Newspapers / The News & Observer … / July 1, 1920, edition 1 / Page 11
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1.1 t:;::;iSTATicrnoKEz:L:i: y .; TAKES A fEW TURN i E.aton," June 30. The BnTonTSlaUba 3. ke her bis taken a ew tura. The etatioa authorised yean ago i bo nearer construction and they hare stop ped auHinf .prematura poateard pictu r4 ot it at the drug etorea, but tha faet remains that if it new does get bum Kinston. ha1a nnloaatatio this "vary moment. Tha Norfolk Southern, Caro lina and Kinston-Carolina railroads are authority for this. .Tha tiny .depot of the Norfolk Southern baa become the ofiicial union station" of tha three roads and tickets bear the ''union station tamp. Chamber of Commerce officials tan And no fault with this turn of affairs, but they are confident, tha pub lic will neer take tha thing seriously enough to tall the so-called "packing ease depot "union station.' - REVENUE COLLECTIONS - BREAK FORMER RECORDS Wi nstoa-Salera, -J una 80. Internal revenue collections at the local office, for tha fiscal year ending today, g srreeated 180 J44J.60. These figures were announced as breaking all former records and nearly doubling Jhe amount eojieciea tna year prerious, www w. $13,432684. The customs receipts of the local offica the past year totaled 3,787,413.88... , , . 'T""": Federal af Mrs. Bants;" Kinnton, June 30v The funeral of Mrs. Eliza L. Bants, was held yesterday afternoon at S o'clock, Rev. George B. Haarahan and Bon J. N. H. 6ummerell, l'retbyterian mlnistera of this eity and New fern respestirely, officiating. Mrs. DACK HURT " , ALL THE Tli-'E Mrt. Hill Says Lydia EPink bam'e Vegetable Compound Removed The Cause. , : KnoTTille, Tena. "My back trart me all tha time, I vas all run down, eouli DOS ems ana say uwa bothered me, t!l mmnmmtt fcr femalei trouble, UI wast three ' years wns thee', trouble, sli doctors "did we nor rood, j Your med Ciina asIdmI nf sis ter eo ihe advised me to talcs it. I took Lrdi E. Pinkhams Vegetable Com nmiiul and tha Liver :11. ..J mmA T,Hi. E' Pinkhasrf Sanative Wash and now I am-well, can at heartily and work., I give you my thanks for your great medicines. You ... Bhlik bit letter and I will tall everyone what- your medicines did for we Mrs. Pkau. Hnx, 418 Jacksboro Bt., Kncxvill , Tennessee. IIP' 'il ... lam's Vegetable Compound has oconv pliahed are constantly being" mweed. proving the reliability of this grand old ' If you are til do o elrag along sad continue to suffer day in and UT owt but at one Uke Lydia K. PinkWs Vegetable Compound, ft woman s remedy for woman's Ills. liantz, who was 87 yera of age and a former resident of Burlifigtoo. X. C, died Monday at tha residence of ber daughter, re., pscar T. -Boney, .107 North UcLewesa street., She was known to many-Tierwnstbere."' One daughUr, one soa and one brother survive ber. Burial took place in Maplewood eeme Ury. - Tha floral tibu tee were- aanef oas. v -'. r-.' - :-- SPECIAL ! SNAP BEANS 30c Per Pound; $2.60 For 10 'Pounds, Postpaid . v jr. ;Burpees Stringless -.Green Pod Bountiful Black Wax Red Valentin Longfellow , Giant Stringless " , Golden Wax Black Valentine " . - White Kentucky Wonder Pole or Cornfield -- r- Prompt delivery on any of the above varieties. v . jod p. vyatt arsons CO." RALEIGH, N. C. Y UliislMilittllltUtsmtiiititMIIUIIIItltllHltleMMlUIsi MtmittmiMmtmMim4MlMtMistHm4imiis4iie UU4M4tatl(mtlUieaaitie4ife ! ri n nn rpm IT IS 3 FiVe Reasons ; We can get more for your land - - ' than through any other method: ' v FIRST. We have an organization -.. :'. made up from men who know the . r - "game from A toZ . SECOND. We know how to "v ; make your proposition atttracdvei ": rr' 1 . ' THIRD. We know Just where, wheh. "t ,": V''s- '-v ."V. and how to proper! advertise it. . Yi ':;: - FOURTH Our reputation of many years 4 standinjj is a guarantee of best results. '-. FIFTH. We furnish the "pep'- ! ... Fill in the ccaipon below, we do the rest Raleigh Red Estate ad Tresl Ccsrpaay 4 East Martin Street, JUIeifh, .C How msny Acreif...... Row near ILK. Stationl.!... Number of Dwningff.... 3ert frieef Name , . Fair Grounds lpi;iiaf:pillf 3rd Races To Start Promptly At 3 P. M. . .. f"a . i . , -... " asasaaiiMawm -;iwan0i Entrie Wanted From North Carolina Communicate At Once With ,F. R. Sineath, Hotel LaFayette. -K.' Fayetteville, N. C. , ENTRY SHEET IS AS FOLLOWS CAR f Essex' Stearna Chalmers ' -Ford - - Victory Special National ' National ' Hanes - - OWNER Gibson Bros. F. R. Sineath B, W. Steers . Bob, Wile J. BvBetha- . McLaurin James Burkett Tally Garren ' : 1 ), DRIVER -' ',. r, Bill Wiles, LaurinburtT, N. C. 4 . BO) Alston, Columbia, S. C Willie McRoy, Hartsville, S. C. . Bob Wiles, Columbia, S. C, J. D. Betha; Barnville, S. C. McLaurin, McColl, S. C. J. T. Burnett, Sumter, S. C. ""Tally Garren, Clinton, S. C. i E 3 i I POLITICAL ADVEBT1SIXQ rOUTICAIi ADVERTISING POLITICAL ADVERTISING ' - POLITICAL ADVKgTISIXa - ! L C 2S -.rri-T- mmm , Jii 1 V I I I . , - - r - ' -4- t a .. n buUuUilt r This Space is Donated By. Tha Boyhood Friends in Richmond County of nn- i a r iiii si udlilLuLuLI "r -,.,-i.iJ. i . It has been published by a few ungrate ful North Carolinians.-nien who are seek ing to detractirom the illustrious record of a great North Carolina Democratic statesman, that Cameron Morrison was appointed on the Republican State Exec utive Committee nn Raleigh on August 29, 890. This was published without giving all" the facts intconnection. there with, and for the purpose of discrediting Mr. Morrison by misrepresentation. Jhe joUowing are the facts; ; JkIrJdorrisoivasmHiovm 1869. He was 21 years old inNovem- berri890Taftertherf all!election.-An at V tempt to show that he was 21 years old in August of that year is an attempt to : pervert the truth. Mr. Morrison's father was a Republican and: he grewup under . "Republican -environment. - In, August, . ' 1890, before he was 21 years old in No vember following; he was elected a dele: gate from his homei county to' the Repub lican State Convention m Raleigh. Im-' mediately preceding the adjournment of. L the convention a State Executive Com mittee was elected and Cameron Morri son's name was on -it; Morrison never served on the committee. ' He went home disgusted with the crowihe found him- self in, in Raleigh; told his father that if that crowd ever got control of the State, v M they would ruin it and that he was going to be a DemocratTheretarose an--estrangement between him and his fa-, ther over his repudiation of the Republi-; Lcan partr which deprived him of the as- sistance he expected" from his father to 'enable him to go to a law school. , He , went out and got a free school to tiach ; and made enough money to pay his own way. He was not old enough to vote at 7the election in Novemberrl890 In I89I3 ' he was studying law at Judge Dick's law school in Greensboro. In February, 1892, he was licensed to practice lawand hung out his shingle in Rockingham. He . stumped the county : that 'year for the Democratic party, and in November, 1892, cast his first vote and cast it solidly for the Democratic ticket . Anyone who denies these statements is stating a false hood. - . 1 . . Beginning with the campaign of 182, jMr. Morrison ;- has, beei) in. every cam- . paign since, fighting the battles of De ; mocracy with a degree of zeal and abil ity that has beenunsurpagsed in North f Carolina. ;;, 73 .vr-: -C ; ::Tr No just em.atff-' : dent that he was not bern a Democrat He has never been anything else since " his voting age,;bjit it'added to the hard '" struggles'of his early youth to be a Dem- i T ocrat. O He accepted parental displeas- ure .and lpss.pf emploent to'be a Dem bcrat, and in cbiintyhichliip to hat time had not elected a Democrat to office ' since the Civil War. c Of course he has been intensely a Democrat because he . had to make up his mind that he couldn't be anything else before he could be a. Democrat He has come through ordeals -:-and through thirty years of hard service' ; for his party to the high honor which he " now asks at the hands of the Democrats' of the State." . , ; ; Mr. Morriaon's. active campaign was not1 bejun , until six weeks before the first primary. In this short , - period of active campaigning he rapidly f ortred ahead t " and achieved a position of leadership in the first pri-, -f1 inaryr-olBBereord4oul4euaI "Tirtrenfftfiwfth the- J It is beyond comprehension that men who call - ' themselves NorthyCfcrolmians; who have been Lblesssi: ed and benefited by the efforts of Cameron Morrrson , and the other great Democrats who rescued the State , from Republicanism, should seek to discredit him by reference to an envu-onment thai surrounded him in his youth and from which he had the sense and cour- age to break away upon attaining man's estate. Such tactics is enough to make decent men sick. Rather "should they honor a man who so early in. life exhib ; ited such sterling qualities of manhood, and whose innate statesmanship enabled him to determine the - true and righteous ourso4o-pursuev H haarisenl through struggle and against oppostion to a place 61 honor and leadership in the State.T Yet there aire , men' who would seek to traduce his character and - drag him down.- Many falsehoods, have been circu lated against him by those who would defeat him by fair means or foul. -But Mr. Morrison stands above reproach in hia private knd political .character, a North Carolina Gentleman and Democratic States roan. ,,' ' ';' -.- "r This achievement was in large part due to the pop- t i ! ular appeal of his own campaign tpubjic addresses. , ,His voice was not new to the people.They had heard him and of him in many battles of the party before. He presented the record and achievements, and the hopes and ambitons, of the "party constructive campaign, strengthening the defense of thr party whose leadership hMt&-r?s? , He will be in the great campafgn that is ahead of us, whether he or Mr. Gardner carries the flag. He hasn't failed in neatly thirty years. Isn't it time' and doesnt the party need that he should be given the added power of strength for service which this i -ominationj(rouldj1 .-.. ', S-.n;-- v i z: Canj Morrison's nomination will be acceptable M every class of citizenship represented in tha Demo-1 cratic party. In every speech he has made he has emphasized the superiority of the public interest to . any andvery class interest. ; ' : :- . .. According to immemorial custom we are selecting " ' a candidate for Governor this year from the western ' half of the State. In the recent primary Morrison -was givemrmajoritjrover Gardrerrfareacbr of the four western Congressional districts. . ' Because some emphasis has been given by his , - friends to his long record of party service, it has been charged that he is living in the past. Those who " know Cam Morrison his aggressive character, his ; great ability and his honorable ambition for himself ' and his party know that he would not be content to ". live in the past and leave opportunity unworked. '' ' Every resource of his great ability would be utilized to accomplish a greater record of service for the peo- pie during his term of office. Every possible influence , of his great office would be utilized to carry on the era of harmonious industrial development, and every political address he has made in 30. years has been in support and advocacy of progressive policies in ' vry department Of government. . Morrison's life has been lived in the open, and as - i Archibald Johnson says "his enemies are not those. I he has met jn the open field." Any personal or po- , litical charges against him, after his thirty years of ' f "heroic and unselfish party service, reflect only on those who make them. . v ; ; Yours for more votes for Cam Morrison, v 1 m .!. tajM a. .wmm 0m t. . 1 HtJUUl (JLAKJvdUiNf " ; Manager i I - iKhiiiiiiiritdWMMIsisMl g Come To Hear , The Next Governor Of North Carolina . E V. V i , r I u i At ACADEMY OF MUSIC Friday niflht. ii! eeaauMMttWWMttetf !!M)!HntirmMmiMIl1IIIMiMltMt"nilimi(imMt1IIMHtlffMMimttlllimmm
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
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July 1, 1920, edition 1
11
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