in
!-W ; it
VOL VI.
Professional Cards. J
PHYSICIAN AN1J SURGEON,
Offers his professional serviceto '.bo
citizens of Lincolntou and aurroun
diog councry. Olilco at. his resi
deuce adjoining Linrolnton Hotel.
All calls promptly attended to.
Aug. 7. 1891 ly
J. W.SAIN.M.D.,
II a:; located at Lincolntou and of
fers Lis services as physician to the
citizens ot Lincolutou and surtouud
iug country.
Will he found at night at the less
idence of li. C. Wood
. , March 27, 1891 ly
rmmr urn i rma im iwirniwiin niinri ncnr-
Bartlett Shipp,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
LINCOLNTON, N. C.
Jan, 9, 1S91.
Finley & Wetmore,
ATTYS. AT LAW,
LINCOLNTON, N. C-
-Will practice in Lincoln and
surrounding counties. '
All business put into our
hands will be promptly atten
"ded to.
April 18, 1890. ly.
Dr. W. A. PRESSLEY,
SURGEON DENTIST.
KOCK 1IILL, S. C.
Will spend the WEEK BEGINNING
WITU THE 1ST MONDAY Ot EACH
iiONTil at office in Lincoluton.
Those needing Dental services are
requested to make arrangement by
correspondence. Sctisfaction guar
anteed. Terms CASH.
Jnly 11, 1890, ly
DENTIST.
LINCOLNTON, N. C.
Cocaine used for painless ex
tracting teeth. With thirty
years experience. Satisfaction
jven in all operations Terms
tsh and moderate.
Jan 23 '91 lv
GO Td
BARBER SHOP.
Newly fitted u p. Work aways
neatly done,
waited upon.
'Customers "politely
Everything pertain-
trig ;to the tonsorial art is done
axxordiiig to latest styles.
" Henry Tatlob, Barber.
J. 1). Moore, President. L. L. Jenkins, Cashier.
No. 4377.
F1EST NATIONAL BANK
OF GASTONIA, N. C.
Capital 150,000
Surplus 2,750
Average Deposits 40,000
COMMENCED BUSINESS AVGUSTU 1890.
Solicits Accounts of Individuals, Firms
and Corporations.
Interest Paid on Time Deposits.
Guarantees to Patrons Every Accommodation Consistent
with Conservative Banking.
BANKING ROURS. 9 a, m. to 3 p. m.
Dec 11 '91
l,.,.. ... ., i , -
for Infante
'C Mtoria to to unll Ufd to chadrea that
t reoomnaend It u ru peri or to xnj prescription
knotrn to me." H. A1. Asceks, M. D.,
Ut So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y.
"The us of 'CaatorU'te 90 tiniTerAl and
4 merits so well known that it eam ft work
f upererofrtlon to endorse it. Few re the
InteUigent f&milie who do not keep CartonA
within easy reach."
Carlo Mism.D. D.,
Kew York City.
Late Pastor Blooming dale Bef orxued Church.
Th Cdttacb
( . A. Thompson, Seymour, Ind , writes :
"My Mater Jenny, when the was a young
girl,-siitfer4 fporu whitw swelling; which
gn atlj impaired hr general health and
made, hef blond very impure. In the Hpring
b!i was not able to do anything and could
bcarcdy et about. More than a year ago
she Uok thr e bottles ot Botanic Blood
Balm, and novfh4 is perfectly cured."
M. D. Lane, Devereaux, Ga., writes:
'Une Kiiiuiner, .several years ago, while
railroading in Mississippi, 1 brvome baly
dieted with malarial blood poison that im
paired my health for more than two years.
Several cffcnsivu ulcurtt appeared on my
ls, and nothing seemed to i ye permanen t
relief until 1 took six bottles of li. B li.,
which cured me entirely."
O, W, chandler, Tied Fork, Ark., writes;
"I was bo weak that it was only with great
effort that 1 could do anything. 1 used
several bottles of Botanic Blood Balm, and
can now d' a good day's work-"
Waiter Bridges, Athens, Term., writes :
"For ix years 1 bad been afflicted with
running sores and an enlargement ot the
U.ne in my le. I tnd ever thing I heard
i t without any permanent benefit until
Botonic Bloed Balm was recommended to
me. Alter using hix bottles the sores
healed j and lam now in testimonial unso
licited,, because 1 want others to be bene
fited. "
Two JIIeii-i-Two States.
Two men happened to be in the
perculiar position of coutroliug
their respective States in the prps
eut national contest. They are Sen
ator Hill, ot New York, and Judge
Gteshaui, of Indiaua.
These men have each a political
following that takes its inspiration
directly from its leader, and the fol
lowing of oach is quite ample to
hold the tialance. of power between
the two great parties.
Had Senator Hill decided to re
fuse the laboring oar tor the Clever
laud ticket in New York, Harrison's
success in that privotal State would
have been assured beyond doubt.
With his cordial support ot Cleve
land, the democratic canidate can't
be defeat-d iu the empire Coxnmou
wealth.
Had Jude Gresham given a cor
dial support to Harrison this year
as he did in 1888, it would have
been possible for Harrison to win its
electorial vote, but with Gresham
openly against Harrison aud for
Cleveland, only a political earth
quake can give Harrison the victory
in his own State. Philadelphia
Times.
Itch on human and norses and all ani
mals cured in 30 minutes by Woolfords
Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Sole by
J M LwinS Druggist Lincoln ton. N C
Subscribe for the LINCOLN C0U
Bier, $1.25 a year.
and Children.
CMtorl cares Cone, Oonstrpation,
Rour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation,
Kill Worm, sires sleep, and -promote dt-
reatioo,
ithoutini
W
injurious noedication.
" For several years I have recommended
your ' Cartoria, ' and shall always continue to
do so as It bag Invariably produced beneficial
results."
Edwin F. Taxdxm, M. D.,
The Wlnthrop," 125th Street and 7th Ave,,
New York City.
Cwaxt, 77 MtnaRAT Stbxtt, Nsw Youm.
McVEAGH'S LETTER.
The Keuhliuii x-Aliot-iiej
(General of Hie United Stater
Hayw He 'Will Vote ior Vlvv
laiul and divo His Reason
at length The Kcpuhlicau
i'oliey Keck left and Revol
utionary Tho MeKluley
TftrlfTaiMl the Force Hill
Iloth IJnWise Measures
Hon. Wayue, McVe igh, of Phil
adelphia, a lifoloug Republican
and Attorney General in Garfield's
cabinet, has, as mentioned in The
Landmark last week, announcing las
purpose to vote tor Mr. Cleveland
at the coming election, and in a
letter to the secretary of the Mass,
ackusefts Reform Club 'ves his
reasons for his change of faith as
follow-:
Ent rtainiug the'eonvictions I do
no other course is open to me, aud I
cheerfully accord to the supporters
of President Harrison the same
sense ot public Jduty by which 1
claim to be actuated. As both par.
ties Lave presented unexceptional
candidates, there is no reason why
the differences which exist upon
questions ot public policy should be
discussed otherwise than in a good
humor ami with entire respect for
each other's opinions.
In the present campaign what
may fairly be called the false alarms
of the canvass will prove of little
vale because of the general confi
dedce iu the safe aud conservative
character of both candidates. The
average voter knows that tree trade
is impossible in this country, for the
conclusive reason that the vast rev
enues required to meet Ihe expen
ses of the government will necessa
rdy afford a higher degree of pre
lection to our established and pros perous
manufactures than eithor
Alexander Hamilton or Henry Clay
thought desirable in infancy of our
work and struggling industries.
The average voter also knows that
the irredeemable paper currency in
use before the war can never re-appear.
On the other band, he knows
as well that no system of duties on
imports, however inequitable, can
prevent our continued growth in
wealth, iu manufacture and in pop
ulatiou a growth due to the incorn
parable gifts of Providence, the in
telligeuce and energy of the people
and tne blessius of tree institu
tions. While I am more than ever re
solved to hold duty to country fat
above any ties of party, I find my
self at piesentiu general accord
with the Democratic party aud will,
lng to trust its course in the future.
The insight, the courage aud the
patriotism the masses of the party
exhibited iu compelling the nomi
nation ot Mr. Cleveland wheu he
was without a single office-holder
to support his candidacy seem to
me to demaud that I should meet
them in the same spirit and act with
them as loug as they maintain that
high standard of policy and of ad
ministration. It is the more easy to
do so because the Republican party,
sacuring its return to power four
years ago bv promising to preseive
matters as they were, at once em
barked upon what I regard as a
reckless aud t evolutionary policy,
even overturning all the safeguards
of legislation in the House of KepT
resentatives in their baste to pass
the force bill aud the McKinley bill,
both, to my mind, unnecessary and
uonise measures.
The opposition to the force bill, as
n t oui sure to erer.ta far greater
e'l.t ili;n :t could cure, tut as also
bU vei's:ve ot ihe rights ot I he States,
has become no earnest aud widen
spiead that it is sid to have been
abandoned, hut it rnntt ut be for
goiten th it only two jeai a ago such
a measure was wniudy advocated
by President Harrison, earnestly
-i.pported by the republican party
and very naimwly escaped become
ing a law.
There is no pretense, however,
that the McKiuley bill is abandoned.
Ou the contrary, oar express ap
proval of it is demanded. No doubt
that hill, which I cannot but think
wass an uncalled-for disturbance of
the tbeu existing tarilf, greatly benn
efited a few Interests, bat certainly
it greatly oppressed many others.
LINCOLNTON, N. C, FRIDAY,
01 the protected industries them
selves many were then, as now, in
far more urgent need of free raw
material than higher protection, but
with raw materials on the free list
the bill could not have passed, for
those having such materials lor sale
controlled enonglt votes to defeat
it, and they were very likely to do
so if their bounties were d:contui
md.' The manufacturers needing
treu raw mater ia!s wen-, tfieivforci
obiiged to join in the objectionable
process ot increasing p rices by re
btrictiug production, thus adding
to the uumber of tnnts, by which
the price of Ihe necessaeies of life is
placed at the meicy of unlawful
combinations ot capital. It is not
suiprisiug that labor, believing it
self to be oppressed, soon rose in
revolt, and civil war has actually
raged this summer in four different
sections of tho country. And, of
course, the farmers, paying more
tor what they huy and getting less
for what they sell, grow poorer day
by day, and excellent farms iu some
of the most fertile sections of this
most highly protected State will
hsrdly brlug the cost of the build
ings upon them.
lint the economical evils, however
great, of the McKinley bill aud the
unreasonable system of protection
it represents are of far less impor
tance to my mind than the moral
evils which follow in their wake.
In deciding for what purposes the
masses of the people may pioperly
be taxed it may not be forgotten
ihat taxes have a wonderful capaci
ty for filtering through all interven
ing cdstacie till they reach the
bowed back of toil and resting there,
and therefore the giving cf bouns
ties, under any form of taxation, is
mainlv the giving away of the wages
of labor. The sad tr uth that the
curse of the poor is their poverty is
illnstiated in nothing more clearly
than iu the undue share they suffer
of Ihe burdens of taxation.
But apart from this consideration,
ought not taxes only to be imposed
as requiied for public purposes, or
may they also b imposed for the
pecuniary advantage of such per
sons or classes as are able to con
trol congressional action in their
favor? It, seems to me like a travs
esty on taxation to require, as the
McKinley bill does, the farmer who
grows corn in Indiana to pay a
bounty to the farmer who produces
cane sugar iu Louisiana, or to re
quire the farmer who grows wheat
in Pennsylvania to payT a bounty to
the farmer who produces maple
sugar in Vermont, but it is nearer
tragedy than travesty to tax the
masses of the people to increase the
wealth of the very wealthy owners
of most ot our protected industries.
Hut even such inequality and in
justice are the least of its evils, for
while such a system endures politic
calconu-tiou is absolutely sure to
increase, as such a system not only
invites, but it requires the corrupt
use of money, ooth at the polls and
iu Congress. It is of its very os
seuce that "fat" shall be 'frieil" out
ot beneficiar ies. Who shall happeu
to do the "frying" or who shall hap
penpen to distribute the "fat" upon
any par rieul.tr occasion is mere mat
ter of detail, but while that system
lasts both will continue to be done
by somebody.
Aud the evils ot a system of legis
lative bounties, so far troiu stop
ping only begiug with those boun
lies secured to the industries pro
tected by tariff. The disastrous
course of the Republican party on
the silver question is an apt illustra.
tion of this tiutb. It ouijht to be
au honest money (party, and it
would be if it could, but whild it
demanded increased bounties for its
favorite manufacturers, it couid no'
refuse inert ajed bounties to the
ver producers, as the voles they
coutrol weie probably necessary .to
the passage of the Mcjxiuley biil
So situated the fillepubhcan party
had no alternative but to pass the
silver lavv ol 1890, doubliug the
purchases of silver and requiring
the building of more warehouses iu
which to store ihe useless metal
The total purchases made by the
government amount to nunureds of
millions of dollars, and would not
realize, if resold, ooehalf their cost,
OCT. 21. 1892.
whih the poison of a debased cur-
rency, whoso work, however slow,
is making irpelf daily more and
more felt in every channel of busi
ness and finance, and is inevitably
uuvu.K yum out or me country aud
leading us to all the evils of a tluc
tuatinS and therefore dishonest cur
rency based upon silver alone. The
Republican party cannot take any
effective steps toward repealing ihe
bill, ior tho silver men are likely, if
their bounly is stopped, to so voie
that the bounties, of the McKinley
bill will stop also.
The abuses of the pension system
furnish another apt illustration of
the evil euro to follow su::h a sys
tem ol legislation. If uougress
was to levy taxes upon the people
to cooler bounties upon t-.eitaiu
classes of manufactures, it was very
natural that the pension agents
should also join hands to increase
their fees by an indiscrimiu ite
granting of pentious. The result
is that nearly a generation after the
close of the war there is a stead
increase of the vast suras passing
thiongh the pensiou agents' hands
until now the total amount staggers
belief, and has hecomo of itself a sc.
nous burden upon the treaury
From the day ot Lee's surrender un
til now no single voice lias ever
raised against tho most generous
provision for every person uuo had
any just claim upon the gratitude
or rue country ; nut surely mere is
neither teason nor justice in legisla
tion which destroys ail distinction
between the discharge of duty and
the shirking of it, between loyal
service and desertion of colors, b.i
tweeu wounds received in battb
aud diseases conti acted in pursuit
of peace.
There is still another great anil
increasing evil chiefly traceable, in
my opinion, to the maintenance of
an excessive tariff siuce the war and
the constant meddling with it to
make higher, and that is the bii.'ig
ing to onr shores ol those vast
swarms of desirable immigrants
who degrade American labor by
these competition and threaten the
stability of institutions based upon
an intelligent love of country. Ju.-t
as the duties upon imported mer
chandise, have been increased so
has Ihe grade id imported labor
been lowered, until now, un
der the McKinley lull, there are
coming hero everyr month many
thousands of more ignorant and
therefore less desirable immigrants
than ever before. It is not easy to
exaggerate the moral evils they are
likely to inflict upon our social or
der and our national life.
As the Republican patty i now
definitely commtted to the policy
of taxing the people for the pur
poe ot giving bountios to such per
sous or interests as can secure the
necessary votes in Corgrss, so the
Demociatis party is now as definite
ly committed to the policy of res
tricting taxttiou to r lie need of the
government tor public purposes
alone. Tne jjii't fixtd between
thesH two policies of tax iti m is as
wide and deep as cm wed exist be
tween political parties, and I am
also convinced that the other causes
iu which I am engaged cannot hope
for success until the avowed policy
of the Republican party on this
subject ii overthrown,
Until then the right of each State
to coutrol elections within its bor
dets will not b seCure; until then
there la no prospect otour enjoying
the single and statde standard of
value fchicb. other civilized and
commercial nations possess; until
then there is no hope of placing
either our peus'.ou sy.d-ni or the
regulation of Immigration upon a
just and proper basis; until then
the purification of our politics wdl
coutiuue "iridescent dream' which
high K'piihliciii authority has de
cl a reel it must, always remain; until
then any pretended reform of civi
service must prove, as it has prov
ed these last lour years, a delusion
and a euare.
Aud until thn eved ballot ic
form, the best help yet discoverd to
honest elections, and alieady threat
ened with over Throw by the Re
publican managers in Maiue, Ver
mont and Indiana, must 6bare the
same fate of defrayal iu the house
j of its pretended friends. All these!
j good causes are in ihe very nature
j ot things vs relentless ftm of :
j system rf government by bounties
to favored interests, und such a
system is their relentless foe.
As 1 believe, tor the reasons I
have given, that ihe true welfare of
the COillilrV Wiml.l ! ninmnii'il t.v
j Mr. Cleveland's election, it is my
j it is my duty to vote lor him ; and 1
j recall the capacity, tiu fidelity ami
the courage with which he has
heretofore discharged every public
trust committed to him, the duty
becomes a pleasure.
Sincerely yours,
Wayne McVbaoh.
The Caoveruuu'iit Acar AVatll
Street.
While the opponents of Mi.
Cleveland are busy in their ctToits
to connect him with Wall sheet in
tluences, ihey appear to forget the
inmate relationship existing be
tween the leadors of the repuulican
party and that money center.
The near kinship ot Mr. Harrison
i as ceased to bi the subject o re
mark, as no one doubts now his
blood lelationship, an it wore, to the
goldbugs of the north, but it may
not be so well known that Mi.
Cliaum-ey Depew, the gentleman
who nominated Mr. Harrison a
Minneapolis, and who is now can-
vasainL' for him. is tho hired
attor
ney ot the Vanderbills, at a salary
of 100,000 a year, and that the. in
tluence of t he Y.tnderhil'K in Wub
street is potential. And theieis Mr
Motion, vieesPiesident of tin
United States, and head of the firm
of Morton, Bliss & Co., Wall street
brokers, thus presenting the spec
table that every hill passed by the
Congress ot the United States must
oe signed by this Wall street brok.
er.
It is the republican party that
has brought tho government undei
the, influence, of Wad street by el
ecting ii Us cheil offices men who
are dependent upon the wealth of
Northern capitalists for political
support, as well as the leading
brokers and mouy chaugeia ol the
country.
Mr. Cleveland has been ,wd is
now the consistent and persist uui
opponent of all such men and then
(titluouces. Ho one should eleny
this who knows auything ol politi
cd history. State Chronich.
A Lady I'rophe-sicfS IXer Oun
14 iltll.
Mrs. Elizabeth Talor died at. he r
home in Dilworth, yesterday mom
ing at ( o'clock, of heait disease.
(ft'Cea-ed told her i elation. laM .Sat.
ill day that she would die ii'ay
morning at G o'clock. They iaugtied
at her and tried to reason awa
such an idea as sh" seemed hrnily
convinced, of, but uothini con d
shake her beleif that she would de
part this life at that time Fridaj
;-he made all her arrangements, and
tirerlly put her house iu order Fri
day night she went to bed, telling
them all that she would be a crpM
before another day. Du'ing the
iiiht and towards day she waked
several times and asked what time
it ap, saying that it seemed a
fjiig tune until C o'clock. When
the -;!ock struck G, true to her pro
phecy, she. expired. Charlotte Ob.
wcer
A LITTLE GIRL'S KXPElitENCE IN
A UGHTHUlj.SE.
.Mr. and Mr?. Loren Tr"-ott are keepers
o. tlie Guv. LigfUli'-iise it Saud B-iitch.
Midi., and are M-ss.fi w it h a daughter
fnar years old. La-t Apnl .- was taken
down with merles, flUw.;-J unh a dread
t it couh and tumuitr into a f.-v-i, Doc
tirs at hume und at Deir. it treated her.
but in vain, thu grew w-jr; raj iJiy, until
.Ha im: a niPrA ' ha n ftfil I (if -. ;' 'Chen I
she tried Dr. Kintr's Nc Discovery and r
after the use cf two and a half lott-e was
completely cured. Iney s iy lr. Kui r ' H
New Discovery is worth Jt e'i:ht in ir lj j " " "
yet you may geta trial h.-!iiefi;.; at .1 ,.', ELECIMC L'tTii j.S.
Lawin'a drutore. Tbi3 rernedv Is t to .i,.in," we, fcr-uwa
"77T """"" j :i:.d so popular as t. need i. s; eeul rnei,
ihe W dm -ugtoii .V,'- qie haj.s lil!u AU who h.v; u-.-d Id t i j Uiitt-rs
pily remaiks that G o. li uringet, !'-,f o s r: ' "r pini.-c. a j urti
, T . y, , . n, .l,.- n ; does n..t :i-t and it is ijaarar.
Col. Johuaon, Col. l'.Mx.n, t has j .,ej u (J aM lLiU j, cnlllJ,j Electric
McKesson, Oo1. Gu'i.iie, Col. Aigo, j D'ticrs will cure alt -lipase nr tc Liv-vr
T , ... . and Kidneys, will reni..ve 1'iinpl.s, f.il.
Judge Alberto:., ria..k . inbion, Ualt Kh,ui arill util.r ate. ,,.lI,;,aU.,lJ b;
Col. Mooie, Leieto Republicans, linj'iirw bio 'd VVjl.Jrif Ma':iriM ti om tlei
jo...i the iocmticj:' ":.::"r,u:z
part in this State, are noc a b id O i ipatiofr-oid inii.-c v-j-. n Electric
exchange for Marioa Butler and Lr i''tt-rs-E..iira:iVucii... tu;i.unte.ed,or
fc Ui"iey ietundl. I rice jijc rit-) ati l Jl.tlu
Fxum, wlio are now placing the
NO. 25.
.of cu.
., : ; : .
I The mighty are falling, the centum
I ry hasten to its close and those who
! av thought the deepest, sung the
! sweetest and labored the hardest
and made their names . conspicuous ?
Ml itH annals, uiu pasting ttway wtta
its last year; Septi'raber called
away our Quaker Poet, Whittier.
October has taken Tennysou, Eng-"
land s Laureate, R nan, the distiu-
miished French Vrlrcr; Dn Ken-
dtdl, the griat chairman of Hi" Homo
Mission wotk of the Pi ( b lei i.m
chinch in this country-, -and Dr.
Allen, the Missionary hcnctactoi.ot
the colored people. Dr. - Allen is
pleasantly remembered here as the
guest of some otour people-a few
years agit and his i : st i u;t i ve ser ,
toons iu tne pi' b it-ii.iii church
and his wise aud lulp'ul advice to
out colored pcoj.le The wise ot
the piesu'eut Is icpt.l ti d i.S passing
away, and, the op ning testivit:es ot
fie Wot Id's Columbian l'Vir may bo
b'tadowed by the mantle of grief
over the Picsident's Mansion.
Slow often the lesson is repeated
"Ofatiuth God is no respetor of
pei sons". The goldeu text for next
Sunday.
11. Z. J.
JiMlgo Cr3r4liaia( ioilloii.
CmcAoo, (Vt. 7 Fi an Klin Mac
Veagh of this city, a brut In r of
Wayne MacVeagh, says it is mi.
d.iubtedly true that Jude (Jresharu
h is definitely decided to vote for
.Mr Cleveland.
"Judge (liesham' said Mr. Mac
Veagli "has made no seeiet or his
position among his friends I have
known for some time that he intend
to vote for Mr, Cleveland. Others
have known ir. Mr. Cleveland
himself hits know ir. 1 am no- au
t homed to make any statement lor
.Indue Crecham, hnl I know hi
position so well that i c:in ea-i'y
state it
4I cannct take any public p.! it.
iu this campaign,' he would B i . '1
cannot on I he st ump ; J cando;
write a public letter: I cannot cam
not express m self in an interview.
It is not because I desiie to conceal
my position, for I -do n:.t. Ir. is not
that I do not desire to see the tar-iffref-n
ined, for I do. it is not that
1 am not going to vote for Mr.
Cleveland, for I am. Rut the trad
itions of the position v. liif.li I hold
a United State circuit judge are
opposed to my taking any part in
the political campaign, i iel these
traditions 1 mean to respect and
protect.
Tills is Jud (tie-ham's po-l
tion. I think it ought to be under
stood."
'I he .4IIi;iiiT Defined.
IvJin. rial extract from Pr"sre5.si vl l ii. iur
lncr, Sept. 8, 1887.
President MrOune, of the Natlen
il Alliance, says: "It is ttrictly
white, man's non-political secret
business association- It does not
seek to force any iasues on any peo
p!e, but as;-s them to Co-operate ad
cotton-raisers and go into it them
selves and meet audi issues as they
may have in any ay they choose.
It is held that m order to secure a
a bu.-iinesi association a secret or-
! g tiiizatiou is absolutely neccessaiy.
Rut the very fact that it is stctet
must of neee.-ity absolutely preculu
any tendency towards partisan pol
itical action. Nothing can be truer
th i u to say that heuev er you iu.
I reduce any secret1oture into a
polition pat ty ii will destroy tlm
party and, vice vera, uheuev.r
you introduce pa.fizau politics int:
a secret societv the society wi:l die,
aoi bould tie av 'Ujed a
utr.ii
i.
h.er at ir, J. JI. l.aAin-'-- Dru,