Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / May 26, 1903, edition 1 / Page 4
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- KCTHE MORNING POSTa TUESDAY, MAY s6 1903 I 4 1 i I 1 if " 1 l i I M li 5 . --. a i- i ' 1 c . - . i 1 I t t 53 i ? 1 . Lthe morning post I KALB1GH, N. ' I PUBLISHED DAII- BS TJI j,ORTU CAROLINA PIBLHHIS6CO "robbkt in. rtmnAN if - t. - Bdltr L L- 55.00 tone Tear. . 50 Slx Months -5 Threev Months.... One ilonth ......... -a" Office In the Pullen Building. Fayetteville Street. . The Post will publish brief , letters on j subjects of general interest. The wit .. . - -nr,nr the letter. en name musi tt.wuii"i -Anonymous- communications will noi tw RoioctPd manuscript wui ! not be returned. 3 - . ' - 1 nam from any i xsnei ieiiera ui w f stat -win be thanltruiiy U deceived. . .- ... jjj Merely personal controversies win if ot be tolerated. S Address all business letter and com- 5 municatlons for publication to mx. HORNING POST. , The telegraphic news service of THE MORNING POST is absolutely full and complete, and is unequaled by any morning newspaper south of New jider special arrangements with - p s rmttts tutu a TWtTTO i 1 1 of the New York Run, and is the same III service that is used by The Sun Itself. A I which is known to be superior to any I service In any newspaper in the United States. This service is received nightly j by wire in the office of THE MORN f? ING POST directly from the New J Yorkj Sun, and includes special cables if'and domestic news and all commercial 'if and market reports. 4j TTASHINGTOS BUREAU! Kimball Balldlnc. 1417 G. St. N. XV. FASTEKN OFFICE. 1 WESTERN OFFICE I 140 Nassau St.. 617 U. 8. Ezpren . p Nw York. I Bld.Chlo Ircdarice o' tTe VV. Floyd Spaolal i- Agcy. ' Snttserlber t THE POUT are re (Btttid to mot tb date on tb label of their paper and lend In : their renewal before the expiration. Thla wlllsre Tin(mlMli. or a single leene. All pat pert will be discontinued when ue time paid np expires . ' THE WEATHER TODAY; P Q Fair; cooler. - ; TUESDAY, MAY 26, 1903. i - ,. THE RAILHAD SHOPS Mayor Powell exercised the prompt ness The: Post expected of him in mov ing ;n the matter of eectiring the Sea board railroad shops, for the city by consulting with various citizens and in vestigating conditions. Learning that thedamage done by fire to the Ports mouth plant was a trifling affair com pared to the sensational story first pub lished, that the machine shops nor ma chiftery were damaged and therefore thejlcompany could have no occasion for I removal as first thought by some of our citizens might be the case, the .mayor concluded that action on part of bur citizens with such removal in view would be futile; but 'that the authorities and citizens were ready to mejit the Seaboard on the most favor able terms as to tiny plan that may be j at all Considered by the company, h shops in this city will be rebuilt and re-equipped, and it is hoped also wla be enlarged at an early date. For the present, however, no elaborate works jwill be established here or else where,! save the enlargement contem plated iat Portsmouth. The authorities of the Southern Rail way offer a large reward for the person or J persons who it is therein charged plaqed an obstruction upon the track or said road, causing the wreck near this', city last week. It is known, as can' be seen by any one, that the acci dent was not caused by "rotten" or 'any' other tfes, but that the fore (or pony) : wheels of the engine jumped the . rails nd, cutting the bolts and driving inj he: spikes holding the rails, caused the' latter to be thrown off and all the wheels of the heavy engine to leave ! the track and the coaches to follow. h . - W irtf er from this offer of reward by Mr. ckert that the authorities have j reason to believe that some object was bq placed on the track as to cause the wheelis to Jump, if so, no punishment could he too severe. To thus attempt to destroy life as well as property is i more j wanton than any other method l villaiiy can resort to. That something , caused the wheels to jump is beyond . question, whether placed on the track by design or accidentally. It is to be hoped hat Buch Investigation will be made! as to disclose the real cause. It was certainly a remarkable accident, i both as to the manner of its occur rence; and that no serious injury re sulted i T The United States are more directly corjcerned with' the Russian assaults upon the Jews than any other country, because the effect seems to promise a general exodus of that cruelly treated people-to this country. In this view m tie s!tuon tfvwovaa seem that our 4.1 I .--' :A government would be Justified In at least making earnest enquiry into the cause which can threaten such immi gration to our shores. If the persecu tion is carried on for the purpose of driving these unfortunate . people from Russia knowing there is no other coun try that will permit them toenter upon Its territory save the United States It presents-a very serious question for the consideration of this government, if it does not appeal to the humane instincts of mankind generally. To have eight or ten millions of this class of people dumped upon our shores with in as many years would entail a. fear ful condition of affairs, we can but be lieve. That many can oome and be absorbed may be true, but a flood of such dimensions as contemplated can not fall to cause very embarrassing results. Senator Simmons' speech before the New York Society of North Carolinians on the "race problem" has attracted more attention than any utterance on that subject in a decade. It was not animated by unfriendliness to the col ored man, as some extremists of the equality idea insist, but it discovered with the acumen of the statesman a new danger which enthusiasts may per mit themselves to encourage an4 de velop which will result as disastrously in the future as other schemes intended for the elevation of the race have re sulted in the pastl Senator Simmons nor any other Southerner would de prive the negro of a single opportunity to develop the best that is in him or of which he may be capable, but they in sist In behalf of the future welfare and happiness of the negro himself that the opportunities which are of fered shall be along lines that will lead to accomplishments the ne gro can enjoy and profit by. There are no smarter, more apt, people on earth than the Chinese, yet all know the severe restrictions and limitations placed around and upon them in this country, and why. It Is primarily to prevent a. conflict which could and would result disastrously to the weaker race which contact and competition with the white "race would bring about. Mr. Simmons calls attention to the danger to befall the negro just so soon as enough of the race become educated to enter Into competition with the white race In what is, mistakenly, called the higher branches of industry. He and his Southern supporters wh.o are the only real as they are the best friends of the negroes, desire the mto be happy, con tented and prosperous to become own ers of their own vines and fig trees and he and they know the fields of industry In which these things can be achieved and that which, with very, very few exceptions, the race is 'pre pared to follow with success for them selves and satisfaction to all. The speech was as Important as it was an able one; the criticisms of it have been few, while the endorsements it has received North and South em phasize its force and present useful ness. At Olympia, the capital of the State of Washington, our State "nearest the north pole," as the New York Sun de scribes it, the President, of the United States concluded a speech on Friday with these words: "The government of this nation Is not and never shall be a government by a plutocracy. It is not and never shall be a government by a mob. It is and it ever shall be a government by. the people, by and through the law." "Words of greater importance have not been uttered within a generation, if ever. They courageously and patri otically meet the situation, and give emphasis to the sentiment and deter mination which inspires every true American. It covers with the three short sentences the fundamental basis upon which our government is builded, and upon which it must be maintained to preserve the labor of the fathers to the future generations. They were words fitly spoken, at a most opportune time, and that they received the "pro longed cheers and applause" of those who heard them evidences the readi ness of the people to maintain this government as it was builded. Now let Mr. Roosevelt, as President, live up to his knowledge "of his duty without deviation to either the right or the left. The Greenville Reflector rises to re- mark: "Mary Ann up at Washington breaks Into The Morhing Post to talk about the People's party. If Mary Ann has This popular remedy never falls to effectually cure Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick Headache, Biliousness And ALL DISEASES arising: from a Torpid Liver and Bad Digestion . The natural result is good appetite and solid flesh. Dose small; elegant ly sugar coated and easy to swallow. Take Wo g"ftt!ftf- - Titf fi no respect for the dead. The Post should have." The Post, mine frendt, cannot refuse kindly reference to the dead on the part of the aggrieved. We still have a 'art, Bro. Reflector. Mr. Tillman has Joined the Nebraska Knockers Club. Evidently we shall have to love Grover Cleveland for the enemies he -has made whether we want to or not, is the Rochester (N. Y.) Her ald's view of the matter. An exchange says: "The 'race problem is being fought out in the New York pulpits. This is evidence that the problems of New York city, are too much for the preach ers. A distant problem is always easier and safer to -handle." And so much easier to misrepresent. Mr. Roosevelt reached his "apogee" at Seattle on Saturday, says the New York Sun. The "hully-gee" part of his perform ance will come a little later, next year perhaps. It may be that since speculator E. H. Harriman has had his appendix clipped he may riot be so "unsafe" in handling railroad stocks as Mr. Morgan, once thought he was. ' Many Beverascs are so vastly improved by the added richness imparted by the use of Bor den's' Eagle Brand Condensed Milk. The Eagle Brand is prepared from the milk of herds of well fed, housed, groomed cows of native breeds. Every can is tested and is therefore reliable. Some Good Ones from the Tarboro : Southerner The Farmers' Protective Association of Pitt are considering the building, of a cotton seed oil mill at Green ville, arfR probably a fertilizer factory. The roads in Rocky Mount township have been decidedly improved. Super visor House says he expects to begin on the Battleboro roads in July, and will not leave the township till every load has been thoroughly worked. With all the dry weather cotton that is up has hot suffered. It is healthy nnd growing finely. A rain Is needed tomake the late planted sprout. Con siderable tobacco has not been trans planted, and a rain now may be too late, the. plants having become tough and stunted. No less than twenty-one new graded schools will open in this State next fall. It is not bad prophesy to predict that in a score of years, there will be a graded school in nearly every township in the .State and a county high school at every county, seat. Then North Carolina will not rank highest in the percentage of illiterate t whites as it did in 1900. Even the next census Is expected to show aft Improvement. A little life may be sacrificed to a sudden attack of croup if you don't have Dr. Thomas Electric Oil on' hand for the emergency. Ffr. Keesevell at Hie Apogre (New York Sun, Saturday.) Today is a notable dale in the Pres ident's itinerarybecause it marks his farthest from the" ' post of Executive duty, his nearest to the north pole, and the turning point in the remarka ble journey which has tested his en ergies, physical and mental, since he set forth from Washington about eight weeks ago. After leaving Seattle Mr. Roosevelt's face will be turned steadi ly toward the White House and the comparative seclusion which that man sion affords. It is too early to sum up the results of the most extensive scheme of travel which ' any President of the United States ever undertook while in office. The trouble Is not over, nor are the wayside delights exhausted. According to the original schedule, which has been so conscientiously observed up to date, Mr. Roosevelt has yet not less than thirty-six cities to visit, and therefore not less than thirty-six first class speeches to make, without reck oning the incidental stops and less elaborate communings with the people along the route. - Few men now living are capable of extracting such continuous enjoyment from a terrestrial progress so rapid end ambitious. Probably even Mr. Roosevelt would have wearied long ago of the everlasting chug-chug of the locomotive ahead and the eternal plinkety-pllnk of the wheels oyer the rails beneath his private car had he not been sustained not only by a phe nomenal buoyancy of personal temper ament but also by a strong sense of duty to the people whose President he is. It may be said truthfully that he has neglected no opportunity - since April. 1 to inform himself of the state of public opinion. - The scheduled date of the President's arrival in Washington is June 5, two weeks from yesterday. If present ar rangements are carried out, after a brief sojourn of three or four days at the executive mansion Mr, Roosevelt will proceed in his private car to Cleveland, Ohio, where the Hon. Mar cus Aurelius Hanna expects to enter tain him . socially. This little supple mentary trip has no possible political significance; the State convention of the Ohio Republicans will have been held and adjourned more than a week before Mr. Roosevelt next sees Mr. Hanna. . For the remainder of the President' journey of continental exploration, for the special supplementary trip to visit Mr. Hanna's household, and for all sub sequent peregrinations by land or sea which his restless energy may impel him to undertake, we wish him the same uncommon good luck, high spirits end immunity from accident or , seri ous annoyance as have happily attend cd his prodigious r wanderings during tiie past eight weeks. ."'" THE BOARDING HOl'RB SUNDAY How sad to recall are the boarding house suppers Each dread Sunday eventide drags into view; . The hungriest tramp on his uttermost tippers. Could scarce find a thing on the table 'twould doj . . The bit of cold tongue and preserves you can bet: on, The salad laid out in Its lettuce-leaf shroud. The bread that has all of the crust it can get on .Those Sabbath day suppers should hot be allowed. Those heart-breaking suppers, those boarding-house suppers, Those Sabbath day suppers should not be allowed. ! Those heart-breaking suppers, those boarding-house suppers, Those Sabbath day suppers should not be allowed. '" If ever I dwell 'neath my own vine and figtree, And have a wee home where I (think I) am boss.' I'll let all the salad arid cold pickled pig pie be ' Right where I consign them when e'er I am cross. And each Sunday evening I'll have a big dinner j -Of beefsteak and mushrooms and pie and ice-cream." At which ev'ry wretched, cold-ham- ridden sinner - i May fill to the brim with the food of his dream ' Avant, ye bum suppers, Ve boarding- house suppers, Ye Sabbath day suppers that poison my dream!; Baltimore American. A Farmer Straightened Oat A man living on a farm near here came in a short time ao completely doubled up with rheumatism. I hand ed him a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Palni.and told him to use it freely and if not satisfied after using it he need not pay accent for it," says C. P. Ray- der of Pattens Mills, N. Y. "A few days later he walked Into the store as straight as a string and handed me a dollar, saying, 'Give me another bot tle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. T want it in the house all the time, for it cured me.' " : For sale by W. G. Thomas and Robert Simpson. One in four Albanians dies by vio lence. ' . Where to "pend the Summer At C & O, Reserta The Chesapeake & Ohio Railway have issued their Summer Folder for , the season of 1903, giving list of summer homes on that ! line and which can be obtained from the C. & O. Ticket Offices or by addressing W. O. Warthen, D. P. A., C. & O. Ry., Richmond Va. This folder is handsomely illustrated. giving the rates at the various seaside, Mountain Resorts and Summer Homes for which the C. & O. is particularly noted. . f 3.30 Rate to Greensboro S3 30 $3.30 RATE TO GREENSBORO $3.30. Southern Railway announces above rate Raleigh to Greensboro, N. C, and return, account Commencement Exer cises State Normal and Industrial Col lege. Tickets on sale Mav 23. 2. 2S and 26; final limit May 29, 1903. T. E. GREEN, C. T. A., Raleigh, N, C. Special flairs via . A. I.. Hi- $1.30 Raleigh ; to Oxford, N. C., and return, account commencement exercises Oxford Seminary, May 17-1S. Tickets sold May 15 and 16; final return limit May 2.0." Commencement exercises tmp-. in stitute, Raleigh, N. C, May ll to 20th. AicKets sold from all points in North Carolina at reduced rates. Tickets sold May 15, 16 and 17; final limit May 21st. or lniormatlon apply to C. H. GATTIS, City Pass, and TiPkt -Agent, Raleigh, N. C. H .6. LEARD, Trav. Pass.!; A-.nf Raleigh, N. 0. ' Sfrrw A a v 1 trw MSTiriOOKCASE can be? moved IT GROWJ' Oie UNIT at &, WITH YOUR 1 time withouh LIBRARY duturbiixd corxteixtj fTTTED WITK PERPECTION ROLLER-BEAR! DUJT-PR005 O0OW iCAU. AND Sit Tf.tn OK. iSTOR" SPRING I'Sr kept" 1 if IN A B DYSPEPSIA OF WOMEN. z- i f 'Pill iiH ' Mrs. E. B. BradshaWj 01 Guthrie, Okla., cured of a severe case by Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. A great many women suffer with a form of indigestion or dyspepsia which, does not seem to yield to ordinary medical treatment. While the symp toms seem to be similar to those of ordinary indigestion, yet the medi cines universally prescribed do not seem to restore the patient's normal condition. , , , Mrs. Pinkham claims that there is a kind of dyspepsia that is caused by derangement of the female organ ism, and which, while it causey dis turbance similar to ordinary indiges tion, cannot be relieved without a medicine which' not only acts as a stomach tonicf but has peculiar uterine tonic effects as well. ' - ters prove beyond question tliair nothing: will relieve mis uisu v--lng condition so surely as iLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. It always works in har mony with the female system. Mrsf Pinkham advises sick women free. Address Liynn, Mas. Summer Excnnlea Raits x Commencing on Mav 17th. the Sea board Air Line Railway will sell round trip summer (excursion tickets to teachers and students from the various colleges to points which $ummer ex cursion tickets applv. For further in formation apply to C. H. GATTIS, C. P. & T. A., Yarborough House. Raleigh, N. C. Tliie Daisy Seed Farm. Columbian Beauty Seed Corn, the premium corn of the world. It look the premium at the IWorld's Fair. The Corn Is snow white, large ifraln and small Cob. weighs 60 POUNDS TO TH E BUSHEL. 3 TO 5 EARS TO TUB STALKi grows from 250 to 300 BUSHELS TO THE ACRE. It is worth its weight in gold. The Seed from which this Corn was grown was brought her from Genoa. Italy, in 1890. by Col. GeaSiewers. The price of this valuable Corn is. by mail, postage paid. HALF POUND 30c. ONE POUND 50c. THREE POUNDS $1.00, ONE PECK $2.50. HALF BUSHEL $4.00. ONE BUSHEL, $7.00. TWO BUSHELS $12.00. Every ackage sruaranteed to give satisfaction or money cheeruflly refunded at once. I refer you to S. E. SteW arf, postmaster at this place, or to any reliable merchant. Order todav and be ready to plant when the season comes. The best is always the cheapwt., F a success. - . ;-;' - The Daisy Seed Farm, " " ' : '",. ' Daisy. Forsyth County, N. C. Institute FOB Young Women Thorough instruction in all departments of Female Education. u Ihis is the ONE THING that occupies tk minds of all ' Good Housewives in May. We are ready to assist jou in replacing the old piece with the . NEW PIECES OF FURNITURE. Or it may be you will, furnish a room en tirely with new. MATTRP-a "PAL ELASTIC FELT than hf "iake Summer cooler tWthe old, hard one you are now slcc,- Royali & Borden Furniture Co., Co, Wilmington and Hargett Sts., RALEIGH, X. C "TIME HONORED "STIEFF For a hxlt century the st'.el Piano has taken the prize, 0ye an. others at all North Carolina Palm and throughout the United States wherever exhibited. ' The "Sweet-Toned" rht . y the only "Art" Piano sold to the i retaa traae direct from the manufacturer In North Carolina. Prompt attention given all mail orders. i Sole Asrents for the celebrated Cecilian Piano-Player. . Investigate' the Stleft Tyfor buying. Wiy make -prices ani terms to suit you. A postal card to us mav sav? you a HUNDRED DOLLARS. CHAS. M. STEIFF, " . ' Raleigh, :. c. A. W, CHANDLER Fadtory Representative. The Pretty New L On Exchange Street, .is at the saloon where yoi get nothing but the finest Wines, Liquors and the coldest, fresh BEER in the city. The physicians recommend our iquors for medici nal purposes. Look for the sign. K.. W. YOUNG. Lareg Pores PnaltlvAlw Cufari n Vnur Uo.m. 1 completely remove every spot and blemish num me lace or Doay, rendering the skin clear, smooth and healthy. onsuuauon iree. write tor Book. JOHN H. WOODBURV n I ae vrert inn nu, iw vnru. Conservatory Sanaa. OP MUSIC. Using the Leschet izky System, Send for catalogue. JAS. DINVVID0IE,M.A Principal, I RALEIGH, N. C. j
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 26, 1903, edition 1
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