Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Dec. 11, 1904, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
I - I GOTHAM CITY GOSSIP A Guild That Gilds a Dark Problem. -r;A TfTnArl Dollar Cat and i ThousandDollar Rooster Dy EMEL JAY Special torresponrfeuce Such -women, as Mrs. Russell Sage, Mrs. Clarence Maekay, and other housewives of wealth and position lend their names and Influence to The Wo man's Domestic Guild. And that guild is proving- itself a business-like and successful body. The servant problem has grown in complexity with the growth of wealth and thte increasing demand for the services" of women in mercantile and manufacturing pursuits. For, in creased wealth means a greater num ber of families able and anxious to hire servants; and the increased jumber of business women means, pro portionately fewer women fitted for .domestic service. So, the shrewd women at the head of the guild are trying to do two things ; first, to educate servants; and second, to place them only in good positions at tempting wages. With a view to education' The - guild has hired a chef who is a pastmaster in all the-arts and economics of culinary concoctions. Anything short of sole leather, that chef can make tender and palatable. A family of epicures he can delight .with crumbs and scraps, and Lucullus himself would get foundered on the first-cuts and patries of this modern son of Gaul. Mistress and maid alike sit at the feet of this Gamaliel of the range' and gas Stove. Members of the Four Hundred and members of the Four Hundred Thousand become acquainted and friendly. As Kipling puts it. 'The Colonel's lady and Judy, O'Grady Are sisters under the skin." When the members of the guild once understand txiat "like mistress like maid" is as truly as law as "like master like man," we will probably get nearest to the simple solution of the present complex servant question. The Unfashionable Feline The feline cannot be said to be fash ionable in New York. There was a cat show here last week, and It "was in striking contrast to the- horse show and the dog show of the weeks pre vious. Horse and dog must needs have Madison Square Garden as" their show-pJacer'sand Madames and Mada moiselles must don velvet and lace to inspect and applaud the prize-winners. But the cats have their exhibi tion in one end of a big hall on the ninth floor of Macy s building, and society does not go near it. Women ! in plenty do go, but they are chiefly owners of catteries, or interested friends. .Occasionally, you see among the crowd a genuine, non-commercial cat-lover, and she strokes and murr inurs over the Persian beauties, and J asKS me price. But there are few fashionable folk on hand. Evidently Tom and Tabby are not sporty enough for the swells. But they are rising in importance. They boast long lines of ancestors, and in some of the blue and pink lined cages at the show there were tadked up at the side an impressive family chart. One big gray fellow, nine months old, who, when curie i up asleep, looked like a gorgeous chin chilla, muff, was tabulated as tha grandson of the "late" somebody noted in cat catalogues! , And their monetary value! One bigtunne1' elevated and surface. Hence, Persian,' a descendant of. "Silver Sul- j the Present public spirited wails of tan" and "Smoke," brought $500 in cold caoh. The poultry show was in another part of the same building, and one rooster in the lot brought a thousand dollars. No wonder he looked over at the cat cages and crew so loud. But little cared Tom and Tabby. A good snug place, is all they care for in this life. And .those Persian and Maltese beauties have it, you may be sure. Big Germ-hunting Business ! New York may be said to have a pretty fair appetite for milk, since it consumes something like 2,000,000 quarts a day. That giant supply of the lacteal fluid comes from the farm jing country within a radius of a hun dred and fifty miles or so. Just now '.the city board of health is arousing itself, anew, to the dangers of adul teration or organic impurities in this daily necessity. To be sure, there are inspectors who are constantly going the rounds-and testing the article of- lerea for sale by the dealers. Pre- sumably they do good work. At any rate, in one week recently, they ran across forty milk dealers who were violating the law. But the very fact that so large a number are caught at cbout the same time proves that the penalties are" not sufficient, or the op - portunity for fraud very open and tempting. Now, the board of health Fays, the milk comes from the states ,o Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, as well as New York: and that even th stat board of health cannot control the food and water supply of cattle in other states; nor can it inspect the - sanitation and methods of those dair ies. So it is now proposed that the city allow milk to be sold within its limits only on permits, and that those permits shall be issued-on. condition that city inspectors shall have the constant right of supervision over any ' dairy which . finds ' a market in Now York. ; ' All of which stir is on account of ot the Horalog Post the babies.- Twenty-five per cent, of i infant mortality is Sue to bad miik, j and the board of health is -trying to j devise some way to stop the wholesale murder. Wanted--A Playwright The theatrical world is in a fine state of nebulous attenuation rotating around a number of rival nuclei. Dull tinies for. the past two years meant an empty play-house, uniess by good for tune a good play was on its boards. Nothing drew that was not magnetic. Shams didn t go. Old plays. Ions time favorites, were too familiar to appeal to the regularplaygoer. Problem-plays puzzled folks - too much. Fun and froth plays broght only sick ly smiles tothe face of worred brokers and business men. Actors pleaded for new plays. Managers, with ruin, staring them in the face, alternately pleadedlwith the bullied the play wright.", "A play,-aplay( a fortune for a play!" had been the cry. Ws people spoke of the old-style stock company . without its bright parti cular star. Others said, give us an endowed theatre; and they wro j private and open letter to that little Scot, Andrew Carnegie suggesting the donation of two,- three, five mil lions of dollars worth of those won derful underlying steel bonds- of his, for -the establishment of a great na tional theatre that would primarily entertain New York, and incidentally educate a great number of fine ac tors. The playwrights take a hand in the discussion as to what is the matter with the play , of the present day. They give long and learned opinions of the state; of .their art. They tell state secrets of how they are oppress ed and handicapped by demands : for this, for that, for the other thing. One is a pessimist, another an opto- t mist. Some blame it all on the man ager whose eye is on the box office. The whole truth seems to be that there is" a dearth of inspiration. Old hands are written out, and few new ! skilled ones are at work. George Ade has made one real hit of late. Rich ard Harding Davis got up a farce that drew because it had no competi tion; 'vlt Js the same, thing over sfgain in London. Poor ..Olga Nethersfle in 3, brand new -play by' a popular au thor, John Oliver Hobbs, was hooted and hissed till she broke Mown and cried on Covent Garden stage where -!- . Ai-Mn Vvftrti-. n V? "-N Ffl X-".$ Ck j But ifc New York g mov. ing ahead in the preparations for the future, and moving everything under the sun for a good play or two. In one block in this city there are seven theatres and none of them is ever filled. If anybody can write a play that will draw, it means a thous- and dollars a week to him or her. Let some untried genius seize the chance. More Tunnel Talk The opening of the tunnel to the public has given a new impetus to a : demand for more tunnels. Merchants doing business on lower Sixth avenue. ; are afraid . that their great depart- inciil , siui cs vt 111 EuiLci ucvauoc iivr tunnel runs by them. The long-headed Macy Company left its Fourteenth street corner years ago, and located I at 34th street and Broadway where it could get the trade by all three lines VOlJ U 1 LA. 1 VV111IV V X V. A W Then, lower Broadway from 14th street to 33d street, so long popular for high-priced shops, is in danger of losing its prestage because of forsooth, there is no mole track under its corn rows. The unfortunate property own ers who. once raised every objection under the sun to the construction of a tunnel are now. moving everything in heaven and earth to get the tunnei built before, the trade shall locate it self elsewhere. Those two, tunnels as well as many others will come about in good time. Manhattan Island is a very small spot and people will need every possible way for getting about. So given any any street running north arid south, and it will always be as crowded un derground as on the surface. Notes About Notables The late Harriet Webb Gustin had a rare gift for sarcasm. In her pub lished will, the lady, who "had been twice married, requested to be buried beside her first husband and to the second she left one dollar and her . best wishes. Poor man!. She evident- ly found him disGustin! Chauncey Depew declares himself an optimist and a Calvinist the first, in j believing things will come his way; the fast in believing if they do not, it is 80 directed for his good. With such philosophy, no wonder a man can at- tain 'an international reputation for jokes, The appointment by the president of i Stonewall Jackson Christian as West -Point Cadet gives Uncle Sam the promise of a fine., officer. The young cadet's name tells his lineage, and stamps him a soldier by heredity. -New York, Dec 9, 1904. His Excellency (From the New York Sun.) 1 Ion. .Wfiliam I L. Douglas, the next Governor of Massachusetts, has cut off an old sacred furbelow from his robes. He say-3 that he won't make sneechcri: i that he mean? to be at home every XHK MOUNTS nrght at ). He will do his duty to the Commonwealth, but he proposes - to take care of himself, see his family and not waste time, wind and digesticn. Mr. Douglas insists that he is a shoe maker, not a speechmaker. He showed in his canvass tn:u he Is a mighty, ef fective speaker, but he doss't talk for lh WUse of airing his voice. The after dinner speech bug hs not bitten him. Tho ecrrrcvonial ana processions functions cf the governor of Massachu setts! have be:i most important and varied. He dedicates. Ho corner stones. He cattle-shows. He musters. He commencement exericses. He pats voung ladies on the cheek and givi them sheepskins. He addresses every snap of man, woman and child the Gomervrhat limited area of the ' Bay r,iate can produce. In better days, ac fOTrpsnled by the most splendid and heaviest braided and cloaked staff !n tbt wor'd, he roamed about the state, raisins hl3 voice and the standard of aesthetics. . Mr. Douglas will not sacrifice himself on the altar of Wind- Sensible man. Besides, if Gen; Nelson Appleten Miles is ta be the next adjutant general of Massachusetts, the state will not lack a. constant splendor and a voice that will not spare itself in the task of in strueting, elevating and warning. IN THEGOOD OLD TIMES (From -Success.) Not until February of '1812 did tha people of Kentucky know that Mad ison was elected president in the pre vious November. In 1834 one of the leading railroads of the United States printed on its time table: "The locomotive will leave the depot every day at 10 o'clock, if the weather is fain" . The first typewriter was received by the public with suspicion. It seemed subversive of existing conditions. . A reporter who took one into a court 100m first proved its real worth. In England some centuries ago if an ordinary workman, without per mission, moved from one parish to an other in search of work or better wa ges, he was branded with a hot iron. When Benjamin Franklin first thought" of starting a newspaper in Philadelphia many of his friends ad vised against it, because there was a paper published in Boston. Soma of then! doubted that the country would be able to support two newspapers. One hundred years ago the fastest land travel in the world was on the Great North Road, in England, after it had been put into its best condi tion. There the York mail coach tore along at the rate of 90 miles a day, and many persons confidently predict ed divine vengeance on such unseemly haste. When Thomas Jefferson was elected president of the United States, on February 17, 1801, after one of the most exciting political campaigns in our history, the gratifying news did not reach' the successful candidate for many days as it now takes hours to transmit the result of a presidential election to the whole civilized world. When in 1809, Richard Trevithick ut tered the following words, there were many who considered him an insane, dangerous person: 'The present gen eration will use canals, the next will prefer railroads with horses, but their more enlightened successors will em ploy steam carriages on railways as the perfection of the artof conveyance" When Benjamin Franklin first took the coa,ch from Philadelphia to New York he spent four days on the jour ney. He tells us that, as the old dri ver jogged along, he spent his time knitting stockings. Two stage coach es and eight horses sufficed for all the commerce that was carried on be tween Bostoh and New York, and in vinter the journey occupied a week. Napoleon at the height of his power, could " not command our every day conveniences, such as steam heat, run ning water, bath and sanitary plumb ing, gas, electric light, railroads, steamboats, the telegraph, the tele phone, daily newspapers, magazines, and a thousand of other blessings which are now part of the daily ne cessities of even manual laborers., When the first two tons of anthra cite were brought into Philadelphia, in 1S03, the good people of that city so the records state, "tried to burn the stuff, but at length disgusted, they broke it up and made a walk of it." Fourteen years later Col. George Shoemaker sold eight or ten wagon loads of it in the same city, but war rants were soon issued for his arrest for taking money under false yu e tenses. - ;V' Mrs. Fish an Inventor (From the New York Press.) Society has not been accustonied to look on Mrs. Stuyvesant t'Jsh as 1 an in ventor of aught save novels gaities, as yet it is said she suggested a clever device for travelors, or, -at "a,ny rate supplied the basic idea. The inven tion is a mirror on Its face, and it is about a quarter inch thick but at pressure of 'a spring at one end hun dred of business like bristles fly erect, and behold -the possessor has a hair brush strong enough for service in train or steamship. It has the added advantage that the bristles necessar ily escape the dust of travel, which is difficult for an ordinary brush to even in a seemingly airtight handbag. Mrs. Fish dislikes lHSng too dependent on her maid. Hence the thought that resulted in the production of a device Headaches frcm Colds Laxative Bromo Quinine removes the cause. To get ti senuine call for the full name and look for signature of E. W. Grove. 25c G ENG I.EM EN!! Make your ar rangements to take your midday and evening meals at the BAZAAR in the City Hall. The Ladies of the Good Shepherd Church are famous for the QUALITY of the refreshments which they always serve, and they will serve lOli generously. PnSTKpypVtiSEEMB' I Mountain SceerInd Old Battle $ fields-General Taylor Did Not Know When He Was Whipped Special Correspondence The fatigue following the exercise and excitement of our visit to the fair sent us at once to bed when we reached our car. The country for the first hun dred miles after ' crossing' the Rio Grande, which by the way is a mis nomer, is said to be uninteresting. The railroad follows the old State or Milir tary road the same that General Tay lor followed f when he marched the American troops to Monterey. After crossing the Salado river, the country changes". A mountain two thousand feet high, with a perfectly level top is seen. Two hundred years ago the Benedictine monks established a mission here, finding wood and water in abundance on the top of the moun tain, though none are in the plain be low. The first object that attracted our attention upon leaving our car the next morning at Monterey, barring of course the ever present Mexican, young and old. male and female, was "Saddle Mountain," which rises to the height of four thousand feet, so near as almost to startle one, the,.top of which has the perfect shape of a 'saddle, of the "Mc Clellan" style. Then, as the eye fol- j lows the horizon from left to right, the ; "Mountain of the Miters," so-called from its resemblance to that part, of a j bishop's vestments; then still other mountains and high hills until we reach our starting point, and we see that the city is completely inclosed, and wonder how we reached it. Upon being notified that street cars were awaiting us we proceeded to look for them and soon discovered some very small old fashion ed cars, just outside of the fence which incloses the station to each of which I were hitched two of the,, smallest mules ! I ever saw, "en tandem." With jokes and laughter we spon filled the dimin utive cars. The driver, a swarthy Mexican a lofty crowned, wide brim med had on his head, bright colored zarape over his shoulders, white pants on his- legs and bare feet, flourished his enormous whip, emitted a noise be tween his teeth resembling the his3 of a snake, which caused the little mules to pull with all their strength, and our car started. We are to see our first Mexican city. ' We . crossed the bridge which the Mexican made the heroic at tempt to hold against the Americans during the battle- in the city. It is said the reason of this brave struggle by the Mexicans vas that they saw the "Virgin cf Guadelupe" hovering over the bridge a sthey.- were retreating across and were inspired by it to turn and make a stand. They held the bridge so long as the apparrition could be seen. As we crossed we saw great numbers of Mexican women washing their clothes and bathing in the clear running water below. Through streets linetl. by low, ''fift-roofed houses, built close out to the sidewalk the stuc coed walls, painted in various colors and designs, and some covered with glistening tiles we were taken to the "Plaza of Hidalgo,", where is a statue of that Patriot Priest, and for whom the plaza is named. Quickly disem barking we stroll through the pretty plaza. Shaded by beautiful trees, fra grant with flowers, a beautiful foun tain in the center, and many benches for the weary to rest upon. Monterey has a cathedral, which we visited, a fine state house and municipal build ings. After visiting the mwe took the cars again for a "round" of the city. In the western part, a sem-suburban district, the houses are surrounded by beautiful gardens and magnificent shade trees, fruits, flowers and running streams of water. We get a glimpse ( in passing alogn the streets, through open doors of the courts within.- All the houses have these inner courts, where si their family life. Those of the rich are beautiful, with marble pil lars, colonades, fountains and flowers. One of the objects of interest is the "Bishops Palace," built on 3. hi&h hill, just northwest of the city, to the foot of where the ..street cars run. It was built for a summer residence for the bishop, but is now but a pictures que ruin. This hill was vigorously t de fended by the Mexicans during the bat tle of Montery, because it was the key to the city. It was' captured by Gen. Worth by assault, 'Which caused the snurrender of the city. From this hill a fine view of the city can be had, as well as of the beautiful and fertile valley, in which the city : lies. The stream which runs through the city has its rise in the "Great Springs of Chico," a few miles from the city, on the mountain. These springs are a great attraction to people from all over that part of the country. There is a legend that Montezuma's daughter, a puny maiden, made the long journey over the mountains and across the plains from the "Hill of the Grasshopper," now called Chapultepec, to , this famous spring, where she was restored to health and returned to her father a vig orous and beautiful woman. Monterey is the most important city commer cially of Northeastern Mexico. It is an old city, founded in 1596, ,and has much purely Spanish in. character, but has become a good deal Americanized, having various manufacturies in opera tion. Leaving Monterey at 1:30 p. m. we cross a fertile plain, with here and there a white walled Haicunda in sight arid enter the San Juan Valley. The land grows poorer as the valley narrows, un til it seems as poor or poorer as any I ever saw at which any attempt at cul tivation was made, but the scenery con stantly increases in grandeur and pic turesqueness. Never have I seen moun tains of sueh unusual and fantastic shapes. At qne place about two miles away, high up on the crest of the moun tain, is a round hole entirely through h f94 of The Morning Post it, looking through which you see the blue sky beyond. The noie smooth and regular a? though made by a monster cannon ball. The vallej grows narrower and narrower, the rail road running first on one side and then on the other of a noisy little stream, as cending all the time with mountains closing in -until we seem to break through on to an immense stretch of table land. A pretty village, a large haicionday on the right, and fertile fields on every hand, and just at dark we reach Saitillo. - Saltillo is the capital of the state and is situated just on the rise of the great plateau of Central Mexico. The climate is delightful, only a few days of cold weather in the year. Apples, oranges, bananas and pears are found in the same gardens along the streets, through the center of which the railroad runs. Leaving Saltillo we enter a section of country not so fertile. Five miles from the city we run quite near the battlefield of Buena Vista where in 1847 Santa Anna, with twenty-thousand Mexican troops attacked General Zach. Taylor, who had but five thous and men the most of whom were vol unteers. The fighting continued for two days and was most, desperate, resulting- in the complete annihiliation of the Mexican arniy. I was ten years old at the time and well remember the highly colored prints f the battle, showing General Taylopand other of ficers' with their swords lifted high in air, leading their men", amidst fire and smoke against the Mexicans, were brought around by peddlers and bought by nearly every family in the community. - ' Santa Anna said of this battle that he ., whipped General Taylor seven times during the fight but that Gen eral Taylor did not know when he was whipped. D. H. A. Mexico City, Dec. 1. 104. Mrs. Hunter's Cheermonger (From the New York Press.) In connection with her social colo ny work, Mrs. Robert Hunter, who used to be Miss Caroline Phelps Stokes has discovered a new occupation for women for society women, at that. It isn't a lucrative pursuit, measured by monetary standards, although Mrs. Hunter thinks the divends more sat isfactory than she receives from the millions of dollars in gilt edge bonds standing- in her name. She calls .it cheermongering, and so devoted to it is she that already her fellow-workers hail her as a past mistress of the craft. Cheer, as may be supposed is Mrs. Hunter's stock in trade, and her home, 8S Grove street, is a warehouse of the commodity. There are persons a-plenty dispensing cheerfulness and cheeriness, she says, but the basis of those qualities, cheer itself is all too scarce n the dwellngs of the poor. Mrs. Hunter carres a large puppy on her daily round of charity and she has so much to spare that she is sitting up several other young women in the trade. Her method is to visit as many melancholy women as possible in the long hours she devotes to her mission, and instill enough cheer into them to banish their ' careworn looks for days at ta time. EVen such remuneration as she allows herself is not retained, for she takes her pay in the smiles she leaves behind. Mrs. Hunter believes . much of the misery in the world is the direct re sult of the widespread habit of im parting dismal confidence to the one's acquaintances. Women who ought to be radiant in the mere joy of living, she says, enter the house of theih friends like areas of general humidity' and leave the members of the samll community depressed to degrees de pending on their various tempera ments. They rightfully assume their intimates are interested in them, but they take advantage of that interest to unload their whole burdens of woe ort shoulders perhaps weaker than theirs. If each of such promoters of pessimism would leave her troubles at home" now and then and go abroad with a few tons of 'cheer for her, rel atives and friends, everybody would be happier and the woman - herself, would find it easy to weigh, every ton of care on an apothecary scale. The cheermonger, soon or late, must be recognized as fully as essential to 'ci vilization as the: physician more so; in fact, since her work would reduce the need for the" medical man to a minimum. Sang at His Own Funeral Herr Paul "Turon, of Teschen, In Austrian Silesia, , sang a hymn at his own burial the other day. He had intoned the hymn into a phonograph shortly before his death and directed that it should be repro duced at his funeral service. This was carried out by the heirs, who under the terms of Herr Turon's will, had to sacrifice $500 of his es tate to a charity if they failed to com ply with his wish. A Costly Mistake . Blunders are somtlmes very ex pensive. Occasionally life itself is the price of a 'mistake, but ..you'll never be wrong if you take Dr." King's New Life Pills for Dyspepsia, Dizziness, Headache, Liver or Bo well troubles. They are., gentle yet thorough 2Cc! at all druggists. ; Don t buy your Christmas ' presents until youi have seen what they have "FOR YOU" at the Bazaar in Metro politan Hall nest week. J SPECIAxTltATBsl AnntTNT Otf BAPTIST j. , - STATE CONVENTION.- fare and a ra Q."--.. . raroUna to rabeth 0" rSn of T!k? SUte convention. Decern, ter 7th to 11th. attractive The Seaboard offers vvvu routes via Suffolk, leaving al eigh t SeS -'via: Norfolk lea eigh 1:30 a. m., arrive at Elizabeth Citv 11:30 -a- m. J - '. For further information, apply to H. A. MORSON, C P. & T. A., ... 1 u n ATTTS T. P. A. Raleigh, N. C. - . Sale of Valuable land ' By virtue of the powers contained In a judgment of the Superior ourt of Wake County, ' N. C entered onthe 26th day of September, 1904, in a -Special Proceeding, therein Pending enti tled J. A. King and wife. vs. Idella Dil lard et als.. it being 1129 Special. Pro ceeding docket of said court. I wi offer for sale at public outcry, to the highest bider for cash at the court house door in the citv of Raleigh. N C, on Monday the 19th day of Decem ber. 1904, at 12 o'clock m., the follow ing described real estate. ; FIRST TRACT. A certain tract or parcel of land lying and being in( the county of Wake on the waters pf Syca more Creek and bounded as follows: Beginning 'at a dead . oak, thence 76 poles to a hickory, thence west to pointers, thence south 106 poles tp a pine, thence 68 poles to said creek, thence down said creek to a stake, thence east 82 poles to pointers, thence north 46 poles to a black gum, thence east 140 poles to the beginning, con taining 224 acres more or less. SECOND TRACT. Lying on the waters of Sycamore Creek, - beginning at a hickory on Jessie Harris' . corner, thence east to a hickory on Rheubon Jackson's line, thence -south to a cherry tree to a former, corner, thence west to, a pine, thence 27, poles to a pine, thence west to a red oak, thence north to the beginning, containing 28 acres more or less. Save and except from the above described tract of .land, a tract sold by C. H. Dillard to W. M. Jackson, by deed recorded In, the office of the Register of Deeds for Wake county in Book 64, x page 174, contain ing SO acres and forty pojes and a cer tain tract of land conveyed to Yan cy King, containing one acre, by deed recorded' in the office .of the Register of Deeds for Wake County, in Book 68, page 309. " W. B. JONES, Commissioner. HRISTMAS A large arid well' selected stock of books, in beautiful cloth hi: ings, at 25c:j 85c. and' 50c. ' The best of the 'Poet's,' Fiction, History, '. ence, etc., can be had in these books. .Full list' will be sent on arP-'a' tion. . Card Calendars, - in great variety. We have the largest stock shown in the state, ar.i you can be suited in selection and price. Mail orders will receive our personal attention. ALFRED WILLIAMS & CC CHR IQTRI3AQ HOLIDAY EXCUR lOllVlMO s I O N R ATES 19041905 Southern Railway Announces account above occasion. FOR THE PUBLIC. Tickets at rate of one and one-third first-class fares from all of the Ohio and Potomac rivers and e ast of the Mississippi, inclu l ru' ington, D. C., Evansville Ind., and St. -Louis. Tickets will be sol ! I ' cc: 23, 24, 25 and 31, 1904, and January 1, 1905; final limit January 4, l;' ' FOR STUDENTS AND TEACHERS. On presentation of certificates signed by the Superintendent, Fn President Of School or College tickets will be sold December 17-24th,-W( with final limit January 8, 1905. For further particulars call on or a rencl Reduced Rates to Morehead City For the FisHing Season WHicb Is Now at Its Height. On and after Saturday, October 22d, speclai tickets Trill' be eoW ever h A. & N. C. Railroad from --r- r j . Goldsboro to Morehead City and Rett' to $3tiO. : . -. J Tickets good going Saturday and returning Monday. At Atlantic 1! f excursionists on these occasions a special rate of $3.50 for two nigh- lci' and fiye meals, ' . j :' I V R. P. FOSTER General Manager, Wehn yoM buy your Grocer at pur store. New good arriving jia i;y, E sure that you try our Bon Ton Flo Call and examine our variej stock, J.R. &0 Etc., tc. ROSES, CARNATIONS, VIOLETS and other flowers for all occa?: Palms, Ferns, house and yard p; and plants for decoration. Shade is Magnolias and Evergreens. ; Floral Designs delivered at short not: IMPORTED BULBS for forcing and outdoor planting;-: cinths, Tulips, Freesius, Cai!a, . clssus, etc. Send for price lit, H. STEINMETZ. Florist Phones 113. . Raleigh, X. C o)OOKS r, ri Leather ! T.'E. GREEN, C. T. A., Raifh V. Excu rslo E. a. ; Ferrall Flowers, Plan Goods I se from a to the before grand advert i eminen lie kicl encouti that pi ten fee form t ticularl not pr Bavor j "We pieces, lioman only u blesse ward gyaft!l nually "Hod "Aba I agrd The e should a sorq more square ploitat tonics, soups,, park - tree's i hung public mothe shoes 1 feed t with ' Scienc digest 1 sent t la ted we w than mlssic ' with liar v er or ton, c for g corpu! out - o man-, Parlal public cation comes out tl they may' with "Oh "This publid about VTu "thatj face-t ing a f comp! I ma. subw; the adver Unite - the with visitc or D Blte cure ' tenai does j figurt . .' 'W ' yer, Ing i all 0 stuff j value ductf' possi busir . "Gi what "O. Is at te nc word '.the Eolnj be p him.' "V said tiot , ;W.Ii tvh:v pioi fic 1 to, v, ' 'tiOTlf for ' Frar And whei JectI rnalr ' Frc : nd ro tJost Ed , x thefr cc .'.featt Vorl Pvaf tos, tera hid, find by, a bo wor P?0; f,Ut
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 11, 1904, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75