THE MORNING'POST: TUESDAY. FEBRUARY IO 1903 South to the Shade of the Palm They Go Virgin! Press Association Ara on the Way to Flor- Ida-Passid Through Here Yesterday Down toward the Florida coast a ear load of Virginia, journalists are speeding this momliifir wherw for sev eral day they wll! bask 'neatta the southern un, and woo " the" natives T.eath th shade of, the sheltering palm. The Virginia pre association passed through towu lat night on the fast train for Jacksonville. It was a hap py rrv of scribbler that occupied the J trifod and the nightmare of the pa?te pot and brush they intend not to for get Virginia; a Virginian never for irets home to enjoy themselves; to fee Florida and profit by their Journey. They are traveling In tro divisions, one of which parsvf here at 6:21 last r.icht. The other division eanie through at and will join thir main body to day. In the flrst division were; other period of negro rule. And that such a rule would follow unrestricted negro suffrage in those states, coun ties and cities where the negroes have the majority there can be no doubht. But it may be said that in the thirty years which" have passed sln.ce the re construction period ended the negro has become better qualified for self-government and the use of the. ballot. Un fortunately there Is no evidence of this. In casting . his , vote the negro is no more controlled by principle today than he . was 30 years ago. He is governed WHY NEGROES ARE DISFRANCHISED H. II. Beaxley and wife, South Bos ton News; K. M. Slack and wife, Ab ingdon Virginian; E. D. Gregory and mother and Jus Jeter, Bedford Dem ocrat; A. S. Morton and sister, Spectator-Vindicator. Staunton; M. T. Har- rimnn. Iiedford Democrat; J. E. Wood t exclusively by race and wife. South Ilofton Times: Misses . solidly lxvensteln. Times-Dispatch; Dr. J. M. Hamlet and "Mr.. Mellwaine, Farm Kiaminor: C. M. "Walker and daughter, Farmvllle; CSofge W. War-, xen and George O. Green, Clifton Forge ; lleview; Fulton Kegley. Bland Repor-J ter: 11. uaraner, rujasM . i Review: James -Mullen, Richmond Times-Disiwitrh; F. W. Baker. South ern Churchman; Catesworth Pinckney, Itichmond Times-Dispatch; Mrs. C. A. Hurt, SmithvIUe Gaaette: C.B. Cam per and daughter. Fincastle Herald; Alex. Forward. "VVytheville Dispatch; J. J. Hurt Sttwt wife, Farmville Her ald, and A. S. Onwely, Martinsville Bulletin. Editor Cope-land who arranged the details of this tour was unable to along aii a press of editorial kn.t him busy. A uumbt-r of ladies, the mothers, j Terring upon them the suffrage the wives tin l d.nighaer of the editors j failure to teach them the competency are along with them. J to enjoy it." -Negroes in the south are still. what Thaddeus .Stevens designat ed them "voting cattle." It is neces sary for the southern states to dis- in a mass. the negro, in various ways, for the la&t 20 years." said Kooker "Washington in a speech delivered at Madison, Wis., "have tended too much to array him against his white brother rather than to put. the races .in cx-operation witn each other. More than once I have no- iiicea.mai wnen me wnuw ' i c j:i favor of prohibition the blacks, led even by sober, . upright . ministers, voted against prohibition simply because the whites were In favor of it. If the Whites vote to lay a tax to build a schoolhouse it is a signal for the blacks to oppose the measure simply because the whites favor It." Thus, upon the testimony of the wisest of their own race, the negro is still unfit for the ballot. Secretary Hoot admits it when says, according to the repoi'ts of So the country has to face eon- go he duties : his sneech: the failure of the plan adopted by governor to proclaim martial law in vM V -i mnitv. to arrest and trv bv ' franchise tneir. property irom piunuer aim men (Baltimore Sun.) Secretary Boot In his New York "speech, published In the Sun Saturday, "concedes; that the constitutional amendments and the laws enacted for tlw purpose of granting the suffrage to the negro In the-south and protect - lnr him In its enjoyment have failed. t was stolen by the negroes and their And now, 30 or more years after Uu-ir white leaders from the North, who had nactment, the negro is disfranchised : flocked to the South as vultures gather court martial, and the soldiers w re negroes. In South Carolina alone, ac cording to the declaration of Governor Chamberlain, a Republican governor of that State, when h succeeded Moses he found that two hundred trial jus tices were holding office by executive appointment who could neither read nor write. Negro majorities had com plete control of the State governments, taxes were multiplied and the money gathered from the unfortunate whites ( civilization from destruction. And as some of the property in the south is owned bynortherners. there is a strong sentiment In that section aHso in favor of "grandfather" clauses.' ( And whatever may be said of dis franchisement of negroes by such con stitutional devices it is far more de cent and honest than the. disfranchi ment of white people in Pennsylvania by ballot-box stuffing and perjury. In every otat where he constitutes any considerable portion of the popu lation. A writer in the New York Tri bune undertake to give a history of this disfranchisement. But on a carcass. At the close of the war the debts of the seceded states aggregated 5S7.000.0O,). .During the ten years of negro rule neither ; $3ihVH0.(K- was added. In North Caro- Secrrtary Root nor the Tribune writer lina the state debt increase! fSS.OOO.OUO xr.aks any mention of the reasons ant the jissssrd value of -property sank from I292.000.0M) In Wo to $130,000.- mhlch led up to this movement In the South. It Is wH. In the Interest of truth and fair dealing, to have this in mind. In the first place, it is a recognized fact that the amendments conferring IoUUca! rights upon the negroes were never regul;irly adopted by three fourths of the States, as the constitu tion renulres. Thy were in fact forced .upon the country by the military pow er and against the will of the people. A law so enacted will never receive the willing obedience of even the most law-abiding cltlwns. But. notwithstanding this fact, the nrro enjoyeu tne unrestricted right (o in 2S10. The taxation for state pur poses In 1W had been $543,000 a year. The negroes Increased it to 31,160,000. The negroes issued $14.000.XH of bonds to aid railroad construction. It was all spent and not one mile of railroad was built. S."hol fund securities were sold to carpetbaggers at one-third their value and the money received dividend among th negro legislators. In two years there was not a public school- j house open In the whole state. The (fame story might be told of every state in which the so-cal'ed disfranchise ment has taken place. In Mississippi fi. 400.000 arrps of land' wero con ft sen ted !.n - .. .. . . ,mlr3 e heavv taxes levied unon them, and AMERICAN AND BRITISH RAILWAYS In a second article on American rail ways the London Times ooints out many differences "between the English and the American systems. The most striking of these differences, it says, is to be found in the respective mile age or the two countries. The total length of completed railways in the Tinted States on December 31. 1901, was 19S.7S7 miles, whereas the length of line open for traffic in the United Kingdom ou the same date was 22,07 S miles. - I : the states. The land so confiscated was . 'largely given to the negroes. In short to vote uuring a ponton oc tne ain;ui-j"" lstratlon of Andrew Johnson and dur-i,n In the two administrations of General I vhoKllff confiscation took place in all Grant. It was the white people of t SVmfli who xcfTt disfranchise l for trn-re was a reign oi terror in the soutn. and the miscreants were upiorted in every town and village by United Mates troops, many or whom were n operate .i lh M.rrftl", . " ".nne, ik Ierl-J of more thin 10-years. and the j jicgroes. b.-u'ked t y the United States! army, had an ample opprtunity to! show their capacity for elf-govern-1 ment and their fitness for and lent willing in hnmili.'it iiif rntihfiic mid Invii'! t inf t.f..th miffrage. Figures may giv thep fonmr nasterf,. ThP l0t.al Rov. rome htt idea-of sne of the result trnn)Cnt!l o( towns and counties rf unrestricted negro suffrage during Jww as t.oirupt timler lM.Rro rule aa thu liat terribV tint. But neither words ;..lte KOvenimtit. Plunder and bar nor figures can mak-; an adequate de- k, ..:,., or- v.r ivr'ption of the saturnalia of grand and petty larceny, of violence, of plun der, of fraud, of lust and of every crime in? ijkjm ji-,iu:u;iis ur iih- tiui , r'nsupportc citizen was saie irom violence. inou-. In 177 lresident Hayes: withdrew the !.-rmy from the south, and as the sol- 'diers turned their b-n ks the nejfro gov ernments melted away and disappeared. by the bayonet they did not exist one (lav. Just u annn na th, sands and tens of thousands of citl- uhife lnan affala got contpol the tens, upon the ftJmsiest charges and;80Uth in to jmm from an without a particle of evidence, were .,niict ion far more costlV than the civil torn from their homes and families Vnr hjllI Wealth has Increased na cast into prum. in .xonn caro- and the owners of that wealth have lina. the Legislature authorized the no min i to permit its spoliation by an-(typical v TIIii Dbs"Q! siil: iras-CnaDi? jpipnc It takes of the ordlaarr quarts" to make. allon, bit a IIAYNER QUART is a foil quart, aa honest quart of 32 ourcon. four to the raUoo. Now. you pa? your dealer at lewit tl' botus for whmker that entot poHly be any better itiaa HAYNER. if us food, or . a gallon. If you buy HAVXEK V7i IISKF.Y you have at least iS.05 on every gaiioo. We ceil two r&Uoas for about the tuma aa yo-i ! force? gtvlion of probablv poorer wbtskey. Just tcinV. that over and remember that flAYNEK WHISKKY roes direct from oar dtsnllery to you. carries a UX1TKD STATKS KKQ I STKRED DISTILLKK'S GUAR ANTKB of PURITY aad AOK and saves you tne dealers' enormous iro9ts. That's why it's so good and mo cheso. Teat's why we have over a quarter of million satitifled cus tomers. That's why YOU aboold try Ik Your money back II you're oot satisfied. BIreoi from our distillery to YOU Sam Doaltrs1 Profits! Praunts Adoltsntlon! pnnnj- win (PURE SEVEN-YEAR-OLD RYE fin AV7nf?R jilMyljuLlJii CM v3 ... . i EXPRESS PREPAID W wZl ue yoi FUIX QVAHT BOTTLES of HAYNERS SEVTN- YEAROUD RYE for tX TO, and wo wia pay the eipreaa charjes. Try it and l foa doa't find it aU rif ht aod as good as you ever used cr can buy from anybody else at aay prloe. taea snd it back at our exyense aod your $9.iO will be returowl to yo-j by next matL Just thln't U:t oo over. How could II t tatrerr IX yoa are not perfectly satisfied, you are not out a cent. Better ! w aead iva a trial order. 'If yoa don't want four quarts yourself, get a friend to cia you. VTe aUp la plaia sealed case, co Darks to show what's tgiiisAft CTtlsrs for Ariz., Cat, CoU Idato, fo5t.. Ner.. N. 3ay.. Ore.. Uth- Wash. tr Wp. icu3t be on the baas rf -1 $uart for 4.0O br Impress iTcpald or JtO Jnrta far lO.Ot by Jl'reight Prepaid. . Writ our tearert oco and do 12 NOW. THE HAYNER DISTILLING COriPAUY ATlANTAi &K f OAYT0K. OHJO ST. LOUIS. 0. . . $T. PAUL, MINN. ISO X723TIZUC3T. THOr. O. XTAXUSHTO 18 n '" i- The longest railway system under the control of a single company in Great Britain is the Great "Western which represtnts 2.66 miles. The next longest is the London ond Northwest ern, with 1.937 miles, and this is fol lowed by the Northwestern, with 1,6-'i4 ;the Midland, with 1,441. and the Great Kastern. with 1.109 miles. But in the United States the-Pennsylvania Railroad Company and the New York Central ana - Hudson River Railroad Company each control over 10,000 miles of railways. There are twenty-eight systems . which own and control over 2.000 miles each, and forty-nine mileage of over 1H) each, the mileage of th Ameri can railways is greatly in excess of tha tof the British railways, the den sits of passenger traffic in Great Brit ain Is far greater than that of the United States, for, whereas in 1900 the number of nassengers carried (exclu sive of reason tir-ket holders) was 1, 142.oiO,r.00 in the case of the British rail ways, it was only ".76,000,000 for those of the United States, though the length of railroad there is niue times that in Great Britain. In Great , Britain the railway com panies must provide for a prodigious number of people traveling short dis tances, while they stretch from Lon don to Glasgow or Edinburgh as a long distance Journey. In the United States there are. fewer pas sengers, but far longer journeys. The British comoanies druv.- the larger pro- ! portion of their reveunes from passen ger' traffic, whereas in" America the companies derive their Inrgest in come from the movement of freisrht. In" regard to working expenses, it must be remembered that 1900 and 1301 were record bad years for British rail ways. Allowing for the slightly larger number of train miles run in 19C1 thin in 1S99, coal cost the British compa nies over 2.Sf.V00 more in the former ij'ear than it would have done had the j price remained the same' as in 1S99, and against the disadvantage experienced through the . increase in the price of coal there was no adequate - set-off 1n the form of advanced profits from business done. On the other hand. there is the fact that the last two j years have, been record good years for j the American rnljways. that their car- j rying capacity in respect to freight has been taxed to the uttermost, and that" their coal bills, in proportion to the length of their lines and to the amount of their business, are far below those of the Knglish comoanies. QUESTION OF LOCAL. TAATION .. "The question of local taxation," con tinues the Times.. "is -another consid eration not to bejgnored. In 1901. the railways of the United Kingdom had to pay in rates nd taxes a sum equal to no less than 1S0 per mile. - It is diffi to generalize on this point in regard to America,, inasmuch as each State adopts its own methods in the taxa tion of railways, and the whole matter is most f-'omolicated. The sum paid per mile of lino varies, in fact,, from $11.26 In India Territory to $1,366.32 in Massachusetts but the average Tor the whole of the United States is equiv alent, in English currency," to a little over 54 per mile of line. Taking the working expenses as a whole, thwy amouut to fcj.d per cent, of gro. earnings. In the' case 'of .the United States and 63. ner cent, in the United Kingdom. One point that tells this mater of working expenses is their comparatively smaller- number of em ployes, the total per 100 miles of line being "548 In the United States as against 2.635 in the United Kingdom. Contrasting earnings per ; mile one get? . these . figures for; the year 1901: United States, gross, 1,697 per. mile; net,-531; United Kingdom, gross, 4,8?6; net. 1.769. . , ; . , ' the "American railways in 1901. at $11, 688,177,9991 say 2,337,635,598 we find that the net earnings were 104.059,000 say 4.45, or 4 8s., per cent. The total prejudice and votes capital of the railways, in the United "The teachings jf Kingdom for the same year (after al lowing for nominal additions) was 1, OOS.107,000, and the net earnings were 39.069,000, say 3.87. or 3. 17s. 4d, per cent. If coal had;remained at the same. price as in 1899 the net earnings on English railways would have been increased to 41,697,000, thus ' yielding, say, 4.16, or 4 3s. 2d., per cent. If. in addition to this, rates and taxes had increased since the year 1891 only j m the same proportion as the gross receipts, say, 30 per cent. the amount payable in that respect, instead of be 919,000. cmfwyp shrdlu cmfwyp mf wy ing 3,979,000, would have been onjy 2,919,000, a saving of .060,000. Adding this to the figures given, above, the net earnings for the year 1901 would have been increased to 42,027,000, yield ing, say, 4.26, or 4 us.' 2d'., per cent. NONYIELDING CAPITAL ...... ..'.' The amount of capital stock in the American railways paying no divi dend at all on June 30,1901, was $2,829, 021.925, or '48.73 per cent, o f the total amount then outstanding. ; Omitting equipment trust obligations, the amount of funded debt 'which paid no interest was $361,905,202. Of he stock paying1 dividends, 8.82 per cent, of; the total amount outstanding paid": from 1 to 4 ner cent.. 13.37 raid from. 4 to a per ceni., iu.it iaia irom tu o .iJri cent.; and 6.67 paid from 7 to 8 per cent. The amount of dividends declared dur ing the year was $156,735,784, which was, equivalent to a- dividend of ' 5.2ft pel? cent, on the amount of stock on which some dividend was declared.. It is. however, only during the last year or two that certain of these companies which now pay dividends", and espe cially in the Western States, have been able to show any profits at all. The effect of Increased prosperity, however, is shown by the fact that for the year j ended June 30, 1902. the dividends of ! essentially the same operating roads iwere greater by nearly $30,000,000 than for the previous financial year.. "Commenting mon the operation of American railways, the Times, gets tne impression that they are both in ad vance of their times and two or three d&cades out of dare. .Hpecial criticism is made of the grade crossings and the prfssing of trains through crowded streets of "populous towns without ade quate protection for the public. "At York, a populous Pennsylvania city," says the, writer, "where the trains passed down the centreof an extreme ly narrow street before, it x-eached the railway , station, there seemed to be something peculiarly ; appropriate in the injunction wjiich.. some one naa had painted in prominent, letters on a fence alongside: 'Prepo.re to meet thy God, for thou shalt surely die V " t B. of them i?i order to preserve BASE BALL AT TRINITY v , " .; . . Schwtfule of Games Arrangtd for the Season Durham, N. C, Feb. 9. Special. The base balr team has oergun prac tice. Almost all of last year's team is back and there are several new men who give promise of being good players. Mr. Otis Stocksdale, the coacn last year has been engaged for the season. He will be here in a few days to take charge of the team. The manager is p m.- Kins' ' and the captain Is 'A Bradsher. The following scheauie games has been arranged: - March 23. Horner a,t Durham. March 25, Lafayette at Durham. April 6. A. M. at Raleigh. April ' 10. " Cornell sa t Durham. April 11. Oak Rldre at Durham. ' April 13, Wake Forest at Durham. April 16. Guilford at Durham. . "April 18. Wake Forest at Raleigh. April. 20. A. & M. at Durham. April 1 21. Guilford at Greensboro. April 28,' University of Virginia Durham. May L Fredericksburg at Durham May .4, "Guilford at Guilford. May 5, Mercer at Macon, Ga. May 6. Wofford at Spartanburg, S. C May 7, South Carolina College at' Co lumbia, S. C. " J; E. Csirtland,. viercwair Of! sir i aiior, Greensboro, N. C. Our line-for this spring is compo sed of all the latest goods, lv..; f... and domesUc. " We shall be pleased to serve you, guaranteeing .r Isfaction. at Good flee Wanted NEVTR!NITY LIBRARY Fofmal Opening to Take Place on the 23rd Dui'ham, , N. C. Feb. 9. Special. The formal opening of the Trinity College Library, the gift of Mr. J. B. Duke of New York city! will take place Monday, February 23d. The program follows: Address of Presentation Judge Arm istead, Bur well, Charlotte, N. C. - Address of. Acceptance President John C. Kllgo. Dedicatory Address Mr. Walter Page of New York city. The exercises will take place in Cra ven Memorial, hall beginning at 8 o'clock in the evening. After the exer cises there will be a reception in the library building. . There has just been issued from the press of the Macmillan Company, New York, a ; tlook -vhich which has received much favorable comment. The author is Dr. Geo. L. Hamilton, professor of romance- languages at Trinity cllege. The book is entitled "The Indebted ness b? Chaucer's-Troilus to Guide deile Colonne's Historia Trojana." This vol ume forms oneiof the series of Columbia University studies in romance" litera ture and philology. - Salaries Guaranteed for One Man in Each County in North Carolina Comnlencement Officers No man warned who cannot furnish best ' references and prove his ability to work. v Men will ,be placad on salaries and not on commission. . f ; If you have a good mind and want to maKe money, address at once j. D. BOUSHALL, . Manager Etna Life Ins. Co., Raleigh, N. C. Quality, Not. Rrice -f i ' ' -...'-'" Is the .chief consideration with at In baying our drugs. Thr best met - can buy is used. in compouuding prescriptions at this atore. Voa cut cure of always -getting what ths doctor prescribes if you buy of ua. ILlafe mi&utft, and you'll see how im ?ortant this is. BOBBITT-WYNNE DRUG C S3 Fay ettvll. Stret j s CO.. UALRir.M.t. Cane Tliat Will ObeT Orders If you want to astonish your young friends at your next arty, here is a way you can. do it.. , The success of the trick depends on the well known fact that all bodies which have some electricity in them, and that it is only neressary to wake the elec tricity to make them active. Take a sheet of thiit paper, for ex ample, and rub it briskly with a brush or with your hand or your clothes, much as i f it were glved there. Rub a piece of glass in the- same way, and jit will attract to itself any light thing such as a scrap of cork or, a pith-ball. glass that this trick may, be per formed Place a chair in the middle of the fioor. and on the back of it "balance ,a walking stick, telling the spectators that you are going to make the stick fall off the chair v without touching either of them and without even blow ing on the stick. i Having, first thoroughly dried the. glass, rub it with a. brush or on your sleeve and hold it near, one end of the stiek. , " -'.., The wakened electricity in theglass will at once attract the stick and make It swing in any direction that you move the glass, so that you may make good your promise and draw the stick out of equilibrmm whenever you please. You may substitute for the walking stick, if you please, a cane fishing rod or a bamboo feather duster handle.. AK J you have to do is to balance it nicely on the back of the chair, where it will ! swing so easily that the small quantity of electricity in the glass will attract if . . ' ..-'.' -". The stick is better performed in dry weather.- for if the air be damp the. electrical effect is much weakened. Oxford, X.' C, Fih, . Special. At the last meeting of the Franklin and Washington Literary .Societies of Hor ner Molitary School, the officers and representatives for commencement, were elected. "The full list is as follows : FRANKLIN ' SOCIETY. President, R. P. Simpson, Wilson. Secretary and Treasurer, W. M. Boy Ian, Raleigh. , First'Assistant Marshal, C. D. reirce, Warsaw, Second Assistant Marshal, B. J. Boy la 11,. Raleigh. K Third Assistant Marshal, Wm. P. Em- erson.erson, Wilmington. Essayist M. Alan Humble, Lancaster, Pn. ' -. I : - , ." .- Declaimer, E. A. Simon. Statesville. Debater, Thos. O'Berry, Goidsboro. Orator, H. M. Merry. Horr. Montana. WASHINGTON SOCIETY. President C. V. Knight, Lawrence. Secretary and Treasurer, J. A. Har dier Greensboro. - Chief Ma rshal. C. B, WoodruiT, Greensboro. First Assistant Marshal. N. B. Daw son. Jr.. Donetoe. Third 'Assistant Marshal, V. J. Cobb. Asheville. Essayist, G. Roy Hales; Rockj Mount. - I). Garland Grubbs. Seaboard. Debater.Stahl Lim. Salisbury. . Orator, O. R. Haynos. Tarboro. ' """" of Awards The Jury t tbe Pan-America:t Exposition nj;i ed to pass upon the merits f ibe a:-! exhibited navio prouounced: he U nderwood &e Fastest, , &e Stron1et S6cSimpleil( CAcmost Compicts and the Most Practical Typewrite Mods 4 YIKITKH I.M Mliill or CataToguo wrir to. R. LINDSEY, . State Agent, DURHAM. X. L Agents Wanted In rver Town. Wilmington, N. C, Feb. 9. Special. In a general row over a game of cards Sunday morning" early, Dan Shines, a young negro, was murdered in a gamb ling house. He was shot and stabbed and then dragged some distance from the house. The police have made sev eral" arrests. fat. March 16 and Iov. 9, i?gjt fat. in CaaadaNov, st, 1897. TO SulLL, THE Write 1 For - Information And Terms. Noh- poisonous Potato, Squash and Plant-eating Pests Insecticide. HART-WARD HARDWARE CO., RALEIGH N. The O a favor of the American railways injo'ciocii. Address on College Training Guliford, College, N. C, Feb. 9. Spe cial. Prof. Thos. Newlin, late, of Wil mington college, Ohio, but now vice president of Guilford Collf ge; last Sat urday evening, gave a rare treat to an appreciative audience." The title of his address was "College Training and Civilization." After nrilntine- nnf our advancement in educational lines, I he showed how dependent civilization is upon our homes and schools - and colleges. He also said that a young man should i get as much out of fbuij years, well spent in one of cur stand ard colleges as he will get in ' forty years . years of ordinary life. Prof. Newlin pointed cut the. danger of young men specializing before they have received a college education. He especially brought-out the value of the knowledge of history, literature aud economics to every one. His lec ture throughout was just what the young men and women all over our country need to have impressed upon tbfir minds. ... v .- ; . There will be gymnasium ht iv, next - Saturday- k?v,mii'' MUTUAL LIFE INS. COMPANY Of Philadelphia. ASSETS OVER FIFTY MILLIONS. SURPLUS OVER SIX MILLIONS. r. Commenced Doing Business intX847; in North Carolina in 1874 THE BEST COMPANY FOR TH TTgrmn THEREFORE; THE BEST FOR THE AGEN ; - t" ':---. . . f i- r . r. , ". . -- -'- - - , ' Several; Special Agents Wanted : MOST LIBERAL CONTRACTS TO DESERVING ME " , Agents can do more business for THE PENN than for any other compa!iv. Ask its 4,000 policy-holders in Nortti Carolina, carrying over seven mil lions of insurance. .'. : . , , . Gold BondsEndowments, Life, Term and all other approved policies at rates with large guarantees, and annual or deferred dividends. low conte3t R. B. PANEY, ... General Agents for North Caro'' : ; RALEIQM, X C . . i. w