Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Oct. 4, 1905, edition 1 / Page 3
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la In Society, : PJ, L. Foster went to Burlington a visit. ' . ; . - , Is5 AJma Campbell went to San ; yesterday. . . , r, Mary Lltchford returned from .-.'u'iiIertdersoA. '.' ,." ..s Yi14 Norris left I yesterday' for a -hiruioiiA p. 4 to attend1 school ; v:s Elizabeth Burton has Returned i a Visit to relatives in Virginia. j Met a Dunn of Oxford was in c;ty on her way to Willow Springs 's Esther Rush of Aberdeen ar f i to enter King's Business College. J- 'M. Gardner of Warrenton is ::r.:,- her daughter, Mrs.' J. -t. Row- E. E. Moffitt is confined to her , by sickness, but is reported im- .vd.: ' t . .... s. W. C. Oliver of Norfolk is visit Mr 5. L. L. Keuster on north Daw- .- :vH.' "Y. II. Pemberton of Little Rock, .,' is visiting Mrs. R. O. Burton, on ;r.t . street. : - J. S. Fulghum and nephew. Ernest King, left for Franklin- a visit. f. J. D. Larkin of Henderson was yesterday on her way to Sampson : y on a visit. - -.11 ' ,'. '' . I ; i p. Charles Baskerville . and chil returned to Xew York after vis'it- G. II. Snow. ' I s Ella Simmons has eone to ncrton City,.iwhere she will at ?v hool this season. . Hamilton Powell arrived from rl and is spending two days with ..!-, Mrs. "Wj C. Tyres. Virgil Rountree returned to .or. after visiting her parents, . and Mrs. J B. Timberlake. Sallie Bonner of Cary spent the here and was accompanied home iss Ethel Page of Cheraw, S. C. H. R. Bryan, who has been lir.g the sumrher at Black Moun :assed through on her way home ew Bern. M:?s Marcja . Myers of .Washington, V ' ".. passed through yesterday on her to .lorganton to attend the con- :ion of the Daughters of the Con racy. -. ; Mrs. Pu H. Brooks and Mrs. Leo D. H'-urtt of Raleigh and Mrs? T. J. Jar- ; of Greenville, N. C, left yesterday ' . Morganton - to attend the Daugh- :-rs of the Confederacy convention. Miss Mary Pearson, a student at the ! ;: ist University, was called to Dunn . -rilay by the serious illness of her r.thi. Sheriff W. F. Pearson. Miss '-'.fon was accompanied to Dunn by - : "iicle, Mr. John Pearson. a ::i?s Willa Norris left yesterday for V -hinpton .City, where she will enter National Seminary. She was ac- . t s i 1 i n r n r r-r. N" Miss Ella Simmons also went : Vv'ashlngton to enter the same in- :T uilon. . a Witherspoono Ramsay . ' ': "Is. have ?een issued to the mar r; ..f Mr. TAEdgar Witherspoon of ' : . Ala., and Miss Julia Allan R y of Salisbury. The wedding f "lie place in the First' -Presby- : : .. hurch at Salisbury at 8 o'clock "n th 17th evening of this month. ' Song Recital Thursday Th- rubhc is cordially invited to at f r.l the song recital to be given in, Elenton Street Methodist church the evening of Thursday, October ' h at 8 o'clock.. A silver offering ins Home Missionary Society. Mott-Elli, Forthcominn W.hhi InvUaUon!!6' N- ' Oct.. 3.-Special. rcaTarfolS rratl' Mrs' wam B. Ellis ' honor of your presence . at thmarriage of their daughter, - ; .Mildred, Lieutenant Thomas A. Mott, nn '- V? lted States Marine Corps, on Wednesday evening, the eighteenth jr f October, at six o'clock, Episcopal Church, i " Hickory, N. C. - Miss Florence Cowles, niece of Lieu tenant Mott, will be maid of honor, and Miss Esther Ransom, daughter of the late Senator Ransom, will be the only other bridesmaid. Mr. Dorman Thomp, son of Statesville will be hest man; Mr. L. W. MacKesson of.! Statesville and Mr. Neill. Clark of Hickory, ushers. The ceremony will be performed by Rev. Dr. J. A. Weston of Hickory. Im mediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Mott will leave for Washington, where, and at Baltimore, they will spend their honeymoon. Lieutenant aott resume his duties at Wash jirigton on the 29th. The bride-to-be. is well known and very popular in Statesville. Lieutenant Mott is a son of Dr. J. j. Mott, who lives just east of town, and is a youngs man of promise, of excellent 'character and habits. . A Rorhantic Marriage Patterson, N. J., Oct. S. Miss Helen Van Nimwegen of this city was mar ried today to Augustine Meaher, a southerner of Mobile, Ala., who is. re puted to be a millionaire. Tho cere mony was performed by Dean Mc Nulty in St. John's Roman Catholic church. The bride, who Is a tall, attractive blonde, is the daughter of Mrs. An drew Van Nimwegen of No. 657 Clin ton street. Until recently she was em ployed as a stenographer in a Wall street office. It was in last July that she flflrst met her husband. The latter had been paying attention to the daughter of the senior member of the firm where Miss Van Nimwegen had been emploj-ed, and he came from the south at that time with martrimonial intentions. As soon as he saw the pretty .stenographer, however, he fell in love with her and his interest in the( broker's daughter quickly vanish ed, and from that time he was very attentive to Miss Van Nimwegen. THE MORNING POST. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBEE, 4, IQOs' Full of Tragic Meaning are these lines from J. H. Simmons, of Casey, la. Think what might have re sulted from his terrible cough if he had not take nthe medicine about Which he writes: "I had a fearful cough that dis turted my night's rest. I tried every thing, but nothing -would relieve It, un til I took Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, which completely cuj-ed me." 'Instantly remleves and permanently cures all throat and lung diseases; prevents grip and pneumonia. At all driggusts: guaranteed; Oc and .'1.00. Trial bottle free. . ', . ' . Mr. Ernest Meadows of Oxford, who has been for some time secretary to W. C. Parsons of the Panama canal commission, has gone to Panama as secretary to the board -of consulting engineers. He left last Thursday. He is a son of Mrs. Ludie W- Meadows, matron of the state school for the blind. . LAST CROP BULLETIN Reports for the Week Ending Mon day Show Little Change The, last crop bulletin here for the year was issued yesterday. It was from the North Carolina section, Unit ed State department of V agriculture, climate and crop service, weather bu reau, for the week endihg Monday, October 2, and reads: 'The week has been characterized by warm days and cool night, the tem perature averaging about 4 degrees above the normal ; and by the absence of rainfall, the only rain reported be ing a trace at Asheville. Light frost occurred in Tyrrell county on the morning of the 27th. The weather has been favorable for saving crop3, . but tov dry for plowing and for sowing small grain. All growing crops need rain, and pastures, are failing. "The general condition of the cotto"n i i if i The Secret or Good Coffee -Even the best housekeeper cannot make a ood cup of coffee without good material. Dirty, adulterated and queerly blended coffee Buch as unscrupulous dealers' shovel xrrer their counters on't do. Bui take the pure, clean, nnturai flavored- LION COFFEE, th lesfler o! ali package coflces the coffee that for over ft quarter of a century has been daily welcomed in millions of homes and you vrill make a drink nt for a king in this way: nnw Tfi tiiakf nOOD COFFEE. Cw LION COFFEE, bcOM to gt b. TffdU T? "& Ji?$?an and one Grind yonr LION COFFEB rath-.-; fit ' 'VZ0! ,Mck?rartf nd extra for tho pot." First mix it wilt little cold vrhUn, ecoreh to mke & IWcK ae. n a a.id whit of an egg (if eKg ia to be ud a. a. attlr)t tha .'o.fow on of the W 1st. WITH UUiLinu nJt. uu nlil9 live THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a little cold water and set aside live Sawa nrAmnflv. - . minutes to settle. Serve promptly. - .. nd 2d. WITH JCOID WATER. . AM yoof 3413 1 ve brlnfi ff in a hall. Then set aside, add a little cold water, i.a-w 'r m WITH J COLD WATER. in2niitc rcAdv to serve. 3 :JB2lfctVt2 DOVTS iDon't use water that ha3 been boiled before. 1 TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE. . TTft . .let With lags. Tee part of the white of an egg, mixing it with tha uol Col- fee beore boUlng. . , . . , x,ju r caA water, and act 2d. with cold Water instead of egga. Aftef boil og add a daeH o. cia waicr, aglfl for eight or ten mlnntes, then genre tniooga ypg Insist on getting a pacKaoe- 8,' y-' prepare It accordtag to tots recipe rSSdSSSS Li ON COFFEE In fnture. , (Sold only in lib- 8eale4 pacKagoa.; (Ldon-head on every package.) r (Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.; SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE . . - . . rrtTOA cTTrrP. r.rt . Toledo. Ohio. A DANGEROUS MISTAE E RalefgS Mothers Should Not Neglect Kidney Weakness in Children Most children have weak kidneys. The earliest warning: is bed-wettingr. Later comes backache, headache, languor. 'Tis a mistake to neglect these trou bles. To blame the child for its own dis tress. . - ' Seek to cure the kidneys Save the child from deadly kidney ills. ' Doan's Kidney Pills cure sick kid neys. Raleigh parents recommend them. , Mrs. A. C. Howell of 215. East Davie street . says: "My little boy suffered from a kidney weakness. Tho secre tions from those organs were thiGk and he always complained of being un able to retain it and often wet the bed. He had a sallow look and his back ached a great deal and he also had much headache. I had a doctor attend him, but he seemed to grow worse instead of better. I noticed Doan's Kidney Pills highly recommend ed in our papers and I got a box of them from Bobbitt-Wynne Drug Com pany's store. Before the boy had taken half of tfiem there was a decided change for the better. The secretions from the kidneys became natural, he did not complain of backache or head ache and there was a wonderful change for the better in his complex ion. Doan's Kidney Pills are all that is claimed for them and I will only be too glad to sjiy so at any time." ' For sale by 'all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Company, Buf falo, N. Yr, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name-Doan's and take no other. crop remains unchanged; it is open ing fast and picking is progressing rapidly, about three-fifth of the crop having been picked; fewer reports of shedding have been received, but-the top crop will be very light; in general the crop will bo below the average, and in places very light. "A fair crop of tobacco, of rather inferior quality, has been cut and cured. Early corn is maturing fast, and in. some localities, is being gather ed late corn needs rain, but has been beneflflted by the warm weather. A good crop of buckwheat is being har vested, and good crops of Irish pota toes and peanuts are being dug. Sweet potatoes are good; the, cabbage crop is a failure; turnips are needing rain badly. Fine crops of hay; fodder, and pea-vine hay have been secured. Sorghum molasses making is under way. Over the greater portion of the state it is too dry for plowing and for sowing small grain some wheat and oats have been sown in the central and western districts, but are needing rain badly. Apples are falling badly, and will be a. light crop. "Rains reported: Trace at Asheville; other stations ' none." , RALEIGH BUILDING AND LOAN Charter Issued for Another Strong Association for this City The. Raleigh Building and Loan As sociation was chartered yesterday by the secretary of state with $20,500 stock subscribed, that being the amount with which the concern is authorized to be gin business. It is announced that the incorporators will meet this afternoon at 5 o'clock in the office of the state treasurer for the purpose of organiza tion. The following are the subscrib ers to stock named in the articles of agreement: Messrs. "W. C. Riddick, James I. Johnson, Alexander TVebb, A. A. Thompson, Joseph R. Chamberlain, F. T. Ward; J. F. Ferrall, J. W. Bailey, William B. Snow, W. A. Linehan, C. B. Edwards, James R. Rogers, "Walters Durham, J. J. Ber-; nard, D. K. Wright, W. S. Wilson and Judge Thomas B. Womack. Another charter issued yesterday waa to the Henderson-Snyder Company of Monroe, Union county. Incorporators are Messrs. F. G. Henderson, D. B. Snyder and J. W. Neal. The company will conduct a general merchandise business and will start out with a paid in, capital stock of $5,0CO, which is the amount of the capital stock. COMMISSIONER VARNER Presided at Convention of Commis sioners of Labor Stastics Hon, H. B. Varner returned yester day from San Francisco where he as commissioner of labor of North Caro lina, attending the annual convention of commissioners of labor statistics of America. Mr. Varner was first vice president of the association and in the absence of the president, ; Hon. Carroll D.. Wright, presided over the sessions of the convention. Mr. Varner says It was a good meeting and proved profit able to every member. The associa tion elected Hon. Chas. P. Neill, Uni ted States commissioner of labor, aa president and left the place for tha meeting next . year to the executive committee with the understanding that it would be held either in North Caro lina or Canada. -- Mr. Varner while away visited the Lewis and Clark exposition and other points of interest in the far west. Reduced Rates via Seaboad Acccrunt Norfolk Horse Show The Seaboard announces account of the Norfolk Ho'rso Show, October 17th 21st, , they will sell round trip tickets from Raleiglvand Intermediate points, to Noolk and return, including ad mission to the Horse Show, for one fare,, plus 50 cents (minimum rate in cluding admission fee $1.00). Tickets will be on sale October 16h to 21st, Inclusive, arid bear final return limit of October 23rd. ' ' For further information, address C. II. GATTIS, T, P, A., ' - Palelgh. N. Q. B8YIAN PEARCE CO. AWAIT THE BIG EENT rl ,1a o Wed Eiestil ay 9 4th CONTINUES FOR THE WEEK. THE MOST GORGEOUS DISPLAY OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC HEAD WEAR FOR LADIES, MISSES AND CHILDREN EVER SHOWN IN RALEIGH, AWAIT THIS EVENT, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, J TAILOR-MADE WRAPS, TAILOR-MADE SUITS, TAILORiMAOE SKInTS, -TAILOR-MADE WAISTS, v SILK PETTICOATS. FALL DRESS GOODS, NEW DRESS TRIMMINGS, GARPETS AND MATTINGS. f. - ;.vf: 1 t - . i - C0 Knstltute for Troong Women B Conserva tory of Music TT Best, Place1 for Yom Daughter PEACE RALEIGH. N. C. r m : FREE Address, tas.Diawiddit) Vietlisat fiitute for Conserva tory of. " Music Tto Best Flace frr Your 5 i nriif:' A X7.AI.EIGH I CoHegb courses Catalogiifll Address, !: fistittrt fnr- Young, Women Conserva tory of Music. The Best. Place for Your Daughter V N. C. ff . Citalogua Address, Chas. W. Barrett rp ium Raleigh, N. C. ' i " ! . ! !... THEssss- i pf Obi. TUCKER JNO. A. TUCKER, Greensboro. N, C.r New and modern in every particular and a model of neatness and comfort ff A share of your patronage will be appreciated. WHEN AT THE FAIR. CALL ON JOHN P. HAYES 124 1-2 Fayettevllte Street. ; jcc auu licai tuc uuiaun an Victor Machines. I carry a large line of both kinds of records; also a line of horns and sup plies. Write or call on me for further par- ticulars. You are always welcome. ' I also control two Photo Studios, where you can get any style and price photographs. CONTROL YOUR COOK And you will have a happy horn Buy a I And you will have no further trouble. ' Cooking done quickly and economically. For Light, use the NEW WELSBACH. A Big Light for little money. Standard Gas & Electric Co,, 124 FAYETTE VI LLE ST. PHONE 228. x, . We do gas piping and electric wiring. No charge made for estimates. Eo Cart land, Mercf ant-Tailor Greensboro. N. C. We lead tha Stab in Style, Fit. Quality: and Pric3. STATE OF CONN ECTICUT, . Office of the Insurance Commissioner, ' Hartford, November 21, 1904. Hon. Morgan G. Bulkeley, president, Aetna Life Insurance Company, Hart ford: . Dear Sir: You will find enclosed herewith a copy of the report of the ex aminatidn of your company that was recently made by this department in compliance with the : law providing for such examinations. , The work began on the 19th day of April and ended October 24th, 1904. The result of the ez amiantion is very gratifying to the department and fully confirms the state ment of the company as to its financial condition. The figures show the sur-' plus of the company as the result of this examination to be $3,047,248.49 'more than was claimed in the statement filed with this department. The larger surplus shown by the department'3 figures arises mainly from th fact that you ha ve( charged yourselves with a special reserve , liability o! more than $2,000,000 above that required by the statutes. The Investigation makes.it qujte apparent that the company Is leading fairly with the policy holders and complying with all the requirements of the law. Respectfully yours, ' THERON UPSON, ' Commissioner. The Merchiants . Journal. TO GUARD AGAINST OVERCHARGES and ; ; . DISAPPOINTMENT B UY SHEET IRON STOVES, SELF FEEDING STOVES, Smok Consuming Stoves and t Paint Your House with S.W.P ALEIGH. N.C. INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES $100 FOR SALE BY THE Mechan ics & I n vest of s' U n ion Owing to unusual demand for money for the erection of dwellings the Company will place on sale at $f2.00 TWENTY-FIVE FULL PAID TEN YEAR COUPON CERTIFICATES, $100.00. At this price it gives -a net six per cent, investment, secured by Real Estate Mortgages. For particultrs, address, Official Organ North Carolina Re of Wholesale Dealers, Millers and Manu NORMAN H. J It has the largest bona fide circula In the south. ' ' Every, merchant should sad it. S Points, Advertising Hints, Window De Association News, Fashion Notes, Mad lation, Trade Evils and Abuses. News prises. Published in the Interest of an Semi-monthly subscriptions received pr pess Man's Journal. tall Merchants Association. Afsoclatloq facturers of North and South Carolina. OHNSON. EDIT? X tion of any merchants paper published r . '' peclalL features: .Commercial Law corations and Cards, National Bulletin, e Reports, Hints for the Clerk, Legis Notes Concerning. Commercial Enter d for the Merchants of the -South. lor tq July 1st, $1.00 the year. A Busl- iSample Copy Sent on Request .Bins in Piisiii, inc. RALEIGH. NORTH. CAROLINA. H GEORGE ALLEN, Raleigh. TRINITY COLLEGE Four Departments Collegiate, Graduate, Engineering and Law. Large library facilities. Well equipped laboratories in all de partmis of science. Gymnasium furnished with best apparatus. Expenses very moderate. Aid for worthy students. , ToiiEig men wishing study j Law sHotild investigate tKe ; superior advantages offered by tHe Department of Law in Trinity College r For catalogue and furth Information, , address, v D. W. NEWSOM, Registrar, DURHAM, N. C. f
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 4, 1905, edition 1
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