Newspapers / The News & Observer … / Jan. 8, 1903, edition 1 / Page 3
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BISHOP HANDY SAYS <«/ take great pleasure in acknowledging the curative effects of Peruna. At the solicitation of a friend / used your remedy and cheerfully recommend your Peruna to all who want a good tonic and a safe cure for catarrh.”—JAMES A. HANDY. Prominent members of the clergy are giving Peruna their unqualified endorse ment. These men find Peruna especially adapted to preserve them from catarrh of the vocal organs which has always been the bane of public speakers, and gen eral catarrhal debility incident to the sedentary life of the clergyman. Among the recent utterances of noted clergymen on the curative virtues of Peruna is the above one from Bishop James A. Handy, D. I)., of Baltimore. OTHER NOTABLE CURES. A Husband Escaped the Pangs of Catarrh of the Lungs. Most Cases of Incipient Consump tion are Catarrh. Edward Stevens. Mrs. Edward Stevens of Carthage, N. Y., writes as follows: “I now take pleasure in notifying you that my husband has entirely recovered from catarrh. lie is a well man today, thanks to you and Peruna. He took six bottles of your medicine as directed, and it proved to be just the thing for him. His appetite is good and every thing he eats seems to agree with him. His cough has left him and he is gaining in flesh, and seems to be well every way.”— MKSf. EDWARD STEVENS. Any internal remedy that will cure catarrh in one location will cure it in SYDVOR & HUNDLEY. vse Headvuarters for Bridal Suits. <s A happy and prosperous New Year to our many patrons in North Carolina. With a line of goods second to none in the South, we trust our trade with you, will steadily increase in the future, the past year being far ahead of our fondest hopes. * SYDNOR & HUNDLEY, Richmond, Va. A Happy Home is Where Contentment Reigns Supreme. I We Can Help Your make Your Home Pleasant | During the Winter Months. Our Stock of Wood Burning Heating Stoves | Is the Largest in the State. I The WIZARD AIR-TIGHT, made in three | sizes, most attractive ever offered. An ornament to any parlor is the EXCELSIOR | AIR-TIGHT. Combines eat ness, economy and | durability, | For the dining room, bed rooms, and any room, If a medium- Eg priced stove is desired, we call your attention to our HAG ft Y KING B HEATER. We do not hesitate to sav it Is the best, the cheapest aud safest quick heater ever offered. Made In five sizes. For prices and an opportunity to Inspect the stoves, write for circulars or call at store, No. 224 Fayetteville street. We have in our employ expert Stove Mechanics- Stoves put up jw free of charge. Full line of Cook Stoves, Coal-Buruhig Stoves, Fur naces. HART-WARD HARDWARE COMPANY, Successors to Julius Lewis Hardware Co-, RALEIGH, N. C. The People's Storage and Mercantile Company. 313, 315 and .317, Wilmington Street, RALEIGH, N. C. Will hold and make CASH ADVANCES when desired upon your COTTON In store or upon bills of lading for same—from the best reliable information we ou r got, the crop will not be a large one and that higher prices will more than likcl; prevail. Correspondence solicited. J. I. THOMAS, President, S. W. BREWER, See. and Treas any other location. This is why Peruna has become so justly famous in the curw of catarrhal diseases. It cures catarrh wherever located. Its cures remain. Peruna does not palliate; ife euros. Mrs. Frederick Williams, President of the South Side Ladies’ Aid Society of Chicago, 111., writes the following words of praise for Peruna from 973 Cuyler avenue, Chicago, 111.: “ My home is never without Pcrun'A, for I have found during the past si.l years that there is no remedy that will at once alleviate suffering and actually cure, as Peruna does. Four bottles com pletely cured me of catarrh of the head of several years’ standing, and if my husband feels badly, or either of us catch cold, we at onco take Peruna, and in a day or two it has thrown the sickness out of the system.”—Mrs. Frederick Williams. Mrs. W. A. Allison, of 759 Sheffield avenue, Chicago, 111., is the Assistant MrT.vvTjCXinsea. Matron of the People’s II osp i tal. She has the following to say about Peruna: “I have had fre quent opportuni ties to observe the wonderful cur a tivo effects of Peruna especially on persons suffer- ing with a conjested condition of tho head, lungs, and stomach, generally called catarrh. It alleviates pain and soreness, increases the appetite and so tones* up tho entire system that tho patient quickly regains strength and health.”—Mrs. W. A. Allison. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to I)r. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and ho will be pleased to give you his valuable ftt vice gratis. Address Dr.' Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. THE NEW 8 AND OBSEKVEh, TttUHSJAY MOKNINU, .IAN. 8. ito3 FIRED INTO A CAB A Bullet out of Darkness at West Durham. Daniel Horton Fined One Hu dred Dollars and all Cos's for Assaulting Strgeant W. 6. Cr*b ree. (Special to News and Observer.) Durham, N. C., Jan. 7.—At a late hour last night a street ear was fired into near West Durham, the ball passing im mediately over the heads of two pas sengers and narrowly missing others who were on the car. Broken glass was scat tered over the two passengers nearest the window, through which the ball came. Tho shot was from the direction of a negro locality and a police officer, who was in that section heard a shot in that direction. The car was immediately stopped and every effort made to ascer tain and apprehend the man who did the act. This was without success. Since starting the cars a few rocks have been thrown through the windows, but this is the first time that one has been shot into. I In the Superior court room this after noon Daniel Horton, the young white man who assaulted Sergeant W. G. Crab tree with knucks, was fined ?100 and all costs in the case. There were two charges against Hor ton. one for secret assault and tho other for carrying a concealed weapon. The i grand jury failed to find a true bill for ! secret assault, and then a second bill i was sent, charging assault with a deadly ! weapon. Pleas of guilty were entered in 1 both cases. Quite a number of speeches ! were made by the counsel in the cases, for ard against the defendant, and it was after 2 o’clock this afternoon when | sentence was passe®. The ease has been tho talk of the ! town since the assault was made on j Christmas night, and even now thero is a great division of sentiment as to what I should have been done. HOTEL KEEPER*’ CONVENTION. jThey Want Laws Enacted to Protect Thom Against Dead He its. (Special to News and Observer.) Southern Pines, N. C., Jan. 7. —A hotel men’s convention, to which all the hotel men cf North Carolina hav£ been invited, will meet at the Carolina Hotel, Pine hurst, Tuesday, January 20th. The hotel men want laws enacted which will pro tect them from dead beats. They also propose to compare prices on fuel, lights, ice, water, etc., and other matters which are to their mutual advantage. New Laws Needed To the Editor: A law is needed re quiring all government distilleries to be operated in incorporated towns or cities, where they can be under strict police control. Operated as they now are in remote country places, the law is con stantly violated and all kinds of crime is tho result. 2. A law should be enacted forbidding Town or County Commissioners, or city aldermen from issuing license to sell in toxicating liquors, unless the petition is signed by a majority of the voters of the town, ward or community where a saloon is proposed to be opened. 3. A law should be passed forbidding drug stores from being converted into gog-shops in communities where prohibi tion is established by law. Some drug gists have shamefully abused their priv ilege of selling liquors strictly for medi cal purposes. 4. A strict law should be enacted, re stricting doctors in giving prescriptions to nearly all persons who want to buy liquors. Thousands of people will pre |t tend to be sick to get liquor, and doctors lj know they are not sick. I do not ‘say I that all doctors will violate the law, but many have done it. They should not be allowed to give prescriptions for more than is really needed for medical pur poses. A person should not be allowed to continue to buy all the liquor he wants under one prescription. Everybody called Doctor ought not to be allowed to give prescriptions. 5. A law should be passed allowing any town or community to establish a dis pensary, or prohibition, whenever a ma jority of the voters call for it. 6. A law should be passed requiring every county to make better public roads. This is an absolute necessity. There can never be any real prosperity without it. Money should be provided for this purpose, either by direct taxation, or the i issuing of bonds. The legislators that do this may he unpopular for a while, but when people realize the benefit of good roads, then such law makers will be popular. The stock law was very unpopular at first, but is only needed a few years to make it the most popular and beneficial law the State ever had. J. A. STRADLEY. j Oxford, N. C. * I Is This Religious Persecution? (Statesville Landmark.) Messrs. Bishop and Saunders, two Seventh Day Adventist preachers, are “up against it” at Rock Cut, about nine miles west of Statesville. About three months ago a band of Sevepth Day Adventists located at Rock Cut and have since been holding services under canvass. They are preparing to erect a school house and church at that place. Several Sundays ago two of the men engaged in carpenter work on their new buildings. Thereupon Mr. R. J. Plott complained to Squire J. A. Ingram that the men were guilty of breaking the Sabbath. A warrant wag issued for the Adventists and was served last Saturday by Sheriff Summers. The Adventists were given a hearing before ’Squire In gram yesterday. The result of the trial has not yet been learned here. As is generally known, the Seventh Day Adventist holds and teaches that the seventh and not the first day of the week is the true Sabbath. He therefore ob serves Saturday for Sunday and Sunday as a secular day. l-or Croup u«e CHKNKY’S EXPECTORANT, the SEW TOWS CF X.INDLET. Is to be Established in Mooro and Named for Mr J. Van Lindley, (Special to News and Observer ) Southern Pines, N. C., Jan. 7. Mr. H. M. Holloman, of Boston, who is interested in the new town of Lakeview, near Vass, and W’hich is located about six or seven miles from Southern Pines, was here for a day or two this week, and talked .vith your correspondent concerning the de velopments of the new town of Lindley, one mile west of the town, which takes its name from J. Van Lindley of the Van Lindley Orchard Company. It is said that if the land owners ad jacent to the Lakeview town do not co operate with Mr. Holleman’s plans look ing to the development of the proposed new town, Mr. Holleman has many other places offering special inducements, and will develop elsewhere if he does not secure the hearty co-operation of those near the land he has on hand. Gen, Carr for Senator. To the Editor: The Senatorial candi dates have pitched their camps in Ra leigh and are lining up their forces for the final battle to be fought out in the Democratic caucus. All kinds of esti mates have been made, none of which has any particular value. It is generally thought that on the first ballot Overman or atsen will lead, Carr will be third, Craig fourth and so on. By the third ballot the caucus will get down to busi ness. All the complimentary votes will have been east and the casting .about for the best man to unite on will begin. It will not be necessary to go outside of the seven or eight avowed candidates to fix upon this man. As long as there is any sort of a chance of making a selec tion from among the declared candidates a dark horse will not be considered, as the general sentiment is in favor of giv ing the prize to some one who has made the entire race. Conservative public opinion indicates General Carr as the winner. Overmen and Watson will de velop their full strength on the first two ballots, \uhich will still leave them far short of tne goal. When the friends of these gentlemen realize that they will not be nominated, who will they look to? There is but one logical, ethical candidate and that is General Carr. His claims as a represen tative North Carolinian of national prominence will appear. His claims as a Civil War veteran will appear. His claims as a frier*! in need to his fellow comrades will appear. His innumerable benefactions to worthy institutions and individuals —to public and private chari ties—will appear. His munificent and long continued contributions to his party’s needful expenses will appear. His public spirit and State pride will ap pear. His constructive record as a self made man of business will appear. His broad, cultured, progressive, statesman like ideas will appear. The fact will also appear that in return for the unstinted aid he has lent the party, he has been promised time and again by its leaders anything within its gift he wanted. And the further fact will appear that if the Democracy would purge itself of ingrati tude it will not again, turn down its bene factor for the only thing he has asked at its hands. This is but the barest statement of some of the claims upon which General Carr’s candidacy rests. And they are claims that no Democratic legislator, having at heart the well-being of his party, can decline to consider. We have already in the Senate a man of consuming and conspicuous ability as a lawyer and politician. We need as his colleague a man of equally commanding ability in business—a man of affairs and activities—a captain of industry who will be the fitting exponent cf our industrial progress and aspirations at this era. Every formidable candidate in this fight is a lawyer and a politician and more or less a replication of Senator Simmons, with the single exception of General C;i rr. Why not take a business man this time? The representatives of the people cannot w'it.h impunity ignore his claims. He has not su'.ked in his tent on account, of his defeat at a time w r hen his candidacywvas inopportune, because it was no reflection upon his party standing or popular strength. Although his friends feel that the party now owes him doubly this only honor he has ever asked of it. he has questioned the right of no candidate to appear against him. On the contrary, he is the friend of every man who stands opposed to him. If no one of the other candidates finds that his legitimate strength is sufficient to secure his nomi nation and that a compromise candidate must be agreed upon, why not take Gen eral Qarr? His selection will mean general satis faction and not heart burnings, party unification and not disruption. It will moan recognition and requittal for his splendid generosity to his party. It will mean that the Democratic party is ruled by a majority aS' well as by a machine. But if he wantonly repudiated and hu miliated this time then 50,000 Democrats, W'ho in 1901, resisted all conceivable pres sure and supported General Carr in tht most adverse, disadvantageous and un equal contest in which a man was ever involved, wall ask the reason why. C. A. MATTHEWS. Charlotte, N. C.. Jan. 7. Hand was Bidly Cut. (Special to News and Observer.) Hamlet, N. C., Jan. 7.—Mathew John son. colored, an employe of the Hamlet Lumber Company, got his hand badly cut by a haml-saw this afternoon. While operating the machine he accidentally touched the saw with his hand. His little finger w r as entirely severed. CAUTION. This is not a gentle word—but wheD you think how' liable you are not to pur chase for 75c. the only remedy universal ly known and a remedy that has had the largest sale of any medicine in the world since 1868 for the cure and treatment of Consumption and Throat and Lung trou bles without losing its great popularity all these years, you will be thankful we called your attention to Boschee’s Ger man Syrup. There are so many ordinary cough remedies made by druggists and others that are cheap and good for light colds, perhaps, but for severe Coughs, Bronchitis, Croup—and especially for Consumpt ion, where there is difficult ex pectoration and coughing during the nights and mornings, there is nothing like German Syrup. Sold by all druggists in the civilized world. STATE SEWS. The Presbyterians will shortly begin the erection of a new church at Troy upon a lot given by Mr. -b C. Bruton, a liberal Methodist of that town. A bold robbery was committed in the very heart of the city last night. Some thief or thieves entered the store of the Rowan Hardware Company, gaining en trance through a rear window.— -Salisbury Sun. A private letter received here from Washington says that Senator Pritchard is considerably improved in condition, but that it cannot be stated when he will be able to leave his room. Very few know, but it is said on excellent au thority to be a fact, that a week ago yesterday Senator Pritchard’s condition after the operation was so serious that fte was hardly expected to live. —Ashe- ville Citizen. News of the death of Mr. H. Ccdum Parks at Asheville Sunday night, of smallpox, was received in Statesville yesterday and came as a shock to his friends and relatives here. Mr. Parks was the only living son of Capt. J. M. Parks, of Statesville, and was about 36 years old. He had held positions with the railroad since tie was a very young man and for the past seven or eight years was an engineer between Asheville and Columbia.—Statesville Landmark. To Investigate .Rockingham Oil (Special to News and Observer.) Reidsville, N. C., Jan. 7.—Mr. H. E. Vaudervert, of Jamesville, has written to Postmaster Wray here and asked him to skim the ton from a vassel of water from the supposed oil regions in this county and mail it to him in a vial. He says he will examine it and if there is a sign of oil he will come and investigate the matter. Mr. Vaudervert claims that he has had years of experience in pros pecting for oil and could easily toll if there is oil in this county after ex amining sample of water or looking over the ground. Mr. Wray will send a sam ple to him. and it is hoped the investi gation will prove to be profitable. One Bottle of Burnett's Vanilla Ex tract is better than three of the doubtful kind. Though costing a few cents more per bottle, its purity and great strength make it the most economical brand. HEALING SORES Slow healing sores are unsightly, pain ful anil dangerous. They are a constaul care and source of anxiety and worry. Chronic, 6low healing sores are fre quently the after effects of some long debilitating sickness that leaves the con stitution weakened and the blocd in a polluted, run down condition, when a scratch, cut, simple boil or bruise, be comes a fearful looking ulcer that grows and spreads, eating deeper and deeper into the flesh in spite of everything that can be done to check its progress. Old people whose blood is below the standard and the circulation sluggish, are often tormented with face sores,-and indolent, sickly looking ulcers upon the limbs that give them hardly a moment’s rest from pain and worry. Ordinary sores are liable to be come chronic when the blood Purify the Blood He:.! C. 3 Sore. is too weak to throw off the perms and poisons, and no amount of external treat ment will heal them, but they continue to prow worse and worse, and many times terminate in that most ho'rrible ol all human maladies, Cancer. S. S. S. cures slow healing sores by purifying cud invigorating the germ laden, vitiated blood and purging th** system of all corrupt matter, thus strik ing at the real cause and removing every hindrance to a rapid cure, and this is the only possible way to reach these deeply rooted, dangerous places. S. S. S. strengthens and tones up the circulation, and supplies rich, nutritious blood sot the rebuilding of the constitution and healing the sore, when you get rid of SSS the old plague spot for all time. If you have a slow healing, stubborn sore, write us about it, and our Physicians will advise you without charge. «. The Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. 250,000 Ac u,nd f FOR SALE. FERTILE AND WELL TIMBERED. 89,01)0 acres lying In Jones county. Ififi.ono acres lying in Onslow county. 90,000 acres situated on the Wilming ton and New Bern Railroad. Will sell in small or large tracts to suit purchasers. Mill men aud capitalist are askod to Investigate. Title good. Call on or address, Stephen W. Isler, Trustee, At Isler & Shaw's Law Office, KINSTON. N. C. 9 9 g Wint Your • | House Moved ? • • THAT I DO. ' And can alwavs serve • 3 promptly Write or tel- f • egraph.' • J. N. CREEL, | 3 Dunn, N. C. 3 9 9 9999999999999999999099 NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that application will be 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. 1 This 16th day of December, 1902. A cough means a greafdeal to a young person, when there is a family history of weak lungs, with perhaps a case of con sumption itself. Coughs weaken the tissues, congest the mem branes, and prevent healing. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral controls the congestion and inflammation, and the cough disappears. Your doctor will explain, for we give all doctors the formula. JVC. Ayer Co., liOwell, Mass. <* We have used Ayer’n Cherry Pectoral in our family for over 25 year*. For all lung troubles lam sure there is no medicine its equal.” Mrs. A. POMEROY, Appleton, Minn. 123 and 125 Fayetteville St. OUR STORE PRESENTS ITS SERVICES TO THE OFFICERS AND MEMBERS OF THE STATE LEGISLATURE AND TO ALL VISITORS. \ Our Store is the; Best place in town) to buy your Furnishings, Hats and Shoes. I DobbinsFerrail .UTUMIvIjIST |ot —y. "Between ffie — North^indSouth Florida Cuba. A passenger service unexcelled for luxury I and comfort, equipped with the latest Pullman Dining, Sleeping and Thoroughfare Cars. For rates, Schedule, Haps or any informa tion, write to WM. X CRAIG, General Passenger Agent, Wilmington, N. C. ■. JEiavjm TLaaYB/xji JL-uwzxaimi. -a. i - -xt-t i ■Braraww—^ FOOI CLOVE. J W. P- TAYLOR CO. M Manufacturers, wf Boston, - - Mass. $3.50 SHOE \ On the market. All Cross&Liiielian We sell —• Stetson’s Boyden’s Dress Shirts, Wool and Merino Un derwear, Scriven’s Drawers, Handkerchiefs, Gloves, Hosiery, Neckties, Sus penders, Etc. 3
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 8, 1903, edition 1
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