Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Jan. 9, 1913, edition 1 / Page 1
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- , ' - T G COBB, Editor and Owner. Trt S BV K.KE COUNTY NEWS ( r , . a lont THE HOR.GANTON HbRALU ( " " ' Subscription Price $1 Per Year in Advance. V0L. XXVIII, MORGANTON, N. C, JANUARY 9, 1913. No. $ I T o - V FV Pl 1 n in 4l?e stomach or bowels, caused by indi sJUS1 gestion or constipation, yields quickly to SIMMONS RED Z LIVER REGULATOR (THE POWDER FORM) T- removes all impurities or fermented food, cleanses and Jones the stomach and bowels and restores that fine feeling nf exhilaration, mental activity and cheerfulness that belongs Sold by Dealers. Price, tSj feauine with .j Red Z cn the label. If it bv tnau p,., - - - -- : 7 r . J pr-c; 51.00 ; bottle. Look for the Red Z label. "? . 1 i-i!inn I ivif RtvHilnr It nm II. ZEILIN & CO.. Proprietors. St. Louis. Missouri IT FOLEY yi A KIDNEYL , 1 For Sale By W. A. LESLIE. B SALE OR EXCHANGE. 0-;e SxIO Eclipse 15 H-P Engine and Boiler on sill complete; has just been overhauled and is a good engine. Price $350. CO One 15 H-F Lerrel Engine on 15 H-P LerTel Cornish Boiler on sills, complete r insrooi running con- dirion. Price i?2o0.00 io r n p Vno-lA ' Q-e 11 to lo il-r iagie . Stationary Engine, and : 20 H-P Bay State Boiler j on sill, a complete rig. price $200.00 j r -.10 1; n D T'.-Ja Cit-v Stationary Engine, and 2 ' H-P Erie City Boiler on sills: this is a com- j i j r.ote r: and will give coed iacisCaction. Price $225. 00 . Any of this machinery I wil1' S-ii lur casii ur uu unit:, ui 1 win . ta.- No. 1 and No. 2 Hart for same. Write or phone to C. H. TURNER, Machinery and Supplies, Gi--'.fir. M f Phone 7. -10" Or -s tlinn Tr-kc i? E.aay. ilo, nothing 13 X I iiixaicn ill: ' Uzd Ly thousands for a gsnsi'iiicn . iir.ve suuc-reJ from : ; r.o-.-d not be told i- - it ii to secure re -C C'.S'.CSt WuV out ot i : ta use Dr. Miles' r. i:i;"s. They have re uiierers ior so many hive become a ity. n Ir. Miles' Anti-Fain "I h..- - to!:. i- : -iis nnd they are the t::; t Jo s me any good, r- '.i 'v- d r.ouralgia in my . r. ir.iuutcs. I have also f'.r rheumatism, hcad i tno breast, toothache, Mas in the bowels and ve foun-'l nothing to t'r.'.y are ail that is m." " r.lX'jn, Bine Springs, Mo. At a!' drit3!sts 23 doses 25 tents. r.we- sold in Dulk. ''!UE3 rv-ECiCAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. i Fresh, Mliable. Pure Guaranteed to Please Every Gardener nd Planter ehoald teit the nn.rlm merits Of Out Northern Grown Seed. SPECIAL orrEB FOR 10 CENTS t we w '. 1 1 iend postpaid onr FAMOUS COLLECTION 1 't.iaut . . " KaOifli .... J0 1 rr-.k-i t1ilMC ... -r-.t.rx Vs-tit !tt-je ... "'1-llCoiM tlmnrSKdl ta (1.00 ' ?nl 10 cnta to help py pMtag Bd ' -' - ti e IMT "Fsnio il Collection, to ' .r anfl Ir.structiT. fiarden Guide. A r KOUTilKKN SKKD CO. , St. Koclc ford, Illinois 7 Ol.U; n V. S. and Foreign , r - tv..- Kv" i2'iei, oltetcti or photo ci invention or priow tabllity. for :tun paten For free book TRADE-MARKS write ' to WASHINGTON D. C. r-T"T TT .1 P '.r ?a.rA?u"'?Z -uite county llKe tne Clew, ah, ai in this paper reaches the People. EEiS mm 1 1 liia Large Package. S1.0O. you cinnot get it remit to as we v-iil send tm :n i: :j r i . . unuiu iurm ior loose woo prcter In Debt to the Ants. If the ants had not got Into the sugar there would have been 110 vaca tion for mother in a Pratt street fam- 11 IT 1T1 . while and mother had made u: her nj. iniuer was going away ior a uijuu 10 stay at norne with the young Euu auu jusi rest ana navn a. trnori time In her own yard. But on the day of father's depart ure mother was doing soma baking and she went to the sugar crock for some sugar. When she removed the lid she found the sugar alive with tiny ants. She took the crock to the back porch, spread a newspaper out on a table and emptied the sugar on tne paper. Just then her gaze fell on a railroad advertisement of ex cursion rates. She found that a spe cial train would run from Indianap olis that night and that the fare was low. The advertisement told about the fine bathing beach, the hotels, the fishing and all of the other attrac tions. When father came to dinner that day there was a large bouquet of flowers at his plate. His chair was cushioned and a nice, fat, soft pillow was there also for. his comfort. He knew something was about to hap pen, but he didn't know what nor how much it was going to cost. What is it now?" he asked. "Looks like there's something on your mind." Mother handed him the paper. As Boon as amner was over fatner -wrote a check, and mother and son packed their trunk Indianapolis News. How to Estimate Number In a Review. Dld yu ever try to estimate the number in a crowd and then find out later that you had missed your guess by hundreds? Here is a simple system with re gard to the number of troop3 on the march: The strength of a body of troops may be estimated from the length of tIme it takes to pass a given point. Assuming that infantry in column of fours occupies half a yard per man, cavalry one yard per trooper, and artillery is in single column of guns and caissons, a given point would be passed in one minute by about 175 infantry. 110 cavalry at a walk, 200 cavalry at a trot, and Ave guns or tween companies, battalions, and regiments, all of which is according to mathematical rule, it takes a regi ment of 1,000 men divided into bat talions just ten minutes to pass, or at the rate of 6,000 an hour. And this supposes no breaks in the line. These rules, it must be remembered, are for trained noldiers used to a long step and to keeping up without straggling. No civilians ev-sr have kept up this pace. Persuaded. "That man's motto is "After rne tlia deluge!'" said the fervent tyoakar. "In that case," replied Farmer Corn- tossel, "I'm goin to vote fur 'im. We never did have enough rain to satis fy me." "Ain't It Awful?" Mack Everything is going op. Jack Yes, even the price of ex- pcrience has advanced. Horse's Part In War. Les grands maneuvers de pouest," as the French maneuvers are official ly termed, are unique in their way be cause for the first time aeroplanes are to be tried on an organized system. Bays the Paris correspondent of the London Telegraph. No longer will the commanders In chief be obliged tc rely on the reports of the cavalry for their information on the enemy a movements, An aeroplane can do the work of a cavalry patrol in a twentieth of the time and in a far more compre hensive manner: and one thing is cer tain, this new development of a mili tary science will have the effect of speeding up war and will give birth to a new Bchool of generals, men of lightning decision, who can decide tt-itTi intpnRft raDiditv what the next move on the great chessboard of war ehaii be. The millennium 01 peace bbbiuo most to have arrived for the horse. Ke has practically disappeared from the scene on which he has played such a glorious role In the past. He drags nothing and he is almost use less for scouting. The motor trolley puffs along the mad. relieving him once and for all from the sore backs of his progeni tors, and the aeroplane soaring over head leaves him hopelessly in the rear if he endeavors to ascertain the movements of the enemy. Chance of Front. That the framework of the faces of Europeans has changed greatly In the last three centuries is the contention of Dr. F. A. Woods of Harvard uni versity. The eyes are now closer to gether, the upper part of the nose more slender, and the cheek bones less prominent. Altogether, the upper part of the face was closer to the Mongolian structure three centuries ago. The mouth and lower part of the roi on the contrary, appear to have h.nH wi-v little. In the early part of the portraits of English, French twi ridrman nobility it was rare to find a face of the modern type. The face of the aristocrat of those days was more like the peasant of today. WHAT CAN WK SAY ! M vou are not satisfied after - , - Suthertand's Eagle Eye Sal.e wo will refund your money. 2ac, at all dealers. TALKING After Fen- Years Edi.-ri Another Piece of Wizardry. The New York Sun. Thomas A. Edison sat bark in vuuu auu vixucKieu yesterday afternoon as there passed upon a screen in the theater of his laboratory at West Orange, N. J., procession of human beings and animals that sang and talked .nd shouted and nluvci V. U UJW1 musical instruments and barked and made various other no:'sos that n-oving pictures nver bc- iore nave furnished. It was a moment of triumph, the result of four years of unremitting ei- tort to give to the world what probaoly was the only develop- m?nt possible 1,1 t p "iovies, ' to reproduce sound synchronously wi h action. That's a little raw vt. laughed the Wizard, "but you just give us a chance and we'll show you. We' O w working these things yet." There may have been some thing "raw" to the trained eyes of Thomas A. Edison, but to other spectators it seemed that success had been achieved. When the time for the show to start came there was a short de lay. The "old man," as every body in the big factory calls Mr. Edison, couldn't be found. Finally he was found and his right hand man and chief engi neer, M. R. Hutchison, gave the word start For the first few seconds it looked just like regular "movies, A large man in evening dress strode down a flight of stairs and to the front of a lavishly fur nished setting. When he reached the front of the "stage" things began to happen. First the big man thrust out one arm m customary attitude and then and even the specta tirs who had known what was con e were surprised he be gan to talk. "Ladie; and gentlemen," he began, and there followed an in traduction to the first exhibition of talking moving pictures, real talking "movies" that has ever been seen. The speech wa3 de livered in carefully modulated tones, with articulation of the clearest, each action coinciding exactly with each expression. It wss so lifelike and natural that gasps of surprise and won derment could be heard from dif ferent parts of the darkened rm. Lii the -tourse of h:o talk J speaking picture tooK u; a yiat and dasned it tj the floor. It flew into pieces witb a crash and each fragment maus its individ ual roise in bouncing up and back. After that the picture blew a horn and a whistle and then a man came on and played the piano. A girl appeared and played "Way Down Upon the Suanee River" cn the violin, and another girl sang some of the old songs, while the pianist and the violinist accompanied her. They went away you could hear their footsteps as they walked up the stairs and an other man appeared with two collie dogs, whose loud barks were as natural as life. It was hard to realize that those were not living beings in flesh and blood until the lights came on and broke the illusion. That was one complete reel and it had taken just six minutes to J show, two minutes longer than J the ordinary phonograph disk re volres. Four add'tional "sketches" were exhibit id and in each the illusions was maintained. Two of these Mr. Edison hadn't seen himself before and he laughed heartily as an Irish politican ia one of them delivered an impas sioned political oration which his daughter, standing behind, read to him out of a newspaper. The most startiling manifestation of the synchrony of sound and ac tion came when a brick was sent crashing through a window- above the speaker s head. You could plainly hear the tinkle of each piece of glass as it fell. Men have been working upon the proposition of moving picture that would talk for a long time. Mr. Edison has been at it for four years. He has literally "slept" on the job," as his employes dc scribe his absorption in his work, and when he "sleeps on the job" he has the reputation of making things go. Children Ulu U taiu 23m, HOea' Laaa attr T&blaftk PI AM IS CVfilVCii Tn rvn ALL nil 1U f UJli uL 1 J cit u REPUBLICAN JOBS BY JULY 1. All Pes rna- tlO!: Kcyeus, Disir ct Att eys. United Sittts Marshals aad O.hcr Jobs' Would Be Affected. Washington Dispatch, Jan. 5th. The Democratic caucus of the senate probably on next Thurs day will consider a somewhat startling patronage scheme from ts patronage committee. This committee was appointed to de vise a plan of action toward the nominations, which President Taft has sent to the senate since his defeat and which the Demo crats thus fr.r have held up. Its program, if adopted, will result in vacating thousands of federal jobs within a few months after the inauguration of President Wilson and the substitution of a host of Democratic for Republi can office holders. The scheme originated, it js understood, wnh Senator Clark, of Arkansas, but it is said to have the approval of most of ine otner memoers or tue pai-; ronage committee. The plan contemplates the enactment by Congress of a law that will terminate next July the terms of efrbe of all Presidential postmasters, district attorneys, marshals, revenue collectors and other officeholders, whose terms originally were contemporaneous with that of the President and mernbeis of his cabinet. The plan is to propose the passage of such a lav at this session of Congress with the understanding that in the event of Republicans supporting it, all of the 1,310 Taft nominations now being held up shall be confirmed immediate ly and that all further nomina tions made by Mr. Taft up to March 4, shall receive favorable consideration at the hands of Democrats, Of course the enactment of such a law would threw onen to the Democrats in a block on July 1 next all the vast field of Federal patronage. Under present condi tions many of the Republicans who been appointed to office by President Taft within thelastyear will hold through most of the Wilson administration unless Mr. Wilson resorts to the removal of Republcan3 appointees before their terms expire. Some of the Democratic advo cates of the plan, however, con tend that if it is not accepted by a Republican senate at this ses sion an effort will be made to have a lav passed immediately following the induction of the new Congress, when both branches wiil be controlled by the Demo crats, fixing July 1 as the date for the expiration of Federal officeholders. The Democrats who have con sidered the proposition profess to regard the plan as a fair one, although it may be unplesant to thousands of postmasters, mar shals, district attorneys and col lectors whose nominations might be confirmed at the last session of Congress and who are looking ahead to a fcur year tenure. Her Version. "I was talking with Harold last night and he says he has completely reformed since he has become en- I gaged to you," said the elder lady as I she reclined in a luxurious armchair, i "Yes," replied the young debutante, J "he says I snatched him out of the jaws of death, out of the mouth of hell, back to the 400." Harper's Bazar. m1 I START NOV Susceptibility to colds, sore threats, tonsiiiiis and such, indi cate impoverished vitality lack of reserve strength to weather changing seasons. A spoonful of SCOTTS EMUL SION after each meal starts healthy body-action like a small match kindles a great fire and more: it makes rich, healthy, active blood fortifies the tissues and stimulates the appetite it makes sound body-strength. SCOTTS EMULSION is the purest cod liver oil, made cream like and palatable without alco hol or drug the quintessence of purity. Reject imitations they art im postors for profit. SroTT Rr Bowne. BloomBeld. N. J. 12-58 I r n H B B B EA'a H U Si ,. -.-3 FAVOR ARBITRATION BUT NOT AT HAGUE. i President Taft Prefers Special Board of Arbitration to Settle Panama Toll Dispute. Washington Dispatch, Jan. 5th. President Taft is willing to submit to arbitration the ques tions at issue between Great Britain and the United States over Fanama caml tolls but he does not favor arbitration by the Hague tribunal. This fact be came known here to-night upon the President's return from New York. Although he has not yet given the matter of a tribunal much thought, the President probably would prefer a special board cf arbitration composed of an equal number of citizens of the United States and Great Britain. Such was to be the composition of the arbitral court he proposed to set tle any vital question arising be tween nations whan he snoke in jehaii :: rn a iiie r", 'rionds lie arbitration treaties, sidant ha expressed to ie vi .vy that at the i Europe would be against this nation and that the moral pressure on the court would be enormous because all Europe is interested in Panama toils just as much as is England. In a court in which only Great Britain and the United States were repre sented, it is argued, there would be a much greter chance of a fir decision. Several Democratic senators have voiced that a special tribunal might be created to arbitrate this dispute. Saving Carbons. Every time the attendant trims an arc light it is necessary to remove 8 piece of carbon which may be three or four inches in length and this has teen heretofore thrown away. The carbon can not be iede any smallei for the reason that the rapidity of their consumption varies so that II is necessary to provide a carbon ol sufficient length to Insure that i1 shall last a prescribed period, even though it should happen to be of a texture that would consume more rapidly than usual. There seemed tc be no prospect of making these pieces, but recently USeS Ol n TnT-iffD German inventor employed by one ol the electric companies has caused these pieces to be saved and he makes use of them by cementing them to the ends of new carbons. In this way the entire carbon Is con sumed. The time spent in the re construction of the carbon is verj trifling and the saving well worth while where there are any great num ber of the stubs to be saved. Health Color Sunshine. A wonderful trinity, this. Tour health, the color of your clothing and the glorious sunshine have much tc do with the human body. If you have not given the subject any special S thought, you may well wonder what connection there can be between the color of one's clothing and health. The salutary influences of solar light not solar heat are not suffi ciently well known to have their ther apeutic value appreciated. The sun has its effect, beneficially or other wise, on everything in the universe, the human body not excepted. There are certain cases wherein one needs the heat of the sun, but there are many more in which the light of the sun is of greater value. Do Net Wear Black Habitually. Black clothes, black hats, black shoes, should be discarded as Regular wear in midsummer not only in the tropical and semi-tropical countries, but every here. Not only In midsum mer, but ia all seasons of the year in all countries where one is much in the sunshine. Why? Because it is an indisputable fact black material transmits the heat but absorbs the light of the eun. If you ride, walk or work while being exposed to the heat of the sun then it is a matter of grave concern as to the color of your cloth ing. Danger and destruction may lurk In the heat of the sun, but not In the light thereof. Curious Illness. "Yea." said the good woman who was describing the last Illness of a friend, "she was taken suddenly sick with pantomine poisoning, and four doctors came to the house and Insult ed about her and diagrammed her case very closely. They decided that she had eaten some fish or something that had paragraphs in it, and so they gave her a hypocritical injection of a serial that would destroy the basilica, but she didn't seem to help any, ana she soon was in a state of chromo. Chicago Evening Post. BEST COUGH MEDICINE FCK CHILDREN. "I am very glad to say a few words in praise of Chamberlain's Cou-h Remedy," writes Mrs. Lida Dewey of Milwaukee. Wis. '"I have used it for years both for my children and myself and it never faHs to relieve and cure a cough or cold. No family with children should be without it a gives almost immediate relief in cases of croup." Chrmber Iain's Cough Rem dy is pleasant and safe to take, which is of great Importance when a med icine must be given to young children For sale by all dealers. csr 1.50 Per Day paid for g-y h pr on our lumber works at Sevier. N. C. T. T. Adams Co., otTTT M C MORE THAN SHE COULD BEAR Heart of Gentle Old Maid Was Touched, and Silly Quarrel Im mediately Came to an End. Two old ladies who had been lov ing friends for many years had a vio lent quarrel, and it began to look as if the wound would never heal. Nei ther one felt like taking the initiative, and indeed both were too sore to care to make up. Efforts of mutual friends were all in vain; representa tions to one that the other was suf fering met only with the stubborn an swer that she ought to suffer. They both insisted that they hoped the other would suffer more, and that she richly deserved It. Some thirteen months went by like this, and the one-time Intimates saw each other only on state occasions, that is, at church each Sunday, where they sat side by side, too proud to change their pew because of what had hap pened. But they never pretended to notice that the other was there. On a recent Sabbath morning, however. Miss Sarah glanced around Involun tarily at sound of a sneeze beside h-ir, and despite her will kept her gazt) fixed on Miss Malinda. Then an aw fjl revelation broke in on her mind. Malinda had come to church with out a handkerchief! Miss Sarah did not know what the sufferings of a P'.-rson about to be electrocuted might bs. but she knew all about being at church without a handkerchief. Ma linda merited electrocution. In Miss Sarah's opinion, but no crime was hei nous enough to merit such agony as this. A drop slowly gathered on Ma linda's pinched nose, and finally fell off, giving place to another. Miss Sa rah could not bear it. She took out her own handkerchief surreptitiously, glad it was a big one. Next moment there was a smothered sound of tear ing cloth and Malinda felt something pressed into her rigid hand. It was a half of the handkerchief, and it went to Malinda's eyes before it touched her needy nose. Then two wrinkled old hands groped for each other, and through the sermon Miss Sarah and Miss Malinda sat sv' clung to the newly found friend v.L. had been lost. Luxury of Balloon Travel. A Zeppelin airship leaves the earth with none of the balloon's soaring motion. It is just like a Pullman train, started without perceptible jar and kept In motion upon a perfect road bed, perfect track and perfect wheels. At luncheon time Individual tables are placed in position, and luncheon is served much as It is in the ordinary buffet dining car in America. There is soup, an entree, a toast all piping hot vegetables, salad, cheese and coffee. More of a dlnnA. tlifln Int-i ill onn on1 all aawtiA uiiiuui luau luuucuu cbuu. an d , I LUiluf.il lua V. 11 l mail " tt i v. i ij in tne conveniences oi a great, noiei at their command. The principles of the flreless cooker have been brought Into service in preparing the food, the ex haust from the engines being made to supply heat. The comforts are all those of a very modern hotel. The cabin is kept at an unvarying comfortable temperatura by means of pipes that carry the ex haust heat from the engines. There is more room for action than in an ordinary chair car. In the lavatories are hot and cold water. There is a library with the daily papers and the best of books. There la a lounge for those who are willing to sleep away the hours of flight. World's Work. Sand and Gravel. One of the most important Indus tries in the United States of which comparatively little is written Is the production of sand and gravel. In 1911, according to a report by E. F. Burchard, just issued by the United States geological survey, the produc tion of sand and gravel amounted to 66,846,959 short tons, valued at $21- 158,583. The production of sand of all kinds was 40,253,977 tons, valued at $14,438,500, and that of gravel was 26,592,982 tons valued at $6,720,033. The production of glass sand was val ued at $1,457,733, an Increase over the figures of 1910; the sand used for building in 1911 was valued at $7,- 19,286, a slight decrease as compared with 1910. This was accounted tor by less activity in 1911 in the build ing trade, Including that of concrete construction. The production of mold ing sand in 1911 was valued at $2,132, 469, a marked decrease as compared with 1910. The production of all oth er sands in 1911, such as sand for grinding and polishing, fire sand, en gine sand and filtration sand, was val ued at $3,043,012, an Increase of over a million dollars In value as com pared with 1910. Imagination. That imagination often lights the way to discoveries that would never be made by matter-of-fact plodding has proved true over and over again, Illustrations of this in the history of chemical science are as numerous as in other fields of discovery. In this connection the Journal of the Ameri can Medical Association calls to mind that oxygen was merely a prin ciple to Lavoisier In 1777, and that when, a century later, it was produced In liquified form "the metaphor had become a reality." When Harvey was writing of the blood he wondered whether there might not be motion, as it were, in a circle, the Journal says "he expressed in metaphoric language what only later became the fact of the circulation which was given visible demonstration by Maljiphi," and adds, "the fabric of progress is woven from legitimate dreams to a greater extent than the nractrcal man is wont to realize or Is willing to admit" A GIRL'S WILD MIDNIGHT RIDE RiTo warn people of a fearful forest fire in the Catskills a young girl rode horse back at midnight a'ld saved many lives. Her deed was glorious but lives are often saved by Dr. King's New Discovery in curing lung trouble, cough9 and colds which might have ended in consumption or pneumonia. "It cured me of a dreadful cough and lung disese, writes W. K. Patterson, Wellimrton, Tex., "after four m our family had died with consumption gained 87 pounds. Nothing so sure and safe for all throat and lung tr.i bles4 Price 50c and $1.00. Tnaf -ottle free. (li,,nti rl Vlir W. A. T pRlie. fijIKiM&f SIS lis rfealfhjuiQooIillEsioMia Prof. Prescott, of the University of Michigan, testified before the Pure Food Committee of Congress, that the acid of grapes held highest rank as an article of food and he regarded the re sults from baking with cream of tartar baking powder as favorable to health. Royal is the only Baking Powder made from Royal Crape Cream cf Tartar. Immense Ant Hills. West African ant hills are veritable giants, frequently standing forty feet high. These ant hills are shaped something like a sugar loaf and are divided Inside Into hundreds of tiny rooms. They have, needless to say, myriads of inhabitants, and these are all busily making roads, gathering food and watching over the eggs and youngsters. The natives are afraid to touch these hills, except from a dis tance with firearms. The ants often make their strongholds around trees and they are built very solidly; with sides sometimes twenty inches thick The inside is hollow and at the top there Is a sort of attic. The "royal cell," where the queen ant lives. Is al ways found on the ground floor. This good lady is a prisoner, but Is careful ly fed by her busy subjects, the eggs the lays being Immediately carried away and deposited In "rooms" set apart for the purpose. Wide World. Talk In Peace. The fearful ones may take hearl once more. The telephone is not the deadly menace some of its patrons think. There are women who will not use the receiver of a telephone with out wiping out the mouthpiece with a disinfectant, so sure are they thai it Is a transmitter of disease. Now an eminent bacteriologist, Dr. Harold Spitts of London, has made extensive experiments and declares the telehpone cannot spread infec tion, public opinion to the contrary. Therefore, ye fearful ones, wipe out your mouthpiece if you think 11 daintier, but talk In peace you will not catch tuberculosis or other dread diseases from your predecessor at the "phone." HOW'S THIS? "We oflcr One Hundred Dollars Reward foi any case ot Catarrh that cannot be curedtrv Hall s Catarrh C"re. F. J. CHENEY & CO..Props.,Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F 1 Cheney lor the list 1Z vears, and believ him perfectly honorable in all business tran sactions and financial! v able to carry out any obligations made bv their firm. WALU1NG, K1NNAN & MARVIN, Whole sale Druggist?, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally acting directly upon the blood and mucou surfaces ot the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Are the Fly and Mosquito Dangerous?, The fly, with spongy feet, collects the invisible germ3 of diseases, spreads them over our food aad poisons us with typhoid end cholera. The mosquito with its bite injects into our veins malaria and yellow fever. The bacteria of consump tion, or grip, are everywhere present for us to breathe into our luns. The blood which flows through our veins aad arteries is our protection. It should contain healthy red end white blood corpuscles capable of warding off these disease germs. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery ir: a blood medicine and alterative made entirely without alcohol, a pure glyceric extract of bloodroot, golden seat, Oregon grape root, queen's root, mandrake and stone root, winch has enjoyed a ... ,.- f Telephone Saved Child's Life One of the children fell into a water tank on an Alabama farm and was rescued unconscious and apparently lifeless. The frantic mother rushed to the telephone and called the doctor six miles away. He told her what to do and started at once, but before he arrived the child was out of danger. The protection of w omen and children is only one of the chief values of the telephone on the farm. You can have this service at small cost. See the nearest Bell Telephone Manager or send a postal for our free booklet. FARMERS' LINE DEPARTMENT SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY S. PRYOR STREET ATLANTA, GA. How a Vote Was Lost. The favor of the public is as hard to keep now as it was when Aristides was voted out of Athens because the citizens were tired of hearing him called "The Just." David B. Parker, "A Chautauqua Boy of '61," tells how former Gov. John A. Dix of New York lost a vote when he ran for re-election against Samuel J. Tilden. General Dix used to say that at his home on Long Island he had set aside a plot of ground, built a substantial house, and given it, rent free, to a fisherman, the only condition being that the fisherman should supply the governor's family with fish at the prices that ruled in the nearby vil lage. The fisherman also had a large family of children, who were assisted by Governor Dix's family in many ways. As election day approached Governor Dix met the man and sait to him: "Well, I hope you have liked my administration as governor well enough to vote for me next Tuesday." "I am very sorry, governor," an swered the fisherman, "but I have re ceived two letters from Mr. Tilden that have convinced me that we ought to have a change, and I think it is mr duty to vote for him." "What have you to complain of?" asked Governor Dix. "Governor," he replied, "I have not averaged more than three ers to a pot for the last three months." Youth's Companion. , Admires French Manner. "Of course, the Frenchman Is in Blncere but who wants sincerity in a casual acquaintance? Surely it Is more pleasant to be told that you never looked more charming, tha your hat Is the very choicest thlni possible and so on, than to be greeted with an Indifferent handshake and a remark about the weather? "What does it matter that he has forgotten you an hour after? He has made you feel 'purry-purry' at the time and has given you the added confidence and the brightness of outlook that only the consciousness of a becoming hat can give a woman." "My Parisian Year." by Maude Annesly. ? our.H"?l;i means nerve pain. Dr. Milr-s1 Anti-Pain Pills give relief. good reputation ior over iumy yems. nc ci,cu,iS .in fluence of this extract is like Nature's influence the blood is bathed in the tonic which gives life to the blood the vital fires of the body bum brighter and their increased activity consumes the tissue rubbish which has accumulated during the winter. " About forty years p.ko while in Newark, New Jersey, 1 had chills ired fever," writes Mrs. Michael. Maouirk, of National Military Home. K.3IU. I went to Kansas j!ty anct in tne spring oi ion me miius iu f "-ver returned. Doctors and everything I tried failed to do me good. ily I saw Dr. I'icrce s Uolrten weuicai Discovery advertiser-, i u,u'i .'xrttle of it and tho chil-s vanished. In about a year afterward t them comijjr back so i got another bottle and have never had r-.' nrrnc. ;in(-f Thn.fr. is all of twenty '"irs aj?o. for I had" the chilis about twelve years before I started to take "Goldea, MoUical Discovery." " I I i !
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 9, 1913, edition 1
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