TS -n;i railrnnd .nnnHona had '1 aslcecl aman now many ; bar failed out twice to meet the plans of rooms there are m Minneapolis He Manager Sibley; speakers had in saiu, Aoout - inree nunureu, - x Consequence;met the r every appoi it- recicon. ' "veij, saia i, "uo vou ...... f want them . UX) no, 1 don't want them ; I ain't got' any use for them." r , - ; 1 said, "What are you doing with them ?"-' bare the weakness ol the enemy, ir reverent toward- all conservatism, reverential in every attitude before God, mellow in his christian faith, artless and yet unafraid in. his decla rations, pathetic to the extreme of i W. S. . M 00 RE, GREENSBORO, N. C. has just received a large assortnv. nt of cheap and fine Millinery, "White and Dry 1 r I . 1 a a ana oiten eloquent as tew men are. And five years ago this man wa3 a Democrat, a lawyer, an editor and an infidel ! Think of such a combina tion, and marvel that' now he is a christian, and a Prohibitionist, with ment save in three or four instances, all that these imply! : : - pathos frequently in tender reference GoodSj Trimmings, Notions. 5 and lOcts. on time, and without disarrangement Temperance people in many States ot programme. A pretty large expe- have seen an(1 heard John s Sobieski, nence in held: service tells me that fche p0iish orator, yafc of thousands special uuLiiuiejiuatiuii. j. uuuHiatu- mr-r- onI Hii-mcwl Ktt w . m u .w.o.v, xvj- late tne Lieveb circuit manaocemeni them : I can't do anythinsr aboutit." counter goods, to exchange for cash or country produce. King's 500 yard cotton 5cts and 1,000 yards French thread Sets. 500 flower pots- Shoninger Organs at reduced rates of four dollars each. $41 to $137. . Easy terms of $10 cash $5 monthly. . Big sales on them last year. 3 m. Apr. 15 86. For the Pbohibitioxmt. ' ! EIGHT AND LEBEETT. In the British House of Com mons are 150 members who are di rectly or indirectly interested in the liquor traffic, while many of the Lords and some oi the Bishops derive large rents from rum shops. No wonder Mr. Gustafson has felt compelled to launch a simon-pure, one-idea Prohi bition party in England. The casting vote of the Speaker defeated, prohibition in the New foundland Legislature. Exchange. May-be the temperance people who voted for the man who occupied that speaker's chair, wish they had elect ed him as a party Prohibitionist, one whose chief aim would be to strike the Rumocraoy every time. Oh. yrel I ! wp may learn in time. ected. 'A moments thought, how- influence ot whisky - money. heu 1 It . t 111 I I I .-.J. 4l.n Cnlintdl v- I Af nnn ever, reveals tne iaci tnac its sense we niusb nave mcjuuiuiai caC,,u depends wholly upon which word is tive branches of the governments in emphasized. the hands of the same class of men, Party spirit means a settled con so!that the interpretation and execu- TnVli'rm nnrl lptrmin atinn in stirW tnTtion Of the law shall be fiV Ofable to one's old party, right or wrong, dead Prohibition and; not, as at present, or alive. It is a spirit which never opposed to it. , To accomplish these asks whether the issues and ideas ends, a great national Prohibition around which the party first gather-: party is absolutely necessary. We ed, have been practically decided, it shall never have i Prohibition, such as ives upon the same sounding words we desire, until we nave a I'ronioi and names. It cares nothing for tion party, tully organized, strong vastrnew, living issues which time is enough to control the government forcing upon the country at every state and national. , And such a par fiim ITHp man who ''nets with his tv we are ffoinsTto have. party, simply because his father did so, orbecause he early began so to act, and has been too lazy to stop, or whose eves are in the back instead of the front of the head, or who dares ' The recent letter of Jeff Dav s,read - I i i f i 11 . . x f"TT onH tne; people dv me governor oi social lords, or who is afraid to be in J'exas, which turned the tide of pub the minoritv for conscience sake, or "O interest against tne i-roniDitioi. r I -l i : rn lX who ever acts from regard to perso- sme in tne great exas contest ior nal friends, or for bread and butter the constitutional amendment, was a for himself, that man is acting pure- very unfortunate thing. His entire Tiia letter is lull ot sopmsm, wnicn any partv Is his political God. He is the nnprjndiced mind can easi iy perceive neio partisan ! liis wnoie plea against constiiuuonai Party spirit however isan entirely prohibition is couched m that mis- ,iiffUTOnt fi,in,r it. ia-'fiiA smr t comprenenueu wora, -liDertv. xqq which for conscience sake will cleave many , men, like Jeff Davis, take lib to, or abandon, any party at whatever erty and license to be synonymous cost and under anv circumstances. If terms. , : iioerty is tne opportunity no existing party has his aim, he will i the tree exercise ot our own lacm make one. though like Luther he has in the performance of duty, and in the pursuit of eood. under the ment is as much ordained of God as taw of benevolenca j License is free is the church, and his duties in tne d"om from the restraints of dnty and one as conscientiously sacred as in obligation, ana always is an attempt v.fv,. nQ;nr nr;nr.orl fhat : to iejralize & wrons in order to lree any line of action, or any candidate, tne actor irom tne aeservea penai is proper or is improper, his spirit ties ol some law violated by the act. eads Lim to favor, or oppose, regard- J 1 he right ol liberty covers not the ess nf who plKft mv Rtaml witn liim. privilesre of doms as we wi 1, but as A man nf anirif not n. rlnmh flrivpn We believe We OUffht CO Will. JNO in ,Vv -.v me a uusii urauur, yuL ol tnonsanus lis record is unusual, una worthy of wn0 iiave b3en delighted by his hu jecial commendation. ! congratn- m0r, ad thrilled by his patriotic el oquence, fewrknow this .inanV verv l "1 . I 1 I upon it, ana lencitate tne cause upon stranae history. I At the risk of of 1 i It. ' i -x T I . . so creuitame tin outcome oi vvnax fAnfl no. n;m art mrv.i00h i3 i T will . , ,i . -. : , ' was, as to particular meinou uuu ier- venture to speak of it. He is the ritorial plan, largely a doubtful- ex- sole Surving lineal descendant of old periment. . . King John Sobieski, of Poland. His , It should be borne in mind -that f,, hundred bar-rooms, and therefore she this was hvely a frohtbttlo count" are t' in nf nas got tiiern ana whenever you don t CfHirsc 6r circuit. It was popularly thfl nr - n whi1fl 1, to . ho,n thv wnn r. t Iioiti wh v rrnn flnoo thorn tit I -i . i j . . . . n j I 7 7 , J ""j i"uvj "uvu4 - iinaerstooa to e a-parcy matLer, auu ai.rni.i l,,. Tf si mun s 1 f a rflp a n rl -flrVl rl a liia nm Li . i . l ' . I Qe locai managers ol every camp h undred yeara of transmitted inb er onn act w a I nnn r wdnt thorn I novt I n irr i rn tt . . . il . m, ..- rw , - were eitner vv. v. x. u. women, .01 :tQT100 ;0,iQ oQr,fQa ,vp nrk naa trki thorn I . r ottoi rrr in 1 . 1 1 1 j . 11. ? . I . 1 A ovu .'") '"Known tnira party svmpatnies, or u:0i,,v,i. cnem ; 1 ve got no interest in tnem, aV0wed party Prohibition men, whose uoro :n a . fnr.an ia,i o Yon know that is not so. You have threu-hundred bar-rooms in the city of Minneapolis. IF as an evi dence and an advert sement to the world that Minneapolis wants three '.' Bfi. R. W. TATE, tr: cticing Phjeician, Greent-boro N (J., ottci a hi I'rol'essional Services i,o the; citizonaof Greeissboro and .Nurroundipg couulry. Office at Portti& Daiton's drug store. When not there can bo found at" his resi dence on Asheboro street, opposiie Col. T. B. Kooh's. .r Ja!2U Piedmont Air-Xiino Route. my hands of the whole concern say to you my brother, : you ; cannot wash, your hands of the whole ' " vj x ivulv.il,u m,u, here in aN foreign land, upon the ash leadership in local work meant- the platformj his father, a Polish Geiler- 1 A party's upbuilding. Then every al took arfc ia the Revolution of J46' i Richmond and Danville System. livelihood CONDENSED SCHEDULE IN EFFECT the JULY 24, 1887. T BAINS KUN BY 75 MERIDIAN TIME. OrtTTfBTr-nATTITT camp opened with St. John square at and paid the penalty, lying two years Lv. New York ; DAILY. No. 50. No. 52. AMi. I . T 1 M 1 .1 . ' x . -" tne lore, ana unuer tne uisauvauuise : nri- .lnnn Drti;k.VD- anA Uoir cern Deiore tne great uou, , wno is wide.sbread prejndice :iocx2Utn . 1 l r 1 " 1 1 - 1 " .1 JUUH V. VAX UAAW VI.CH XIC ' T CbO .- VX AV-V. AA mio oiir! inct nnril 7rn navo ay nn na.1 i - i i i t i . . t xt. 1 .: . ;T Vfr;J ruTVTr " mw fitter natrea oi nun. xi forth and hanged, as were also liis " -fe v i was a serious mistaice in tae circuitH mu.,! ;wun...im: t,j you, both individually and as a eiti manaemenfc it lav iusi here. Wiser V- : ... . . lit . i 1 1 v uuu. uic cu -viva uu y , nci c ov-ij i 7on TOirh mni" -. a mnar nmtiinnrinr . . t i . cm x i . i - j. - . . .. lliuti . uiuivu. viuu.uvv.. rmr Wftni llOVfl tl U .r . lin IH.KI. fill 1 - 1- - T . 1 . ' I J ' I I j , ' , ,., , , l - a'"" ' -- out oi x'oianu unaer military escort "r., ' J .--o. .... tne wllole rouna. it was uenevea, a bv decrees which forbade their "" "o- presume, tnat lie would draw me ulirn ,u itCT p.iaofi, . 1 A V I j I - - I 1A 11VAVI I 'V-' AA 141 ly Vi VCCBULX 1 f AXCXi -.-v-k riin I."' i 1 nml hAt-M1 . ff iArl iit 1 . " . t 1 I . . luic uu Uv curious crowd to begin with : and .ai twplva wars nld: vnnna W. just as long as you value party above first he did so; at the last in some Lid's mother, the countess, died in punty, ju .ivug us juu .u piaces, he did DOL -X'here were Sign rndon: and John rm tn Am Prin' ty, above righteousness, as long the-last fortnight or more, of a con- fn. frtunm ft Pilin1(1 TTn vno - . . . I . - t . V A A.. , VVAV tM VWU ft UIV1AVV4 ..V 1 S I jruu vau L,,j aa r uca3 certe(1 boycott against liim, wnicn no word of our language, but he had aoove SOOriety ailU CUD saiYAWJtl OI hp , in snniA ' mnsian ra. no-n. nst. aI I these debiuched thousands in Jour Lv,0 fpiio community, just that ion : you are We had line audiences, in the main :n ti1( TT S armv n a hii SuiuS uB iruciu iu. ii Dat lt wa3 m SPlte OI AiepUDllCan bn TMr, ; mnit.ai-- wnrioo read of Liberty's land, and his young heHrt hungered for it. lie enlisted er, and It- 4- if iirn.i i n OTM l-rt r ItltAiin I i " uui iu in of1 - ,uu,,l'u was tpn vftRrs in mi ir,Arr servira in the man that keep this damnable efforts to shape it otherwise. Bain's eluding the whole of our civil war, thins upon those people, f Applause.! irmwWfnl 'nnTinlAHt.v And swtn'raa iu' -dt.:- u. ....ii.nr. - - .. .... . j . :- a(( mc tiusc ui tuis ue lveiit wj jAtAiuo, yen command oi a As loug as you love your Democracy of speech, coming first of all, would andwas giv or love yaur 'Uepubhcanlsin better have softened many asperities-, of ment in the than you love regi- Philadelphia 'V Baltimore "Washington " Charlottesvlle " Lynchburg " Richmond ' Burkeville Keysville Drake's Br'ch Danville Greensboro " Goldsboro Raleigh "Durham" " Chapel Hill " Hillsboro " Salem ' " High Point "Salisbury i Ar. ; States ville. " Asheville, " " Hot Springs Lv. Concord, Charlotte Spartanburg Greenville 4 45am 7 20" 9 45 ". 1124" 8 35 p m 5 50" . p ta 480 6 57 9 43 " 11 00 " 3 00am 5 05 " dTing souls. MA Pusillanimous Set." Says the editor of Uhe Richmond, Virginia, Christian Advocate "A few days ago the keeper of a sa loon in this city boasted in our hear ing that the barkeepers were bigger men in this city than all the churches and that they could 'clean outfall the praying people, and rule Richmond as they pleased. He had unmixed contempt -for the "whole race of church-goers. They seemed to him a pusillanimous set mumbling prayers for the spread of religion on Sunday and at home, but meekly going to the noils and votfne foi the candidates . selected by the worst elements in the Community." '. Prohibition in Texas. Every State wherein the temper amce sentiment, waxes strong seems bound to learn for iiself the well settled fact that Prohibition does not orohibit. . Texas is the last State to have the craze. Some years ao temperance crusade in Texas would have been thought as good a Joke as a campaign against smoking in Mex ico. But our special despatches from that State to-day tell a remarkable story as to the growth of the Prohi bition sentiment there. The vote oi: the constitutional amendment at the election this week has been separa ted from politics,; and the result is admitted to be in doubt The liquor makers and sellers and drinkers otiffht to see in this revolution a warning not to resist reasonable res ' frictions and fairly compensating taxes upon the traffic New York World. Js it not. a little strange that the whisky men cannot see, any - more tnan the fanatical Prohibitionist, that Prohibition does not prohibit at all, at all? No sensible individ ual expects' that prohibition laws will be executed as they should be by men who are " in sympathy with the traffic and who hold theii , office by the suffrages of whiskyit3s. These! jmen vink a and aid in the viola r-1 i U.A. -A. -ft. v auu vtM Y asperities oi ment in the Mexica'u arm v. to onnose Nothroiint i .ii.. . . . - Uyiter nP ,,,i rf And oneri' d the wav well. UfaTlmllinn All V,4a Hativo i ioflrfo Lv..; Atlanta than you love the principle of Jesus while the tributes paid by him and were at fend with Austria. Ami tho Christ, better than you love the m others of us with Governor St. John ftsh,hHShmntnf fV,rmcn PmnirP nr, tegrity of your own nature, then you would have dulled the edge of parti- tbe American Con tinent by an Aus- are Hums uu uj leaiiuusiuic iui uie M h , l- b trrw , in hparta Ot u: it.. I ULIU . - - I I I ll I I III III! -I - I I H continuance of this damnable traffic in this country. People should have then ha1 the Governer come on, he many, and roused the inoerest of alL j eighteen said, to me, "1 don t tmuK you to tal k about all t heec fide ona:ht issues i and prohibition in t!i3 pulpit." But that is what got ma. avMy IVoai the loyalty I plsd.ei and. vowvd to my wile. That is what carnci mi awuy from the duties I owed to 1117 chii- dren. That is what carried me away from the service of Christ to the ser vice of the devil. That is what car ried me. into the very fumes of the beast,f not a hired cheerer at the rate tell igent oeing can have a right tojsulphurous mouth of hell, and Jesus 5 - , - 1 1 1 1 1 i. : i i 1 . 1 - of so many for a dollar, he uses party nse ni3 noeri-y ueyonu tue limits oi as aninstrument for the expression benevolence. JA certain degree of of his conviction, and whenever his freedom of action, which is consist- udgment and consequent conviction ent with the general good, is the etanged, will his party change, un- right of every moral being m God s ess, lucky fellow, his party has kept universe. Such freedom is to him a Mice with him. , source and condition of happiness. Party spirit! Title of nobility ! A jnoral being existing alone in the Far better than to be dead of party ! world,; would be; without restraint, except such as a regird for his own EALEIGH WET. goou would impose, lie wouiu nave a right to use every utility for his The News-Observer says the. board own advantage. The moment au- ofcommissioers met yesterday morn- other similar being appears, his lib- ing and at once made Known the re sult of their secret session in the con sideration of applications lor license to sell beer and wine in Kaleigh township. There were in all 25 ap plicants, but the sense ot the board was Ithai," only nineteen licenses should be granted. J his of course makes llaleigh a wet town. There is in reality but little difference be tween beer and wine, and whisky so far as its effects are concerned and any discrimination made in favor of the former is a simple point scored for license. . . Further than this when beer sa loons are once opened . it win be a verv easy matter to sell wlnskv. and detection will be much more difficult than when there were no saloons i at all. ! Where it is allowed to sell beer or wine nothing is easier than for the saloon keeper to put wh sky in the glass when his customer come3 in and calls for "white wine," and the world is presumably none the wiser for it Thus it is seen that Kaleigh is virtually wet. License has been issued to sell wine and beer, and the traffic of whisky and other intoxi cants has been made easy. The spirit 01 the law has bet n evaded and a technical loop-hole found through which to dodge. 1 he people ot Ka leigh at the ballot box havesaid that intoxicating drinks should not be sold in their town, but there was one way to set at naught the verdict ot the people, and that way has been resorted to, being a judicial ruling that a spade is not a spade, and that intoxicating drinks are not intoxica ting drinks. , With all due respect to Judge Mernmon who made this decision we ' think there could be be found scores of men who probably have drank more beer and wine than Judge Merrimon ever did and others who never drank any at all, who would take issue vith the Judge squarely on the decision, and .we are very much of the same opinion as the rustic philosopher whose voice has been heard from the Tokay ; Vine erty ia prescribed .: The absol ute and relative goods of his new neighbor demand the exercise of benevolence in their observance. The logic of Mr. Davis is g eatly at fault in striving to make the mi pression upon his Texan friends that men have a right to drink as' they please. The - very constitution of heir physical, being is "a law - that limits the freedom of everv individ ual to drink as his abnormal appe tite may demand.5 The law s of his nature are prohibitory, lie has neith er right nor liberty to drink as he will, unless he wills to observe his personal good; and, if he does that, he will drink! none. i ' ' - . . .. T he argument based upon : "sump tuary legislation" is too silly to ema nate foin the brain of a sound mind ed man.- Alcoholic liquors no more fall under the head of sumptuary laws than do arsenous acid, chloride of mercury, or nuxvomica. Sump tuarylaws are intended to regulate alimental substances, such as can be assimilated into blood, flesh, bone or muscle. But since God made the world, no being has been able by any chemical or physical process to vital ize a single drop of alcohol for : or ganized purposes. ; It is a devitalized substance excreted by millions of.mi crobic animal-beings and a combina tion of Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxy gen in a state of cursidity, the dernier resort of dame Nature to save the elements from utter annihilation. . K. L. Abernethy. Christ redeemed me from it all. And now I am going to fight the thing that is damning so many thousands of other men as it was damning me. I would not stand in any; cowardly pulpit, in America or in any 'other land, where they would padlock my month upon this subject. I would not step my foot into the ; pusillani mous pulpit run by a pusillanimous crowd that would want me to stay my v(ice or bold my hand from the greatest enemy Jesus Christ has got in the world to-day. Applause. Let me tell you people another -thing that, if that Bible i3 true, is as true as the Bible itself,and that is as long as yon keep up these institutions in your midst for making drunkards and orphans and criminals, as long as you keep these three bundred fac-. tories at work night and day in your midst turning out this terrible crop, all your alms-giving and your chari table organizations and all your char itable institutions are so many in sults to God. Cries of "that is so." You cannot run three hundred crim inal factories inside the limits of the citv of Minneapolis, and then bribe God with an orphan asylum you can't run all these gambling institu tions and all these places of licen tiousness and all these places of hu man debauehery in the midst of this growing city . 01 Minneapolis, and then bribe God with poor little char itable institutions and fairs and strawberry and ice-cream festivals It you want to please -. liod, it you want to do a mighty work for hu manity, and if you want to save souls alive, stop your factories" and then you won t need your charitable or ganizations, or on han homes, nor poor-houses, nor your inebriate lums. - ' might have faced larger audiences everywhere than "at a few points greeted him, and he would , surely have won them, as he always does, to belief in himself and the leform he so ably advocates. I wrote not long ago of the Gover nor's personal characteristics, and the platform influence he exerts. Let me add something about others of the camp combination now dis banded. They formed a singular di versity of styles and gift3, the seven speakers. First and peerless every where as an orator stood and ftands George W. Bain. For me to describe bi3 matchless platform graces would be a work of supererogation. They are familiar to all who will read these words. But I may sav that Col. Bain loses nothing in power as the Those who are in our debt will confer a favor on us by "sending in the amount due at once. : Ar. Greenville " Spartanburg " Charlotte " Concord . " Salisbury "High Point " Greensboro " Salem " llillsboro ," Durham " Chapel Hill ""Raleigh "Goldsboro "Danville " Drake's Br'ch Keysville . Burkeville " liichmond ''Lynchburg " Charlottesv'le " Washington ".Baltimore " Philadelphia " New York prince, lie served months as a volunteer officer, and his regiment was the first to enter Quentaro when , Maximilian surren dered. He stood within one hun dred feet of that unfortunate would- be Emperor when Mexican bullets ended his career. I expect he would have, taken pleasure in personally commanding the "squad that fired those fatal shots. : His inborn hatred of royal pretense and tyranny is deep, intense, abiding. Of princely birth, he is Republican by every breath he draws; In every conviction of his great princety soul. It is worth much to hear John Fo- bieskl plead for American patriotism, sleepers between Montgomery and Wash and denounce the anti-American mgton and Washington and Augusta Pullman Sleepers between liichmond 3 10" 5 17 " 5 56 " 610 " 8 50 " 10 44 " 3 30 p m 5 83 p 111 6 41 " t5t0 " 7 20 " t7 2 ) " 11 15 " 12 39 am 1 26 ". 2 25 am 5 36' " 6 50 " . 120pm No. 51. 7 00 pm 1 04 a m 2 19 " 5 05 " 6 01 " 6 45 " 7 5S " 8 28 " 11 30 " 12 07pm .12 47 " tl 20 " 2 10 " 4 30 " 10 00 am 12 44 p in 1 00 " 1 40 " 3 45 " 1 15 p in 3 4J " -8 23 " 11 25 " 3 00am 6 20 " 2 30 " 4 25 " - 5 04 " 5 21 " 8 05 " 9 48" JSlOpm tl 00 a m 2 37" 3 32 " .630" 10 16 " 11 23 " 12 31 p m 5 88" 7 35 " 11 59 a m 100pm 3 84 " 4 48" 10 40 " No. 53. 8 40 a m 2 34pm 3 46 " 6 25 " 7 23 " 8 01 " 9 13 " 9 40 " fl2 30 a m t2 34 " t3 50 " tO 31 " ill 2) " 11 29 p m 2 44 a m 3 02 " 3 55 " 6 15 " 2 00 " 4 10" 8 10 " 10 03 " 12 35 p m 3 20 " Daily f Daily, except Sunday. jMondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. SLEEPING CAlt SERVICE -On trains 50 and 51, Pullman Buffet Sleepers between Atlanta and New York. Pullman Buffet asy- THE PIELD AT LAEGE. Close of th.9 Great" Camp Circuit - Some "Words about the Workers--A Foreign Born Ameripan-His Love of Liberty. . Mountain Lake Park, Md., July 27. : On Mondav, the first Lever Series of Prohibition Camps came to a close at ChnmeWa Lake. Ohio,: " In thirty- seven days thirty-three sets of meet 'ings had been held, three, days in a years wear on. But ratlier does he srsiin in strenth. and in the grasp of the great principles which underlie this movement. At many places on rmr ftirfini he had spoken irom one to six times before, but at each the testimony was fervent and uniform "Rain outdid himself." His mar- velously musical voice has held lip perfectly,' and the hard round wore upon him less. I fancy, than on any other of the seven. Whenever we heard Bain it were easy for some of us to violate hat commandment which says, "Thou shalt not covet." Yet I think no other speaker envie3 him the rare reputation he enjoys, the exceptional gifts whereon it is based. For he is as simple and un affected as anv child, amid compli ments-and praise that would have made ffiddv tht-head less true and o . . - well balanced ; and to know him as it has been my privilege, in the home circles and in daily companionship afield is to love him as a brother. Bennett of . Kansas, ' was new to most of us, as to the audiences that faced him. I had met him several times, incidentally, in his own State , y w. and out of it, and wondered if Gov. St. John's endorsement 01 him were not extravagant. But from two or three personal hearings, and the tes ti monies bonr about v. him at every r t n i.: camp, i-conciuue tne uyveruors esir- mate correct. "Van Bennett is a cvclone. So said St. John, lie . is an original, anyhow ; a man of unique appearance on the - platform and off it lean, nervous, impatient of all wrong, keen ' of wit, sharply sarcastic,' incisive at times as a Tole do blade, (I don't refer to Nasby's,) cruel often in comparison, unsparing of denunciation, terribly personal in his application of truth, wonderfully well read in political history, ready with apposite citations, swift to lay conduct, the disloyal spirit of men who come to this country to break its laws, to condemn its ideas, to defy its authority. "I came here," lie de clares, "for liberty; but not the lib erty to get drunk. I had that liberty on other shores. And though I was not born in America.! am an Ameri can." Yon believe it in spite of his partly foreign accent. You recognize in his broad, strong face the ardent love of a loyal man for his native land : you accept his patriotism as genuine: you welcome him as alien but by the accident of -birth, a broth er that makes national : brotherhood. He knows more of American historv than the great mass and Greensboro, and Greensboro and Raleigh. Pullman Parlor Car between Salisbury and Knoxville. Through tickets on ale at principal stations to all poi ts. For rates and information apply to any agent of the Company, or to Soi,. HAas.T. M or Jas. L. TAYLOR. Gen'l Pass. Agen", Washington.. D. C. or 3. S. POTTS, D. 1 A., Kichmoud, Ya. CAPE FEAR & YADKIN VALLEY RAIL ROAD COMPANY Condensed Time Table. To ake if ec at 5 15 a m . Mon'iy. July - k5 1887. - MAIN LINE Thaix North. Ieave Bem ettsville, Arrive Maxton, of native born ; V66 laxtn' ' ' Arn p. Fiivettuville . he has the most marvellous memory Leave Fay e ille. for historic facts and names and Urnve Sauford, ueave oaniora, places, ot any man I,have ever meti Arrive Gr ensboro, U is Leave Greensboro, Arrive Germanton, His heart like his body, is big. intellect well matches both. Would that more Sobieski's came from lands afar! MJ 10 "'"c uul Leavfi Germanton spoken of these last meetings, though I Arrive Greensb ro, Veil - deserved mention-at S8Srdr' ! Hamilton, Dayton, Springfield, Fos- L ave S nford, toria and- Chippewa. At Fostoria. Gov. Foster's partner, Gen'l. V. S. Arrive Maxton, Pass and Freight , Mail j-nd Pass. 10 10 am 5 15am 11 20 44 7 15 44 11 30 " 7 40 -4 130 pm 1100 " 2'0 44 9 30 " 4 05 , 44 1 40 pm 4 15 " 2 15 44 7 25 " 8 00 " 10 15 am 1 15 p m Pas . and Mail dinner at Fayetteville. TiiAfN South. Pass. . ud Freight Mail a-- d Pass 3 UO p m 5 00 44 9 50am 1255 p m 1 15 44 320 " 3 30 " 5 15 44 5 25 44 Pflvno harl nhnrrro nf tlio. namn and o I LiS&VQ VI i X On, J . & 1 44 Arrive Rennettsville. 645 44 noble Prohibitionist he is, spite of j Passenger and Mail dinner at business association. He should and will come to the front in Ohio tics. The Neio Era 7 0 a m 1 17 pm 1 55 "J 6 00 "i 12 15-" 3 45 4 4 15 " 6 15 44 Sanf ord Factoky Braxch. Freight and Pass. Train Nokth. managers Leave Milboro, Arrive Greensboro, 7 45 a m Tkain South. Leae Greensboro, Arrive Milboro, 5 30 p m 7 35 44 poli- had I control at Springfield, and worked up the attair grandly, giving it great success. Chippewa brought us a i,iut axzv ..--.aw Freisht and Passenger Tr in runs publican interruption that made our between Fayetteville and Bennettsville on final meeting lively, aud wound up Mondays, Wednesdays an1 Frida s. Uha Aiwim't in crvinforl fooV.;, at Freiffht and Passenger Train run be- UliV VIA V A A. M. Vt . UDCillVU KJ Yt j O - the quartette is moored upon the ween -ye eV1 19 & ? - , . , , , , days, Thursdays ana Saturdays, and be- muuu. w g " s tween Greensboro and Fayetteville Mon- tne xemperance Assemoiy held here, days, Wednesdays and Friday and presided over by Mrs. Carrie r Passenger and Mail Train r.;ns daily ex- Bnel. The place is charminsr, rest- cept Sundays fnl .inVl full nf hnlfnrr ;f! The Paseneer and Mail trai 1 makes I would like to write of it at length. Some hme may be I will. A. A. Hopkins. -Sgnd in your subscription. close connection at Max on with tarot Una Central to Ch rlott and Wilmington. Trains on Factory Branch run daily ex cept Sunday. - W. E KYLE, Gen'j Pass. Ag1 J W. FRY jGe '1 PupV
The North Carolina Prohibitionist (Bush Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 12, 1887, edition 1
2
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