* PAGE TWO CljC CljEVOftEe S?cout '* Official Organ of Murphy and wha?-oke?r County. North Carolina PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY W. BAIi. ^ dilor-Manager ?RS C. W BAILFY. Associate Ed * W. SIPE As* ciate Ed Cntered in the postoffice at Murphy, <Iorth Carolina, as second class mail tiatter under act of Mar. 3. 1879. SOUTHERN RAILISM GATHERS IMPETUS IN A NEW NOVEL (Continued from Page 1? their protective coloration. It saved them from a thousand minor humiliatons. "Momie-Mollie" Donbrook i- tr? second of the McApperson girls. and it is her character seen through thieves of an adoring -mall son. Chester, that the masterpiece of Mr. Olmsted's fine novel. An erratic housewife, married far too young to an uninteresting and unambitious man whom she loves through a .-enso of proprietorship, capriciousy alffectinnntn t.. there is a saving something in Mollie's spiritual make-up, either shrewdness, coldness or plain common sense that saves her from the commoner catastrophic.* of life. She is the sort of woman whom men low devotedly without ever getting very much love in return, yet who pay their debt in dividends of domestic peace and material well-being, that, at the end of a long life, are perceived to be no bad exchange. Left alone by her husband for months together. and besieged anew by the lover who had really won her heart in girlhood, during a period when his absence has all the appearance of desertion. Mollie fights and wins her battle with no help save from her native integrity. * I kr.ow how Chester loves ye * '* but do ye think I want my children to grow up and find out they had a strumpet for a mother? What 'ud?the voice must control its break again? "what 'ud Chester think and feel if he was to grow up and find out that his mother had turned herself into a strumpet." She hurled the epithet she was never to earn, straight from the shoulder. It was hor antidote. Her voice alarmed her no more. It is n fine tribute to the value? ' to the omnipotence in the last and desperate issue-?01 me numan win. i I I I * r i *1 7MM \JJ _ And all the finer because Mollie knows, in the secret palcos of the heart, that fate has mi-runted her. end that the man -h? has driven fr? in her side, and perhaps to death waa the predestined vessel in which the plcntitude of love was offered her. Standing by |?-?or Ham Altrop's grave <-n the eve of her departure for the ambitious life : t Washington into which she has pushed?even nagged her slack husband, she muses over her homespun adorer: If Ham had been the father of her children instead of N'at. ' Yes?there would hu\ been fuller ecstasies. in tfome inviolateness through all its yele of awakenings and reawakenings this dust called to 1 ?-r own dust. Its yearning polarity spoke to the ycart of her own clay, vibrant-vital for uii instant longer in an eternity grained with such instant locking time and space i 1 their sintrie identity. That e seemed to know, would never 1m* otherwise in all eternity?that polnritv of this dust with her own. HI To the ing V; The Mo a job ! O to call it; thi g in v; and custor A modi of a class < us to pubh and rende Our cus inspect Th When y 201 % Valley R THE CHEROKEE SC ere Comes the Br Mr. Olrmted has written a very distinguished novel, indeed. "At Top , <>f Tobin" arouses interest and i anmkrs imagination very like a distinguished fare seen in the midst of :t vulgar and commonplace crowd, i; phrasing tends at times to be a little invt !v?m1 as through the process ?I'-r illation had been carried a step too far. "A deprecative smile, consciously acidulous.*' "The aroma i illiteracy was fluctuating and forhaitous" "fissure by the impact of cumulative strain." "congenitnlly slower sensitizations." ITut this occasional overmannerism i* a light flaw in a novel that is not only a historical document in its reconstruction \>f a period all the more past for being the' near-past, but a I ositive contribution to right thinki g through its insistence upon a truth never so obscured as today that if life he full of spiritual perils the intact soul i.- not left without tefenscs and antidotes for each and every one. b Hav : second story of alley River Av< Carring' iving of The Scout office i h, boy! And there's a lot yet to do in getting things ckable shape and are no1 n< rs than ever before. ir;i two-revolution cylinde )f work that we have hithei si The Scout, and a numb r better and more satisfa tenners and friends and th< le Scout in its new home. COME, T ou want printing just phor iftn PRINTING iver Avenue gj^c . ide ?.? i ?* : j | TELL MF. WHY?" "ThTLL ME WHY," is a picture dealing with Birth Control, opens at the bonita Theatre for a one day cngagvir.ent Wednesday, dune 0. The picture theme takes up the delicate subject in a most interesting manner according to the advance pits- information. The story behind the important subject deals with the love of a mother and hei sacrifice for her child. The picture has received the commendation of both educators and laymen in the cities where it has been shown. According to the management the film is one that every father, and mother should see. Owing to the delicate nature of the picture special matinees for women only have been arranged during the afternoon at 3:30 and the men at : night 7:30. Unless children artvwith their parent or guardian they will , not he admitted. e mo : the John E. Fa enue over Dav er's Store was completed this week, a of labor, work or whatevei " straightened out. But v w prepared to better sers r press has been installec rto been unable to do, be: ;r of other publications w ctorv service e public are cordially invil O SEE US ie 20 and representative ill## i AND PUBLISHING Over , t v SP " marble - >j j c llr. and Mi:. John P. Smith and .i ildti n motored from Mars Hill. N. j 3 Saturday evening to visit their j i parent Rev and Mrs. A. B. Smith. 1 Mi. and Mrs. W. R. Dockery have moved into their new bungalow. Miss Osie Smith left Monday for , Culowhee. N*. C. where she will enter summer school. Mrs. Carl Brecdlove of Needmore ? spent the week-end wii a her parents Mr. and Mrs. M. !,. Deliart. Quite a number of people f.on ! Marble attended Memorial Sero'ices at 1 l'eachtree, Sunday. WANTED: An ortunitj offer i d a reliable : lun in Che okce , County ti> omul a profitable, i .dependent business selling Whitmu Products house to house. Pvd<i<ts highest quality and guarantee* t\f{ or wagon and team needed. Real opportunity foi right man t?? make' MO to $20 daily. Salesmanship I aught FREE. The H. (". Whitmer Company. Dept. .1. Columbus, Ind. <40-St-pd.? FOR OVER ZOO YEARS liaarlein oil has been a world- j wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. HAARLEM OILH| 1 correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sires. All druggists. Insist co the original genuine Gold Medal. Announcement 1 hereby announce my self an aspirant for the off ice of Register of j Deeds for Cheiokee, County, sub- j jeet to the action of the repuldician party. Your Respectfully. W. A. BOYD, j TO T'lE DEMOCRATIC VOTERS OF THE 20th JUDICIAL DISTRICT: I am a candidate for re-election for ' the office of Solicitor of the 20th fed in Buildidson & ind it has been - you are mind re have everyre our friends I to take care ?:J 11 5iuc8 aiiuwillg hich we print, ted to call and > will call iwwt -Davidson & Carringer's FRIDAY. JUNE 4, ,9Jb udiciai District ?nhject t'7> f the democratic voter I Hs ure y. u th.it I i C oui support. infmeace "tr primary. I.Iur-1-pd.) CiROVKR i . ^ \ \ J > Look at the 1 strength of -tl- _ _i ; Lilt DU1CK chassis and make a comparison I with competitive motor cars, before you buy your next transportation. You can see Buick's superiority with the naked eye. I buick motor company I Di^UionolQrfuralMotortConxtratioy FLINT. MICHIGAN 1 J. W. Davidson I MURPHY, N. C. | ==nl * \ , f r I 1 -

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