Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / July 8, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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'&!Rrf3BS!N!.JJIMJUMM Till-: TOD.U'CO IIAU1T SINCE BABY'S CKOWN II' BIIiCH KOU DAYS GONE icy i; J. Yuiti in the l'.:ni t uii ini.l a:id .MiTai--. on Uu' biuly, the iiu:;.! a.: nature, i-wivl.--- ls:i tci mir.o.l by al u: r.lon, t!i;u?;;vh i -. j 1 1 -. iim at vatiua, uiiii many l'aiU rati' them. If tulnuio v.v jiccc-sarv to laa!fl- we ..i f of ui.- I tin; naaa! v hoc n Il ! M-icatiiic ami I'iiHcr to ioiiobo- c u.i'ful or lieht malic Wiai.'.m AliO'l WhiL1 r of the E'dcrly Man ttitalls How ( hil- i "I 'or ;;a!o an.) C.actti', rei vi'.t'y ran " ;vlvo: li: 'iii'at in his pa : !iL- I'amvlitcr's Shctiar.d i'.' v..' oiiVr lu'intr niaile j'.iin;;- laiiy lias outgrown '!"!.. i'.;"..-viiir touch insr -ion will .h a n'Sionsi-. '.- chord in the heart For sale, a Shetland pony, by Yv'illiam i Allen White, some allowance for the time ami nion-, .J(,tj imi .-(.iUo, city broke, has cy throw n away uion it ami for the onp. )evn the delight ecllishni'ss ami lilthiness which the Qf William Allen's little girl, who habit eiiKcmlers. But tobacco is one! now jias p,0wn so ohl of the strongest vegetable poisons, ; Am bi)? aml pretty that the pony's rank, baneful and destructive. It does jrointr to be sold. not assimilate in any way with theIt socmS so rapa William thinks, so process hi naiure, ami supines uu m.- . short a time ago ognized want of the system, it tur- That thia same pony fit the jd nishes no blood, bone or muscle, and ' th-n heo-an to erow. when left to its legitimate action it Her baby ways "seemed, all at once, completely tiesiroys me me principle. ( to vanjsnf an,i ;n pace If the use of tobacco injures the t Qf (A Bi abs.. aml Uvo timcs two body it must necessarily affect the, nnestions crave to face. mind. The brain and ner ts suffer The pigtails changed into a crown of most from this practice, ino oram ( hair around her head, is a delicate ana sensitive oryan, me The dresges lengthened and one day instrument ot all motion, tnougnt anu , . . , mothpr sai(1 feeling. To have it act normally it That baby wag ft ,ady and papa wi, must De in penect neaitn, anu me , 8miiP(i vitalizing blood which nourishes it And joked about her feller.. with his must De pure anu unaeniea. nut little hnhv chiM the blood be saturated with the dead- The ponv,8 stable-s needed to house jy nicotine, uismiea irom pipe or tig- ( tbe ljmousjne; ar, or absorbed from the quid by the The feed.rack wi'n be turned into membrane of the mouth, and if the t t f mmKno vital stream is diseased in its essen- The good old days those baby days, liai structure, wnicn we Know mevi-, ,, of ,. j.,:-!, tably follows the use of tobacco, then Are memories now in Kansas for we can wll understand how the men- Wiiiiam Anen White, tal powers must be seriously affected But sometimes as he sits up late to by this subtle and virulent poison. readf perhapS( or writC( Dr. James Copeland says: "Smok- Hel, think of baby days again Ing tobacco weakens the nervous pow-, will'am Allen White er favors a dreamy, imaginative and And while his daughter's life is happy imbecile state of mind, produces in- ( ag can e dolence and incapacity for manly or He1, , and , for b&b , &n continuous exertion, and sinks its cudded on hig knee votary into a state of careless or For M, g Shetand b mmm mauldm inactivity, and a selfish en- Allen White joyment of his vice." gome other t- lm,e ir we That tobacco enervates the rmnd as h ,.. treat ft rf ht well as the body is proved by a com- And if fihe wi once in a whie drive panson or smokers with non-smokers . i-i. a. i up to the uazette, in institutes of learning. At the Poly- An(J , him ee the , technic School in Pans the students somehow he ,oves h w ere divided into two groups of smok- 1 ers and non-smokers, and it was shown Helen Keller, on the "Modern Wom that the smokers were far inferior to an says: "Woman from times long the others in the various competitive gone has been the consoler, the healer examinations. At other schools and 0f pai. Xodav the sick bed is often colleges in France a similcr state of in a great public hospital. There she affairs was found. The ncn-smokers has followed it as professional nurse, were healthier, closer students, and aml her scrvices have been welcomed consequently better scholars; and as aml acknowledged. From the battle a result of these tests smoking was fieI,is of industry come the wounds, prohibited in all the public semina- from the shambles of poverty come ries of France. Dr. Dio Lewis states the deformed. What enemy has -that no tobacco-user within fifty years stricken them ? How much of all this lias graduated at the head of his class jsease and misery is preventable? at Harvard. shall the wise nurse stand by the bed Delirium tremens, usually ascribed of pain and ask no questions about to alcohol, was unheard of prior to , the social causes of ill health? If her the use of tobacco, and men who never own child in her own home is needless used liquor but used tobacco, have ly hurt, she blames herself for her f til. j:. - t I , , .. ,j i -tr died of this disease. Insanity is one of the horrible consequences of using "tobacco, according to the statement of physicians and statistics of insane asylums. The Xew York World, some years ao, after an investigation asserted that in nine cases out of eleven, where insanity had resulted from alcoholism, the primary cause was smoking. Xot only does tobacco cause insanity by means of alcohol, but it is a direct cause in itself, and cases could be cited if space permitted. So true is the connection between the habit and this disease that it has been proven that "lunacy has kept pace in France with the in crease of revenue from tobacco." Mr. Sims estimated some years ago, that there were about 70,000 lunatics in America, and of this number more titan 15,000 or one in five were were made insane by tobacco. Dr. Shaw enumerates eighty dis eases caused either directly or indi rectly by the use of tobacco. Dr. Ham mond, of Baltimore, declares: "As a physician of forty years' practice, I give my decided opinion that tobacco has killed ten men where whisVcy has killed one. This, no doubt, will be disputed by physicians who indulge in the weed, but I believe it can be demonstrated that many of the chron ic disease to which the male popula tion are subject, owe their origin to tobacco." Dr. Grimshaw says: "So Insidious are its effects that very few have regarded it as swelling the bills of mortality. It is nevertheless true that multitudes are carried to the grave every year by tobacco alone. The effect of tobacco upon the moral and spiritual nature is quite as nark ed as that upon the physical and men tal powers. Neal Dow says: "There is no doubt that the tobacco habit deadens the moral sense in every one who is its .victim; many of them are not aware of it, but it is certainly . true." According to a New York doe tor, "Tobacco, using, even more than liquor drinking, disqualifies the mind for exercising its intuitions concern ing the' right' and wrong: it degrades the moral sense below the intellectual recognitions." Professor Mead, of Oberlin College, writes; . "The tobac co habit tens to deaden the tens of carelessness. In the world home if a child is needlessly hurt she is equally responsible. By her vigilance in the world home woman can help to bring about a civilization in which every preventable disease shall be rooted out, and every condition that causes broken bodies shall be examined and abolished. This is her problem. She is mistress of the sick room and the sick room is world-wide." dren lused to Be Brought ti. Philadelphia IJocord. "What a difference there is in the bringing up of children in these .'a;, a to what is was when I was youi.g,' i remarked an rlderly man in an up town oating house. "In my own homo, as well as in other homes, a birch rod or a good-sized leather strap was ki ot in a convenient place, the sight of which bad a strong impression noon my mi ml. it was tne general prac tice then to chastise children for .lis-, obedience or any other wrong bchav-1 ior. I Boys of 12 to 14 years in our town never knew what is was to be out of the home or home yard after 8 o'clock, and most of us were in bed by that time, and the streets were quiet and deserted by 10 o'clock. I remember how the people talked when : a new family moved in the place and ! allowed their boys to run in the 1 streets after dark, and how the con stable was appealed to to prevent the habit from growing. "Then, again, we had to be par ticular how we spoke to persons older than ourselves, and, if anything out of the way was said or done in the presence of women, a severe applica tion of the birch rod or strap was sure to follow. The schools are bet ter, too, than they used to be. The children are now taught to realise the worth of knowledge, and the school is more of a home than the prison it used to be. One seldom or ever hears the cries of a hoy being punished by his father or mother, and no matter how late one happens to be out at night, he will find boys and girls on the streets. "We had no such entertainments as they now have. A magic lantern exhibition used to be thought a grand thing, and was talked about for weeks after it had been shown in the vil lage church. Now every little town has its moving picture theater. Yes, sir, there is a great difference in the bringing up of children, and I often wonder whether it will prove to be the moral good of the rising generation." MW lAPf fiPICT II Kidne Rsxa y Remedy Will Cure You We have Rexall Kidney Remedy in two sizes, 50c and $1.00 per bottle. We will simply guarantee this remedy to benefit any kidney or bladder trouble and that you will be satisfied with the result. We recommend that you use Rexall Kid ney Pills with it at 25c per bottle, while the others are 50c. Rexall Kidney Remedy has been used by hundreds of people in this section and we have not heard of a single complaint that it did not do all it claimed to do. We recommend this as the best kidney and liver remedy on the market Six large $1,00 bottles for $5.00. Standard Drug Co. Restored to Good Health. "I was sick for four years with stomach trouble," writes Mrs. Otto Gans, Zanesville, Ohio. "I lost weight and felt so weak that I almost gave up hope of being cured. A friend told me about Chamberlain's Tablets, and since using two bottles of them I have been a well woman." Obtainable everywhere. LIFTERS AND LEAKERS of people Thirty-Six for 25 Cents Dr. King's New Life Pills are now supplied in well-corked glass bottles contsunine 35 sugar coated white pills for 25c. One pill with a glass of wa ter before retiring is an average cose. Easv and Dleasant to take. Cheap and eonomical to use. uet a do trie toaay, take a dose tonight your consr.pa' tion will be relieved in the morning. 86 for 25c, at all druggists. honor, as well as of decency, and none are more likely to practice deception unscrupulously than those who use tobacco. They are strongly tempted to harden their conscience by lying." have heard it said that a tobacco- user is liable to become a beggar, a liar and a thief, for when he wants the weed and has none, he will beg it of others. If he has only enough for his own use and some one begs it of him. he will deny having any; and when the craving comes on him, and he has no tobacco, if he cannot pro cure it in any other way, he will steal it. Rev. Mr. Sims Bfnrms: "Tobacco is praised as a soporific as a comfort and a solace in trouble. Yes, here is the world-wide mischief of this nar cotic. Thousands of young men and old men hear the Gospel preached, are awakened, resolve to become Chris tians, thank God for a good cigar which allays their fears and quiets their disturbed mind. We have every reason to believe that thousands of awakened souls have been lulled to sleep again by the use of the stupefy ing drug." Dr. Talmage says: "I have known people trying to become Christians for many years, and then failed miserably, simply because they could not give up this baleful nar cotic" The whiskey toper is oftimes a more hopeful subject of the grace of God than the tobacco sot. . There are two kinds earth; Just two kinds of people, no more I say; Not the rich and the poor, for to count a man's wealth You must first know the state of his conscience and health, Not the humble and proud, for in life's little span Who puts on vain airs is not counted a 'man. Not the happy and sad, for the swift flying year Bring each man his laughter and each man his tears. No! the two kinds of people on earth I mean Are the people who lift, and the peo ple who lean. Wherever you go you will find the worid's masses Are always divided in just the two classes. And, oddly enough, you will find, too, I ween There's only one lifter to twenty who lean. In which class are you ? Are yon eas ing the load Of overtaxed lifters who toil down the road? Or are you the leaner, who lets others bear Your portion of labor, and worry and care? Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Plant Wood's Seed Potatoes In June and July For Fall Crop. Potatoes planted now mature in the cool weather of the Fall when they can be harvested to best advantage for use or sale during the winter. Wood's Seed Potatoes are choice selected seed, put in cold storage early in the season, so as to keen in first" class, vigorous condition for late planting. Writ lor "Wood's Crop Special," giving prices and infor mation about Potato for lat planting;. Cow Pa, fteja Beans, Millet, crimson csovor, tc T.W.WOOD & SONS, SEEDSXZN, - Eictooai, Va. QUEER QUIRKS OF NEWS Okmuliree. Okla. Sanford Lee Kee- lev. an hour and a half younger than his twin brother and one pound heav ier, arrived in this world with two teeth in his upper gum. The twins are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Keeley. Moreantown. W. Va. A practical joker released several white mice in movie theater here. A panic fol lowed amonsr the women, in which several persons narrowly escaped se rious injury. It wa3 necessary to dis miss the audience and close the thea ter until the mice were caught. San Francisco, Cal. A black cat was rescued from the British ship' Dalgonar and landed at Papeete after drifting two years on the wrecK. ine Dalironar was abandoned in midocean in June 1913, and since then has drift ed helpless off the coast of Maupihoa Islands in the Society group of the South Pacific. Sullivan. Ind. "Aunt" Eleanor Combs. 106 years of age, took her first ride in an automobile last week and saw an interurban ear for the first ime in her life. Detroit. Mich. Mrs. George Hugh es has been eranted a divorce from the champion weeper of the United States. She says her husband began to crv at the breakfast table the day after their marriage and wept for six years. The sight of a hearse or inea potatoes or a hurdgurdy would send him into a naroxysm of grief. inai ly, after a burst of agony, he flisap- peared and has never been heard ox, New York. N. Y. Charles Williams haled to court by his wife in Yonkers, nroudlv admitted he had 44 ammties. He said he had been in the grocery mines for vears and that women forced their attentions upon him. He's nnvinir 7 a week alimony. PhiWolnhia. Pa. Miss Horence e. nifTfi.w. this city's first jitney bus driver, is averaging $8 a day with her touring car. It is the only pay-as- you-enter jitney in Philadelphia. Binders, Mowers, Binder Twine JUST RECEIVED A carload of McCormick Binders and Mowers. Also McCormick Binder Twine. If interested, 'Phone, Write or Call to see us. MCCRARY-REDDING HARDYARE CO. 1837 GUILFORD COLLEGE 1915 OLDEST COEDUCATIONAL COLLEGE IN THE STATE THOROUGH TRAINING HIGH MORAL TONE IDEAL LOCATION Courses in Arts, Sciences, and Music Ten Buildings with all Modern Conveniences Ample Athletic Facilities PRICES UNUSUALLY LOW SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR WORTHY STUDENTS For Catalog. and further information address THE PRESIDENT, Guilford College, N. C. Another Fly Preventative. Another safe and effective weapon acrainst the typhoid or house fly is now being advocated by the U. S. De- nartment of Agriculture. This time it is the use oi powdered neiiecore which ia readily obtained and has proved to be an effective larvicide. It is claimed by the Department that nowdered hellebore mixed with water and sprinkled over the manure, will destroy the fly larvae as soon as they are hatched from the eggs. It does not lessen the value of the manure or injure its vegetation. The directions for its us are: v "One half Bound of nowdered helle bore mixed with 10 gallons of water is sufficient to - kill the larvae m 0 bushels or 10 cubic feet of manure. The mixture should be sprinkled care fully over tne pile, especial attention being paid to tut outer edges. "THE WORLD MOVERS" Most things come straight when they are explained. Some time ago was announced that Andrew Carne gie had signalized his seventy-sixth birthday, November 25, 1911, by pub lishing a list of the world's greatest The list, embracing twenty-one names, was largely uniamnmr 10 many and disappointing to all. Some editors complained that they were, driven to the encyclopedias to gain their first knowledge of many of the Then, too, the standard of hu man greatness is different in different ages, and different with different men in the same age. It was once a mat ter of physical strength, and "there were giants in those days." Later the standard was one of intellectual strength, as among the Greek philos ophers. Greatness with many in every age is a matter of financial strength The sentiment of the present day awards the palm to service rendered suffering humanity. He who builds a home for orphans, erects a retreat for the aged, provides a hospital for Crip pies or an asylum for the blind is re garded with esteem and remembered with gratitude by the people. David Livingstone, striving to heal the world's great ulcei- slavery in Africa and found dead upon his knees imid its jungles, receives the plaudits re served for greatness and finds a tomb in Westminister Abbey. But Mr. Carnegie was not talking about greatness. He had nothing to say on that subject He spoke of the men who had "moved the world, pro moted physical science and made the world a more comfortable place in which to live. He enlarged the scope of the movement, to embrace moral and political conditions somewhat as well as the purely physical. But it was material advancement he had in mind, and so he selected the phrase, "The World Movers." In most cases he added the expltna tory phrase, indicating the ground be cause of which the name had been se lected. His list, embracing such ex planations, is as follows: ' Arkwright, inventor of cotton-spin ning machine; Bell, inventor of tele phone; Bessemer, inventor of steel WOMAN A HELP FOR MAN As I am opposed to political suff rage for women, I wish to make a few remarks on the subject I be lieve that if not fought against, the time is coming in our State when women will have equal suffrage rights with men. Now, reader, go back with me to the beginning of time, and let's see what God made woman for. In Gene sis 2nd chapter, 15th verse, we find that God made woman as a helpmeet for man, that is that she should be overseer of the household, for she knows best the things pertaining to . household life and duties, because this is her talent. I do not think that woman ought to be behind the bar, pleading law, or acting as President of our nation. The Apostle Paul said: " Let the women be keepers at home." What will be the occupa tion of our intelligent men, when so many of our women are behind the bar, pleading law, and in the White House, and holding similar offices f The men's occupation will have to be domestic work, such as cooking, wash ing, Ironing and caring for the household. Do hot think that I consider woman as not having brain enough to hold office. I think she would make as good laws, or better, than aten. But I do not think thia ia her calling. Margaret Walker, MOlboro, N. C. Children Cry FCR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA manufacture; Burns, the Scotch poet; Columbus, the discoverer; Edison, ths electrician; Franklin, pioneer in elec- tricity; Gutenberg; inventor of pnnij ing press, Hargr eaves, inventor of spinning jenny; Jenner, discovery of vaccination; Kay, inventor of weavers fly-shuttie; Lincoln, abolition of siav ery; Morton, discoverer of anaesthetic ether; Murdock, illumination by coal gas; Mushet, steel manufacturer; Neilson, inventor of hot blast for iron; 91iot.ciu.wi nlovwricht: SietnCD8 steel manufacturer; Stephenson, rail- f roads; Symington, the steamw Watt, steam enguie. ( . U4m
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
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July 8, 1915, edition 1
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