Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Nov. 30, 1904, edition 1 / Page 6
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ff HE MORNING POST. WEDNESDAY, "NOVEMBER 30, IQQ4 if Hi i it . I, i r if. i up "ratnlnff in London" style, as to show some rather loud hosiery and ancient footwear. There was a negli gee air about the rest of their cos tumes, and when they entered the car Uv, looked as If the exercises had . . i 'been going on for some tim. either umu U, Mad6 MoneV DV LOS-;ln a theatre or in the hotel district. HOW nS MdUO J J ,Benra in the Mount Au burn car were forcibly reminded that something was "up" when the four men walked around offering .0 . trv rh n. bite from nis said the retired Pullman sa ndwltcn, or -hot dog.' .... vxr had been iaiKis .., thougn J'"uuu' THE WILES OF A . PULLMAN PORTER ing the Shoe of a Passenger Daily News.) down through the south one year ago frankfurt" as they call- Most of the passengers smiling, refused the unexpected hospi tality, but there were a few Aiount Auburnites, who did not let the op- went around who was a wonuw. -I think I must caf "lcm" last trip ; portunity pass. They bit the cigar salesman. frnm , Then the young man south a porter took mu I the car trying to sell a one-cent pa- me to buy a box of J ' per for a nickel. Nobody wanted the tatlon. brought back . He .bargain. Then all four walked around eyed me unti 1 I gave it 10 a th and read aIoud the advertise- charged 30 cents a pint j ment8. beer and wanted a eery then ordered to he walked across the buffet car hahdg an(J kneeg the a fresh bottle." Dorter length of tne car and make fft no2se "No. that was not the same porw nut, so as to attract the squlr- retired runuw" . naa ms aid the rels. The noise he made did not sat- "although. iom, 1S . rt jSIV the inquisitors, so the young man miit iiuc iv-. ! - - , wa peculiar abilities m iu " - ; d tQ ,t Qver and make We were sailing along through lower , g one iiiK111- ' satisfactory. One of the students were then or dered to kneel on the seat and look out of the window, which he did in a very docile manner. And another one of the quartet was told -to put tape on the shoes of the kneeling student. With a little piece of wood he imitat ed the work of a shoe-maker on the soles of the young man's shoes, driv ing imaginary nails with great seri ousness. At Brookline street the eight stud ents left the car and got transfer check. At Harvard square the students left the second car and headed for the iLT?JssiDDi after midnight and Tom was setting in the wash-room shining the shoes of the passengers. He had bad feet and taken off his own ahoes. . "All of a sudden the train stopped at an unaccustomed place and told I Tom to jump out and see what was the matter. It had been raining heav iiv nd he looked out dubiously at the - muddy ground and then looked down at his stocking feet. Tt don't look prett5r bad out yon dah, boss,' Tom says, 'but I'll go out f you wants me to.' "With that he picked up a big pair ef shoes belonging to a passenger, i i 3 t,sm nn and i limned into the B"CU """" -.I"; M tin rooms of the society. darkness. In a few minutes the train atarted up and I forgot all about Tom." J "I suppose you pitched in and shinedlp 111 TI II A IT DIIDIIPITY the rest of the shoes for him," sug- ! U II A I I U A I I UDLIUI I I gested the cigar-salesman. "No, but in a few minutes after we - started, he came clumping in to where I was looking worried. " 'Says boss, I'm in an awful box,' '..he says, 'and I doan' what to do 'bout ' ' it "What's the matter. Tom?' I asked. " "Well, sir, he says, 'when I jumped off back theah, I done put on a big pair of shoes belonging to lower 6, an and when she started up, I made a quick run and one of dem shoes done stuck in the mud.' "He held out the remaining shoe and looked at it ruefully. '"What do you 'spose I'd better do?' h asked. " "Why there's only one thing to do,' I said. Shine up the other shoe In a good shape, put it under the birth and bluff it. out in the morning. Tell him you don't know anything about his hoe." "That sounds good,' says Tom. 'I'll Jo It.' The next morning there was a fearful row when lower 6 got up. He was a big, broadshouldered Mississ lppian and he got his finger on the push button in a hurry, Tom pretend ed not to hear the bell, but pretty soon the big fellow came stamping out. "Hey!" he says in a voice that near ly turned Tom white, 'did you shine Eugene Foss. He says, president the shoes in lower 6 last night?' j Roosevelt, late last week for ahout " T-y-yessah! Yessah!' Tom says. 'two minutes, secretary Morton being 'I done shine all the shoes in the cab present at the interview. No official I must have shone 'em. j "Well, one of 'em's gone,' the big or unofficial denial . has been issued fellow says, 'and I want you to find j about the statement Mr. Foss is cred it jited with having made regarding the "Tom never batted an eye, but went j president's intentions when he had In and turned the car upside down, emerged again into the outside world. He turned the bedding out. of all the J But what Mr. Foss is reported to births, swept the car and looked in 'vo coin t or-ttn the tipper berths. No shoe. j pers does not agree entirely with the seems tobe gone, boss said, at length. -The Mississippian fixed him with a .cold eve. "Have you any idea how that shoe could have got out of here?" he de manded. "'Well, sah,' says Tom, they was two ladies got off at Water Vrillev FISH HATCHING FOR . MOUNTAIN SECTION " - . Nw Supply of Fish for the Streams in Western North Carolina (Asheville Citizen. Evidently there is a strong desire especially among local sportsmen, tu increase and preserve the supply of fish in the mountain streams in Wes tern North Carolina. Following the announcement that a bill will be in troduced to provide some means by which the fish can ascend the streams above them, comes the report that preparations are well under way look ing towards the reckoning of the streams in this vicinity with moun tain trout. In fact one carload of several-thousand fish has already been shipped and is expected to arrive be fore the end of this week. The prime movers in this effort are E. W. Ewbank, Judge Ewart, and sev eral other sportsmen of .Henderson ville, and the Sylvan Valley Hunting and Fishing. Club of Brevard. The trout are being sent at their instance from a government hatchery in Vir ginia. They are placed when ship ped, in especially constructed fish cars and the. consignees are required to keep seve'ral" hundred gallons of fresh water' near the railroad at every point at which fish are to be unload ed so that no time may be lost, and none of the trout allowed to die, dur ing the transfer from the tanks to the streams. The first point atwjnch the coming nsh car will be stopped Is Fletchers. Here a few thousand trout . will be taken from the tank and y iiiimpp j 'j" 'j 1 I.. ....... 1 11 When your lungs are sore and inflamed from coughing, is the time when the germs of PNEUMONIA, PLEURISY and CONSUMPTION find lodgment and multiply. to Mrj to stops the cough, heals and strengthens the lungs. It con tains no harsh expectorants that strain and irritate the. lungs, or ooiates that cause constipation, a condition that retards recovery from a cold. FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR is a safe and never failing remedy for all throat and lung troubles. The Doctors Said Ha Had Consumption - A Marvelous Cure. L. M. Ruggles, Reasoner, Iowa, writes: "The doctors said I had con sumption and r got no better until I used FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR. It helped me right from the start and stopped the spitting of blood and the pain in my lungs and today I am sound ajd well. THREE SIZES 25c, 50c, and $1.00 REFUSE SUBSUITUTES If 11 4 SOLD fiflD REC0UL1EIIDED BY BOBBttT.VYNNE DRUG GO., RALEIGH, N. C. Standpatters Annoyed by Prominence of Revisionists (Washington Post.) The prominence of Governor Cum mings of Iowa; .Representative Bab cock, of Wisconsin, and Eugene N. Foss, of Massachusetts, in tariff re vision talk, is irritating to high pro tectionists in the Republican party. The lowans of note in Washington who are . identified with the standpat doctrine chafe over arrival of Gover nor Cummings just at the time when Mr. Foss has passed off the scene. They repeat the old story heard at the Chicago convention that Governor Cummings does not represent the sentiment of the state; that he had to surrender to stand pat wing of hia party in the Iowa convention, and that 'his own delegation at Chicago would not permit him to become a member of the resolution committee. As Iowa has two members of the. cab inet both stand-pat men, Governor i Cummimt vigorously announcement i his arrival has been decidedly llocners and Cane creeks. At Hen- dersonville, the greater part of the consignment will be disposed of, it being intended to place fish in all of the larger streams near that town. isome of the trout, however, will be taken to Brevard. Zirconia and Ros man ar.d . placed in streams in the Sapphire country. A few thousand fish will be deposited in the French Broad river in that neighborhood.- It is , hoped that this car load will be but the first of many which wi;l hatch is done, the incubator is opened and the trays, removed. '.?fst the. ventilators are all . - opened and trie placed inheat run down .to '98 or 100 degrees, leaving the chicks'" without - fiiod- or water urrtil the next dj Then the chicks 'will be strong nd lively and in a,1 gol condition- to remove to the brooder, whieli should be:, done with out '.chilling them. ''They are then given1 a little warm water and theri fed fijie grit, oat flakes and a little mSlet." . , The chicks are lept on this ration': for a vteek, hen they are ted . one meal., a day of meat scraps and one meal' of kreen -food, until they can be be supplied by the government and !u n Th.0 ' ! that in a few years the once abundant supply of trout in the'- mountain streams will be equally if not sur passed. It is thought by many that a flsh hatchery will be establiJied near Asheville within a short time ,,.and that the keeping up of the fish'-sup- easy matter. The only two hatcher ies from which nshcarn be sent here at" a temperature- of 90 ami "95 degfes. After a short time " the chicks are moved to the' brooding Iro-use, where the temperature is kept at 75 degrees. As-, soon as the chicks are strong' erjfugh and the weather is suitable, they -are removed "to small, yards or doors, and when old enough ,.are ply will be thus made a comparatively J &iven free range of the fields. As.sqoh as C'Sld weather the. pullets are put' In to th main house for la vine. Earlv are located," "one in Virginia and one - in Aninist tho rnffls rp sort rmt in Tennessee. AshevillV, as is well .and, except a few of the best, which known is an excellent distributing , -ut tn wi fnr hrppinp- r,nr, which was put in thedral Heights, place yesterday. The stone- which was placed in po sition yeteterday is the lower column. The upper section which is half its size, is yet to be set, and when this is done the rest of the building of the Cathedral will progress rapidly. - The-first of these eight columns was placed in position two years and a hal. ago. Each one of them has been donated by 'some prominent New Yorker, and when the work is com "Pleted the work of the donor will be Inscribed oh the base of each of the -pilla'rs, which are polished granite. The - placing of the stone yesterday was "witnessed by many of the clergy of' the diocese. - -.-' J. E. Gartland, MereliaiiitTaiSor, since offensive- in certain quarters. There is an interesting incident ' in connection with the recent visit of point and an application for a hatcb ! ery here, ,it is thought would be well received. . . This question,,..!-- is reported, has been .brought before Mr-.. .Vanderbilt, ',vho offered J todonate - the land nn which to-, construct ' the 'nece's.ary buildings. -' GOVERNOR-ELECT TIRED OF HIS JOB Would Like to Hire Some De cent Fellow to Re lieve Him are placed on the market. $26,000 Pillar Adorns a Cathedral One of Poe's Experiences (From the Lamp.) Foe , one night during those last 'veeks he spent in .Richmond, stated this personal experience adding that he would carry it with him to the grave: "I was living Philadelphia during the epidemic of the cholera there. All day I would pace the streets seeing the dying and dead until , my hearjt was faint and ..sick within . me.-.,,Wt1j. one evening on coming home iteT:1' "AT! one of these aimless Avanderings, L broken down and Tvith a thousand secretary of the Cathedral building to the Binffhamntori. memory of others who were parties i. dated nv si-t-a- to tne conversation A press dispatch from Topeka, Kan., committee. (X. Y.) Press, Time of ceremony, one hour. The opponents of revision are try ing to discredit these advocates of an extra session by pointing out that nearly all of them have fared badly with the people. Mr. Foss, of course, was beaten at the polls by an in--' creasea majority or over two years ' V. A I . 1 i . ... . ' uuul lIliee ocwK tnis morning and1 ago, when he was also a. candidate they both had these here long, trailing , for congress on the reciprocity plat skirts on. Now, I often heard how j form. Mr. Babcock, too, was re-elec-they could sweep a shoe out of a car ted by a .very narrow margin, but "Iguess that's what happened to; that criticism of him may not be en mine.,, the big fellow says, 'but I've nirely fair, as his reduced vote was got to get off at Harrodsburg to meet 'due to a very bitter factional quarrel my mother. Xow, here's $3. When we' in Wisconsin. Then it is claimed Btop to change engines at Barr June- ! that Governor Cummins was not on tion you duck up to the town and get ly, repudiated by his own state, but n,!aM r f X' 12S' Don,t lose b3" the authorities of his own conven- n tlme now" Ition, especially speaker Cannon, the Tom chased up" and got the shoes presiding officer, who did not take and they fitted all right and the Miss-! kindly to Governor Cummins' de- isippian gave nun a, quarter for go ing. When the big fellow was gone at Harrodsburg I cornered, my porter. " 'Well, you got out of that scrape pretty lucky,' I said to him. 'Lucky?" he says. Why man g jodness, man, you don't know half of it. Them were dollah an' a half shoes I done bought him. " INVITATION STONTS Antics of College Boys Amus the Passengers (Boston Globe) In a Mount Auburn car wlJich left Bowdoin square about 11.45 last even ing, a young man, eveidently a col Ieg3 freshman, tried to kiss the con ductor who resented the familiarity. But that was only the beginning for. there were three other freshmen of .equally strange rig with this first one and there were four other rather -sedate freshmen in the company of "his quartet, seated quietly near the icat-.r of the-car. The first four fresh- . men "were being initiated into some coJlege secret society, and the last four were attending to the duties of initia tion. ' ' - . WTien the boys entered the car at Bowdoin square it was noticed that . they were munching "hot dogs."- They wore red ribbons just below the knee At -their trousers, which were turned mands for an opportunity t0 be heard in a speech. From the start the revisionists have possibly had the best of it in pub licity, all three of the gentlemen men tioned as well as others, havihg been here and visited the president. The anti-revisionists, would like to see the ether side have as much public prom inence, which will undoubtedly happen as the time for the session of congress approaches and the leaders in senate and houses come to town. WHEREIN THE DANGER LIES. (Chicago Tribune.) The Doctor (flicking the ashes from his cigar) You'll be telling me, I sup pose that as a' physician, I ought to know smoking is unwholesome. The Professor Unwholesome? Doc tor, it's deadly. Have you never no ticed that whenever there is a rail road acident the fatalities are general- ! ly confined to the smoking car? DISINHERITTED. (Detroit Free Press.) Stakes What's the matter? You look glum. Did you lose an election? Rakes No, I won $20 from Jimmy; but I've owed, him that much for: a year, and I haven't the nerve to col lectthe coin. Governor-el . ct Brooks of Wyoming is already tired of the job. In a letter to E. W. Howe, ov the'Atchison Globe he says: : "If I could hire some decent fellow to take this governorship job off my hands for a couple of years!' would do it. Confidentially,' r ddit think I ever wanted the job, but some peo ple thought I couldn't .get it, and I thought I .could. When the frills and didos get too thick, I will telegraph you and we will sneak of to the ranch and go back into the mountains, put up a tent and I will smoke a corn cob pipe again,, fry the grouse and make the biscuit, and .we will lazy around and laught at the 'world as. we used to do." Howe describes a hunt he onci'.had with ; Governor Brooks. They were following a band of elk and In order to keep up the chase were: forced to leave the riding horse and pack mules. The elk got a,way and ."by'1 that 'time the hunters were -lost. Thov built a fire and then" Brook's: .said 'he- believed I he could And the horses, and they set! out, leaving their guns bv the fire. : Within an hour they were lost again, and could not -find the fire, the guns or the. horses, .They spent ' the riight sitting under a pine tree. ; . Howe says that he and the govern or organized the first "Don't Worry" club that nigh't as they shivered '-with cold on the mountain side. Since; that time 2,000 of these clubs have been or ganized, and 10,000. men wear "Don't Worry" buttons. The aove is" a history of the last of "i'Tgrouof eight giant pillars which are., to surround the choir f of . the Ca thedral o.f St J! John 'the divine, on Ca- (From the New York American.) . jpictures of suffering' and death danc- Cost of Cathedral Pillar. S23000. " hideously before ''my' 'eS-eswJ ' lay Cost of shipping it to this citj$ and lifting it into place, $3,009. "' Six men employed in lifting the "pil lar into place. " ' . " Actual time .of -lifting the monolith from the ground , to, tha position for placing, three a'njd one-half minutes. Size of monolith Height, 51 feet; diameter, 6 feet. : Wght, 90 tons. - ; . Pillar' laid by'TJr. W..R. Huntington of Grace chur&H and Dr. John P. Pe ters of St. Michael's, :( chairman and upon tne oea. in a moment was asleep," and dreamed that a black bird like a raven came into "the room a.nd perched over the" door. I asked what it was: The bird replied:. "I am the spirit of "the" cholera, and you are the cause of me." "I woke with a start but the appari tion was so real that it made an im pression on me L shall' never forget. Greensboro, N. C. We lead tha State in Stb, Fit, Quality and Price. Chesapeake and Ohio Railwa 'Wohl'd Fair Scenic Route To St. Louis,Mo. Vestibuled. Electrlc-LIsMea V. j-SHORTEST, QUICKEST and BEST iiOUTE. .TrafM with Pullman Sleepers and Dining Cars. .'TJtrbugh tickets from North Carolina with direct connections. SPECIAIi ES FOR SEASON, SIXTY OR FIFTEEN DAY TICKETS. AvFJfteen-day tickets from Raleigh, N. C. $24.80." ' 'Sleeping ar accommodations engaged up-; application. SPECIAL COACH EXCURSIONS on authorized dates, tickets good for ten days at rate of 11S.50. Special ac commodations arranged for parties. USE THE C. t'-'O. ROUTEf and purchase your tickets accordingly. For coach excursion dates, reservations and other information, address , W. O. WARTHFN. D. P. A.. C. & O. R'y. Richmond. Va. HAS A DISTINCT ADVANTAGE. (Chicago Tribune!) ' Addlpus D6n'.t you Jiate to be as lean as you are? Skinnicus No;" frietimes I find it's a decided help. I can cross my legs in a crowded car without taking up any more room tlran I did before. or Bought, sold IN' ANY LbcALfffi ahn.tmneral ai on j ana ana jgaoa triit. ionaucica ewaxtsrrn- pxpem. isZepTYbr meritorious fenrpriseS' ". GIVE TC., 5KCLOSITMO CRIPTION. PRIC . STXMP FOR BOOKLET MQDERN-4VlJET-4vODS" M U M PH RY-OfB$,ON CO.I V N.CAftoLmi- V.'iT? Man St., yj Norfolk, Va. rsion Reduced Rates to Morehead City For the Fishing Season Which Is Now at Its Height. On and after Saturday, October 22d, special tickets will be sold over the A. & N. C. Railroad from' - . . ' . " Goldsboro to Morehead City and Return for $3.iO. Tickets good going Saturday and returning Monday. At Atlantic Hotel offers exctirsicnfsts on these occasions a special rate of $3.50 for two nights lodging and five meals. E. A. NIEL. Traffic Manager. R. r"F.pSTER, - General Manager. Wlf-'U&tt III TAKE TIME BY THE FORELOCK Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are becoming a favorite for stomach troubles and " constitpation. j For sale by "SV. G. Thomas, Robert ) Simpson and Bcbbttt-AVynne Drue Co. ' W holesale Poultry Raising Nine hundred white leghorn fowls are kept in house 28 x 40 feet by G; Monroe WcviJ, of northern New York, who raises annually about 2,300 chicks by artificial means, says the agricul turist. The incubators are started tha j first of April and the breeding is dis continued the 1st of June. ' When .hatched "during this period the -!ck-ens will not molt until the next year, and will make good winter layers.- If hatched earlier than April 1, the chickens will molt in the fall like old hens, and will do but little laying dur ing the winter. Mr. Wood uses incu bators, and on an average no more than nine eggs out of 100 will fail to hatch. T ' At the end of the 21t day after th vrm tl 1 3 V TM m WHISKEY 5 YEARS OLD (SMOOTH anoMELLOW rULL QUARTS s. Furnaces EXPRESS CHARGES PAID BY US A trial will convince you that these "goods are the vritY best for Medicinal and other purposes. Send us your orders and a not penecuy saiisiaccory return ai our expense and money will be refunded a once, fehipments made in piam cases. 1 1 i t !t w it 5 YE ARS . OLD COPPER DISTILLED 4 FULL QUARTS SZ6-5 Remit by Postal or Express Money Order. WRITE FOR PRICE LIST OF OTHER LIQUORS JD SEE OUR LARGE ASSORTMENT. SEND FOR CATALOGUES EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE Building Material SEND FOR CATALOGUES EVERYTHING IN PAINTS Guhs Pistols . WE. GIVE GREEN TRADING STAMPS HART-WARD HARDW. CO.,
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Nov. 30, 1904, edition 1
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