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The Farmer and Mechanic from Raleigh, North Carolina • Page 8

Location:
Raleigh, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MECHANIC, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8. 10. THE FARMER AND 8 Does Farming Pay -a Nsrth its commercial life. For many years he us wuu- with the busi-1 MAKES PRISON STATE AT HAVE BAPTISTS i a ins mc of a article which arj 7 number1 of tho aer rr It la a statement fj 'tju several practical was a prommtHii. uiv" ness under his own name and later as Primrose Petty and Newsom.

I His wife waa Miss Sarah A. Stone, a 'daughter of the late David Stone of CORD HIGHER RE his word, and love for each other, the future is radiant with promise. UNUSUAL PROGRESS. In an interview yesterday with. Mr.

J. W. Bailey, Editor of the Biblical Recorder, he said: "The Baptist State Board of Missions and Sunday Schools met in Raleigh Friday night and received the report of the most gratifying years work from Secretary Livingston Johnson, that has been Franklin county, uesiaes wu- CCk flflfl htm two children, his son. Ml BEST YEAR, HER 'i Will Oiear ri UUI WjVUUc Newsom. now in Philadelphia.

farming: U. v. -r, I stock, grass an rr Brawley, of Ired. u. and his daughter.

Mrs. Maurice stock larmer; mock larmer; n. to $70,000. 1 1 it. 'recorded in- the history of the Baptist I.

Three Ouarters beyond Edgecomu. a CU! f- farmer on a v. ry hr. I Dunn, of Nw It, rn. a- 1 2c on hlarket.

Kmhw. u-. gentlemen all aKTt Carolina iIchs pay. a 'has liald them. denomination o'f this State.

rtmpnt unusual rjrogress a fr' I InorrO hOVA Livingston Johnson Gives Valuable INCREASED MISSIONS of Henderson. The funeral services will take place at twelve o'clock today and will tje conducted at the First "Baptist church by Rev. W. C. Tyree.

ATTENTION I CONFEDERATES. The members of the "Wake County Confederate Veterans Association will meJt at the mayor's office this (Friday) morning at 11:30 o'clock for the purpose of attending the funeral of 'our late comrade. Jas. D. Newsom.

J. J. THOMAS, President. Aiinni nilKIMIMO I AIM nce. and tboy Director J.

P. Kerr Says Cotton Crop on State Farm is a Half Crop but Higer Prices Will Aid, ancj Conditions are all Satisfactory. Messrs. W. E.

Cro3land and J. P. Kerr, was reporxea. iue cnuiiuea it a.i6 had gracious reasons cf revival; the amount contributed by the churches to the several objects of the convention exceeds the amount contributed last year ty $3,000., The convention will meetf this year in Charlotte. Nine years ago it' met What they wy Is tio orin varoi.na.

i-' good old State is. ar. i 4 will continue to Farthers are Uniting to Get Full Bales we wish every xory" in that citv A comparison or tne prog acnievea wumn uu-uw rwu xr, crntpnflcnt W. WEST, Secretary. N.

and it is a first rate WALTER PARISH indicaum of the-growth of our State, of the State's Prison, returned yesterday Nine years ago only $7,000 was rejorted "from a three day's inspection of the State for Foreign Missions; this year $17,500 is farm Halifax C0Unty. reported. The following is a summary a A. M. -College History of Baptist State Convention, its Primary Object From 1 830, When it was Organized, Uuntil the Present Day.

and May Bring Last of Crop to Raleigh With Report of Very Little Left in Their Section. in crpnoral Por State I A-err, in XJL LliC- lawwi-iv. Observer reporter last mgnt, tn.i. Farmir.5'. Count jy I.i: cation are the le'iidu M.

College Recor! r. Prominent Citizen Died Last Evening of Pneumonia. full table of cotit r.f The many friends and acquaintances past year: for Foreign Missions, i for Home Missions. ST; for. Ministerial -which were regarded as hopeful during education, for Baptist Orphan-j the summer, have not been realized.

age for Ministerial Relief. ''The cotton ch is the money miscellaneous, $500. The total amount producer on the- iarm said Mr: Ken, thp trital "was fully one month late this year, anl The North Carolina Baptist State Con of Walter Parish in this city were great- 1 i i u- 'I ot w.i ore-anized in the town -A 1. Does -i Fa train Some cotton that reached Raleigh yes- jjQa? terday made 12Yz cents a spring board and 2. How to Bu.M leaped higher.

How to Buil-l jv iit ui tiof vara erwM 'mi this Lands in Micljle Norih Jy shocked Jast. nignt to learn oi mj Greenville in 1830. The idea of organizin Kxtensive Farming market yesterday four bales reached 124c. a pound. These were bought by "Messrs.

Truck Fr Jarniins 'n C. E. Johnson and Company from Mr. the Baptists of the State, into a conveu amount raised this year 'is $82,500. frost came fully two weeks earlier tlian death Which occurred at fifteen minutes tion originated with Elder Martin Ross, tt thege n-ne yearg tWQ Baptist illsti.

usual, and the result is but little if any- geyen D.clock On Wednesday he was who just a few months befoie remarkable progress. thing more than a half crop. Last year treets a nd looke after some work ciganization took-place. N'ine years" ago the Baptist Female Uni- with 1,200 acres in. cotton the yield as on our sireeis ana xuoue The primary object in the organization CJad not been opened.

and only 1,137 bales. This year, with 1,400 acres he had going on. He was suffering from of the convention was the evangelization CQ0 been rajsed to start it. 'Today cotton but little more than 700 bales can a scvere cold and early Thursday morn- of the State. The founders of the conven- we' have' five buildings in Raleigh, are be hoped for.

The only bright spot In be jng. pneumonia developed on him and tion were not indifferent to the claims or educating 250 'pupils; have a faculty ot cotton situation is the pnee. We hae he grew rapidly worse, closing with eld Foreign Missions, but they believed that twenty and the value of the University noi sold a pound of cotton yet, and if tac death He was attended by Dr. Rogers if npppssarv to first form a "base of nvnnPrtv is $175,000. Nine years ago the price continues to advance we may realize rshndwin nnrl fivirv efrort was C.

The -Tresont nut Duncan Mangum, who, comes from rnear Wake Forest; Many farmers here yesterday refused offers ci less 12 cents a pound for their cotton and held out for this until berry (Irowliig ja North 7. The Statt- Kanivrv' S. Tbe Enrichiiunt r. 9. Rural Education.

The Record" main'. navfl In Vorth rill i 11.1 1 1 rir l'jc 'i ci nir nn nrs rrnm vear rri)ii u.a i li6 cnnliW' nt 'home in order that tney nrnhnnace at Thomasville had only 1 made to save mm. ne receivea inu laiiieu. last. might be more able to send the gospel children.

It now has 260. The plant was abroad. The history of the convention WOith only $25,000 then; it is now worth justifies the wisdom of their course. Nofch-j more than $130,000. ino- '-ias done so much to give us denomina- "There are fifty-nine Baptist Asocia- finally tnany of them feachefthe desired.

to the'i'-fiKht sort goal. The sales here averaged 12c.t the for "The corn crop Is the only full yield wo will have on the State farm this year," said Mr. Kerr, "and the price will probably be low, as there is a great abundance orices rahginz from 12 to 12. A year or business or proirs ctrnno-th ns has the work ot tatc tions in the State, vinere are mission- hvalth crtDortunlties tor ago, with prices at irom to-bje, tne Missions. "When the convention n-as or- aries working within the State; these mis-' of n- uiVnnn'oa cnr-nlv 477 olllirfrllPS and 279 Out i corn throughout the country." When asked- is to the showiner likely il J.

sales were aooui zvtt Daies. His Home Bur'd. franizC'Ci mere were miccu vuuu.iaua -i- i-iuiiunvo lists in the State white and stations. They baptized last year 1.176 to be made by the States Prison in its Thoro are now a hundred and seventy-five persons and there were 2,222 conversions forthcoming annual report to the Gover- The- market showed no signs of weak ness here and tne prices 01 tne aay Deioie -or i and nearly as under tncir mmisiry. iney oiKaucu nor, ivir.

iveri- saw uc muugui uiu twenty-five churches last year. There are be creditable to the management and were realized. The farmers all looked Aoad va'g in tht. thousand white Baptists, mnnv rolored. with several friends yesterday afternoon.

They saW that he was a very sick man, but none of them dreamed that, the end was so near. Mr. Parish was in the 43d year of his age and leaves a "wife and ten children-eight boys and two girls; two brothers Messrs. Iowa and Sam Parish, and one sister, Mrs. Emma Woodard.

Few men enjoyed a larger circle of friends, and. as a painter- contractor he had the unbounded confidence of everybody and has always been a leader in his business. Mr. Parish was for several years 'a member of the Board of Aldermen and chairman of the' Police Committee. He was a member of Hiram Lodge of Masons and for three years was its Master.

He was also a member 6f the Ancient Older of United Workmen, Royal Arcanum and of the Red Men. A broad-minded, public- fifty houses of worship being built in the satisfactory to the people ot the State, State a.t this time. even if it did run below estimates male Drignt ana nappy vne uiS muney iii toJd of the burning of hi- h.V were receiving and between 11 12 jvIng -o'clock the sight about cotton headquarters on Martin and Wilmington streets His home was a Vt-n woo livoKr nn Tho VSiivcrw werA-hur- was iuuiiu uu i fw an ha There was a party was a party in-mx house and part of tin' of "the-building va.s gom- getting the top of the market figures The reeeiTjts here for the oast week -were Before the convention was two years old the fathers saw that, in order to evangelize the State they must have a better equipped ministry, and they founded Wake Forest College. This, however, was never strictly a "preachers school," as is sometimes supposed. There was never a day since it began its existence when the ministerial students were rot in the minority.

Today about one-sixth of those attending Wake Forest are ministerial students. About the same time Wake Forest was founded the brethren felt the necessity for 1 nor 1 1 was discovered." In a viy 1. In "The Woman's Missionary" Societies of upon conditions earlier In the season. Af- the State raised last year $12,000 for mis- ter leaving supplies on the farm to meet sions." The Baptist book store, in Raleigh, an the demands for stock during the is reported in good condition. The great coming year, and after paying every cent increase of the year is in gifts to Foreign Gf the running expenses of the prison, Missions, being an increase 'of $3,500.

Mr. Kerr thinks there will be a surplus 'If there were no other evidence that cash and -farm products estimated at North Carolina is going forward in intelli- current pricss of from $65,000 to $70,000. gerfce, in generosity and in the graces of This surplus will come from -the cotton Christianity, this record would be con- crDp, the peanut crop and the corn crop, vincing. Mr. Johnson and his co-workers added to what will be realized from the feel that their denomination is just in the sae 0f'hay and fodder not necessary for beginning of a grpnt career." use Gn the farm.

brings the receipts this season up to 8,967, whola house was in Uaiu- as against 10,299 bales sold-to this date last lue 1U' Nothing saved cxk season, being a shortage 01 Daies. spirited citizen has died, and Walter jht- -tuiM- of Prof. Barrett, his wile an 1 ish wall be greatly missed in Raleigh. ZT.r SiT. ZC'' who boarded with them, bad or We feel sure that we express the feelings to araw aiLcpuon oul( sauft8 "hnnt with JS" some medium of communication through supposed to lavc of our-whole community in offering sin- crop is sux in mis secuon, as bv- ernment bureau report shows it to he 111 1H LIVINGSTON JOHNSON, "The short cotton crbn on the State a defective -Hue in the kitihrn.

cere syitipatuy iu lug nc, cu which the denomination throughout the corresponding Secretary State Baptist farm js not the exception in the Roa- short in the county. relatives in this their sudden grief. State might be touched, and to meet this Convention, Raleigh, N. C. And that the.

crop, is ghort is not alone shown in the figure given above, "but in the CAROLINA IS want Thomas Meredith began the publication of the Biblical Recorder. For sev cnty years these two the paper and the college 'have been mighty forces in building up our Baptist Zion. At first the Bap ALANCE ON HAND remarks of farmers here yesterday, bearing out the reports of farmers made months ago: MORE PROPOSITIONS FOR A. N. C.

noke sectiooii of the State," said Mrv Kerr: "Few, any, farmers dowrn that way will gather oyer a half crop this' year, but they are all in good spirits and There is much consolation a3 wall as compensation in the present price of the fleecy staple." A DANGEROUS ROAD, i tists did their mission work in the coun- TEMPERAS try, and sadly neglected the towns. This gave us great numerical thought in the 1 --inI at -fiff-rr i vonra Tir $120,438.19 towns have been drawing on the country Governor Says That Matter of Lease Mr. J. T. Holderfield, who -lives near Millbrook, says that the cotton is about gone in his" section.

Yesterday he sold the last bale of his crop at 12 5-16. G. C. Alooneyhan, who lives two miles from Raleigh, on the Leach farm, has sold the last of his cotton and yesterday received 12 1-16 cents a pound. He has sold twenty-one bales at from 8V2 to 2 1-16 cents a pound.

"Cotton is very scarce in my section," said he. Mr. Joseph Davis, who comes from near Avent Ferry Road Said to be Impassable at Points. Will not be Considered on December 9th. churches for material out of which to build Baptist churches.

In recent years, while not neglecting the country, the Mission Board has given attention to the towns. There is not an im- i 1 1 ni-i- irU A 1 Real Battle Come A citizen of Raleigh, who has capital invested on the Avent Ferry Governor Aycock yesterday notified Mr. portant town in me oiuie iu wuil-u mei Treasury in Fine Shape. Literary Fund $30, 107 to the Good. cannot be found one Baptist church, atjJ; w- Qrainger, of Kinston, State proxy road.

a few miles beyond sthe Catholic least that stands as a monument to State for the Atlantic and North Carolina Orphanage, said yesterday that the-rdad Next Year, Says Chair man Bailey ivlethod, and who works at the farm of Mr. Charles H. Belvin, eaid that there' were about twenty-five bales of about 500 pounds each at that place and I that none of it had been sold. The following information Missions. In the city ot Charlotte, Railroad Company, that he would not be' ln tnat direction is in a terriDie conai- whprp the mnvention is to meet the fruits tion, portions being impassnble, so 'that wnere tne coiiveuuou ia iu metl' LUC prepared to consider the question of leas- i-iv, of State Minion work are plainly seen, i a temporary way has been made through Tryon street church, with which the con- inS he Atlantic and North Carolina Rail- lhe wood8 at pointg.

He says there vention meets, was one of the first points ircad during the next few and that i not a bridge on the road for several miles aided by the beard, while Twelfth Street therefore the matter would not come up i ou na safe- -and Priehard Memorial are now receiving nnnaiaamHr-. ho motino- v.o I The county bridge over Swift The total receipts and disbursements of the -State for the 'fiscal year ending -No Mr. G. E. Robertson, of Eagle Rock, pileoV by Chairman 13a! h-y -ot sold the last of his cotton here yesterday sai0on and for some of it-received 12 cents a ti tt How i The following counties h.

t) vember 30th, 1S03, were given out yes- State Audt-his work of Ai aid from the board. Both of these lattej directors on Wednesday next. this gentleman states, is in a positively terday, from the office of. the churches are erecting beautiful houses of 1 it is understood that there are other dangerous condition. It sways and sags tor, who has just completed worship.

They will soon be self-sustaining 'parties who have informed the Governor 'm the. middle when a light buggy hf driven fiaIancin the books. pers cotton and says that in his section have prohibition: there is not much cotton left. "Many Alleghany. Anson, Ashe, i i 1 1 -ii it.

peopie are nere ioaay wnn me last ot r-nhamia C.U i and will stand as soul-saving agencies that if the road is to be leased they de- over Just before bwitt is reacn- The net receipts for the year just closed their crop," said he ed, going out from Raleigh, travelers are ham, Cherokee, Clay, Clov 1 through all the years to come. sire to submit propositions. It was said It must not be supposed for a moment last night that Capt. J. M.

Turner, th that tbe convention has confined itself Messrs. Barbee and their associates in doing State Mission Our denomina- 'the Raleigh and Pamlico Sound propOL-i- compelled to turn out through the woods for a space, the road at that point being such that a buggy simply cannot get through. Even in dry spells the mud were $2,269,638.86. Adding to this the balance on hand December 1st, 1902, makes a total of $2,322,042 50. The disbursements have amounted to $2,201,604.31.

This leaves a balance on hand now, of $120,438.19, a fine showing, considering what been accomplished during the year, as well as the fact that the tion has been a pioneer in many important tion had approached the Governor in re- lelijrious The Baptists were card to the nic.tter, stating to him that holes are fearful. the first to organize for State Mission it was the desire of this company to make i About three-Quarters of a mile beyond work. They were the first to establish' a propdsition which would be done just the orphanage, says this citizen, is perhaps denominational paper. They founded the as soon as a rdeeting of the directors the most dangerous point. Here there is Mr.

Lonnie Hodge, Mr. Medlinand Mr. M. P- Eddens, who come from the same section, say that there is being little cotton left there and that in some cases farmers are going in with remnants to inafee up full sized bales. W.

H. Stephens, who lives six miles north of Raleigh, solthree bales here yesterday. The lowest price he has received this season is 10 3-16 cents a pound. ''Its getting mighty thin in my section," said he. "There is not much cotton left." He sold his cotton yesterday at 12 cents, a pound.

bus, Cumberland, Dare Durham, Gaston, Gate-, Gmh Henderson, Hyde, Iredell, t-k Lincoln, Mitchell, Moon. Orange, Pamlico, Pender, Pasquotank, Polk, Rutherford, Sampson, Kcotl.ni'!, Swain, Transylvania, Wautaga, Wayne, Wiik' Yancey. The following have saloons: Bertie, Bunc-ombe, Burk teret, Caswell, Chowan. Edgecombe, Fo'r3yth, (Ireen-, 000 borrowed last year has been paia first denominational college in the Stale and. stockholders of Raleigh and Pamlico a high embankment on one side, on back in fu! for the training of their ministry, for road could hold, which would be in the the other a deep chasm, where the ground As 6r the literary fund, of the State-has caved off to a depth of at least Board of Education, which is cf course twenty feet.

The read-at this point is so not inciudel in the above figures, the narrow that it would be impossible for recsipts during tne year amounted to two teams to pass' each other. $101,997.74, and the balance on hand De-It is slated that no work has been done cember lst) was $43,909.18, making on this read for years, except such volun- aitogether $150,906.92. Out of this was tary work as was put in to avoid paying -d th Dubiic schools $120,799.83. Ac- equipping all young men who woudl attend next few days. It was stated by one it for greater usefulness.

They of these gentlemen that they would ed the first denominational orphanage be in, position to submit a proposition the State. In" the work of Foreign Mis- nacre advantageous to the State'and pri-sions the Baptists are taking a deeper in- i vate stockholders than any that had terest than ever before. This is a brief hitherto been made. I'pvion rf thp rrmvpnt-'nn whirh tn h-ld There were a number of colored farmers cordingly tnere is. a.

Daiance uu its seventy-third session in, the city of At the annual meeting of the stockhold'- road tax riiiirinttp np-rt u-ppIt ers of the Atlantic aod North Carolina! the credit of the State Board of Educa Our neonla have done the Greatest work 1 Railroad Company at New Bern, Septem- SHE COLLECTS TAXES. during the year which is now closing than ber 24th, 'the regular session was inter- rw ruDted bv the withdrawal of State Proxv I tion of A considerable portion of these disbursements consisted in loans to different counties for the building of new schoolhcuses and the improvement cf 'old sions and Sunday schools will submit the J- w- Grainger from the meeting, and Sheriff Dies and IllS Daughter best report that they have ever made to.durillS his absence the following resolu- i Takes up this Work. ih nnnv0rnnn mof I to 182 by the private stockholders present State Treasurer Lacy yesterday said SOUTHERN MUST PAY. that he had received a letter from Miss Charlotte. We can get some idea of Bap-' lt By the private stock-n nniriTs in siiTt.niifll mpMinc nsspmnlpd here yesterday with cotton, principally Halifax, Lenoir, Martin.

I from St. Matthews and Panther Branch. Icnburg, Nash, New Hanov. r. "This is my last bale," said one and Person, Pitt, -Richmond.

others repeated his remark. 'The cotton Rowan, Stokes, Surry, is about all brought to market," said The following hive others. lin, Greenville," Hay wood, That is the way the talk went yester- son, Lenoir, Macon-, dayand besides the parties quoted others Jackson, Warren, Washingt from different'sections of the county made Wilson. similar remarks. The men are not talk- In- the east there arc IS ing for effect and it i3 certain that in all have prohibition; in the w.

-t 1. this section there is a short crop. the center 18. In the i.sf 'counties that have dispen-ai "You can say for me," said Mr. Charles west and in the center- E.

Johnson, of the cotton firm of Charles there are 15 counties E. Johnson Company, "that I believe the west 3 and in the. center that thirteen cents will be paid for cotton oS far as can be pudged in Raleigh next week, though it may not mation there are saloons in 1 reach 12 cents in New York." In talking 45 places in North Car.iin i. the situation as regards the manufac- Saloon League hopes that turers he said that a good motto for them to be in tho coming would be. "It is better to be safe than, thoroughly in sympathy with to be thus striking off their atti- an important legislation will i- tude with g09ds sold ahead at lower It ig understood that an prices for cotton than that at which it is to tbe aWtr.

bemz 1 i.i.i twfr that it is. the sense of the stockholders Mary Estes, of Caldwell county, stating Penatv "for DiSObeVinq Order Of Cor- be submitted this year with that of nine ml' a nif Oir-ry-v QT tof hop VI flit fl TItJi THT tt anra hnr fa tier's vWth wlin was uuiuiiici a 11 uuuiiuniuK me ynvaie siucii. VlltO IT11J AW WAV UO HI i i LA of the Atlantic and North Carolina Rail- sheriff of his county, she had been ap- (II III-: t. I .1 II I. i I iLIIll 11 tm poration Commissioner.

Miss Riddick, the stenographer to the raised this year twice as much tor State rQad a that it is to the best ln. pointed his successor and authorized to Missions, three times as much for Foreign fu. 4v. nrncPl with the business of collertinz Lcrest ui me ruau, me ctiinj ana me n- 1 mr.ia Missions, four times as much for Home the taxes. Corporation Commission, has completed Missions, and three times as much for tho jeased Her home is about twenty miles from the evidence taken in the case of the -orphanage as was reported nine years ago further resolved that when this Lenoir.

Mr. Lacy said that this is 'the Greensboro Ice and Coal Oompw vs The total contributions to all objects or meetjng adjourns it adjourn to meet on only instance in the history of tbe State Southern Railway and the case or the convention nine years ago amounted rwnm'hnr i(th khvi at Tpvv where a lady has collected ithe taxes of Charlotte Shippers Association vs. Sea- to $38,000. while thiavAar thev rearh V. -l countv.

and thinks the voune ladv very b6ard Air Line. There are 163 typewritten tsern, 10 runner consiaer me aoove t. the pages of former and fifty-three of the uuu. xvme years ago naa oeen paia nontinro in with thn enierpraing ana miemseui on. the lot where now stands the Baptist representatives of the State's interest eiuiiie t-iiiiv ersiiy.

we now nave a pianu rnnr! in the very heart of Raleigh worth $15,000, It was contended by a large number of Mr. James D. Tewsome Dead. One of Raleigh oldest and greatly beloved citizens passed away suddenly yes latter. The Greensboro Ice and Coal Company case' is the.

one in which the Southern Railway refused to obey the order of the Commission to place cars on the private siding of the Ice and Coal Company; The penalty for refusing to disobey an order of the Commission is $500 with an enrollments of 20 pupils. The those present, this number including orphanage plant was then worth it of those who favored the resolu is worth $150,000 now. Then there were tion. that the ree-ulnr meeting was not fluctuations were over a very narrow range. The market for closed at one point lower yesterday than it had the day before, while in Raleigh the spot market was a half cent higher than the day before.

of repealing this bill. erne substantial improveiri' s. has Ibeen an important year of the League, but, in officers, the real battle will yea rand the chairman i 1 establish strong organlziti. 1- terday morning when Mr. Jaines D.

New- 126 children at the orphanage: now there in session when the resolution was passed ecm was called "tois final reward. are 260. Then we had one school in west as the State's proxy had withdrawn, and Though' he had been-sick for some a day and unless the Southern Railway The QUtlock this week ia fnr- a fir- thus left no auorum rjresent. months his death was unexpected. For to the courts succeeds in ob Treasurer Manlv.

of the A. and N. C. R. 'nearly four months he had suffered from market with prices in the- neighborhood county of 12W to 13 cents a nound unlets th 1 taining a reversal of the judgment of the has issued a call for a meeting of the acute indigestion, though he has kept at A FRIGHTENED H')i directors of the road on the 9th instant.

bears get control and push the price down, which dees not seem likely. j. Running like mad doun a work Yesterday morning he complained of a severe pain In bJis left breast and at 5:20 he suddenly expired at his home on North Salisbury street." Mr. Newsom was an upright man. He Commission, it must pay that $500 for each day it refused to obey the order of the Corporation Commission, and that will amount to thousands of dollars, for it was some six or eight days.

The Charlotte case is a petition for lower freight rates on Seaboard Air TTor-n c--m Am rfimnin? tho fjpriinahts. or. ern North Carolina, with 150 pupils and property worth now we have ten. schools in the "West, with a total 1.C00 and property worth $40,000. We have gone forward this year in our contributions to Missions.

The trustee's report this year will show to State Missions, Foreign Missions, $17,561.15, and 'to Home Missions $7,762.15. This is an advance over last year of $3,700 to. Foreign $2200 to State Missions and $1,500 to Home Missions. -Round numbers are given, the advance is a little more than the above- On Sea Six Years. Mr.

William R. Worrell, of the United States Navy, has arrived In, the city and is visiting his mother, Mrs. J. R. WorrelL on Oakwood Avenue.

has been a of the First Bap vxoi. uux 11 auu jLLuueLjr ouuuui lOf many linG. years and he has made a good one, earn- Both of these cases will probably be de est and true. He was a gallant iri liv the Commission "this week. ouie layout auu liKures on COt- ton crops given by the New York Herald otner accidents, are every that will prove of interest: It behooves everbody to li Highest price ever Salve hady and there's non- per in 186 Bucklen's Arnica Salve.

Lowest price ever Sores, Eczema and I .05 per in 1845 quickI uder its Biggest crop ever All Druggists. ..12,156,000 bales, in 1838 "7 Crop of ...10,750,000 bales The State Board of Education Mr. Worrell is the Assistant Chief En rin nn 4ho fmnsnnrt Sumner, which soldier, and after bavins: has latelv arrived from Manila. She went Manly's -Battery in which he was a mem-1 Marry at Morrisviile. From the beat information at hand thrra i r-r, -ivnttrrs for ber of Company Tenth ArtilWv nf were probably ten thousand added t-the i reoairs and after a Ion trip' reaclied San which General Ramseur was' the first cap- Tndnv Morrisvill UTi.

-wtti- Crop of 1901 bales Tortant meetins yesterday churches last "year. FranoiW Mr Worrell has e'en away for tain, lie was connected with the Forty- aht---nf Mr A. a. sMr will TrriT-fv- ix TMi 1LJI I IP TI I I 111 .11 T-w nr I I 1 a i ra ITHrt 1 0 10,333,000 bales Governor's office. object Our denomination was never ih Mtpr1 mnv lively seventh orth.

-Carolina which rnrrt- TI W- 11 J' llvv 9.425 nOrt halea ln xxraa tn malroa loan i'" T-na rri r-' a iaii4At.i uiu ui i mand he a lieutenant nfltTTflfi CO. 1 a a 1 trim for aggressive work: Thereis not experiences to xelate. verelv wnnn r.ott-, a prommem. youug mercnani oi tnat place uau nuee years tne r.onsumntion erai mimtioa ty names oi Dure and tfH a -r: ana leu into the enemy's hands. 7 more than overtaken the r.voc.nctiJ o-iven out t't v.

ivt, daughter, and Mr. James M. Yates wiU be Last year's available wnt, the Sl mo. from one side of the State to the other The man who goes to the, bad never our people stand Fjolldly together. If we "thinks of providing himself with- a re-continue to have faith.

in God, loyalty to iurn ticket: one time- irtoTfio1 Tini-T-iorl ThP Mifiee InM o-o. rr i ue iiwu is mauc '1'llf ni ISSPS SPHN ttfa Tfiama r4 V. jt with the business interests of Ralegh in Mr. A. L.

Sears of Rlleieh 7 Pnces- sdpphes were and $80,000 has een loaned iroiu I al 1 UVIif. era! Fund..

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About The Farmer and Mechanic Archive

Pages Available:
11,768
Years Available:
1877-1915