Newspapers / The Kinston Free Press … / Feb. 12, 1900, edition 1 / Page 2
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W. 8. HERBERT? Editor, nd..JProipr LPPJ iEU'V?TAN?, V)(H9 BELIEVE IN THEM. .fOsfCfvrOvt av full line, of Btered at Ptlt m econa claaa majt aattr. Tba As heville Citizen truly says; sJVUlTi any legal excuse, without even the form s of law, and without an amendment, a committee of congress, has decided to disfranchise all the voters of Asherille In Order to give Richmond Peareon an office We do not see why. the Black-and'Tans should complain if the people' of North Carolina should now decide to adopt an amendment that will disfranchise all the ignorant negroes of the State to keep Fearson and the like of him out of office. . . A movement is on foot to establish a sugar beet factory at Fredericksburg' Vo. The factory will be established pro vided contracts can be made with farm- era in the surrounding counties to plant su fflcieu t acreage in i beets. Leading farn- ' era held a conference in Fredericksburg Friday and many signed contracts vto J suffered herself for the death, In Iml- piant so many acres. -, I xauon or cue aeain 01 we saviour, in The work of obtainiair contracts from I order to save the souls of her fellow fhm lurman thrnnohnnfc t.hnt.apt.fnn will I believers. Ilaor a Peulla f stJU .-U Old Wboit Members Kill mod Cruelty 'Vita lalntlan tmw Tim ltalaJ That human sacrifices have been made eveu In the nineteenth century, and by professing Christians, too. Is brought out by The American Journal of Sociology In a striking article: The Convulslonlsts, a sect existing la Paris about 1700, were wont to crucify members of their order, - In emulation of the crucifixion of the Saviour, In the belief that the souls of the surviving members would be saved by the sacri fices , of their fellows. , In 1817 the 'Tascbellaus." an Austrian secU mur dered a man. his, wife and daughter under the delusion that the trio, who refused, to co with the fanatics, were possessed of the devil. On the follow ing day they crucified one of their own number, a girl of 19 years, who had &hLU Dry Q.AxIh Hiid GroorUi. . nr.. .... l. . , .. ;..- . ttiwn at ttftm uficeH, od wiHwII as clone at aov iiirvliHi'tdoinflr asquareand E J iv-1: -jj .,ivai. .All, l . '. . We Solicit 7 Both Town ue ket'ii h imotHivfry wairon on oar HtiftM for . ib 'ciiovf'ou'iiCHf of oar' town 1 trid, wv h ( lr mimI tttblet for oar country unromfr. t uihh to ie as. i YotirH vfty truly, VVM. ALEX LallOQUE, ' i Queen Street. Phonb 67., KINSTON. N. C I Are those used by the.merchant who tries sell gooda , without advertising. ; He that wise doth advertise in THE KINSTON PRr PHESSS. - .. ;f OH. THOS. II. FAULKfJER, j i v OfSca Hoorsr" 8 a, in. to 6 pm ( t ": Uooms over the Bank of Kinston. j be prosecuted until the necessary acreage is secured, which will be done, it Is thought, by : March. The establishment of the plant will follow. ' Why cannot such a movement be started In North Carolina, and why pot Kinston be the site for such a factory? We believe our lands will grow almost anything. ' Mr. J. J. Marshall, one of the first men in Forsyth county to join the Populist party, recently received a letter from Senator Butler asking certain Informa tion in order to get ready to organize tcutsk. Russia, the Fopulists against the amendment, Mr. Marshall is a patriotic Populist who believes in white supremacy, and his re ply tq Senator Butler was crushing, lie says that Butler' has betrayed , his party. Mr. Marshall says he will stand with white men for the amendment and white civilization. We make the following extract from Mr. Marshall's letter: "Have you, Mr. Butler, stopped to con sider what thing this is you; are asking me and otner ropuiists to do7 Do you realize the position in which you are at tempting to place the Populist party? . 1 if ay, sir, now far do you expect us follow you? By what right do you ask me that I betray toy principles and my race at the same time? I believe1 in the free coinage of silver. You ask me to co operate with a party that is even now ' riveting the gold standard on the country. I am opposed to trusts. You ask me to Join in with a party that fosters and fathers them. I believe in a white man's , government. You ask me to vote with negroes and .for negroes. You go even further,, you ask my active support agaiost a measure intended to make ne gro domination hereafter impossible: "What good, sir, can come to my State, ray partr, myself or my family from such perfidious course? I think you have mis understood the character and the temper of the men who compose the Populist party, in assuming that they lack in that pride of blood which makes the white man everywhere cleave to his kind." : io CktiA .f i'orrt Pin-. ! & traveler who uaa occasion to make an encampment on a ledgo of rock in an onbroken forest asserts that he witness ed the beginning of one of the most de- Btructive forest fires that? ever occurred In that region. A dead tree of enormous size blew over and lodged against an- 'other tree, which it bent almost in the form of a bow. The fierce wind swayed the top of the bent tree which supported the trunk of its fallen neighbor. It so chanced that there was a space of sev eral feet where the , fallen tree was smooth and rested ou the other. The force of the wind in sweeping the bent tree back and forth soon ground the bark from the trunk of the tree. The friction caused by this grinding de veloped a high degree of heat, and tho tourist, to his astonishment, ""saw the wood of the dead tree burst into a flame. The top was soon consumed and fell, scattering burning embers upon the dry leaves for some distance around. These, f -nnd tn n flama kt ated a fierce fire that 6wect over miles of valuafc timber. Much blame has been attached to campers and malicious persons who have, it is alleged, started fires either through carelessness or for a desire for wanton mischief. Owners of Jarre tracts of land would dnm l b keep close watch cf their forests during and after heavy windstorms which are net accompanied by a heavy rain. A lit tle jitcaution might save thousands cf rrrcs cl valaUa thatcr. New York In 1823 the leader of a Pletlstlc cir cle In Switzerland.' after having dis patched her sister, who gave her life as a means of saving the souls of her relatives, was crucified by her follow ers at her own command in order that she might die, -rise again after three days and restore to life the sister she had slain. In 18C3 two mothers, ad herents of the "Iloly Men," slew their sick children, believing them to be vic tims of demoniacal possession. - In 1875 a. Hungarian miller, belonging to the "Nazarehes," killed his. son as an offering for . his own sins ; after the fashion of Abraham, tn 1S70, la Ir- ont of the rSchlsuiat- DENTAL SURGEON, KINSTON, N. C. ' ! tyovrios Ovib Our QonsiT'a to, JKUUUT flSUSIM,flUT TO 4. A. VMIB d.w.eoLLiw General Hardware. Staves. Tinv. ; anfl Hossefurnlsbtsg Good, No. 14 Qaeea St., Kinston, N. ) Take Your Cattle to MOORE & HOOKEl KINSTON, N. C, and get the Highest cash prices for sac DR. JAMES M. PARROTT, , Physician and Surgeon, : KINSTON, N. C Office near Court House. : Office tours : 8 to am.; 2 to 5 p. tn ics" convinced .himself .by. prayer and fasting and much Scripture reading that to save his soul ho must be cruci fied. Accordingly he. "'attempted : self crucifixion and succeeded so far as the circumstances of the cast? would permit. 1 In 1S30. In the government of Perm. Russia, a peasant JkllhuUhls child, as an offering for sin and burled the body In an ant hill. Likewise. In the gov ernment of Vladimir, another peasant killed botn his children In due Abra hamlc form, and while the babies bled under the father's ; knife the devout mother celebrated the' service-by read tag aloud selected portions of the twen ty -second chapter of Genesis. In 1S54. in the government of Tambov, Russia, a peasant, convinced that to save his soul a man must have a sin to repent of, killed a neighbor with an ax In or der to satisfy this highly Imperative condition. It Is a part of the creed of the "Wan derers," a Russian sect . that antl Christ rules In high places there and that accordingly good men must have naught to do with governmental af fairs of any sort In conformity with this belief a man murdered in various Ingenious" ways 23 men. women and children, including his own wife and babies. In order to free them from the danger of losing their souls by suffer tag the contaminating contact of the government census taker. This occur red In 1807.- - , The "Denlera." another quite Inter esting Russian sect, believe that evil taints all earthly good and that the only escape is death, . In 1825 60 of these men, strong In the faith, after having murdered their, wives and chil dren, permitted themselves to be put to death, one by one, by their leaders. The Scourgers," who also form a widespread and Influential sect in Rus sla. in obedience to the behests of their "saviors," are In the habit of indulg ing tn human sacrifices, cannibalistic feasts, erotic dances and other lewd procedures as an extremely efficacious metnod or Jceeplng tie hand of evil from off their immortal souls. So the "Muckers" of Konlgsberg and the cel ebrants of the black mass In Paris af- M a . m ' ioru runner examples or tne use ot a ritual of erotism, coupled with a prac tice of the most abandoned and ob scene behavior, to promote the eternal welfare of the soul Don't Stumblo through 1 the world. - Let- some trood fairy of an optician fit you out with some eyes. ; Don't be . ashamed to wear glasses. It will give you an intellectua look, and then how nice it will be to be able to recognize friends across - the street, and by returning their bow . ex plode the idea that we are of a haughty and unkiad nature. If we lit your glasses, you will have no trouble with them or with your eyes. We would be pleased to have you come to us whenever vou need our ser vice. ' ' ' ' ' H. O, HYATT. V. T. PARROTT, P.Q.lM. A, . Physician and Surgeon " . WINSTON, N. C. Offxck: Located Parrott's. " at Prv J4s. M. II K. SHAW, f ti AH matters attended to promptly Practice in State and Federal courts. Office located back of Court House, Kinston, N. C. Barrott & Thomso; :. AEGHITECTS, ii54 Fayetteville St., Raleigh, n.H . fa . ... Mm- M cscrwme lor our ."jBrocnure" ot 1 formation. , ' JOHN F. STRATTON CC. Importer A Wholewl Dealer In all kinds c W1 MUSICAL MERCHAN DIGS, Tlolln. Onttra. Banjoa, Aeoordaona, Hkrmonleaa. All klndaofKtrlnira.&a. t tend for JOHN F. STRATTO N CO Catalogue, 2 Grand St. Mew yonk. j . JOHN F. STRATTO N'S WebratedQUITAEj. ' importer ana wnoiesaie ' Dealer la all kinds of MUSICAL MERCHANDISE, Send for JOHN F. STRATTON CO. Catalogue 62 GRAN o St. N aw Yq;i I a Mr m fit : rek, . h, MP pi Tc;jf Boots . .....ura w.Bi-j..iii.iiii.,.,iii ir.11,1' i,,Wi,i,i.anHi In Order, to Gake Room for a large Spring Stock, and having such a large stock of Shoes on hand, we have greatly reduced the price : , GbntsNShods. A Chocolate Colored Vict Kid, made by Rice & Hudson, ; This shoe is neat and trim in appearance, is one of the ; r easiest wearing, and is guaranteed to be the equal of any $5 shoe in both appearance and wearing quality. Re . . duced from $4.50 to $3.50. . We have, a durable Tan Shoe, that is also neat in appearance, reduced from $3-50 to $2.75. Ladies' Shoes; r The famous Regina; the finest money ever sold in the town, $3. Ladies Shoe "for, the DAN QUmERLY, Queen Street KIN-TONN. C. FOR THE..,. ' - ,.-, CAUPAIGtl OF 1900, BY W. H. HARVEY, A-uthor of "Coin's Financial School.' VV - r "F-y y J'-V- .-3'" y ' y y y ' 5 b f Prico 25c. ' 'Patbomcterw For Wheelmen. Of the Inventing of long felt cycling wants there seems to be no end. The latest of these Is an Instrument by which It Is easy to record automatical ly nei oniy tne 01 stance traveled by a bicycle, but also the various directions followed during the Journey and the hlUs ascended and descended. The rec ord of directions is obtained by means of a compass. The needle Is suspended at the top cf the "pathometer," as the apparatus is called, directly above the tape on which the rccorJs are taken. In size it is fully as large as "Coin's Financial School," profusely illustrated, with best paper, enameled cover in two colors. , x - - '-'v-,-, Its treatment of the subjects of Money, Tbusts and Imperialism, is exhaustive and yet simple and plain as the A. B. C's. It will educate and arouse the American people to a common defenseof their homes and the heritage of free institutions. It teaches organization and points out the remedy. It is educational and practical. It should be in the hands of every man, woman, boy and girlin the United States. Tbe book is a SCHOOL., and . the little boy COIN the teacher. Ilis school in May, 1894, "Coin a Financial School," electrified a nation and moulded the political sentiment of a national political party. "Coin on Money" may be ex pected to rally anew the forces of human liberty. ; . r - ; A copy.of this book and The Twice- a-V eek Free Fkess a year for S 1.4.0. The book alone, 23e. liiE Daily Frk e I'm:, a year and a copy of the book for J l.lo. , : . . . , . , Send orders to . . s : with ' - ". I 9 - . ' ' ' ( i - 5 your name engraved thereon, and ico cards with your name on thera, sent to any address oa receipt of GO Cento. ' .THE- FREE PRESS, THE Ff . - i-iinsto:;. c.
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
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Feb. 12, 1900, edition 1
2
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