NO. 16 LT.41.1. c. chzputh II BUUAC, Rttftll bJUtJUM. (From The Johnsoo City Staff.) One 6f;the most important achievement? accomplished in the past twelve months is the com pier ion of the. extension to the East Tennes-ee and estern North Carolina Railroad that places Boone, Watavurc County, N. C , prominently on the map and opens upia territory, of ,vir gin timber, tasth richest moun tain farm lands and gives an out let to the trade of ,tha,t section Pejrnn nearly, a' War; aso .t. Shull Mill vtbf iffM'yrjpi half miles of foiiway were loiri in orae mon8,twU-ia,fe.thelBce of war conditions higb; prices of material and thVwarcity .of. la bor, a noteworthy acbfevement in railway construction which re fljcts the greatest aredit upon the enterprise and resources of those identified kith the: growth and mcceM of the E. T! & W. N. C. Railroad. ' It was a race between the Virginia-Carolina and East Tennes see and Western North Carolina Railroad as torVhich should first reach Boone.&iid the rich but on developed country ' contiguous War conditions put the V 4 C out of the ninning, but the E. T. went forwaraundaunted,sothat today the pe pie of the thriving little town of Boone have a .Tail way outlet for their product, and Johnson City i the beneflci arv of a promising business rela tion hitherto denied. Boone itself ti a village of some eight or nine hundred popula tion, the count? 8at of Watau ga county, 3,332 feet above sea level. The Dearest railway point was some thirty;; oriforty milee dUtant andwas rgachedb.vhgh way. In spite of the-mll way han dicap the p ace boasts of a weal thy citizenship who .own. .ft n e homes, for the land rouafl Boone is known as the richest in the Carolina country, and yields enormously. Ev b before the railroad .entered 'their town the price per ncre was f 200.00. At this time real estate values have increased prodigiously. The sleekest and fattest cattle are raised in t,his country where sue culent blue grass grows rank, and the many streams provid- unlimited acres of bottom land" farms, while potatoes cabbage and the hardy- grains furnish bountiful crops, i'-'.: '' , But the ;chW . prooi-iict of--the country and the ridbes't are the virgin timber boundaries, and it was to secure this unlimited wealth in tonnage the Eart Tenn. & Western North Carolina Rail road wasrbiiHt. Tlv" H luMiig lumber interests own something like 7,200 acres of land - in. three different tract", uppq which it estimated tftere are 200,000,000 feet of timber, the finest oak, poplar, hemlock and all the dif ferent varieties of' nierchan table woods now in sucn, demand. In Avery county,-'through which the railroad runs to teach Wa tauga county, the Lin ville Im provement Co. owns some 16,- 000 or 17,000 acres of land. They also have available at pres. nt over 200.000.000 feet of lumber which 'U untouched. ;"" Tk iiMmii oinm within niorhf years has doubled its mileage by taking over the- Linvilie River Railway, the liner that extended m I i n 1 S iromcranoerry w rmeoia, auu by the construction of the. line from a point near Mon tezuma to Sbnlls Mills; thence to", Boone, eight aoAfloe half miles, in the past year; At present the total mileage it 68. 'Froms-scnic standpoint the traveler going to Boone wil) pass TUrDUHU cs luuuuiaiuuuo irtiun the view ol which is unsurpassed tm in Urns ni Askts. (The Progressive Farmer.) One source of plant food that many folks fail to make use of is in the form of leaves that' fall from the trees and are often burned. Thee contain consider able quantities of plant tovd and if raked up in piles, covered with layers of rich earth and kept moist during the fall and winter the result will be an excellent pile of manure for next spring's crop. Many vegetables need considerable potash, and inas much as this is rather hjgh.pric- ort M.n.1 jliffii'lili to m.pm in' thf the uoi ui ( coin medial fertiliser, ofitf Should' save eve'ry. bit that ran be obtained from, the refuse, about .. the '. farm, These jotted leaves contain considerable pot ash. Wood- asb.es, .especially those from oak and hiekory, are quite rich in potash, and these should be most carefully conser ved,;' Store them in such a wav l uiubauey wm not. .Docome wet, as if this is allowed, a large pro portion of the plant food will be lost by leaching. CURE FOR DYSINTERY. .; f ... 'While I was in Ashland, Kan sas, a gentleman overheard me xpeaking of Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy," - wrlteH WilMam Whitelaw, of Des Moines Iowar"-Hertold me in detail' dt what it bad done for his familr. but more especially his daughter who was lying at the point of death with a violent attack pf dvsintery, and had been given ud by nerramiiypnysician.'Sorae o the neighbors advised him to give Chamberlain's Colic and Di arrhoea Remedy, 'which he did, and fully believes that by doing so saved the life of .hi child. Re sfcved that he had, also :ued this 'etn- dy himself with equally grat f.ving results." ' '.' . by any railway fast of the Rock tea. At Linvilleap the height above Believe! is exactly 4,041, the average height of some of the mountain peaks intheAppalach. lan range. It is near.. Lin ville that the Little. Doe, Lin ville and Wataaga rivers bead- Shull's Mills is 2,000 feet above sea level To reach Boone on the railway one ascends over a thousand feet to the highest point. -The road from Montezuma winds around the celebrated Grandfather moun taiii peak4, and follows the beds of swift flowing mountain stream Different from the view from most' railway coaoh wiudows tlie traveler on the E. T. train U af forded magnificent panorama vis ions of the mouhtaiU8; he looks out and down upon the jagged ewarp.me.nt, the .serried .breast1 of iiiou litmus, jigged chasms, nd the glittering streams wind irig nt his feet "ln'st"ail if g.irg through gorges with. their macs es of frowning stones dripping water, fern covered and walled in, be is thrilled with the most mag- niflcent view ever afforded from a railway coach. At Lin ville Gap the railroad is the highest above sea level of any other cast of Col orado. As stated at the outset. John- City above all other cities will be the greatest benefitted from this improvement,' notwithstanding all other towns along the E. i. W: N. C. will share in the new ly opened wealth. Every stick of timber will move tp and thru Johnson City, and the mineral wealth to be developed will later come to this city. The possibili ties and promise of the riches off ered are limitless,- and it is ex- pected that the business men of this section will avail themselves of the opportunity of affecting a c'ose commercial relationship with our new neighbors of the mountain region. hl.lLUlUllrllJsBc&f, The Washington, N. C-, Daily news of Jan. I Stb, says: In the presence of what was probably the largest congregat ion ever assembled in the Metho dist church, Rev. D. H, Tuttlelast night delivered a sermon on the evils of dancing which held the closest attention of h's audience from start to finish and which was one of the' best sermons of its kind that ever has been delta ered in Washington'. . So large was the congregation that extra chairs in the aisles bad to be pro vided for the late arrivals! -. Mr. Turt le began his sermori by ahowing to the congregation some photographs :illutrJting the latest dances. . .V " ; .."Look at .them? he invited. "At first glince you; would Bup- pose that there; was only one per son represented, on '.this: heet. Look close, however, and . you wilj see tu6 headsand four. feetJ That; proyes-that there. are really; two persons there. That is :the. kind of: dancing which some of our church members are trying to unite with their reliion. "Such contact of the sexes in public is a positive disgrace. Any person who can indulge In J'hat kind of dancinff and not eive birth, to. evil thoughts isn't . a man; she isQyta woman. Iffan- cing hadn't gpno past the old square" dance I probably' would not raise my head against it to. day. But' the modern dance de mands crititism and invites : de nunciation. This 'town Wash. ihgtbn,' or Beaufort county, or Xorth Carolina, or the United States or the world has no place for the dancing' master or i the dancing mistress.: They are en-i gaged in an utterly useless pur pose. , r 'Primarily, in a good many cases, the fault lies with the par ents. If proper parental influ ence were used., there wculd be much less dancing in our town. today. If the parents', exercised Jtheir.auibo'lty then there would be fewer boys and girls to go wrong in this world. ' ''And yet, there are some per sons who will stick to the theory that there is nothing" wrong in dancing. Go to almost any dance and you will find a roW of chape rone lined up against the wall. That, for one thing, shows the evil pf dancing. If there Is noth ing. Wrong about dancing why have the chaperons. . . "Another reason for the dane i that some rsons try . to. use it as a method of getting 'into society. 1, tell youhowever4 you can, never hope i to get into- the bast' society by heel training; it's" yourbraiutb you've got in your., brainand not what you've got in youf you vo got in your heel,- ; ' "The dance, as all works of th devil, changes in order to keep up interest. I was told by a friend .that If I mentioned ' the' tango or the .'turkey -trottpiiiahr I'd be cori'pfdered ont of date They do the fox trot, the tickle toe and the cheek-to cheek now odays. Can you and do - you think that there is no danger in vouj daughter or - your sister prancing about on a ball rpoin floor all night long .with her cheek laid up against the cheeks of pther men? " '-'The line must be drawn some where. Y o u cannot rightfully say that dancing belongs to the' church. Therefore, it must be placed outside of the church. The Methodist church does not" con- dole dancing, i wu i read you statements from Baptist, Pres byterian and. Cathode officials -ki,K i.-s- l-orln not muntpnnr Ko dance of today. ''Is it a sin to dance? Yes, if li Itinnf if "Grandaa Violet" Sister Violet Ilodges, w hose maiden name was Tiolet Moody; daughter of George and Sailie Moody, and wife of Riley Hodg es, and familiarly known as "Aurjt Tiolet,'! was born Febru ary 11, 1837, and died Nov. 14, 1918, at the age of 81 years, nine months and thre days, She"; professed faith in Christ and joined Cove, Creek 'Baptist church at about the age of six teen jeara..On January 15, '53,. and before marriage, then ou Deo. 24, '54, $he w as marrried to Rifey Hodges, and June 15, '55, she , wffa Oismissed from-. tove Crwfe atrd in. May, '56, she join ed the" Three Forks Baptist Church by letter,; and remained there untill the 2nd Saturday in March, 85, when she joined the Brushy Fork church by letter froln Three Forks i church, Where she remained and lived a, most faithful,, consecrated christian l.ffe,; and; flaring1 her long chris tian pilgrimage of nearly six ty six years, she honored the pro fession made hi early life, by her close attendance at church, al ways .filling her seat when she could. She was also full of good works, Visiting the sick; the dis tressed and the afflicted, lend ing a hefping hand to the needy. Her christian influence was strot gly felt in her faithfulness in re buking sin in the wayward, and also the-gentle admonitions to the sinner to return and be sav ed. Perhaps a very few, :if any, lived a more model christian life than did Aunt Violet Hodges. . For many mouths before her death she was a great sufferer, which none could have borne but a christian with such patieni e and without murmuring. But she's gone on ' and we will miss her in churchy inhome and in community. Butfe thank t h e Lord for Aunt Violet, for her life and .influence iybioi still lives. May. they be the means of lead ing.vraany friend and relatives o the Savior whom she loved and served so faithfully... . ' ... h M. TRIVETT, Com. A BILLIOUS ATTACK, When', you have "a bilious at tack your liver fails to perform us luncnoDs. iou pecome consti pated, The food youieatfirment in your stomach instead of diges- aiug. 1 bis inflames the stomach and causes naneea, vormtingand. a terrible headache. Take three of Chamberlain's Tablets. Thev rtill tone unyour liver, clean Kit your stomach and you will soon be-as well as ever.. They only cosl a quarter. ryou want to be- the besf Chris , Nq -t m flr 2,r K5- 1 ? 00-cflre- The above are sonitvof tho mor important points which Mr. Tur tle brought iu his remarks It was a Strong sermon from begin pintoeud. He weu ton to show that many persons might not de rive evil: effects .from the dance but that their example induced others to dance and might lead them into evil ways. , He quoted the words of 'Paul;.. "If eating meat shall cause my brother to onena inen win i eat no more meat as long as the world stand eth," and urged the same spirit among tLe people of today. It was not what might be termed a ' sensational sermon." Mr. Tut tie don't resort to any Billy Sun day tecticts,: but he stated his facts in a clear and forceful man ner and in Buch a way that there can be no doubt but that his word mado a big impression up- I on bis lu arersj Scores of persons the congregation crowded a boUt the P?H at thCOncloton of the service to personally con-! gratulalo him on hU sermon. GeraiflYS Sacrifice Ti Aairicf. When the German superman went to war withjthe world and invited the United States to come in by sinking the Lusita nia and later by submarine work, he had but little idea that he was giving this Yankee land the grea test impetus it has ever received. But look at some of the figures and then put in half an hour in the job of prophesying. . .In 1913note theso figures.ior they . are impressive the three great exporting nations bf.tbe world where Great Britain, Ger many and the United' States, in the order named,- and so close together that the foremost was oot ten pr cent ahoiul of the third. The exports were respec ively $ 2,550,000,000, ?2,403, 000,000,, 2)329")000,000, Ger many being the middle member and the United States thiru; They followed eaoh other in tLe ralfo of 23, 24 and 25, which . is a' mighty close chas - : Germany was growing at. an astonishing gait. Her commerce was reaching all over tire world. She had a fine commercial navy. Of the foreign commerce that en tered and t-leare I at the United States ports Germany caried al most identically the tonnage that our own ships carried. Ger many curried as inu'.-h of our for eign commerce as we carried. She carried her own commerce and the commerce for. other coun tries that she traded with. Today Germany has no export trade. She has no ships to carry any that sue might build up, She has no foreign relations to suppy her with raw material. She has slain her indatiai woik- ers. She has an absolute wreck as far as enterinz the woild com mercial field again is concerned Germany has thrown away her place in manufacture and trade With her are Austria and all Mid die Europe, and she has all but slaughtered Belgium, France and and the neutral nations. She has thrown to the United States her own expert trade, . her field oi carrying on the seas, and jf this country is alert Germany can never recover what she has forc ed upon us. The United States is the only nation in the world ready to take up the big trade. Germany' has thrown away Great Britain is loaded as heav ily as she can carry. It. is up to us to build the ships, ;,f ail them, supply the wprld with the goods; that Germany has bean supply ing before the war, and to stand in the first place in. the: market of the .world, far in the lead .of everything Besides that we mut take on tie commerce and the carrying busiues of some of thoe smaller countries, i hat Gdrraai-y has demolished. . Gerruauy bus given the Uuitud. States the greatest commercial lift that any nation ever had. r. The Uuited States will be the busy sector of the wor'd for years and on the biggest and most active sea In News and Observer. NOTH.'B. Having qualified at administrate r of the estate ef R. M, Phillips, deo'd. late of Wataaga county, N. 0., tblsls to Dotlly all panoDi havloj; claims agalost the estats of said deceased to exhibit them to the underslfrued at r-'auds within twelve ui nths from date of puhlicatioD, or this, notice will be pleaded la bar of their re cot ery. All persons indebted to raid es tate will ntke immediate payment, This 22nd of January 1019. II. H. tf ORRIS. . Adin'r of R M Phillips, deceased. 6ttht GanuineYxiCl PROFESSIONAL E. Glenn Salmons, Resident Dentist. BOONE, N;C. -Office at d itcher Hotel. OFFICE' HOURS: ... . ' 9:00 to 12 a. nji; 1:00 to 4:0ff f. u , EDMUND JONI v.- LAWYER r- " -LENOIIlr.N. C,- ; : . :Wi'U Pr&cticeMeXulailr in we Courts ol: atpvtD. L. D. lOVtt T.'k - OV:. Banner Klk, H. C. '. l-ini-ola. x; ii ' LOWE Sc W m 'atjorx e v.-vat IVactice in th rnurt,s of A Very v'tiTpurrcunuiiii 'r'f,:i'. -r ,.i attention-given to all matters f a frgal uai uiV. ' . . Ml-12. r : . p. a; unney, Will practice in' the coliitf u VVatanga and adjoining ronn- fie. ; i i.-U-19K; ' , : . W. P. SPEAS, .BL D. " ' PRACTICE LIMITED To Eye, Ear, Nose and Threat HICKORY, N. C. OFFICJt CVCR Hocnj s to is V ttoS HICSOHT ORUO CO. i.,P..Lorlll. v. t. i Lidvill & Lovill -Attorneys ATj ,Law--B0WErN. C. Special attention given to aU business . entrusted . to cneircare. 1.. -T!E Bingham,- . ; ' Lawyer BOONE, xc:.. : Prompt attention given t all matter of- a leg.il ' nature. Collections a specially. : r Office with Attorney F. A. Lin- ney., - DR. R, D, JEIININGS Resideet Dentist. Banners Elk, N, G. . At Boot:e on ; hrel .iJohdaj oV every mpntn lor or 0 Uay8 ond evety' court wpj?k,: Office-ut th' Blackburn-Hotel; t WOfAN'15,1 (. Prompt attODticin i-'. mattsrsofa legal nature. " Col- levuivMs a Byniuuiy. UolC8 Wltll Lovill ALovill,-.- 1 1 done at this sbop ' inder;a positive .' guarantee & n materia! rSiJ L, -(if i ffnaratteed to be genuine. Estimates fnrnlaiied on all mail orders. Sutia faotleii guaranteed In every mpeet on altrallroad watches. Offloe near the . Wataqga Oo, Bank. 4: w.) i Qrad'iate Jew-ler sod Watet bik ft- BOOHK.N.C. mi' i .