AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM TRUE TO OURSELVES, OUR COUNTRY AND OUR GOD." ASIXG CIRCULATION. NO. 19 ftMTTTTT7TTCTD, N- C. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1899. vol- i. - A THE DREYFUS CASE, :, .n case no.v absorb ;u, ot the civilized .i.m to the exclusion ol rtant matters The , r s.ii.l to be more ia- III 1C I HUH I" n.v. w,r in South Africa, -.r.nvitig to Mr.Cham ilrre in America the r devote more col r ,e rep orts ol the trial iv other matter. V surprised, therefore, to following communi :n a valued friend: vivis of Your readers, I ure. oulJ thank you uKi give one column of . ihlican to a concise, ,t ot the oricin. cause' -.,- far. of the Dreyfus have enough of the i i ait conscience as it t tunc and t vents and , ; .ts put out ot rtcol : '.lines and persons that t keep in mind if we ; !e an intelligent coin .1 what i doing and manship, three of whom judged that Dreyfus had written it, while two relieved that he had ,-.-r?9tln Review of not. This division of opinion lnal . o. . n . . i . VVorltl ramuua voa. weakening lue prosctunuu s lens?. General Mercier, Minister of War at that time, submitted the ?o-called "secret dossier," or envelope, of other alleged evi Ukrces of Dreyfus's guilt. The i secret dossier wa not shown to ! Drev'us or his counsel, and upon jit. together with General Mer cier own emphatic protestation that the accused was guilty, ! Drevfu- wa condemned. It was I (or lom the claim of the war otBce that the secret uossicr could not b exposed Ljt its se crets should endanger the foreign iclations of France. Time passed. Dreyfus's friends submitted the bordereau in ac simile, and some of the captain's real handwriting, to 12 eminent expert in penmanship, selected Irom different nations, and not one ot them came to the conclu sion that Dreyfus had written it. It may be added at this point that of tne three French experts who, in 1S9, decided that Drey fus wrote the bordereau, only two. uoon the re-examination ordered by the French ' .,:, , Utm r adhered to lon't keep newspaper ".- ' :nn. wh:ch .vj dates back to Octo Iv-jt. heu Capt. Alfred , A French Jew ot Alsa iretitae and Tbirt h . was imi the charge of high : Capt. Drey tin had been .1 T- 1. - vice m tue rreneu a subordinate member r.eral staff. He was an . .nan About the middle ,,l.ur, 1S04. he was tried .-; martial sitting in secret. Jeruned and sentenced ntationand life imprison O.i lanunry G. 1S9". Drevtus was publicly c ! and was sent to D.vil's M.ir. ! m the tropics, off the coast 1 Tic. ch Guiaua, South Ameri , jr .refinement. There be re- : ,!. confined in chains some ': tit ti .u- nd frequently treat rlwkh reat harshness by his i .",:rs. until tin summer, wnen, Vv'orjfr of the French Govern rc t. lie wa taken back to i'r.inee for a new trial. That t:ii! i? now in progress at Keraie. The c'.iaia of causes and events t tt compelled this second trial K.iiL- ol t ie story, iue . i - i .. . .. - - - - rf us tarmiv . t i t . . i i i ...... 1 All ; h iri-tvN believed in his inno . : Their unceasing labors , unstinted expenditure of n,jr,ev soon began to have an t.V.t in interesting the public in wi; it thev denounced as a mis , ,-rin (.p of i istice. Then facts v;-e published and revelations :: i't which convinced feailess ft independent Frenchmen, as a,.; as most foreign observers, t . it. at least, Drevfus had not :. 4 i a fair trial The demand for region" became irresistible. ir.e u'reat ve-kness of the trial n l'.a wa its secrecy and the ble fact that mucn oi me left the original French commis sion 3 to 1 in favor ot Dreyfus on this point. Anticipating stilt t,.riw if mnv l.ere be said that the Court of Cassation this year Jecidcd that Dreyfus did not write the bordereau. The real turn in the campaign for revision came when Colonel Picquart of the French general staff came into possession of the famous secret dossisr and cxatn ineditscontents. On the strength of that dossier he had hitherto nirmosed that Dreyfus was con ' 1' . . -1 TT victed ou good evidence. testifies that he was stupefied to find nothing in the dossier which coui'i nave wtiuaiuvu nation; that there was no evi dence in it which would not ap ply with equal strength to other men. one in panuu.ai hazy. Colonel Picquart made known bis opinion to ms supe rior?, and tbey bundled him off to Tunis, but not before he had blurted out the truth, honest man fashion, to the world. One of the most important things in the secret dossier, and tne one upon which General Mercier had most relied upon before the first r.Mirtniartial. was a ctrtain in tpPnt;d messaecfrom a loreign m;iUrv attache, which Mercier declared referred to Dreyfus. It however, that the t. V : s. m a t w convicted was not presented or hi counsel. t'-itT to him , ,t was a denial of the funda ; rt il principle that an accused n shall be allowed to defend i tlf. The charge against l' Tiro trill J W:W that he had d or given to the military at t he of a certain European ; r.vtr information iu documents, . : i truing French military se i --.is as follows: 1 V note on tbr hydraulic ' .ke 120, with the way of - . i.ipulating it. . note on the modification r oduced into the troopa of . r f'troupes de couverture ). A note on artil cry foruia- message referred to "that doc o n " Now. the letter "D begins the name of Drevfua, but it also begins the name of a great mnnv other people. The mes sage therefore, was no proof at all that Dreytus was hi communication with the foreign military attache. Then came the thrilling "I accuse, by Zola, and his charge that Esterhozy was the real traitor; Zola's trial for libel, and the Esterhazy. . . . The final stroke, which com pelled the French Government to tiun toward revision, was the suicide last year of Lieutenant Colonel Henry of the secret ser ;r denartmentot tue waruiuec , w- I sent to a foreign power the docu ments mentioned in the borde reau. General after general has gone on the stand and declared his opinion, for instance, that Dreyfus wrote the bordereau, yet what do their opinions amount to beside the majority opinion of handwriting experts and the decision of the Court of Cassation? They also repeat their conviction that Dreyfus is guilty because he confessed pri vately to his jailer in Paris in 1894. But Col. Sandherr, then chief ot the intelligence depart- ment, is on ncord in a iener stating that the jailer's stoiy of the alleged confession cannot be depended upon. The generals also sav that certain letters and dis patches bv foreign military at taches prove that Dreyfus is guilty, yet whenever they pro duce any such evidence the said attaches have invariably de clared it to be a forgery. Thus tiei eral Mercier has produced an alleged report made by Colonel Schneider, the Austriau attache, to his government, in which Dreyfus was incriminated. Colo nel Schneider at once branded it as a lorgery. ?o,iuu, iue Court of attache. Colonel Panizzarai, I branded as a lorgery an aucu report incriminating Dreytus which General Roset said the Italian attache had sent to Rome. We have looked carefully for fresh evidence against Drey fus Irom day to day and nave tailed to find any worthy of the name. Did Dreyfus send those documents? The prosecution evi dentlv has no direct evidence on the point. That the documents were actually sent by some one and are now in the possession of the German Government, is well understood, we believe, yet the Hsumntion that Dreyfus sent . , . . them has not been proven inus far. !sr f.ir as he is concerned, the prosecution evidently demands his condemnation on the same ground that an American mob once lynched a subject on "gen eral principles. Most outsiders, as well as Dreyfus's friends, believe mat Esterhazv wrote the bordereau and sent the documents in ques tion. Esterhazy, although a great liar.claimsfrom his retreat in England that he did it. It seems certain that tne borde reau is in Esterhazy s band writing, if in any one's. Dreyfus was rich and had no possible motive to betray his country. Esterhazy was a scamp, a liber tine, and always "hard up" for money. We won't attempt to work out the case against Ester- h.iv hut mention him to snow that there exists a reasonable alternative to believicg Dreyfus guilty. The most reasonable theory o thP ren origin of the treason that has come to our notice is as lollows: All great governments as is well known, maintain dv system in the capitals o nther'nnwtrs to obta n secret trinl of 1 military information. It is uu wiui i - . I--.. doubtcti.lv true tnat ine vunu military attaches of European , :-a Qit Mm to I Rennes,rranv. 1.1 ..1... GinM t Vin the Save IUCU1BCU". " n.I o-n T!mM-Hrald ring has played upon every Rennes ne of the Dreyfus national prejudice of the conn- tfia nQw an ordjnary COmmer try, have claimed that the Drev- towQ q weatern France, and fus movement was an aiiac ou unknown to m0st of the world the army, and that the pro- uQtil jt tue temporary Dreyfus sentiment abroad was residence of the celebrated pns T f hQT I , i an attacK on rrnuw, r I nrcr. dates from tne very Deein- the Jews were trying to ruin the I . of tfae ehxistla.ii era, and country. It has even stoopcu 088esses a history resplendent to forcerv. I :u mAaTra nm crnntrv and - r- m r I wiiu uivuit4v i I This theorv of the causes oi v,iai Mariner, it was the affair may seem far-fetched. the capitai and chief city of Bnt No foreigner can pretend to . . da o ju independ- know the inside history of the T, Worri0r dukes of caae.- Yet the Dreyfus affair s Britiany assembled their parlia- extraoroinary.auu " ' mrnt. Here Uonstance, aucucss admitting that Dreyfus is really . nr5ttnv. and oueen. cele- innocent, meets the requirements biated for ht;r sorrows by Shrike- T 3 A C rod soeare. was marrieu w usumv; Plantaeenet. liere it was wai her son, Arthur, afterward so cruell murdered by his uncle, John of England, was crowned duke of Urutany. It was at Rennesthat Uertram du Guesclin, famous constable of The Intrinsic Value of Silver. of the situation as well as any. Queen Victoria's Crowns. Nw York Home Journal. Oueen Victoria has three crowns, but it is seldom that she wears them. One is a tiara, made nearly forty years ago, prflnce and aotlv called its clive, about eight troy iitqc Knm find this was the land ounces. It is alight shell of gold. and tnjs was tne people whose thicklv incrusted with diamonds, ;nripn.ndence not even ne, victo there being no less than 2,773 rjous against all others, could white diamonds and 523 of the coaauer; It is said they broke rose brilliants. This was design- . neart these sturdy, liberty ed for use with a long strip of oving people of Brittany. No tulle used as a veil by her majes- r3reton ever alter spoke to him, tv on state occasions, sucn as d though he laid the founda weddings and drawing rooms. t:on cf the greatness of France The quee hfr lirad. aouil iuiun a n... krinmnc. fnsten the ceremonial veil, which . - f prance under the rule ot rints awav from it to the hem . . u:n the Breton blood was of the train, inc gwu too poweriul in mm lormmw was the successor to iucu.n fnr(r.t nthemlds oi his great- of gold which may be seen in the ness his expatriation and the earlier pictures of the queen. The . . d hja own pe0ple bore him. , . l : Vx.ontifnl 1 , ' . C I 1 . ieweis in mis uic it n yu a rcrrioic urc vm.. being choice diamonds matt-mug t : the middle ot the town perfectly in color. The general , ra?e( six days. No effort effect oi the crown is shown in .ag made to put it out by the some of the coinage, although d:sheartened citiz.ns, and when the veil was not worn until the work was done nothing was later tiara was adopted. This . .. . xt antique charm but a diadern and another of similar , huildinff3 on the outskirts - 1 1 I " J shape that preceded it wcic used when her majesty openea and prorogued parliament. It was also worn during the cere monies attendingthe wedding ot the princess royal (now tne im press F"rederick). On every occasion on which the queen visited the house ol ords the state crown was ikcu ut of the regalia room in the tower ol .London anu vt uv.u. before her majesty on a cushion. Riffnt for this purpose the crown has left the tower but twice during her reign once tor renair. some of the setting hav no become loosened, and once in order to modify the ermine, lhei oueen has never actually worn : . the State crown since n w placed on her head at corona tion. Ibis crown was maut more than a century ago, and is kept in the custody ot the tower. Tf includes -Z.i&Z diamonus, i pearls, 1G sapphires.il emeralds - and 4- rubies and the old Roman gate, which is now the only object of interest to the tourist in the present city Today it is modern and common . t -I L.'U A ..lnrr. The DUlldlDgS wuieu f . . . i ru-l chief merit spaciousness and sliver. cleanliness; of architectural beau ty of design there is vry little. The Palais de justice or court house is one of the most inter esting buildings in the city from its association. The Breton par liament used to assemble there. Of churches Rennes has no anh The cathedral, begun in 11 SO and not completed until 13.7 U a marvel of bad taste on the utside, being a mixture of tuscan. gothic, done and ionic. nd the interior a tamous emit has HKeneu iu ano. o- or corn m is the Mecca T A. Kennes. it ---f. - j uinh Let us not think that because our nation is involved in war, that all other issues should fand second place, for in our mind the free and unlimited coinage oi silyer is the greatest of the age. We are in favor of silyer being used as money, or in other words, bimetalism, not any more gold than silver standard. Then how can you monetize the value of the American silver dollar while the price of silver bullion remains so low? The remedies are several, but the one which is most easily obtained is the basis of our discussion, viz : Favor able legislation. When silver was removed from use look what a premium was on its bullion. Now look at it. It is worth just one hall what it used to be. When silver was demonetized it was robbed of its principal tunc tion. When any commodity loses its sefulness it is decreased in value to the extent ot the loss. Take for instance gold, suppose an eadintr nations of the earth were to demonetize gold and adopt zinc for coinage purpose, l hen the principal use ot gold is destroyed. It could be used only hv the eweler and ornament " r . t manufacturer. Tell us not tnat t marketable value would not crease! It would surely greatly depreciate in value. lust like s lver is today, n suver wuuiu be restored properly to coinage we would soon see a rise in price of bullion, and ere a few years we would see a premium on sii- upr'fnual to gold. We need silver as money anu a 100 cent dollar, too. mere is ' .1 ....onf thor no reason in me should a law declare free and un limited coinage of silver at a ratio of lG to l, a man with gold could buy enough silver to coin two legal dollars tor every gold dollar spent. Let us ask. What fool is going to sell his sil ver bullion at a reduction when he himself can take it to the ,v.;t nnd pet a hundred cent i-.r- ouprc ?.71U crams ol UUlldl iyj w.w, - c-i GENERAL NEWS. The Texas Cotton crop is re ported short at least 400,000 bales. The U. S. transport McCIellan aaiL-d from Brooklyn last week for San Juan, P. R., and San tiago, Cuba, carrying sixteen hundred tons of clothing, pro visions, medicines and building material for the destitute in Porto Rico. Governor Tyler, of Virginia, ace bill, which was expected to instantly rose in value from 94 cents to $1.20 per ounce in this country and the same in Europe where legislation was ad verse to silver. Can any one contend in the face of these facts that legisla tion does not effect the yalue of gold and silver? Ninety per cent of the present value ot goio is fictitious and controlled by legis lation. If silver had free and un limited coinage at the ratio of 1 a 1 ;o 1-mlHnn would be worth in this country $1.29 perhas commuted to life imprison ounce. This fact is self evident., mtHt the death sentence of Silver iu Europe, admitting' Thomas w. f rice wno yva i there were no monetary demand haye been hanged September Gth over there, would be worth the lor murder of Hall Carter I rice price it would bring in this coun- is a very old man, and belongs try less the transportation to a highly respected family, charges. There is no question Df . fi Uarri9 Chairman of about it. An Englishman would p list Executive Commit not sell his silver at one halt Ue of McLerjnan County, Texas, what it brings inthe United wa9 shot ad killed last week by States. . f n O'Brien, the editor of a Suppose there be an unlimited rjemocratic paper. Articles emand for cotton in Virginia at . . , . (yRrjen's paper caused O cents a pound, would we sen ;j n'Rrien is In our cotton here at t cents: Anu if America is far iu the lead in silver mining, could she not raise the price of the minority amount miutd by othercountries? Is not Mrs. Georgia L. Borneman, wife of Charles F. Borneman, proprietor of a bakery at New- the value of anything maintained port News, has eloped with a when its demaad is unlimited: negro nameo ucurgc ,oUu.., ;wPr is hound to be restored to who is almost coal black. The coinage at her modern, mediae- couple met by appointment on val and ancient ratio, and it is the Norfolk boat ano on tuc to A-merica's interest to hasten ?ame evening proceeded to the time. Baltimore by .the Bay Line Clarence P. Tones, M. D. steamer. Benson, N. C, Aug. 17, 1HJJ. pjve men are dead and ten nrmin1pi1 as a. result of B. fight Married tor a Show. , hetween gendarmes Chicago Aug 24 -Forty-fonr and disappointed Cuban soldiers Chicago. Aug. i j Cuevitas, three miles from Ch.cago couples went to St at uueru paYment liceosts aod wcddin2s without log. t cost. The ' te d.!7M OUtOOOr iestivti r . . . -J Tmonsnnds who i , . . i i nnn I it t 11 uaiu . . u - oat ICtUP PTTOLirMUJII. J I " 1 The Best Matchmaker. InlH-n')-nt. The isolation of the sexes for four or more years during the period when their affections are in bloom is the chief reason wbv t, I i Uo1n! rf arte re cfatmnpr in i ans cn niaiiv utn-utiuia . , i iMrmr.finnnhnutLtnn matrimonial bachelors Pence's army from -leaks" in This is proved by the fact that a....,nffl,P It is known that this evil is much less in coeouca this betrayal has gone on since tional institutions than Webster defines intrinsic as in ternal, inherent not apparent or accidental, opposed to extnn sic All substances used in arts have certain inherent or intrinsic properties w hich tend to make this or that substance more or less desirable, and to such extent mflnpnn the desire for their pos session. Gold and silver have rJns'p nrooerties which many other substances do not possess : olllifv. resistance to Vl., ! ' chemicals, retention o color! etc. The same cannot be etc fc - . j i r.cn "i. i.:ni of st. Tosenh and alter tnree uays ) . . : i nan ueeu v aiu. with a great laKe excuis.wx.. rt;tMi at other advertise the affair and draw a nm, i" p .. as arge crowd they offered to , pa; r " " '"me-t in'the or t e licenses and prcacueis - r -r .ii i n,Vir I orovince. services tor an wupics "".r would agree to a public cere- . the re9ult of a tight with mony on the veranda of one of I hig diyorced wife, the Rev. the summer hotels. I William K. Wilburn oi riat noi- There were thousands at t ae oW Ky., is lying at deaths dock this morning when the ex door wjth a fractured skull, lhe cursion steamer pulled out into the river with its load ot pas- sengers. as tne unuci passed up the gangpianu; iut- were readily recogmzcu hearty cheers were given iui them. There was a continuous per I :J ( ,irnr 7".nC ITOH. 1.i Mnr alT (rate saiu . - ; , . v,ip U determined by extrinsic J? rl-! I'!", Mm- deter.- erent or intrinsic in- Koman military architecture. tAn r ,t O ifl Til Till II 11 I . ., , i . nnCC9 lUC Ulll-ciyi avv. and dates trom tne :M ,,-ver flnctaate. True with tury A. D. Ibrougn it au c fa ld dukes had to pass to be crcwo ; n Qiav rnntrol ed.and here all - rules were an c .. met by the bishops and cicrg. . - The ;ntrin3ic value of who exacted the promise tnat pi"-- . fa ganie as be main- Ky- : .;i.,Pr tbey were in 10 1 j, were mlnUfpr and his wile divorced last Tuly, and under an agreement they were to divide their household gooos cquauy. All went well in the matter of division until they came to a handsome cut glass bowl wnicn Krth wanted. A quarrel cc- formance on the hotel veranda curred, and the woman smashed at St. Toe, marriages taKing fche bo,vi over the head ot tne place at the rate Qf one every minjSter, severing an artery and four minutes for four hours. fracturing his skull. Wilburn There were eighteen couples be came near bleeding to death sides those from Chicago. before a physician could reach . .. ; . h5m. He is mortally injured, S:ck headacne -s ic uau, u. :T w;ih,,m Is under (XllH lull. arrest: v w..- i their rights should tained. ,o rlmonetized. But the ex cir values are different, gold rpmmns about the same, and Sulu Accepts Our Rule. Manila, August 25.-General Snver about one half. Value is Bates has returned irom ou.u oasea u,.t. iu '-y. XTJ and has successfully accom- arJd demand, a suuut t- olisbedhis mission there. Alter m tasnions somc. fiv. weeks' negotiation with away one-half the value of many lives. Dr. M. A. bimmons Liver Medicine cures and pre vents this annoying complaint- Coffee in Brazil. Chicago Record. The size of the new cotiee crop a . iu Brazil is the absorbing Board of Health show tion of the moment. It has oeen . have been 2,312 estimated all the way trom . victims of the recent O.O?0'00!' Liffi,'; h;fcLe. .00e thousand fan.;- eacn sacs wSu.uR . - .. missing, together wun 132 pounds it may oe more houses. The report states 2,312 Dead. San luan de Porto Rico, Aug. 25. An official report has been issued by the President ot the to Mada- 1 A note relative i-..ir. " V manual on field pieces i t nrove this charge the prose t mm in urni In hmI a sheet of paper i .w historic as the bordereau), j. irts pasted together, upon A'nkh was a written, unsigned ti norandum. It began with t i. announcement that the writer had the information, i , .,1 r,l.r,vi. to communicate. Vn followed an oiler to lend t e documents for extracts or to oteach "incxtenRO. 1 1 ii liordereau was said tohave l in t.Uked out of the wnste- h.Aet at the German embassy im l':iri l. n l'rrnch SPV. And t u tirosecution claimtd that the writing of the bordereau was tiie writinirof Capt. Dreyius. Thi bordereau in 1891 was in col ,1 tViir i : irr na wns murisuuiu. ica " ii. r,iffs;efi to loru'uum i . . i o7i orarinflies . , ii. f nnnH i ne aemanu nc fnr thp most iatt a pettv irauic, ty.iwouuiui iui. mUCh tact, an agreemcui u taia st-iC - tain documents whicl . the nU- for ' xmtAUx. 0 the women's college Bryn ch in substance was is lessened. Extrinsic influences revisionists hod. nuchrehed upon dealing .n tQ and inciud,ngthe have been brought to bear. Tne in fastening gmu upou-.":. T;;. saiaries. Gene- class of 189i. have married, or - sovereignty over intrinsic qualities qr tne go u These torgerie threv S - ijoi9 tffre, when At the only 14 per cent, of the total , fae rccoerjiz.d and have not been changed mat picion pon the who e case - ral d . "7KMr;1l6ffreceW.d MIBber. Out ol the 130 women ai, be no persecution inherent quantity ca led value against Dreyius uuu & Lieu- graduates of the co-educat.on ion; Tfa United I does not exist in any tmug ernment.clespue llVTVCrne tenant Colonel Henry, the forger, University ol Kansas up - gfial, occupy and control article is worth its saitu.c F of the army, rema nded he ca e ten & as haye married, or ex- of the arcbipelago as nothing more rPOnute to the Court of La, rtcved . actly 50 per cent. public interest mavdmand;-any Supply and demand regulate highest civic tribunal in France head ol tL . of the Tfaat pr0pinquity is the best Put purchase land with value of commercial commod.- This court deeded in . faror ol mt lhe I dboreauoffi. matchrnaker is shown by the 1 tan's consent; the intro- tie9, an increase in demand ove revision on the ground that the P0" jn raris. to peddle fact that of these G5 women dCct;on of fire arms shall be pro- the supply increases value and evidence at the hrst tnai wu.m V.. to the fore52n raduates of Kansas University kJKi'tpd- niracv shall be sup- vice versa. Restoration o complete, and that the accused " -""v prea, Dut 31 married fellow students. " "'V?he American courts W.H cive it an unlimited demand uA not heen fairly treated, ine auu. , mf,ana.a noticeable from the ex- r", , . ,.,f!ntl w.t bt l it, commercial va it may be less than lia" that tbe numbero( destitute per- these figures, but upon tuc 250,000. amount of the output depends "V Estimated that it will re Brazil's happiness and prosperi- 000,000 pounds ol rice ty. Among the well-informed na and 4(250,000 pounds coffee merchants there is an im- dfish to alloW Gf a ration of pression that the maximum oud a day being issued until yield will come either this year f"' ga1hered seven- ornext, and that it w " oc weeks hence. The cost of lowed bv a ZTrZ these supplies would be$125,000 in the amouui uuuv. - - exhausting manner in which the ,n,mtrv has been bandied anu the irrad ual planting oi an tuc iorl nvnilable for coffee grow- - - ooc'rrnpd as the cause of 111) ia Jf'n"vw , this predicted decline. Cood Opening of the Campaign. Loncord Standard. The campaign for the adoption of the constitutional amend ments was opened at Old Fort loot Saturdav. Mr. M. H. His Life Was Sayed: M,. T. E. Lillv. a promineot I Istice made the owning speech moreover, threw out -Itirely the question whether Drey r I lus wrote the bordereau, and de Hrevbis had large pn and was tion inations ot alumni catalogues the Moros; the Americans bound to be raised. lue is When de - a - J I. l-njkM " I mm i r . , iti, mhirh is sam to nave uu wvai, Icitizenotliannioa , mo., - - - , , carrvine wonderful deliverance iog e- r ' " had In telling conviction with his words. . . fi.iAcfinn clared that the sinipt M.w- be decided by tuc m.uUU courtmarti-1 was wnetaci us did reallv communicaw oreicn power the documents in the bordereau. iniiii'uuv-" . . i -i-i. . :Q nn v issue uruuvi.. l ut i. is -:i before the present conrim-.i.- . t olthouirh no one, huv at icuu, , .... thf case. could oe h wu "r " the im to know it irom ..n.m nt irreievHin sip and opinion which the mil.- i . r nor mil tarv ju,-,ft,-;' i'- in nlTer. ti trust the press re JTorts of the Kennes trial, the F .;n h.iR not offered any timonv provinfi that Dreylu, ...r.n Vif Mnrns iue nuisnv.""" mnuiiu i . . J.nh n tp inr cuu ii.u" " : i ii! .wt t vr sfcreis ioritne s. r nn tmnnsinon anu tuc s i rauc. x uk. - . . , i -r haf ran into i westci u un.i- UCUUiiu, t .1 , .t V,rtlH hilt I ' o . , u,.11 I " . WBK,.o to - Io- prayer-book they .bould. but -Bfi Spain shall t decreased by l lntn. r, Z Ld had involved Ugh offi- also the S's marry the T's, and JncontiDaedf qualities or, want o(, as we often ";eKds,crbUy was ao'agen, soon through he a phabe .n ben'8nUan and .evera. chiefs gear the .term cers. iisiciurt "" :. " ,i. " tlnV students t - ft hPbp mPTi. i r nnflP niiiciwa nuviv and eo oetwet-u t The bordereau was written by are seated aipnaoctiuy Jim and snt to the German em- classroom. In short, if you w,sh r i . m a m w toy m tipiii i ir 1 bitsv in the regular transaction tnem to .7." orbusines,. There it wa, Inad-Lethe,; you don t want them UVC&i signed tbe agreement. by its demand oc.ng i Fy x.- - u.aninPruntions A7Un tVip Rl and-Allison act ot W M'xw I I !' , .. r .... . I 1 t,To n. nnacpd nrovlalDS lor Are grand, but Skin eruptions 1010 wa y r -. ,.r r '. tj..i Arnica the ourchasc of a limited am 9 i,FJd on Drcvfus.chifly because with comfort and Pains and Aches. Only 25 cts. Again in hc wasalewithustakingshrewd tr-nqnd,. Cure guaranteed. Sold States Sen advantage o the immense anti- M. A. Simmons Liver Meaici Hood Bros Druggist. passthelL i.. Air.i ;n Fmnre. occasionally. rUJUUiai i . j Again in 1890, when the United enate passed a iree cuiu- House also, silver bullion Typhoid rever - iQm hig pneumonia. Aiy .uu :-. a lwver the hardened. I wafso vea& 1 1 V" " i nnt conflict ng neipeo uic m. There was a number of speech- enon die Ol tuusuuiunuu, "i"-u . . . , . T - I h "ard of Dr. King's New Dis- es, closing with Lock Craig :? 5w wt cv trreat who made one of his pleasing covciv. wu. " o-r-o ; I , n J na .rl (nr a vntf hv d 1 speetucs auu v-t-v. .v,. -j elief. I continued to use it, an " rofim well and stronc. I can't raising tne nana wn.tu nltS it nraise " all did. including several prom W ' I V I III UWUSU - W I . . Rpnnh pans. It was au This marvelous medicine is tne . -. , . - Jurcst and qu:ckest cure in the auspicious beginning and it is orid for all Throat ad Lung to be reasonably expecred that Cub e Regular size 50 cents k is but tbe opening of a most Ind $1 00. Trial bottles free at triumphant campaign in the Hood Bro.s' Drug Store. interests of the whole State. bcmitic pre) udice in France, occasionally t -i .initted to five experts in pen