- Title
- State
-
-
- Date
- August 09 1958
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-
- Place
- ["North Carolina, United States"]
-
State
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Aycock’s Educational Message
One of the great milestones in North
Carolina’s progress was this speech.
(The following is part of Governor Charles B.
it ycock’s inaugural message to the General As-
“ mbly delivered at a joint session held in the State
j apitol in Raleigh on January 15.)
Raleigh, Jan. 16, 1901. — Gentle-
len of the General Assembly, Ladies,
:nd Fellow Citizens:
On a hundred platforms to half the
voters of the state in the late campaign
I pledged the state, its strength, its
heart and its wealth to universal edu¬
cation. I promised the illiterate poor
man, bound to a life of toil and strug¬
gle and poverty, that life should be
brighter for him and the partner of
Wayco OLD SOUTHERN HAMS
NORTH CAROLINA
Wi
Hams 12 to 14 lbs.
'Cl lie
О
(sometimes smaller
сж
or larger)
From selected porkers; and fur¬
ther graded for leanness.
Cured southern style with dry
salt, sugar and spices.
Smoked with hickory wood.
Aged by mother nature for many
months.
• FIVE times first place winner at National Ham Show.
Delicious — baked, boiled or fried.
Wayco Hams can be shipped anywhere, without refrigeration.
For yourself or your friends, send the address and we ship
the hams.
Wayco Hams are cured, smoked and aged with the same basic
methods used for generations to produce the country hams, of North
Carolina, so popular for their superior flavor.
Remarks from our customers support our belief that the care used
in each stage of producing Wayco Hams is resulting in hams which
are consistently unsurpassed in flavor and texture. Cooking and
carving instructions are packaged with each ham.
Shipped either of two styles:
Style 1 Bagged — regular price (this has been standard for mailing
in the U.S.A.).
Style 2 Bagged and boxed —
50c extra per ham (this
for foreign shipments and
for added protection in
U.S.A. if desired).
$1.00 Per Pound F.O.B.
Goldsboro, North Carolina
We welcome orders for im¬
mediate or future shipment.
WAYCO CORPORATION
P. O. Box 841 GOLDSBORO, N. C.
THE STATE, August 9, 195B
his sorrows and joys. I pledged the
wealth of the state to the education of
his children.
Bound by Promise
Gentlemen of the General Assem¬
bly, you will not have aught to fear
when you make ample provisions
for the education of the whole people.
Rich and poor alike are bound by
promise and necessity to approve your
utmost efforts in this direction. For
my part, I declare to you that it shall
be my constant aim and effort during
the four years I shall endeavor to serve
the people of this state to redeem this
most solemn of all our pledges. If
more taxes are required to carry out
this promise to the people, more taxes
must be levied. There are many more
important matters which will claim
your attention but among them all
there is none that can approach in im¬
portance the necessity for making am¬
ple provisions for the education of the
whole people.
Appropriations alone cannot re¬
move illiteracy from our state. With
the appropriations must come also an
increased interest in this cause which
shall not cease until every child can
read and write. The preachers, the
teachers, the newspapers and the
mothers of North Carolina must be
unceasing in their efforts to arouse the
indifferent and compel by the force of
public opinion the attendance of every
child upon the schools. It is easier to
accomplish this since the amendment
to our constitution raises its solemn
voice and declares that the child who
arrives at age after 1908 cannot share
in the glorious privilege of governing
his state nor participate in the policies
of the nation unless he can read and
write.
A Long-time Project
We shall not accomplish this work in
a day nor can it be done by many
speeches. It is a work of years to be
done day by day with a full realiza¬
tion of its importance, and with that
anxious interest on our part which will
stimulate the careless and will make
B1