The Atlanta constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1885-19??, September 07, 1903, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

2 fefc® SEND US SIO.OO I 11 CUt ° Ut th “ “ n,U “ t ‘” WB "‘” Pr, " Ud b ’ ,OW ’ y ° UV f “ U - m ’ “"*’ W ‘" #e “ , ‘ r °‘‘ br retur “ ’»•«'< with » complete .et of our Sample Beebe. Cummer.- P.M Book-. C “ F<l ’- •*•- O [J 811 W*lw Ono SKaro of 7 Per Oent Guaranteed Preferred Stock || Il Bl! iOS Effi IM Kntltlln. you to . fell rn.mbor.hlp .nd p.rtn.r.hip In our r»u *<• P-roh... Ml Mood, bou.hl for own .... M prm.tlo.llr «o,t. BntUllu, you to » oommle.lon of 3 p.r cent on nil pood, .old In fu <><»»•■* jg l-EJSTI ' 110 l MsT tl.ronwhyourlnnu.no.. in other word.-tl.. Ten Dll I Ur. (or «. much more it. you our. to put in) put. you j|| ,IM BU S ! NESS F*OF3 YOURSELF ft «8m W* T& Witl 2 al L ,he “’« ’’’T" P rofi ‘ s , on your money In one of the biggest mail-order house, of the country; enable, you to ma hundreds of dollars on all the aoolsyou eat wear and use, and gives you a chance to MB O It, ypt® ”®** a°T 4SBVRFB 'uiFE-IIUCOHIC "ohliu your neighborhood through your Influeuco-wltlwut any rhk, expanse or oaplt” of any kind® except the small amount of money you invest in the g other investment c"uld earn. * MWS<W,£ F f/VGOWF front 7 per cent to 40 per OB3l t on your money each and every year; better Interest on your spare money than any saving, bank, building and loan association or any ™ 8 ta Ow Plan Ou°r name has the V*™ B " ld ? a1 ' 110 ™ °L doIb ‘ ls ’ worth of goods direct to the consumer by mail through catalogues, circulars and newspaper advertisements fi in wr Una to us Wn °f Amer,ca “ I,d stand ® f ° r *,««f advartfslnp, Good Soods ond Fa r Oeatfr,,, as thousands of our half-million customers have testified, of ■ I iret will ana actora, in writing to uh. Mfn wanted to Increase our business— nifike our institution the largest business house in the country—and in sttiivimr over the manv nlans of increasing a business hit upon a n the wU:d. ’’ Whl ' llS far ° nd aWay ahead ° f auyth,ng eVer Oflered tO the peo ‘ lle - a plttU Whteh *- “ akl “8 «« uew “» ** globeLJl f e \upMiy our busSS th ’front of all the great estab- B -2.---..-S Through Co-operatsoai and Profit-Sharing. ®‘’? b.V profit-sharing that does share profits. We are giving our customers an interest in our business, letting the people own the g ™irilinifira«i expenses to the lowest level ever knoi77ami“are thereby enabled to se'l all Lodl a T tem of Profit-sharing are gaining the hearty co-operation of every customer, increasing our business tremendously, re- g| WE sell | FF I AT LOWER PRICES | „. tile|,; ip r. .r., o, ltoir K I than all others, and issue com- | Zlf M’if'Sf W/e 1711302 f 3 FCKV of Ouf* CIS StOtnSFSi a * ko< * their opinion about it, and the enthmiasn with which thjy too < hold of the idea convinced us that R pieto eataioß-ues of j | ast remains of the expensive onnresslva and waste ul middl'em ß .nd ih.t w. ww ~T7Tn 7“ we h 2 d at last solved 010 <>f lho ? problem, of tra ling; that we had at last succeeied in cutting out the Kg tsKsisit.,,., ,n "* s « reu ° r< " ,r ‘'“"■ e ”-p r » flts g BiXies rri ‘' = '' s I Ruaranfee to Pay You at B-east 7 Psr Cent Bntereat on y°«r money and asour institution has made as high a6 40 per cent on the capital invested, there is no reason why-with the much larger business |« IBXSt I g BBlrF B iUr , ne“"l:?? < ’ r n'.r<ne; , ;' ~U | lurgcit mail-or icr ho !-.•< <• >mb ne 1 amounts to *35 U i t.hi i annually and vic d< 1 pmfit of Sino oi) on a totJl‘c'”-*™ ™ ta -’?h a n%"o r® /o-V, ’“’T 7 ° f t ,! l<, ' l 7 a ’‘ ;|s of co-oper itlve .stockholders. The business of two of the g| | I MiilE" "'’ " y suSber bSnesrbi'r mV’S^urin? ne Ce ?‘ is .P aid f to or fiscal agents but the entire amount || Mi.Ai.ai Instruments 21 • J ’ • ' 1 ol< ot thi (tn idt nd <an t>e paid to anyone until the holders of our referred shares have first been paid their guaranteed 7 per cent each and everv voir H Oo Confound Our LehsralOifer an , ail ninety-nine outof every aunrrM Os such schemes manuring offers of R Photographic 10.0.1. your money Into legitimate. hlgh-Rrade business which is a OOtnq and inonoy-maKln'J C ince.rn. with a successful record of .8 « ars snnd>nv and whiclf' h '° U ’ P ros P ectin K fort or the oil-well whah you have dug refuses to spout or peters out—your money is lost. There is no such chance, r.o such risk in putting |»Ki I’nbllr Entertainment Outfits R • - ~ IESI i I SELLS EVFRyTHHG FROM A REEBLE TO~ i JHRESHIMS M?.C?IIME. EVtRYFHRG Y)U EIT, Wa« AXD USI E7EBY OH iH THE YEAR, [ [I ?nmkT m'i tebois *llbl' lb 1 k C laS « .•;. as >-ah ■' caVtMl’yo. ki" .t .m\'r.'bi’bi:. "v. ' We ft k“so H rrferlnd P mu b csk ! Ci''l < i £f oV Va°ck>n of c.’.'‘f? ! ’ O J Wh ° ” r, ‘. ?° w nur '■ us,o! »®rs. We can refer you to people right, in your own town who have done bus-nos. je Veil tele; of Ei er-. Descript ion 4 i rust and Saving; Bank of <'hi,-:i ff o. a,’.:, n capital and surplus of over S- ).o'>: i•> nay otn-r ‘>vik or rooalable busaoss house in Chica-o'- to 6-in's or 'ir.-'street •Jifr ! il\.' •• Z ’' •’ la ‘"” est ' "’ ttlr country, with a capital o’ nearly Eight Million Dollars; to the Metropolitan gg| ■ I iideru, ;;t ?’ or express company to whom we are known as larjte .nippers; to the publisher of thia paper who v. >ll bo glad to furnsh you the fullest information e n no r .rn.,>7-, or i>',.r,,0.au,,,i,h '•’■ports concerning our institution you can secure through your own banker at home: to any railroad Ml s Itc I- tr ■t * v A __ " 1U « uur 1,1,81 ~r* u b'»« "vLiintj or any mveavniont j’ou may make with us. wBM S '" I,i " h fcwttetl to B&COfne a Partner in Our Great Business an<J’bare in its profit in the exact, proportion of yo g cimhibution ta tlie capital and the amount of goods ynn buy, and which R B | I but the most modest means, can take advantage of th truly oppmimilty to- arebo “g ht b y »« our oth « customers. Mfa hare Divided the Capital Mo Shares of SIO.OO each, so that you, even if you have ■ pS < ar>M't« !|n<i < urtains fca I Vt> ' monfry by co-operutinu U’itit ns f/nd yet o roimn i usiun of .7 per emt on all the nw Im *in ** you help us yet. ° H any you my, | | Co-opsration and Co-opsraflve dealing V.oe 1 1.™ a vuy.ng imM-whi. h an g raj Drj OootU > r, to non-menibrrs all over the world In our book which we s-nd t> .ill shareholders free >f chirpe we mention the exr>pr’>n.e e th> <h i.?h>H r >•, .ri.zv '<• ‘-i*-; . c ' J-i ? *<• .‘ »‘ /; •*V '■. ;v)kh S '- I,s hs shareholders at actual cost and divides between the shareholders all the profit made on the g’oods ggg Log Electrical Good* L sm I’l inv H f ni )Ht which m uns '-nip b> • r : it hil v i tri h' - -h M ia: .\ 3 ‘. r ,o> \ a v,:; s J llre or the society and at the end of th? year foun d his account credited with $19.00. ® Fishinjr Ta< kel jrf - - , —--7. taken the advice <.f manv prominent bankers, lauyers manufacturers, -n \id in iMto‘r r' °V‘ srn >n ''’ b?rt f r int? re.s; than .-,f.: posito.’y secure in anv other wav. Before submitting our plan w<* have Mg Furnaces W that've would have to disappoint thousands of people who would be anxious tn jh|n us -r o. our o.a ~t cus.o.n-rs. a!! or w 10m h.iv» proto : icel it p*rfect. AU prophesied t tai i t would "tak? like wildfire. and the onlv difficulty they foresaw WA i £».'T% .fi k 3 siri’iCHl’lnM’rnment. Si if 3y._ in a h^' ' 2sWm!ltf YOU WUSt act a: once. We are offering only one-half of our 3 HtnHoncrj K n rC,Uy are ,OAer tnan those of ' ,ny other honse > quality considered. You will lose this advantage and as the by-laws of the forbid th’ iss-i’ o' mo--\h ires than -r r f ’ a ' m u enlb 7 r - and P''to -s only are entitled to the 'loocia 5 por cent discount on our prices (which $|S M Tfiilors Trlnnnlnfrs th-immense profits of the business m9 '- snires tr » an sc.>..k calls for you will b 2 forev-r bar-d from becoming- a shareholder and participation ia the special 5 par cent di SCOUHt and g toou^Tory | p o jtab ‘ 1339 Cash Buyers* Union, First National Co-Operative Society, !53 l cHicAQ(ZiLUNor.i stro3t ' I Re ' chart %^o 9 c c u a 9 ?ome?s’ 000 ’ 000 || AV'ill I’aper rj !■ ■■ 11 win mi iw in mw nn 1 : <>?^^ l A* , 'jiai»MK , &xaßc^znrkggx.xa^g.«a 1 ;; CY .. -n • : r xzyn* fcta*»H*-<iijnnuiju.(ii ■iiiai—i im imipmiwn—Wfrmr it 1 "7n"Z*;'„ m , I rk „ ~ REQUEST FOR PROSPECTUS. i for quick action fill in this remittance blank o ’""- h 1 G ne-T & Gash Fu’/srs’ Union. First National Go-Operative Society, Ospt. 3iS. 158 to 168 W. Van Bo Si, Chicago § M ’ tr^, M l ?.:\Tl^i‘^t 8 4. nk 1 . IUI . aRO ,,„. T’ 1 f I ' ’-' —‘ ’, ' *-’- - <s?n,l *' mpn :—Plca:ie ’’•nd your complete “Book of Information” and all literature pertaining to the profit BhnriTig Staci Os your company to | Gentlemen. I herebj subscribe sor shares of the full paid non-asseesable, 7 per cent Preferred and fully jpflj Write for nn-. of th ma Name Streel B El’wi < v,n«' > . i . n */ , l kof nl| P ( as!l . I, *‘>’ , ' rs '• “f*” l I'lrst National Co-Operative Society at SIO.OO per share. Enclosed find S .....?. jci .... nr ~ I u .,7'' l|lß st to‘>a registered by you in my name and tlie stork certificates sent to me. and when so registered end sent to 31 ’ ! ' l E Catalogues, I:,* , E . 1 arc authorized to turn over my money to the company. If my subscript ion is received too late, the money is to be returned to me. raw A•-nrsf’Pgrr, State R ■ >« iHxtorsji'Od that abftvp will be sent to me free of all eharges and that I am under no obligatio’i wliatsoever to subFcr he u •* n,e Street BH g®L The Atlanta Weekly Constitution. J " H P<> ALL EQUALITY BARRED; ANGLO-SAXON SUPREME John Temple Graves Says the Horizon of the Negro Will Show No Signs of Hope as Long as He Remains With the Whites. Chicago. September 3.—John Temple Graves, of Atlanta, this morning deliver d . tin atiaress on “The Problems of tne ■ J'.a*before the forty-eighth convoca-, tion of the Univ* rsity of Chicago. The speech wa: eloquent and dramatii. , as well as pointed and legi* al. >1- said in pan: ■’The civil va> of tin sixties was the; liagedy of the nineteenth century. Its ; r.,H cause dated back to constitutional 1 constructions and to th" irrepi * scibE* eon- , tiicl ov**r the nature of the compact framed by th* fathers. Its provoking in cident. i's precipitating cause, war ; "Os equal value but of unr qicil num- ; b r«, til m* of i, north and the in n of the south grappled for four years at • each other s throats, and for this b:ack . A DOCTOR’S SERVICE FREE. Also a valuable booX on nearly every disease of the. human body, tailing how to cure yourself of chronic ail ments at home. Send for the Book You Want. Men and worn on who are eontinu:*!- T an 'l ,! " w f what is the SR? matt*r with them. |7£ w ns wc " :is wbo k ni,w K, ’ ;4 rtis,asr ,l " >y have, but can't find n Permanent cure. << 1,1 " aovised to write at once to *A W»»lr D>. J New *n Hathaway. 42 in- DR. HATHAWAY. man building. 22 1-2 S. Broad St., Atlanta, (la., who is In pos session of a most w nderiul home method that quickly cans any chronic disease forever. He Send.- you the t.-atrneut and you can cute yourself at home. The doctor wants to get into imme diate correspondence with all who suffer from any disease oi the heart, liver, lungs, stomach, till' it, bladder, blood, dropsy, kidneys, rheumatism, nervous debility, sexual weakness, emaciation of parts, stricture, impotence, weak back, prostativ trouble, and ladies who suffer al the monthly period and have womb, ovarian, uterin< or no vous tr rubles. Ti is great scientist's treatment is marvelously simple. safe ai.-a quick. instantly steady ing the nervous system, toning the bio' I. fortifying the heart and creating manly energy and womanly warmth. Write Dr. Hathaway how you suffer and he will t il you wiiat your disease is and the quickest way to be cured. He lias medical books on all of the above diseases which he will gladly send free of charge to any sick person whose name and address he can get. Write him this very day and it will surprise you how easy it is to be cured in your own home v lieu the right means are used. man of Africa the white men of America snriilrid a million heroic lives and .s'ptmt •:i- !«r',ici.',ii- ? n of their money. "From the unequal contest one section cmcigva victorious, ano the oilier section Uc t int •». . lie in .a at . ut t..e > iclut toCll. AilVi*; die 11* Ut? lilll.lUll MiUW, CUIU 11,111*011 11* Lilt,* toUUUI. two ojjp'jsiti, u.c iji.ai and antagonist! ? 1 <ICC£S <llt.' bb v &IUV IJ J • ? *t‘C lUI o ' X»J* - •' xI v < iw. uc.-unj. vdle u*. iiicse, uj ulu rtvuiu, ; llx« bf’-ngt'.-L lU.UC Mil x.-.UAxi, Uie OUIU. t-ari n. i ».e problem is one of irreeonciiabiv ili-ihcii- . a <me in i*apo.s.Siu*c cornu- I i cj,,i.iu. tiow tue su«».i o r?.t ot races ana mt vnuKcsi oi raws, .an i *-u nuuuiea ? :..,s opal. ,ii cill iZii Lit,a, unequal in ale . lUii.ni iv ami ma<-reii..y aiiLu b <nusuv, , s- , oeiwti.il par.,, sei,i Hies auu si.c --u?„ a;11 1 ■ i.VS, 01.101.0 oj ICC.-.l CUU i.ie.r ..i i mis.co oy mlSiatieu piiiiiia unvpy, . .oi ,*<<■ on e imti terms iiiiulC .. .ms ill toe same g*» . v........ a.-- ~ nr oilier I<l‘ 's, i ppu.-ii’' air*.l a: 11 lie, mil s lie. na.e ever mauu, m peace ano irauquu- uix.i g'jicri.ment vriuieu u.t uoii or laau nmeu oy man me expel miflit lias had thirty-etglil years ot trial, oacken ay me power ot me i- ii.iin g 'Veiiimein, ami t>y me sym pathy of Hie worm. It lias lalieu. i o Die wnite man mis p.omcm means division, ft imperils iiatyona: unity. ' Jo me wiiiic man ot me south the numpei.s its ijsm.riai uevelop ...<ni. it nans our «rowm. x-y uie icc- ■ i*is 01 uie ceu.-.us i. 1. ignielis iimmgi.t- . ■ ' i< iaige,y ucii-is capital Uo.n m- ' ■ li'in la i.ir ..lanow ui uji unsoiveu c.0./.em. h n.aim,, a ctanua.u 01 laooi ..at pleJUmtes <m os. sou..lei'll pool* .igaia.-,. menial out honoraoie service. • t .s a pm.i.ciu oi Ur rai decay. It demoralizes politics. V\ tierever a biack ■ , I.- mi ~±ollo'o mioug'l a ijmcw imijOfi... tn macii. Oauot Is strangled wimo.it reserve in the ojuck. nanus mat noiti n against me safety ut the Slate, i.ms is v. mog. n is inegal. Ji is inon ■ iiir.ii', cut it is uno. it is true in ueorgia. it i- true m South Caiuiiii.i. . ami li would lie UTi..- in Alassactiu svi - ana in 1111110:1. ' ixo Miiltut can eradicate, no public opimon can remove, 110 armed lor-o tail i .oxi.now ini* mnvient, nivmcioie, mue .-tr■ii.ix, auu, n you win, me iinscrupa ..■ mp ici.y 01 i,n> rviigio-aaxvli race m '.in a kind oi liyht and liberty, in an ag< ot enlightenment and law, the wo- II eii of toe south are prisoners to danger and to fear. Wlnle your women may w ili 1 Tom suburi, 10 suburb and from township to township, without escort and without alarm, there Is n*>t a woman of tin: south- wife or daughter—who would lie p*. I milted or who would dare to waik al twilight uiiguaide.l through the resi ,! icc stji ’t.s of a populous town or to rid*' tin:- outside highways at midday. 'Tlere. then, the issues—Unity of the ripublic, material development, purity of politics, political indep. ntleil e, respect for the ballot, reverence for the con stitution, the s; feiy of our homes, the sanctity of our wonn.u. the supremacy of law, the saeredni's.s • f justice, the in tegrity of race, and the unity of the church. There is not. a phase of out civilization. there is not a principle of our ra there is not a fundamental of TELE WEEKLY COySTATITriOWi AHABFUU OAo, MUJWAX, SEPTEMBER 7,1903. I .society, that Is not wrapped tn the hope- Itis tnngle which this problem weaves. Problems to the Negro. | "These are dlthctilties which compass I the white man of the south. Heaven I knows they are serious enough. I “But what of the negro? ■ ''Will the white man permit the negro to have an equal part in the industrial, I political, -aieial and civil advantages of 1 the United States? This, as I understand ‘ it. is tin question which involves his life and destiny. “These words come from a negro—th? wisesi. tin- most thoughtful and the most : eloquent negro of his time—as discreet 1 as Washingtoe. a deeper thinker and a much more eloquent man. But for one I hour Os the Atlanta exposition. Council, of Huntsville, might stand today where Washington, of Tuskegee, stands—as the 1 *.* •■'anized lea der of his race. “This *|i> -ti 'n. asked by Council, as the delib*'r::t" repreientatlve of his peo ple. is tin* core of the negro problem. “The answer to it is In ■ ver.- white num's Ic it, even if it does not lie open ly on every white man’s lips. It may be cxpriT 1 * d in diplomacy; it may be veiled in indirection; it may bp softened [ in philanthropy: it met be guard**,! in 1 oolitic titterrince. and nftenest of all if i is restrainc 1 l>v ultra conservatism and I !■* r.'-'.m.d timhl ty But wherever the I answer to this v’t;<l onestion comes. Stripped of Vi rbinsro and indirection, it rinr. . like martial Imglr in the single syllable Race Prejudice. Mr. Graves* said that the history of man was wiitten in '-a e antagonism .and race separation A thousand years have ; not removed Hie prejudice against th? Jew, who is the aristocrat of history Dow can the negro hope to win where tile Jew has failed? The prejudice against the- negro was not limited to any sec- Ition. die continued: "There ar* ll'n.iKiO negroes in Ohio, Penn sylvania. and New York. Wher*.? is the o’ffu- that they hold or the station of 1 trust and profit that they fill? In Mr. ! Ctuinpnck*'r's state of Indiana they lyneii negroes almost as frequently and upon much less provocation than In Georgia. A riot raised on race prejudice reddened the central avenues of New York. Chi cago citizens chased a negro through the central stru ts, ready with a rope to visit capital punishment for theft. Boston <*i* i d a negro by accident to her com mon council and then offered him SIO,OOO to remove bis off-nsive color from the cl.amb"r in which Im served. "P.ace prejudice is as old ..? the world and as everlasting as the hills, and this prc.la lic"s. deep. imeircumsiTibet! and imtradicable, sits like u shadow on the tut m t of the weaker race. It makes the con o: hi probl "in and it answ rs (■'•uneil's e.truest question with an inexor . hie—NO. The Negro Barred. "Under this prejudice the negro can never, north or south, be received in equal social and personal relations with the families of the white race, and can never, therefore, be a social equal with the white man. “Under ihis prejudice lie will never, north, or south, te permitted to govern in ij.ihy situte or country, even where he has I majority-, and he can never, therefore. ■be a political equal. “If he can have, then, neither social nor political equality '?nd every fact and ai. Uieory and all instinct and every un broken precedent declare that he cannot then he can never under these condi tions reach the full development of a •————— A Great lliocoverj- DROPSY - fl WKO With vegetable remedies, entirely harm. 7 less: retuovfs nil symp- L'S toins ot dropsy in R to .’<l <lrvs; Jjo to fib days e’« 1 fectHft permanent cure. . . > z .v : \ •.? Tria! tr* traent lur niehert tree to every #IV - t er; nothini? fairer, or circulars, tesHnjon :apply to Dr-H.H.Green's Sons, Box A, Atlanta, Ga “ihS “v “ i' fortunate inf*. ds ’ h'.lpless ami up- i t difference haslh„„ a r , ? sake ~ h c one i ' tion.- of our i-K, ' ! J between the ,*. ■ ' black body we j 1 ' I ' l .. co ' l ,n *. ! ■'' Dyer ills , ■ and treasure t*f.' . "f blood et.nvietions of separam i ’ tlie crimson tide'f' ’"it. And yet as * w< r* x'zn that oY ; L ‘ nt,J / and W vail wa - 3. , ti'casme the J4., : 0. whom ' ,r ?.,y illn ' anfl that i“ died .-ne.r-ee, is in' Americans , tnre promise still 111 bon l ami fu- ■ circumstance, ir* **i ie' ' ; whipped by > and ineradicable pro;”' H ’ r , I, ” n b - v ; J*, ever from tin* oppdt '. n ?t for- th' heritage of liijf?rq, lit,os which are 1,, The Only j ' ' Mr. Graves, under th , 1 , . tiv.. remedies, argues -X ' lI s Pecuia- ; the negro is no remed*’, ‘ of ■ n.ilily has increased as i' : .'' n,s ; ' creaN“d t anti race antagor ' ias 4 ’! r ' with bis intelligence. T I,as grown I Neither does Mr. Grate ~ the formal repeal of the tis !'' ve ‘hat rm nt will be sufficient, asit 1 11, 1 amen i- |Ju ambition and leave him to e!"‘ T thoughts of comfort and lubJ'' 1 -” 1 O’l'Y :ll stronger race will lift the wJ hat the, level, tne speaker did not bel r to its | how the Hawaiians, the Tasmai. cl, n g | ' SI Zi alamlers and the Indians h.t vt s -, A i Ci: and decayed by the contact witj : * 1 , 1 ? '*: *' tion. viiiza- j n , “Separation of the races is th ! if the only wav. If God ‘hath made v g< blood all the nations of the eard Oi,e i Ai bath also 'established unto ibei | l'; io metes and bounds of their habitahe j lb did not intend that opposite an( j go tagonistic races should live together. ' j ie; prejudice of race is a poiniing of pF! so dence and the antagonism of peoples? of the fixed policy by which God peoples l Ch different portions of th<* univir3>* at ' establishes the individuality of the nferi' tions. The act that brought these peoplut together on this continent was* a sin of** lib* fathers—a sin of gri *d. an initially of trade- and the sorrow and suffering of the present is for the sin of the past—a sin against nature and a. sin against God. The curse can be lifted only when nature is vindicated and God is obeyed. The problem will be solved only when the ne gro is restored to the 'bounds of his habi tation.’ ” Expense of Separation. The wisdom of separation was opposed by many great minds, said Mr. Graves. Daniel Webster. Thomas Jefferson, Ed ward Everett. James Madison, Henty Clay. Abraham Lincoln and Henry Grady approved and believed in it. JI was not impossible of accomplishment, for today Is a day of large things—a day of magnili cent enterprises—a day of colossal move ment. England is now offering a king dom tract to the Jews of the world. Con cerning the expense he said: "Is tlie expense appalling? Is the cost prohibitive? England again offers an ex ample. England, our mother country— England, next to ourselves, the greatest 1 and most enlightened government under ! the sun—England has just puts its hand I into its pock*", to expend $,11)0.(100,000 in or ! der to buy out the Irish landlords and to ■ heal the otherwise incurable running sore ; of Irish discontent. Wonderful liberali | ty! Wonderful statesmanship! I "We are as rich as England—richer : than England, .''.nd twice as rich as any I I other kingdom in the world. We have as gf'at a stake—as tremendous'a necessity : —in this negro problem as England nad ■ with Ireland. We have already expended i $1,000,000,000 in tlie futile effort to make | the negro free. If England, just out of i Hie war in Africa, can expend $500.000,0C0 ! to solve its Irish ’problem, then surely the j o-reatest of republics, in this era of peace and unparalleled prosperity— at Hie acme of its wealth, at lhe zenith of its great ness and power—can well afford to put. a few hundred millions into the solution of the vital problem of its races—a problem demoralizing to one race and hopeless for mother—a problem that menaces unity, purity and peace. Liberality in this enter, jreney is superb economy. "The argument of analogy would seem cnT <1 " A New Fact. "1 state here for the first time a fact which will be as surprising to the south as it is to you. Thu negro no long Hi s the staple or cere.i. crops of t souta! fl:e cotton of Texas, of Louisiana ai ol .Mississippi is made 'hiedy by i ’.'.bile, man and not by th* negro' ■Thu ufigr.i is m, long .*' a.n'mdu.-tri “ocessHy, ihi s j,. t * r ,, ni t t !e cen-.i ‘, ls , lbJt . as 3 ' < /’Hi siicd, blit it. <• •-u.-jjg.it iruin ;.n authority nut- tmn in the | :ll? J; * >, ~, * UI t lt *,; U<U .^ L „ h I*- I.i' li’g verdi* d and undcrstoi, iiv ti last onserver.-. and thinkers of tlie suite ■'nd when that i-cl-thai tr< ni**:idui lact-now so lilt!, lln c! ... t *. q -' ..ei.iby kimw.i in m ■ ~*juiitij- <md : ‘-y - Hi>.*ii tie- routh will stand a “'h'lly lor s. parutio-.i as its humble; Stands foi it h. r : ..... if il l’s mpciiis th»? reti’.%i' , - t o'*L* iC ’L r r ,el * l t l a V , ' n 1,1 col >BTes<'h*t ‘th? ■hi. it will be a <■ mooiarv loss -r|. '/n' 1 '" 11 :n ,!l; ,ib '- 1 an m.proved and r* strieted imird -i *, ton. .i„.l th,, writing Swede, tin Lrift *.m ! .’‘in A? l ' ' ”" 11 llu (nahmon wi o ej. L J'! 1 0!: 1' '‘itiea! st tt.is .eord** ‘ l6 h,a l ’ s ' vil!l a homogen*-..,! The Place, Plan, Etc, >w'r .‘ Sl ' ssests the Philippine ower Cdhtornia, or tin* lands west ( lhe government, with 400,000 0. -'■res ot land, could easily provide a spo ie went into figures showing that by low exodus inside of eighty le.us, al ! >St ■■ 0! SIOO,OOI 1( tha Heat Britain gave to satisfy Ireland, th legi'oes emffii b,* moved by ship to Africa ‘J ' ’ »5 • As an inducement, he I’e'iii' n fU ir * 11 "' ""K ,( >"S tie coioniz 'd o: '“‘Ml •'■’Oil, that no white man be al 1,1 m the negro slat* , and n* i.Yw oisewhvre. That the negro wil " ti'"ij. believes; but adds, parodox •il as it may seem, Hie whites of tin n.th ma v at m-si object. Tile politician th. mum ;vi!l probably object. In eon ins.on. Mr. Graves said; “l-idies and gentlemen, my message i: iven and my mission is done. The scopt th*? discussion is too vast for an houi id too deep fol- a morning's thought. , (e ollered the bare elements whict ir mams and your scholarship musi tie with tlie form and substance ol ■ elaborate truth. May the word: rh have been spoken in weakness bt p 4 In strength, and may you see my ‘..qo]* * their I )roblfcm as yotfhave not harmy parting words plead for the bi’yf and sympathy which lies for u? Jane tins dividing issue. Abraham ‘coultold you in 1X59 that the union ire. ’I. survive half slave and half ne llvlteve with all my mind that it j 1 rams .today his noble lips would i not lonj; the truth that tlie union can > halt slave half black ami half while j upon wind half free! This is an issue ■ j I* or hl seems Wc can never agree, j wrangled i hundred years we have | about thit fought and bled and died | the wrangiick Man from Africa! Is I the great rtli its fearful cost? Shan I mon coimtrjern section of our coin tlie great stays turn its hand against . try? Shall trn section of our conn I north steel h»tmg American of the I American of art against tlie young I l attse? Shall Huth over an alien's l and of a comrtlihildren ot one blood i in bitterness heritage divide . Shall Hie. memdlranger in our miiist ’ i town be obtilenXC Eutaw and York 'ol Wilmington a. ;i the recollections ; p*.ace and harmon'ewnan? Shall the , be forever imperilthis great republi-: negro, whose faults the sake of the , so wonderfully outA whose weakness ■ his gratitude? Sh ill his virtues and ! Africa hinder and dehiaqk Man froir | destiny of our imperil WOl *k ;i n d the l “Great God! Tlie ide..? ! unthinkable! The soutn’onstrotis and I nor unpatriotic, and thVelther cruet * The north is neither itllqi knows it. diet.ive, and the south lcn>],, nor vm r>t us is mistaken, and If* if r ~ ~ **. of ns are g Opium, Laudanum, Cocaint and T.hail CTCTW g manentiy and painlessly cored at home. K from bixaineta. Action Immediate. jnl » natural, healthy condition without desire 99 g Write for partlcolars. I>R. LONG CO., R I nm im l m e Tr , misimdeistood, we are yet one peopl( he . and we must meet upon the plane of ou 1 brotherhood and our destiny. ,iJ ! “Men and women of the" university, i appeal to you who make the future. . ; appeal for Gaucaslan unity. I appeal so “j i U"' imperial destiny of our mighty race “ \ This is our country. We made It. AV* ; modeled It. Wo control it, and we alwav ' shall. We have done great things. W l have mighty things yet to do. Tlie negr* i is an accident-a.n unwillizg. a blame ' less, but an unwholesome, unwelcome ' s helpless, unassimilable element in ou in civilization. He is not made for ou times. He is not framed to share in tin ..j duty and tne destiny which he perpiexei and beclouds. Lot us put him kindiv am ~ humanely out of the way. Let us giv< : him a bettor chance than lie has evei I _, i had in history, and let us have done with , s * him. Let us solve his problem—frankly ■ fearlessly, nobly and speedily. Let us put v I it behind us. Lot us purify our politic? f] of the perplexity. Let us liberate the , > south to vote anil to think like freemen , s ' upon the mighty Issues of the times. "And in the name of history and des- I tiny—in the name of the Past and in th*? j name of the Future— in the name of God ' s ? ' and of our Mission. I appeal to this great, of conquering Caucasion Race to lock arms iDO and go forward, and onward and upward ,t_ to its essential work." a ~ “ —— a Grove’s Chronic Chill Cure n cures the chills that other chill tonics ie don’t cure. Made of the following fluid x> extracts: Peruvian Bark, Black Root ~ Poplar Park. Prickly Ash Berk. Dog u A ood Bark, and Sarsaparilla. The Best j. General Tonic. No Cure. No Pay. 50c. 11 TRAIN WENT THROUGH BRIDGE. Six Killed and Twenty-four Injured, Some Expected to Die. s Charlotte, N. C., September 3.—Passen j, gt i ti aln No. 15. northbound, on the South r Carolina and Georgia Extension railroad, 1 formerly the Throe C’s, now operated by ! > the Southern railway, went through a r trestle 50 feet high over Fishing Creek, 3 .1 miles east of here, about 11:30 o’clock e today, killing six men and injuring twen v ty-four, five of whom will likely die. t Three of the latter are negro passengers. Tlie dead: “ ENGINEER BRICK MAN ’ FIREMAN FEED RHYNE . POSTAL CLERK SMITH, j* THREE I'NK?<(JWN NEGROES. 'tlie injured (white): Julius Johnson, of Rock Hill. S C rwr h.'.ps fatally. ’ 1 W. L. Slaughter, Hickory Grove, S C , seriously. Fred Poag, Lancaster, S. C. P. W. Spence, Roddis, S. C. I J. N. McLaurin, Bethune, S. C. Mrs. J. (_.'. Boyd, Pressley, N C Mrs. 11. B. Buist, Rock Hill, rs. C. B. F. Williford, Charlotte. T C. Hicks Lancaster, S. ('., seriously. M. Harry Willie. Jr., Rock Hill g H R. A. Willis. Edgmoor, S. C. F. M. Stephenson, Kershaw. S. C —. Cunningham, Lancaster S "c O. B. Hall. Rock Hill. S. C. ' ‘ Mrs. Saddle McCaskill Kershaw S C Two children named Jenkins Hill. ’ ‘ ' Conductor Ed. Turner. Baggagemaster I'ukes. Flagman Whianant. HIS HEAD WORTH LARGE SUM. Roach Makes Sensational State ment About Goebel Case. Georgetown. Ky.. September 4.—T. G lioach, who has been living in El Paso seems to have created quite a sensation yesterday in Juarez, Mexico, by the statement that ex-Governor Taylor and Caleb Powers would be willing to give me hundred thousand dollars for his head and that he is in possession o' n , r'. e 7 u W ?,‘ ich ' ‘ f niadc public - clear » ( aleb Powers and condemn ex-Gov *rnor F W. S. Taylor. governor , The only connection of the Rno m 3 with the Powers case so ft»r Is £ hs -"i «Un y V" 0 ."’” is that Vrs Roach w >’Z ■' at Hie list trial and at forme - rials , IS' witness introduced to prove that Caleb B e. Powers, prior to the cire-amstaaii at v.hfch culminated in his arrest, h assumed responsibility for bringing I I rankfort of the mountain men. Road I statement that what he knew would ch ar Powers and condemn Taylor is not e. keeping with such conditions. ,'e In an interview at the Georgetown i zs,- today Powers said: ’e "I know nothing about th- Roa ■r, story. A.ll I have to say is that som ... body somewhere has information will* s 1 ! given out would clear me. Somed* ]r Killed Mr. Goebel, t:iat we know. If ; ,P j guilty parties would only come forw ie | and tell the truth I would soon b< >s j free man.” r) * ■“ A Guaranteed Cure for Piles, h ' raV 0 ' 1 ’ Bleeding or Protrur 1 : . ; Piles. Your druggist will refund .- ' ' money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to c you. uO cents. n WEST AFRICA TO RIVAL SOUT? ” Cotton Growing Is Being- Develo J on a Large Scale. Liverpool, September 4.—The news r * ceived from Lagos, British west Afi September 2, that the development of 1 cotton trade in the interior of that . of Africa was so great that the 1 railroad officials had been obliged to ru extra trains in order to bring down i large supplies to the. coast, somewhat. - prised tha cotton interests here co-i giowing m west Africa being still’reg I ed as l*u a largely experimental st?.* m n V 'vr' S “ f tronl i-ago-s air, . in the Mersey this week i I noun.-ed to bn of excellent quality. lhe seed sent out from here and sow in June 1 S expected to yield 4,i?(X) 1„...... 11 livery of this crop is eKpei at ( hHstmas If the cotton grov ■ L*,« wm n ’i 1S , successful - Um cultivat area will be enlarged. Cotton Crop of West Africa. Lagos. British West Africa, Septem ■ ' 2.-Tlie development of the cotton t in the interior is so great that the r roads have been obliged to run ex -i trams in order to bring down the supplies to :he coast There D *'■ ' pr ?, s * 1 ' iPl ' t , 01 a farther Increase in “•> cultivation of cotton. Free Booklet A b biding. \tTX H & haWa >’ ■■'-'■"Lg 1"".,,;’ L ;IPV " J rest incase by the timely use of utt s Liver Pills, an old and ?! orite remedy of increasing opularity. Always cures SiCK HEADACHE, dur stomach, malaria, indiges ion, torpid liver, constipation nd all bilious diseases. UTT’S Liver PILLS ? e ßll ar ’l’ Sa * lu act the be.l «'»••■*'» rib. XSfef/'* u® r <auge. 80 or 3Un/.k CBnj pl*to fiun ol«red *7.80, or send tl id w? 2L r . el> fltnt 00 rPcd r ? of :8 * balanee, with prlrfilA ® fl ! '' e ® 4 expreg. 0. O P • rnotoxtctlr as reprMentei 11,111 ne a€ your e x P reM e® o * aa £ 'he fl. shell loadl a< .J*!!’ rel y rn tie end « »‘l‘ refa«d