Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / Feb. 18, 1893, edition 1 / Page 2
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The tlatly Eneninjj Visitor. PUBLISH ID EV1BV WTiK005, Except oonday, IMS VISITOR It served by carriers In the elty At '!5 cents per mouth, payable to the carriers lu advance. Prices for mailing - fa per year, 01 i& cents per inouch. Cominunhvitlous appearing in them eoluruna are bul the expressions o' the opinion of the correspondent writing the same, and they alone a A cross mar it Xj after your nan afe ...o j on that yoar time Is oat. A 'due? all orders and communion lions to w. n. mwxvs, sr.. .Raleigh, N 0 Local notices in tliis paper wil. i Five Cents per line each insertion LiRiHST Otrs Cikoolati s. RALEIGH, FER. 17, IS 9,1 RESCUE THE UNFORTUNATE CHILDREN. Borne one has said "Show me t.b 3alt and I will tell you how th chUd was reared." Now tbat oar legislature is in sen Rion and are tinkering upon the law telative to the suppression of crime, Seeking to lessen it by enacting stat utes for the speedy punishment of Criminals, would it not be wise for them to begin at the foundation so far as practicable? There are great numbers of children who from their manner of rearing, necessarily be eome vicious and more or less crirai Hal in character. Such children are to be pitied more than blamed The children of the pauper and thriftless classes are taught by their parents to beg and are sent out b them on the street and from house to house, using all manner of misrepre sentations and deception in order to succeed, and soon they become crim inals. And what else could be ex pected of them? The p rents are the ones who should be held accountable There are thote in this city, and w presume in every city in the state who send their children out day after day to beg on the street" and from house to houfe Some Hse legisla tion is greatly needed along this line People should not be permitted ' make criminals of their children, or to subject them lo that sort of envi ronment that will educate them downward. We should have, n the first place, such laws as will take the children from such parents, and we should have, in the second place, an asylum for them where they can be reared under proper influences. This would be expensive, it is true, but not halt 80 expensive to the state as the thou Bands of these so-called homes which In reality are vice training schools and apprentice houses for crime. As the years go by, generation af tei generation of these crime-taught creatures go out from these home of squalid poverty and vice to burden the courts, and to con' tinue the propagation of their kind while our laws strike only at the branch of this great Upas tree. What we need as much as possible is to tear It up by the roots. If necessary break up these homes, if taking the chil dren will do it. But you say it will cost a great deal to do all this. Well, suppose it does, are we sit supinely by and permit this business of schooling children into criminals to go on because it costs a little money? While thous ands of dollars of tbe public money Is being expende 1 in lines where one tithe of the benefit to tbe state can not be expected that would accrue , from a vigorous step in this direction. Advocates for immigration spy that every industrious citizen added to the population is worth $1,500 to the state. Criminals are not only of no value, but are an expense of many hundred dollars ech to the state. Then for every one hundred children thus taken and reared so as to be come moderately good citizens, the state is enriched to the extent of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to say nothing of what is saved In the prosecution and maintenance of criminals, such as they most likely would become if reared in these crim Inal producing environmens, end of the betterment of society generally. -Let some of our wise legislators formulate a bill that will do this' work.so greatly needed; not that sort otlcglilatlon whl h provides for the punishment of young criminals so much, bat for tbe punishment of those who teach them crime or rear them in such a way as to prepare them for crime. Poor things, they ninth world and like most of as ire, and will be what they are made b eavironm nts We gieatly need lit so called economy alonrt this lioe.f nJ macti more, very much more, along other lines. ODD Fr LLOW'3 COLUMN. Ve were pleased to meet Grand Beps. W. A Bobbitt and Jno. F. Bra ton who spent a few days in the city this week. Bro. R. N. Hackett and other?, of ' i ket-boro, who were here in tbe interest of certain legislation, this wees, gave us encour gmr news from their part of the vineyard. The petiiiou for a lodge at Moncure has been accepted and a lodge wili be organized there in the near future Oape Fear Lodge, No 8, at Wil iuington. now has the largest mem- tMMlitp iu the state. A privnt" letter from the secretary of Atlantic, No. 43, savs that lodge l in a flourishing condition. One of the little orphans at our orphan home died during the patt we :.. Ti e average member sivs: "Give me i'infits or give me death " . ' ist 6gures to tbe dogs. I want my ! nefits " "i tit iuv dues down all you lil e but s'.iri'r. interfere with my beueu;s " '. . There are about, forty Odd Feltov frauds abroad in tbe land and a ma jority of them are very slick rascals It is almost a daily occurrence that we read of some Subordinate Lodge or big hearted member who has betn "taken in" by these scoundrels In pine cases out of every ten the Lodges and in rubers are to blame for beiog imposed upon. The "victims" gen erally commence to use the telegraph after they have been fleeced, and hen it is too late It will only cos very stxmli sum to ascertain whether r hey are frauds or not. B on the lookout for them, for one is liable to ah on you any time Satisfy your self beyond a doubt before giving monny or aid to an traveler claiming to be an Odd Fellow. , Thk Past Grand you Sometimes Meet The Past Grand is a biped of the genus homo. He is unusually an enthusiastic Odd Fellow during the early stage of his career that is be fore he becomes a Pest Grand After he attains that exalted rank a change in his nature begins to manifest it 8 elf As a rule he loses his energy He becomes so weak that he cannot ascend the short flight of steps lead iog to his lodge room ; he begins to lose his memory and cannot recall the night of the week upon which his Lodge meets. After being in this condition for a long or shorter time, he finds his way into the Lodge room at irregular intervals, and as a rule on the occasion of such visits he reads the boys the riot act about some triv ial affair. He seems to possess a swelled head, and to have an exag gerated idea of his own greatness He wants evervone to know that he is a Past ftrand. Pe becomes a fault finder and a kicker. He finds so many defects in Odd Fellowship and Odd Fellows that his hearers wonder why in the world he ever became a member of the Order This state of affairs exists until at last our Past Grand fails to attend his Lodge at all, and some evening he is dropped for non payment of dues, and strange to say no one is sorry. rhere in also another 1 type of the Past Grand. Upon becoming a Past Grand he tills his chair every night ; attends his Lodge regularly ; always has a Kind word for his brothers; gives a word of advice here and fath erly admontion thre j attends to his duties promptly as committeeman ; strives to get new. members for the Lodge ; never wearies in well doioe : keeps his dues paid ; and seems to grow younger as the years roll on ; remembers that Odd Fellowship is progressive in its character and strives to have his Lodge keep abreast of the times ; favors improvements of all kinds, and gains the esteem of his brothers. . Mv brother Past Grand to which class do you belong ? " 1687." in Her- aid, t Figures given by shoe dealers prov that the ladles of Chicago have not lage f-et. The world is fall of Iba nsrhters, . bat It Is hard to find people who won't ran from a hornet When peopU arj hlr 1 he they quit work hs ooh as (he pny stops Mr. S. G. Derry Of Prevldence, B. I., Widely known as proprietor of Derry's Wateiw proof Harness Oil, tells below of his terrible sufferings from Eczema and his cure by FOOD'S Sarsaparilla "Gentlemen: Fifteen jears ago I had an at tack of Inflammatory rheumatism, which was followed by eczema or salt rheum, breaking out on my right leg. The humor spread all over my legs, back and arms, A Foul Mass of Sores, swollen and Itching tenibly. causing Intense palu If the skin was broken by scratching, and discharging constantly. It Is impossibla to describe my suffering in those years ol agony and torture. I spent Thousands of Dollars to futile efforts to get well, and was discour aged and ready to die. At this time I was unable to lie down in bed, had to sit up all the time, and was unable to walk without crutches. I had to hold my arms away from my body, and had to have my arms, back and legs bandaged by my faithful wifetvviceaday. " Finally a friend who was visiting at our house, urged me to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, I began by taking half a teuspoonful. My Stomach Was All Out of Order But the medicine soon corrected this, and in six weeks I could see a change in the con dition of the humor which nearly covered my body. It was driven to the surface by the Sarsaparilla, the sores soon healed, and the scales fell off. I was soon able to give up bandages and crutches, and a happy man l was. 1 had been taking Hood's Sarsaparilla for seven months ; andiince that time, nearly two years, I have worniio bandages whatever and my legs and arms are sound and well. The Delight ot myself and wife at my recovery it 19 im possible to tell. To all my business friends In Boston and over the country, 1 recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla from personal experience." S. 6. Derby. 45 Bradford street, Providence, R. I. If you are Bilious, take Hood's Pills. KAi EltJH POST OFUlOJb MAIL SOEDHULfl., "Ukpabtub Ulose at Close at P.O Dei oi OUTGOING MAILS 9 00 p m 6 15 am ExFtTrll Kor Greens boro, N., S. and West, Ex Ft 20-For Short Cut North A Goldsboro RPOTr 3 For Wel don. Norfolk N and E RPOTrlO-For Short Out S and Goldsboro EPO Tr 41 For At lanta (K & A A L) Ex Ft Tr34-Fcr We1. don, Norfolk, N and fe EPOTrt -For Oreens boro, N, 8 and W 815 " 845 " 10 55am 1 1125am 050pm 128pm 3 45 " 4.20 " 4i'0 " 500 " 4 05 " 440 " ARRIVALS. At At P. O Depot INCOMING MAILS. 6 00 am 6 15am Ex Ft Trl2 F'mGr'' s- boro, N, Sand W 9 45 am 1 10 00 a m Ex Fr Tr 45 From Wel- don, North and East 11 17 am 11 32 am R P O Tr 38 From At lanta (R & A A L 1 09pm 125pm RPOTr 10-F'mGr'ns- boro, N, 8 end west 4 05 pm 4 20 pm R P O Tr 41-FromWel- dot, N and S 4 30 pm 4 45 pn R P O Tr 9- F'm Golds, . and Short Cut, N and 8 11 30 prc-11 45 pm Ex Ft Tr 21 F'it G'ds boro Trains marked thus, do not mova on Sun aay. Mail for train 9 going west close at 3 p n; on Sunday. STAR ROTJTES. OurooTBra Maii-Dbpabts Raleigh via Snotwell. Enele Rock and WakerieW to uiuonhope, Mondav and Friday 7 am. Raleirb vin Myatt's Mills to Dunn. Tnes f t.v and Friday 6 am. Raleigh via Kelvyn Grove and Dayton Fun Dam, Monday, Wednesday and Friday 8 a ra. Raleigh via Six Forks and Bar gor to Roeers" store.Tuesday and Friday 1 pm JRategb to Massev. Tneday and Friday 10 a m. mTifcOMiifo Mails Abbtvx TMonhcpe v Wanefield, Eagle Rook and Shotwell to Pal eigh, Tuesday and Saturday 6 p m, ' Dunn via Myatt's Mills toRaleigh, Mon day and Thursday 6:15 pm, Zih Dam via Davton and Kelwn Qtne and Flint, Tues, Thurs and J3at at 4 p m. Rogers' store via Banpor and Six Forks to Raleigh, Tuesday and Friday 12 rr Massey to Rahigh Tuesday and Friday t 12 m. E"Close at 9 p m ante. F? o Di"vbt Ststeh. Free delivenet at 8;30 a m, and 2:30 and 4:45 p m, er uc Sundays. Collections made at sajiif bonrs. Sunday, 6:30 to 7:30 a m. Free de- I,vSLwJn,d0W8 Pen on Sundays from 8 0C to S:30.o'clock p m. A. W, SHAFFER, Postmaster, i ' WHOM CITY ! In the heart of the Iron and ICoal Dis- rictof Tennessee.. . rhrr.ato salubrious, never hot and Lever : d l Land unequallod for agricultural par, oses, and uuueral resources unlimited. ! U0O Lotsat $4 Od per Lot .4,1 iW " 8V 1,0 0 " ....... 4 W " toai " ............. 600 t.WX) 10 00 t.O'.X) " 15.00 4,000 20.00 60i) " 60 ''0 " 8C0 ' M 100 00 " WOOD WORTH orry" lies about 30 miles i rtiirth nf fhnrr-tn -wwia within a fa-M niilaj rf j Altamout, the county seat of iru:idy coun-1 I ty. and betw ven Tracev Cit and tue cele- j brated Beereheba bp 'iiiin, the Baratox1 of tue Sou'h It is in the centre of tbe rapidly ' developing coat and iron district, of Teu les see, uni within its borders are found coal, iron. zinc, marble and atibesto'. with various hard wxxls, sucli as oair, chestnut, maple, beach, looust. hickory, ash, pine, cherry and black walnut in abundance. The village of Grueili, with several l.uuJrt i inhabitants, contains Ci arches, i-ichools, Stores, Post . othce and tulet;raph station and a number j of manufacturing industres, . It oi which are locates on ine property ana iorni part 01 Woodworth Ci'y. The proceeds of the sale of these lots will be used to develop the mineral re-ources of the property and build up a large and thriv ing city Quii k application tor these lote should be made, as the right is reserved to advance the price without notice. For further particulars apply to B. C. LIVlGVTGN, Agent, 712 DeKalb Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Parties desirous of visiting and inspecting this property can obtain spicial ratas on the new and most comfoit:ible vessel atloxt, of the Ocean Steamship Comoanv. Thesf I steamers leave New York, Mondays, Wed j Lesdnys, Fridays and Saturdays, making a ucugntir.i sea inp oi fifiv hours jo mum Where immediate connections are made to Chattanooga and WOoDWOaTIJ C IT LIVINGSTON & , 4eonK, Ocean Steamship l'o. of Savannah, No. 712 UeKalii Avenue, '(Kkh'n. N. V. -.. s-.-rv j ,iy BUY Yv DR Watches, Clocks, JEWELRY AND SPECTACLES at prices that dofy competition, at home. The undersigned, an old reliable watch maker end jewelr, is better prepared "ow than ever before to d vour watch clock and jewelry work, or turnhh you with any goorls usually kert in his line 18 size Americn Made Movements from in Gold Cases, $'5 00 up 18 size in Gold Filled Cases, 8 50 up 18 siz9 in Silver Cases, 7 1 0 up 18 size iu Nickel ( ases, 5 0'rp m size American Maae Movements in i Id ( 'axes, 10 size in Gold Filled Cafces, 16 size in Silver Cases, 16 s.'ze in Nickel Cases, 6 & ft, Ladies' s ze, American Move ments in Gold ( 'ases, 6 & 0 s ze in Gold Fillrd Cases, ' 6 Sf. 0 size in Silver 'ases, Swiss Go!d watches, Swiss Silver watches, Swiss Nickel watering. 17 50 up 10 00 up 10 00 up 7 50 up if 00 up in oo up inooup mooup 6 00 up 4 00 up (not recom- Swiss Mckel watches, mendpdi M to $3 up A crnnA lino nf Wntr.Toa ' Plrknlra Taar.,lTr and Spectacles constantly on hand for sale. The Brvant Gold and Combination Rings a specialty. The workmanship and quality ujl nu uwer ring are Detier. Call on the olu reliable undersigned for what you want, either goods or work, in his line, and you will be well treated, and goods or work honestly repiesen ed and warranted good or not good. del7 2w a. SKT TO LOAN ON LIFE IN STJRANCE, TONTINE. AND ENDOWMENT POLICIES. No delays! Correspondence invited! ; Inter-State Trust Brokerage Co. oc24 8m RALEIGH, N. O. When Balqr was utek, we gave her Oattocte. Whea hs wm a Child, ate eried f or Oastorlffi hea she became lllas, she duns to Oasletvi, shahadCihgdww it i tn ttwi Culirtr D1BY wN'dre" Cry for Pitched Cistorft n mmi m m I "Cleanliness is akin to godliness' and in order to show to the world that you enjoy this Bless ing, rely upon Nature to furnish The WATER AND BUY Toilet Soaps OP J. HAL BOBBITT. A stock of the following brands of Soaps ALWAYS on hand: j Lnbin's Soap, 60o j Ran de Cologne Soap, 850 Pinaud's Soap, 25e Violet Soap, 2Bo Roses and cerine Soap, 25o Cold Cream 8onp, 5e Benzoin and (ilycerine Soap, 25o New Mown Hay 8oap, 25a Cashmere Bouquet Soap, 25o Cape May Bouquet 8oap, 25c 4711 White Rose Glycerine Soap, 25c Rose Geranium Soap, ' 25o Tooth Soaps, 25o Cutlcura Soap, 5C Carbolic Soap, 25c and 10c Tar Soap, 25c and 10c Sulphur Soap, 25c and 10c ichthyol Soap, 25c ;lorax f ' ap, 25c rtoraci c d Soap, 25c Thtiu ( . p 25c Gr-iuiichle -. rj 2f C Viola Skin Soap, 2'c Pears' Soap, 20c Rosadora Soap, 20o Bay Leaf Soap, 150 Ti-ansparent Soap, 10c and 15o Buttermilk Soap, 10c Oatmeal Soaps, lOc Peach and Honey Soap, 10c Handworker's 8oap, lie Cotton 8eed Oil Soap, ' 10c Shaving 8oap, 10c and 25c Turkish Bath Soap, Ota Palm Oil Soap, 05c White Castile Soap, (tfc and 10c Red Castile Soap, 15c Blue Castile Soap, 05o A reduced price on any of the above by the box or dozeb. J HAL BOBBITT, IDIRTTG-GKEST raleigh ......... .........MMMM.N.;H xv c.
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 18, 1893, edition 1
2
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