Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / June 30, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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RO BE SOMIAH THE ROBESOHIAN JOB OFFICER ia FULLY EQUIPPED WITH A' Fast Presses and Excellent EacHnwj,: Everything isnew and up todatf, having just been received from the -factories and foundries. -:- A large stock of all kinds of pa per just, received. iYjHj.ri patronage is solicited. it I.iinilK'i't'm, .; ltm:lllt. ill-i-ri'f Uu- i ill r. iiy asm ,;rviiiilln:t i inn. M:!!-P)irn 'l it r. ituiiK i ; !t j--.-"inl l.J 'VlT IHllWll i. II rt I'.'I'liml ilalfM'ja ill. I'.irtlculiir .. :i v, i.' .. In ' ;,, . ' ',.'!. I; -illl-ill. 11 ,, ut'l "I II .1 i f.iitu'i f: ESTABLISHED 1S7Q. Country, God and Truth. SINGLE COPIES 5 CENTS. i'ii ki-ipi.i,' i'.; iiu- I'.iku it It. ' 111 UlilK'd Ml" V I'- VOL. XXVIII. NO. 23. LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8t), 1897. WHOLE NO. VL427. SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS. ADVl'UTISINO ;i nt-w business; ,TU 111 HIV i s many an old inisincss; t . i main ;i l.l;'-misim-ns; dull busine; a to-1 business; f i I........ Vl I'laliy H laura- mmiinw, U ii.s succi-sH in any business. 'H.S',:i I. vi:s in .! i i tu.my '.i.Ktrlise judiciously," use the f M tii'i.-UiiVt W. It 1 Tiub- 11111? "I llll- 4- I in one of the live and growing -.,(' North Carolina and circulates iMM.lv among an intelligent ami ,..r ,n. iiKinle. whose trade is well i Oi -i-king and having. j 5 2 : 3 3 3. 3 8 588 "8 o I 3 3 3 3 3 3 R3. Si ss 3 8 0 3 Rffr?RS8 3 8 8 ISO ttXX ff:o 888 , w, K-,- vc i-. t- o jo iC 5-QOCOQ r c : c ''6 "io o 8 5 5 ;j ; i ; J n 3 o s 0 3 1- N fl T ll lO lfl sO 1 JO f ri T 5 lOO 0 .: 3.R3 S?a3 38 3 f. t S o AN OPEN LETTER. Senslljle and Opportun Advice ta People Along tiic Seaboard Air Line. John T. Patrick, Chief Industrial Jktwnt, In Salin.iKUiHll. . Human nature is of a discontent- i i i ' i : :a. ! 1-. ed aim wanurriiisi tuiM).sii un. i-j v- ry dnj' our trains have some one on lnard who is looking for a place to locate, and sometimes those looking for homes represent a colony of 100 or more families I will relate a few instances in my life which greatly impressed me with making a good outward ap pearance. Of courwj I believe in an inward appearance to corres pond. Some eight or ten months ago I was traveling on a train in "Jefferson Sti:l Lives." Extract from Hon. AY. 3. Bryan's Address at the I'nivcvsity of Virginia. "Jefferson stated the wonderful The School Tax Election. StaiCiiYille Landmark. The Landmark has heretofore nrinted tlia lnv . ir i ...i. u 1 v, Suuiii.it "- the special school tax election to eastern passed Tratikicut ndvcr'isrtiient to he pub .iJii'it iinr mmitli mid under, must he ni I for in advance. All advertising for .1 v'xntcr time tlian tliree tnoiuns is con kri'l traiiMciit advertising. Accounts ri i .lrrc. mi irierlv f"r idl iilvertisenieins ijii'ili-lnil i"r .t longer period of time I,,n al a4vL-r:i-i'i!ient' aneannn anions n..i!iii'.' matter will he charged io cents i.er line fur I'.uli insertion. l.r ; il ;i h r,ii'.c:tHiits, such ns odininis tr.itoi .' .! I i-M-i tilnrs' notices, cointnis s;ir-i' ar ' tru.-.iees' cales, suiuinons to ..t North Carolina. We a town nicely laid off, streets looked clean, trees white- ashed, and the town presented a lie appearance. A stranger sit ing just ahead of me, turning to 1 . t I 1 1 1 A me, asked tne name oi tnai Town. told him. Then he exclaimed: I have been traveling considera- ly through the Southern Slates, ml this place invites my atten- ion more than any place I have omul vet J", I became interested n him, and found that he was a well-informed man. lie told me le was from Minnesota, and had represented his county several imes in the Legislature; and was now sent out by a colony of 50 in search of a place in which they could come and locate, lie gave me a brief history of his country The severe winters and fearful cy clones ; that their wood had to be brought on trains some torty or fifty miles; it cost the farmers from $S to if 10 a cord. In many instances they had to burn their m A 1 1 r corn lor iuei: and as prices ior produce had become so low, they i. s. etc., will lie clunked lor at -Nt t.it when thev exceed t of sjiaee, m winch case vv nutt to fi our ow n price ii' r.-rr art .in ffn'ru.' tli veh l.uvrncv.! mut 'ne paid fou is i,v vni. : . The ih iri;e is very small and f cania.t atford to Like risks or wait the v'.,i.t!Tv i . rsons to j'iy said that all men were created equal not equal physically or in tellectually but equal whenever government comes in contact with the people; whenever the law touches them. If all men were created equal, it follows as a con sequence that no government lumld enable or permit one citi zen to injure another citizen. This is applying to government what Christ taught when lie said 'All e are .brethren.' We put rings in lie noses of hogs to prevent them from destroying property. Gov ernment must recognize that there are human hogs uid keep them rom destroying propertjT. In our best moments we are willing to nit rings in our noses to restrain be held next August, but as there seems to be a general desire for in formation on this subject a reca pitulation of its provisions may be of interest. The law requires the county commissioners of each county in the State-to order this election to be held on the second Tuesday after the first Monday in August on the question of levying a special district (each township is a school district under the new law) tax for schools. The com missioners are given the privilege of deterimining the amount of the tax but the act requires that it shall be at least 10 cents on every $100 worth : of property and 80 cents on each poll. This -is the amount named in this countv. If. r : ii lrmn "ineia, ana so m . election to be llekl on he making our laws it will not do to 10th of Augusst a majoritv of the leave man ax. xue mercy oi me iav qualified voters of any one town w men injures mm. Uhin vote "For Kebnola tbon "Corporations are created for the public good, and the people should so control them as to pre- rent them from violating the lower under which they exist. There should be nq corporation greater than those who gave it life. Never before was it as important as it is today to restrain men from injuring one another. In these days, wnen corporate weaitn.is banded together, you will find special need of laws for protecting the humbler citizens. Jefferson not only declared that all men this special tax of 80 cents on each poll and 10 cents on each $100 of property will be levied and collected this fall along with the other- taxes, and the amount so levied and collected will be ap plied to the schools of that town ship alone. The law - also pro vides that the State Treasurer will pay to each township levying this tax a sum equal to the amount so levied, provided the amount does not exceed $500. If, there fore, any township in Iredell or Hawaii, the Land of Lepers. Clmrlotte Observer. " Private advices recently received : at tran Francisco report that lep- rosv is spreading with alarming rapidity in the Hawaiian Islands. Formerly it was confined almost ntirely to the natives, but now many oi the whites are tailing victims to the appalling disease. An old man named West, a lead ing merchant of Honolulu, has just been removed to the pest is land, and his wife has died of a broken heart over the heart-rend ing separation. A man named George Breuns, an employe in the Honolulu telephone office, has also developed the disease and been removed to the leper colony. Arid this is the island country the United States government has definitely agreed to annex I With the least homogeneous population of any country on the face of - the earth, hardly half-civilized, en tirely un sympathetic with repub lican ilistitutiona, and, to boot, leporous! Such is Hawaii. And because she has a few rich sugar cane bottoms, a few fertile cattle pastures, and a couple of harbors for coaling stations we .think .it desirable to make her a'TerritorjT of the United States, with the pos sibility of becoming a State and having two United States Sena tors. Hawaii's leper island, Mo lokai, ought to be enough to for bid. the very thought of annexa tion. The servant of the prophet of old, covetous of gifts that it "Put Money in Thy Purse!" New York World. oeverai thousand young men ho have spent fifteen years or more in careful education for the ligh places of business, the pro- K. K. I'M'. V ToR, JK. 9. MCINTVR1 Proctor &. McIntyre, ATTOUNKVS AT LAW, l.iuiiU'rton, - - - N. C l'rntfiec in nil the courts of the State. Trn:ii;it and painstaking attention given lo .il! Ic.i'i hiisiuesH. tf T. A. .V''XKI!.L. A. W. MCI.KA.V. MCNEILL ft MCLEAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. ('like in Shaw Untitling up stairs, North Coiner, l.t Mlil'.RTON, - - N. C. I'motiie in State and Federal Courts. Prompt attention given to all legal htisiness. N. A McJ.i.an. C. I!. TOWNSKND. McLean &. Townsend, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, U MIiKR'roN, - . N. C. Vractice in Federal and in Superior iui'1 Supreme Courts of the State. All kinds of legal husiness attended to any- w in re. AI.l'KKI) KOWI.A.ND. 1. A. ROWLAND. n W V LMI LJ OC Ol ATTORNEYS AT LAW, U'lIllKKTON, COM K. C. I'rnctice in State and Federal Courts. Prompt attention given to all legal husiness. had .concluded to sell out their farms and move South to a more mild and p'nial climate, wher the cost of living wa not soareat Tlie st rangr r was .; imjire v-"d with the town, that after gi-tting wl.at informulion !:o could from me, he concluded lie would go back and spend a week prospecting in that neighborhood. Another in -dance in pas-ing Apex: lwn gent Jfiuwii sitting near me said, one to the other: "John, I like this section of coun try better than any I have seen on the road -from Weldon here." "Yi.i " rivln I, ilin ifhor t(tlio a, i.., mi ii i' v , w,....., ,y lands look more productive, but the people are not showing much signs of thrift, trom the appear ance of their town. Why don't thev clean up and paint? Their land looks like it would afford it," It pays in dollars to fix andim prove the condition oi your prop erty. It will bring new people to your town and new money to your section. Recently a large insur ancecompany, with $20,000,000 to loan traveled through North Carolina. examining the towns to see if they could afford to put out their surplus money, and after several days' examination they decided that the country was not prosperous. The conclusion they had arrived at was that the ap pearance of every place they had visited except Charlotte, was in an unkempt, dilapidated condition, and that such condition did not hIiow prosperity: they could not fiord to loan money in- a place anv other countv should vote m j i i i x n-.i j.1 " were creaieu equal, uui mat. iey favor Gf this tax and the amount were endowed with inalienable leyied d collected should be rights rights which government does not give or take away. "Jefferson still lives. We love him not whose body died, and dy ing sanctified the soil of Monti- cello, but Jefferson, the philoso- The Wool Tax. j Wilmington Messenger. ; The people may prepare to pay a great advance upon all . -cloth ing, blankets, flannels into which wool enters. The tariff now be- THE SEXTON. BY 3J4S V.i V. COSTEN, JR. Merrily floateth the sunlight adown, .Gheel&y Binglittle.hd injLhe, trees; AsTiierrily goeth.ieseton hijQund, As cheerily floateth his tuneQn breeze. essions and politics are leaving ing enacted is the most unequal, the colleges. And eminent men burdensome and drastic nistru- who haA'e won that for which ment ever adopted by any people, these youths are just beginning to not excepting the half civilized, strive are telling them what the It is a measure of favoritism, of real prizes of life are and how they classes, of abominations. The are to be gained. importation of wool for four vears . . The burden of this wisdom of past showed an average of about ife is the same be braye, be hope- 150,000,000 pounds. But in the ful, but above all be honest and two months of March and April just and faithful to the best last, the actual importation in ideals both in private and in pub- advance but expecting the Repub- ic life. lican dragnet was 150,683,675 Of course these youths liaving pounds. This is an excess of 4,- been taught to test theoryby prac-1000,000 pounds in two montlw tice, look out upon life for verifi-lover the average importation for eation of these noble and beauti- each year. " Why was it done? ful teachings. I To get in the wool at a low rate They naturally look first to before the high tax set in. It is Washington, where sits the winner I expected that in May and June will of our . highest prize. T,h.ey p peel, aggregate 100,000,000 additional, him distributing public offices un-: Whak,.svijl b.e tlie effect? Will .it der th-e .dictation of a boodle be of great benefit to the .gQyerni fund campaign manager. And I ment that levies the ouraeoua , The phantom is digging or jxqu.&t. for these offices go to men who, as Mr. most unreasonable tax? iTUisifii j Hanna puts it, "may not be good hardly possible. The Jac"kson- j For wherever he goes 'monghe grayes men, but did the work desired" ville.TimesTUoion draws this con- he has made. that is, delivered, the votes at elusion: tT? Tr 7 . ,. ,. .,,, . .,, , With his hat and his spade he casteth a the nominating convention. "The government will get no shade Next they look at the Capitol, revenue from raw wool during the where the next of kin shall lie, There sits a Senate cynically in- next year none worth consider different to its reputation for hon- ing during the next two years, or and honesty, andf or money and "The wool-growers will get no political advantage holding wide protection during the next year the pockets of the people for none worth considering during the thievish hands of tlieSugar j the next two years. Wherever he goes jaggsL jthegraves; fce. has made Wherever he turneth his eye, With his hat and his spade he maketh- a shade, Where the next of kin shall lie. Still, aa he works, he is whistling away, And righting the low, grassy mound with pride. And the thin phantom shade iiath ttye yery same play As it works .on the low, phantcoii injpuqd at his side.. How glad is his tune as Hie .WQrks;'mongst the graves. And planteth the grass and the lilies -v'iCh glee! While the shade-sexton planteth with just as much care. And weedeth with just as much feeling as he. And merrily floateth the sunlight adown. And cheerily singeth the bird in the tree; While the gaywhisUine: sextpja is dij- pher. When tlie names of military heroes are forgotten children will till lisp the name of Jefferson, wno tilled the Kneeling suoject with hope and bade him stand erect among his peers. We do our duty- as best we can if we advance our government and the welfare of society. One of your Southern orators, a Senator from Georgia, (Hill), gave utterance to a noble thought 'Who saves his country saves himself and all things saved do bless him. He who lets his country die lets all things die ig nobly, and all things dying curse him.' The strength of the gov ernment is not m its armies or navies, but in a happy and con tented citizenship, in laws so be neficent that every citizen will be willing to die if need be to pre serve them." Deserting the Farms. The Montgomery Advertiser an swers affirmatively the question, 'Does farming pay?" and adds: Why, then, is it that me in the country is tabooed and a young farmer one who can manage la i i -i -i t oor successtuiy and conduct a plantation in a practical manner looked upon as an object of cu riosity, mingled with a suggestion oi pityr mere are a lew young men in this immediate vicinity who have the business sagacity to perceive that the prospective ad vantages of agricultural life far outweigh the future in the busi ness or mercantile, field. They as much as $500, the township will receive an additional $500 from the State and will thus1 have $1,000 as a school fund to expend on the public schools of that township in addition to the regular school fund, for this special tax in no way interferes with the school tax i.i i i i .ii .i es nereroiore levieu ana ie leu this year. If the property and polls of any township voting for this special tax do not yield as much as$ 500 the State Treasurer will give that township an amount ual to tho sum levied and collect ed, no matter how small, but in no case will the amount exceed $500. The law provides that m town ships where this special tax is lev ied it shall be levied for at least three years. After that time it may be repealed by a majority vote provided that one-third of the qualified voters of the town ship petition for an election for such purpose. Those townships which vote against the tax levy will have -an election on the same question at the same date every two years. The elec tion is to be held under Jhe rules and regulations prescribed for the election of members of the Gen eral Assembly. The act appropriates $50,000 from the State Treasury to bedis tributed among the townships which vote the special tax, in the manners hereinbefore ' set forth On account of the condition of the Treasury some doubt had arisen as to whether this money would be available, but the .necessary arrangements have heen made and the State Treasurer announces that he has the money to pay out The PrcM and the Railroad. At the recent session of the North Carolina Preaa Association at- Morehead City, the following resolutions were passed: Whereas., Certain railroad sys tems of the State have on differ ent occasions withdrawn pasatjs from various members of thin As sociation, because they disap proved of; the policy of the paper, therefore be it Resolved 1, That the .policy, of ule3, ete., for. all transportation was not lawful for him to possess, and other trusts. "The people will have to pay was cursed with the anathema They turn to the bar and they largely increased prices for woolen maranatha of ancient- times, and see the men who lead in fame and goods because the highest tariff went out from the presence of his ability shrugging their shoulders ever known will go in, force on master "a leper as white as snow." at their solemn oath, as officers of woolen goods. The republic has all it can do to courts of justice, and for a feehir- "The manufacturers will reap a keep the leprosy of anarchy, of ing their brains to organized rob- rich harvest. They have already revolution, from developing from berv and promoting iniustice with purchased their Burmlies of wool " i " o - j i j.a ji - . .i- . a. . ..5i 1 within. Let her not invite the all the might of their svmerb en- in a free trade market. Thev will imB riiw seonrcm from without. Let her dnwmeiits. mn.niifaci.uM their xrooris nnd sell ue received in advertising . Belied- beware of covetousness of foreign Thev look out unon the business them in a market protected bv Dossessions. It is dangerous to World, and behold 1 the man who prohibitive duties. IrvGeaved, eg presents from Neaman. Let crushes competition by unlawful "And yet the manufacturers 2. lhat we resent any eiiort cpi aer beware a Gehazi's greed. means, who buys legislation, who will not-get the full benefit of the uie paf c OI raiiraas to . comryi holds himself above the laws of high duties on woolen goods. Im- the policy ot any paper, tr coerge his country, is the man who reaps porters are also taking time by the lts whtor b? withdrawal of - pas richest rewards of wealth and in- forelock. The imports of woolen fluence. goods into this country in March Our young men are not as a rule and April, lSDI, amounted to over-endowed with revenue. Is it $13,895,080, against $6,843,992 in any wonder that many of them March and April, 1896, and May put their tongues in their cheeks and June will show a similar in- as they listen to eloquent admoni- crease. This will still further re tious to public and private vir- duce the duties that the present tue? Is it any wonder that many tariff was expected to yield." decide that Iago was right when You will observe from this sum he summed the whole philosophy mary how bad legislation fails to of life as "put money ;in "thy be.nefit.either the people who toil purse?" When so many older and wiser men are deceived by the glitter and tinsel of appearances, is not the surprise, rather that the ma- nrer. But they will not get all as jority of our young men do look is pointed out. The importers too below the surface to the bottom of have been "smart" and alive to the well where the truth is hid- their own interests, and jiaye tar cen? v ken time hy the forelogk .-as did Pointed Paragraphs. the wily manufacturers. They A ftfr n. in nn rliksciworu linw little imnnrtpd the ren i v-ni n rl e p-iiods Arvrrlincr tn nnr mpfhod of livincr in I . ... . I . .. . .... & ... he knows he begins to suspect t and this will lessen to some ex- The Food That Man Needs. "As in the daily wear and tear of life a great deal of the substance ot a man's body is used up, it is absolutely necessary that the re pair to the body be. carefully and systematically looked after, . writes Mrs. S. T. Rorer, in the Ladies' Home Journal. "Then,! too, man must create heat and force, according to the climate in which he lives and the occupation he follows. A wise combination of food is, therefore, necessary to keep the body in working order. In cold weather, we need a larger amount of carbonaceous foods- fats, sugars and starches than we do in summer. In the hot climates and during ; the hot months, fruit and green vegetaT bles, containing the salts necessary to keep the blood in good condi tion, should be used freely. Ac- given in exchange for advertising. 3. That while our feelings to the riioodd ftre entirely rricii&lyj-wZ-." desire it understood that accept ance of transportation in .ex- , , change for advertising istlpokd upon by us as a purely business matter,- and does not and should not.affect the policy or independ ence, of the press of the State. Once Tried, Always Used. If we sell one bottle of Chamberlain' or the ,-government that should cougu Jttemeay, we seiaom iau io seu bless. It only confers benefit on Uie Person more- .18 flSP " 1 j.j t j i : . i i. - r :i the' greedy, exacting, insatiate class: the omniverous manufact- this country, we should take about that possibly othera do not know tent the huge .jOxeanu- as much as they pretend. Atchi-1 f acturing gra balls. needed. Indeed, it hashe.cnmethe family medicine of this town, for coughs and colds, and we recommend it because of its established merits Jos. E. Harnkd, Prop. Oakland Pharmacy, Oakland, MxL. Sold by Dr. J. D. McMillan. two parts of repair food such as meat, eggs, milk, cheese, or, in the vegetable kingdom, the old peas, beans, and lentils to three parts of carbonaceous food such son Daily Globe. The Dingley bill waa a tariff for protection with incidental .xob- I bery. The Senate 1 1 that was not prosperous. This nru :n nM:va Knr0 nf ii a as the law provides, l he town- kept $20,000,000 out of the South. ua nv; ships are to be given a sum equal "The free silver heresy" is a curious expression to apply to the rnnimittm bimetallism established bys.iiatiire, as white bread, potatoes, rice, but- Lhanged it to a tariff for robbery adopted and practiced by all men iei, cream, anu. iuitui ... nmwtinn W aa nations irom time wnereoi TT It'll lllVlUUil HV r V t York AYorld ne memoT7 man runneth not A dispatch says that an Oklaho- to the contrary, cwn proclaimed mamanhasbeenarrestedforhav- part of our political creed by intr one wife too manv. A crreat a11 our early aiiostles. A heresy o O I. , . . .The attitude of the Senate to ward trusts recalls the inflexible position of the Maine Prohibition ists toward the liquor law. .They are in favor of tjie,.law but against it f.finiorpep.ent. Philadelphia Record. Citizens along the Seaboard Air Lrilf..f:pn1 fflrrilfiPfl nf tinprnRoiVftS . to the amount they levy (not ex- Line, take a lesson from this, and t w nrft lfinflin(T in1onmif1pnT. ceedmg $000 every year tor three Did Ion Know I that there was a dif ference in QUININE? Well, there is, and we iell only the very best it the same price oth ers charge for the in ferior article. I. A. NORBEHT, JR. ft CO. make money by improving the looks ot your homes and your town. And for the pleasure of four family, and the pride you and fix up right now. ' mi healthful lives, and buying more ye7- iS .pxuvuu land each year with their earn- maue Ior UB l'"1" J I i rr ii? j iugs. Their comrades have gone, ximy' UI uuulstJ " ry town- as clerks, into the railroad offices 8mP m olHl wwrt LU -vuie UUH or the stores of the eitv. areenm- special tax tne.OVJUUU WOUld De " I j j . n n ing but little more than the bare entirely inadequate to give an ot iii- i i ii. . i tnem a sum equai to tne amount cost of living; are accounted most Cabarrus county commissioners fortunate if in two years they get have purchased worth ot a week'e vacation in which to 1 1 1 - i . i - - road machinery to ue used in con- spend all their earnings, and are nection with the work of the chain frightened at the unexpected ap gang. They have also decided to proach their employer at all turn over $75,000 of railroad times. In fifteen years they will bonds, votol several years ago, to be worn out old men mechanical tho proposed new road to be built contrivances for doing a certain from Aberdeen to Concord, on stipulated tnsk barely living condition that the road be com- within their modest income, and plete and in operation within one I in continual fear lest their place y'ar. g. w. mcqueen. l.miSKUTOX BARKER. "it vi ,li nn easy shave, ' I ' hurhcr t v'c-r gave, 'II on un- :it mv t'lli.u - j " lll'il Hllir l ' lit au J'.-l tvo or iiiMjn; r -ss tli-'iiair with lrrnce. ml Un- l ontimroi' the face. M WI K in-lit ail.' towels rli-nn. s"s-..ih sh;.rpnnl raorn keen, Miruhing I think you'll find , '!' S1,"1 1,M" '1U'' P'ense the mind,' . .... ,y nn hum skill can do. f C4 3 & A tr. a vsn - -at " just tiill ni do for you. I BUDjeci. w , peculiar ills. lu rlslit remedy for "babies' ills enpeclally jrwornis uud storuuch 'jllsordera 1 Froy's Vermifuge has cored children for W years. Hena 'for lllus. book about the ills aud tha rauicd v. Om O nU Lit. rBET, Italtlmore, Bd. shall be filled with a younger man. And tho young men on the plantation will be influential land-owners with an assured in come a -'sound mind in a sound body' both prosperous and hap py, of use to themselves, their families, and the communities in which they live." If the sugar trust is not satisfied with a bounty of .120,000,000 a y jar all it has to do is to let the Senate know it . The trust should be modest. Atlanta Journal. levied. But there is no danger of every township m the btate or half of them, so voting. The Legislature was doubtless aware of this and reasoned that the $50, 000 would be ample for all purpo ses. In view of the facts we do not think that there is any doubt that the townships voting the tax will receive the amount provided by law. The Landmark is heartily in favor of public education and in favor of the betterment of the public school system, and we don't know of any way to improve the latter except by local taxation, as 1 - 1 i 1. Il -XVT proviuea ior uy tins act. we are aware that it requires some .cour age to advocate an increase of tux at ion in these hard times, but this proposed school tax is a small one and we believe the investment will pay handsome returns many times over. We hope that at least some of the townships in this and ad joining counties will vote for this tax. Then we must have a certain amotmt of bulky or watery vege tables such as lettuce, spinach, cabbage, onions, and also the fruits. In making out a daily ra tion, we should have at the begin ning of the meal some light dish hat .may be taken slowly, to pre pare the stomach tor. the food that is to follow, then a meat or its equivalent. With beef we Bhould serve potatoes ; with mutton, rice ; with chickens either rice or pota toes." Hoisery dealears say gelf stock ings are being turned down. many reputable, law abiding citi zens have that.rr-Chicago Times-Herald. The United States Seriate: is de veloping into a mopt magnanimous body. It continues to refuse to take advantage of all the opportu nities to single out and punish its traducers. New York Journal in a departure trom tne original and traditional faith ; an innova tion in doctrine, and a false and evil subversion of the true and good teachings and practices of the canonical fathers. .Theegual ity of silver and gold as coin, money and legal tender is recog-" t Cramps, I Croup, - rvj?. Coughs, 11 IUVIU' Colds, I &cbe, i i Diarrhoea, Dysentery, ad"1 Bowel Complaints. A Bure, Safe, Quick Cure for these troubles is nized and established by our- po- When the greatest lawyers of NewYork are "retained" by a iel m our fundamental confession powerful combination whose mem- of fath aml T com the bers are indicted for breaking the constitution of the Lnited States ; , - 4.u4- Vu and from 1792 until- 18d this law, Bveij wiie jviiuna niui uicj 1 knows that are paid to defeat the law. New York World. If every Northern newspaper had upon its staff at least one ed itorial writer with a little knowl edge and experience of the South ern people it would be better for the country at large. Washington Post. equality between silver and gold was unquestioned both being equal legal tender and each equally invested with free and un limited coinage at the value and ratio fixed by law, Norfolk Pilot. Summer Resorts Reached via S. A. L. The passenger department of the Seaboard Air Liuef-Jias just Chamberlain's Pain Balm has no equpl as a household liniment. It is the best remedy known for rheumatism, lame back, neuralgia; while for sprains, cuts, bruises, burns, scalds and sore throat, jit is invaluable. WerU & Pike, merchants, Fernandina, Fla., write: ".veragnero buys a bottle of jpbmberlain' edies, comes back and says it is the best medicine he has ever used." 25 and 50 cents per bottle at Dr. J. D. McMillan's drug store. An esteemed South-hating con temporary suggests that if the Urbana affair had occurred on the stum y side of t he Maon and Dixon liwe the militia-..wauld have joined the mob in lynching the' r?gro. Of course, there is no means by which such an assertion can be either proved or disproved, but. we fail to recall an instance in which a Southern mob has suc ceeded in capturing a prisoner guarded by a military company. Nor do we recall an instance in which the soldier boys of the South have been forced to eneak out of the back door of a jail they were supposed to be guarding disguised in citizens' clothes. Newport News (Va.) Press. ; It ia the trusted friend of the J Mechanic, Farmer, . Planter, s Sailor, and ia?fact all classes, e Used internally er externally, y f Beware of imitations. Take 5 T none but the genuine " Perry Davis." Sold everywhere. ? 25c. and 50c. bottles. j A Havana paper demands Uen. issued an attractive, interesting j Lee's recall because he went into and valuable Summer Excursion a room where the queen of Spain's Book, descriptive of the seaside picture was liangnig, 111 hi3.,e.hirt nd m0untain.Jiomes a.nd resorts 1 "I x.. j.1 . ' 1- vP"sv- 4- K , v i L -I, located on and reached via that o particular. Pittsburg Fress. 1B,ra wuicuiFn.iB "Don't wait for prosperity" says summer trip or vacation, will do the Boston Globe, "go to work weu to examine same, a copy of and. bring it," That a what-. Ave which can jje BeCured uiwn appli are doing down in this i nefiki of , . .. , woods. Now let Massachusetts " u-i gau, .u do its part bv putting a lot of its addressing l.J. .Anderson, uen- 1 hoarded money into circulation. eral Passenger AgentjPortsmouth, Houston Post. Va, Dnring the summer of 1891, Mr. Chas. P. Johnson, a well known att6rney of Louisville, Ky., had a severe . attack of summer complaint. Quite a number of different remedies ,-werc..triedJ.j5jit failed Jo afford any relief.'. A friendfcUcfrieflew -daVcis. needed procured him a bottle 6f Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy, which quickly cured him i and he thinks, saved his lfie. He says that there has not been a day since that time that he has not had this remedy in his household. He speaks of it in the highest praise and takes pleasure in rec ommending it whenever an opportunity is offered. For sale by Dr. J.D. McMillan, 1 f J
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1897, edition 1
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