Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Oct. 7, 1915, edition 1 / Page 8
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"Satisfaction Firsts last and all the time is our business motto and we "make good" by having Ed. V. Price & Co tailor your clothes as you want them delivered when you want them. Let us prove kl IT WILL PAY YOU TO SEE US BEFORE FITTING Yourself and Family up for the Winter. WE HAVE A GENEROUS DISPLAY OF FURNISHINGS AND SHOES AT REASONABLE PRICES. Our stock is new and comprises the best the market affords. Long Wear Shoes for all the family. These shoes are a combination of Style, Service and Comfort: We have the Red Riding Hood and Education School Shoes for children, also the Almo Oak heavy shoe for men. New lot of Rain Coats, fashionable Soft and Stiff Hats, Underwear, Shirts, Cheney Ties, Hosiery, Suit Cases, Hand Bags and Headlight Overalls. One Price to Everybody ! We Sell for Cash ! See Us Before You Buy ! COFFIN SCARBORO. J BOARD OF EDUCATION MEETS. General Rules Governing Schools Resolution)) Miscellaneous Matters The Randoph county board of edu cation met in reguar session Monday transacted the routine of business and adopted general rules governing the schools of the county. Seventy-five dollars was allowed for a three months school at Mt. Lebanon church near Gray's Cross Roads. All the teachers of the county are to be allowed Thanksgiving Day and the Friday following with full pay in order that they may attend the State school is to safeguard the children's ucation that no teacher in Randolph Countv shall make up lost timfi by leaching on Saturdays or holidays; that no teacher shall be paid for lost time unless the time has been made up and that no committee shall issue voucher except for time actually taught, unless otherwise ordered by the Board tf Education C. H. PHILLIPS, Chairmaa. J. T. WOOD T. FLETCHER BULLA, Secretary to the Board Resolutions Adopted. Realizing that the first duty of a bly at Jtaleigfc during h, those two days. JflV, vS"; tion of Randolph County make the. fol- It was ordered by board that all lowing requests and Suggestions: taechers in the county schools should. take the reading course as outlined by the county superintendent. This read ing course consists of a subscription to North Carolina Education and the reading of the Geographic Influences in American History. These will be supplied to the teachers at the first teachers' meeting which will be held at some time daring this month. Application was made at this meet ing of the board of education for the consolidation of New Center school house in Richland township and Brow er district in Brower township and a two-room building constructed to ac commodate the pupils. Spero school district No. 6 in Back Creek township was ordered changed to Asheboro township as district No. 6. General Rules Governing Schools 1 1. The daily session of the school shall begin at 8:45 a. m. and shall con tinue for six hours exclusive of a morning and noort recess, of not more than fifteen minutes each, and a one, hour recess from 12 to 1 o'clock. Note. Schools failing to comply with the above rule will have appor tionment reduced accordingly, 2. It shall be the duty of all teach ers to attend the meeting of the Cojjg-, er teachers' meetings called by the county superintendent ef Schools. !0unty superintendent is hereby for bidden to approve the employment or sign the vouchers of any teacher who fails to perform this duty without ex cuse satisfactory to him. 3. No pupil shall be allowed to at tend any public school while any mem ber of the household is sick of small pox, diptheria, measles, scarlet fever, or within two weeks after death, re covery or removal of such sik person. We urgently request all parents to have their children vaccinated against email pox and typhoid fever. 4. All teaohers are required to be in their respective school rooms at least fifteen minutes before the time fixed for opening the daily session of the schools, and at least one teacher in every school shall remain on the school premises during all recesses, and in the afternoon, until the build ing has been safely closed and all of the children have been Bent home' for the day. 5. AH teachers shall furnish the county superintendent a monthly re port of their work before salary vouchers are approved. 6. Any pupil doing damage to pub lic ckool property shall pay for the same, and upon failure to do so after notice to the parents by the teacher, may be excluded to Hie school, and for willful damage shall be prosecuted an der Section 4128 of the School Law. 7. It shall be the duty of the teach ers of the public school to maintain good order and discipline in their re spective schools, to encousage morali ty, industry and neatness in all their pupils, and to a teach thoroughly all branches which are required by law. 8. It is hereby ordered that the an nual sessions of the public schools ef Randolph county begin not later than the first Monday in November, and earlier if possible, and they shall re- mci in continuous session exclusive of Christmas week until the close ef , tie . - 1 Itke?AtMbrtibBewdf Ed- Ua ea awrat 1 Jst, We request any teacher who may be accustomed (if there be any) to smoking cigarettes, not to smoke on the school grounds or in the pres ence of the children. 2nd. We suggest that the school committeemen in the various districts take enough of the school funds of said district to purchase coolers for each and every district in the county, and that parents provide their children with individual drinking cups and that the common drinking cups be abolish ed. 3rd. That all toilets be 50 yards or more away from school .buildings. 4th. That there be no dry sweep ing or dusting of floors or seats. 5th. That all school rooms be prop erly ventilated and that the tempera ture of the same be kept about 66 to 68 degrees if possible. 6th. We suggest that all parents have their children vaccinated with Prophylactic typhoid vaccine. This will be furnished free. 7th, The county superintendent of instruction is to encourage the carry ing out of these suggestions while on his rounds visiting the schools. C. H. PHILLIPS, Chmn. - ... T. FLETCHER BULLA. Secretary to Board, i JOHN BARLEYCORN ON THE RUN In a recent address in Charlotte, N. C, Ex-Governor Hanly made an address in which he declared that old John Barleycorn, after a career Vif crime, is on the run. Mr. Hanly is a member of the Flying Squadron on a speaking tour of every State in the Union. He said in part: "We are in the midst of a great Nationwide movement. We have caught the vision of a saloonless American of a sober people. In the past year it has been my privilege to go with my people into the State of Arizona and to see Arizona vote dry. It has been my privilege to go with my people into the State of Washing ton, and to see Washington vote dry. It has been by pleasure U go into the State of Oregon, and to see Ore gon vote dry. This month we have been in South Carolina, and next Tuesday we shall have the pleasure of seeing South Carolina vote dry. Oa the Ran, "We are luring in a dynamic time when John Barleycorn is en the de fensive. He is en the defensive in the Church. He is on the defensive in the public schools. He is on the defensive in the university. He is oft the defensive in every scientific labfr- satory in the world. He is eft the defensive in every great industrial, financial and commercial movement. He is on the defensive in tie count ing room, in tan bank, in the "mer cantile establishment He is on the de fensive in the mill, in the factory. He is on defensive in tire mine, in the shop tike defensive in the legislative as sembly. He ts 6a the defensive in the Congress of the Vnited States, in the execative o Sices, in the cabinet councils, in the great throne-rooms of the world, on all the great railway systems of the country. In the red tnenckes beyond the seas, lie is oTta the defensive. . "No thoughtful man ow .defends T t eceMasieal grounds. We have driven him from the field of morals and new step by step, we are driving him from the field of economics. For him there is no defense he makes none, John Bar leycorn, the dcthroner of kings, the spoliator of men, the despoiler of lit tie children. He stands at last at the bar of public opinion begging for mercy! Think ef it! Mercy for hiai? For a thousand years he has wronged humankind and denied it mercy. For a thousand years he has debauched the manhood of the race and denied it mercy. For a thousand years he has entangled his brutal fingers in the heartstrings of mother hood and denied it mercy. For a thousand years with brutal foot he Kas trampled on white-lipped baby hood and, denied it thercy". And now after a thousand years of unwhip ped brutality and crime, with the power in our hands to dethrone him and annihilate him for ever, shall we grant him mercy and let him live?" Can't Resist Him. It is argued, said Governor Hanly, that John Barleycorn should merely be restricted and restrained. "For two hundred years we have tried that policy and we have miserably failed. Why ? Because he simply will not be restrained. If in two hundred years we have enacted a law restraining him as to place, he has violated that law. If in two hundred years we have enacted a statute restraining him as to hour or day, he has in fracted that statute. For two hun dred years in this Natiaa he has known no law but the law of greed. ror two hundred years he has known no love that the lust for gold has not corrupted, he has known no pity tht avarice has not strangled. Now shall we extend to him mercy that he may K9n.tinue his career of spoliation and crime? 'iri45i!5TOwr "But he files another special plea, not to the merits, but as an avoid ance. He poses as! a friend of hu man liberty. He professes to be so"1 concerr.ed about the rights of the citizen that he Cannot bear to be re strained lest humrn liberty be im paired." Governor Hanly txk up this argu ment t.nd combaitcd it, by showing the kind of liberty liquor gives a r.ian, dethroning his reason, lighining the fibres of insanity, nnsteadying his gait, sending him home to bruise the body of his wife, to scar her soul and to implant the seeds of degen eracy for futurj generations. "Fine liberty, that," he exclaimed, after each item in the bill of indictment. "If that be liberty, I want none ef it for myself. I want none of it for my enemy. I want that I shall be master of my passions. I want that I shall be the captain of my soul. Men, that's not liberty IVe been talking about. It's a crime in God's high forum and it cught to be a crime in every State and every county." Insult to America. The Ex-Governor took up the re maining plea, one which, he said, he blushed to name the plea that if a Federal amendment was enacted we would be unable to enforce it That plea was made in Congress and re peated the other day by an ex-Prai- dent of the United States, speaking in Boston to the bar of all Uossachu setts. "That assertion sets athrill every nerve in my body with re sentment," exclaimed the speaken," It is a confession and a ffroclamation that representative constitutional gov ernment has failed m this Republic. The essence, the soul of American liberty lies m the right of the peo ple themselves to choose for them selves to choose for themselves their policies of government and have their choice made effectuaL" la words of flaming eloquence he depicted the price paid by the found ers of this Government for the berit agV'of human liberty 140 years ago and with withering scorn denounced the insinuation that this free people in this enlightened day woald abdi cate their prerogative of self-govera- mcat PROVIDENCE ITEMS. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Fields and small daughter visited Mr. Fields' parents, Mr. and Mrs, John Fields, near Beth lekem, recently. Mr. George Frazier, of Greensboro, spent Thursday and Friday of last week with Mr. G..P. Barker. Miss Ora Pugh, of Plaasant Carden, was the guest of Miss Etta Neece Sat urday night. Mrs. Robert Vickory and aon, Char He, also Miss Bettie Vickory. attended last Tuesday the 45th wedding anni versary and reunion of Capt. and Mrs. W. S. Lineberry near Millboro. Mr. B. J. Gregson, of Liberty, re cently purchased Mr. G. P. Barker's timber, .jr-'v?" Miss Vanner Neece, also Mr Clar ence Macon, were at home from Guil ford College to attend the meeting at Gray's Chapel. Mr.. Ralph Cox has left for Guilford College, where he will attend the gra ded school this winter. Mr. R. J. Barker and sister, Mrs. G. P. Barker, Bpent Sunday at Holly Springs, visiting relatives. Miss Mary Skeen and brother, Les ter, left last week to attend the Bible School at Greensboro. Mrs. W. R. Neece spent Saturday night with Mrs. Mary Pugh at Pleas ant Garden. How To Make the QuickesLSimplest Cough ! Remedy "J (he RmIt- nMm mmm mvm Blft 93, FmUr UumlMd The Charming Toned York Piano. "Within the last five years I have selected and purchased': three York Pianos from you, one of which is in my own home. It gives me great pleasure to say, that these pianos are giving en tire satisfaction in every re spect" Most cordially your' samuel h. Thompson;. Tennessee State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Nashville, Tenn. In his capacity as State Superintendent, Mr. Thomrjson travel extensively and comes in contact with musical people and with pianos of all kinds. He is a keen but fair judge of values. He in dorses the York Piano not only because of its beauty of appear ance and tone when new; but because it grows in favor with ac quaintance. Remember Mr. Hammer selected the York Piano for the fTmi rier contest only after a thorough investigation of the merits of the many pianos offered. He couldn't find a better one for the Courier, neither can you for your home. Call on or write immediately for prices and terms. A. N. CULLOM, Factory Represeotatiye ASHEBORO, N. C. used in more homes than any other cough .uuvuj. aw pruiupmetw, ease ana cer tainty in conquering distressing coughs, able. You mi actually feel it take hold. A day s UK will usually overcome the ordinary cough relieves even whooping coyga guickly. . Splendid, too,, for bron- Militia tiuamfljin .rmin hrnnoliial antliM..' and winter coughs. . ttbfk toy druggist 2 eunces of Pintt (50 cents worth ) , pour it in a pint bottle and fill the bott le with plain grahtt lated sugar syrup. This gives yon t a cost of only 64 cents a full pint of better lakes but a few minutes to prepare. Full aireetinna with Pinav Taaiaa nnA ..J kever spoils. fo? will be pleasantly surprised how quickly it loosens dry, boarse or tight coughs, and heals the inflamed mem- II . in s paimui coujfn. Jt also Stops toe formation of phlegm in the throat anil hrnnohiai tnKm 4V sistent loose cough. nnex is a most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine ex tract, rich in guaiacol, which is to heal ing to the membranes. jo avoid disappointment, be sure and and don't aoeept anything elss. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, ur uiunrj promptly jrerunaeu, goes wrjn this preparation. The Pinex Co., 252 mam St., rort Wayne, lnd. SPECML VOTE COUPOt. This coupon will entitle any contestant in the Auto mobile Contest of The Courier to 266 VOTES For Contestant District ADDRESS....!: VOID AFTER OCTOBER 14th. R. L. Gray, of Washington, N. C, has accepted work as Field Secretary with the North. Carolina Anti-Saloon League, and will take up his wark October ISth. Mr. Gray will take up his entire time in visiting all sections of the State in the eause and interest of tefnperance. FRESH BOX OF RIB MEAT AT 13c. a pound at Lambert's Cash Store. WHERE TOUR MOSQUITOES COME FROM Filing complaints against the mos quito, meanwhile madly swatting and rubbing elbows and ankles, has been about the chief topic of recent porch conversation and evening amusement. Where they come from is a mystery. Not even the housekeepers know. Some say they were blown ia. Others saya they came with the big rains a week or two ago. While nobody knows, a few, however, have their sus picions. A survey of the home premises would more than likely clear up the moaquitoe mystery. It is true the re cent rains had something to do with it They filled the gutters and drains the drains that dont drain like wise an the tin cans, barrel ,bncket sad broken ware lyiag weaisd, and Millinery ! SEE OUR NEW HATS The Smartest Styles of the season at Lowest Prices, t We have all the new velvet shapes Turbans, Sailors. Pone effect. New Beaded Ornaments. Fancv Feathers, New Wings, Ostrich Novelties, Gold and X auver r lowers. Mrs. Millard H. Allred CASH STORE ASHEBORO. N. C 4IIIMIIIII MHMtfMMUniMIHHIHMHIH kept these filled long enough for a full crop of mosquitoes to raise, which pro cess requires onhy about fourteen days at this season. Weeds and vines might come in also for condemnation for giving them sheltering places dur ing the day. But if all the above containers of water had been kept empty during and after the rains, there would not now be such a mosquito rage. And be this understood thai it does not re quire more than one or two tin cans, or a bucket, er an improper drain, to produce enough mosquitoes to annoy a household for a season. What probably played an important part in the recent mosquito epidemic was tha fact Oat It followed the height of vacation season. Whole families were away and homes were closed. Vessels in which water col lected were probably left out and these became unmolested and continuous breeding planes far mosquitoes. Since the mosauito is hatched and already at his nightly trade, these suggestions may or ma? aot be timer? warnings, according to the season, whether it is wet or dry. or hot or cold. But they should be sufficient to- clear up the mystery and as a oii to the wise next summer. For Sale. Eleven acres of land ia New Hope Township,; lying near Oak Grove church and school. Anyone that wants to buy call and see me at once. IVY YATES, Sol, N.C FRESH BOX OF KIB MEAT AT 13c a pound at Lambert's Cash Sto
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 7, 1915, edition 1
8
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