Newspapers / The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, … / Jan. 12, 1906, edition 1 / Page 7
Part of The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Every Two Minutes Physicians tell us that all the blood in a healthy human body passes through the heart once in every two minutes. If this action be comes irregular the whole body suffers. Poor health follows poor blood ; Scott's Emulsion makes the blood pure. One reason why SCOTT'S EMULSION is such a great aid is because it passes so quickly into the blood. It is partly di gested before it enters the stomach; a double advan tage in this. Less work for the stomach; quicker and more direct benefits. To get the greatest amount of good with the least pos sible effort is the desire of everyone in poor health. Scott's Emulsion does just that. A change for the better takes place even be fore you expect it. We will tend you a ?ample free. ^ Be ture that thb l picture in the form of a label it on the wrap IA per of every bottle of [F Emulsion you buy. # Scott & Bowne Chemists 409 Pearl St., N. V. 50 cents and $1.00 All druggitU Alcohol a Remover. The following taken from Chari ty and Children shows the re moving qualities of alcohol with great accuracy: "An exchange save that "alco hol will remove stains from sum mer clothes." The exchange is right. It will also remove the summer clothes, also the spring, autumn aud the winter clothes, not only from the one who drinks it, but from the wife and family as well. It will also remove the household furniture, the eatables from the pautrv, the smiles from the face of his wife, the laugh from the innocent lips of his children and the happiness out of his home. As a remover of tnings alcohol has no equal." Mr Johnson is at his best in the above. It is the truth pure and simple. There is no greater "remover" in the world than al cohol and if any one doubts this let them look about them at the joys, the sweets of life and of life itself that have been thus remov ed.?Charlotte News. You will not find beauty in rouge pot or complexion white wash. True beauty comes to them only that take Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. It is a wonderful tonic and beautifier. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets A. H. Boyett, Druggist, Selma Drug Co. SPECIAL REDUCED RATES VIA SEABOARD. Pensacola, Fla.; New Orleans, La ; Mobile, Ala : Account Mar di Gras, February 22nd-27th, one fare plus 25ctound trip, tickets sold February 21st-2(5th inclusive, final limit March 3rd. Tickets can be extended until March 17 th. Louisville, Ky: Account De partment of Superintendents National Educational Associa tion, February 27th-March 1st, one fare plus 25c round trip, tickets sold February 24tb-25th 2(?th, final limit March 4th. Niagara Fall, N. Y.: Account National Association of Retail Grocers January 23rd 25th, one and one-third fares pins 25c on Certificate Plan Basis C. H. GATT1S, T P. A., Raleigh, N. C One Minute Coutrh Cure contains not an ntom of any harmful drujr, and it hns been curing Counlis. Colds. Croup and Whoopinji Coutfh ?o long that it has proven itself to he a tried and true friend to the many who us it Sold by J. R. Ledbetter, Hood Hros.. Benson Drug Co. P CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAII S M |y Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good IfJ ?SI Use In time. Sold by druggists. El eg**-! >7 55555585 ' Education Column For School Teacher*, School Committee men, Patrons and Friends of the Public Schools. Conducted by 8upt. Ira T. Turlington. Punishment of POpils. Sometimes small children must be punished at school in order to control the school. The kind of punishment and the degree of the punishment should be de termined by the offense. It is not often that severe punishment is necessary. Certain but mild puuishment for violations of j rules is far better than severe! punishment administered as the whim of a high tempered teacher may direct. Some authorities claim that teachers should never whip pu Cils. 1 heard a gentleman who as taught school in the differ ent grades of the school work | and who is now president of one of the leading universities of the South once say that a teacher | has no right to whip pupils and that he had neyer whipped a pu pil. From my own experience 1 i know that it is not necessary to \ whip as much as some teachers do. In an experience of twenty j years I am quite sure that I nev er whipped more than twenty pupils. Yet I do not say that whipping should never be resort ed to. I do say it ought to be j the last resort. Teachers who whip for every j little offense acknowledge In so doing their inability to control without the rod, or an unwilling ness to try to think of some oth er way, or their love of brute force in controling. This is an acknowledgement that no true teacher will make. The true tactful teacher will be able to find some way to control pupils without much whipping. What would I whip a pupil for? I have whipped some pupils for fighting on the play grounds, some for profane swearing, some i for continued wilful disobedience, j and one for impudence. Should a teacher punish a pu pil under the heat of passion? No. Wait till your angry feeling passes away. Never whip a child at any time for any offense simp ly because the child made you angrv. Never punish except for the benefit of the child. The teacher who punishes for revenge or because the child made him ! angry regardless of the child's good has a great sin to repent for and, may be, a punishment to endure. Teachers, let us all consider the responsibilities we have as sumed and try to meet them in a way that will tend to make our pupils better and nobler? better prepared to meet the du ties of this life and to realize the possibilities of the life beyond. * The apportionment of school fund has been made and notices sent to all the districts. Some of the teachers have not sent in their first monthly re ports. He prayeth best who loveth best All things both great and small; For the dear (iod who loveth us, He made and loveth all. ?Samuel S Coleridge Work. Blessed is be who has found his work; let him ask no other bless edness. He has a work, a life purpose; he has found it and will follow it! How, as a free-flowing channel, dug and torn by nobler ! force than the sour mud-swamp i of one's existence, like an ever I deepening river there, it runs 1 and Hows; draining off the sour, < festering water gradually from - the root of the remotest grass- 1 blade; making, instead of pesti- i lential swamp, a green, fruitful i meadow, with its clear, Howing i stream. How blessed for the meadow itself, let the stream and its value be great or small! Labor is life; from the inmost heart of the worker rises his God-given force,?the sacred, ce lestial life-essence breathed into him by Almighty God; from his inmost heart awakens him to all uobleness, to all knowledge, "self-knowledge," and much else, so soon as work fitly begins.? Thomas Carlyle. My God! I thank Thee who hath made I The earth so bright? So full of splendor and of joy, I Beauty and light; | So many glorious things are here Noble and right. ?Adelaide A. Proctor. ' | r I am content with whal I have, j i Little bo It or much, j' ?John Banyan, j - STATE NEWS. The whiebev plant of Dennett & Morgan at Marion was burned la*t week. Loss estimated at $200,000. The monthly salaries of rural mail earners in North Carolina now aggregate $04,807, an in crease of nearly $20,000 during the paet year. Dr. J. A. Caldwell, who died in Salisbury recently, left an estate valued at $40,000 to $50,000. The entire property is left to his wife unconditionally. Christmas a cannon cracker exploded in the hands of Jo. Urif fon, colored, in Wake county. Now he is dead of lock-jaw as a result of the accident. Dr. Isaac Emerson, of Haiti more, has made the State Uni versity a New Year's present of $5,000 to be used as an endow ment for the library of electrical and mining engineers. A Southern Railway flagman named Hess was killed Tuesday of last week near Ruffin, Rock ingham county. He fell asleep while waiting to flag a train and was run over. It is said that he had been on dutv two or three days and was suffering for loss of sleep. Why Good Health Is to be Found In the Early Morning Air. Scientists haye discovered that there is real wisdom in the old fashioned advice, "Early to bed and early to rise." They find that early rising and getting out of doorB while the dew is on the grass enables one's lungs and circulation to absorb health-giv ing elements which the atmos phere contains at no other period of the twenty-four hours. They figure it out in this way: There is a fall of temperature at sunset and a rise again at dawn, and, consequently, mois ture is alternately being thrown out and taken up again, and it is well known that change of state is accompanied by electri cal phenomena and certain chem ical manifestations also. The formation of dew has probably, therefore, far more profound ef fects than merely the moistening of objects with water. Dew is vitalizing, not entirely because it possesses an invigo rating action due partly, at any rate, to the fact that it is satu rated with oxygen, and it has b?en stated that during its for mation peroxide of hydrogen and some ozone are developed. It is not improbable that the pe culiarly attractive and refresh ing quality which marks the ear ly morning air has its origin in this way. Certain it is that the bracing property of the early morning air wears off as the day advances, and it is easy to conceive that this loss of freshness is due to the oxygen, ozone or peroxide of hydrogen?whichever it may be ?being used up. The difficulty of inducing grass to flourish under a tree in full leaf is well known and is general ly explained bv saying that the tree absorbs the nourishing con stituents of the soil, or that it keeps the sunlight away from the grass and protects it from rain. It is doubtful whether any of these explanations is true, the real reason most probably being that the vitalizing dew cannot form upon the grass under a tree, whereas, as a rule, both rain and light can reach it. All of which is merely corrobo ration, and a scientific explana tion of something with which habitually early risers are al ready familiar through the bene ficial effects of that habit upon their health and spirits. A single ?xperiment will convince anyone ? who is not lazy*or prejudiced? that the air of the early morn ng is more bracing and invigo "ating than at any other time of lay or night.?Exchange. The soothing and comforting effects >f PeWitt's Witch Hazel 8alve. when ipplied to Piles gores, cuts, boils, etc., lubdues pain almost instantly. This talve draws out the inflammation, re luces swelling and acts as a rubefacient, hus circulating the blood through the lisensed parts, permitting or aiding Mature to permanently remove the trou pe entirely. Sold by J. It, Ledbetter, Bood Bros., Benson Drug Co. In Another Form. "Won'tyou have some grapes?" isked the host of old Soakern. '?No, thank you," was the re slv. "I don't take my wine in sills."?Fliegeude Blatter. IAS STOOD THE TEST FOR 25 YEARS rhe old, original GROVE'S r.astelessChill Tonic. You know what you are taking. It is Iron tnd qu'nino in a tasteless form. Mo ouie, No [-ay. o'.'c. j A TAR HEEL S PHILANTHROPY. Mr. R. E. Baker, of Four Oaks, Purchases Large Tract of Land In Virginia and Will Establish Industrial School for Boys ?Will Gather Them From the Cities. Richmond, Va., Jan. 2nd.? It. K. Raker, of Four Oaks, N.C., has purchased a farm of 1,00(] acres near Fheeterlield I'ourt House, on which he proposes tc establish an industrialaud train ing school. Mr. Maker will begin operations in the early spring and will have the necessary buildiugs.eouBtrueted from time to time. His plan is, to take or phan boys and the homeless trom the cities and to keep them till they have reached the age ol twenty-one. The boys are to be given training in whatever they have most talent?carpentry, dairying, farming, bee culture, blacksmithing, harness making, or such other pursuits as will be profitable to them when they shall have completed their course and are ready to make their way in the world. It is understood that the boys are to be taken absolutely free of all cost and are to be clothed, fed, educated and trained under the personal direction of Mr Maker and a corps of assistants. They will receive no pay for their services, but will, upon leaving the institution with a certificate of completion of whatever course they may desire, be given a kit of tools and a sum of money suf ficient to meet their wants for a period till they can get a posi tion. This is understood to be the nrocramme. The farm is on the Farmville & Powhatan Railroad, and a station will be located adjacent to the institution. Mr. Baker will take the boys aud see to their wants. It will be no place for idlers aud the youngsters will be kept bus? and made to work. They will put in a full day on the farm and in the school, will be given wholesome and plain food and their clothing is to be comfortable. Mr Baker is a man of means and will have the co operation of one of the best edu cators in North Carolina in his work.?Special to Charlotte Ob server. THE HICKS ALMANAC FOR 1900. The Rev. Irl R. Hicks Alma nac will not be published for 1906, but his Monthly Journal, Word and Works, has been changed into a large and costly Magazine, and it will contain his storm and weather forecasts and other astronomical features com plete. The November number, now ready, contains the fore casts from January to June, 1906. The January number, ready December 20th, will con tain the forecasts from July to December, 1906. The price of this splendid Magazine is One Dollar a Year. See it ana you will have it. The November and January numbers containing the Rev. Irl R. Hick:; forecasts for the whole year, and more com plete than ever, can be had by sending at once 25cts. to Word and Works Puhlishing Com pany, 2201 Locust Street, St. Louis, Mo. FOR SALE! 12 ? gal. (Mason jars) canned Huckleberries, 30c. 24 ? gal. (Mason jars) Spiced Pears, 30c. 100 ? gal. (Mason jars) canned Peaches, 30c. 1,000 3 lb. cans Pears (in sy rup) #1.50 per doz. 2,000 lbs. Pork for January delivery. Hogs weighing from 70 to 150 l'os. The above fruit is first class and not put up by hired help. All warranted No. 1. Mb. & Mrs. C. S. Powell. Dec. 18th, 1905. WATSON'S MAGAZINE?IN CREASE IN PRICE. Beginning with the February (1906) Number, our Magazine will becalled Watson's Magazine. It will have a handsomer cover. Several new features will be added. The price at bookstores and newsstands will be 15 cents. To be just to our present sub scribers, we have decided to re ceive renewals and new subscrip tions at #1.00 a year, up to March 31st, 1906. After that the subscription price will be #1.50 per year. This is a golden opportunity for those who are not within easy reach of newsstands. If you have never seen the maga zine, ask for sample cop>, men Honing this paper and address, Tom Watson's Maoazlne, 121 West 124 Su, Now York Qitjf. in! a'C aro I !nipl kOTVONll Vl,W,P.rAc77jr^Abovepar J It is a \m11 known f i t that cotton H ( ' J or any otiser crop, ) r< lured with v ir- fe ginia-Carolina fertilizer* will bring J ' tin* hi guest possible j?v??? E I j hrt. Make healthy, strong. w< do-1 I \ eloped, early otton. w ith full jrr> n g 1 ^ bolts on the fruit limbs at the base as ft - well asall the way up to the very top r i " and tip ends of the i>? nchrs ot the E t cotton plauts, by Jioevady using Virgioia Caroliua Fertilizers. S They contain all the materials necej- 2 sary to supply to your land the ele- flj ments which naveocen taken from it ^ . by repeated cultivation year al ter year. J Tneso fertilisers wi 1 great v "increase R your yields poi acre.'* Accept no sub- a stitute lrom your dealer. Virginla-Ceroltra Chemical Cj. jjj ' Richmond. Va. Atlanta. On. Norfolk. Va, Savannah, Oa. Durham. N C. Montgomery, Ala. S Charleston, S. C. Memphis, Term. R Baltimore, Md. Shreveport, La. ? It Will Pay You! I have on hand a seleit line of Buggies and Wagons also Harness at Low Prices For Cash When in need ef a first class Vehicle be sure to see me before buying. I keep well broke 41 Mules And Horses and ask all to come to see me and save money by buying now. 1 will carry a number of stock all the season, so you can come any time and get suit ed. Don't buy until you see me. Yours to serve, Alonzo Parrish BENSON. N. C. Wood's Seed Book FOR 1906 is one of the handsomest and most valuable publications of the kind issuea. The useful and practical hints contained inthe annual issues of Wood's Seed Book make it a most valuable help to all Farmers and Gardeners and it has long been recognized as an up-to date authority on all Garden and Farm Seeds, particularly for southern planting. Wood's Seed Book mailed free to Farmers and Gardeners upon request. Write for it. T.W. Wood & Sons, Seedsmen, RICHMOND, . VIRGINIA. Wo solicit your orders direct, for both VEGETABLE and FARM SEEDS, if your merchant does not sell WOOD'S SEEDS. DeWITT'S WITCH HAZEL SALVE THE ORIGINAL. A Well Known Cure for Pilea. , Cures obstinate seres, chapped har.da. eo ' soma, akin diseases. Makes burns and scalds ] painless. We could not improve the quality | If paid doubla the price !"ne nest salve that experience can ptoauce or that money can buy. Cures Piles Permanently rvwitfi la the original a"?t only pure and genuine Witch Hazel Salve made. Look for ihe name DeWITT on every bo*. All othen ?ra counterfeit. rusMniDtv * C. D.WITT A CO.. CHICAQO. Ask for the Iqo6 Kodol Almanac and 200 Year Calendar. HOOD BROS. BUSINESS CARDS JAS. L. WOODALL Attorney-At-Law CLAYTON. North Carolina Spec ial Attention Given to all Legal , Business. WTOftlce over Bunk of Clayton. L. H. ALLRED, Attorney-At-Law SELMA.S. C. Will Practice In all the Courts. A. Z. TAYLOR. Dentist Office Over Bank. CLAYTON. N C. Treasurer's Card. ALEX. WI665. Treasurer op Johnston County, will be in smithfield every Monday and Saturday and Court Weeks Office In back room of the Bank of Smith* Held. In his absence county orders will paid at the Bank | Bring your old I: Metals, Rubbers, | I Rags, Etc. to | M. M. G\illey | Fancy Grocer ? ( CLAYTON, - - N. C. I NOTICE. By virtue of the authority contained in a certain Mortgage Deed executed to me by Z, C. Harbour and wife, Mary D. Barbour, and by me transferred to the Adams Company said Mortgage Deed executed on the 26tnday of November, 1904, and due on the 1st day of November, 1905, and recorded in theHegistry of Johnston county in book Z, No 8 page 154. I shall sell to the use of The Adams Company at the court house door in the town of Smith tleld at auction for cash on the 20th day of January, 1906, the following described tract of land: One certain piece of land in the State of North Carolina and in Johnston County and in Ingrams township which is eight acres across the east end of said Z. C. Barbour's and Mary D. Barbour's home place adjoining the lands of Mrs. W. H. Massengill on the west side, bounded on the south side by the lands of I). P. Barbour, bounded on the north side by the lands of Emanuel and containing eight acres. This December 20. 1905. J AS. A. Wl^LLONS, J. K. WEBB, Attorney. to the use of The Adams Co. MOTICE. By virtue of the authority con tained in a certain Mortgage Deed executed to me on the 13 day of April, 1904, by B, R. Bryant and Susanna Bryant, his wife, and duly registered in the Register's Office of Johnston County in book S. No. 8, page 532. I shall sell at auc tion for cash at the Court House door in the town ot Smithtteld, N, C.. on the 5th day of February, 190?, a certain tract of land, lying and being in Johnston County in Banner Township, and described and defined as fol lows, to wit: Adjoins the lands of James Young. A. D. Young Heirs, Pias Hudson, Hanson Beasley, and others, bounded as follows: Begins at a stake in the run of Dismal Creek, William Beasley's line and runs south 5 east 20.75 chains to a stake, thence south 87 east, 12 chains to a stake in Oeoige Hudson's line, thence north 5 west 33.96 chains to a stake in the ran of Dismal (swamp) Creek, thence down said Dismal Creek to the beginning, containing 323% acres more or less. (See book "E" No. 8 page 26 Registers Office of Johnston County) and fully described in said Mortgage, This 4th dav of January. 1906. CHARLES F. NEIGHBORS, Mortgagee, NOTICE. NORTH CAROLINA) In the Superior Court JOHNSTON County 1 before the Clerk J. I. VVoodard, J. W. Woodard and others. vs. Walter Woodard, Fannie Smith, Charlie Woodard and others. The defendants above named will take notice that an act on entitled as above has b en commenced in the Superior Court of Johnston county before the Clerk to sell for partition a certain tract of (35Jt) acres of land same being lot No. 7. in the division of the lands of lienj. Woodard. Said defendants will take notice that they are required to ap pear before the Clerk at his office in Smitn tlcld Johnston countv N. C. on 29th day of January 1906 and answer or demur to the com plaint in said action or the plaintiff will ap ply to the court for the relief demanded In said complaint. This Dec. 28 1906. W. S. STEVENS. Clerk Superior Court Jonnston County. JAS. A. WELLONS. Att'y for Plaintiff. NOTICE. By virtue of the authority contained in a Mortgage Deed executed to M. C. Stewart on the 12th day of January, 1905. by J. K. Finch and wife, Lumie E., and duly reg'st reu in the Register's office of Johnston i;ot>nty in hook / No. 8. page 160. and transferred to us, we sha 1 sell at auction, for cash at the Court House door in tin- town of Smithtleld. N. C.. :>n the 5th day ot F< b'j. tne following real property to wit: One lot in tne town of Benson, N. c., known as lot No. 4 in block "F" In the C. c. Kyals addition. Beginning it a stake on Mill >treet and runs S. 37X V\ . 1-tO feet to an a<ley thence N 53 \ W, 50 feet to Ingr.im Smith's corner thence N 37S E. 140 feet to Mill Street thence S. 53 .S K. 54? feet to the beginning containing a fractional lairt of an Hcreaod fully described iu said Mortgage. This 2nd day of January. 19t|R. ('. W. ANDKhMiN, ( Assignees of ('.A. AN DF.KSON, l" Mortgagee. HOLLISTER'8 Rocky Mountain Tec Nuggets A Busy Medioino for Baiy loop ? Brings Qoldsn Health and Rwewsd Vigor A specific forConstipatIon, Indigestion I 've and Kidney Troubled. Pitnplea Lfffltiln lrnpstf t)l<gxt. Had Breath, 1;: ? ? Bowel*. M I n he and ftn^Whe. P's t> ? ?\v Tee ? uh h?r form, 3ft c ud* n i,..r a uinlne maw* ojr ? ? ,r |;u i u Pv' ? C .'." 7 'HU ? VI',* .?vu.ll llWM J ~ k U I V'i ? '.i
The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 12, 1906, edition 1
7
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75