ASHEBORO
VOL. XXI
PujCB,$ 1.00 Feb Year, Invariably in Advance.
A THANKSGIVING HYMN
For bud and for bloom and for balm-la^en
breeze,
For the singing of birds from the hills to. the
seas,
For the beauty of dawn and the brightness
of noon,
For the light in the night of the stars -and
the moon,
We praise Thee, gracious God.
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For the sun-ripened fruit and the billowy
grain,
For the orange and apple, the corn and tha
cans.
For the bountiful harvests now gathered and
stored,
That by Thee in tha lap of the Nations were
poured,
We praise Thee, gracious God.
For the’ blessings of friends, for the old and
the new,
For the hearts that are trusted and trusting
and true,
For the tones that we love, for tho light of
That
tho eye,
warms with a welcome and glooms
with good-by,
We praise Thee, gracious God.
TOI? xCIPLES, NOT MEN.
PREPARING FOR THANJKSGIVING
That the desolate poor may find shelter and
bread,
That the sick may be comforted, nourished
and fed,
That the sorrow may cease of the sighing and
sad,
That the spirit bowed down may be lifted
and glad,
We pray Thee, pitying Lord.
COURIER
ASHEBORO, N. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1896
For the Continental Congress ordered
eight different days of Thanksgiving,
which fell in April, May, July and De
cember.
When the war was over and the Con
stitution had been drawn up it was
proposed to incorporate such a day
within its limits. Although there was
nothing inserted in our fundamental
law, the motion was soon carried in
effect. Washington appointed in that
year, 1789, November 26 as a Thanks«
giving Day. But not so great atten
tion was paid to that first Presidential
call to thanksgiving as to the later
proclamation by Washington. —Path
finder.
THANKSGIVING MEMORIES.
Advertising Rates Rsasonabl
NO. 19-
Highest of all in Leavening Strength.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report,
1^ ^^sssese PowJer
ABSOWTEW PUBE
WM. C. HAMPER.
Allotney-at-Law &
ROTARY PUBLIC.
Boss and Rush Building. Court Housf
Square
Asheboro, N, C.
Prompt attention to all business.
That brother the hand of his brother may
clasp
From ocean to ocean in friendliest grasp,
Th^t for North and for South and for East
there was in his mien an indescribably
something that made Moses lift hat
with involuntary greeting.
“Thank you,” said the gentleman,
good-humoredly. “I have been walk
ing some distance, and should be very
glad to ride.”
“Walkin’ some distance, eh?” said
Moses, as the stranger took the vacant
seat at his side. “Where might you be
goin’, if it’s a fair question, sir?”
“Perfectly fair,” returned the gen-
and for West
The horror of war be forever at rest,
We pray Thee, pitying Lord.
For the blessings of earth and of air and
sky
tieman, ^smiling. “I
visit some friends in
hood.”
“Oh!” returned tha
am going to
this neighbor-
baffled Moses.
said Moses, plunging his carving
knife into the breast of the huge tur
key. “Why, it’s all over the village!
The young Squire wasn’t drowned,
although he came pret ty near it—and
he was ill for months of a fever that
followed the accident, in some cot
tage in Italy, and now he’s come home
and claimed his own, and old Had
ley’s turned out, neck and heels—
sarve him right, I say.”
“Gracious me!” interjected the
breathless matron, “I wish I’d asked
Miss Edith and her mother .to dinner
here to-day.”
of
Jyo. T. BRITTAIN. OSCAR L.SAPP
BRITTIATi & SAPP.
" .Miarngp-aHaw.
Office near court house in tlx McAl
ister building. Ail classes of legal bus
iness promptly attended to. Practice
in State and Federal courts.
That fall on us all from the Father on high,
For the crown of ail blessings since blessings
begun,
For the gift, “the unspeakable gift,” of thy
Son,
We praise Thee, gracious God.
—S. E. Adams,
“Thon you’re acquainted round here ?”
“I used to be.”
“Don’t want to go no further’n the
cross-roads, do you? ’Cause I’ve got
to stop there. I’m carryin’ a basket
of things to Miss Edith Manners and
Her mother, that live just side o’
there,”
“To whom ?” said the stranger.
ORIGIN OF THE DAY.
First
Thanksgiving Proclamation
Was Printed in 1677.
THANKSGIVING INDEED.
WILEY RUSH,
HlornsHHaw,
....Boss and Rush Building...,
ASHEBORO, N. C.
Prompt attention given to business
entrusted.
ET’S have a reg’lar
“Miss Edith Manners and
mother.”
“I -thought—I understood,”
hex
ex.
1KW
u Thanksgiving din
ner,” said Farmer
, Wheaton.
Mrs. Wheaton
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H shook her head du
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times.”
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illcetrated “Book of Wonder?
‘‘We’ve been pretty well to do all the
year, and I guess we’re about as able
to pay taxes as other folks. Come!
we’ll have a turkey and a big Indian
pudding, and I’ll pick out tho yellow
est pumpkin in the corn lot to make
pies of! Say, wife, shall we?”
“I don’t care,” assented Mrs. Whea
ton, rather ungraciously; “but I was
a-ealculatin’ to sell the turkeys—
they’ll bring sixteen cents a pound.”
“0, hang the sixteen cents a pound !
We’ll keep Thanksgivin’ just
used to when I was a bey in
mont. And I say, wife—”.
“Well, what now !”
“Let’s ask Miss Manners
as they
old Ver-
and her
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For sale by Standard Drug Co.,
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For gale by Standard Drug Co.,
Asheboro, N. C.
claimed the gentleman,, “that they re
sided at Finely Hall!”
“So they did until 'bout a yearback ;
’cause, you see, Finely Hall belonged
to a great friend o’ thejrn—a young
feller that was brought up in furrin
parts, and only come over here, visit
in’ occasionally. He was engaged to
marry Miss Edith, folks said; but I
don’t know how true the report was.
ter come over, fellin’ how this young
man was drowned while he was out
boatin’ on some o’ them lakes with the
outlandish names. Of course, the
property went to the heir-at-law—a
sort o’ distant cousin, and the poor
ladies were turned, bag and baggage,
out of the hall, to provide for them
selves the beat way they could.”
“The brute!” involuntarily ex
claimed the stranger. “Aud does he
make them no allowance?”
“Not a cent. He'is a brute/there’s
no denyin’ it; and all the neighbors
mother to come to dinner. Thereain’t
no prettier gal in the country, andshe
don’t get sewin’ enough to do to keep
the breath of life in her body, hardly!
I’ll stop this evenin’ as I go by and ask
em to come—shall jI?”
“Moses Wheaton, you’re the strang
est man I ever saw in all my blessed
life!” began Mrs. Wheaton, queru
lously. “I can’t be botheredjwith com
pany. There’d be the china to get
out, and the best room to be slicked
up, and no end o’ ceremony, afore tha
house’ll be fit for Miss Manners. I
won’t have any such arrangements
made, and that’s the long and the
short on’t!”
“Very well,” said the farmer, dog
gedly. “I’m detarmined they shall
have a good Thanksgiving’ dinner,
whether they eat it here or at home!”
And forth stalked Moses, with his
hands defiantly thrust into the pockets
of his trousers, heedless of Mrs. Whea
ton’s energetic demands as to “what
he meant by that, hey?”
The sun was just setting behind the
line of leafless woods that fringed the
far horizon, as Moses drove on his
way; the air was full of the aromatic
breath of fallen leaves, and the wind
that whistled through the quiet soli
tudes was keen and cold.
“Guess we’ll have a sharp frost to-
night if the wind goes down,” solilo
quized Moses, as he chirruped to Dol
ly, the sleek brown horse. “Wonder
how Mrs. Manners and Edith are off
for wood! Guess I’ll send over a lit
tle to-morrow. Live and let live—
that’s my motto! Hallo, mister!” he
shouted to a leisurely pedestrian,
upon whom his eyes fell at that mo
ment, “which way you goin’? Want a
lift?”
The stranger turned round at this
sudden address, givi 'g Moses thereby
a good view of his outward man. He
i was tall and slender, apparently about
allow he’s a hard man. I’ve been
wantin’’to buy a nice lot o’ land from
the Hall property, that jines right on
to mine—three acres of medder—and
Mr. Hadley won’t sell it at no price.
That ain’t the kind o’ man to help two
friendlessjladies; and so they jest keep
soul and body together by fakin’ in
sewin’. See that ar’ basket, mister?”
“Yes.”;
“Well, that holds a Thanksgivin’
dinner Pm takin’ down to ’em from
my place. I can’t dew much to help
’em, but I try my best. I sent down
a load o’ wood last month, and I cal
culate to send another to-morrow,!for
—Hallo, what you squeezin’ my hand
for that joint-crackin’ way ?”
“You are a noble fellow,” said the
gentleman, enthusiastically, “and I
honor you more than £I can express.”
“What in thunder for?” exclaimed
the amazed Moses. “I hain’t done no
more than atty other feller would that
had a heart bigger'n a poppy seed!
Goin’ to get out here, sir?”
“I must—I have business with this
Hadley fellow! But if we live I shall
see you again, my friend!”
In the old New England days there
was no Christmas, for Christmas, to
the sombre Puritan mind was a Papal
idolatry. When Thanksgiving Day be
came an annual festival it assumed
many of the features of the old Eng
lish Christmas. It was simply a day
of reunion in November instead of De
cember, with the exception of the in
terchange of gifts, a day on which
Puritans ate turkey and Indian pud
ding and pumpkin pie instead of such
“sacrilegious meats” as boar’s head,
sirloin, peacock and plum-pudding.
But Thanksgiving Day was not a
fixture in New England until a long
lime-after the landing of the Pilgrims,
nor yet original with the “Yankees.”
Days had been set apart for e'ivin.Q'
fore the Reformation and were in fre
quent use by Protestants afterwards,
especially in the Church of England,
where thanks days were a fixed custom
long before they were in the Colonics.
Even farther back we can trace the
custom of setting apart festivals of
thanksgiving in ancient history, when
the priests would designate a time for
feasting in commemoration of a great
victory or of successful crops.
The first Thanksgiving in New Eng
land was issued from the lips of the
Popham colonists at Monhegan, in
“giving God thanks” for safe arrival
in America and for other liberal
blessings, which were perhaps more
imagined, than realized. The first
To Many Households the Day Brings
Sad ; ,Recollections.
“It should not be forgotten that
Thanksgiving Day, because it is a
home festival, comes to many people,
to many households, in a very bitter-
sweet way, awakening slumbering sor
rows and reviving the pain of great
bereavements. If the reader will but
turn to the thirtieth strophe of Ten
nyson’s Tn Memoriam* and read the
verses beginning:
With trembling fingers did we weave
The holly round the Christmas hearth,
he will find there the most perfect il
lustration of my meaning. The house
hold gathers for the wonted celebra-
ion of Christmas Eve with an awful
sense
Of one mute shadow watching all.
Now they are silent, now they essay to
sing an old song, and then comes si.
lence again and tears. It must be
read, for no description suffices. So
Thanksgiving comes to many house
holds in deep affliction, as remarking
and emphasizing their losses. What
then ?
“When the late Dr. Dutton, of New
Haven, was called to mourn the loss of
his beloved wife, Dr. Bushnell wrote
him a letter of condolence, the last
sentence of which reads as follows;
‘Soften your griefs with much thanks
giving.’ Just ponder that sentence a
little. Outside the Bible I have no
where found a bit of counsel more
wise and precious than that for those
in affliction. Nor have I ever known
it to fail of comfort when presented
to sorrowing souls. Think upon vour
.Liecall ana meaitauv. „ ,
occasions of thanksgiving to God and
mix them into your cup of sorrow.
Thanksgiving mingled with affliction
is the more than magic branch that
sweetens the bitter waters of Marah.”
—Rev.. Edwin D. Parker, D. D.
THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION.
Reinember the Needy, the Widow,
Orphan and Old Soldier.
Governor Carr has issued the fol
lowing proclamation, designating No
vember 26th as a day to be set apart
by the people of North Carolina as a
day of public thanksgiving:
State of North Carolina.
Thanksgiving Proclamation by the
Governor:
The observance of one day in the
year as an occasion of “solemn and
public thanksgiving to Almighty God
tor past blessings and of supplication
for His continued kindness and care
over us as a State and a nation” is a
beautiful and time honored custom of
a Christian people and should be per
petuated among us and observed in a
dignified and religious manner.
The people of North Carolina have
much for which to be thankful to the
“Giver of every good and perfect
gilt.” Although the past year has not
brought so great prosperity or the
land yielded so abundantly, still our
people have enjoyed a proportionate
measure of these blessings and have
escaped the dire calamities which have
befallen some less favored Common
wealths.
Therefore, in accordance with the
laws of this State, I, Elias Carr, Gov
ernor of the State of North Carolina,
do hereby designate and appoint
Thursday, the 26th day of November,
1896, as a day to be set apart by our
people for public Thanksgiving to God
for the many blessings vouchsafed to
us. To this end let our people assem
ble in their usual places of worship or
around their firesides and give thanks
in prayer and praise.
On that day let us remember in our
prayers and with substantial offerings,
the poor and needy, the widow and or
phan, the noble charitable institutions
of the State and the disabled soldier
who more than ever needs, in his de
clining years, the strong arm of the
State and the assistance of her patri
otic citizens to protect him from want.
In witness whereof, I have hereunto
set my hand and caused the Great Seal
of the State of North Carolina to be af
fixed. Done at the City e€ Raleigh, this
12th day of November, in the year of
our Lord one thousand, eight hundred
the one hundredth and twenty-first.
Elias Carb,
By the Governor:
S. F. Telfair,
Private Secretary,
Sootharii Railway.
PIEDMONT AIR LINE.
FIRST AND SECOND DIVISIONS.
Schedule Effective July 19, 1896.
This condensed schedule is published as
uformatlon only and is subject to change
without notice to the public,
RICHMOND TO CHARLOTTE.
Eastern Time. No. 11
am
iv. Richmond 2 00
Amelia C’rt House
No. 35
pm
No. 9C
I twenty-six or seven years of age, with
j dark, wavy hair, and cheeks bronzed
- b^-the sun of some foreicra clime, and
The Thanksgiving dinner was smok
ing on Mrs. Wheaton’s table, the
kitchen door swung open, and Moses
entered, his face beaming with sup
pressed exultation.
“Hallo,” he ejaculated. “I ain’t
late, be I? Guess I am, by your face!
Here’s something to sweeten it,” and
he flung a folded parchment toward
his wife.
“Land o’ massy, what’s that?” ex
claimed his wife.
“A deed o’ gift o’ them three acres
belongin’ to the Hall property.”
“Who— on — airth—gave ’em to
you?” shrieked Mrs. Wheaton, her
mouth apart, and her eyes open wide
in astonishment.
“The gentleman who owns the Hall,
and who’s goin’ to be married to
Miss Edith Manners, and settle down
here.”
“Now, Moses, that’s all nonsense—
Mr. Hadley’s married a’ready!”
91 sea yen haia’i haard thacantal’?
Thanksgiving week in Plymouth was
observed in December, 1621, and
dozens of wild turkeys were killed to
make the feast. That was the first
“cold day for the turkeys,”
Two years later a severe July
drought scorched the corn and beans,
and a fast day of nine hours of prayer
was observed. A rain followed that
“revived their withered corn and
drooping affections,” in the quaint
language of a contemporaneous chron
icler. A second day of Thanksgiving
was set apart because “it would show
great ingratitude if they smothered
up the same.”
In 1830 the first public Thanksgiv
ing was observed in Boston on account
of the safe arrival of food-laden ships
from England. From that time until
1864 there was in New England an
average of one Thanksgiving Day in
two years. It would be difficult to say
just when Thanksgiving Day became
a fixture in the whole of New England,
though from time to time days were
designated for rejoicing on account of
the “dissipation of pirates, abatement
of disease or for the safe arrival of
persons of special use and quality,” as
well as in gratitude for abundant har
vest.
The harvest gratitude accounts for
the fact that the festival generally
came in the fall, though it was by no
means limited to Thursday or to No
vember. On one occasion the town
of Colchester ignored the Governor’s
appointed day and had its own feast a
week later in order to allow time for
the arrival of a sloop from New York
with a hogshead cf molasses for the
“pumpkin pies.”
The first printed Thanksgiving proc
lamation occurred in Massachusetts in
1677. During the Revolutionary
i period frequent Thanksgivings were
appointed in “acknowledgements for
mercies enjoyed,” and it was during
this time that the observance of the
day becama in any daoxaa NaiinnaL
S^Jl-J^J^
A Barnyard Mishap.
First Turkey—“Our old gobler seems
to be in a terrible plight.”
Second Ditto—“Yes, he just fell
down and broke his wish bone.”
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The Eucharist.
Probably on no day in the year
are
so many union services held by differ
ent denominations as on Thanksgiving
Day. And, even when churches wor
ship apart, the spirit of the day binds
them into unison. So in the home.
It is the harvest on the hills gathered
together, which is at once the symbol
and the cause of these delightful and
affectionate reunions, which enliven,
enrich and sanctify the home. Is it
nob the vitality of the sentiment which
has kept the word “eucharist” alive
through so many centuries on its na
tive soil, and gives it fresh birth in
other languages? And is it not the
vitality of the sentiment of gratitude
which shall make our own National
eucharist, not only the recognition of
a blessing, but a new joy and blessing
in itself?
The Day Alter.
“I can’t offer you anything^” said
the kind-hearted lady, “but some
corned beef and cabbage.”
“Madam,” replied Meandering
Mike, “it ’nd be my salvation. I’ve
walked four miles tryin’ to find a
house where they’d offer me somethin’
besides dark meat an’ wish-bones.”
What He Had.
Richard (discontentedly)—“Thanks
giving Day, eh? I don’t know what
I’ve got to be thankful for!”
Wraggs—“Why, you’ve got a good
home, splendid prospects and a big in
come.”
Richards (savagely)—“Yes, and dys- j
An
Unhappy Lot
has the member of
your family who suffers
from Neuralgia, Headache,
Nervousness, or whose
health has been shattered
from any cause whatsoever.
Possibly Brown’s Iron
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GUARANTEE—Purchase money refunded
should Brown’s Iron Bitters, taken as
directed, fail to benefit any person suf
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Headache or Neuralgia.
OPIUM
MORPHINE
111 HABITS. ft
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1 To prove that we have a painless,
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I tialk Address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO., |
i S. W. Cor. Race & Fifth, Cincinnati, O. ^
Burkeville 3 26
Keysville f3 59
South Boston 453
Danville 6 40
Reidsville 7 27
Greensboro *8 35
High Point 9 06
Salisbury 10 30
Concord 11 17
Lr. Charlotte *12 00 N’n
Spartanburg 3 05
Greenville 4 40
Atlanta. Cntr’l time 9 30
12 55
. 2 14
2 50
3 29
4 42
*6 05
6 50
7 40
8 03
9 12
10 00
10 40
1 00
1 50
5 20
a in
CHARLOTTE TO RICHMOND.
Eastern Time. No. 12
am
v, Atlanta.Cent’l time 7 50
Greenville.. ..
Spartanburg
Charlotte 1
Concord
Salisbury
High Point
Greensboro
Reidsville
Danville
South Boston
Keysville
Burkeville
Amelia Court House.,
kr. Richmond
* Meal station.
N'. 36
2 16
8 22
*6 40
7 22
8 10
9 15
9 52
10 39
12 30
1 43
3 05
352
. 436
6 00
1115
5 25
6 18
*8 50
9 35
10 20
11 30
12 05
12 48
5 50
6 25
7 05
7 27
8 17
8 48
9 25
11 37
12 28
3 55
pm
No 38
pm
12 00
5 30
6 18
8 30
f 9 00
9 3€
10 50
1 50 12 OOnl
2 53 ......
403
444
521
6 40
SIGH PONIT AND ASHBORO AND SAL
ISBURY AND NORWOOD.
No. 41.
Lx. San.
1.00 p.m. Lv.
1.0) p.m. Ar.
No. 47.
Sx. Sun.
1.30 p.m. Lv.
j.20 p.m. Ar.
Righ Point. ,Ar.
.-.'Asheboro.. ..Lv.
.■..Salisbury Ar.
Norwood Lv.
TSKOUaH SCHEDULE,
■Washington
Alexandria.
kr
Noll
Daily
Charlottesville
Lynchburg
Danville 6 40
Greensboro ||8 15
Winston-Salem.. 9 50
“ Asheville
jv Asheville.^
kr Hot Springs ...
“ Knoxville
“ Chattanooga....
(Central time)
” Charlottee
2 30
4 04
IP 40
11 20
N’n
||12 00
“Columbia
(Blanding St. Sta)
“ Augusta
“ Savannah
“ Jacksonville...
“ St. Augustine.
(Central time)
“ Atlanta
“ Birmingmam.
“ Memphis
kr New Orleans..
[I Meai station
9 30
Nos.
36 and 16
jv New Orleans..
(Central time)
“ Memphis
(Central time)
“ Birmingham...
(Central time)
“ Atlanta
Daily
p. m.
7 10
5 30
p in
4 20
1115
(Central time)
St. Augustine.
Jacksonville... 6 50
“ Savannah 11 25
*• Augusta 10 30
(Blanding St Sta.)
“ Columbia 5 00
8 50
am
5 20
9 05
“ Charlotte
(Central time)
“ Chattanooga ..
“ Knoxville ....
kr. Hot Springs Lv 11 50
pm
jv. Asheville ..Ar 103
“ Asheville 106
“ Salisbury 10 20
“ Raleigh 8 50
“ Winston-Salem. 10 30
Lr. Greensboro Lv. 12 05
“ Danville
“ Lynchburg...
“ Charlottesville.
•' Alexandria....
Lv. Washington ..
||Meal station.
1 30
113 35
5 45
9 18
9 40
pin
No. 42.
Ex. Sum
7.50 a.m.
6.00 a.m.
No. 48.
Ex. Sun.
9.45 a.m.
7.00 a.m.
Nos.
No. 37 35 and 11
Daily
p. m.
10 43
11 06
4 40
5 50
7 04
8 50
9 25
p. m.
12 50
Daily
a. m.
1115
11 38
P- m -
2 27
4 00
||6 05
7 40
8 50
12 30
1 55
4 50
9 20
p. m.
10 40
4 15
4 25
9 00
8 00
4 52
9 00
355
10 10
7 40
7 40
5 20
12 20
10 20
8 30
No. 38
Daily
a. m.
7 50
No. 12,
Daily
9 00
5 55
Noon
12 00
7 50
8 20
12 26 pm
2 30
5 28 am ....
8 30pm 6 40pr(
am :
430
815
11 53
pm
140
125
9 38 pm 8 10
412 412
6 20 6 20
10 48 9 52
12 OON’nll 25 .
158
6 20
6 42
SLEEPING CAR SERVICE. I
Nos. 37 and 38, Washington and Southwest^
irn Limited. Solid VestibuledTrain between
Jew York and Atlanta. Composed of Pull-j
nan Drawing Room Sleeping Cars (minimum
hillman rate $2.00; no extra fare). First-,
ilass Vestibuled Day Coach between Wash-.
Dgton and Atlanta. Through Sleeping Caq
jetween New York and New Orleans. New
fork and Memphis, New York, Asheville and
Jot Springs, New York and Tampa, anq
Richmond and Augusta. Southern Ry. Din-
ng Car between Greensboro and Montgom-
^Nos. 35 and 36, United States Fast Mail,
Pullman Sleeping Cars between New York,
Atlanta, Montgomery and New Orleans, New
fork and Jacksonville and Charlotte and
kugusta*
Nos. 15 and 16. Norfolk and Chattanooga
Limited. Solid train between Norfolk and
Chattanooga, through Selina, Raleigh,
Greensboro, Salisbury, Asheville, Hot Springs
ind Knoxville. Through Day Coaches and
’ullman Drawing-Room Sleet ing Cars.
Through tickets on sale at principal sta-
ions to all points. For rates or information
pply to any agent of the Company.
W. H. Green; J. M. Culp.
General Supt. Traffic Manager,
1300 Ba. Ave., Washington. D. C.
W. A. Turk,
Genet al Passenger Agent.
A New Jersey match company has
decreed that its employes must imme
diately visit their dentists to have their
exposed nerves covered up to protect
them from the deadly phosphorus. Per
haps tho whole trouble with the Moore
brothers is that they were so busy clip
ping coupons that they didn’t have
time to have their molars kept in pro-
J per repair.