Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / July 5, 1902, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
t I- THE MORNING POST rrHLnnno daiiv nr tii .oniu cISoha wbuihim co . dltr Oat Tear 2 50 Fix Months j23 Three Months j$ Una Month lOfflct la th Pollen BaUSiafc t Favettevilla Street. The Port will publish brief Utter. JJ subject, of rrl Interest. Th. it must accompany the le""r,c. mcui commnnicationa will lifted msnnscript-wiUBOt b retu Brief letters of local new. JfJ5J ectioa ef th. Sut. will b. ''Merely personal controvert, win be tolerated. m- Addrcss .a bwraw. Utter. ?a wonlcatfoae for publication to HORNING POST. - . -nE Tb- telegraph! new. Vnii lad HORNING TOST Is .beolotely fall ana .complete, and Is oneqoaled by y njrn fnc newspaper 9onth of Jw 5 0TK ' ui errlce U fornl.bed ua under specUl arrangement with . TIIC LA F FAN NEWS BUREAU f the New Tork Son. an 1cb,e,!tf errlce that Is used by The Son Itself, which Is known to be "perlr "i .TTlce in any newspaper In the States. Tbi, serrlce i jrSnT?NlNG IT wire la th. office of THE MOTINg" POST djrectly from the New ?n' end Inclode special cables &i eews and all commercial and market re ports. wUftlllTVCTOX DinRAPI ITftcbta BolUl.r, IOtWeDSItr kastfrn orncr, 1 western orricE I w Tcrk. I BId.Cb krlb-r. ! TIIK POT r- re- etl ! lb b- ,ab1 mt th.lr prr .nd ! tolrreevl fr ih iptrtl. Tbl. will sr ttiimlMlier Uu.. Allpa- yr will b llm paid np expire. . eft-' THE WKr.tau -ODATi Fair. "sAljCRD.VY. JULY 5. 1902. "V tv5ti( I mar orxs. consclentious- r 1 . true juu u k j of my pfrty and for like conscientious : reasons jvlll not vote for him because cf henes belief In bis unfitness, wouw not hy any means disbar me from tak ing partjw my party convention and in the Mlecti-JTS of other candidates." Thus spoke one of the leading Demo crat of khd State, who occupies a high position la the party councils today, in oar preenc a few days ago. And he Is right, j This slush and gush indulged ta by heelers in politics cannot deprive a Democrat of his duty to h! conscience or his privileges in his party ranks. In rejonse to the above, a Democrat equally high in public confidence said that a Try larSe number of the Demo crats wb6 were opposed to Judge Clark - based sulr opposition upon principle and could neaher be driven into his support nor from their party allegiance. "When -gentlemen like those quoted above, life-long Democrats and among the State's best citizens as well as th. party. mot substantial leaders, hold oca Tictes,- tbe attempt of the ward heeler, iji party work to frighten such men and! the thousands who tblnk as hey do y popping the party lash looa . more thia silly. The fojlowhi? very pretty story first nppearediia the New York Tribune and is copied' by other papers under the pleading iltle, "A Brave Governor." It reads: j , . "When! Governor Ay cock of North Carolina I made his strong appeal for large appropriation, for schools the leg islature threatened to pass a bill grant ing wbati he asked, bxit dividing it be tween the races in proportion to the con tributions! of each. The governor frank ly .aid that if this bill was passed he would veto It, and If it was repassed over his Tetodie would resign and make a campaign for re-election on the issue to raised; His will prevailed." This we .ay is a very pretty story, but is sadly lacking in two important fea tures to fcrtve It good standing in those colamn. devoted strictly to the truth. In th. 6rH place, the legislature nor any roan fitted to be a member thereof would have .threatened to pass a measure par porting -60 be an appropriation bill, so flagrantly la violation of the constitution . such' described by the Tribune would be. and, secondly, the governor of this State ha. not th. veto power. The compliment Intended for Governor Ay cock for tl. zeAI in behalf of universal education! .however la well bestowed, j t S-jppoe the fusion proposition offered by Butler and endorsed and urged by Jufg. CXark and th. News and Ob server in' 1S0S had been accepted and the andidates whom the Butleritcs had r chosen who had been Instrumental la turning th. State OTer to the negroes end the Republicans had been "put upon th Democratic ticket; would a, Demo crat, we 'meaxi one who "considered him self too jtru. a Democrat, and good a citizen to support uoh e dishonorable aad dishonoring combination, who re- fnsd to rot. that ticket. read out of th. party?" And yet those who were fuslonists then talk about reading out of the party now- those who. for conscientious reasons, will not endorse Judge CSark as a proper candidate for Democrat, to vote for for he high and honorable position of Chief Justice. This readinroat proces. . must come from real Democrat not those who were tainted -with fusion. t It is entirely -within th rule of pro priety for u. to remind dotm Northern journals -who ara still terror-atricken whea proposltaoo i made according to leader, of th. South In the -war between thtatea the coneideTa-tioa that just history th. honest conscience of the world have come to regard a due, that th usetion to erect a rultable monu ment to Gen. Lee in Washington was made by ft distinguish eJ Northerner. The South has not made nor will it make any such eusgestion or request. Neither Daris nor Lee, their associates or following, need monuments in the North to embalm them or their Tirtues In the hearts of honest people of either section or in the consciences of men who respect true greatness, etrict fidelity to honor and country. The South can and will take care of and cherish its own, while helping , to pay for monu ments and other things for those who trantonly deTastated its homes, and vis ited the cruelties of war upon helpless women and children. This from the WhiteTllle, Columbus county, Newa: "The appearance of Capt. V. Y. Rich ardson on the streets Tuesday afternoon for the first time In two months after his accident was a very pleasant event to his many friends. We hall with de iUrht his recovery and hope to see him soon regain his strength." The friends o this noble citizen of the State who heard with sincere sorrow of the accident to which the News re fers will rejoice with it in Capt. Rich ardson's .prospects of recovery. .He has ever been true to his county and his State, and has rendered both faithful and distinguished service. A more hon orable man or truer friend never lived. We sincerely trust our long-time friend may soon be entirely restored. Senator Simmons is entirely correct in saving that the Democrats have cam paign issues in the Tariff and Illegal Trusts upon which they can go before - w tne people with the strongest hopes of success. And they are enough, so far as national issues are concerned, though of course 'there are other questions of national concern which will be freely and fully discussed, but the proper pre sentation of the evils of the Dingley Tariff and the Illegal- Trust combina tions ought to and will be enough for a successful campaign to be fought out upon. We are "ratified to see from the press generally that no more race-issue cam- Daicns are emected oi desired, nor will fany person or party who attempts to lead up to such issue be tolerated. This is the Democratic view and de sire, but it is as incumbent upon the Republicans as Democrats to declare this fact? and to recognize and proclaim the further fact that no attempt to question the permanency of the consti tutional amendment will be made. The voters of neither party desire any. fur ther contention over the Tace issue, nor will they, in our opinion, sustain leaders who attempt to revive or force it. We do not believe the negroes thcnselves want it. certainly they ought not. Let us have an assurance that this question is settled as . the white people, of all parties, settled it in 1900. . . The esteemed Messenger-IntelllgenceT who is as willing to feed In a Topulist pasture as a Democratic and is more at home in the former than the latter. styles the Charlotte Observer and .Morn ing Post "ravenous wolves We assure our Pee Dee contemporary that whatever we are, we are still very particular as to what we feed on, and therefore the esteemed M.-I. is in no sort of danger. $ The Durham Herald observes, anent the Republican scheme which Mr. Sim mons exposed: all in their power to help the tnspira tor. out." And a correspondent elsewhere in this paper takes the same view. It strikes everv, thoughtful and sincere Democrat the same way. A HAPPY HOME Is one where health abounds. With Impure blood there cannot be good health. With a disordered LIVER there cannot be good blood. revivify the torpid LIVER and restore its natural action. A healthy LIVER means pure blood. tv, Pure blood means health. , Health means happiness. Take no Substitute. All Druggists Tit's n THE MORNING POSTt The Monroe Enquirer. " unmindful enough of facte to say: ; "Almost to a man the ones who criti cise Judge Olai-k's Democracy walked up to the ballot box at the last election and deposited a Republican ticket, and they are the men who now attempt to give orders to the Democratic! party in this State." . I . ! It is "upon Just such rot. as tnis that the strength (7) of Judge Clark is based, s the slim attendance upon conventions shows. ; - i This refers to the Guilford primaries and is from the Record: j j "While all the returns are not in from the country precincts ,it Is evident that about all of them held their primaries yesterday afternoon ,and Sviiile the at tendance ranged from halj a dozen up, in many Instructions were given for Clark," &c. j (From "half a dozen up!" ? . ? lit ??!?'? ? : - Our patriotic contemporary, the South port Standard, glorifies the Fourth by coming out in a flaring, pop-cracker color of red. We doubt the safety of carry ing the Standard around j carelessly In the -neighborhood of the bovines of Brunswick. It would make even Repub lican bull-frogs furious. The Asheviue Citizen says: "In North Carolina this! year Repub lican success depends upon disseusions in Democratic ranks." Then that which it is known will create dissensions should be avoided. If Insisted upon, and dissension and Republican suc cess follow, those who forced such con dition on the party out of blind prejudice and 'false appeals will bo alone respon sible, i The, more evident it .becomes that the manipulations by Judge Chrrk and his friends will secure his nomination the less interest Is taken in county conven tions, notwithstanding spirited contes.ts in behalf of other candidates. All of which bodes no pood for the Democracy. The people can't be fooled all the time. j ' t The .Atlanta Journal says the Demo cratic -State platform of Georgia is to be more commended for what t does not tUaufor what it does say. ! A most excellent merit at this juncture, worthy of being followed by Democratic conventions of other States. ' j It is difficult to determine which taxes the people most heavily, a billion dollar Congress or a billion dollar trust-' The few are the greatest beneficiaries of either. t ;- ! ! It required a" Republican postmaster's entire crop of corn to make one mess of roasting ears, so the Taylorsvi (Alexander county) Scout relates. ; le Tht Voire of itin Glorious Fourth (Win. J. Lampton in the Cosmopolitan.) I i. Am the Fourth of July, And I'm li enough j To b the. other three-fonrths. , j Iint'I'm modest, you know, . j And I dou r claim all my share. i , .via 1 ui.ti 1. 111 . ' Of course it is; It's my biz ' T- Ii.ivp n f;ilr. And equal divvy everywhere, That's how I cot my start. Hooray for Mo ! And the Amerjean Eagle I And the Declaration of Independence ... 1 ti - .Aim tup iM;ir-rpai!giea pauuer rml I nolo nm And G. Wash., It'rosh. I'm- the birthday ' I Of the greatest Nation on earth, A citii-o Itc liirth The Avorld has seen better days, Aim it uoes not raise Siifh rnnx of klncs And their underlings As it used to raise Hift nld-Mme days' In Which is oVing to me. See? Before I was The freemen's cause Was in a slump A nA o-Airn 1fin But. -Friends and Fellow-Citizens, When I fe-ot in the game It nade a jump; For I. ! The Fourth of July, ; Had come to stay, j And well tliey knew The lied. White and Blue Would float forever as i a sign TTn frrnnto wrvo TW UIOTO divine Than were the People: they who stood As slaves to their o.wn masterhood. And to no other. Man and Brother j Was my creed i . j As ret forth in the Sacred Screed ( The Declaration which unfurled The Flag of Freedom to the world; It lines wore red I With Mood of patriots shed ; To make it stand i The firm foundation cf the land. 1 But what of thaj? In blood, , Not mud. Are written all the deeds -That lift mankind to loftier things, r.A Trimt ic liRtin'T Jn all creeds i Has borne the cross of sufferings. However, that is done. And now we're having fun. Bells! f Yells! ! Boys! j Noise! ; Fizz! Whiz!!! From' iakc to gnlf T. - fit GO!l I I Mill l - . ri-L j. .i.iro Hrrht fir ijinertv i v- ..itt ii-r T- lnsr nnfuriea That stretches hajf way round the world. . j And I Am the Fourth of Tuly, The birthday of a Nation that ptlv -where it s at. And stands out clear.lv, 1 boldly, so All others in the push may know, j Ce whiz! i I What a glory of glories 1 The Glorious FourtV s' ' Rubbing It In. She had just handed him the icy mitt. "Yon are a heartless woman." he hissed in a tone seventeen degrees more bitter '.than qulnir.e, "but, thank heaven. I have at Ktst found you." "IU it so," rejoined tne human refrige rator, "ami, what is more, you win con tinue to find me ont hereafter should i you call." Chicago Daily News. ' SATURDAY, JUIAfjlOO STRONGEST ARGUMENT Conspirators Aided and Abetted , by Friends of " - Judge Clark Tarboro, N July 4. To the . Editor oX Th. Post: ; i If Senator Simmons is correct in Iks letter published yesterday that it is the aiin of the Republican leaders to tir up strife and dissension in the Democratic party and thereby secure a legislature that will insure ithe re-eiection of Sena tor Pritchard, he lias furnished1 one of the strongest arguments I have heard why Judge Clark should not be nomi-j Judge Clark's friends are certaly aiding and abetting these conspirators in forcing his nomination, for they must realire that the grounds upon which he is opposed i will leave nothing for many Democrats to do but scratch him on j election day. Their opposition is f un-I damental and they, " cannot vote for him for such an office without stultify ing themselves. Judge Clark's aspirations have al ready 6tirred up more strife and dis&en- j sion in the Democratic party than Sen ator Simmons' Republican conspirator can accomplish between now and elec tion day. Frtti Oplaton. on lb Kpubllen . Selictna ' : (Greensboro Telegram.) . That is a very ingenious scheme that Senator Simmons -has mapped but for the opposition but somehow it is hard to believe it well founded. True the Republican party has been claiming that it would return Senator Pritchard but in politics ! it is the fashion to claim everything in sight and we imagine that few Republicans took themseles serJjs ly in predicting Senator Pritchard's re election. Another thing, it is hard to believe that the Republican party will nhood to invoke the aid of the Federal Courts to the extent that Senator Simmons thinks it will. The re cent CongTess, largely Republican, has shown a becoming regard for the delica cy of the operation of mixing up State and Federal affairs and we do not be lieve that the leaders of the party will sanction such n risky business as Sen ator Simmons' mentions as likely. How ever, there is 110 need to be caught nap ping. North Carolina Democracy must marshal all its strength and win a vic- v.o -511 imeTsmnled. This can be done if every Democrat will do his duty. , (Charlotte Observer.) We weTe told that if we adopted the constitutional amendment we would be relieved of -the menace of "negro domi nation." The reasonable presumpt5n was that we would also be relieved oT the fatiguing talk thereof. Now we ..ia n rfoAn-1-vid scheme, whicn will mature between the 1st and 15th of October it will be. well to recall w at that time whereby the amendment is to be overturned and we are to be subjected again to all of the horrors of "nesrro domination." Of course all this is intended to play npon the fears of the ignorant, equally of course no man of intelligence is going to be scared by it. It is intended to force men to vote from their; prejudices and fright in stead of voting according to their judg ment. But, really, has it come to.this that the Democratic party of North Carolina, .with the negroes disfran chised, must needs resort to appeals of this sort 'to perpetuate Itself in power. We think not. We haven't so poor an opinion of the party as to fear that an appeal to the reason of the white .people of the State upon its record, would be in vain. . ' The negro vote is out of the way for good and all. Let us have, done wita fustian. . ' Good Cropi In Brnnw1f k (Southport Standard.) Last year was the worst crop year for Brunswick county that we ever experi enced. Wo trusted! irf the '-Giver of everr perfect gift" that this year would not bring a second! successive failure. The present outlook Is quite encour aging. Our .farmers have every reason to feel truly thankful. S Christian' Smith , the oldest locomotive engineer living, whose home is near Har per's Ferry, ran the first engine on the Baltimore Railroad at a speed from six to eight miles an hour, which was con sidered rapid for those days. PRE Is the This furniture, store is full o" thin to the longest purse that is lengthen The Store Neyer Was More Pightly 1 tt. t?,,. Every one wno lacKs in tiouse r urn uure wanmuie i " . , ever showed so many exclusive patterns of Fumiture-the store is fairly You Get the Cream of the Furniture Styles Here Raleigh people are said to be rather exacting when : buying furniture-th ey're apt to -beWas . ihey turo drummed in their" ears from year to year. The exacting ones are the person we're after as our prices are moie forceful to the knowing aad comparin g ones r l Furniture from Master pieces are on view from the foremost designers, who dictate and .interpret the styles for all Viewing days are today next week any time. Come and enjoy the looking anyhow, whether yc -r-.lna in Vnnw whst's neW. . ' . ! I It's nice; to know what's new. : Mail Orders pron - t r ATlflTC TIf 1 TII1II W4 IIIIIX & Corner Wilmington Royall At Paaama( Columbia, by Chtmber Imlnla Clie Cholera and Dlarrbaes fiemedr . . Dr. Chas BL : Utter, a prominent phy sician, of Panama, Colombia, in a recent letter states: "Last March I had as a patient a young lady sixteen years of age, who had a very bad attack of dys entery. Every thingl prescribed for her proved ineffectual and she was growing worse every hour. Her parents were sure she would die. She had , become eo weak that she could not turn over in bed. What to do at this critical mo ment was a study for me, but I thought .of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and as a last resort Prescribed it. The most wonderful re sult was effected. iWlhin eight hours she was feeling much better; inside of three days she was upon her feet and. at the end of one week was entirely well." i For sale by Crowell, McLarty & Co., Bobbitt-Wrynne Drug Co., North Side Drug Store, W. G. Thomas. : H3 ' , " After much careful' study and two trips to the polar regions Louis Lindsay Dyche, professor of natural hds'tory at the Kansas University, has arrived at the conclusion that the first human be ings were born and lived in the Arctic zone.. ' , -: : A. J. Cottingham went to Washington county, Ark., to see his sister and, while there was taken with flux (dysentery) and was very bad off. He decided to trv Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and was .so much pleased with the prompt , cure which it effected, that he wrote the manufactur ers letter in praise of their medicine. Mr. Cottingham resides at Dockland, Ark. This remedy is for sale by Crow ell, McLarty & Co., Bobbltt-Wynne Drug Co., North Side. Drug Store, W. G. Thomas. t Cheapest and Best Paint riAClNni: A Powder Mixed with Cold Water and Applied witS a Broad, Flat f Brush. ........ fi8 Founds vm 01 The Best Fire and Weather Resisting Paint Made, j TWEHTT-FOIJR ATTBACT1VE COL OBSAHD WHITE. State whether Interior or Weather proof is wanted when ordering. j HART-WARD HARDWARE C01 Successors to Julius Lewis Hardware Co. ; j COUPON PAYMENT. 1 The June coupons from th3 Full Paid Certificates of the Mechanics' and In- SwfllUbipaidUn presentation at the COMMERCIAL AND FARMEK.S BANK IN RALEIGH, ON AND AFTER FRIDAY JUNE 27th. Nearly ad of the Coupon Certificates placed .on sale a few months since Save jj, . The company now offers another issue of FIFTY t LJLL PAID CtUTIl; I CTES OF $100, each certificate having twenty semi-annual coupons of -.-. They will be sold for $90 each. These certificates give a six per cent ten year investment, with taxes paid by the company. At the end of ten year-, after all the coupon' have been paid, the certificates will be redeemed bj the payment of $100, or they will be redeemed at any time on demand by tn? return of $90, with interest to date cf payment. They are fully secured b mortgages on real estate worth double. the 1, Secretary. i '- Pullen Buildinff. , I J 222 Fayetteville Street i-iJUST RECEIVED G-eorgia Cane Syrups," Old fashion Mo-an-tain Buckwheat, Prepared Buckwheat, Pan Cake Flour New Cured Va, Hams, few Old Va, Hams. ALL Keynote of Our PARI DIM ESS s useful and things beautiful Furniture that "gies the largest equivalent alike ed by economical choosing. ,fw i interred in comih Modest Priced to Most Sumptuous pt v attended to. Freight paid to railroad Ill 1111 I I I I I r-TS. Bordeo ; Euriiitiirp and Hargett Sts., JSuyfrom .the MAKERS - and save, A $250 Up; right Piano for $175. I The lines above tell In brief what the JUNE CLEARANCE SALE is doing for you. ; Fur ther, there's no need of Incon veniencing yourself regarding the payment $10 cash,; $0 a ' month that's all that's :neces 1 sary. ' Of course, we've lots more at equally as little prices and on equally as' easy terms. Among them are a half-dozen uprights, some good squares and quite a few organs. , So, there's no rea son whatever why you shouldn't have a piano or organ, if you really want ont. i If you want the BEST piano . that's made the artistic STIEFF'S it! Investigate! I ' STI E FF 66 GKANBY ST. KKFOLK, VA. SUIIFACE ONE' GAIjIiOPI ! x 1 U1LL COVEItt The amount of surface which one ga Ion will cover depends very largely upoi a the character of the surface, but, tbe ; following table has been found to be ' substantially, correst: j Smooth, hard boards. . 300 to 373 sq. ft. Rough board, brick or stone . . . . . . 150 to 200 sq. ft.- To ascertain how much paint is neces sary for a building: add the four sidis together, multiply the : sum by the height, and divide the :. product by tho mimber of square feet which one gallon will cover. The result will be the num ber of gallons required. Multiply th s by five to get the number of pounds needed. ' It does not rub off, scale nor wash oft. It is durable, resists heat, and is waiter-proof. . It is, easily cleaned; has a smooth, uni form surface. It is cheaper and whiter than oil pau.t. errall&Co; 4 4 4 PHONES 88. Stocks. Full and Inviting e. here to Shane. No -store anywhc.o Ii f .:r r y i r.iw - abloom with beautiful Pieces. "America. you buy or not. !l KALEIGH, N. C- GOo, 1 r ii a:
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 5, 1902, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75