i^——————W—W——Ml— !■■!< <■> ■ W I I II I1IIBI ~n—HIWTiTWIIlM ■' I Reminiscences of a. Wayfarer Some of the Important Events of the Pioneer Days of Richardson County and Southeast Nebraska, as remembered by the writer, who has spent fifty sne years here. Tin: N'K\V AND Till'. OKI* ‘•Man that is born of woman is of few days a ml full o 1 trouble.” The pntriaeh who is said t«* be responsible for the above profound declaration, seems to indicate that man born in some other way might not be so lull of trouble, but failed to give the mod us of the operation. Ac cepting the truth of the state meut, which all human exper ience has amply verified, we as | sume what is equally true, that ; nations born of man using the j word in its generic sense are of brief existence, and just as | full of t h e same brand o I ! trouble, but on a larger and vastly more extended scale. As aggregates always partake of the nature of their unities, it follows that they are also sub ject to similar vicissitudes, troublous lives, and ultimate death. None in the past have been exempt from the common fate, and it is very certain that none will be, in the long life ol our race that is yet to transpire. To go no farther in the past than is covert1.1 by the history of our own nation, and take its natural life as a fair sample of all that proceeded it, we ob serve that to bring it into being, and keep it so, has been one continuous struggle against un toward and unfriendly condi lions. Like a child, it has had to tight for its life at every step, and the worst of all the enemies it ever had were what is known as domestic, such as long time war with the native Indian tribes, disputes over tin nature of our governments, state and national for the idea seems to have been that ours is a conglomerate mixture of all kinds of sovereignties, with not much of a head anywhere and the perennial crop of uneasy politicians a n d demagogues that has been and yet is, the peculiar curse of the republic, for to them more than to any other, we owe the wasting, bloody civil war of the decade of JNKt. Thomas II. Benton, in my humble judgment, the clearest thinker of American statesmen, •said: “the- danger to this count r\ would come from uneasy poll ticians; its safety from the trail quit masses.'’ Lvery year has j proved the truth of that predic tion, and it was never more true than it is at this moment. The span of ray own life covers the stormiest years of our na tional life, and it has been a fact known to the veriest mod iocre of the period, that the Negro question in one form or another, has been, of all others, the most vexatious. The pres ence of the black race in Amor j ica was involuntary lie was a 1 slave to begin with, and contin j ued to be so until the institu tion was abolished as one of the results of our civil conflict; and then occurred the greatest mis take that was ever committed in connection with that unfortu nate people they were entrust ed with the elective franchise. J remember with much personal satisfaction that when the lath amendment to the constitution was submitted to our legisla ture for ratification, at its ses sion in lNHi, I, as a member of the upper house of that body, cast my vote for it under pro test. It was a foregone conclu sion that it would be adopted by an overwhelming majority, and I was unwilling to stand alone as the only member voting against it. but l was more un willing to allow the occasion to pass without giving expression to my serious objection to a measure that would enfranchise an ignorant, half civilized race, who were no more competent to measure a id rightfully under stand the responsibilities im posed by .1 freeman's ballot, than any other animal of a low er order than man. We already had enough and to spare, of ig norance and brutality in the electorate of the country, with out swelling the number with millions more of the most objec tionable material that the folly, or blind ((artisan zeal of men, anywhere in tile world, ever tried to make voters out of. The impolicy of the measure lias long ago been demonstrated, so much so, that the amendment has, to all intents and purposes, become a dead letter ou the statute hook of the nation, and it ought to be so. Nevertheless, the dusky race is with us yet, and still as pow er I ul for evil as it ever has been, and quite as demoralizing to the dominant race as in the day of its greatest subservance, as I shall presently endeavor to show. It was only the other day a man of some national dis tinctiou made an address before tile RraduatniR class ot our state university, by invitation of the authorities of that institution. His subject was “Dixie," which sobriquet was Riven the south land in the time of its rebellion aRainst the authority of the Reneral Royermnent, and one it is likely to retain as Ioiir as the recollection of that awful strife shall dwell in the inemor ies of the American people. AnioiiR other matter to which he Rave attention, and the chief one I take it, was the XeRro, or as lie politely put it, the racial question. I read that part of his address with some interest, not particularly in what he said, as in what he iniRht, but did not say. This orator has Ioiir been in public life, and is, in an in tellectual way, fairly represen tutive ot tin- people who have honored him in the past, and who have recently further dis tinRuished him with a seat in the I'nited States senate the AreopaRiis of America and the Rreatest deliberative body on earth. We had a riylit to expect a man, so honored and so distin Ruished, in an address of the character mentioned, that if he touched the racial question at all, lie would deal with it frank ly, comprehensively and in de tail; that our people, less ad vised on the subject, iniRht Rain a knowledge ot the real disturb ihr element in the society of the south, and which has made the continued presence of the XeRro amoiiR t h e white people, a source of anxiety, not to sav alarm, for the peace and Rood order of the southern section of the country. But he did noth ing of the kind. The real ques tion was not touched at all. He talked much about the Negro as though tin* people in the north do not know what a Ne gro is, nor what he is like. So tar as the anthropological rela tion of the African with the bal ance of the human family i" con cerned, it is altogether proba ble that tlie people north of that imaginary line known as Mason A Dixon s, are as well informed as the senator elect from Mis sissippi is, and on that point in i struct ion was not needed. That I there is. and always has been, j since the black race has been denizens ot this continent, a cause for racial alarm on the part of the whites, there can be no doubt. Had some intelligent representative white lady from the south delivered the address, instead of Senator-elect Wil liams, she would, if allowed a free hand, have told her audi tors that that disturbing ques tion in the southland is not so much the negro himself, as it is the disposition t<> race amalga matiun by the male portion of the white race. Tin* pretended fear that tin* white man’s daugli ter will marry a ••nigger'' is the i merest bosh, and nobody knows that fact better than Senator Tillman, who frequently talks that nonsense. Hut what of his sou ." What is lie dcfing’r Marry ing a negro woman ' Nothing of the kind, but he is doing what lie can to increase the race of mixed bloods and their name in the south is-becoming legion. It is the common experience of the ages, that where two dis tinct species of the human race come in contact, and they are disposed to amalgamate at all, and do so to any extent, all that is necessary to a complete ab sorption of one by the other, is indefinite continuance of such contact. I have stood on a corner con venient for the purpose in a southern city, and taken note of the variegated hues of color in the faces of the people pass ing by, and 1 affirm what I know to he true, that of the mixed bloods and the pure Afri can, there passed me more than three of the former, to one of the latter. Among other sig nificant facts in the same con nectionn was o n e concering school children. At my point ot observation the children go ing to the colored school went one way, while the children go ing to the school provided for the whites, went another. I observed among the colored children, so-called, there were more than five mixed bloods to one full blood, ranging from perfect white, all the way in deeper shading, to the perfect black. 'Phis told a n awful story, but somehow and for some reason not explained, the southern people do not like to talk about it, and yet it is the bcte /loir of the whole South. It is claimed on the authority of the census, that the blacks in the south are steadily on the increase. This, in point of fact, is not true,and for this reason every .mixed blood i> classed as a negro. In that sense they are on the increase; not otherwise. The eminent gentleman could have enlightened the university students on this subject and made his address one of loftv distinction and lasting profit, tie could have told them further that the dominant race in the south is in no danger of ulti mate corruption by taking into its veins the blood of the black race, for it is not doing that. That can only be done when the white women in the south shall become as Inst to the higher ideals of civilized life as a certain class, low down in the scale ol manhood of the white male population appear to be, which all the world knows is a thing impossible. It is the black race that is being decim ated. corrupted and destroyed; not the white one. Assimila turn sufficient to change fixed types intoa mongrel people,such as exists in Mexico, Central America, and some of the South American states, requires the concurrent action of the sexes o i both t h e amalgamating species. No instance in the history of the Cermanic races can be found where they have mingled their blood with that of the African, the Indian or the Mongol, sufficient to pro duce a distinct type of the mon grel, while just the re verse is true of the Latin races. W bile the blood of the Anglo Saxon is not being corrupt : ed at the fountain, a surplus and worthless population is be ing engendered that will require an indefinite time to eradicate; anil southern society, or any other burdened with this unde sirable race, must suffer in the consequence. But what is that to a professional reformer? Nothing. Among other reminiscent things pleasant in memory, are A hammock for two, Just you—and A Package NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY the many solitary hours of study I have devoted to the works of the mighty thinkers in past iages and in later times, on this same subject of race integra tion and disintegration great historical men such as Plato and Aristotle and their contem porary (Grecian and Roman phil osophers, a n d Maltlms, La Marck, Darwin and Spencer of thb nineteenth century names written high on the scroll of the immortal few in the temple of Mnemosyne, there to remain as imperishable as time itself. Prom these we learn that the natural process of race continu ance by survival ot the fittest may be arrested, if not prevent ed entirely, as can be seen, as an object lesson, by a glance at the people of Mexico. It is not pertinent to my purpose to en ter upon a discussion of these questions in a paper like this, but 1 do insist that it would have been consistent with a statesman's duty to his constit uents, the American people, when addressing them, as Sena tor-elect Williams did at Lin coln, to have treated the race question in his own vicinity a dangerous menace to the peace and happiness of the people—as a political philosopher, when the subject of his address made it entirely in order to do so. Hut as though partisan politi cal clap-trap is the proper thing in an address to a gradu ating class at a country school or a state university, whether the subject in hand is “The Price of a Soul,” or historic “Dixie,'’ the distinguished law giver from the south, in con formity to precedent perhaps in that particular, interlarded his address with something very like it, and disposed of his sub ject much in the way the novice played Hamlet, by leaving Ham let out. Politics in these latter days, seem to be in order at any and all social functions among the people, except fun erals, and it is not impossible that a new departure will be in augurated as to them in the near future, when some peer less orator that is,one who can | talk by the mile will on such oc casions discuss the “trusts,” or the “principles of my party,’’ (personal pronoun, possessive case),while the mourning friends are paving the last sad rites in the memory of the loved and lost. In the old days, on the close of a school year, some one emi nent as a teacher in some branch of human education (not neces sarily in a regular school or col lege), was invited to address the graduating class on the completion of their labors, and just before they bid farewell to their alma mater to be^in the real battle of life. Such ad dresses were always suited to the occasion, and nothing was allowed to enter into them that would offend the sensibilities of anyone, either in his religious or political beliefs. The world has progressed since then like the crawfish—backwards. His Opportunity. “A man in Winsted, Conn., ate 13 eggs at a sitting,” says the Buffalo Ex press. Perhaps he was determined to take full advantage of the recent slight slump in price. ,■ THE UNFORGIVABLE SIN. ‘‘Grandad, what was Adam’s great sin?” “Adam's great sin, Tommy? Why, parting with his rib, to be sure." THAT EXPLAINED ALL. Hearty Party (meeting old ac quaintance)—How are you? Haven’t seen you for years. How’s the wife. Old Acquaintance (very much married, gruffly)—She’s all right. Hearty Party (pleasantly)—Ha! I brought you two together, you re member. Old Acquaintance (resentfully) — Oh, it’s you, is it, I owe a grudge to ? —Ally Sloper. BARRED. “If time hangs heavily on your hands, why don't you go into poli tics ?” “A man as rich as I am,” an swered Mr. Dustin Stax, “doesn’t dare go into politics. He is consid ered lucky if they let him shove a card under the door with a check at tached to it.”—Washington Star. CURED IN ONE ACT. “Fred, dear, I feel it in my bones that you are going to take me to the theater to-night.” “Which bone, darling?” “I’m not sure, but I think it’s my wishbone 1”—Sydney Bulletin. AFRICAN'S FAVORITE DISH. Dinuzulu, the Zulu chief, has burst a blood vessel, says a telegram from Martzburg, and it is said to be only a wonder that his father did not do the same when he was enjoying British hospitality in London after his capture, lie and his sable suite were housed in one of the artistic mansions of Melbury avenue, near Holland house, and his favorite breakfast was a basin of oatmeal porridge and a pint of whisky, which he preferred to milk. Otherwise he was fairly quick in his assimilation of the manners and customs of civil ization. RATHER FIER'Y. Old Uncle lliram from down Bacon Eidge way halted in front, of the “quick lunch room.” “Waal, begosh,” he drawled in deep meditation, “I always heard that thar was a blamed lot of tire eaters up in town, but I didn’t kuow they would go that far.” “What, now, Uncle Hiram9” asked the city nephew. “Why, just look at that sign, ‘Lightning Lunches.’ Just think of lunching on lightning!” MARRIED CHUMS. “Has he any friends?” asked the judge of a prisoner in the clock. "No, only a wife,” was the mat ter-of-fact reply of the witness. Eathor hard on the wife not to he counted as her husband’s friend, wasn't it? It is the perfection of marriage when a couple are real chums as well as lovers, just as it is the perfection of parenthood when children count mother and father their real, best ! friends. FULLY EXPLAINED. “Yes, her husband is always con fidential with her. He isn’t like so [ many men who never tell their w ives anything.” “Do you mean Porgie?” “Yes.” ! “His wife doesn't get much out of Porgie. lie can tell her all lie knows in five minutes." A SORE SUBJECT. “How much did that eapito! | cost?” inquired the sightseer in. Harrisburg. “Sir,” replied the guide, severely, “we are here to improve our minds, not to talk scandal.” Chatauqua, July “5 to Aug. 1. DAVIES & OWENS Reliable Jewelers and Opticians Diamonds of Purest Quality To wear diamonds is to be in harmony with the fashion spirit of the period. It is sub stantial evidence that you are ' imbued with the element of enthusiasm that accelerates progress and establishes pros perity. By permission we will refer ! prospective buyers of precious stones to our ultra exacting clientile — those who either knew values, or accepted our word and are satisfied. DAVIES & OWENS