Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / June 19, 1903, edition 1 / Page 4
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i ' "" ' 1 V ! v V V N x V V V V V " , " 1 THE MORNING PQ5T; FRIDAY. JUNE 191903 1 4 1 : 1 : .1. THE MORNING POST KlLilGH, Bt. 0. PUBLISH BD DAILY BI XMH KORTH CAROLINA FUBLlHI?fO CO KOBEKlin. FKKJIAN titer , tVBSCK irTION PHICB ! $5.00 One Year 2 50 ftix Months.... Three Months 50 Oue Month Offlce In the Pullen Building. I Fayctteville Street. ' The Post will publish brief le Iters on subjects of general Interest. The writ er's name must accompany theti,le""; Anonymous communications will . no be noticed. Rejected manuscript wiu not be returned. Brief letters of locl news from any section of the Stale will be thankfuJy Merely personal controversies will rot be tolerated. Address all business letter" and com munications for publication to , MORNING POST. The telegraphic news service of THE MORNING POST is absolutely full ana complete, and is unequaled by any 'morning newspaper Eouth of Hew ;York. jThls service is furnished us un der special arrangements with THIS LAFFAN NEWS BUREAU of the New York Sun. and is the same service that is used by The Sun itself, which I is known to be superior to any service in any newspaper in the United . States. This service is received nightly by wire in the offlce of THE MORN ING POST directly from the New York Sun. and includes special cables and domestic news and all commercial and market reports. WASHINGTON BUREAU! Kimball Building:, 1417 G. St. N. TV. EASTERN OFFICE. I WESTERN OFFICE I40KBiian St.. 517 V. 8. Eiprm t MiwTork. Bi'd. union- jry'rtisrr ot tv W. Flo jd Special .Agency. Kakscrlbera f THB POST are re created to nele the date tbe label ef fr paper and end la their renewal eefere (be explrallen. Taxis wlllpre iBlidlilBer elncle leave. All pa pers vrlll be dleeeatlnaed wSaea lite line paid np txslrei THE WEATHER TODAY; ... Pair. si a Q FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1903. HONORS TO THB COHFKDEB1TE I ' DIAD AT ClMPcnilB On Thursday, June 11th, under the immediate auspices of the R. E. Lee Chapter, Daughters of the Confederacy, at Columbus, Ohio, of which organiza tion Mrs. John H$ Winder, formerly of this 'i city, is President, the graves of the Confederate jsoldiers who died in prison and now sleep their last sleep in Camp Chase cemetery near that city, 'were sacredly and lovingly remembered In this performance of duty these Daughters of the South were assisted, In deed and in sympathy by the sol diers of the North, who met these brave Confederates on the field of bat tle, and their friends The occasion is thus gracefully and patriotically referred to by the Colum bus (Ohio) Citizen of the 10th: I "Tomorrow the Confederate Associa tion of this city, with the assistance of j friends of the North and South, rep resenting both sides of the great con flict of 1860-4, will pay an affectionate' tribute to the memory of the Confed erate soldiers who sleep amid the scenes of their former imprisonment at Camp Chase. This ceremony has come to be an annual one in Columbus, and it is not only fitting in itself and emblematic of the restored grandeur of the republic, but it brings Columbus into prominent view every year as the chief city of the North, where the evidence of this restoration is thus emphasized before the eyes of the whole country. "The exercises at Camp Chase have not become possible "without a long period of contemplation of the real causes which led to the fratricidal strife of the civil war. They have not become possible except through the medium of a liberal view of the effects of that war, and they would now be Impossible if brave men on both sides of the controversy had not in recent years crowned their achievements of arms with the more lasting honors of peace and reconciliation, j "The country is at last ready to con cede with unanimity that there was no material difference, so far as men were concerned, between the Northern and the Confederate soldier. Each fought for what he believed was right, and either would have adopted the princi ples and tactics of the other if their environments had been exchanged. Cer-1 tainly there was no difference between the sacrifices of the two armies no dif ference between, the anguish of a deso- iatea name or the pain of a broken heart on" one side or the other of Mason and Dixon's line. "Having adjusted what differences re mained after the war, and having come to a complete reunion of all our inter ests, whether those pertaining to the government or to society' in general, it Is an honor which this generation of the North now pays to itself to remem ber with such ceremonies as those to be bserved tomorrow at Camp Chase, the rirtues and sacrifices of the heroes of Ihe Lost Cause. The annual observance f this day will not be omitted as. long M each returning spring blesses with i it mun and sanctifies with Its rains the grass that grows green, above these Confederate graves." KTlBROPfiFCL IF ROT Says the Winston Sentinel: ' ! "Several- northern capitalists have been here within the past few days con sulting about the advisability of estab lishing a new Industry in our midst." The time for blackberry pie have ax rove, we believe. This is always" en couraging to ye country scribe. This, from the Greensboro Record, points a moral as well as adorns a tale which cannot be too seriously consid ered by the people of every community: "While other places in the State are now footing up the cost of smallpox during the past winter, it is interest ing to know that Greensboro's bill, in cluding doctors and all other expenses, will not foot up more than $200. The cause of this is the fact that some years ago the city adopted compulsory vaccination and has stuck right to it ever since. It is also interesting to note that every case of genuine small pox was that of a person who had not been vaccinated. There were one or two cases of varioloid where the pa tients did not even go to bed. These cases occurred where there was a gen uine case of the disease- in the same house. There was no scare or any thing resembling it in Greensboro dur ing the whole time. For all this the tmblic is indebted to ur. Harrison. county physician, who had charge of the work and has had charge of it for some years." This loathsome disease has been very costly : to many communities in inia State during the past several years, and, with the recent report of the Sec retary of the State Board of : Health, Dr. Lewis, that there were over 4,000 cases in the State within the past year and iver 100 deaths therefrom, it is evident the time for preventive measures has by no means passed. And there is but one certain preventive, to wit, wholesale and general vaccination. The result in Guilford as stated by our cotemporary establishes this, were there not already sufficient evidence of the fact. A strict observance of the law for the law exists and is mandatory on the health officers of every county -and community only will result in a final eradication of the disease. There is no use of a panic anywhere when the officers promptly isolate the case on discovery; and when it is known that the strictest regulations in this respect are prepared and will be enforced, no public anxiety need be felt. But the surest method of avoid ance is the vaccination of everybody old and young in the community, ard this, could, be attended to every year, certainly fcvery two years, with an assurance of safety. It is an important matter to the coun ties and towns of this State in more particulars than one, in dollars and cents, and the loss thereof in direct cost or through fear is by no means incon siderable. It should be looked after as same people look after every other possible-misfortune, and strict enforcement of the law as to vaccination should be insisted upon. According to the report of the Inter State Railroad Commission for the year ending June 30th, 1902, it is shown that there was an increase in the net earnings above operating expenses but not including interest, taxes or div idendsof $52,002,753 over those of the year ended June 30th, 1901. Notwith standing the heavy, we may say large ly increased, business of the year just ending, the increase of net earnings above those of last year will be less than $10,000,000. This is accounted for as due partially .to the coal strike, but particularly to -j the expenditures for permanent improvements in the higher cost of all material entering into rail way construction or maintenance and of wages of employees, the latter being quite marked. The hope has been hitherto that this increase in operating expenses would Le made up by anttnerease of general business and by the higher freight tariffs which in very many instances. at least, the railways have been ena Died to charge, says the New York Sun. No one can predict what the quantity of railway business will be in the coming year, but up to the present time the hope of the railway managers that they will be able to keep up their net earnings to the high stand ards of preceding years by the imposi tion of higher charges for carrying freight seems not to have been real ized. It is - probable, however, that railway Improvements will no.t be plan ned as extensively in the coming year as they were in the present one. A year agt or more this paper called :attentlon to the working of a night force in the cotton mills as an evil In that It was but adding to the over production which sooner or later would cripple the milling industry and the labor as well. The following from the Charlotte Even ing Chronicle tells the story: "I believe one good result 'will fol low the depression in yie mill business, said a cotton manufacturer today. 'When it became necessary to curtail production, many "of the mills laid off J their night forces and are now operat- 1 ling Is tht day time only. Now, ing these people who were employed at ; night must work somewhere, and it is ; reasonable .to .suppose that most ofj ne neavy thinners oi tne uepan them have secured day jobs. It stands j ment are now engaged upon the prob- to reason that, so long as they can : work by daylight, they will not take ! a night job, and. some of the mills are going to have a hard time start- j ing up at night again. Good help Is not too plentiful, anyway, and most of the better class of operatives will . . . i ih. eventually manage to keep out of the, mills at night." It is difficult for any, one to resist the temptation to strain every nerve tl Its utmost to meet what may be an immediate demand, and thus gain the advantage temporary though it may be. In this day of close business con tests it would seem to be necessary, for every little thus gained may add to the substantiality of the undertak ing. In the long run, however, the re sult quite offsets if it does not over- balance the advantage thus gained. In I running the cotton mills at such high I pressure for any length of time must I result in a market glut such as has worked with more or less injury to the mills during the past two years. The Duplin Journal quotes the cen sus of 1900 as authority to show that Duplin is the largest producing straw berry county of the State and one of the largest in the South, one county ln Maryland and one Hn Virginia only excelling it, the yield of the county for the year reported being 4,493,550 quarts. At 5 cents per quart only this would mean 5255,000 for the good farmers of that county for this one crop alone. But the Journal does not drop the matter here. It asserts, and as truly as experience proves, that crop3 of lettuce, beans, peas, watermelons, can taloupes, cucumbers, squash, onions, and huckleberries are also profitably cultivated for the northern market, while cotton, corn and tobacco con stitute the staple crops. Our cotemporary may well challenge this or any other State for a more "suitable, prosperous, home-life" than is enjoyed by the energetic farmer of Duplin county. There must be a fascination about Servia as irresistable to the Servian as the victims of snakes are said to be to the charms of that creature. From the history of that little bit of territory and people now given out people accept the crown thereof with the expectation of assassination, but satisfied to thus shuffle off the coil for the privilege and possible privi leges of one sort or another enjoyed for the more or less brief season. The Servian is an interesting animal show of himself. Death by suicide has become as fre quent in this State of late as that by foul means, laudanum, carbolic acid as well as the pistol getting in their work. The "failure of the courts" to hang somebody, specially the last per son in hand because of the other crimes, must have something to do with this cyclone of self-destruction now sweeping over the State. Like all epidemics let us hope both phases of destruction will soon have- expended themselves. Our esteemed cotemporary the Davie Record tells us without a blush: "The Lord and the Republican party take care of this country of, ours in spite of Democratic opposition' Now really, friend, how can you say that the Lord has anything to do with the fraud scandals now being unearth ed in Washington or with the wicked trusts which a. Republican tariff has built up and maintains. You must not take the name of the Lord in vain. Our Hillsboro cotemporary the Or ange County Observer prints in full what it styles "Senator Pritchard's chicken law," which it states "makes it unlawful for any person in Hills boro or Orange county to permit tur keys, geese, . chickens, &c, to run at large." Bro. Harris must feel lone some since this law went into effect. The Duplin Journal, under the guid ance of Messrs John M. Falson and D. S. Hines, has entered upon its third year. The Journal is easily one of the foremost of county papers in the state, not only newsy but edited with con spicuous ability. The Post wishes it the fullest measure of prosperity. The policy of the power behind the Servian throne seems to be to Avip'J off the slate and start fresh, lenvins the dead past to bury its dead. There are times 4r? the lives of nations as well as of In Mduals when this may be wise. . " Admiral n liiuiy I'ci k nn; (Washington Cor. rhiladslphia Record.) The Navy Depirt:r.er.t statiioHr.i have decided that the presence n Admiral on board a b4ttlerh;;3 ; fifty tons to that.craffa weie V.. In addition to. the ;dC2d prs his gold-laced staff, who a:a gen.-: large, well-fed, ample-waited 3:: -men, the Admiral must have an a::;r, boat for , his own personal use, two extra bath tubs, one for his own use and one for the use of the guests he is supposed to entertain, and a large number of flags, books and instru- ments that are inseparable from the dignity of the commander of a fleet. or reducing tne weignt as rar as possible by cutting off such articles as can be spared by the Admiral. Up to te they have got no further than the extra bath tub. which they are inclined to regard as an unnecessary luxury " is n' ?! y, necessary, they ucuc v c, uitti. me jiuimrai a.iiu ma guest . j should bathe at the same time and the guest snouia be willing to use the Ad miral's 'tub. Cats, Bnlici i Barn Quickly Healed Chamberlain's Pain Balm is an anti septic liniment, and when applied to cuts, bruises and burns, causes them to heal without maturation and much more quickly than by the usual treat ment. For sale by W. G. Thomas and Robert Simpson. Harry Lahr Parrot (Newport CorresDondence New York Sun.) Harry Lehr. who has been conspic- i uous in the Introduction of things out of the ordinary in Newport social life, has another innovation. This time it is a parrot, a very green parrot, and it is such a valuable bird that nothing is too good for it. When Mr. and Mrs. Lehr arrived at Newport Polly trav eled with them, in charge of a maid. People who have had business at Neth ercliff say that the parrot is waited on at all times. Polly is quite a linguist, and it is un derstood that it can imitate Mr. Lehr to such a degree that the servants in the house are often puzzled to know if their master is .calling them. It was not until recently that the public .had an opportunity to appreciate how val uable a bird the green pet is. Fre quently Mr. Lehr has been seen walk ing about hi3 lawn and piazzas with the bird perched on his shoulder, but a few days ago it niade its first public appearance on the avenue, and attract ed no end of attention. Mr. Lehr was seen coming up the avenue in his trap with a green object behind him. At first people did not know what to make of it, but as he came closer it was found to be the par rot, which uttered a cry or whistling noise when anything particular seemed to please it. The appearance of Polly on the street has caused no end of talk. The only parrot that ever received marked at tention here was one owned by Mrs. Herman Oelrichs. The bird died two years ago in New York, and Mrs. Oel richs had a casket made for it. The bird was buried in the rose garden on her place, Rosecliffe. Sixty Barrels Per Acra (Duplin Journal.) The truckers at Calypeo are making large shipments of potatoes. The yield in that trucking belt (for that's what it is), has been very good this sea rch. In some instances 60 barrels per acre have been shipped. Mr. J. A. Shine shipped the first cu cumbers on Tlmrsday, June 11th, which sold at $2.75 a basket. O. K. and Tip Top farms followed the next day and all hope for a remunerative season for "Cukes." A SKIN OF fiEADTf tS AJOY FoTEVW DR. T. FEXIX GOUBAinD'S ORIENTAL CKEA3I. OB MAGICAL, BEAUTIFIKH Removes Tin. Pim. pies. Freckles, Moti Patches, Rash, and Skin dis eases, and ev ery blemish 0:1 beauty, and de fies detection It has aioc the teat of St rar, and it e Mrmleis we taste it to be cure It Is prop erly made. Ac cept no coun-, terfelt of sim-j : nar name. Dr.) j L. A. ' Say re j said to a lady ; of tbe baut-tor ( a patient ) "As tou ladles will use tbenj. I recommend 'GOV RACD'S CREAM' as tbe lusst harmful of a'.l tba skin preparatlocs." For sale by all Druggists and Taney Ooods Scalers la the "t'nlted States, Canada. nd Europe. . f RED. X. HpPkUNS. Proe'r. 37 Creatine SUN. Y. ore This Rocker $2.00. Without Arms $1.50. . A A Jd, i. ova J Cor. Wilmington and R A WOMAN'S BACK The Aches and Pains will Dis appear if the" Advice ci this Raleigh Citizen is Foi lowed A woman's back has many aches and pains. ; Most times 'tis the kidnes' fault. Bachache is really .kidney ache; That's why Doan's Kidney Pills cure it. Many Raleigh women know this. Read what one has to say about It: Jas. G. Upchurch, clerk, at 219 Smith field St., says: "We have used Doan's Kidney Pills with very satisfactory re sults. My wife has suffered with her back and kidneys, and I bought any number of remedies for her, but none of i them did her any good until I procured Dpan's Kidney Pills from Bobbitt Wynne Drug' Co.'s store, They acted immediately on the parts affected and appear to have cured her. It may re turn, but she has not complained of having any pain in her back sjince using the pills and it is to them that she at tributes her cure." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.; Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. Remember tfie name Doan's and take no other. Where the Work Is Bens (Charleston News and Courier.) There Is a good deal of preaching nowadays about irreverence of young people and their impatience with re ligious life. The people who have chil dren are more to blame for this than anybody else. If they would look after the training and education of their own people instead of adopting machine methods of kindergarten and Sunday school instruction in piety, probably there would be a very marked change in public sentiment toward the things which used to' be regarded as sacred. A Greti Injustice (North Carolina Christian Advocate.) The higher court confirmed the ac tion of the lower one (in Sewell suit against Seaboard for the Shelby rotten- egg business), and the decision is in line with others in this State;' but it sc-ems to us the doctrine laid down in these cases is a harsh one, and works injustice to the railroad companies. , aisy TheD Columbian Beauty Seed Corn, the premium corn or the world. It tooU the premium at the "World's Fair. Ttk e Corn is snow -white, larpre trrain and small Cob, weighs 60 POUNDS TO TH E BUSHEL. 3 TO 5 EARS TO THH STALK: grows from 250 to 300 BUSHELS TO THE ACRE. It Is worth lt weight in gold. The Seed from which this Corn .was. grown was brought her from Genoa. Italy, in 1800. by Col. Geo. Siewer3. The price of this valuabla Corn is. by mail, postage paid. HALF POUND 30c. ONE POUND BOc. THREE POUNDS $1.00. ONE PECK $2.50. HALF BUSHEL $4.00. ONH BUSHEL $7.00, TWO BUSHELS $12.00.- Every ackage guaranteed to glva satisfaction or money cheeruflly refunded at once. I refer ydd to S. E. Stew art, postmaster at this place, or to any reliable merchant. Order today and b ready to plant when the season comes. The best Is always the cheapfcat. Fo a success. The Daisy Seed Farm, Daisy. Forsyth County, N. O, Institute I Young Women Thorough instruction in all departments of Female Education. rt Borden Furniture Go., Hargett Sts. S Buy from the Maker 3 AND SAVE ri St Pays to i Buy the Best ! H ' This is especially true of pN i nnos. A niano you have la your home fcr years and year your children grow up with It it becomes In fact a member of your family. The Artistic StlefTia Best of All Pianos ! Not because we say so, but because we make It no! And, being its makers, we sell It to you at a very low price DIRECT FROM THE FACTORY. You save the dealsers profits, which, in most cases are enormous. INVESTIGATE I STIEFF, 6 Granby Street NORFOLK, VA. The Pretty New Electric Sign, On Exchange Street, ia at the saloon where you gel nothing but the finest Wines Liquors and the coldest, fresh BEER in the city. . The physicians recommend; our iquors for medicinal purposes. Look for the sign. R. W. YOUNG - Positively Cured at Yoiir HonM. I completely removeT nd blb jrom xne law "rri t-LVwi the skin clear; smooth k Consultation free. Write fr Book. JOHN H. WOODBURTU. i. ca nmit ! ttt.. Mew Teric. Seed 'Farm. fort: More than half our life at home i9 spent on the porch. Why not be as comfortable there as you seek to be indoors ? We have Porch Rockers, CHairs, Benches, Hammocks, Swings and all the requisites, the porch. for life on jO I MUSIC. I j Using the Leschet- j I izky System. Send for 1 I . j catalogue. J 1 W JAS. DINWID0IE,M.A..S 8 A a-rinelpal. j I & 9 RALEIGH, N. C. J RALEIGH, N. C,
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 19, 1903, edition 1
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