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I Continues to m&Ke Miraculous Cures £ READ THIS LETTER: ALMOST A MIRACLE. J DiisisOX, S. C., Aug. 18th, 1002. ■ Gentlemenln September 1890, E took rheumatism In a very bad form. £ In a month after the disease started I had to give up my work and go to y bed. It continued to grow woris until my arms and hands were badly drawn, £ so much so that I could not use them. My legs were drawn hack until my 9 feet touched my hips. I was as helpless as a baby for nearly twelve months, y The muscles of my arms and lew were hard and shriveled up. I suffered death many times over. Was treated fey iix different physicians in McColl, Dillon and Marion, but none of them could foo}c any {rood, until Dr. J. P. Ewing, of Dillon, came to see me. He told me to 4np four “ llhrumacide.” tie got me one bottle y of the medicine and I began to fcfc&l feu and before the lirst bottle wa3 used up I f, began to get better. I used live a half bottles and was completely cured, y That was two years ago, and my kcxMCh has been excellent ever since. Have had no symptoms of rheumatism. I regard “RnnrMACin® ”as l>y far the best P remedy for rheumatism on the market. I cannot rhv too much for it. I liavo J recommended it to others since and It has cured them. y Will say further, that I began to walk in about six days after I began to take ra “ RnEUMACIDE,” with the aid of crutches ; in about three months Hirer I began 7 to take It, I could walk as good as anybody, and went back to work again. m Very truly, JAMES WILKES. jk All Druggists, or sent express prepaid on receipt of fi.oo. £. Mtt^Cttem: leal Co., » - Baltimore, PUBLIC OPINION S TDNOR * HUNDLJBT, for VAlufß tme, are unsurpassed the city throug Y ieldlng to none, for atylea new, the choicest Furniture, alts for yo XJ X) arable and elegant, ornate or plain, such Suites elsewhere we *v>ek in xal IN' oted far UPHOLSTERY, here we «nd a graad selection of every kin J) 0 ornamental DRAPERIES, It is known well, In perfect taste, they do «xc« X 5, lgbt at 711 ». Brosd St., as MIRRORS JL PICTURES, the stock » couplet J] & tor Beauty and Quality wa can rely on all BYDNOR * HUNDLEY 1s suppl Y This Great Store is 709-7u-7i3 E. Broad St., Richmond, Va. A Happy Home is Where Contentment Reigns Supreme. J We Can Help Your make Your Home Pleasant | During the Winter Months. Our Stock of I Wood Burning Heating Stoves | Is the Largest in the State. The WIZARD AIR-TIGHT, made in three I sizes, most attractive ever offered, An ornament to any parlor is the EXCELSIOR | AIR-TIGHT. Combines neatness, economy and | durability. For the dining room, bed rooms, and any room, If a medium priced stove is desired, we call your attention to our 11A(iEY KINO HEATER. We do not hesitate to say it is the best, tho cheapest and I safest quick heater ever offered. Made in five sizes. For prices and an opportunity to inspect the stoves, write for circular-, or call at store, No. 224 Fayetteville street. We have in our employ expert Stove Mechanics- Stoves put. up free of charge. Full line of Cook Stoves, Coal-Burning Stoves, Fur- |j HART-WARD HARDWARE COMPANY, Successors to Julius Lewis Hardware Co-, RALEIGH, N. C. | The Eastern Insurance Company. Home Office: WASHINGTON, N. C. An old line company from the foundation up. Most liberal policies with large cash surrender values issued. Profitable contracts in productive territory for energetic, reliable agents. Address, D. T, TAYLOE, H. SUSIVIAN, President. Cenera! h/lanagor. Horner Wary School, OXFORD, N. C. One hundred and fourth term begins January 20, 1903, Prepares for University and College. No time or energy wasted on so-called finishing courses. Lim ited numbers and maximum personal attention to each student. For particulars address, J. C. HORNER. poor GLOVE. W. p. TAYLOR CO. Manufactyrers, Boston, - - Mass. THE BEST S3.SO SHOE On the maik et. A1 ! styles Sold by Cross SLincliaii THE NEWS AND OBSERVER, TIES )AY MORNING, JAN, 6, i 903 y IST THE SALOON Legislation the Anti-Saloon League Recommends* In AdTi.ion io Closing Rural Stills and Saloons, Th_y Wish Applicant for License to Pre sent Petitions Wi.h Vuj i ity of Votes. Tho executive committee of the North Carolina Anti-Saloon League will press upon the General Assembly the need of effective temperance legislation. The fol lowing statement is issued: TEMPERANCE LEGISLATION PRO POSED. The following are the features of the temperance legislation proposed by the ! executive committee of the North Caro ; lira Anti-Saloon League in session with ! authorized representatives of the North ■ Carolina Methodist Conference and the ! Baptist State Convention: ! l. Prohibition of sale of manufacture of intoxicating liquors outside of incorpor -1 ated towns. Prohibition of sale of liquor , in towns of less than 500 population, whether incorporated or not. Prohibition 1 of manufacture of liquors in towns of less I than 1,000 population, whether incorpor ated or not. The distinction is made between incor ■ porated towns and unincorporated com ’ raunities because incorporated towns are organized and policed. It is made also ■ to proieet the rural districts from the saloon. It is made also to protect the towns and cities from being surrounded | by saloons. The distinction is made, in respect to population mainly to prevent the evasion of the law by the incorpora i tion of saloon or distillery settlements. I ; 2. Local option elections in incorporated ) towns of more than 500 inhabitants at any . time upon thirty days notice and upon petition of one-third of the qualified vot j era; provided elections shall not take ( place oftener than once in two years. Tn such elections tho question of sa ! loons or prohibition, or saloons or dis- I pensary, or dispensary or prohibition may I be submitted as petitioners may request; I only one question at an election, however. ■ 3 Prohibition of the Importation of li- I quors by any means into prohibited or dis | pensary territory. I I 4. After July 1, 1903, all applicants for * license to sell or manufacture liquors I shall present with their application pe- I titions in their behalf signed by a inajor- I ity of the qualified voters, save in those i towns and cities in which between the II date of Ibe enactment of this bill and j July 1, 1903, an election shall have been ‘ held and carried for saloons. These propositions are clear, and need no exposition. They look to the sup pression cf the saloon and distillery in tho rural districts, and to local option ? elections in the towns and cities in the I near future on a fair and reasonable I basis. There should not be a saloon I in anv town or city unless the majority | of the people expressly call for it. I I The people of North Carolina are eh- I titled to this. They have long been op | posed to the saloon. They have never [ had a fair chance in a struggle with it. I They have been hampered by the ignor- I antant vote. They have stood in fear I of division. But these things are now I passed. And now that they arc passed, | the General Assembly should freely I grant the people's petition for a fair op- I portunity to grapple with the evil that I in their long affliction fastened itself I upon them. Especial attention Is directed to para- I graph four. That calls for the recogni- I tion on the part of the General Assembly I that the people of Northu Carolina arc I moral people. The saloons\ now exist I not with the consent of the people of I North Carolina, but solely because con ditions have prevented the moral forces j of the State from asserting themselves ;in elections against the saloons. Every I intelligent public man in the State knows t'rnt this is true. It is but rea ! sonable to ask now that the patience of ! the people be rewarded, and that the true ) attitude of Ihe majority be recognized. is it unreasonable to presume that the 1 saloons should not he opened unless it is expressly voted by the majority to open them? It is more reasonable to pre -1 , sutne that the people of North Carolina 1 j desire tne saloons —recognized as ruin ous, as the sources of all manner of ! crime—to go on with their work unless j they vote to the contrary? To be sure, j he does violence to the character of the j people who holds that they favor saloons j and that saloons must exist until they j have been voted out. One does not ask a good man if he loves virtue. His char | actor is answer. One who believes in tho people of North Carolina will say that the people desire the saloons closed, • and he will not ask the people to prove this, but will bid the saloon men dis prove it. This is just what paragraph four calls for. t is fair; it is represen- I tative; it is reasonable; it is only a just recognition of the patience of the moral forces of North Carolina; it pre sents them with the opportunity that they have long waited for. In their name we ask for this recognition and this opportunity to vindicate themselves and , those who respect them. J. W. BAILEY. I Raleigh N. C., Jan. 2, 1903. The Executive Committee:—N. B. ; Broughton, A. J. McKelway, J. O. Atkin j son, T. N. Ivey, T. C. Blair, J. O. Oates, J. SY. Bailey, and Q. K. Nimocks, repre senting the N. C. Conference, and M. L». Kesler, representing the Baptist State Convention. Death of Mr. Mebane’s Sister. (Special to News and Observer.) Newton, N. C . Jan. s.—Prof. C. H. Me i bane left this eve to attend the funeral j of his sister. Mrs. Pritchett, who died j this morning in Graham. It has been only | two weeks since Prof. Mebane buried his mother. Catawba College will open on Tuesday, January 6th. Prospects for the spring term are very encouraging. ELY S LIQUID CREAM BALM is an old friend in a new form. It is prepared j for the particular benefit of sufferers from | nasal catarrh who are used to an atomiz-' er in spraying the diseased membranes. All the healing and sooting properties of Balm are retained in the new pre paration. If does not dry up the secre tions. Price, including spraying tube. 75 cents. At vour druggists’s or Ely Broth ers. 50 Warren Street, New York, will mail it. THE STALE'S BILINJID DEVELOPMIKT. State Auditor Dixon Tell* of Splendid Progress and Bright Future, Dr B. F. Dixon, State Auditor, being asked his opinion of the development of North Carolina during the oast year, and the outlook for the future, 33id: ‘‘The material development of North Carolina during the past year has been much greater than that of any previous year of her history.'' “More domestic corporations have been organized. One hundred and fiftv.tu 0 miles of railroad have been bfuilt. Tec tobacco interest has increased amazingly, as indicated by the building of warehouses, stommerics, prize houses, etc. The farmers generally are in better condition than ever before. “The record for the year of textile progress is very gratifying. Many cot ton mills are replacing old machinery with the very latest and best, and finer grades of cloth have taken the place of low grade goods. Our factories aire now bidding for foreign trade, and as the Southern exports amounted to $500,000,- 000 during the year I am sure that quite a good slice of this went f:\-m North Carolina. “But the greatest devclpment has been along educational lines. Our good State is now bounding forward educationally at a rate of speed that, promises, at no distant day, to place her where she cnce stood among her sister States. Why Have One Rule for North Caro -1 na and Another for New Tt O'k? (Washington Post.) The President is having a great deal of trouble with his negro officeholders and officcseckers in the South. Me do not wonder. He would have still more trouble at the Nortih if he were to ex tend his imlicy to that section. He has declared, speaking of the South, that he will appoint negroes to office wherever they prevail in sufficient numbers to war rant it, and provided they are of good character and approved competency. But why not apply the same rule to the North? There are more than 50,000 ne gro voters in Pennsylvania, more than 30.000 in Ohio, more than 20,000 in New Jersey—has it ever occurred to any Preidcnt to appoint a colored collector of the port of Philadelphia, or a colored United States district judge in New Jersey? Why have one rule for North Carolina and another for New York? Why, in fact, differentiate the negroes from the whites; why segregate the ne groes any more than the fat men or the red-headed men, or tihe cripples? Theoretically all men are free and equal. As a matter of fact, the negroes claim more than equality, for they insist upon being set apart, and they demand a cer tain share of patronage, not because they are competent, but because they are negroes. Republican Presidents have always had trouble on this score. They will con tinue to have it so long as they recog nize the preposterous pretension we have described. The Knife Petetrated the Skull. (Wayriosville Courier.) Dr. J. H. Way showed ihis writer yes terday the inch and five-eighths piece of blade of a pocket knife, which w ! as literarllv buried in the brain of Rufe Jones of Balsam, and which he extracted last Monday. Mention was made in the last issue of the Sourier about the drunk en row between Jones and Duncan about Christmas, in which Duncan cut Jones across the head and face. The knife actually penetrated the skull and enter ed the brain to the depth of one and five eighths inches, and having broken off re mained in (ho brain till the following Monday when Dr. Way took it out as he did also a piece of the skull. Friday Dr. Way was to see Jones, finding him able to sit up and on te road to recov ery. ONE MINUTE COUGH CURE. Is the only harmless cough cure that gives quick relief, cures coughs, colds, croup, bronchitis, whooping cough, pneu monia, asthma, lagrippo and all throat, chest and lung troubles. An ideal remedy for children. W. H. KING DRUG CO. A Distir, guithed Visitor, (Fayetteville Observer.) Mr. Chas. R. Flint, a multi-millionaire of New York, organizer of the rubber and about a dozen ether great trusts, and also of the lumber company at George town, S. C., the largest plant of the kind in the world, arrived in the city Tues day night and registered at thp LaFay ette. Early in the morning he was driven out to the pine product plant of the Aus tralis Manufacturing Company, in wheih he is interested. He brought his dogs and hunting equipment along, knowing that this was a famous quail shooting section. PATENTS-PROTECT YOUR IDEAS. No allowance, no fee. Consultation free. Established 1564. Milo B. Stev ens <Sr Co.. 817 Uth street, Washington, D. C. A Cowardly Shooting. (Bryson City Recorder.) After the show at the court house last Friday night and Mr. Canic Randall and Miss Anna Stallcup had returned ome some mean, low, cohwardly rascal with out giving any warning slipped up to the window of the room in which they were in at Mr. H. L. Stalleup's residence and tired four .shots of a 32 caliber pistol in rapid succession and ran. Two of the balls passed through Mr. Randall’s over coat grazing his arm and one ball grazed Miss Stalleup's back. It was a narraw escape for both. A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES. ✓ Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Your druggist will refund your money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure you. 50 cents. STATE NEWS. Murfreesboro, N. C.. Jan. s.—Rev. F. L. Clundy, the new Methodist pastor, has won all hearts. He comes to North Carolina form Florida and this is his first appointment in this State. Thomasville, N. C.. Jan. 5. —Rev. G. P. Harrill. the new Baptist pastor, has made a splendid impression upon the new con gregation. PUREJBLOOD Necessary to Life. Vinci Makes it. POOR BLOOD CAUSES ERUP TIONS AND WEAKNESS. r Vino! Makes Pure, Rich, Red Blood. ; BECAUSE WE KNOWN THIS WE GUARANTEE ITS ACTION. Impoverished blood is a sure sign of internal disorders. We see every day too many people whose faces plainly show that there is something radically wrong. We want all of our fellow-citizens to know of our splendid blood purifier and blood maker. We refer to Vinol. Vinol, as we have before stated, is a purely scientific preparation. Vinol owes its virtue to the fact that it contains in a highly concentraced state the active curative principles, taken from the livers of live cods —the same elements that formerly wero found in cod-liver oil, and which made it famous. Vinol does not contain the grease or fat that characterized cod-liver oil and made it in many cases worthless. Vinol acts upon every one of the great vital organs, and by invigorat ing and giving them strength, enables them to properly perform their func tions. Vinol's effect on the stomach is mar velous. It tones up this, the greatest of the organs of the body, and enables it to obtain from the food which is taken into it the necessary elements to create flesh and muscle tissue, bone structure and pure, rich, red blood. We are in receipt of a letter from a Savation Army woman which reads as follows: “I took Vinol after a bad attack of grippe, and so much good did it do me that I persuaded my sister to take it. She was all tired out. Had no appe tite and her blood was very poor. It did her as much gopd as it did me.”— Betsy Habersuaw, 71S River St., Fall River, Mass. Won’t you please come in and see us ? We are always glad to extol the merits of Vinol. We will give you back your money if you don’t find Vinol will do all we claim it will. Could any one do more for you? K. H. KISS DDK CO. BUYING A PIANO Means providing a source of constant entertainment to your family and friends and giving your children a liberal edu cation in the most rcflninig of all accom plishments. Before buying the piano we want to show you the Shoninger. We can show you how to get an in strument of the highest quality at a mod erate price. DARNELL & THOMAS. Raleigh, N. C. Large Stock. Highest Grades, Foreign Portland Ce ment at Newpor. News. Write for Prices, , Southeastern Lime and Cement Co , Charleston. 8. 0.. Southern Agent* NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that application will he made to the next General As sembly for the passage of an act granting a charter to the Raleigh, Wilson and Eastern Railroad Company. It. A. NUNN. This ISth day of December, 1902. If You Love Your Wife Cias Heats Your Rooml Give Her a Gas Stove. Well in Six Minutes.^ (? | fSTANDARD GAS \ r\ AND | if :ELECTRIC CO | £ D " A Cheapest Heat and Best l ove light in wife's Eyes Cheapest Light & Best Preserved by Gas Light. (INSTITUTE fo Jvomen nc l Conservatory of Music. A famous and well os- j,‘ " " _" ‘ hosohet jjl| tablished school. Full P™ jfk f** I ,zkj : All and thorough instruc, LJP -O £J* modern appliances tion In all departments j ?"VSKSSS of female education. r .. —— j terms. RALEIGH, N. C. Catalogue free. Address I JAS. DINWIDDIE, M. A. of Univ. Va., Prin. 1 Our The First First Showing Great of Event New of White Goods, The Embroideries, NEW YEAR. Laces, &c. Our first showing is being made this week of new white Things—-fresh, crisp, snowy white, refreshing delightful. Some of the new materials that promise to be espcially favored this season are the mer* * Basket Weaves, Madras Shirtings* fancy ve cheviots, figured and embroidered Piques and Damasks. These attractive wash fabrics are as suitable for present use as for later spring wear. Never has such a delightful, refreshing array been made in our city. Dobbin § Ferratl King’s Business College. J. H. KINC, President. F. J. HOLDER. Vice-President. The best equipped, largest. most successful and progressive business college in the Carolina!*. Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Typew* Ring. Penmnn-hip mid English, tnught by ex perts. Reference; Every hank and lending business cone rn in Raleigh- Contract given to secure our graduates positions «,r money refunded. Railroad fare paid- Board, $lO per month- Write today for latest College Journal. Special Offers and Holiday Greetings. WINTER OPENING MONDAY, JANUAR Y 6, 1003. Address, KING S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Raleigh. N. C. FARMERS! FARMERS!! Get Only the Best Fertilizers for Youi v) IP fNG CROPS.^ Our Brands Are Unsurpassed for Corn. Colton and Tobacco WRITE TO OLD DOMINION GUANO CO., BRANCH V.-C. C. CO.. NORFOLK, Virginia. A. FEW OF OUR L EADING BRANDS AND Old Dominion Soluble Guanc. Farmers’ Friend Farmers’ Friend High Grade Fertilizer, Osceola Tobacco Guano (has no equal). Planteis' Bone and Potash O D. High Grade Bone Phosphite Rovsler’s High Grade Ana Phosnhale. THE WHEAT CROP OF LAST YEAR WAS THE LARGEST IN MANY YFARS Our Fertilizers were more generally in the State than all others, and are The Best for All Fall Crops. They make the stuff GROW. Ask for and take nothing but goods made by DURHAM FERTILIZER CO., Branch V. C. C. Co., DURHAM. N. 0. Prices and Particuiars'for the Asklr e. V
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Jan. 6, 1903, edition 1
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