9ffiSffia Year, In Advance. 'FOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH. Single Copy, 6 Cents. VOL XII. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY JUNE 21, 1901. NO. 1G. ini:jho ii:vi VAI, II YIH-. Ohl whar shlll we so w'en do great day comes, Wid de blowin er de trumplts en do lianRlu1 errte drums? How many po Htnners'll bo kotclied out late En fine no latch ter de f?()Men tinte 1 No use fer tor wait twell ter-jntorrer, De sun mustn't set on yo' worror Sin's or. sharp oz a bamboo brier O Lord I fetch de mo'ners up higher ! When de naahuns or de earl is a standin' all aroun', . Who's a jrwine ter he choosen fer ter w'p r tie glory crown t . Wno'B swine fer ter stan' stiff-kneed on bor. En answer to dor name at do callin' er de roll ? You better pome now of you comin Ole Satun Is loose on a buniniin lie wheels er dlstruckshun Is a liummlnV , Oh, como 'long slunors, et you comin'. Desougr er salvashuu Is a mighty sweet song. En do 1'alrldlse win' blow furenblow strong. En Aberham's bosom, hit's sutt, en Int'H wide, ' Kn right dar's do place whnr de sinners oughtor hide I Oh, you i.ee'n tor bo a stoppin' en a lookln'; Ef youfoolwldoleHatun you'll t:lt took In; You'll hang on de aldge en git phook In, Ef you keep on a stoppin' en a lookln'. De lime Is right now, en dish yer's de place Letdesuner salvashun Rhino scjuur' in yo' face; , Fight de battles er de L,ord, fight soon en f. fight late, En you'll allers fine a latch ter de golden gate; No use ter wlt twell tcr-morrer. De sun mustn't, sot on yo' sorrer Sin's ez sharp ez a bumbuu brier, Ax de Lord lor ter fetch y ou up higher t. Joel Chandler Harris. can sen SOItllS TIIUMJS. That love is bill d they do declare, Itut every gay coquette Has proven by her gay soltaire lie Isn't stone-blind yet. Ilobnon Speecli Approved. Buffalo, N. Y., June 13. Captain Hobson's memorial speech made at Detroit on May--the 80th, '.which he advocated one Decoration Day for both the Federal and Confederate dead, has provoked a great deal of favorable '' comment from the cosmopolitan news- papers North and Sonih. The speech is full of patriotic sentiments and the young hero of the Merrimac showed his courage in a remarkable degree by the suggestion that the Northern ora tors should go South and Southern ora tors North to praise the bravery of both armies of the Civil War. Another courageous thing on the part of Captain Ilobson was the view he took of sla very in his Detroit speech. A great many old veterans shook him by the hand after the speech was finished and told him that his views of the slavery ques- tion were entirely new to them and that they cordially endorsed them from the beginning to the end. Captain Ilobson was introduced by the oldest veteran of the late war in Michigan, an officer of the G. A. R. In doing so this veteran remarked that as an American he was as proud of the bravery of Lee, Johnson and Jackson as he was of that of Grant, Sherman and Sheridan. . At . the close of the speech Captain Hobson was given an ; ovation by the- people of Detroit.. An immense crowd asesm bled to hear him speak. Of course lie ; acquitted himself-with credit to his section. He will spend the .summer on duty at the Pan-American exposition, Wmtcru North Carolina Soldier in -. DemandIt er u HI station at " Ulurphy. Knoxville, Tenn., June 13. Capt. C. B." Vogdes, local recruiting orlieer, has received orders extending his "au thority to enlist army recruits in all flNorth Carolina counties bordering on . Tennessee, in Dade, Walker, Catoosa, .Whitfield, Murray Fanni and Gilmer, Uordou, Chatooga and Floyd counties, Alabama; Fentress, Cumberland, War ren," White and Franklin counties, Tennessee, He has orders to enlist at once 312 soldiers needed at Willit's Point, N. Y., to be instructed in ear pentery, plumbing, blacksmithing and .other mechanical trades, civil engineer ing and cooking. He also wauts coast and field artillerymen. Recruits will be enlisted here from any point. Capt. Vogdes already has one station at Mur '. phy, N. C, but he will establish others at once throughout this new territory. - War Department officials say soldiers secured from this territory are the best . to be had for army service. Oil As Fuel On ItallroadM. According to the Chicago Tribune, the discovery of oil wells in California and Texas will Rave a beneficial in fluence on the rail-road induftry in the whole south western portion of the United States. Says the Tribune: "Since the beginning of 15)01 no coal has been used as fuel on the Atchison lines in California. Now the same company is equipping the engines on its Texas lines for the purpose of using the oil from the Beaumont wells. The oil heeessary to do the work of a ton of coal costs about $ 1 less than the coal, and the cost of " installing oil burners on " the locomotives is only aliout f250. It is estimated that the substitution of oil on a single Texas branch of the Atchison system will cause an annual saving of $1 80,000. "The Atchison is so situated that its coal costs only fl.CS a ton, while the Southern Pacific must pay $4.03 a ton because of the scarcity of coal west of the Rockies. To the latter road the use of oil will be better than the discovery -of a gold mine, for it is estimated that if applied to the whole system it would mean a yearly saving of nearly $5,000, 000, or enough to pay an annual dividend of 5 per cent, on a capital of $100,000,000. Such a lowering of railroad expenditures cannot fail ultimately to bring altout cheaper freight rates." BILL AIIP'S LICTTKU. Labor and Capital. When will the long protracted struggle cease. Away back in history there was war that lasted thirtv years, but this war has lasted longer than that and seems to grow more bitter as the years roll on. In the good old times it did not affect the south, but like a pestilence it spreads and there seems to be no remedy. All of the women most all of the men, outside of the capitalists have here tofore sympathized with the toilers in their demands for less work and better pay.. They have bitterly denounced the heartless managers who would wear out the life of a child before it ges grown who would keep them caged in factories from early morn till lamp light, with not an hour for recreation. No May. day; no 'play day, no ball game, nor marbles, nor fishing, nor frolic of any kind for the boys; no hunting wild (lowers or blackberries for the girls, no youthful pleasures, no recess, no Saturday; but from year to year it's "Work work work, in the dull December light. And W ork work work, when the weather is warm and bright." . How sad it is to see them toil as if in a treadmill, and to hear them sigh as they glance from the windows of their daily prison, and with longing eyes, whisper "Oh! but to breath the breath of the woods and flowers sweet. With the sky above mv head and the grass beneath my reot." . And this is sad, pathetic, and but for heartless legislation and legislators, would have long since been remedied. It is the good side of human natur that arouses sympathy for the poor, and Leigh Hunt never wrote a sweeter line than that of Abou . Ben Adhem's plea for ontrance into Paradise: ' "Write me as ono who loves his fellow mar." In ruminating about the wants of the poor I have, often thought that the greatestwant and the best boon to a toiler was a home, Home one of the sweetest words in . any language. Its best definition is in the heart, for lan guage fails to express it. Indeed there are some languages that have no word for it no synonym. The French has none and substitutes only an abode o dwelling place. The best definition is found in the old Sanskrit, the sacred dialect of the Hindoos and Persians. Ine word is ivshema and means a permanent place of rest and security. Would that all the poor, all the toilers, all the women and children in the land had that a permanent abode a place of rest and secuntity. No landlord to can lor rents no expiring, lease, no uncertain title; but a home where the good wife can plant her own vines and adorn her own yard with flowers and feel that they are hers and her chil dren's. Why didn't Mr. Carnegie think of this and give homes to the poor, instead of books. Fifty millions of dollars would have giveu comfortable homes to one hundred thousand poor families and given a permanent place of rest and security to at least half - a million of the toilers. The time was when a Methodist pieacher was not entitled to a home no more than . a Roman Catholic, priest was to a wife. He must abide for a year in any house that was cheap and vacant. He must be the exemplar of humility and un selfishness, for they said that the Savior was born in a manger and his softest bed was hay. But there is some more scripture that demands the best of everything for the priesthood, and that says: "Touch not My anointed, and do My prophets no harm.", A better civilization now provides a good com fortable parsonage in almost every town and village and I am glad of it, not so much for sympathy for the preacher, but for his good, long suffering and patient wife and her growing children. Woman loves her home and loves to adorn it with fruits and flowers. When the Methodists get strong: enough to build a parsonage they should not sk at the finishing of the house, but have a permanent committee of ladies to plant vines anG roses and make gravel walks, and establise a garden with such things that do not pass away and perish with the year. Plant fruit trees, make an asparagus bed and don't forget the strawberries and raspberries, and here and there plant some of the old time garden herbs, such as sage and balm and parsley and calamus for a sweet breath and mint for the children's colic. Fix the place up for a home and when the good wife leaves it, of, course, she will leave it clean and leave it with - re gret, and her successor will be happy and talk about her to the neighbors. If I was a bishop I would allude to this at the general conference, and law much stress. on what John Wesley said, that "Cleanliness was next to Godliness." That is not in the Bible,- but might have been and done no harm. Yes, the kindhearted people have generally been sympathizing with the strikers, but the case at Dayton, ()., has discouraged them. We see that Mr. Patterson died suddenly this week, lie was only sixty-nine years old and tne opinion is that his grief and morti fication over the great strike caused his death.. A nobler rich man never lived or died. He was the president of the National Cash Regialer Company, that employed 2,300 men and women. For seven years he has sought to make his extension works a model for all the manufacturers of the world and a workman's paradise. From time to time' he 'has reduced the hours of work and increased the compensation. The cottages for his people were models for comfort good gardens, nice ilowers a skilled man sent free to show them how to plant and grow flowers, a free library of well selected books, hospitals for the sick, good nurses, good beds, all free and no lost time charged against them; bath rooms with hot and cold water and time given to bathe; . clean towels and soap. For the women and bathrooms and brushes and combs and even curling tongs provided; sofas and cots to recline on and books to read. Everything' was nuui as much like home as a loving mother would have provided. Half of every Saturday was theirs. Mr. Patterson was happy. He believed he had solved the problem of capital and labor. But about three years ago a labor union was formed and its committee began to hunt up devilment. Not long" ago they dis covered that the 2,000 towels that were furnished the bathrooms free were washed every week by some poor wo man who did not belong to the union, and they demanded of Mr. Patter son that hn have his washing done by union folkV He refused and the com mittee ordered a strike. Then he de clared that his men were not charged for the baths nor the towels nor the soap, and he would stop, the whole bus iness, which he did. Next they ordered the discharge of his superintendent be cause he was not a union man. This was refused and they struck again Thev also ordered that two union men who had been discharged for bad work should be restored. They restored them and paid them rcguarly $15 a week for each, but gave them no work, saying that they were not competent, but he would pay them." And so they hunted around for other things and finally or dered a big strike, and it has been, on for weeks and no settlement. Up to date the loss to workmen in wages amounts to $120,000 and all these poor families are in distress and would go back if the union committee would let them. It was at Davton where a few months ago the union crowd pursued gome non-union men and knocked them down and hammered their fingers to a jelly with stones, so that they could not work any more. Mr. I at terson's works have been visited by progressive men from all countries, who wanted to see how he mannaged that erica t business without any clash between his capital and their labor, and now thev saw "I told you so. I knew it would not last!" It made me right sick to read about it, for it is much worse than I have told it. Is out sympathy for the poor all wasted? No no! It is those con temptible leaders who got on the com mittee and wanted to make a big fuss out of nothing. With the great com hi na tion trusts on one side and the union strikers on the other side, we the unnroduetive middle class, who make our living by our wits, are in bad fix. But thank the good J.ord we still have meat and bread and straw berries at our house. Bill Akp. A. and JTI. College Catalogue. The catalogue of the A. &M. College is received. It shows 302 students and 28 teachers. The student earned by work last year, $2,4X5. Every member of the graduating class and some of the Juniors had engagements for work the following year in desirable business. The College offers complete instruc tion in Agriculture, Horticulture, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Cotton Manu facturing and Dyeing. There is manual training in carpentry, wood-turning, machine-work, drawing and designing, engine, boiler and dynamo tending, dairying, horticulture and agriculture. The Board of Agriculture has just established 120 scholarships especially for agricultural students and appro priated $2,000 for agricultural work by these students in order that they may be instructed along these lines and also may be helped in paying their ex penses. For catalogue address President Geo. T. Winston, Raleigh, N. C. Cotton 31 ami nu t u ring,. V ihnlugtou Messenger. According to Mr. Watkins, a statis tician, North Carolina had 837, 7X0 spindles in 1800; 1000 it had I,2ll4,5o0. In 1800 it had 01 cotton mills in oper ation; in 15)00 it had .190. Shuth Car olina had 34 in 1800 and 83 in 1000. It had 1,003,040 spindles is 1000. Its mills are far larger than those of North Carolina more than double the size. The South had in 1800 1,554,000 spindles; in 1000 it had 5,001,487. Its factories had increased from 281) to 500. The report shows that North Carolina mills consume 58 j per -ent. of the cot ton grown in the State; those of South Carolina consume 41.6. per cent, of the State's crop. Georgia mills use 22.4 pec cent, of the Georgia crop. f;overnor SamCord Dead, MoKTooM kuy, Ala., June 11. Win J. Samford, Governor of Alabama, died to-night at Tuscaloosa, Ala., where be has been ill for some time. Disease of the heart was the cause of death. A Fl IiHIVE IT YEARS. I Now KfloriN to Get a Pardon for i Viiightllll Algernon. Every county in North Carolina is in suspense to know the outcome of an application, now in the hands of Gov ernor Charles B. Ayeock of that State for the pardon of ' Waightstill A very Anderson, who 10 years ago was con victed of murder and sentanced to be hanged, and since then has been a fugitive from the grasp of the law. It is supposed that the federal admin istration will exert an influence in Anderson's behalf, for though branded as a murderer " he has since showed himself to be a valuable citizen, having, during many occasions, been entrusted with oiheers of great responsibility. I he' deed of which Anderson is charg d is the killing of a man named Ed Horton, near Asheville, N. C, during a quarrel over a mine. That Anderson committed the deed is a fact, he having confessed to that effect, but according to his story it was done in self defense. The trouble arose in 1884 from a vi olent dispute beteen Edward Ray, a brother-in-law of Anderson's, and a man named Bailey, over their respect ive clainies to a valuable mica mine in Mitchell county. Bailey and his friends were in possession. Ray, bitterly set againstyielding, attempted to smoke the Bailey men out. of the mine. Unsuccessful in this,' he next appeal ed to his brother-in-law, Anderson, then a young man of 25, a deputy co' lecter of internal revenue and gre;: . j dreaded by the moonshiners. It v:.u decided to force the issue in per. , and the young men started for ti'.e mine, armed. The Bailey men, who awaited them at the entrance to the mine, were sim ilarly equipped. A desperate" scuflle followed during which Ray and his combatant, Ccbon Miller, fell down a shaft. At the bottom, with renewed ferocity, Ray attacked his opponent and in five minnutes Miller was dead. Meanwhile Anderson had been attacked at the top of the' mine by "one of Bailey clan, Eil Horton. Their encounter was brief, unseen. All that is known of it is that Horton was killed. Knowing that they would suffer emmediate expiation at the bauds of the enraged-men in the mine, if caught, the two lingered not an instant but made good their escape. They kept themselves hidden until the matter quieted down, and then returned and gave themselves up, ou the grounds that the deeds were committed in self defense. They- were indicated- for murder and tried in a hostile county, where public fee!ingwas against them. The jury brought in a verdict of m : der in the first degree in - Anderso: -ease, and of manslaughter in Ray The sentences were hanging and : I years' imprisonment respectively. The friends of Ray and Anderson at once began to plan to free them. Ac cordingly a stormy night, just a short tune before Anderson was to be hanged, a band 500 strong ' surrounded the jail at Asheville, where the men were con lined. . The uiuisnecting iailer was seized and tied and gagged. Five minutes lat the 500 rescuers left the city witho: having fired a single shot. Since t nisrht none hut Anderson s win ami a few friends has known his whrabouts. On leaving North Carolina he assumed a. new name, under which he has worked all these years. In the struggles of the family which Anderson left be hind to keep alive, they have been tided by Anderson's friends, and though tho influence of Senator Pritch- ard Mrs. Anderson was appointed post ¬ mistress at Bakersville. and bai thus been enable to keep her three children Meanwhile Anderson has become high sheriff of the county in which hi li'ves, in a. State not far from the Rock ies. For a good part of the time he has also been in the Secret Service of the United States, still under his assu med name. Wnen 20,000,000 of gold com ;in Kegs was uiKen iromoan rran- cisco. Cal.. to Washington, D. C, An derson was captain of the 20 men w.: so faithfully guarded iU During tl Snanish-Ameriean war, when tho White House was more caretully guar ded than before, Anderson could hav atrain been seen. Also at Chicago when President MeKinley was there at the laying of "the cornerstone of the new Post . Udiee building An derson was in evidence. All during the inauguration day Anderson was the one seen nearest the President. As far Edward Ray, he was long thought to be dead. His wife secured a divorce and married the young attor ney, who is now Senator I'rttchanf. It has recently been learned, however, that Ray is living in the City of Mex- ico, having amasseu a lonune in mining. Aguinaldo'w Suf-eNor. Washington, June 11. EmilioZur- bano, of Tayabas. proclaimed himself the successor of Agumaldo and "gover nor of Taycbas and the Philippines," according to a copy of a Manila paper just received at the War Department. Zurbano is said to have always been a rather theatrical insurrectionist and to have sworn to fight the Americans down to tle last hole. The publication does not take the Filipino's announce ment seriously and warns him that he will find "that the ollice carries with i certain grave responsibilities which will sooner or later result in heart failure aud a sudden demise." WIIV IMC WAS-NOT DEAD. "I had a queer experience at that place once," said a big Texan at one of the hotels the other evening, speaking of a town in the new oil zone. "It happened a good while ago, but it gave my nerves such a jolt that I can t think of it to this day without a ereepy feel ing along my backbone. It was the first time I ever saw the town, the big man went on, according to the New Orleans Times-Democrat, "and I had merely stopped over for the night in order to make a train connection in the morning. "The only hotel in the place was a ramshackle frame establishment, run by a tall, gaunt Yankee, who imme diately attracted my attention by his striking resemblance to cartoons of Uncle Sam. He happened to have a good, crowd that day and gave me a room in the extreme rear of the house, next to the last on a long scond-story allery. I went to bed early, but I slept badly, and at about 1 o'clock I became so wide awake that I got up in self-defense. The house was quiet as a tomb; I had nothing to read to kill tune, and I finally went out to take a stfoll on the gallery. After a turn or two I noticed that a light was burning in the end room, next to mine, and thinking some other victim of insomnia might be inside and welcome company, I topped gently .1 T , 1 i t 1 1 on tne door, ji was uniaicneu ana swung open under my touch, but I stopped stock still on the threshold, paralyzed with fright and horror. "Sitting bolt upright on a small cot bed in the corner was the old landlord, his igs stretched out stiff and stark under the sheet, his fists clenched, his head thrown rigidly back against the wall and his mouth wide open. His queer Uncle Sam face was the color of tallow, and a dirty towel tied --around his temples completed as ghastly a pic ture as I ever laid eyes on. "It was evident to me at a glance that the man was dead, probably from some kind of a fit, and I -rapidly re volved the situation in my mind. If I gave the alarm nothing could be done, buu I would certainly be held as a wit ness for the Coroner's inquest, which would mean an all-day delay in the little town and the missing of a very important business engagement at El Paso. Why not go quickly to my room and let somebody else discover the body in the morning, . thus avoid ing all disagreeable entanglements? "Unfeeling as it may have been, I lost no time in coming to that conclu sion, and in two minutes I was in bed. "It was broad daylight when I awoke, and I hurried into my clothes, sup- iiosiriL'. of course the house would be agog over the proprietor's death. Well, gentlemen, you could have hung coal scuttles on my eyes when I walked into the ollice and saw the old boy standing, as usual, behind the counter, smiling from ear to ear and as merry and lively as a cricket. He was the most active corpse in seventeen States. "What caused his grewsome trance in the night, did you ask? Asthma simply asthma. Before I left he ex plained the whole think to me. 'I am a confirmed asthmatic.,' he said, 'and I haven't slepi lying down for twenty years. By sitting straight up and not "moving a muscle,' he went on, 'I can kce down the strangling cough that is the whole thing in asthma, and through long practice I've actually trained myself to sleep that way. You're not the first person that's been scared stiff by seeing me,' he added pleasantly. Only last week a lady guest caught a glimpse of me taking a nap and keeled right over in a lit." "I got out on the first train and have never been back," War Claim of States. Mr. Rittman, auditor for the War Oenartment. has prepared a table of the claims filed by the various states for the fitting out of volunteer troops during the Spanish war, the amounts allowed and paid on the claims, and the balance claimed by the state to be due. The table shows that almost as much money is alleged to he due as has been paid. The balances yet el -timed are be ing investigated, and will be settled as fast as adjudicated, lexas is the only state that has been settled with in full, and that has no balance claimed. Texas bill was a most modest one anyhow. Noith Carolina claimed $20,817, and has ln:en allowed and paid $20,010, leaving a balance of $0,207 still due. Virginia claimed $1,101, and has been aid nothing. The total claims filed by all the states aggregated $5,870,000, and $3,330,000 has been paid. Kit. J oli ii' Day at Oxford Orphan Amjrlam. St. John's Day, which is usually celebrated at the Oxford Orphan Asy- him on June 24th, will be observed this year on Saturday, June 22nd. The railroads of the state have been asked for reduced rafts and we hope to have a large number of visitors present About the usual program will be ob served. Ine address ot welcome wi by made by Dr. B. K. Hays, with a re- siKinse by -Senior Grand Y arden W . S Liddell. Dr. Geo. T. Winston, President of the A. & M. College at Raleigh, will be the speaker of the day. Concert by the children. 1'ROPItIETOIt li.XI'LAIlVKD TELKGRAPHING WITHOUT WIRES. Review of Reviews. ' . There have been, up to the present, two difficulties which have stood in the way of the more universal application of "wireless telegraphy;" one was the impossibility of locating accurately the direction from which a message came, the other was the fact that if several messages were being sent at one time their effects wonld overlap and the signals re-ceived at any station would be a confused mixture. This first difficulty can be obviated to a certain extent by using suitable mirrors, provided the ether-waves are not too long; and the second has been almost completely removed by the recent work of Professor Slaby, Berlin, using a method of resonance long since pro posed by Professor Pupin, of Columbia College, New York. Slaby has perfected his apparatus to such a degree that he can make an oscillator which will produce waves in the ether of a definite period of vibration, and a receiver which will respond to waves of a definite period, but to no others; so that however many waves, of whatever periods, are passing over a receiver, it will pay no heed to them unless they are of the proper period. It thus becomes possible to transmit messages free from the dis turbing influence of etherwaves pro duced by vibrations. Naturally, the field of usefulness of wireless telegraphy is limited. It can never complete with the long-distance telepone of the rapid telegraph systems; but for maintaining communication between moving vessels, vessels and across channnels, where cables are not safe, it offers by far the most satisfaoi tory solution of the obvious difficulties. It should be noted that some of the most important and successful modi fications in wireless teiegrapny meth ods have been made in this country under the direction of the officers of the United States Signal Serviee. The history of wireless telegraphy would not be complete without some mention of Joseph Henry, America's gre itcst scientist, for "it was he who first, in 1842, discovered the oscilla tory character of certain electric discharges, and who showed that these oscillations produced disturbances which could by suitable receivers be detected at distances of many rods and through intervening buildings. He even arranged an apparatus on this principle to respond to the light ning discharges of distant storms. The great genius of Henry was never more apparent than in his investiga tion of electrical discharges and their ostillatory nature. It is a lasting testimony to the ignorance among Americans of their own great men that the name of Joseph Henry is not in cluded in the fifty selected for the 'Hall of Fame" of the nation. old-Time Itelielon. Charity and Children. . The long-haired parson who imagines he is in charge of the world, which would soon go to ruin without him, is having" his "inning" now; but he will not afllict us forever. Think for a mo ment of Parkburst and Rainsford aa Talmage; and then think for another moment of Hoge and Broadus and Phillips Brooks, The world i weary of pulpit mountebanks and senational- lsts. It is even tired of the bad grammar of Sam Jones. The pulpits are filled with numbers of men called to be lecturers. They use tlieir pulpits as soundinghoards to send their wise sayings to the ends of the earth. They are eternally meddling in politics, or playing leap-frog in the guise, of the refawner. How long, oh Liorct, must these men cut their cajiers on Sunday mornings? When will these great churches be led by real shepherds? Shepherds who feed the flock rather than fleece them? We are grateful that there are only a few of these religious ranters, but, like three frogs in a pond, they make you think they are a million. All through the land there are thousands of noble men of God who still break the bread of life to the people, not the rotten husks 5of their own opinions. But these reflec tions came to us from reading a very racy article which we found in the Washington Post of Monday, by Rev. William Henry Sharon, a Roman Catholic priest. He says that "the Sunday sermon in .many churches needs to be lorn again of the fcpirit of the Gospel; that the devil of sensation alism should be exercised from every protectant pulpit; that the Gosjiel of Jesus Christ is what every devout Chris tian expects to hear in church, not the latest political, social, or literary fad; the Gospel alone as preached Oy a Moody or a Spurgeon the Word of God unaccompaied by any pyrotechnics -is the highest ideal for any Christian preacher, and is sufficiently, attractive for all who are Christian in fact as well as in name." The brother is everlastingly right if he a is Catholic. No Diploma for a Cadet Who Coun tenanced Hazing. Annapolis, Md., June 11. For be ing present when Naval Cadet Dortch was hazed last fall, Naval Cadet M. G. Cook, of Kansas, one of the first class men of the Naval Academy, failed to receive his diploma of graduation. The Academy authorities held that Cadet Cook, being a member of the first class, ought to have interfered and stopped the hazing. v