Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Sept. 22, 1904, edition 1 / Page 4
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tTHB MORNING POST. ffHtritSMtf4 BEPTEMBBE 3 3 H)&t v1: 1 1 -:! 1 ' 1! I ill i I 3 ,J it ill 31 K MORNINGPOST 15te PUBLISHED DAILY BY THE N. C. PUBLISHING CO. 2lleigh, N. C ROBERT M. PHILLIPS I StifasciiptionPrici One Year ...... 5 Six Months 2 50 Chf9 Months - 125 n HfK .m t Ofio In the Pullen Buildlns. t Fayettevllle Street. - The Toat -will publish brief letters on Object of ceneral Interest. Th wri ter's nam must accompany the letter. Ajanouyiuous communications will not 3w returned . Brief letters cf lacal news from any, vactiou of th State -will b thankfully, 7soafrtf. i Merely personal eontroversles will tfest bet tolerated, i Address all business letters and com SBttnicattiexui - for publication to THB SttORNINO POST. The telegrapfcio news service of THB MORNING POST ts absolutely full and complete, and Is urtequaled by any tnorninjf newspaper south of New (York. This service Is furnished u tender special arrangements with -THB LAFFAN NEWS BUREAU mt the New York Sun, and Is the earn service that Is used by the Sun Itself, Which It known to be superior to any ervioe to any newspaper in the United Btates. This service !s received nightly iby wire in the of3oe of THE MORN ING POST directly from the New York Bun, and includes special cables and domestio news and all commercial and Snarket reports. t In charge 0f the SteY W. Floyd Spe cial Agency. . ' WASHINGTON RUHBAUt . Rtmbcll ESntldin?, 1417 G. St. .Eastern rrici: mKiuau At.. . New York WZSTEKST OTTICE: Si 7 U. S. Express Building, Chicago In charge of the Steve W. Floyd Spe cial Agency. Subscribers to The Post are requested note the date on the label of their paper and send in their renewal before be expiration. This will prevent miss ing of a single issue. All papers will be discontinued when the time pall HP expires. ' THURSDAY, SEPT. 22, 1904.' This Is the date when the days and fche nights are of equal length. .-3- The Republican party is not the only "stand-pat" concern in the world. The Baltic fleet is willing to stay where it is. And now we are informed that the Kuropatkin march is the latest musical production. It should be a retreating gallop. It seems from the press reports that Mr. Murphy was something of a Horn blower in the New York convention yesterday. " A cable dispatch says that Kuroki is tiot engaged. Well, he may not be" now, but he was pretty busily engaged only a short while ago. The rice crop in Japan is said to be.! the finest in years. With a big rics ci op and a long string of victories the Jap empire is getting along first-rate. A contemporary heads a half-column story: "A Crank at Oyster Bay." livery body knew that before, and it's the business of . a newspaper to print news. The Republican candidate has de scribed the treasury deficit as imagi nary. A contemporary says he can't say as much for the grafters that led to it. Those who are talking about the po litical burial of the Honorable Thomas C. Piatt will have to revise their state ments next year, if all hands are still pn deck then. It Is said that Carrie Nation has an nounced her intention of visiting the "model saloon" in New York. She'll find it modelled after most of the other common grog-shops she has seen in the past. The esteemed Winston-Salem Jour nal has donned a new dress, put in a new press and linotype machine. With this equipment it can better serve its patrons and look better. We wish it pontinued growth and prosperitj'. If the nomination of Judge Herrick for governor of New York pleases Judge Parker, as much as it means to the" latter, we suppose the rest of the country may accept the action of the Saratoga convention as satisfacio.-y. We see It stated that German medi cal journals are advocating a remedy for appendicitis that consists in walk ing on all-fours for twenty minutes four times a day. It has been previ ously stated that the appendix is what Is left, In the process of evolution, of what was one time a monkey's tail-! r No, sir. This all-fpurs business is" too suggestive. We decline - to be made monkeys of any more, v MR, HICKS IS CETTIfJG FUNNY Mr. Thurston T. Hicks of. Henderson, a Republican .candidate for presidential elector, is evidently finding It a hard matter to arouse any excitement or enthusiasm in this campaign. He is making strenuous efforts to inject the race question being a new recruit himself to the Republican party, on of the lily-white variety, we should judge into the contest. As a sample of his efforts we copy a letter received from him under date of September 20, as follows: . "A whole day has now passed and the conflict between you and your friend Robert Treat Paine, Democrat, of Boston, over the right of Booker T. to dine at the "White House has not been settled. Neither have Judge Parker, D. B. Hill and Grover Cleve land explained why they enacted laws or allowed them to remain on the books in New York, compelling at tendance of whites and blacks at the ame schools. "Now, Mr. Editor, . don't you think you ought to abandon Parkec-and sup port a real, sure enough Yankee Roosevelt or else support only south- ern men for president? Have you any on a railroad track. What is the at assurance that Parker will not have traction, even dismissing any idea of t , . , ,Ua I danger? Why should anybody place two niggers to lunch at the White on a railr0ad siU cr iroIl ani House? Its not in his gold telegram ico to sleep? Strange as it may ap- or any of his letters or speeches to date, and I don't think its going to be in his letter next Monday. Write and get him to put it in." 1 The moment Mr. Paine, "Democrat, ' or .iioston, got reaay 10 aeiena me j That ,a strangef very strange. And "right of Booker T. to dine at the ,Jt brlnff9 on a new feature for the rail White House," he renounced Democ-' rcads to contend with in damage suits, racy and declared he would support Heretofore it has been hard to keep Roosevelt. That is the way the pa-down the price of damage suits when pers quoted him. And he did right, ! oniy the administrator, or widow, or for a man holding such views has no other friend of the man who was killed, place in the Democratic ranks. And asleep on the track or otherwise, did that old "mixed school" scare-crow the suing; but when the dead man him was hashed and rehashed so many J self appears as the plaintiff well, the years ago that its remains are musty; jig will be up. The average juror wilt and hoary. If it is still in effect in ' simply stand and deliver, that's all, New York, or ever was in effect in any remote quarter there, it-was simply a Question of taste if submitted to by ! . the whites, for there is room enough j nothinff more than a Republican side in North Carolina, where we live and;ahow.. The unique feature of it is that where Mr. Hicks lives, for all who the big show managers are paying the flnn't lilro it tn mrv anil coriil their I children to exclusive white schools. Then Mr. Hicks grows real funny and suggests that we abandon Parker and support a real Yankee Roosevelt or only southern men for president. . Tom Watson, by George! Go way, Mr. Hicks, you are only fooling. Do you really think any North Carolina Democrat, or any other South- ern Iemocrat, will be caught by such a poorly hooked angle worm as that? It has been charged that the Republi cans were paying Mr. Watson's cam paign expenses, and Mr. Marion Butler, known in North Carolina, has been heard .to eulogize Mr. Watson. And now comes Mr. Hicks giving the whole thing dead away. Get some corn-meal, Mr. Hicks, and some cotton and warm water, work it all together, put a little round ball oi it on the point of your hook, drop it into deep still water, then be very quiet and watch closely, and if you are ex pert in handling the rod you may catch a sucker. j stitutes a distance of fi.7 miles. The OUR TAR HEELS IN MAINE Preliminary movement of trains hai 'been, for inspection purposes and for It is not at all surprising to their the careful education of guards and friends in North Carolina that Gover- j motormen to a quick and accurate per nor Aycock and Judge W'nston are fonnance of their duties. The formal r'lvW- th i.iit r.,.- I opening of the road to the public will "w "1,l""-'be nere xney are on a speech-making j tour. It is in order to say, and no criticism will be made, that we all "knew it." While the glowing reports of their brilliant oratory and burning, forceful words are not surprising to us, yet the whole state feels grateful. It means that what we know other people are finding put and we are not" selflsjj that which - we have en- ; joyed, other people may enjoy also. It means that North Carolina is being introduced to strangers through these two brilliant representatives, and that New England folk will have a higher regrd for the entire south after being so richly entertained, and after meet ing and becoming acquainted with these two excellent representatives of southern manhood, brains and chiv alry. The Banpror News of Monday con tained a two-column account of a meeting at -which both Governor Ay cock and Judge Winston spoke. As Advice to the Aged. Age brings Infirmities, such as slug gish bowels, weak kidneys and blad der and TORPID LIVER. Q have a specific effect on these organs. ct:,,la4io 4 h o hnuwll ranclnff thrm ITSZZt :Xr .fotiSn. in youth and IMPARTING VIGOR- r to the kidneys, bladder and LIVER, They are adapted tro!d and young. , CTP n n fl im Mil 5 IT showing what -that - paper thinks of them we make the following extract: An audience of about 1,600 people, fashionable in make-up and apprecia tive in disposition, attended the much advertised educational mass meeting in City Hall, Saturday night. They heard two distinguished and eloquent speakers Governor Charles B. Aycock and JudgQ F. D. Winston of North Carolina; they were treated to some delightful oratory, filled with a warm blooded southern flavor which the northern bred speaker can never hope to attain; they were given a glimpse into the educational progress and in dustrial advancement of a sister state, and; although neither address, perhaps, covered the exact ground which had been expected, both provided rich food for a great deal of needful thought. The address of Governor Aycock was a vivid effort of oratory, and one which will linger long in the memory of his listeners, a clear and forceful exposi tion of certain fundamental truths, un deniable in its sweeping logic' and lightened by a keenly effective yet kindly wit. STRANGE, INDEED ! The editor of the Raleigh Evening I Times is always Interesting in what he says." Hear him in yesterday's paper: if ic Vinrr! tn sw'whv anvbody would .. ,ntvtl nr .. dowl, and KO to sleep pear, every once in a wiine we see that a man was killed by a locomo livp. cause suDDOsed to have been asleep on the track. And, strange to say, that a man killed under these cir- i clmstances will sue the road for dam age. aG u De gooa-oe rauruua The Birmingham News says: "The rxDulist national ticket this year is price of admission, and that makes it look like there's a skin game on the inside. press mimoN Am COMMENT Thero's Profit in Turnips - (Wilmington Dispatch.) Eastern North Carolina farmers lis ten to this. A progressive Georgia farmer has turned his attention lately to the raising of turnips, and he has met with abundant success. This season he has six acres broadcast .in turnips of several varieties, which' he expects to yield him at least 126,000 pounds. Judging from past experience, this farmer expects to make, at a reasonable calculation, $2,000 on the six acres. This beats a two-horse farm, and more, planted in cotton. Kw York's Subway (Batimorc American.) The first section of New York's great subway is practically completed, and for more than a week trains have be?n running continuously between City Hall Park, on lower Broadway, to Ona Hundred and Fourth street, which con- marked by special civic formalities, as the event will be of great signifi cance to th0 far-stretched population of Manhattan Island. The contract for the construction ' of this great underground system of transportation was made four years ago, and the road will ba opened for general use approximately upon ths day set at the time the $33,000,OCO agree ment for construction was signed. Contractor McDonald, the man who has successfully grappled with tremen dous difficulties in making a way for a complicated railway sj-stem far be neath the foundation stones of . a com pactly built city, first gained renown as a subterranean engineer in the con struction of Baltimore's Beit Line Sub way. Of his latest achievement the Scientific American says: "Judged in comparison with other great engineer ing works of a like character, it is positively without a rival. Paris, Ber lin and Budapest have their subways, but in total length and carrying ca pacity they do not compare with New York's new system of rapid transit." The main line, from City Hall Paik to Harlem, comprises a four-track road, and upon" final completion there will be eighteen miles of additional three-track and two-track linea. The $S5,000,000 of cost pertains only to the section just nbout tor be thrown opsn, and provides only for the construction of the road. The equipment, which in cludes the cars, the electric signaling apparatus and the great power station at Fifty-ninth street and various sub stations along the route, will cost J12, 000,000 more, makinsr a total cost" of $47,000,000 that was necessary hafore the road could be thrown open to the public. The large power-house for the operation of the line measures 200 feet HI Width bv MO fo&t in lanertV, on ic x , xtrcri. II in latest of its kind in the world The trains in this undere-round svs- Icm are to be run at high speed. There are to be express train that -tviii mako the run between stations at a speed of from forty-five to fifty miles an hour. There Is tofbf a- two-mlrtute headway between these fast trains and a one minute ' headway between the glowe? locals that will be run at a speed of sixteen miles to the hour. "With a train service so frequent and fast it is ap parent that particular : care will be necessary to guard against collisions and other accidents. To minimize dan ger a method of block signals and au tomatic train-stopping devices has been installed, and the trains will be fitted with every safety appliance known to modern engineers. Every employe, high and low, is being drilled to know all about the safety devices, the signals and emergency calls. The operators of the great tunnel road believe that they have successfully met every difficulty involved, and have procured every safety device and Installed every pro tection that human ingenuity can invent. Are Women Wobbly? (Atlanta Journal.) There is no reason under the sun why men should be healthier than woman. There are reasons enough why women re not so strong as men. One of these reasons is this: Women do not get enough sunlight, fresh air and out of doors to keep them sturdy. Imagine a plant blossoming in the shade. It is easy enough to imagine what it would look like. It would be spindling, wobbly, colorless. If there were a ray of sunlight near it, it would have stretched itself toward that ray of light until it was actually deformed by the seacrhlng for what would make it strong. How can a woman who stays all oi the time indoors, out of the sun, out of t.ie rain, out of the air, grow strong and sturdy? The woman who gets no sunshine, no rain, no out-of-door ex ercise, will fast become a pale flower on a wobbly stem. ' If duties keep the woman indoors she must drive herself out for air and light. There are those who sit all day In a half darkened room and hope to have clear skin and bright eyes. Noth ing so dulls the eye and yellows the skin as keeping them away from the freshness of air and the light of the sun. Nothing out of doors is going to hurt a woman. Women are neither sugar nor salt. Men have to go out of doors, they get at least the walk or ride to and from business. Business women, even with the cares and unusual bur dens of the offices In which they are found, are really healthier than their sisters who shut themselves indoors. Business women would be strong and healthy from the necessary exposure to sun and air, if it were not for the fact that they insist upon keeping up their social duties and spend half ol the night going somewhere or enter taining some one. They don't get sleep enough. If there is no place to go, they sit up half the night, washing or iron ing shirt wTasts. Women ought to be healthier and stronger than they are. Some of them waste their strength. Some of them let their strength dscay. Others worry and fret themselves sick. The woman who studies herself, studies the needs of her body and mind, who practices those exorcises which she finds helpful and abstains from practices , which she knows are harmful, will become healthy. She can't help it any more than a flower can help growing strong and beautiful when surrounded by conditions which nature finds best for it. Some Day Some day: So many tearful eyes Are watching for thy dawning light; So many faces toward the skies Are weary of the night! So many falling prayers that resl And stagger upward through the storm, And yearning hands that reach and feel No pressure true and warm. So many hearts whose crimson wine Is wasted to a purple stain. And blurred and streaked with drops of brine Upon the lips of Pain. Oh! come to them these weary one?,! Or if thou still must bide a while, Make stronger yet the hope that runs Before thy coming smile: And haste and find them where they wait Let summer winds blow down that way, And all they long for, soon' or late, Bring round to them, some day. James Whitcomb Riley. Only Did His Duty as He Saw It "I deem it my duty to add a word of praise for Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," says J. Wiley Park, the well known merchant and postmaster at Wiley, Ky. "I have been selling it for three or four years, and it gives complete satisfaction. Saveral of my customers tell me they would not be without it for anything. Very of ten, to my . knowledge, one single dose has cured a severe attack of diarrhoea, and I positively know that it will cure the flux (dysentery). You are at liber ty to use this testimonial as you please." Sold by W. G. Thomas, Robt. Simpson, Bobbitt-Wynne Drug Co. Last Excursion to Norfolk and Richmond The Seaboard will run their last ex cursion to Norfolk and Richmond Tues day September 27th leaving Raleigh 10:00 a. m., arriving Richmond 3:30 p. m-, Norfolk 3:30 p. m. Returning leave Richmond 10:30 a. m., Norfolk 9:35 a. m. Thursday September 29th. Round trip to Richmond $2.25, Norfolk $2.50. C. II. GATTIS, T. P. A. The Infant Needs a perfectly pure, sterile, staple, easily absorbable and assimilable food. These are a combination of requirements which are found in Borden's Eagle Brand Condensed Milk. These proper ties are so perfectly represented in no other.form of artificial infant feeding. NEWSY NOTES FROM WIDE AWAKE WILSON . Wilson. N. C. Sept. 21.-Special. Captain Edgar Hart, one of the court ri oivrest conductors on tha lUCSb V w- - ,. ai Pnoct T.ine will lead to tna altar on tha 5th of October Miss Addia I ir.T.nr,a nf Princeton, a young lady iUUXVillliW w - of most wondrous fascination and ax tractiveness, for she is royally robed and adorned with all those charms and witcheries which make a woman . iavpIv and so enchanting. And 'captain Hart is worthy of the ex- splendent Jewel he has won, ior a perfect type of a perfect gentleman being at all times most refined and most affable and most courteous and most gentle, and wearing under all cir cumstances and amid all surroundings the pure white rose of the knightliest bearing and most seductive politeness No finer or nobler type of manhood, can be found than the hightoned and refined and polished Edgar Hart, and we know that the lovely and beautiful woman who has blest him with her priceless love will receive from him fhet tndpr kindness and devoted min istry and affectionate consideration (that come from a big, true, manly heart most grandly strung and most sweetly tuned. A young man by the name of Wil mot Jordan reached Wilson the other day and represented himself as be ing an agent of the Southern Railway. His actions and his bearings and his dress and his talk showed that he was a first class sport, full of fun and bent on having a good time. His agree able and insinuating manners opened the doors -to perfect confidence and it was not long before Ire worked his little game and took in some "long green" by drawing drafts upon a bank in Georgia and inducing his new found friends to cash them. He left on the early train for Richmond, the drafts were worthless, and his new friends are now wiser but sadder men. He was arrested In Richmond and is now held there, and as soon as requisition papers can be obtained he will be brought back to Wilson. The Atlantic Christian College has opened under the most brilliant prom ises, and the attendance is all that could be hoped for. The polished Dr. Hrtrper is admirably fitted for the position of president and under h.is able management the college will grow in prosperity and renown and will be7 come one of the most flourishing insti tutions in the statp. "Now good digestion waits on appe tite, and health on both." If It doesn't, try Burdock Blood Bit ters. LIQUORS I am now located at 800 IZast Main sL, Richmond. Va., and am prepared to furnish Liquors of all kinds for medi cinal as well as social purposes. Mall orders solicited. Write for prices and ;-.:rticu!ars. SAMT. SMITH Raleigh Iron Works Company Founders and Machinists, RALEIGH, N. C. Second Hand Machinery for Sale. One 6-horse power engine. One S-horse power engine. One 10-horse power engine. One 20-horse power engine. One 35-horss power engine. One 60-horse power engine. One 80-hor5e power engine. One 10-horse power engine and boiler. , One 2G-horse power engine and boiler. One 20-horse power boiler. One 23-horse power boiler. One 60-horse power boiler. One 80-horse power boiler. One 60-saw gine and one press. One water-power elevator. Two cane mills. Office F 1 IRfe ft teliftrli lllilllffl : Kovaii ot its Cor. Wilmington and Hargett Streets, " AnheuserBusch: ify. I m. I .11111 1 " ' -. l & X A I - . ' ! I.: Anheuser-Busch's Budweisery Faust and Pale Lager can oe procured irom tne Kinstoa Dispensary, Distributors for Hessburg Bottling Co., at Richmond V Anheuser-Busch's Budweiser, Faust and Pale Lager ' ' a n nrftr-nrd from the Raleigh Dispensary, Distributors for IMPORTANT NOTICE We want eeveral energetic men to organise and maintain District Aftn. cles; ood territory is yet to be assigned. The positions rrs permanent, ar4 only such representatives are appointed oa want to make the insurance a regular business. A District Agency can be made to pay handsomely. Thi work i sagreeable. and in the highest sense honorable. . There is still good territory open for the right men. Only applicants witi established reputation for reliability are considered. Address, ;. J. D. BOUSH ALL, General Agt. Tucker Bdg, Opp. Postofflce. Raleigh.N.C i v3ii Yi 5 YEARS OLD (SMOOTH andMELLOW TULU QUARTS 3.15 EXPRESS CHARGES PAID BY US A trial will convince you that these goods are the vert best for Medicinal and other purposes, -bend us your orders and if not perfectly satisfactory return at our expense and once, isnipmems maae m piam casc3. Remit by Postal WRITE FOR PRICE .MADE IN i0m With The UNIVERSAL BREAD MAKER and RAISER than can bo made by hand In 30 Minutes. Hands do not 'touch tho dough. Does away with -hand Kneadina. ' mi Fasv to clean. HART-WARD (I urnnure times Roller and Flat W Desks, Office Chairs J Globe- Wernicke Letter Files and Office Con' veniences. Write us your WANTS or dee Hessburg Bottling Co., at Richmond, yL 5 YEARS-OLD V COPPER DISTILLED 4 FULL QUARTS S26J? money will be refunded at or Express Money Order. LIST OF OTHER LIQUORS THREE MINUTtb A child can work It. 0 3 SHARDWAR Cfc, -T- -t ' v i Fixtures We carry in -Stocks at all Cabinets, Filing if oi cannot call at cur ter? For 0m RALEIGH. IN. c'
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1904, edition 1
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