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The Morning Post from Raleigh, North Carolina • Page 14

Publication:
The Morning Posti
Location:
Raleigh, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

uc We have succeeded in producing a Certain Cure for Headache and Neuralgia, all forms, that has no bad effect. ID)' HEADACHE CURE CAI HI lie ill ev QUO Remedy is IS Vf or just plain com- IF you suffer from Nervous Headache, Mental worry, La Grippe Pains, Sick Headache, Periodic Pains mon Headache, you do yourself an injustice if you do not use Hicks Capudine Headache Cure. Gua aranteed to give ir mediate relief; absolutely harmless; contains no dangerous drugs nor morphine, chloral, antipynne. REMEMBER THERE ARE NO BAD -AFTER EFFECTS WHATEVER! and all -who suffer with headache. cacious, but harmless, as I have seen and felt no other consequences or its recommending its use as one of The lest and mot harmless preparation that I know of.

HUGH MORSON. Truly. W. N. SNELLING, Wholesale and Retail Grocer.

use save relief from pain, tnererore think it a very good remedy for tne troublesome and painful complaint ror G. TL Pilkiara. CbvraUt and Irurzt. Pltatoro. X.

C. 14. Mr. Henry T. Hick.

Dear Sir: Capudine a g.vi z. I take pleasure In Hin; it. it the work every time. Yours, G. IL riLKINGTOX.

Barnville. Oct. 10, ISO. II. T.

icks, Raleigh. X. C. Dear Sir: We take great pleasure In testifying to the merits of Hicks Capudine Headache Cure. Every bottle sold from this store ha given perfect satisfaction.

It relieves headache every time. Yours truly, W. C. JORDAN Druggists. which it is intended.

Sessoms, July 18, 1899. Mr. H. T. Hicks, G.

Raleigh, N. O. N. Dear Sir: My wife suffers a great deal from headache, and I saw Capudine advertised as safe cure for headache. I ordered one 'bottle as sample.

We are highly pleased with results obtained from using it. I take pleasure in recommending its use as the best and most harmless headache cure I know of. Very truly, J. K. SESSOMS.

W. S. PRIMROSE, President N. C. Home Insurance Co.

Raleigh. N. C. May 27. 1S99.

Mr. nenry T. Hicks, MTg. Druggist. Dear Sir: We have sold Capudine for the past six months with entire satisfaction to our customers.

It is a good remedy "without any disagreeable effects whatever so far as we have heard or observed. Near Raleigh. N. Sept. 24, 1898.

Mr. Henry T. Hicks, Druggist. Philadelphia. April 5.

IKO. Mr. II. T. Hick.

Raleigh. N. C. Dear Sir: Please express to my wife at Petersburg. three bottle Capudine.

It Is the only remedy can get to relieve severe nervou licet d-ache without any disagreeable after effect "whatever. Very truly, SIG C. MAYER. (Representing Frank Teller Co. Dear Sir: I have used your Capudine Greensboro.

N. June 6, 1S99. Mr. Henry T. Hicks.

BOBBITT-WYNNE DRUG CO. Headache Cure since you beggan making it, and find it everything that is claimed for it. I find it a preventative Dear Sir: We regard your Capudine as well as a present cure. I am rarely Central M. E.

Church. Rale's a. X. a Edwin C. Glenn.

r. Mr. Henry T. Hick. HaU-ish.

N. Dear Sir: I bare ued your Headache Cure, and rind it t- a quick and pl.twint remedy for La I-ache, with n. unplmsaut following. REV. EDWIX C.

GI.LXX. as one of the very best headache remedies." and take pleasure in recommend Near Raleigh, N. Sept. 20, 1898. Mr.

Henry T. Hicks, Druggist. Dear Sir: I have used your Capudine Ciyta for about four years, rostoffice Department, Raleigh. N. C.

Oct. 1898. Mr. Henry T. Hicks, Raleigh, N.

C. Dear Sir: I liave been a great sufferer from headache, and by using Hicks' r. S. We liave Pent six bottles more to Philadelphia. ever without it by me; and notice that I am not troubled with neuralgia so often since I began using this medicine as before.

Very truly, REV. J. W. ATKINSON. and have always received prompt re ing it to our customers.

It has a larger sale here than any other headache remedy. Truly, GRISSOM FORDHAM. Druggists. lief from heacuccne ana neuralgia, have always found it perfectly harmless A. T.

BYRUM, Farmer, Ginner and Miller. Capudine Cure I find speedy relief from the pain. I have also used it In my family with very best results. I find it exceedingly good to relieve the exhaustion occasioned by excessive physical and mental activity. I can highly recommend it to those who suffer from headache or neuralgia as a sure and safe cure.

Very respectfully, W. M. BROWN, JR. Myatt Hunter, Wholesale Grocers. Mr.

Henry T. Hicks. Raleigh. X. C.

I take pleasure in stating that I have often used your Capudine Headache ('tire with good results, and liave neither wen nor felt other effects titan relief from letln. 1 can readily say that it Is a safe and reliable remedy. W. A. MYATT.

Raleigh, N. Sept. 29, 1898. Mr. Henry T.

Hicks. Mr. Henry T. Hick. lUlelgh.

My Iear Sir: Replying to tout the Mh Capudine i well here. I hate found Inliai.c u'- in recourse to it myself. Sincerely. JOS. Romxsox.

Publisher GulJboro Raleigh, N. Sept 27, 1898. Mr. H. T.

Hicks. I desire to add my testimony to the merits and good results of your Capudine Headache Cure. I have used it for pain in head for a long while, and have never failed to find relief from its use. I can and do recommend to any Raleigh Male Academy, Hugh Morson, A. Principal, OetolHT 31.

1S9S. I have found Hicks' Capudine Headache Cure si very ctflcient remedy for sick headache, and take pleasure in rwr Sir: I take Treasure in saying that I have often used Hicks'. Capudine for headache with good, results, ana De- lieve the preparation to do not oniy em for Sate at (31ft Wett Stocked rug Stores 25 and 50c. a Bottte within the coming twenty years, if not WILLI AAA PRESTON J0NHST0N earlier, the entire missionary and ediH to the mechanical nd operative cl.m nf the city: recognising the fad th.it the final otflce of New Orleans I to 1ncotne a great center crt ornamen! tl actlon of Congress oa the Blair bill for National aid to education. But It can truly lw said that, in 18S0.

the American system at best had effected a lodgment in the Southwest. In this entire group of five States there were not a doz good free high Kchooi for white pupils: probably tut twenty grailed school systems: and the Si ne young women, often lonzinr ia tm fur the moan of olr.ainlns. hn: let praying for the- in the elucatlm. up to ten year Snth had leen Mow to a'r call. There ha.

Ie a srj fying ndtancrnM-nt in hrj tr tlie -calletl frnia'e cvlleje tin-tlii. many of which nre iH-comlary for with an upp-r grade cationai work in our new colonial possessions will be pitched on the Hampton keynote. In a way less exposed to national ol-servatiou; indeed, perhaps even now mot appreciated in many of the "educational centers" of the North. Iresi- manufacturing industry for the in every ia thi extended scheme wa found an expert, limiting on a thorough dealing with the woTk In hand. l.

The presi.lent displayed the qual found as president of Tulane University, in New Orleans, in 1884. Here, first, during the memorable fifteen years of the development of this remarkable seat of learning, the young colonel, profeswor and temporary president of a demoralized State Tokay," Fayetteville, N. August 28, 1899. IHon. Robert IFurman, Editor of The Post, Raleigh, N.

C.3 My Dear Sir take the liberty of Bending you excerpt from the Boston Transcript of the 23rd dnst. laudatory of the 'South' greatest educator sub ities tf the true educational hi avoiding all emtroverny nd pr-; nteut. A few the Sus- uait.r.- have opewd their tj.ir' university attained a national reputa dent Johnston, in the very heart of universities either rulnel by the the most intensely Southern portion of for not yet estabiislwtl. had I fore them the South; like Dr. CuiTy personally a Kittle for life with the old estal-nd by training a Southerner of lished ytem of ecclesiastical len.mi-Southerners: in fifteen years has built lnational etlucation.

still in up an institution rluA in the honesty! of the ground. In Louisiana the prol-and thorough excllence of all Its in-ilem wa.s ivmplicntel by the olxtinite ruction is not the inferior of any social and Teilglous di.TlnctlonH whirh. voklng no unfriendly critlcfcmi frojn the regulation college or uulvendiy anywhere. In the line of the fauiotn maxim of Najoleon: -In iny new departure, let the leader nlotie and go direct to the ieoplc. for the flrnt time in outhem educational hKory a uni school of the higher educsitlon in the from the beginning, iuixl wucceIv.My country.

And, leyond this, in its Ideal met and almot overthrown every ut-of organization, methoxls of college dis-! itemM to plant the American system tion, beyond question, with the exception of his friend, Dr. J. L. M. Curry, the most notable of the new educational leaders of the South.

What meu, like the late Bishop Haygood and Dr. Curry, have done as missionaries at large in the great development of the American system of universal education during the past thirty years, President Johnston, in a work almost exclusively local but tof enduring value and increasing reputation, has achieved by the planting and nurture, in the very heart of 'the old South, sequent to the great war, Col. William Preston Johnston. Coming from that quarter, it is eer-tiainily a high tribute to this high scholar and Christian gentleman, and is worthy of reproduction in every Southern publication. It was my proud privilege to be on terms of intimacy with this worthy gentleman (through more than a generation by-gone, as it was -my pro.uder privilege still to have been on terms of Intimacy with his great father, Al-Ibert Sidney Johnston.

As I have written before, one of the three or four cipline, adaptation to the most embar even for tlie white raw. Happily for and xix of thee State u- eta j-il the free normal an 1 for white c'itU: while t-v-ry Su em Slate hat now a x.j.-::.1 rh.i.iL But the mot of the higher luJJ-n for -meu doubtlte SopU X'- Colk'g the proper worn of Tulane I I the raterly ef I'r- -dent Dixon, himself ia the 1 a follower of Ir. T. lUn the Sophia New(-omb Cc.V grown In ten short yea inro s- j-e wSlh TahU'-. versity president fatvd right aliotit and.

wlih neither apology tir explanation, harnessed Tulane to every vital agency of uaivcral education in Iouisi.ina and th RouthwcM. He was the new experiment, the new-come rassing variety of imputation in a city and State whose previous experiments president found hi nisei supported by in etlucation had leen little more than the most intelligent, resolute and tact- a series of brilliant failure. TnLine fnl board tf trnteH in the South. the au of tlie TouWana etlticarlon, that, ia the ten years of It activity. friends tf the common chool In undnr the most embarrasinjr circum- city of New Orleans Into a owerful grearest men that! have ever known, stances, the group of schools now in University today represents more com-j with Hon.

Randall tiibson an it chalr-pletely the Imperative Southern neee- sill personal friends, and with sity of the broadest education ami the such wise confidence In their leader most comprehensive method of deal- that lie was virtually given a free ing with this necessity of any school i hand. south of Mason and Dixon's Jine. In-1 The record of the great work of deed, to find its com pan ion- work in the President Johnston, and his excell-MJt organization, which, in tlie en year nnaV a-ceordiflig to President Davis at eluded under the general title, Tulane of it activity, repulsed tlie a-ault University. With no' disposition to It oi ai.i.--" sensibly liftcl the of female iieaiSDarle l't State. ItA new btiil.l.r.

in-t :r.i'' the enemies of Kchool; woke depreciate the excellent work now up Its friends hi city and late: and la the broad foundation of what the time of his most lamented fall, the greatest soldier, that the new. world had that far produced. Trusting that our views may coincide as to Col. estimate, I am, yours truly, I TV. J.

GREEN. ing done in several of the more progressive colleges and universities in these sixteen States, we have no hesi faculties of Tulane in lnth its departments for men and women requires more than tli allotted columns of a metroiolltan dally. But in brief the different steps may -1 noted. 1. The new president faced the sit now one of the most hriHfuI of the spectacle ia the new public school trgauIratIon of the lean.

Aiming at tlior-Ksho -a Southwest. Along with this he place.1 Its work. It ha In it- prvMeat -o -r the entire university at the dipoal the nvwt jotM-ati''- of the common school teachem and the higher educational tation in declaring that in what it now is, what it represents and what it can North would be difficult. Perhaps the new University of Chicago is the only eminent representative of the same policy of adaptation in the Northern States. When (President Johnston name lo "Louisiana, In 1880, as president of the State University, he found the educational system in the midst of what be made in the near future, this institution stands for an educational policv alreailr ha etlncational public; through a Kystem uation wlrh a courage that In a weaker of free lectures, by his faculty, and em man would have been professional do that signifies more to the future of thost States than everything that has cultivation of the liirrarr life of New Orlean an I struction.

He simply, told the people 1 '3 been written and said concerninir might be called a struggle for exlf- that a State, full of so-calied "vol eiiial tenns to all the pr.v;J.V ence. The university at Baton Rouge leges," had not Ln It the material for a Southern affairs since its establishment in 1884. The two men who seem to have been university. was without funds, in a hired house, proper university: and that the only inent gentlemen from he whole country: during one whole season supporting a campaign of education that reached almost every "onsIJerable village in the State. He was nlway ready to answer the call to pcak anywhere; throuzh several mouths In with the author of this paper, meeting tne worklngmen of both races in their labor unions in New Orleans.

with thirty-nine students. The fifteen hope of one was the vital connection years or fearful political agitation of Tulane with every live element ol simce the days of Yo had made the ioonular educsvtiou in the Common- fa This great work. ar bort of it own :j.I-?- --t itent at home, bin In f' vork a nidlcal Jiten Wiirl proper development of the new public wealth. In the face of the most n-school sj-stem almost an Imnossihilirv. lentless eccleslastiefsm.

he ulanted jTUIiANE'S PRESIDENT. A. ID. Miayo, in iBoston Transcript.) No school year begins as the year before it evolved to its triumphal end- ing. One change in the superintend-ency of the public school system of an American city may become the most potent factor in the educational development of 'that community for a (peneration to come.

The death of President William Preston Johnston of Tulane University, New Orleans, at the home of his in Lexington, on July 17th, is an event of so much public importance, apart from a wide personal acquaintance, that for the coming few months the attention of the better informed educational public of the whole coun zation of the Mvotid-iry ah-i llirmi'h lit. In New Orleans the common school I Tulane on the broad American plat-was practically in a state of form of the State University hi Its illustration of the nr-cla- Indeed, in this way the city teachers 6f New Orleans for several years re wun me teacners unpaid, and the ed- character training of youth of all .3 1 hap, ia Ihi elif.lI 1 i'f- ucational public greatly discouraged. sorts and conditions of theological he ceired from Tulane University a me one thoroughly live iot hi the llefs. In a State which had iust eman born and educated as the permanent I representatives of the New Education ct the Southern people, including both races and all classes, were S. Armstrong and William Preston Johnston.

Both were of iNew England descent and graduates of New England colleges. Both were specially trained in their youth, in the most characteristic circles, for the graft work of their future. Both were engaged in the civil war, in positions especially valuable fen wide observation and in intimate relations with the group of remarkable men that snrrounded Xdneodn and Davis. Neither of them would probably be regarded by the experts a great schoolmaster; yet both were, in courtie or uniruciiou equivalent to a normal school of the broadest ami ler of aa-i jMHiple for such work i I-5 fifteen Tear TuJ-'- city and State seemed the University ci pat ed a majority of. Its from of Louisiana, an excellent collegiate chattel slavery; he announced that ev-school in New Orleans, doing more ery boy entering Tulane must take off lujrliest grade.

He began at once the is the result of te development of tlie free puliKc library this group of triple, n.i'i' 1TS moaeraie income of liLs coat and light it out on tiie manual which has grown Into the present free library of the city. By a system of leadership of Pre.d. training line of mechanics; and sent 000 a year than any similar institution in the State. The rift of Tml try would be directed to that city. It is not too much to say.

that any freest of the educational policy represented by President Johnston would just now be a greater oalamitv to free scholarships from all the parishes or counties of the State and others to Boston for a group of expertn in this direction. Bv a wise stroke he Terlane of a great block of real estate deed. In hi etate r.i -whK for ten year nu I an lnvalUl. it would 1 for the founding of college for white i utilized the admirable sclwol known offered for competition In the leading schools, he built up a constituency yourn coma easily have been disposed as the University of Louisiana, with wt cixy -anl State amd. indirectl ble even for him i work without the fc.oriy the best sense of the word, educational which cannot be diverted while" Tu Wl Mllu ujciuwi uy wnicn every jits corps or accomplished teacliers, as "V'bole Uthwest, statesmen, fit associates of Mann, Bar- than any political of trutee.

faculty ani 'f' previous donation in Louisiana had --I the preparatory training school for his action of the entire ne.iflnnal nubile. Kan i nara, wintnrop, Huiygood, Curry; and lane retains Its present ascendance. By fortunate early Investment lu school building In the xrity, with an to say that be "net. -r i been robbed of its vitality, or the college established by it could have eaAlly added another to the lonz roll of in. collegiate and university departments.

2. It was soon founil that Tulane was to be no hosnital for educational addition to the original endowment. finer fibre than i It was only hy group of States included in this section. William Preston Johnston was bom in Kentucky, the son of General Albert Sidney Johnston, in .1831., After a miscellaneous Trerjaratarv iohrmr stitutions for all races and both sexes the university has now been enabled Invalids, worn-out veterans and Impe- rota twrwinalitV. tn to hotye itself tn an admirable situa iucu curing tne past century haveicunlous social celebriitivs.

The new i tlon, adjoining Audubon (Park; while the only man yet developed from the colored race worthy of such designation, Mr. Booker Washington. Thy both were given time to plant the new departure so firmly in Southern soil that Johnston could on his deathbed, like Armstrong, that he was no longer a' necessity in the institution which owed its existence, and character essentially to his great person- ble wiU was hanie-- Christian faVth. a .1. J.

the medical ilefKirtment lias been fa piayea rast arwi loose with the highest; president had already, in the aeadem-educational titles with varied results. leal minlical nud legal sehoo'rt. proba-The coming of President Johnston, i bly the ablest corps of Instruct rs at the age of fifty-three, in the full de-; gathered around anv southern instltu-velopment of his magnetic and con-1 tku of learning; the auajority young servative manhood, with hl tritniir men of vored In similar way In town. The time will come with Xh Inevitable coming prosperity of the city, when that thS man tM ble coming of the eod: 1 of suffering and wear Mawlf the luiury additional endowments will fnmNlt the iiecessary funds for the complete might leave his grcai ii.i it rjn development that always ha urn ed the mind and burdened ihe ceart of Its i lor the past twenty-five years, was the ready graduated to the presidency of most pronounced new departure in tue'A great State -University, representing higher education of the Southwest. every section of the country with m-Under theleadership of Dr.

Sears and to-date educational ideal. A most lui-the leabody Education Board of. Intant department, really the outcome home, he graduated at Yale, studied law at fljouisville, and, in 18G2, at the age of thirty-one, tbecame aide-de-camp of President Davis, till the close of t'ae civil war. After several months of confinement as a political prisoner, he was called, in 1867, By General, then President Lee, to the chair of Jlngiish literature in Washington and lee University, in Dui-ing this period he wrote the life of his fa-then In 1880 he was called to the presidency of the. Louisiana State versrty at Baton Rouge, where he remained until his' final position was srniy.

Armstrongs at Hampton, solved the question of the true education of the negro; the question on which the whode future of the South depends; so completely that the Southern educational public and every Southern State iv min-id noilet ai great president. 4. But perhaps the most character future. a't ie-tlc feature in. this almost romantic 3 lUe Progressive ot tne muustnai training, was the or wSfor of a proper schooi of om-l ces in hSdUw The IwEtTTibJt tion'S SeirtSJt mmiofo? attracting the of 4he higher education of woman.

Al ticn for their eight millions of colored-hn everv Stat arvi ut rac very fetate and It a poor both ways. A man nas orgauixatia: has management. on the' though no part of the country can neODle on the Hamntvn i was literally waitr most nccomphshtd nvomeu. ant on me Hampton plan; and, mg, with great extation, for iheotlrer extending a friendly rig and ht hand show a enthusiastic group.

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About The Morning Post Archive

Pages Available:
22,142
Years Available:
1897-1905