Thursday, November 28,4912. ffl!! flATTflAfTT ATT FOR THE EMESIDMS Carnegie Foundation Fond Pro rides Pension for Them or Their Widows ' Will Be Offered at Expiration of Term This May Induce Congress to rrovide a Pension Mr. Ilarri- w,n Thinks the Government Should 5Iake Provision. New York, Nov. 21. Following a r.e'-tinK of the trustees of the Carne- rie Foundation payers souls. But a I aald la the outset. Just watch them, and pot It down for fear yon will forget It by another Presidential campaign and be Induced to rote another Democrat ic ticket then. The fact Is, our Dem ocratic friends hare been out of of fice in the Nation for a long time and they want to get the public swttl troughs. This Interests them tar more than benefiting the common people. Many of my Democratic friends solemnly pledged me on elec tion day who voted for Wilson, that if he did not correct things. Nor rnaku it better for the people, farmers eape-j rorapetftora. The winner made the1 about some eharitahi aatiiA& Bile run within :Sl 11 of tlrae. I did sot notic tar dirrr. la tfeia IUt. Lewia S. Chafer, f the Scho- letter from others because I had tall field Bible School, of New York City.'ed politic this summer., I did not has during the past week conducted a go up and down the country abusing tuoie institute In the Presbyterian candidates, 1 told the men what Church of Chapel Hill. MISS ADDA3LS WINS FIGHT. OScers of the American Woman Suf frage Association Can Take Part la Partisan Politic National Suf fragette Meeting at Philadelphia, t had to' say, and gave them eome thing new to think about la the way of suffrage." Yi!oa Mast Commits Kokiita. Bellev lag He Had Killed Another. Wilson, S. C. Nor. 2S. Believing that he had killed a man and that Pa., Not. 23. OS- the oCcers would be hot on his trail Philadelphia, daily, for they were farmers th7iCe? f tte National American Worn- in a few hours. Jesse Boykin brooded i u r an s suffrage Association can ta.km n nt,m c .w . vi. . uu,u YOie ine "an Moose Uck-Uat- t .... " L ZZZ r -, - w w - uwiu auvui uuiiav utrw fiu If thtt-v wan et the next Presidential election. n.-ar Of held in the room Andrew Carnegie to-aay it was an nounced that it had been decided to offer pensions to the future ex-Presidents of the United States and to the unmarried widows of ex-Presidents. The offer will be made to those en titled to it without application being made to the foundation. Under the terms of the announcement President Taft, when he retires on the fourth day of next March, will be offered $25,000 by the Carnegie corporation. The question of making provision for our ex-Presidents has been one widely discussed with the suggestion Congress pass a law providing them with pensions. The action taken to-day, however, ia the first definite step looking to their financial independence after leaving office. they will have occasion ko vote ZSTL "llV ?'"iea ?M oot wU The man that Bull Moose ticket for I yiHW , . m wtoa OI organ- ne tnought he had killed in a Quarrel believe, and so oronhesv that thllta"?f." coaTea"oa a amendment the night before has only a wound In the hand. was about one of the greatest reforms and Die It rP,l. T fimer.Icaa seconded the nomination of Theodore sensational Su l'?.TeSentt l?e T braach to Roosevelt in the Progressive conven- one ,Wk What Texaas Afixnire nnrtv. ,i.i .1 ' , ' 7 . 7 pronioiung sncn parucipauon . . ocrwueming aeieatea. The suicide was onlr one of the Up to the time Miss Jane Addams half-doxen crimes of a more or less nature that gave Wilson Progressive conven- one shock after another. tlon at Chicago it had been the un written rule in the association that officers should hold aloof from parti san politics except in States where is hearty, vigorous life, according to women had the right to vote. The Hugh Tallman, of San Antonio. "We proposed amendment, it was declared, find." he writes, "that Dr. King's New was aimed at Miss Addams and she Life Pills surely put new life and en- accepted the challenge and fought the ergy Into a person. Wife and I be lieve thev are the best made. Bx- Miss Addams Speaks. "First of all." began Miss Addams, Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 21. Ow ing to the personal connection of a $25,000 .pension such as Andrew Carnegie proposes for former Presi dents and their widows Mrs. Benja min Harrison, wife of the late Presi dent, to-night refused to discuss the matter. However, in discussing pensions for former Presidents, she declared she was in sympathy with the Govern ment plan to provide for them. Mrs. Harrison said: "I believe that former Presidents should devote their lives to the service of the Nation and the Government- should provide a pension for them. General Harrison was properly called upon for service and at a sacrifice of his own time." both factions of the old war oreiu diced people of both North and South, East and West. This Progressive party is the Joshua to take up the cause of the people where Moses, the Republican administration, has failed to obey, or serve all the people with equal Jus- tlce and fairness; but like Moses, the proposition with vigor. ncpuunuau party aia ao a great wora In liberating thousands of shackled! slaves frontf bondage, together with! many otner good things; but as ev-jwhen she rose to speak on the sub ery dog has his day, or every reform ;ject, "I want to apologize if I have and invention have a partial end by j done anything wrong, or if I have reason of better things learned by! injured the association in any way. men, so sensible men reject the old; When I joined the association and adopt the new, and better things. ! when I was elected vice-president, I w I inis 10 in Keeping with common celletrt for stomach, liver or kidney troubles. 25 cents at all druggists. NOTICE OP SALE OP LAXD. By virtue of the power and author ity given in a mortgage deed exe cuted on the 12th day of July, 1910. sense. But the fool refuses to make a change, and sticks to the old habits and customs of his ancestors. Mr. Editor, my precinct at Weeks ville, N. C, gave Roosevelt a good majority over both Taft and Wilson, and would have given the same in many more places but for the great array of able Democratic speakers by L. P. Stewart and wife to J. J. did not know that it was pledged po- Reynolds, recorded in the Register I do not know I must limit of Deeds office. Wake County, in i Book 258. at oaee 246. I will offer litically. myself. "I think that matters of this kind for sale at the court-house door In should be left to the judgment of the Raleigh, N. C, on Monday, November person, l thins: you should keep 4, 1012, the following piece or par your politics one thing and your suf frage another. On the campaign tour this summer, it is true that I talked suffrage. It was the grandest 22. As Congress May Make Provision. Washington. D. C. Nov. the result of an announcement by the Carnegie Corporation that twenty five thousand dollar pensions would be offered each future ex-President of the United States, the movement is expected In the approaching Con gress to induce Congress to provide a pension. Feeling is against having the ex-Presidents pensioned from a private fund. It is regarded as "un Democratic." Senator Culberson, Democratic leader, is one of the op ponents to the Carnegie plan. ROOSEVELT IX 1916. Doesn't Think Wilson Can Carry Out Pleilges and That Four Years Will End Democratic Control in the Nation. Editor The Caucasian: I would like to notify the farmers and the tax-payers of all trades and callings through your good paper to take spe cial notice of the present great pros perity as now existing and also to take special notice of how it will be under the Wilson Democratic admin istration. This will be a case of test ing the pudding by tasting of it, and no intelligent man need to make the least mistake about such testing; and I hope all will so test the Democratic party during the next four years and let it burn deeply in their minds. The Democrats has made fine promises during the recent Presidential cam paign, promising to reduce the high cost of living without busting any body's business. Now, take the farmer first: how can they give the consumer cheap jwho were promised good jobs to de-! opportunity I ever had to talk suf- feat Roosevelt and Taft at any cost on frage. You cannot get them to come any yarn they could hatch up, and to a lecture on suffrage but I talked they did not fail to do their part in ' to audiences of from ten to fifteen the yarn business; and I am sorry to thousand men. say. that many of our people who "In the middle of the campaign 4 were not informed, took them at received a letter from President Taft their word and walked up to the - polls on election day and cast their votes straight, but many of the more informed or less prejudiced Demo crats cast their votes for Roosevelt and the Bull Moose ticket. Mr. Roosevelt, with all the opposition against him, made a wonderful run, and all the Progressives everywhere are cheerful and hopeful for the suc cess of the Progressive party in four years from now, for it is generally; conceded by all intelligent men that; Mr. Wilson cannot redeem the prom-1 Ises he has made to the people, and J snouia ne iaii to ao so, and even hold the present prosperity intact, he would not be entitled to re-election, for he has solemnly pledged his faith that he will improve the condi tions of the country, give to the work ing thousands cheaper food, cheaper clothes (and he ought to have added, cheaper wages). He has promised also to not interfere with legitimate business of any kind, but to promote it. Now, in conclusion, I want to re peat, yet, to burn it in the minds of every liberty-loving tax-payer, to watch the resul t of the incoming Democratic administration and see how they come up. THOMAS MEADS. Weeksville. N.-C, Nov. 22, 1912. eel of land situate In Buckhorn Township, Wake County, bounded as follows: On the east by Henderson Barker and the south by J. J. Hack ney and the A't-st by Sarah Clark and the north by Deb Evans, containing thirty acres more or less. Terms cash. J. J. REYNOLDS, Mortgagee. C. M. BERNARD, Attorney. STATE-WIDE DEBATING UNION. So Far Forty-Three Schools Have Joined the Debating Union Which Was Launched at the University. (Special to The Caucasian.) Chapel Hill, N. C, Nov. 25, 1912. The movement launched by the lit erary societies of the University of North Carolina a few weeks ago to form a State-wide debating union cotton, cheap corn, cheap meat, and s of the high schools of North Carolina cheap food stuffs without cheapening the prices of his products? They just can't do it and they know they can not. Take the lumber man. And when the two dollars tariff is taken off the lumber, reducing his profits, will he not be sure to reduce wages to make the same profit as before? They told us in their campaign speeches that these various business bosses were putting the tariff ac cursed dollars in their pockets. Now, how will they compel these bosses, or heads of any enterprise, to divide their profits with their hired help who puts the big profits in their possession by their faithful labor? How will they make a lawto force a boss of any kind to deal square and give his laborers a sufficient share of his prof its to make him and his wife and children comfortable? If morality, religion, or humanity will not do it, It will be hard to compel them by law unless they adopt Socialist meas ures (and do they intend to do that?) making an equal division of the prop erty of the country to all the inhabi tants of same. Our Democratic friends have got a white elephant on their hands, and Just watch them wrestle with him. Yes, it will be an impossibility for them to fulfill half of the promises they made to the people. Have they not had full control of our State for twelve or fifteen years: and how have they bettered things for the tax-pay ers in North Carolina yotf all know? Now, if they make the same change in the general Government as they have in the State of North Carolina, mm me Lord have mercy on the tax- TO (C Urn n fl s tl mm si s has thus far met with admirable sue cess. The plan which provides for the formation of a net-work of schools for stimulating debating in the secondary schools has already been responded to by forty-three rep resentative schools of the State. The list includes the high schools of Ral eigh, Charlotte, Salisbury, States ville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Washington, Hendersonville, Oxford, Lenoir, and other foremost schools in the State. The committee promoting this debating union have been active in arranging the query to be debated, the prize that is to be awarded, and other technicalities towards making the union a thorough-going one. The prize, nominally the "Aycock Memo rial Cup," will be a contribution of the loct.1 chapter of the Tau Kappa Aloha debating fraternity, which chapter is composed of inter-colleg iate Carolina debaters. The debating union of the Univer sity has recently consummated plans for a triangular debate, during the month of April, between the univer sities of North Carolina, Virginia, and Johns Hopkins. Any new schedule of debates by the University of North! Carolina recounts its notable achieve ments In the field of debate. In the sum total of thirty debates with no ted universities from Pennsylvania to Louisiana, Carolina has lost only nine. This is a record unsurpassed in Southern universities. in a race contest held by the track department of the University last Wednesday, a member of the fresh man class won the- medal as the Rwiftest mile-cUnner airalnst seven Make your selec tion now for that SUIT or VEIMM TMLOEJEi TO MEASURE i NO MORE NO LESS Ifl h fj i II By MUDli Rflis From Mill to Man m Llasoaic Temple Daildlng Tailors and Woolen Merchants Stores in all the Leading Cities of the United States NORTH CAROLINA BRANCHES t Raleigh Durham Greensboro Charlotte Burlington Theresa BULL BOG Gacoline Engine For Ercry Farm Need 1 to 12 H. P. far yew TkrwUsc Uac&fae as Ssw UL lnt Bail uog m a Rmq gtf fy war Writ today for dcaisaa a&d aixca fat THZ FAIRBANKS CO, BALTC2E2, tSD. nun din msns c? fjziihs sons. for loaa hard Ikc4krrpic2. Cutisrtt Frtctkfy H&&ks, Ptttieta w ship, Sbartaaad, Totst.li T pewrttiej, aa aied ssh f y y 7 frtu; Hint's Bstiisrss Ci, Rakjh. H, C Klt JLJ w CiV f 4 ts rccoyr&ired as the meat caoplrtt thoroej lati i -t eaUal and tvtcrsafa! bie o3e in Korti Gr in liaa. Great demand for KINO CTsdsaSra. No vaca- Usa. atrr aaj time. iNsftitz&s gn&araatetd. I Write for Cube. RALEIGH. N. C or CHARLOTTE. N. C -23 Years Raleigh's Leading, ClothicrxT FALLW!IMTER STYLES READY.' Our Stort is full to the brim with Clothing and Furnishing for gentlemen, their sons and little brothers, Wc invite your inspection. WE ARE SHOWING THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF JOHN B. STETSON HATS EVER SHOWN IN RALEIGH. MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. M(gmni(D)waI12 Hart-Ward Hardware Co. We have Moved our store to new building 125 East Martain Street We have 10,000 square ect of show rooms with Electric Elevator, every floor on the ground floor. Right in the heart of the business center of Raleigh We will be pleased to see all fiiends customers, ann the public generally. Our stock is complete and our prices the lowest. HARr-WARD HARDWARE CO. Wholesale end Retail. 12S E. Martin S., Raleigh, N. C IF YOU ARE GOING NORTH Tret el via THE CHESAPEAKE LINE Daily Service Including Surday. Thnew Steamers just placed in service the 4TI1T OF NORFOLK" axxj "CITY OF BALTIMORE" are the moat elegant and up-to-date. Steamers b. tween Norfolk and Baltimore. iQUIPPtD ttliH WlRtUSS-TaEPHlKE ill EACH ROf LL DLIICIOUS miS ON BOAFD EVERYTH NG FOR CO&IORT AND CO MM EHCE. Steamers Wave Not folk (Jackeon St.) &15 p. m. Leave Old Point Co mfoTt 7:15 p. m. Arrive Baltimore 7.00 a. m. Connecting at Baltimore for all points NORTH. NORTH EAST and WEST. Rt&ervations made and any information courteously fumUbcd by W. H. PARNLLL, T. P. Norfolk. Vau The Caucasian and the Ladies' VJorid BOTH ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $1.25. 5 1 s 4 a.... 1 L t t(iiu) baa been eslaiged toeibt gc, and ia the best trkly paper ia the Sute, The Ladira Wot Id ia an excellent l&dJea' magazine. It baa a hardaome corer page each toosth, and la UactinUy Ulcatrsied, It contains excellent abort atones, ai tides on cooking, dreaamaking and ia fac, on all subjects that are of interest to the ladies. It contains serersl pages each month abowing the fatbioss, and bow nice simple dresses may be made a! a reasonable coat. In tact, the Lad tea' TCorld ranks among the beat of the magazines. If ca tust to zztztf cf ttfs extend cCTa il3 est tthj, bt tzzi b prr crc:r it c:. REMKMBEK., joa can get your money back II yon are cot sariified. THE CAUCASIAN; RrttiCtrci. Shipments mado to any part of tho State at samo pneo as at shop M0MMEBJT - COOPER BROS., Propro BAXJBOIL N.C ' OCNO WOn OATALOQUO. Wtaa witiJna to AareniaBtssaeBStea tiMCcssaa U ill 'i 1 1 ill 1 1 5SI in I ! 1 1 s ! : 1 i f i i t f .! SH If n I ! i I ii i i ;i if i i . 1 1 4 n. 'I ti B5M

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