Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Jan. 7, 1903, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE MORNING POST: WEDNESDAY 7 1903 Extracts Prom Senator Hoar's Speech on Trusts Tlie chief evils of the trust are: X. Destruction of competition; 2- The management of local indu r tr absentees In the Interest b?ntee capital; 3. Destruction of local public spirit; 4. Fraudulent capitalization; 5. Fecrecy; , t Management for the private benefit of the c-Scials; T. The power to corrupt elections. aM in seme cases to corrupt . the courts; j S. The want of personal responsibil ity to public sentiment; The absence of personal liability for contracts or wrong doing; 1 The holding of vast properties In mortmain in the "dead hand." If. we xr.ay ue the ancient phrase of ;th-? Flr.jrlish law. But it has life enough jor all purposes of pewer to serve th that wields it. It Is dead only to ti e Influence of any nerve -which comes from the brain or heart of ths pecpl r Massachusetts undertake to curb or Tulate a corporation at Lowell or ill Kivcr, and the president in New rk does not lifc It he can move It Indianapolis or Chlcnrrv Th stnt- undertakes to pass It3 laws rosulatlr.jr , the hmn of !-tor. or the panitary con ' dltion-. cr the employment of chil dren in the factory In Massachusetts. I What has happened? The trust moves Its factory to lihode Island that Is i!t. Nov.. what is the consequence? The v.orkmen must combine, for self-de-; fer..-e. They aim catch the rpirit f tlons, would. If it were possible to suc ceed, be destructive of everything which makes life worth living or man hood worth respecting. But there 13 no permanent danger. I think, from s-oclalism. The socialist, whether he be a dreamer in some college hall or rome Idle and restless agitator, fails to take into account One important and essential thing in making hi3 calcula tion: that if. human nature. Social- do for China or for Turkey, er hs a Yankee remedy. So we must remember that we ore deallnj with the most important ques tion that has come ui for legislation for a long time, or is likely to come up for n long time to come. We are to deal not only with foreign commerce, but with that compared with which our foreign commerce and the foreign -or.itcre of the weorld are but a drop I.yn may do fo b;i It will nev , The edict of their boss mu:t be obeye ! j of the United States. No statistics can al?o. The workman who do?s not sub- j rr,ea?vre it. No imagination can grasp ir.lt his individual will to the edict of the trade union can neither work hlm relf nor teach his children to work The whole manufacture of the coun try in any branch on one side and th--whole labor of the country in that manufacture on the other are to be controlled by two great corporations by which, as betweeen the upp?r an Every Senator can find in his own j the nether millstone, the liberty of tht. experience plenty of illustration of hat I am saying. I hope I havj 1-3 rr.e-I something from my own. It Is said that the tariff fosters these trusts, and that one way to check .thm is to put every article manufac tured by a trust upon the free list. That. I do not think, would help mat ters much. Certainly It would not reach carriers or dealers in the natural iroduct of the country, like the Stand ard Oil Company, or the dealers In. cot tan or wheat, or the owners of mitres. The railroad and the steamboat com panies would thrive by bringing in the frMgn products. Besides, as well said the other day. I think by, my colleague. If you put the, product of the trust on the free list unless the trust have an absolute monopoly of the article you win kill out;ttll of Its weaker competi tors and give It the whol f.ld; and yea give an advantage the foreign trust over the individual domestic manufacturer. There may be some weight and value to the suggestion, and the remedy'may t worth thinking of. if there be any is where any article is wholly con trolled and monopolized by a trust. 1 can easily understand th2 impatience nnl indignation of the gentlemen who have made this proposition when they think of z.rk Artificial being, with an cnificUl capital and an artificial stock, individual, which has made alike the glcry and the strength of the Republic Is gone. But the owner says, "Have I not right to do what I will with mln own?" Tou have not the right to do what you wllj with your own when yo-: get wealth In such masses that It be comes a menace to the State. You have not that right when you are corporation deriving all your power from the State or nation. While you are an artificial being, created by th State or nation, into whom the Stat or nation has put the breath of lift and given the law to its being, you are absolutely subject to the State oi nation. The State or nation has th right to impose a law upon your belnt which shall make you healthful an not hurtful to the community. The domestic otate created you. It gave you your vantage, to j Immunity from personal respons!bllit for debts. It commits to you, if yo-.: arc a railroad or If you are a manufac turlng corporation using water power Its own great rl.Tht of eminent domain. Congress has the rtght to say that nc such artificial . being shall engage ir interstate commerce except on certal; conditions. One of those condition will be the personal liability of you Individual members for contracts an for wrongs, unless you comply witi its commands. You have got" you uhtng out Vil domestic competition j po"r from the public. Your propert Ir an adroit Jar.d Illegal artifice 'and Fitting control of the home market. So 1 i.t not wonder that that remedy has PTurred to some gool men. ut I do j-.i t beileve it, will bear examination. At any rate. I think I can fin a bet :r one and. as I believe, that will not iftroy the policy by which this coun i. y has gained-, its present prosperity.' I spoke Jus; J-.ow of thes great cor-p-vnte powers, whether exercised In rn.Mnatlon of by single corporations a rrr.pird with the frenM return t th p- r-V of all powers of govern tr.'nt. Mate and national. , Mr. President. Mr. Calhoun. I think It was sal 1, tint when the patronage rf thl government should hsve so ln-cr-is-d that th" pirty in pnver couM cproint and 'contre! a hundred thou- It. No human Intelligence can com prehend It. I have no doubt It Is greater than any other commerce on earth. 1 Incline to believe that it 13 rreater than that of all the domestic -ommerce of . the world put together. That commerce Is conducted largely by these artificial being's called corpora tions and Joint stock companies. It an not be conducted with convenience r safety In any other way. It must necessarily be conducted as all great business 13 conducted, by large aggre gations of capital. We can not help it if we would. We would not help it if -e could. The public can not get along without them, unless we would turn .he United States into another Siberia. I remember very well, Mr. President, vhen the railroad that extends from Vlbany to Buffalo was owned br seven liffcrent corporations, each having its uvn separate mechanism, and each laying no connection with the others. rf there came a great snow storm one oad would clear Its track in a day, ut those on each side of It might take week. The passenger got his ticket "or each road, and the shipper dealt vith seven separate, different carriers. Vow the railroad is under one manage nent and .crosses the continent from -ne ocean to the other, and It will soon GREENSBORO IS MAKING PROGRESS . - The Record of the Past Year Makes an Excellent Showing. Creeiisboro, N. C Jan. C Special. Much has been said regarding the uro-, gres3 made by Greensboro of recent ; date, but for a wider conception and a better understanding of what has Injcn , accomplished, it Is well to briefly review I the happenings of the past tweive months. j Under the head of manufacturing en- terprises are noted the Hardware Man- ufacturing Company, manufacturers of j interiors, the Dixie Manufacturing ' Company, manufacturers of b towers and shaving collecting plants; Wysong z Miles, in metal working business; the re-opening of the furnace of the Steel & Iron Company, and the branch busi ness which is now fully under way of (3ent pk00seveit tne American cigar company, per haps the most valuable acquisition of the city in the manufacturing line for the year is the White Oak Mill, which; while not yet in operation, is in course of construction, and ' properly belongs to the enterprises launched during 1902. This is the biggest mill in the world for the manufacture of denims. An important factor in the progress of Greensboro in, 1902 was the launch-.: ing of the bueiness of the Greensboro Electric Company, which has equippec and put in operation an excellent street car service traversing seven miles , of the city's most important thoroughfares in addition to operating an electric , light and power plant. During the year 73 new mercantile additions- have been made to the list of business enterprises in Greensboro. It is conservatively estimated that the 75 new enterprises control capital ag gregating $542,000, or a net increase of $273,000. In this estimate it is but fair to state that the capital of the Amer ican Cigar Company, the Empire Steel Ir. Lyon's I PERFECT jj Quality, INot Price la the cIef consideration wfth tn mylng oar drugs. The best monn, can bay leased in compounding prescription at this tort. You may hi rare of ahra getting what th doctor prescribes if jou buy of us. iV-J minute and yon'll see how important this la. - aj .... E r? rrr BOBBI' tr lMrl Used by people of refinement for over a q-aarter of a centuryj IN A MOLE . Charleston People Do Not . See Hew They Can De feat Crum Charleston, S. C, Jan. 6. While the business people of Charleston are en deavoring to prevent the confirmation of W. D. Crum, the negro who was ap pointed collector of customs by Presi- yesterday, they ; are at a loss tonight to know-how to proceed ; in view of the statement' of Senator Tillman. In reply to queries from his j constituents Senator Tillman declared that it would be necessary for the com mercial organizations to give him something substantial to fltrht Crum : with if they expected him to accom ! pllsh anything.' All - the reasons that the city could present in the plea against Crum's nomination were put before the presi- j dent weeks ago, though these were ! not regarded as sufficient by the ad ministration. The best the commercial : bodies can hope to do in the matter is to submit resolutions, but these will ! amount to little. It was said tonight ,by prominent citizens who have been ; engineering the fight that some action would be taken. ' " ITT-WYWNE DRUG CO.J It The Jury of Awards at the Pan-Atnerieaa Expositkra appoint ed to pass upon the merits of tht aniclj exhibited hare pronounced: Gfca Fastest, j CTAo Strongest, tve 5implet( Cc most Complets and tti Most , Practical Typewrite Mads WKlTBl I.N Mfciilr Fcr Catalorus writj so: R. L. LINDSEY, Sut Acat. DURHAM. 21 C . 1 ' jr x m . J y vnii nnurrrr ifct IF YOU USE SUGAR BOUNTY CASE 5nrd oiTfinla Mel. It cou!! never be dl- Thy aouH b, ns he thought. t'o sirnx fortthe people, lie under rated th strt!cth of the men out of p-T.r who !e.4$"e to h?con-.e officehold er, and he Itfvlerrated the wisdom nn l patrirtti5r.i of the American peo 1 and It ca parity to take care of if in tlm. jVe have proteced our-f-l.-e ntrr.inst ;jhnt danger In part by fir rivll-5ervlce laws. Jut as we will r-r--tect ourseives sooner or later tgalr.rt the linger from aggregate w 'Tilth withoctj a revolution, and. I hope, without fecial disorder or the - 'rthrmv of r")ir Institutions or Inter-f-rir.g v. !th p-jr form of government. l-:tr;.-i-nehhek.rynvbgka shrdl cmfw Jut confide ri how comparatively trl-f-.fz if th p.wer of an administration f .r a it d. nnds. or ever depended. t:"Mi it oHlrthollers compared with :'. :t of n rrr-it ag?;recnte of corpora tiA . rr jrratKecum'il'tio!i of wealth i:-( h r.s I Tiivrf decrlbed. Yi"i will e-ct yot:r givernor only fi- T.e or two ?r three years, and your j rj-:it for four, and your renator f- r 9'.x. r.r.d j-our representative for t-your executive o.Tlcrrs are ' ovabl. andi most of the Important fVifi:. state and national, go out of ; v r n;h the; party with whom they -r-. l".. They; have moderate sala- Th" S:rn.tor gets lers salr.ry. and t; r r":itiuve gets less salary, not .: th in th-3 .''mayors of Important ;!.. but less than fashionable tailors ' -' tlt-ir cutt"Si. thee treat corporations can f : p ! t their npents for life, or as long t!.y c!o the "bldvlir.g of the centra! t". In every town or village where t: ire Is a phoji or an agency or a depot Nor a Runaway It has been stated on the highest uthority that the Harwood-Wall mar pge, v.hlch took place In Raleigh ore than a year ago, and which is on- t"ie subject of a divorce suit at Torfolk. was not a runaway affair, otk the man and the woman were f full age, and it was not necessary y have the consent of anybody to :ieir marriage. Carnegie's Latest Offer Philadelphia, Jan. .Andrew Came ie has offered $1.5CO,000 to the free li rary of Philadelphia to . establish hirty branch libraries in as many sec- ed when they lefT. ons of thi city. The conditions at--ched to the gift are that $30,000 is to e expended for the erection of each ullding. ay, s fie t;. t rr ration . h.a one of the most -Wil ful it ir.n-.-.ttal men in th? com- r.:rly irt Its life officer. i-rcafui:j agilnst it x.-r.ts ;the t It can bid the government n it x.-r.ts ;the grcnt lawyer lor re of the nuprcm Court of th ite l state er Attorry-General. It rri ray for a ir !j fee r.ot only more th-n a rub!!' o.rr can save for his r" ! at, but mre than the aggregate r-: r-;.n:io:i u$ h's lif". I had two t -.-.I ar-.d intitiate companions in my ? '"-h t th la rt-hool. One of them 1 I !-:-. in the prrrt r.mce of judg' tl. Sui rTi-?' Court of tho United k:.o-.vn arid honored ns one f " S'tat J.;:gc9Of the world, leaving '' ir ! h:j-i s'.rrp and modest com r ':. e 1 1 'ipp4e he hil gained that .-;..Tf h vent cpon the bench) after Us i.iriy fortj years of illustrious r. !'. Ti e other. alM dead. Is said hli t i ?gr3phf to have received one r a-:- t ,,f a ritlllon dollars. oi.'j- thj Mr. Resident, but ! Kr- poncrs ran j-ut their hand ' viii.ti;- or :u town or a city and gr-.u- ar.a rour'.?!i or it will iccording to ths Irresistible will. i ." rrat r.JIr4ad or ti:e great m- i:r:j e otr.hi'jr.mt-nt bnlan in its f-r..i the fit of clt nr, rf tat. trd: and wither, ucc. rf an t.;'t.f,. .! r would oe valueless but for the agen cies and powers which have been com mitted to you by the State. The Stat has delegated to you Its power of emi ncnt domain, the right to take privat lands, and to cross highways and navi gable waters, ar.d to lay your track 1 some cases along the highways. Ti: State has as much right to compel yo ro to us? your powers that you sha not be cn Injury to the individual e:i gaged In lawful commerce ns It ha to require you so to manage your loco mc!lv that you sha!l not be a dange to men lawfully traveling on the high way or to the passenger whom yo carry. I am opposed to the governmen ownership of great labor-employing ir. dustrles. I am opposed to the govern ment ownership of coal mines or railroads. I do not ree why, if th government 13 to prevent a famine scarcity cf fuei by owner?hIp. I should not own the sources o food supply, that It might prever rcarclty of food supply, that It mlgi prevent scarcity of food, or the woole or cotton factories, that It might pre vent a scarcity of clothing. If tl government Is to be the great employ er. thewages of labor must be fixe by lav.-. Wages cannot be fixer apply equally to every workman. Th energetic and the slothful and the Intel llgent and the dull; the man of entei prlre and of Inventive genius and th man Thore fingers are all thumbs mu- stand on the same dead level. Be sides. If wages are to ho fixed by th law-making power, then the quest io of wages becomes a question of po!: tics. The two parties must compel with one another by outbidding eac. other for the votes, and paying for tl. vote3 in increased wages. No goverr ment but a de.-rotlsm can control an supply the great necessaries of life. I have no sympathy with any attac on wealth honorably acquired and law fully usd. I have no dislike for grei corporate powers. I think, in genera it is better that they be wielded b private and Individual combinatlo than the government. They are ne essary to national greatness. We ca net maintain our. equality among th nations of the earth and we can nc achieve the ' supremacy now easil within our grarp without them. TV may as well be jealous of gunpowde or dynamite, or of steam, or 'of eler trlclty, or of the power of gravitatlor or the current of Niagara. So long n thes-; are our servants and we ai their masters we are safe and health and great. Put it li service and r.o mastery that Aladdin enpects of th magician. Lt the great railroad cor poratlon span the continent and gird" the earth in the service of the Amer lean people. But It must never for get that it is thelave of the ring an that the American people is the Ala' din. Lt the steel company, ir it wn light up every valley and mountai- fide of the continent with the light c Its furnace flre3. Iet the Amerien- Steamboat Company do. the carrying for th world; but it must be conte' to be to the American people in th relation of slave of the lamp and no of master. , What Is called socialism, Mr. Presl dent, will never cure or prevent th evil I have described. That, also, wll be destructive of the great principle o emulation and individual excellence. P v!!!! be quite as bad. in my Judgment as the po'r of great corporations The Utter can be curbed, and it will ! some way be broken when it become too dangerous. But a general reduc ing of mankind to a dead level, such a must harnen when the State manage and owns the great industries and properly. lie and his wife did not wages are fixed by vote at the eler- 1 wish to hold the office after a petition ross the continent under the same and Iron Company, the White Oak Mi H wnershlp. So we must, in devising company and the street car company rar remedy, go cautiously and slowly. 'We must calmly bear the ills we have ather than fly to those we know not f." Our engineering must be conduct ed like that wonder of the engineer's rt which some of us remember to have vitnessed when the foundation of the Vashington Monument, originally de igned to support a structure SO or 1C0 et high, was removed from under it y a great engineer, and another sub tltuied to support the structure of 55o eet In height, and there was not a rack, or a leaning, or a sinking by a air's bredth in the whole operntion. Ve can do the same thing In protect g our commerce and our country rom the danger I have described if we ill approach our task in the spirit of tatesmanrhip, and not in the spirit of arty, and will settle thepe questions .Ith our judgment and brains, and not vith our angers and prejudices. has not been taken Into account. It is gratifying to know that within the last seven months of 19tl2 only two cas ualties are reported, and it subsequent ly develops that one of these two con l cerns paid one hundred cents : on the dollar of its indebtedness. For the en tire state only 64 failures are reported with assets of $358,249.00 and liabili ties of $635,419, as against 103 during 1901. for which assets footed up $529, ?14 as against liabilities of $731,441, a ! decrease of 39 over 1901 and a decrease j in liabilities of :76.022. NEWS FROM FEZ Three Reports Received and all Contradictory Sladrid. Jan. 6. The prime minister, Senor Silvela, announced to the king today that all the official dispatches from Morocco confirmed the report thaU Bu Mammera, the pretender, was in nell yesterday morning and qualified as Action of the Collector at Baltimore Sustained Washington, Jan. 3 The Bussian sugar bounty case, originating In Bal timore was decided by the supreme court today, the action of the customs authorities imDosimr an extra duty be ing sustained. The question involved was "Does the government of Xtuesin j i pay a bounty on the sugar e?.ported ? from the country?" j Announcing the decision of the. court, Mr. Justice Brown reviewed at length the laws of Russia governing the n.:m: facture and sala of urrar, which is cCn ducted under a close government super vision. Whatever i'. inty bo called, ssid the justice, it 's clear that, whar is in effect a bounty, is paid on sugar ex ported from Russia, . n-I therefore he action of the collector imposing an ad ditional duty --n igar i.i-orted there from equivalent hersto. is Ieg:il. and the judgement of the ourt brdow. 's affirmed. M4m i rm 4 4 KHMttd Vith Black HAN.HBKLBH I I V V HI CJj PISTOLS, jfc Dollar Watch. The two million jpeople wha buy.Ingersoll Watchps every year buy them because they bear tho strongest guarantee Ifor aceuralo time made by any watchmakers, and because eight million people who have bought' and earned them are loud in their praises. The REPEPFE. wlhSioiSnitle. Th fJOBALtod NBW VtCTOK. rita Smoke- Peters LARGE STOCK . iip in iiifU, Have hld tfie WirlA's 'ESSS&JZSSSe Pocket Knive, PJatol, $nd Kcvolver. needt&s for fife years, Car vers J R.Q2or3; Everything for Everybody. HART-WARD HARDWARES CO., RALEIdH, N. C. Uie JErtiiGL JUife Insurance Go IS MAKING A: SPECIALTY OP if "ETNA 5 PERCENT GOLD BONDS." Hi THEIR VALUES ANY OTHERS. ARB LARGER i AND THEIR-RATES LQWER lUJt Mr. TV". J. Edwards of Sanford ap neared before Judee Thomas R. Pur- full retreat from Fez. Madrid, Jan. 6. It is rumored at i Ceuta and Tetuan, Morocco, that the pretender hns again defeated the sul tan's troops. The Benadlr and TVad rass Mohammedan fanatics are groins through the country and circulating reports that the pretender is perform ing1 miracles. Tangier, Jan. 6. Official courier? from .the foreign legations at Fez, which has been reported beseiged by the pretender, have arrived here. They report that the situation was unchang- Mr. Samuel Berwanger received a telegram ; yesterday announcing the the sites to be provided by sudden death of his brother. Mr. Louis hlladelphia or by private individuals. ! Berwanger, which occurred at his heme ffers of sites will be announced to-. in Logansnort, Tnd. Mr. Berwanger j leaves a wife and four children. receiver of the Carolina and Northern .Railroad Company, the Southern Mills xnd Lumber Corrpany and the railroid construction company.' He gave his bond of $25,000 and it was accepted by Judge Purnell before the oath was administered. Yesterday's session of the Wake su perior court was devoted entirely to the trial of a number of petit cases of 10 special interest. ' gndionola Side of the Trouble Stated Indianola, Jan. 6. Upon behalf of the itizens and on request of the south rn representatives in Congress, Judge . P. Chapman today mailed the fol Mvlng statement of the post office af lir which incorporates an appeal for ie establishment of the mail service: Indianola, Miss., Jan. 6. 0 Hon. A. J. McLaurin, Washington, D. C. Dear Sir: Your telegram of the 5th ist delivered, and I take pleasure in ivlng the facts aa to the resignation f the postmistress. About the first of October the clti ?ns of Indianola held a meeting and ppointcd a committee of three to cir jlate a petition aking Minnie Cox to sign. This petition was to be return- 1 at a meeting of the citizens to be .eld a week later. It was circulated nd signed by a. large number of clti--ns of Indianola, Wayne Cox, husband of Minnie Cox, n the evening of the meeting, called t my office and said he desired to ave me state to the mass meatin hat night that he had discovered that he citizens of Indianola did not wish is wife to act as postmistress any ; onger, and he would respectfully re ;uest that I read the enclosed resigna lon. The resignation was signed by his vife. The only request made in regard o the resignation was that his wife hould have time to get her reports eady and get her office In shape so had been freely signed by the citizen of Indianola asking for her resign.', tion. The time named for the resign; tion to take effect was January l 1303. I can state further that I have nc heard of intimidations or threa' against the postmistress, and furth' that, the kindest feeling exists betwec the citizens and the postmistress. Sh being an intelligent negress and nc wishing to retain the position o postmistress after this petition askin for her resignation, voluntarily con sented to tender her . resignation t" take effect on the first of January an deliver the office to a successor. Ther has not been any rough and tumt clement threatening, but on the othe hand everything is quiet and peacr able and no excitement whatever in f town. I respectfully ask you, who have bee so kind as to "make inquiry into t! matter, to bend every energy to hav our post office opened. It is a grc handicap upon us. It affects the bu?i ness of each and evc-rj- one here and ; presents to the world a feature tha causes criticism to be heaped upon on of the best elements of society in th south. A number of citizens join with me U asking that you forward a copy of a correspondence sent to Washington ! order that we may see and learn ho lt was that such reports appeared i the newspapers. If such a. thing ca 'News and Opinions of National Import anos T&e Sun ALONE CONTAINS BOTH. -The 20 Year Endowment 5 per Cent! Gold Bonds of the Etna Life ! OFFER GREATER ADVANTAGES THAN ANY INVESTMENT. OARRT ING -AT THE SAME TIME ABSOLUTE PROTECTION. I FOR INFORMATION ADDRESS J. D B0USHAL14 flanager, Tucker Building, RALEI GH,p, C STYLISH TURNOUTS FOR STYLISH PEOPLE. m a 3 ear. $3 a rear. u. by mall. $ .lily and Snnday.' by mail. The Sunday Sun did greatest Suuda Aeusyay: ia tha World. iicf He a copy. By raafl. $2 a year. Addreaa THE SUN. Now York. Landaus, Buggies. Pjcnlcj.WaffODs and all the different kinds of t,ap, with th best driving horses, both Mr speed an) family nse, always ready. h ' t ' 1 Fine saddle horses for ladies and geniu We make .a specialty aii marriages receptions and funeral, glv'oi thesa thr personal attention of a, m(Hber of th firm. - " , Contracts for heary hanlitic and eic ratlnr solicited. UPGHURCH & HOLDER We guarantee perfect satisfaction It . all branches of our business. , Salisbury S ' IjtPfioneSI. IT or ran St.. 37 The Y MUTUAL EIFE INS. COMPANY Of Philadelphia.. ASSETS OVER FIFTY MILLIONS. SURPLUS OVER SIX MILLIONS. Commenced Doirig Business in 1847; in North Carolina in l874.; :hebespmpan insured rherefore, the best for the agent ; be done we respectfully ask that yo hat she misrht not get out without a secure them for us. as we know thr perfect settlement of affairs with the no honorable gentleman would delib jovernment, lie stated further that erately falsify against hi3 own citizer ie had been a citizen of this county and neighbors. We feel assured th-. cr years and that the people were his 'riends and had always treated him the report have been sent from othe places than Indianola. Yours truly. (Signed) r. C. CHAPMAN i I Several Special Agents MOST LIBERAL CONTRACTS TO DESERVING5 MEN. Agents can do more business for THE PENN than for any other company. 5 Ask its 4,000 policy-holders in North Carolina, carrying over seven mil ions of insurance. M Gold Bonds, Endowments, Life, Term and all other approved policies at ow rates -with large guarantees, and annual or deferred dividends; - ' R. B. RANEyJ; General Agents for North CarpJIira. RALE1QH, N. !.C. S.. i 'If
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 7, 1903, edition 1
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