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IHE MORNING POST WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 3 o iooa UNIVERSITY Institute for ydiiii LAW SCHOOL, The Bumpier Term begh jn 9, to continue three tao Thorough instruction in course, admitting to the bar. gpeciaj lecture by eminent lawytri For Catalogue, address J AS. C. MacRAE, Dean CUAPEL HILL, x. c. Conservatory of nosicr;:Kaieigo,; . ... bc DiXc!rfli Chemical Apparatus. rui ,n-7 Dnnms. I 1m ted tO 100 Boaraers. rnysicui auu Equipment. Able Faculty. .Apply at.oace.if jr Mg DIN,pDlB PEACE FIGHT WITH A MUSKALLONGE Nevr York an.) When the little- i)U rteixxgrrther jot tuck from kis xacat iua, bn face "as toick Ti and flecked "with patches of y-Hng kkx. "Jtift rettlaf ever tha 3artet fever 7 recrked the de cierk. TU tell yon," Mid the other, as he !opd hi desk. Tre had the greatest brfk3ar that ver'fcarp'pened." He fUcic 4 two lJt fmn hi typewriter teya. "Ton kwr, I was born in be coun try . j koir that ftam. the first, said the tarch ts chorus. "Wrfl, too Twtnt get chesty tf T do tit the mark once in a wbtle. re torted the little fcald man. lie elrpped on his ot3co coat, stack a sheet of paper la tbe jaachiae. trrote "My !ear air," viirWJ a.rd la bis chair ari eaW: Oily wife aad kkla you kucwr ere sum nxcr oa the St. Lawrence-In the nor thern ?rt of the State. I was born Jn a lMtje Tillage ot far from whero they re; the other lay I eaM to my Kieet Loy ': . irr trxvxLi ytm like to go oat and e the rce -where I was bora 7 "Tfc -Fatal es.ociatkis didn't seem to present much jcharm, but the piscatorial rro?onija r?'l'd to him. and away he eeent. ns rod. wras tiook, ans line, .s every:tocg-xce?t the Inch. , Well, whea we yet to the Tillage, I knmed up Jim Curtis, an old cham, and to'.vl h.lm I wsmted a loat and Jackie, ht tt St acd I w.re out for a fish. "frocvir h "J- That's my boat; fhe tiggest one one at che foot of the -trr. hr the bridre. Here's the key. Too can hare the boat all day, and wel- come: -aad here s a couple of rods ana a r-T- lice: rd iff you want minnows. as tou will, here's a net and a can. and voa ano yonr wy n miv u. vroek. Same old creek.' he ray, 'and jat in the aerce ilace as when you wai boy. . Thet the toy and I went the road to the creek. I left my hat and coat awl shoes and eocka on a sttzmj and an!!d t?t hit troar and waded la. knee-eep and pnhhed the net a flat affair i ' tvtkir ioard aheed of Toe: and when I came to a little rapid at the end of the-tor!. I lifted the t and car ried it to the. bank with, tnore than a doien Irrely. 4esiln?. wiyrlin, shrnlng ilwr tranm-nr rn it the very beet bait for ba and pickerel that Vrcr went on a hook. The boy ca-pered wtth delight. "Say, you're xrat dad 7 he called out as he ro arched aJonjr with the cao, while I played every Kkely lookiajr pool and trailed out the minnows by tie ecore. JLrd jot then, the net struck a snag co the bottom, which was day, and tny teel went frwn irnVr me anl I rut emi wp to rcy collar la OTer two feet of irudJy water. Tbon the toy howled, , aao. r'jQ arouad axnemr tho bottercnp arl dai!is. and finally Hy down in them cd rjllei with mirth, while I retired t the auiiay seclusion affordel by dirmr of irnoettrTy iushes and made tome repairs. When we sot back to the aromp where I had left my thanr. we found that a red and white herfer had ben there. Cws are the nwt curione thinxs. I rot bothi shoes b-k from among the ehnbs, "but coaVl find only one eock. and tny hat, which wrs a derby, will hare to be t rib locked woe night on the IVnrery. , Well, we rot oat In the punt at last, with, the rolirnows and the rods and the ranch basket; f.nd when we were .acnon? the Islands be'.ow the n:ia?. we cot the Iutpcu spread out on the middle test, and set toe rods. It was a nice, e&ady epot. imder a lot of bijr, branching yms. and the wrk was rocky and ateep. TVe were In atrnt ten feet of water, . ror of caL-n pool eked with Httle discs of fam that floated h tfnoro the wtft watr at the head of the Island. We had the punt axohored. and I had Just laid back, wit a tny mouth, full of ham snJwieh. and one eye on my red .cvi bhie flojrt. when rrp! away went the boy's float out of sight, and the rod oeerly out of !s hand. Tie wa on his feet In a jiff, yelling o roe ran the fish was pnlHas him. in. Toe Kae wts rmmlns out likenad, and when I rot hold c the roA I knew there was a c-d owe on ITetty soon the frsh let tip. and 1 Teelod in, while the boy ell eaxitmesit, stood ready with the ntjr.5 ret. We cot Sir Usee alongside, and the toy rfpped the anet -under him. and rery rVrerly, too. Bnt we had onry just got hita la. when away went my rod orer ths eide trad out of sirt. I tell you, 1 ovia't toow whether I w ataadinc on ray head or my heels yon then. I mrab reJ the oars -snd tueged away, like Sam ran od the lHars, and then retnemer ed that tt.o fcoit was anchored with a" thirty-pound weight that I had forgot ten to rrall up. "We could see my rod ft ws a light baboo, with a light-weight reel Boat- inc way-iowu etram: and- we sot it at IrmU with, No. 2 hard nnd fast, and lots of fight in trim before the boy land ed bim with, the -art. He was a pound hearier than .the fir, and that one wtchfd four Tfunds." Blae bmT sald the blonde clerk. To be ore. We pot fifteen in aH be fore they atopped btttng there, with an -r;resrtte wedght of forty pounds, and two of them mxnt orcr fire pomds each oa fherales of fhe "general store. rTt eanght the lar.;e mouta rreen b&ss la drowned laud full of stumps, wtth a ioor rlne thrown out toward the i stumps, aim a v""- l rim t-Kn, tit them wasn't In it for same ness with any three-rcrnd Wack bass thatthe boy and I caugat teat uay. "Well, the black basa atoppca wins, n.l Tvlien Ton'Te been catrhrn? Mack bas that run otc 6re ponnds there isu t . a anrthlg dse 'M tne rrrer you w fi?h fr M-fth a rod. So the boy aad I went tirolXtyg. " I trims' there was big gam a moo? the isdands, for I remn-bered sotjae whop pers being taken out when a was a ma, f rune by troll and soaie by (heary nitiit- Hne? ba4ed with, large ana t. wanted to gire hs day a fiport, a good round-off jor the boy. X l saw: "(ergc. how would you like to catch a thirty or fortv-pou-nd muskallonge. to paclc in see and eectf duwn to Uncle Tom in Jersey City, just to gire him a surprise?' "I't we hada't been at the game tw?r.ty mimrtes befiire the thing hap pened, tieorfre, ia the stem, -naa me un. with the en I of it l.-vpped around the gr.nwule rtreak. I ws pulling along leisurely 'rough, In about ten or fifteen fevt cf water, ami about thirty feet from sbo It was a steep bank, with eWerberry .-aJ other bushes orerhftugUrg, ar.d the water was dark aau calm and looked like big fish. It was lucky lor George that he hadn't the line mapped around his hand. Tho line slwrt out "t his "fingers, and stiffened on tho -Mat with a jerk and jar that pretty near sent George end over id into the river, and knockel the oars up aealnst my rigs! For a moment I thoncht the tackle would rire. 'We're stuck oa the bottom. Dad. cried George. -George, I aaid, if we're not. then we're hcoked the biggest fiah in the rrrerr . ,. I jumped to the end to grab the line. I eMd. bit iaw fell, for tie line wa 'ack against the end of the boat. "We're lost hlmr I said; and with that, the line whipped across my fingers and nearly cut them off against the bo-it." t The little bald stenographer held up a brown band. "See that bruise? It's only now get ting well," he said. "The next moment th boat spun clear around. nie's all right T I yelled to George He's going down streamT And I jump ed bark to the oars. -George went white between excite ment ant tear, tot we ping It down stream, between a Kn? island end the mala shore, at a three mile rr.it. "Will the line hold. Dad? said George and bis rolce was boerse. Tie went-flat in the bottom of the at. with his hands OTer the end. and tried to pnll in the line. He might as well haTe tried to phaze an Atlantic ca ble. It was taut and straight and hard as a line between a tug and a string of barges full of coal. -What are we going to do, Dad? said George. Jnklet him go I said "The line's getting looser cried Ge-rrge. 'Is he off? -He's getting tired. I said; and he ml At well be, for we had come down the bank half a mlie. "It was the biggest muskallonge taken out of the river rn three yeaTS. The tail was over fifteen inches across and you could have put your head inside his nxwtb." . , , "What did you say is the same or that Tillage?" said the stout clerk, as the bald stenographer puta point to his pen cil. "Wait a minute," be said, as he gath ered rap bis note book. 'There's the chiefs bell." MhNGM . 'Tor all ordinary ritrag purposes," said a man acquainted ,witb, the ink trade, "colored inks, once used to some extent, haVe now been almost entirely superceded by black ink. They are are still made, and in many colors; ami red ink is still, as eTer, a standard for var ious special uses in counting rooms. "Then vaTious other colored inks are sometimes alio used In counting rooms,, as in the preparation of statements or exhibits, m which, for purposes of con venience, the several divisions a.re made ,-ach In a separate color. Bnt for the ordinary purposes colored ink, as violet, have gone almost wholly, out of use; Hack is the thing. "Among the inks for special uses might be mentioned white ink, made for. writ ing wMh on black paper, and especially employ for writing cards for window displays and like purposes. "Black inks are latgely comprised be tween the blacks and the blue-blacks; the former putting on black as it leaves the pen. and the latter putting oa blue and turning black. There is now used, ir, tivu mnntrv more blue-black than I black, and the proportion of blue-Mack sold is Increasing. t "Countries have their peculiarities In this respect. In France, for example, more black IT is. used': while Bnglaud has long been distinctively a blue-black country. "Wiitlcg irfk is sold in a great variety of packages; ranging from to-ouuce bot tles to sixty-gallon casks. School boards are the chief purchasers of ink by the barrel. , "Arrong the smal-er pacages there are stlfl !d onuuolly thousands of gross of tho pyh a mid-shaped bottles of the time honored type, once hi well-nlgli univer vorsal we. In some remoter parts it might be tliat ink .would still be found in no other form, and the pyramid bottle is yet sold, in fact, more or less every where, though It has now beer largely supplanted by modern bottles of improv ed shmpes, in which the ink is more easily accessible, which are far more convenient to the user. "There have been made in bottles In this connrrv vrrions improvements, all, however, chiefly with a view to jrreater utility, he fancy Ink bottle, which serve also ns Inkstands, as bottles in the form of a lady's clipper, come from Europe, and chiefly' from France. 'The greatest consumers of ink? The commercial and financial uspts, decided ly. Ink. is to tte sutc, nn arwtv; world-wide nse, and it Is used in millions FACE ME&1SS0ES Pimples, Vackbsds,jreMss, larre pores. red.Toua-h. oilv skin ana n disorders J"1 fhonSe'fl? mv cefulnfoTwation with bk IreJOBN It WOODBURY D, U Mi Hie Aiil Thorough Preparatory Course for Boys. -P Small classes and dose individual at tention especially In elementary work. 24th. Annual Session. BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1st For catalogue or other information ad dress HUGH on SOW, Prlaeipal RAIEIGU, N. C. More of this brand sold than any other, because of its uniformity in Duntv aod quality. -Itnt I had no sooner let him f eel j r,f homes. Jtnd it might be thought that the aggrcir.'.O coninnption of these mil lions of users would be the greaer. But even in a letter-writing household they are not writing letters all the time, and a bottle of Ink last some time. "In counting aooms ami ofllces, on the other hand, men are using ink all the nnt t-hor jir critical users, who mr hind than away our great fish went acain. The boat swung r?und, anl he was away off upstream In a littlo while the boat slackened Its pace. Jump to the oaTs, George!" I paid, as I grabbed ths line, and row downstream. "And Georee did. The fish was pret MIILI; WHISK&Y4 Xvv-iO otosia; mj-jaJreUSUS' ry i ri f jet flluitrd Handbook 55t tree fta 0 b Jorth Carolina. Strong In eqaipment, excellent in teaching force. Noted for high moral tone. Expenses moderate. Send for catalogue. L. L. HO BBS, President. ioxrnrd Mm for Giris.l T tM rfTT I . . , .-V..ntf M.n. Thorouk : A Klin School Ir avrw " - - ion for Certified .dmittinrf to of JK. ldm CI.j $Uw,rh v"'. . Military mining develop propln., h.ltk c . " , Full cores of PorUrcd chw, AnH,., 11 iM " "- tl..m bulldlM - . . nmtt - 1 u II in 8r- UUM;aa r, pytJj ksMna1sMSwHililUBMlSMW U.H.NORMAN, MUi. DOC SjStMjS 400 WAIO CtVtM IN MUSIC BEAUTIFUL CATAiOftit fair OXFORD, N, C. 53rd Annual aessien Opens Sep tenaber 3rd., 1902. Board and General Tuition $135. t - Apply for catalogue to PRESIDENT HOBGOOD, Trinity Park High School On up-to-date College preparatory school. Superior advantages. For cata logue and album of views, address J. F. BIVINS, Headmaster, Durham. N. C - See the largest barrel ever In Raleigh, now on tap in A. O. Wadford's saloon, Hargett atreet, Raleigh. N. 0. DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACY llififsilf ol Norm Carolina itrme. ty tired by this time, for he came aiong mxift have not alone good ink, but fresh for quite a way. Then suddenly the line -iV.t cienn inkstands, and that sort of t slack tight, a gain thine, and so, common as the use or um. wen "STdash! "Great Scot! said GeoTge, and gapp ed "You could have hung your hat on George's eyes. 'We' had had a glimpse oi our fisCi. And such a fish.! "lie's bigger than me,' said George. "'He's likely longer than I am,' I said. fearful that after all we might lose the j prize. "hen the boat swung aronrm art! we were off down stream once more. It was hH lest frrmrt. Presently ho came to the top. dead beat. flight across, a hundred yards away, nirttir the island shore was a strip of ycl lnw beaCi. I jimvel in up to my waist. twetv yards from the water's edge, and George, not to be outdone, followed suit, im to his neck, ogether we pulled on the line, and oirr fish came along like a log." . ... .... . t:ni. wen. eair mc iimw We!L" said the little bald stenogra pher, as ho ran the carriage of the type writer up and down, "you know that there's sometimes a slp between the cup and ' the lip. "You didn't lose him?" said two or three. "I thought of that as we haulde mm in. He looked so big, ft seemed too good to be true. And I wondered by what rack we hadn't brought a gaff. "I knew"a fish of that size, even dead beat, could make a lot of t-oubTe. and is. it is in the world's oiTices and count ing rooms that the greater amount, is US"!. S . . ,.; .. ...n.tnl " Tn .merican wrumi; iuivs cijiuiim. wherever ink is used. Amerlsan inks are soM to some extent in every coun try In Dirrope. to a considerable extent in Europe, xatfiflffbgkq jenvf wyprnf wypf wy in Gonnany, England, Holland." Spain and Italy. The sales are made almost entirely for the office trade. I should say that a third of the ink now used in the ores and counting rooms of the manu facture, with the proportionate consnnp tlon of American inks all the time In creasing. "Thfse inks cost them moTe than they would have atoyp yjt? r!('1234."il234SW3 would have to pay for Ink6 made in Eu ro -e; but they -buy taem. nevertheless, and in increasing quantities, for the sim ple reason chat . American inks are the best In the world." I ? Cboeae of GrSndstlne Mayor's Secretary William P. Ryan was commenting yesterday on the way in which many illiterate persons seem to get along in the world. The late William J. Carroll used to tell a good story along this line." said Mr. Ryan. "He had busines connected with the collection of rents which used to take him to a cer tain place on the eastern shore at in tervals. On one occasion he went into a store mere, the proprietor of wnica NIttE INSTRUCTORS. Well Equipped Labora tories. Thorough WorR Fell term begins September 8, 1002. Address F. P. VENABLE, Presiden, Chapel Hill. N. C. Durham, N. C- Offers 125 graduate and umieTgradnate I courses of study, rsew liDrary iaciiuies, laboratory equipments and gymnasium. Number of students doubled m eignt years. Large number or scnoiarsnips awarded annually. Loans made to worthy students. Expenses very mod erate. For catalogue address D. W. NEWSOM. Registrar. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION: 1 , '-'! A combination of theory and practice, of book study and manual work in Engineering, Agriculture, Chemistry, Electricity, Mechanic Arts and Cot ton Manufacturing: Full Courses (4 years), Snort Courses (2 years), Spe cial Courses (3 mos.) Tuition and room, $10 a term; board, $8 a month. n Qo etndo-nts ' new bnildinira for 500. Write for booklet "A Day at the A. & M. College." . President GEO. T. WINSTON, Raleigh, N. C. ft Q , 4 MMMHttt !. iSt flary's Sshool, Raleigh, N. C: The sixty-first annual session begins September 18th. The Easter Term begins January 28th. - ... 4 St Mary's School offers instruction in the following departing:; The Preparatory School. The College, The Art School, The Music Schoul The Business School. ' - . . There are two hundred and forty-eight students representing nice Dioceses. Faculty of twenty-five. Much of the equipment i new; e;t new pianos bought this year. . St. Mary's Kindergarten is lopated in the center of the city under; Miss Louise T. Busbee's charge. For catalogue address ( REV. T. D. BRATTON. D. D. Medical School UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. FOUR YEARS COURSE. Severs Laboratories. 22 Instructors Fall Term begins September 8 1902. For information address, F. P. VENABLE, .. President, Chapel Hill, N. C . . . a r . ' 1 might break the tscKie at i'ae las-t mo-!fould neither read nor write. While merit. I told Oeorge to rtand by with j ne was there a man came in who was an oar and let hlmbave it if there was a evidently a -egnlar customer, kick comln. Ia hee-m. !x feet long." "I owe you some money, d "Draw it easy," said the 'aloud clerk. That's what I was dnmg. hawt over hard. When the fish felt the bottom he turned over, and I saw the kick coming. It was now or never, and I gave a yank that landed him, jg as he was, eight feet up the beach. And then" "And then?" - "And then 1 had the oaT out of George's hand and was "banging the life out of him." "Out of George?" -Don't be a fool." "I would to believe each a ynrnr -la's gospel truth, "boys! The tail of hut flh when I earned mm over my two ioofcs for bait, and eocve of those j .houlder. trailed a foot on the ground. fe'Jirjrs jrrct six aad s-rvea poraa; idle weiffoed c7-sevo don't ir he said to the storekeeper. 'The latter went to the door and turn ed it around so that the back vas visi ble "'That's so be replied; you owe me lor a i"rr. "A cheese?' replied the customer; no, I don t.' rne storekeeper looked at the Xoot again. "That s so, he said, it's a grindstone I didn't see the dot in the middle."' Baltimore Sun. : At Coney Island. The Bather "I suppose yon have saved a od many lives?" Th Life Saver "Well, I should remftrk! Why, I was clerking in a dVus store at Asbury Park, all last summer:" Puck. THE NORTH CAROLINA State Normal & Industrial College, GREENSBORO. N. C, A ecollege of high grade with courses leading to A. B. and B. S. "degrees. The chief feature of its work is the professional training of teachers. Graduates of other colleges admitted " to special Normal and CoinmeTcial courses. Faculty numbers thirty-eight. Board furnished at actual cost. Board, laundry, tuition and fees for use of text-books, etc., $140 a year For free-tuition student $100. For non-residents of the State $160. Eleventh annual session begins September 18th, 1902. For catalogue and other information address CHARLES D. McIVEIt, President. Looking: Forwaf d INSTITUTE for V. YOUNG WOHEN 'Thorough Instruction in all Dspartments of- Female Education. a 0 !1 mL e 1 A . .. roRY I CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC '. Using the Leschetizky System. Send for cata logue. Jas. Dinvviddie, M.A., V Principal, - " Raleigh, N. CJ. dison institute-Business MALE AND FEMALE. Buildings, New, Moredn and Commodious. Nice Play Grounds. Ct V Team in State. Number of Teachers 4. Number of Students last Term 10H. Languages, Music, Mathematics. Business Departrnent SpocialiiM. Good Board In Nice Families, near Buildings, from $7.00 to $S.(.mj p;r moxj Kooms where young men can furnish their own provisions and board iiA- from $350 to $4.00 per month. Tuition: From $1.50 to $3.00 per month. . . . ,y van lerm begins reprpii"-' JM. WEATHERLY, Principal. ( MADISON. NQIITH CAKL1 To the Fall. ; We want to estimate to heat your house with THE KELSEY WARfl AIR GENERATOR. A heating apparatus with from nine to seventeen vertical corrugated cast iron flues, or sections, forming the fire cylindcrand combustion chamber, and .having 65 square feet of heating surface to each square foot of grate surface. Warms thoroughly and to the proper temperature great volumes of air, by passing it through the flues, and conveys it to every part of the building.. Provides heat and most perfect ventilation for residences, churches apd school buildings. Send for 164 Page Book of ' Opinions." 20,000 in use. Han-war Har 1 Con!, SUCCESSORS TO JULIUS LEWIS HARDWARE CO RALEIGH, N, C. la S r, OAK- RIDGE- INSTITUTE 5 1 Ct f PREPARES for the UNIVERSITIES and C0J- D 1 2L X Cdr LEOES as well as for BUSINESS, for TCACn ' INQ, and for LIFE. Situated NEAR OkU- B0R0, N. C, over 1,000 feet above the sea level, In view of the moun.a - Largest and Best Equipped Fitting School for Young A"n nJ Uc) 'the South, itates: $125.00 to $175.00 per annum. FOR BCAUVIFUL CATALOGUE, ADDRESS - J. A. & M. H. HOLT - - Oak Ridge, N - , Ml 7A J - - The Fall Session of this Institdtion, one of the oldest in ' begin on ' : ' 0 September 3d, 1902. elegant and commodious College Building is located m : twelve acres and furnishes all the advantages anl cu lt home. '' . . tBoard and Tuition in English, Latin and i , I . ' . - t-a c m rrt- 4... IVAr.V The grove of a pleasant home. I Ppt Sosainn of -Twentv Week ' . . . . - . . . T-T-3 ' - OTHER STUDIES AT, MODERATE n-v Catalogue sent on annllcation. ' M. S. DAVIS, A.M. 'Preside l i 1
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 20, 1902, edition 1
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