I i Advertising Brings Success. h.-ii it ;i.vri tf advertise in the Gold I.hak, if Known by it.s well fi!l"lailvfrtiKiiiKolumns SENSIBLE BUSINESS MEN lint f-tritinii" to spend L'fwiii :i'incv .vhpre no r i.i ' i m if- :ir- HiH-n . That is Proof that it pays TbemJ - THAD R. MANNING, Pnblisfcer7 TT . Oakolina, lET'RArieisr's Blessings Attend tt XVTT s vi.. A v HENDERSON, X. R, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1898. vM?yj ?s?i -p; the custom is for Princesses their beauty by covering : .art of the face with a veil. : a the beauty of many of iiihiurlen because of the weakness and sickness pecu liar to the sex. If the Egypt ian custom pre vailed in this country, many sufferers would be glad tc J "1 cover thei: n r e m a t ii re v - i - v wrinkles, theii .' ' . r. . i- MiiiRcuuieeKS, their unnealthv , from the eyes of the the veil of the Orient. M "i H s s 3 e 2 fc.a 6.5 s b n v.-ornan's true beauty, r s-'t'ontj and well in those : w'.r.cli her whole general Is. It corrects all men- is. It stops the drains I. It restores the womb : v'ace. It removes the :.K',e. backache and ;. it takes the poor, de ''ak, haggard, fading ? '.:uts her on her feet her face beautiful by l.' V. t.'il. is s !! it for $1 a bottle. il;i:s:ra:tJ book for -women. ' regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga. TRY ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. SHAM" INTO YOUR SHOES Allen's Foot-Eae, a inwler for the fret. T cii'i'-painful, saol leu. surirting, nerv nur ti-i-t ami instantly takes the sting out i i ruins ami luiiiioiw. It's the greatest rointoit dicnveiy of the age. Allen's r'.'ot-F.nsi' makes tight or new shoes feel i '.- It i- a ci-i tain cure for Chilblains, 'Aeating. callous, lireii, ach i ngx 1 eet . Try i' to 'lav. Sold ly all druggists ami shoe i.i.-s. ,."et. Trial package FliElt. Ad All. n S Olm-ted, Le Koy, N. V. PARKER'S ViM'.i BALSAM Clennt-a nml Tmitifit the hair. ,4, Tr?? - , Tr 1eiA 1 r'JMfl- iniiiimitt uw"ui. J 'j .Ji",ll, . 1 m,.,w,U ENNYRQYAL P3LLS E y-CV OrlffinnlBn 1 Or:ly Clnili:c. r j' CArc lwa r- iiat.le. lajils ask V'i7'''' ' Brawl in (cd anil n'otallic t t','2t,OIl''! with blu tihh-.n. Tuko 1 Vrurwauti imitation, ai iKupptsta. or Afnrt -lc. I W in fltfucpt fT f.rficTi'ars, testimonial at. 1 O "KeiUf f.r I.u.i irtifKtr, bv rrturi, .A IT RluiU l,00( 1'. --union ! .Vim-1 Va.r. IjviJ t au Lccai iruixuu- t JiilutUu 2 Thousands f. ! Testify TO THR WONDEKFliL Cl'KATIVI- I'OWEKS OF 0 Mfsl Job Person's Remedy. r f ! I OrcJtcst oi al! Bloor! Purifiers. Nature's own remedy it never dis appoints. It has stood the test for more than a quarter of a century. Has cured others it will cure you. The most aggravated forms of Scrofula, Old Sores, Rheumatism, Eczema, Tetter, and all dl-eases of the Ulood and M.in permanently cured by its use u h-reother treatment failed. Write lor book of testimonials. I'ostoftice ami laboratory, Killrell, . '. in Henderson hy The Horsey Drug Co., Phil M. Thomas, and V. W. Farker. r t : r c r ; t i. i V James W. White, Merchant Tailor, Henderson, N. C. ri; f .iits ami Trousers made to order :!! the Litest Ini)oited Fabrics Fer i or :,; and sat isfaction guaranteed. Clean- -. pveing and renairitig done with dis- aial iieatness. 'M'uttinga specialty." il outer will convince the most fas- s- 1'iices to suit the times, fill and winter samples are now for inspection. all and examine and eet prices before you buy your lit. 'e over F.eacoin Uros. store, ejiposite :!:ee. At., ill - LARGEST STOCK -OF- Di iniggists' Sundries, I N TO W N . UAHE li A UOA1NS IN Drummers' Samples of Brush es and GomDs, Razors, Razor Strops, &c. FLESH BRUSHES AT COST AND MANY OTllEll UAliGAINS YOU WILL FIND ALSO. Your patronage is solicited. W. W. Parker, Handsome line of silks for nhirt waists ami trimming, nno satins, etc., at II. THOMASON'S. aids a-e legulator i,..viici' to lie shaken into the shoes. ;- -i':iMri your feet feel swollen, i i on- aii'l laiu. If vou have smarting t or Unlit shoes, try Allen's Knot-Ease. v. imi,-; tin- feet ami makes walking easy. !. . wiilli n.aml sweating feet, blisters i cillous spots. K lifves corns ami .ion. of all pair ami is a certain cure i ' 1 1 i 1 . ;t i 1 1 ami Fnt hit s. Trv it to Ndd !iv nil (I i uirirists ami shoe t..r :?. Trial package FItKK. Ad- 1II..I, OliM.t.i.l I.. IN.,. V V .11K II Willie. II, il X. SOME STRAIGHT TALK. TRUE ATTITUDE OF WHITE PEO PLE TOWARD NEGROES. Friendship for the Colored Race on the Part on the Whites of North Carolina Clearly Demonstrated by the Conduct of the Latter in Their Course of Action, Both Public and Private. Wilmington, N. C.. November 19. ew York Tribune: I have been attracted and enter, tained by an editorial from your paper copied in the Wilmington (N. wl iiutcuiuer loin. lue usual editorial expressions in North ern papers on happenings in the South growingout of the negro problem deserve no notiee from thoughtful .Southerners, beause they are rabidly partisan and grossly ignorant; but the editorial from your paper above referred to is thoughtful, and mani fests a desire to get at the real situa tion and to deal honestly by us. Therefore, 1 desire to call attention to certain facts which you either are not aware of, or overloook. The following quotation is made from your editorial: "If the people of the Southern .States would frankly say that they wanted to be ruled by their best rather than their worst citizens, and proceeded to shut out from suiTrage undesirable white voters on the same terms as the undesirable blacks, there would be one solution. If they would devote themselves heartily to the work of training ignorant voters so as to secure o-ood Government from them, that would be a better, though a slower, process; but as it is, they retard rather than promote the advaeement and reform of the most dangerous element in their population, and legislate, not against ignorance and vice for their own sake, but against them as exhibited bv negroes." Now, as a matter of fact, we have always said we desired to be ruled by our best citizens, and we would all along have been doing SQhad not the country committed the stupen dous mistake on endowing the ncro with the right of suffrage. Had that not been done the recent deplorable conllict in our city would never have occurred. That having been done, it made it impossible for anv com munity where negroes predominat ed to be ruled by its best citizens. Will the country "now permit us to be governed by our best citizens? You say: "If they (Southern peo ple) would devote themselves heart ily to the work of training ignorant voters,1' etc. We havebeen doing our utmost to Irain the negro voter for twent-six years. In this State the w hites pay (J(h per cent, of the taxes, the negroes Si per cent. The pro portion of the school fund paid by negroes is somewhat larger than the above. The school fund is divided between the whites and blacks on a per capita basis, so that in communities where the negro predominates, the negro schools get the bulk of the money. This has been going on since the whites secured control in 1872. We have provided them with free schools in the country districts, and graded sebeols in towns. We have given them an agricultural and mechanical college, and various schools for the training of their teachers. Now what else should we do, think you, before it can be fairly said that we have devoted ourselves to training ignorant voters? Again you say that we "retard rather than promote" the negroes' advancement and "legislate not against ignorance and . vice" per se but against them as exhibited by the negro. Will you point out wherein we do that? I have no doubt that our statute books are accessible to you; will you designate one such piece of Legislation? On the con trary, in addition to the schools porvided as above, which, wo sup pose may fairly be taken as evidence of some effort on our part to promote the negroes' advancement, and the laws which provide for these schools as some legislation against ignorance and vice per se: in addition to them, I sav we have provided the negro with schools for the education and training of his deaf, dumb and blind, j anil with asylums for the care of the ; insane of his people. There are ! houses, under proper custodians, in! every county in the State for the care I and protection of their aged and; destitute. The county of New Han- over, in which the city of Wilming- ton is located, is now paying $150 ! each month for the assistance of the poor of the negro race outside those j houses and $125 per month for the! whites in the same way. The erec- j tion of negro churches is made pofesi- ble bv the generous contributions of ; white men. In all other, except J election matters, the negroes seek t unreservedly the counsel and as- sistance of the whites, in the daily; problems of their lives and receive i them without stint. In the face of.1 these facts can vou justlv say that we retard advancement of the negro? Furthermore I commend to your consideration the question whether Democracy, l. e., government by the people, ever contemplated the sud den injection into the body politic the people of a relatively tremendous number of men who were savages as compared with the native population and really aliens? And if, that being done, we then lind that uni versal suffrage under the influx of such an alien element will result in the arrest of material progress, and will destroy the fruits of civilization, can we truthfully say that, therefore, Democracy has failed? "The pure and ideal Democratic philanthrophy" no more -contemplated the admission of the Southern slaves to the full right of suffrage, immediately upon being given their freedom, than it contemplated or required the admission of tho North American Indian to that right. Jf you really desire to do some thing towards the proper solution of the negro problem in the South, vou would obtain and publish a full state ment of the facts preceding and con current with the recent race trouble in Wilmington. Whatever use you may see fit to make of this letter you at least can not hereafter ignore the facts herein ' stated when you may again write upon the negro question. - - i EDGAR ALLAN POE. (Edward Gilliam, in Charlotte Observer.) Msri. n,elacholy and melodious bard, VYhose fancy was not pawhie r,f i.a earth. But in some rare, supernal sphere had birth. Posthumous fame followed a life ill starred Belated and inadequate reward, lhe Krudging gift for work of priceless worth, Envy and enmity he knew, the dearth Of love, from which such genius is de barred, Ills was to live in "Choas and old Night." Ills soul lost in its utter loneliness. With vultures, worms and tombs to haunt his sight. And .evil shapes to mock at his distress, I rey to all passions and Fate's creatuie quite, Death was the only friend he had to bless. Lebanon, Pa., Nov. 12, 1898. Mr. Hardin Norris, clerk of the drug store of R. Shoemaker, Perry, 111., says: "A man came into our store the other day and said, I want a bottle of that stuff that saves children's lives. I read in the News about it. The children may get sick when we can not get; the doctor quick enough. It's the medicine you sell for croup.' " He alluded to Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and bought a bottle before he lefc the store. For sale by Dorsey Drug Co. OBSERVATION. The Faculty of Seeing and Being Im pressed by a Thing as it is. (Baltimore Sun.) The ability to make accurate obser vations, though it does not in itself insure success in the professions and in many business undertakings, is, nevertheless, an important, element in the mental outfit of a man who is to make his mark in any calling. It is, therefore, a faculty to be culti vated. Men who have a natural gift of observation, who not only see things clearly as they are and "retain mental pictures tilled with detail, have one great quality required in the artist or the descriptive writer. The mere observation will enable them to picture the things observed to others; for that they need means of expression language of the pen cil. But unless they can see they cannot describe; observation is the foundation of their art. Those who have had experience in art schools know, moreover, there are relatively few people who observe accurately until they have been taught to use their eyes, The drawing teacher's I task is more than half done when he has succeded in teaching his pupils ho w to observe an object, and the pupil soon learns the technique of expres sion after he has formed in his mind a clear conception of what he desires to put on paper. Most people have observed that they can talk and write freely upon a subject that has absorbed their attention, though they have been ditlident on general topics. The reason is that they have some thing to say ; the words and phrases come readily enoigh when there is a clear mental perception back of them, they are elusive when the concept is shadowy and vague. A parlor game gives a striking illustration of the neglect of most people to observe common objects. A prize is offered for the best drawing from memory of the face of a watc h. Very few peo ple can make an accurate drawing of the face of a watch until their atten tion has been called to its peculiari ties, although they may have looked upon it a thousand times. It is not an impeachment of a man's ability to observe to lind that he cannot remem ber the details of a watch face, for the subject is not one of importance and may properly be neglected, but j it serves as a strange illustration of the failure of men to note details, unless they are trained to observe. When a father is asked by his little boy to draw a horse, he excuses him self on the ground that he has never learned to draw: bis inability is really due to his inability to observe. He has no clear concept of how a horse is built, and, as a matter of course, cannot make the drawing. The abil ity to observe is not only useful, it is a source of much pleasure to the in dividual. Children are easily taught the differences between plants; they may not become botanists of note, but the training of eye and mind they thus obtain will be a source of enjoyment to them throughout their lives and may also be of great use to thorn. Many inventions and discov eries follow, as a matter of course, upon close observation. Other facul ties are called into play to make ob servation effective, but this is the foundation of successful effort, and special pains should betaken to train children in the use of their eyes and their memory. They should also be taught to answer their ow n inquiries as far as possible, for the knowledge gained in this way is much more dis tinctly theirs than that which may be given to them for the asking. An observing mind is naturally inquisi tive, but it is not necessary to ask questions to satisfy one s thirst for information. It is much better to tind out for one's self, for the knowl edge thus gained remains fixed in the memory. The child brought up to observe, to inquire and to think is sure to be well prepared for a suc cessful business or professional ca reer. Observation will give him a multitude of facts; inquiry will re veal the reasons for their existence or the relations existing between them, and thought will develop the philosophy which makes use of the lessons they have to impart. But the foundation of all this mental ac tivitv is observation. ri,.l,lo; rvi; t-ui.- n:,-. rhoea Remedy can always be depended upon and is pleasant and safe to take. Sold by Dorsey Drug Co. LESSON TO NEGROES. THEIR BEST INTERESTS UE ESCHEWING POLITICS. Views of a Colored Man Who De dares That for Twenty. five Years He Has Honestly Endeavored to Give the Best Portion of fits Thoughts and Actions to the Ameli oration of the Ills of His Race. ; (Washington Post.) Editou Post: For nearly twenty- nve years l nave honestly endeavored 10 give me nest portion or my thoughts and actions to the ameliora tion of the ills of my race, especially along such lines as I considered most substantial. This help was not ad ministered from afar,- but having voluntarily taken up my residence in the extreme South, where I was in constant touch and intercourse with all classes and both races for twenty years, I speak with some information when I attempt, through your col umns, to propound some things to the negroes by way of advice and counsel, and to the white people of America, who stand with the negroes politically, as well as those who have always been kept at war against the negro on account of politics alone. I have always appreciated very keen ly the position taken by the Post, be cause it has so accurately defined the temper and feelings of the white people toward us and advising as to our course accordingly, which posi tions have from time to time been contradicted in good faith by able ccJored men as not being the public sentiment respecting us, but which has never been contradicted by the white people themselves. The Post has certainly reflected what was pub lic sentiment, and that is that ne groes have made serious mistakes in expecting to be sustained when their interests or demands clashed with those of the white people. Referring to the race wars in North and South Carolina I desire to say that the negroes have been victimized and traduced, and in order that they may not be further deceived by any belief that the President or the national government will come to tneir renei l desire, through your columns, to suggest that section 5,299, United States Revised Statutes, discussed in the Cabinet on Friday, under which Mr. Tolbert wants Federal interferance in South Caro lina, was in fcrce when President Harrison told the negro Bishops that the President had no power. It was in force when the United States Su preme Court gave its many decisions covering what they considered denial by the States of the equal protection of the laws. It was in force when the white people of Wilmington or ganized, planned, gave timely notice, and did forcibly prevent a free elec tion, and did expel the duly consti tuted city government and informally install another in its stead. The existence of the statute in question is well known, and is no new discovery; but it ought also to be borne in mind that tho statute at tempts to construe the fourteenth amendment, defines what is meant by denying to persons the equal pro tection of the laws, and directs the President to interfere in the manner therein pointed out. The Supreme Court, our tribunal for construing the Constitution, has given several decisions saying what is meant, and the States in question will not per mit the President's interferance, ex cept in protecting the United States oflicers in the discharge of the duties appertaining to those offices. If these United States officials are mur dered, the United States courts will exercise no jurisdiction in trying their murderers, for the threats against their lives are not made be cause of their holding said offices, but because of their course outside of the duties of suoh offices. Mr. Tol bert, who appears willing to return South Carolina and die with his friends in case there is no power in the Federal government to protect those people, will certainly make a needless sacrifice, for hope held out by the general government is a delus ion and a snare. It is foolish to think there was authority under this statute all these years, yea, all through these troubles. The whole world was given notice that the North Carolina Republicans conferred with the President, the Assistant Attorney General being a North Carolina Republican, and the Presi dent sitting by and allowing all these murders, and the popular will to be suppressed by violence. The President has no authority under that statute, and it is hoped all the authorities will read what the Supreme Court says in the Virginia, West Virginia, Delaware, Kentucky and Mississippi jury cases, and in the civil rights cases, and numerous other cases where they went over the ground. Their position is uniform that the individual, who is wronged in a right under the Constitution and charged up as a wrong of omission or commission hy the State, the party complaining must proceed through his State courts and exhaust his remedy there. The cases where the President may interfere, except in enforcing the execution of the busi ness of the United States, are limited to such conditions where the State Executive shall call upon the Presi dent for help, declaring his inability to execute the laws after proving to i the President that he has exhausted j his remedies. j It is safe to say that no State Exec- utive, either Republican or Demo- j cratic, will call on the President to ! aid him in protecting the lives of the ' negroes, and it is just here that I ! want to advise Southern negroes not j to be further deceived into opposing j the political ambitions of the South- ! ern white people, of whom 99 per ' cent, are Democrats. Their aim is , white supremacy, such as we have ! . 1 1 vr cumin uer. ieKiues are; ' taught to light and fear this when J -ueir UU1 uauger auu nun cuiues from opposing it, for political oppo sition by the negroes has caused all their ills since freedom. Mr. Editor, while the Post and Profs. Washington and Miller, as well as Dr. Shadd, were mapping out the negro's ills and advising him of great opportunities in the South, I thought it strange that all of you failed to R'lvise him to keep away from politics and political conventions, and to apply himself along the lines you pointed out. If this is done, his rapid redemption and true emancipa tion is certain. If he wants to vote, let him vote with the people who have the power. The Southern white peple are Democrats, and the white peopIe,who more there, as a rule, be come Democrats; only the negro holds out to pay the debt of gratitude for nis ireeuoni. This is foolish. He ehatiJd et his fortune with the people where h is piaceu, ami no honest Republican ii ad vise him otherwise, because this opposition most naturally brings him all his ills, whereas, joining in with the white people whose interests are certainly identical with our own, be cause of the same geographical sur roundings, we place ourselvoe- in unison and not in opposition, which will certainly make them take more interest in us. What should the negro care about sound money, free silver, tariff, or government owner ship of railroads? What does he know about them? Who stops to consult him about them? Whv should negro - leaders go wild over party success, which means a few offices for them, but certain destruc tion of the lives and best interests of the masses? Is this enthusiasm honorable that sacrifices the masses for the few? Mr. Editor, you mav have noticed that in these late unpleasant things the usual result obtained; the unsus pecting poor negroes were killed, but the smart negroes came off the vic tors, as also did their white allies. who did not help when trouble came. Those Wilmington negroes could have been saved and their leaders should have saved them by yielding to the inevitable in time and reported back in time that all was well. 1 can give unsuspecting negroes this advice, and that is that they will find they can make better bargains for themselves looking to their own interests than any "combines" seek ing office can make for them, and k will prove far more healthy. The negroes of North Carolina have lost forever along the lines previously followed. It is to be hoped that there will be no disfranchisement nor oc casion for it. The whites want con trol and are going to have it. Make peace with them, and go along with them, obtaining the very best terms you can. This we must do all over the South. Do this and our troubles will end. Make no threats or prepa ration for 1900; let the white people manage it; it is best for you. Your votes decided it in Kentucky, Mary land and Tennessee, but you know but little of politics and cannot afford it, for you know that the more impor tant the negro element is the more trouble he gets into; that is why he is best off in places where his strength is small and worse off in the black districts, for statistics show that in the black districts the white man owns 90 per cent, of the lands occu pied by the negro, and the negro illiteracy is greatest. It is regretted that bloodshed was resorted to to end the negro's politi cal importance in North Carolina, and as it is now said to be ended, the writer hopes the white people will take the negroes into their confidence and cause them to confide in them for the good of all concerned, but for heaven's sake look for no outside help. Poor Baker was promised pro tection, and got it not, and his family is on their own resources, he and other members of his family being now in their graves. The national government has gone its limit in our interests, and we are turned over to the States for every thing. Let us fall in and be with them, for it is suicide to continue op posing them. I challenge any negro champion or anybody for him, to give better advice than the foregoing, under all the oircumstanees. The State gov ernments cannot injure us, nor will it profit them any to do so, and we should henceforth give them no oc casion to do otherwise than foster our best interests, after we have deferred to them in all questions of rule and government. This I submit for the consideration of all concerned. J. N. JOHNSON. The sooner a cough or cold is cured without harm to the sufferer the better. Lingering colds are dangerous. Hacking cough is distressing. One Minute Cough Cuie quickly cures it. Why suffer when such a cough cure is within reach? It is pleasant to the taste. Phil II . Thomas. Eugene Field's Arithmetic. The first book which Eugene Field had printed was the "Tribune Primer," published in Denver in 1S82. It was composed of short lessons in different lines of study. As there are said to be not more than seven or eight copies of this book now in existence, readers may be glad to see two specimen paragraphs from the lesson in "mental arithmetic;" If you have Five Cucumbers and eat Three, what will you have left? Two. No; vou will have Colic enough to double you up in a Bow Knot for Six Hours. You may go to the foot of the Class. If a Horse weighing 1600 pounds can Haul four tons of Pig Iron, how many seasons will a Front Gate painted Blue carry a young Woman on One Side and a voting Man on the Other? Pains in the chest when a person has a cold indicate a tendency toward pneumonia. A piece of flannel dampened with Cham berlain's Pain Balm and bound on to the chebt over the seat of pain will promptly relieve the pain and prevent the threatened attack of pneumonia. The same treatment will cure a lame back in a few hours. Sold by Dorsey Drug Co. RAfF niTPTinN SnilTR I North Caron-W NORTHERN PEOPLE AND PAPERS DO NOT UNDERSTAND IT. Observations of an Intelligent North ern Man Went to the Carolinas an Unflinching Republican, But Quickly Learned That the Democrats Were in the Right in Opposing Negro Domination. (Washington Post.l Editor Post: Reading V.n editorial in the Philadelphia Press of the 11th instant, I concluded to do something I have been contemplating for some lime, and do it at once that Is, write an article on the situation fn the Carolinas from the standpoint of a iNortnera man, and one who for the past ten years has been a resident of the Carolinas, and is thoroughly ac quainted with prominent people of both political parties, and also thor oughly acquainted with the status of the negro in politics. I was born a Republican, being introduced to the world in Massachusetts in the first year of the Republican party's exist ence. I was a strong Republican as a boy and reached a Republican man hood in the State of Kansas, which at that time 1875 was an almost unanimously Republican State. I was for many years publisher and editor of Republican papers, and would as soon have thought of selling my birthright as of deserting the Re publican party. This state of mind continued until ten years ago, I trav eled through the Atlantic coast States and saw the condition of things politically. Soon after that time in 18861 settled at Florence, S. C, a section of the State where the races were very evenly divided, though the white man ruled. I saw then, and I still see no way in which a self-respecting, educated, or intelligent white man can vote with the Repub lican party in the South, in local af fairs. The few white leaders among the Republicans in the "Black Dis tricts" are leaders simply for office, with no higher aim; no higher aspi rations than the money they can make; the notoriety they can attain. and the petty power they can exer cise. For some weeks prior to the recent election I was in several counties of Eastern North Carolina, and I can honestly say, in my opinion, that any man coming from the North or else where, who could see what I saw and keep his Republican proclivities in local politics is either a fool or a knave. There are manv srood men who are Republicans in the Western portion of the Carolinas, but they have not been thrown into contact with the results as have those of the Eastern portion of the State. This year, however, the condition had be come so rotten that the stench from the Eastern counties was wafted like a great miasmatic cloud over the Western counties, raising from the borders of the ocean and ascending even to the clouds which cap the Blue Ridge, and a response came which swept the State of much of its disease. The people of the Eastern counties did not desire trouble; they nad nothing against the negro; thev give him employment; they educate him paving about yo per cent, of the taxes; the whites build school houses and tax themselves to- help him. What then, is the cause for the great feeling of the recent election? The negro, in politics, is not a unit in dividually, but a unit collectively. The negro does not vote for principle or upon party issues unless you call his principle the talisrnanic word Repub lican. For this word he will sell his best friend and benefactor: for this word he will place in office a drunk en sot or a knave; for this word he will turn over to rotton officials the power to destroy the property of his employer and make it practically val ueless. Ihe negro knows no such word as gratitude when he is voting some will say that it is in gratitude that he votes the Republican ticket, but it is not so. It is because he is petted, patted and cajoled by office seekers, who are really his worst en emies. There is another reason he has had a taste of office holding. Ne groes who could not read or write have held seats in the legislatures of both North and South Carolina in the past; they hold offices for which they have no fitness, mentally. Hundreds of them hold positions as magistrates in the Eastern counties of North Carolina. The negro has not, nor ever will have, a judicial mind: it is not given him by nature; it is one great fault of his physical make-up, and why should he, because he is black, be put in a position for which nature never intended him? There has been too much talk through the press of all the faults of the negro of his faults against the white race due to his sensual nature; of the dan ger from him to be feared by respect able people, etc., etc. I did not be gin this letter to discuss these ques tions, but I will simply pause to say that the negro of to-day is not the negro of thirty years ago. The old time negro is honored and respected by his old-time masters, and need never suffer if they have bread, but the "new negro," the boy and the youth who have grown up in the streets of the rapidly growing South ern towns are to be watched and sup pressed. It is the only hope of se curity, the only hope of civilization. Give the ordinary negro "an inch and he will take an eil." He has been so cajoled that he honestly thinks, at least many of them do, that they are superior to the white race. They have gotten in North Carolina so that they dictate to the Republican bosses and that is the reason they have been given nearly all the local offices in the Eastern part of the State, not because the leaders desired it, but because they were compelled to give it. The tool was rising up against the artisan, and with power to crush him. The Press speaks of "honest elec tion laws." The election laws of Caroli inai wuu ine . i their owu hands, the Republ cers could illegally register enough negro votes to carry the State, and this without the power of the white man to challenge. By the present law all names must bo challenged be fore the day of election, on specific days set apart for this purpose. The voter not being present, how can any one know from a name whether he is entitled to vote or not? There is no challenge allowed on election day. Thousands of negroes had been ille gally registered and this is why the white men not alone white Demo cratsgave it out as they did give it out, they would challenge this ille gal vote with a rifle or shot gun on the day of election. The feeling in the Eastern part of the State, as I learned from a thor ough study of it just before the elec tion, was not against the negro as a negro. The most intense feeling was against the white "fusionist," and the white Republican who had organ ized the negroes for the sole purpose of forwarding his own political ends. The tight was really- against the de bauched office holder and his minions, i The negro was a secondary cousider- ation. If he came between the up- J per and the nether millstone he would be crushed; but aside from that he would be perfectly safe. There was a settled determination that the abom inable conditions existing should come to an end, and they "did to a great extent. Tho day of negro dom ination of the Eastern part of North Carolina has come to an end; the danger of negro domination in other sections of the State has come to an end; the day of the negro as a politi cal weight to elevate unfit persons to office in the South has come to an end. With the negro vote entirely eliminated, the South could be split by the Republican party on legiti mate issues. So long as Republica n- ism means negroism in the South, so long will the Anglo-Saxon race vote as a uni; ior men who are white and represent white men. The Press says there was no negro domination. Perhaps not; but. where, as in New Hanover county, where Wilmington is located, as well as other counties, out of forty mag istrates thirty six were negroes-where the deputy sheriffs, coroners, police men, and all similar executive and judicial oflicers were uegroes, while the whites paid 95 per cent, of the bills if this is not negro domination I do not know what it means. I wish to repeat that the whites have nothing against the negro as a negro. The whites of the South will do more for the negro than will the whites of the North. Any inferior race attempting to usurp the reins of power, and dominate and domineer over the Anglo-Saxon, has made a mistake. The negro has made this mistake, but he has made it, not of his owu volition, but at the sugges tion of white men, who have used him to carry their own ends, but the dam, once broken, the originators of the break cannot control the stream. The sooner the Republican party recognizes the fact that ignorance and color cannot rule and ruin the education and the Anglo-Saxon of the South, then and only then can it hope to break the "Solid South," for Northern men, Northern Republicans coming down here to live, only make it that much more solid; that much harder to break. I am not now a resident of either of the Carolinas, but I wanted to say this much, in justification of the firm and deter mined stand the people of North Carolina have taken. They respect the negro who respects himself; they will care for him when sick and edu cate him; they will do much for him; but let him put by his vote, incom petence and dishonesty in office, they will not, nor should thev. JOHN P. COFFIN. Danville, Va., November 12, 1898. Success comes to those who persever.-. If you take Hood's Sarsaparilla faithfully and persistently, according to directions, you may depend upon a cure when a cure is possible. Hood's Pills are easy to take, easy to operate. Cure indigestion, sick headache. Result of the Elections. (Baltimore Sun.) The result of the elections con tains little comfort for the Republican party in the country at large, and not much for the Republican party in Maryland. Considered nationally, they involve a distinct rebuke to the administration at Washington upon the only live issue before the country. The storm centre of this issue was in New York, where the Republican party had the good fortune to be rej resented by a man of exceptional strengh and popularity, with a war record that was calculated to dazzle and captivate the imagination of enthusiastic citizens. Yet in spite of Colonel Roosevelt's many strong personal qualities and the glamor of his military glory, the immense Re publican majorities of over 200, W0 given to McKinley and Black in 1896 are cut down to less than one-sixth of that number. There is a moral in thi3 that McKinley and his advisers should heed if they have any regard for their political future. A woman cannot ba entirely womanly she cannot be a perfect woman if she is not in perfect health. In just so much as her sickness affecU the organs that make her a woman, in Just to much sbe lose attractiveness. This is the vital part f her health. If anything is wrong there, it may result in all manner of ills all over the body. Careless, or too busy, physi cians frequently treat the symptoms of this kind of disorder as separate and dis tinct ailments. The symptoms are many and varied, so much so that when a wo man is sick in any way, the first thought should be given to the organs distinctly feminine. About 9 times in 10 the cause of the trouble will be found there. Dr. Pierce's Favorit Prescription cares all disorders or this kind. There Is no guess work about it. There i no chance about it. It is a fact that has been demonstrated in 30 solid years of extensive practice. Thousands of women hare written grate ful letters, who have wished the whole world of women to know the wonderful things the "Prescription" has done for them. ranorftd that with th.Trr. Calendar. "f O f is perfect beauty, "An American Girl." One of the handsomest pieces of color work issued this year. 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