Newspapers / Polk County News and … / July 12, 1906, edition 1 / Page 4
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STAR L. SATOB, GBAHD 30J1IBIJ " i 111 .vv-.-v'. ..X4. T 4i' SHUNTS SPEECH Cabinet' Member's Address to Nsrth Carolina Republicans COUNSELS THEM TO HARMONY HENS f-eU-I 8TRENGT THE ENTIRE OT. Mr. Chas. L. Saner, Grand Scrihe, Grand jCacampment I. O. O. F. of Tex-w. and Assistant City .Auditor, write troin the rtr Hall, San Antonio, Tex.: "Nearly two years ago I accepted po sition as secretary and treasurer with one 4' the leading dry goods establishment of SaJyeston, Tex. 'The sudden change from a lurli and drj altitude to sea level proved too mueh jne and I became afflicted with eaUrrh nd cold in the Head, and general debility such an extent as to .amuwfc -incapacitate me for attending to my duties. 'I tea Induced to try P-rt-nt etidi after taking several bottle in small doses 1 am pleated to say that J was entirely restored tomy normal vendition and have ever since rec ommended the use of Pemna to my Sriendt." ; The Secretary of War Emphasis the Importance of Breaking the Solid South, Bnt Says as Long as the Re publican Party in This Section Rep resents Little Save a Factional Chase fbrrederal Offices, in Which , Business Men and Men of Substance in the Community Have No Desire ;i to Enter and in the Result of Which t They , Have . No Interest, I" We May Except the Present Political Condi- i -tions of the South to Continue.; TIIE HEIWAY OF SrJOKIMG tfAT- delldcms flavor and will keep sona ana Insects . through the entire summer. - m Wright's Condensed Smolie -inf.aina nothlne except what la obtained tal !p. NEVER SOU) IN .BOLE. 4 bo tjIUom J CONDENSED SMOKE. Made Only bj m1 mo u wDfr.irrr.tvi.til lOftW. Fourth M., runwas wny, iw. by NEWSV. GLEANINGS. -1- $5,000 GUAKA .5 TEED V sr a BANK DEPOSIT R.R.FaraPali. NotisTakei SOO PBBR COURSES f - 1 I Board at Cost. Writ 01 lEffitQIALABAU A BUSINESS C0LLE8S, Macon, tie Food Products nake pietuct more eajoyable by making theprepuations easief . E-asier to carry; easier to serve; aadjurf right for eating as they come from the can. Libby coaka have first pick of the best meats obtainable and they know how to cook them, as well as pock them. jj v, m you re not gomg to a picnic soon you CBU :UUC VUB ftl yiU Unu lulls by serving some sHced Luncheon Loaf. It is a revelation in the bleading of good meat and good spices. Booklet fr; "How to Mat. I f Crtod Thingi to Eat" Write Ubby, McNeill V Llbby, Chicago When a man lets a collar button fall and brags that it didn't roll under the bureau, it's a sign he is a pur jiiTer. v So. tiS-?0(i. AGGRAVATING ECZEMA. V,-' 1 t - Troubled Badly For Several Tears Witli : Cczemai ori Limbs Another Won- . ; .; ;' , derfnl . Cure bjr,. Catlcara. Tor several years I was troubled bad- ..rtij with an eczema on my limbs and wrists. .Phygiciaca - in, several ' towna .had.;.-ipre-.; . ecribed for! me vdthout pving me any re nlts I had often used Cuticura Oint f ' zaent and received relief temporarily. In the spring of 1904 I took the Cuticura Re eoltent" Pills and used the Cuticura Oint ment for . about five weeks, . and at the end of that time there was not a blotch on me anyvrhore. " This spring I took a tew via'.s of the Cuticura lies o vent l'illa, a a precautionary measure, and will con ' ' tinue to dp bo ' every ; spring simply as a spring tonic, as they are so. easy to carry : ' 4 with, you, and they (LCitaialy . ux. your j blood ' for- the ensuing ear, I now . use Oint- an (ireonsboro, N. C.t Special The most interesting feature of tlie Repub lican State convention , here . was the address by Secretary of War, William , H. Tat't. The address was in. part as follows: "Republicans of North Carolina: "When your committee did me the honor to ask me to address (he Re publican convention of North Caro lina, they advised mc that the politi cal' situation was such that if a pii ev 'effort were made at the coming election, it would be possible to carry the State for the Republican party, and that in'that effort they felt they were entitled to the sympathy and assistance of Republicans throughout the country. The s,apeal Iliad con vincinjr weig-ht with me, for T be lieve that nothing: ? that ' could hap pen in the politics of this country wouht work greater advantage to the country at large, and to the South in parlicular, than the breaking up of wliat ha been properly known as ihe tisan spirit, for I am not one of those who think , that this result would necessarily 'increase the probability of the continuance in power of the Republican party. The solidity of the South while 'iit has . assured to the Democratic party a certain '-number o f Congrressmen jand a certain nunv ber of electoral votes, has in a meas ure furnished, its own antidote by re straining many voters in the North who murht have left the Republican parly but for 'what they 'regard as the .injustice and'"' danger of Southern loIiiir.a! conditions." . 1 '---w. a.. I . - Here Secretary Taft referred to the disfranchisement of the negro, showing- that this was not approved by the people of the north. .Concerning the present day South lie said:"" "The white people of the South are k fbmege-neous peopler, much more likely to cherish traditions and re tain customs and opinion of the past than the jeople of, the North of more mixed 'descent: 6 Hence' it takes a long time to convince the white jeople of the South, intelligent, clear-headed and" 'energetic as ihe'v nro'; th.-if "tlio cry of negro domination, so ofteiV raised by -politicians among them, Is merely for the puriose of solidifying their vote on the Democratic side and has no real jurisdiction iif fact. As long as the years immediately fo! lowing the war, their agriculture lan guished, their mines remained, un opened, their factories were few in number, and the prosperity of the country seemed confined to that part of it lying north of Mason's and Dix on's line, it was easy, by appeals -to recollections of the civil war and the unfortunate . sequence of- reeonstruc tion, to fill the ranks of tho Demo cratic army and maintain the solid ty of the South. But nw, f during tne, last decade, an unprecendented pe riod of prosperity" has come 5for the A record .wheat rop is predicted. - One person in 400 is insane in Ohio. , y, , v 1 : Some.Americans are to open a big department store in London. - New York has 4 :cided to erect a monument to Carl Schurz. Heavy rain spoiled King Edward's birthday' celebration; London sub ways were flooded. , The Wells, Fargo & Co. Express Company has been put on a ten per cent, dividend basis. ; Six hundred men in Indian Terri tory, hanged and burned a negro who had assaulted a girl of fifteen. A Japanese expert said that most of the earthquake losses In San Fran cisco were caused by faulty construc tion. A.' B. Hepburn, President ot the Chase National Bank, estimated that Americans spent $400r000,000 abroad yearly i ,'. t' I It is reported that the suits which the Administration expects to bring against the Standard Oil may result in $2,000,000 wt th cf fines. American delegates to the Interna tional Wireless Congress will propose a plan to punish companies for re fusing to communicate with other systems - . Two whipthong makers who, went into bankruptcy recently in South wark, England, declared that they had been ruined by motors, and es pecially by motor omnibuses. An ape in the Bronx Zoological Tark, New York City, seized a lighted cigar thrown into his cage and set fire to a bunch of hay, almost caus ing a panic among the spectators. Morrison G. Swift was fined $10 for posting placards denouncing "money kings" on the,doors of the offices of J. P. Morgan & Co. and the Standard Oil Company, in New York City. - i READING ALOUD AT HOME. Young girls should be encouraged to read aloud frequently. There is no lovelier accomplishment. Not the de clamatory style of reading which pro fessional elocutionists acquire, and which, because it is intended for pub lic use, has a degree of exaggeration in both ' ts tones and its action, .but the quiet, sweet, sympathetic and in telligent rendering of a book into the living speech is what we should seek for. A girl frequently spends a great deal of , time over studies which will- do her very little good in her future life, says Woman's Life. The art of reading well and acceptably "would enable her to grace any circle of friends; it would perhaps cause her to be as eyes to the blind and as an angel of relief in the room of the in- f ..I f :j Cuticura Soap. The Cuticura Oi f, .Kent .nd li'ills ' certainly-cured ine of 'aggravated case of eczema. K St.' Clair ' Mc-."' '"7V " .Yicar; San AntoMo, Texas? July 6 1903." The nek. sick sinner 'a sixtli sheep is J . i , Not o Very Raw. There were some things the man Vhb i had fought; in1 Cuba i bore "with composure and some which aroused bis 'WTath.- - ft: -.rv "It's a wonder such a lot of raw re cruits did such good . work," some body said in his bearing one day. "Look here," said the soldier. "Af ter a man's baked in that ;heat for a couple o' days ihe isn't so raw as you seem to think." Youth's Companion. - DOCTOUS SHIFT Now Gets Along .Witliout It. IITS,St. Vitus' Dance:Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerva i mg man.4 restorer. 72 mai Dome ana treatise ires. .Ds,H. Pw Klhe, Ld., 931 Arcb, t..l'hila.,Pa. "The salary of the Mayor of New York is flSKK? a year. , . Jirs. Winslow's SoothlnR Byrup for Children teethinp.softens thesums.reducestnfiamma 11b, allays pain, cares wind colic. 25c a bottle Home has been entered or sacked more. -Iban forty times since 380 B. C. Says the Atlanta Constitution: The Panama Canal is fraught, with such weighty interest to the -country, and especially to the south, that its type of construction should not be settled kastily or without mature delibera tion. But in view of the attention al ready given this phase, and the fur ther fact that the time is approaching when indecision may' mean expensive . . &elay, wisdom ; and expediency seem rto indicate.the necessity of a oongres teSaii&X .declaration before the expira- tica o! the present term. fair Southern States.' ; The Secretary, then led off into' the body of his'speecly showing viiat the present administration and the pas't congress have ; done foiv the country. He argued that it is how .time. for a break in the solidity, of flthe South, that the' best interests of the whole country demands it aiid that1 North Caroliiia is good republican ground. WlCoiieorniiig .the, republican position ou;the; trust question' he Said : f. f It has been the habit of the Dem-, ocratic party to attack the Republi can party as tavoring trusts and cor porations, . and opposed to the labor- Nothing could be farther from the fact.- The record ) of that party shows that the only substantial steps which have been really taken to stop the abuses and oppression at tempted by, the irresponsibie hold ers of the great wealth.' and corporate power, have , been by the -Republican party "and there is no more brilliant and sueeessful exponent o f this policy than Theodore Roosevelt. His declar ations made before ' the' election are being enforced and put into' practice after the election. - s '. s Mr. Taft argued that the republi cans Avere not to be criticised for the seeming extravagance of (the past congress; that the expenditures made w ere made necessary by the needs of the country. ' - , ., ' Secretarj' Taff left Monday night on a special train .for his Jiomo and thence to keep an engagement in OHio Tuesday.-.- , . ... ' , ' COMPLETEST BUSINESS BUILDING TELEPHONES Are a Necessity j XI M 7 in ine uouniry Home. The farther you are removed from town to railroad station, the more the telephone will save in time and horse flesh. No man has a right to compel one of the family to lie in agony for hours while he drives to town for the doctor. Tel ephone and save half the suffering. Our Free Book tells how to or ganize, build and operate tele phone lines and systems. Instruments sold on thirty days' trial to responsible parties. THE CADIZ ELECTRIC CO., 201 CCC Building, Cadiz, Ohio. Features bf W. Tj. Douglas Adminis- - . v . - - ' tration and Jobbing House. ' The dedication of .the new adminis tration and jobbing bouse building erected at Brockton, Mass., by the W. L. Douglas Shoe Co. as a part of its mammoth manufacturing pUUt at Mon tello was marked by the thoroughness and attention to detail characteristic of the firm in all its undertakings. As the new building is said to be the most complete and convenient of any ever built for -a commercial house jn the United States, so were the expres sions of appreciation by. tbe;naany, per sons who visited it for inspection sin cere and of. a ..highly congratulatory nature. ,.; The - dedicatory program included open bouse from 11 a. m.' to 8 p. m. with concert by the Mace Ciy e?ohes tra ; and the , presence of a , Boston caterer to attend to the wishes of all. The building itself afforded a feast for the eye, s especially - the offices, which are marvels in many ways. Fifteen thousand Invitations were sent out, in- eluding over 11,000 to the retail dealers in the United States, Who handle the W. L. Douglas Co. shoes, the others going to shoe manufacturers and all allied industries in Brockton and vi cinity. Mr. Douglas will be glad to OPERATION AVoiii (I EXPERIEflCE0FHlSSMEtaj InaTltable. HowSblBTy , 7 aa'- an on.. C8C When a uhvaioinn ii. SAt 17IT rilBaWftn, ferinr with aeriou fr;0lnw that an operation is neces,, thought ot the knife and th' tttTh table strikes our hospitals for just such operations. terror to her arefullofLheiO( There are cases where an B " OI C4fe menacing" female trouble cnrH vruat,a. am. puj.ivmm II 8,7 g OJj operations, no woman should snbmJ , :y. "-, efevj and , Syllyisms. Read the following quickly your friends will be amused: ' Simple Simpkins sung a song of sixpence as the sun shone silently o-p the shoii shop sign. Sarah sells sea shells sewn up in a sheet. Break the hands that binds yon blindly before breakfast. A pcack of pealed pears put into a pale pink pitcher. - BLOATED WITH DROPSY. The Heart Was Badly Affected When the Patient Began Using Doan's Kidney Pills. Mrs. Elizabeth Maxwell, of 415 West Fourth St., Olymyia, Wash.. says: i or over three years I suffered with a dropsical condi tion without be ing aware that it was due to kidney trouble. Theearly stages were principal ly backache and bearing down pain, but I went along without worrying much until dropsy Set in. My feet and ankles swelled up, my hands puffed and be came so tense I could hardly close them. I had great difficulty in breathing, and my heart would flut ter with the least exertion. I could not walk far without stopping again and again to rest. Since using four boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills the bloating has gone down and the feel ings of distress have disappeared." Sold by all dealers. 50 . cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. 'I A physician says: "Until last fall I used to eat meat lor ray breakfast and suffered with: indigestion until the meat had passed from the stom ach. "Last fall I ' began the use of GraperNuts for breakfast; and very soon found I could do without meat, for my. body got all the nourishment necessary frpm the Grape-Nuts, and since theU I have not had any indi gestion and am feeling better and have-Increased in weight. 1 ' ."Since finding the" benefit I derived from Grape-Nuts -I have! prescribed the food for all of my patients suf fering from indigestion or over-feeding and also " for those recovering from disease where I want a food easy : to .take and . certain to digest and which will" not overtax the stom ach. - , , , "I always 'find the results I look for when I prescribe Grape-Nuts.' For ethical ? reasons please., omit 'my.. name." Name given by mail by Pos turn Co., Batt)e Creek, Mich. The s reason for tho j wonderful amount of. nutriment, and the easy digestion of Grape-Nuts js, not hard to find. ,t;- ' : ;".'-. .- In the first place the atarhypart of the wheat and barley goes thrdngh various processes of cooking to per fectly change the starch into Dex trose or Post Sugar, in which state it it ready to bo easily absorbed by the .blood. , The parts in the wheat and barley; which ; Nature can make, use of for rebuilding brain and nerve centres aro retained in. this -remarkable food, and thus tho .human body is supplied with tbepowerful strength producers so easily noticed after one ha? eaten Grapo-Nuts each day for a t week or 10 days. "ThoiVs a rea ' son." . - - , ( , Get tho Uttlo book, "Tho' Head to Wollvillo' In pkgs. PLENTY OF MATERIAL. "Why is that strange blond so popu lar witii the college girls?" "Sh! She assists them to arrange their 'cozy corners.' " "Ah, she has an artistic tempera ment?" "No, but her father owns four Junk, shops." Chicago News. Call at the Drug Store To Day, Get a bottle of Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Cordial for Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Childrea Teething, etc. At Druggists 25c and 50e. Disappearing Forests. The National Hardwood Lumber A sociation at its recent meeting in Memphis adopted a report that pre entednthe dire possibilities of the ; de struction of the forests in the 6hort period of thirty-five years. It was es timated that tiaere now stood in the United States in the neighborhood of 1,475,006,000,000 feet of lumber, but that 45,000,000,000 feet of lumber was, being cut every year. The report re jommended the Immediate prohibition of Jog exports and, exemption from '.axes of tree ."plantations. Attention uraa called to' the desirability, of State legal enactments along the last line, ind some constitutional provision by the general Government of likeeffect. Mention was made of the custom pre railing in France of requiring a tree o be planted for every tree cut down. FronTDaily Consular and Trade Re potts. . "" .. Heflections of a Bachelor. - It is easy to say what you would do in another man 's place, but when it comes to doing the proper thing in your own placewell, that 's dif ferent. ' We always say we don't want our friends to grieve after we are gone-j-and they don 't after the novelty wears off. .v Silent Sambo slumbered' safely on tho shifting sea sand. So. 28-706. x ue new uuiiuiuj 19 aicuu.Ltn, just, north of the No. 1 factory on Spark street, facing the Montello railroad station. Its completion marks the es tablishment of a modern up-to-date wholesale jobbing house and office building. Mr.' Douglas has long con sidered the advisabilty of ; a jobbing bouse, not only for the purpose of sup plying his own retail stores more read Ily, but that the 11,000 dealers through out the United States handling the W. L. Douglas shoe might be able to ob tain shoes for immediate use with greater facility. Under the present system all shoes are manufactured to order, and cus tomers sometimes lose sales waiting for shoes to arrive. ; With the new job bing house they will be , enabled to have their hurry orders shipped the same day they are received, which will be far more satisfactory to the cus tomer and will result in a largely-increased business to the W. L. Douglas Shoe Co. The new building is 260 feet long and 60 feet wide and two stories in height The jobbing department will occupy the entire lower floor, . while the offices will occupy the second floor. Leaving the new jobbing bouse on the first floor, the -main staircase as cends to the second floor level in two divisions separating. on the first land ing and meeting again upon the fourth, where the large Palladian window Is situated, which appears over the en trance. . , At the head of the staircase in the mosaic floor appears the word "Atrium," the name of the inner ball, planned and decorated after the man ner of the central apartment of the Pompeiian house. This room is direct ly in the center of the main building, being 26x68 and 16 feet in height, and is I lighted by three large ceiling sky lights of classic design. - . Around the atrium are placed the private offices, where the heads of the departments are located, with their assistants. Beginning at the right of the main entrance, in order, are those of the C. F. Richmond, buyer; H. T. Drake, general superintendent; Hon. W. L. Douglas, president; and H. L. Tinkham, treasurer. They are finished and furnished in mahogany and are ensuite. Mr. Douglas- own room oc cupies thesouthwest corner of the buHding, and is a very handsome apartment. To the left of these comes the room of C. D. Nevins, assistant treasurer, Mrs. Marion Shields, cor respondence clerk,1, and the store de partment. ; - On the east of the atrium and open ing into this hall are two alcoves sep arated by mahogany counters, the fronts of which are plate . glass and grilles of bronze. These are the offices of Warren Weeks, paymaster, and Harry L. Thompson, the bookkeeper. The next in order to the left are two rooms devoted to the credit depart ment, one the private office of A. T. Sweetser and the other occupied by his clerks. The next two offices are those of F. L. Erskine," advertising manager, and his assistants. - The three other rooms completing the outer wall line of the atrium are the reception room to the left of the staircase hall,1 directors' room and lavatory and the sample room. Here are located the telegraph Instruments, telephone switchboard' and booths for use of guests. 'j , . The directors' room is a fine cham ber occupying the space in the north west corner of the building. ."This room is finished and furnished in ma hogany and all. appointments are in keeping. Here hangs a portrait in oil of VIr Douglas, the president The Jast room in this series is the sample room, also In mahogany. On center with the entrance and be tween the bookkeeper's alcove and the credit department is a hall leading to the general bookkeeping room, where is located the host of clerks which this huge business employs. Austria-Hungary has 18,000 medical men. Compound and writing Mrs. PlUu 1 "J U J WHICH IS fffcl Miss Margret Merkley, 0f 2 nJ Dear Mrs. Pinkham: 4i Lots of stJ-eagth, extreme nervoi linnHiia mine t.hrnnnrh V, ine in mwom. uwuioai bui ice. i nedoetor 1 making an exanunatipn, said I bad & w trouble and ulceration and advised n o tion. To this I rtrongly objected andHS rr - T .villi K Pinkhnm'c r.i.i. nniirirf .. Tba ulceration nnipblv !,... j j the bad STmntoms disaDWir&l 9 J t j t . i ouvm mure iu unBI Tigvruus ana wU. It periods are very painful, or ton si quent and exeeseiTe if you hate prf or swelling" low down in the left SI bearing-dewn pains, don't neg'ectTocl self: try lyaia js. iruikiiam s Veu'J tompouna. In -order "to 'advance the price sugar, weakened by general overp; due tion, a systematic reductioiof'j cultivated area has been vmn in France. C MP U DINE H jM a fC PaTai you tm iurinii m " tninufi. I'm fat INDIGESTION and HfliniTV w-k to kiiowituftW :t AulEJIll MKAOACHES JU f ramoTing th cauM. 10 cents. ;. ,You Cannot B3 all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal ? ditions of the mucous membranesui nasal catarrh, uterine catarrhal by feminine ills, sore throat, mouth or inflamed eyes by si: dosinc the stomach. But you surely can cure these sAi aftections by local treatment w Paxtine Toilet Antiseg which destroys the disease genr.ctwj .cuscnarges, stops pain, aim n inflammation and soreness. ' Paxtine represents the most success. local treatment for feminine ills f produced. Thousands of women tes te this fact. 50 cents at druggy Srad for Free Trial Bca THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston, 1 JWdTHIffGSoGCQ PKUSiSIA? POtLTKV T,(1ir hen lay more ecsr. enr ;"""' uqo' powder, kUl lice and rotp ,itry SOe; by mall 40c and 75c. i w ' PRUSSIAN REMEDY Tm ts . Mi(ntPl . ..ilC I TULANE UNIVERSITY OF W d Its advantagea lor practical fu" pjtslff-! are uneniaiel. Frc wiw L, 30,000 annnally. Special Instruction Um f'm Bedside of tne 8!cit.i i ne uej ,ratioo.r,. .18. 1906. For cataloprne nn1 nforiEu P. O. Drawer, So. 28-'06. If ataicted rith weaJK Thoiiipson'sEif?! W1.ent, b v v mi 11 1 a.iirrr.:i f-o- EARN MONEY WrJ&tfv . unless you understand eP-A .how t ratr to their requirerToa you cannot spend years and dollars learning by experience. g: ol buy the knowledge reaulrod hTnthan Wo nffor this to u" oreff'J th.m o. -ceiit3, ou ant thena-to pay their own way even u " kno S K dlX.erwo,U,- In order to hanile Fowls Judiciously, you ufhesi nf 1J them. To meet this want we are selUng a; book giving ne t; of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25c.) twenty-five years. ,lt o( ?,"3Sil.ie?p put aU nla mind and tim. and money to making a y fv flviS 5Tn.ot as,a Pastlme. but as a business-and If you will proW UV I: S'S.Xf!? ,worA'..yo 5an sav.e many Chicks annually, and , majj- rJoU?!e K v,iJ ' Pomx is, tnatyou must be sure to u "Thi9 Poultry Yard as soon as it appears, and know how to remedy it. J" nd!V; teach you. It tells how to dptppt anA tt i-oa. fA for egs. kA tattenine: which Fowls t Vvi fnn ZraA"?. every W 5t ve cents in stamps. BOOK PUB-XSHING HOUSE, 134 Leonard S1"- i t
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 12, 1906, edition 1
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