Newspapers / The Yellow-Jacket (Moravian Falls, … / Feb. 21, 1907, edition 1 / Page 2
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Published Bi-Weekly. R. DOS LAWS, EDITOR and PROPR. tThe Sting of this insert is the universa remedy for all known forms of political cussedness, land is good to take whether you need it or not." We send you ONE YEAR'S TREATMENT for THIRTY CENTS, and then the until three more dimes are slipped NOTE THIS. I doa't send stamps on "subscriptions.-, We can t fc, check, reg- Please rise 'cm in our business. Remit by draf 3 . ; istered letter, express or P. O. mom.'? order. " Always write your name and address plaiaily and direct your letters to - THE YELLOW JACKET, (26 doses) .stinger flops in the slot. TIS -If Moravian Entered at Moravian Falls, N. C, as second PUBLISHED IN ENGLISI Falls, N. C. clqB matter. ONLY ABOUT THE YELiIiOWj JAC This is the Yellow Jacket,- the SET bnly thing Its tempera- inoss-back in a trot. leans and circulates by invited i i tty soon Day arid 1 next do. three Now the teeth- years old our tmrcy it or not. of its kind published -on earth, ture is 200 in the shade. j . It preaches Republican gospel so straight that every issue brings many, old Democrats to the mourner's bench It "gits 'em goin' and comm.'" It retails to Democrats, Repub pnnnlistfs at. 30 cents ner year andJ over nil., the United States. it s.n't iikp it. voir don't hdve to take it. If you do like it you' are herd to subscribe to-day or to-niorrow. ' Suppose you take a day off pre lor instance, call it Yellow Jacket call upon every one of your neighbors to try this paper a year. I We are after getting 50,000 new -subscrip tions to this nauer within the months. That's what we want to will you help us to get them? The Yellow Jacket has passed cutting stage. It is now over ten and is getting older every two weeks. There are no life insurance features con fiected with it. You merely pay y cents and take it whether you like Then you will take it again. You id ways get what you pay for, then the paper stops. We treat 'all oiir subscribers this way even the President of the United States. The Yellow Jacket don't crawl tree to talk. I first see what somebody else is gem It has no "ax" to grind. i Evervbodv in the United States take, the Yellow Jacket. Ail Republicans ought to take it because it is helping to .fight their politic Every Democrat should take i track of the rascality and devilment of his own party. j TTl W . 1 A 1 I 1 r I 1 A. iiivery -ojjuusl snoum mso it points out the only way to his po vation. And everybody else ought because every issue will be filled taVthe brim with Originality, Fun, Sarcasm and "Logical When you read tnis copy ; pass and if you don't make a bluff anyway and try it. ' : ' . ' V 1 If you can use a few sample copies, drop ns a card. " " ; ; The -politics of the Yellow Jacket in the future, as -in the past, will be Republican. However. , we belong to no man, and shall reserve the right to be as independent as a hog on ice on all matters that come up for public consideration. 1 Eli Tucker will continue tor be correspond ent. Some of his letters will be worth the pilV.C J- tUti JX V J. 1U X CL J Kd-L . I If you reeeive a copy of the Yellow Jacket, iris an invitation to subscribe. . You will get more fun and derive more information for 30 cents than in any other way you could spend it. - Now, we want you to send us subscription to this paper. Send if you can. ,Soe offer elsewhere. also want to ask' you tosend along a list of your neighbors whom you, think might suDscriDe. j This is asking a good, deal of you Well ask something of us. behind a g back to j ought to hi battles. l to keep because it itical sal to take it it along Here's the Most Remarkafcle Of f er Wcr have Ever Made.' It's - Curing the next mouth, or until further notice, offer ea?li reader of the Yellow Jacket -a-chance . to become a permanent subscriber ; of this paper without costing you on cent ou'eash. That is we will put your name on a perma nent list so that you will "receive the paper right on and on without ever being required to pay another penny. All we ask of you in return is this: . - , ' - ' - : " Secure us a club of ten enbscribers at 23 cents eaebr making $2.50 In a 11, -and send to us at once with your own name and address written irt the blank below and we will then put you on., the Permanent Subscription List which Will entitle you to the Yellow Jacket indefinitely.. Tnis offer la the most liberal one we Lave ever, mado, but our . pitipoae for making it Is this: We want to secure for the Yellow Jacket a million subscribers. 'To secure such a list is. a task of enormous magnitude, and . can't be done except through the co-operation of our readers. Every, per son who feels enough interested in the came of Republicanism to help' increase the circulation of the. Yellow Jacket ten-fold , certainly dercrves; honor and reward and to show par apnreciation of every such ptieon we propose-to put you on a ptrmanent llt of subscribers. . We will aleo publish ycur name on an "Honor Roll" in the Yellow Jaeket, as suon as your club is received, showing that you are one who has done distinguished service for the-paper and that you have received the higliiest compliment that we can pay you. " " .- . - Now let's see how many will take advantage of this remarkable offer right away. It wont take but a few hours to get a club. Nearly every person you meet will tale the Yellow Jacket. Co to work. Get on the Permanent Subscription List and on the "Honor Roll" and let the people who has helped . to make the Yellow Jacket the largest subscription list of any paper in the world. " . .- ' We will count renewals the same as new subscriptions. ' - - You will cut out tlie form below . and fill in your name and address and return to us: Editor Yellow Jacket: Find enclosed the required amount for which you Are, to place my name on the -Permanent List, and oblige. Name .Pot Office State a 30-cent us a club And we. isn't it? WHAT TOUVE MISSED T T T " f J..' m m vve are senamg out tnis wee several sample copies of the Yellow Jacket and should you ever this issue this one happen to be the first" copy saw it may cause you to wonder if is the result of some kind of a lspasm, or does trie paperkeep up a similar j racket all the iime.' io such an inquiry we wil this is the kind of a caper we have be8a "cut- lius uwure mgn neaven" for the f past ten years, and if you haven't been a Subscriber taen you nave missed ten years of fuore noli- SERVICE PENSIONS. xsecause congress nas passed a service- pension" bill, giving pensions to all soldiers living and to widows of those dead, who were in the Union army during the war of the re bellion many of the Democratic papers take the matter deeply to heart. One of them with tears in its eyes says: nut tnis act , gives a. pension to every union veteran -oyer sixty-two years of age, who served ninety days in' the war between the States" and received an honorable dis charge, whether he be in need or not. The pension is in the nature of a. reward for his service; and is, therefore, contrary to the spirit which should ' permeate every pension enactment.' . JNot on your life. If a man does not need the pension he ; needn't ' take it but he should be rewarded. The men in blue those grim warriors who "went out in the dark days of sixty-one and five those splendid soldiers who taught the people-of the South that they could not, with impunity, fire on their own flag as they fired on it at Sumter, wore men who were hero-patriots, each and all of them. ' The government which they saved is worth its billions. It was due to those men that it retained its life and grew to the rich and prosperous nation that it is. It was due to their valor, and : they jointly became part owners of it and if now a dividend can be dejclared who shall say that they should not receive tueir part of the property they res cued from the hand of treason? - The man who entered the service of his country, under the stars and stripes, no mat ter if he never was en the ficldof action, was there for the purpose, and if he remained but ten minutes, he is yet entitled to a part of the money that his government has made since then. It was because of his. patriotism that the country survived the attack of trea- A son. it was because he was a tearless and superb soldier, a man who meant business and did business that the Nation with a large N still lives -and still prospers. ' Pensions? Why every man should have not the small sum that Uncle .Sam now proposes to distribute, but in this hour of unparalleled prosperity he should have five times the amount proposed. . Of course the Democrats who were licked out of their boots; those who still whine and insist that rebellion was proper and that se cession was constitutional presume to say that the government -should not- reward the heroes. ' Why don't they; vote themselves a- few dol lars of the money of their beloved Confed- eraey and go off and keny still. Unc.ie Sam is rich enough to give them .all a farm and he will do it before j he gets through with the battle-scarred veterans-of those dark days those days when, treason defiant, fire.d 'on the grand old stars and stripes. No one is expecting Democracy to endorse the pension-service act! Nobody is caring Whether it does or not. The men who pre served the Union, wlio offered their lives for it, are to be. rewarded. No matter whether they nesd the money or not, they made a sacrifice to go to warj the war . was -brought on them Sy the South, and they defended their country; saved their country, and the country that they saved wiir reimburse them for time spent and money lost.: That is the long and the short of the matter and we wonder what the Johnny rebs are going to do about it. Do about it- do nothing. Kivjyyu. me itt ueiore. it .you haven't time to get up a club now, then send ushso cents and get this paper bi-weekly for a whole year and at theend of that time if you dbn't agree that you have got over the wortf of your- j vix we. win agree to pay money back. Isn't that fair? you your WHERE IT STANDS. v,a" !' jr. ;Liii.ui- wiicre it nas uww, lUi piugLcssiun aim intelligence ..and enlightenment a'nd advancemint. The Democratic party stands where it always - stood, for anything to defeat j Republicanism. It was for slavery. It was - agiinst - free schools.; -It. was against protection Kf 'Am .5! iiiuusu ico umi it wantffi wnisKey,, 1Ve the .Democratic party twenty-five years of pover and ewrV ZzlZ woald decay; is:noranrP r-u "f V ""..Jr- " VVVf.lltl T - - rf- ft-k -M. . ation woulH nyu free tobacco and everkr industry everywhere and the ' Powers. : . The Ren'nh Iican oartv builder! anr T . ?PUD- K" ...mc ycupie will see tol is si ustcu ip uie sacred cha is re- it that it Fge. . . 1 IN DESPERATE STRAITS. The South had looked -and hoped. It saw in Senator Bailey X the persimmon. At least it believed that the time was comjng when the North would yield the point and sayto take the Texas statesman. ' It was the south vest. The West had contributed it'had of fered up as a sacrifice the Peerless One. It had come across twice with this great man. Then Illinois still in the West had ; offered tical '-skinning bees" than ever camfe ambling rStevenson as a . Vice-president and once it got the goods. ..It was with; Cleveland in f roiit and that , administration; was so dis graceful'; that many Democrats claim that it did not count. . 7 But any way it was the dream that Bailey, sostrong, so bright, so clean .would win. the north: and west- it was the hope that he would storm the Democratic convention and carry the day; But behold: r He was wearing a mask of hypocrisy. He was - reaching out his "eager hands for trust money -posing as a tribune of the people and retained by the most vicious trust in all the world. : : :. ' And they may; investigate and whitewash and whitewash and investigate but the stain is there. The circumstances are against him. : Never again will Bailey be a people's idol. His days of usefulness are oyer. Then therer was another dream that per haps J ohn Sharpe 1 Williams the Yahoo from Yazoo . might do the tric.k. But he gave "it out that the White House jwas too damp- and he might ' have said- too inaccessible . for a Democrat. That dream vanished And ; now they are ; coming along; with a solemn look and wanting to offer up Senator John Daniel, of Virginia. ; Heis a great man JOHN COUGHED UP. There, have been many things said about old man Rockefeller, and the chances- are that most of them are true! but when he came across the other day and handed out thirty-two million dollars to the General Edu cation Board 'thirty-two million without a string to it weir, all must admit that it was a handsome gift. And yet we all have a right to ask where the old bandit got it? We have a. right to wonder if the money The hoards to-day is really his? He has cornered one of God's bounties he has levied tribute from men, women and children, and because the law hasn't stopped him is no real reason that he has come honestly by his millions. He' is simply giving up his loot. He is getting old. He is getting nearer the grave and he doesn't want to be caught by death with the goods on his person. The Republican party has tried hard to convict Rockefeller. It has sent after hinT time and again. It has convicted his com pany and it has indicted Jt. It has made the concern a moral criminal and that is why it stands before the world as an illegal concern. One of these days, if the great Roosevelt has 'his way, and he will, he wili bring before the bar of justice all these criminals who have evaded the law.' And when the time comes John Rockefeller,, if living, will be forced to take his medicine just the other criminals have been forced their medicine. same as to' take A PITABL.E PICTURE. It looks sad to see Senator Foraker, now in the sere and yellow leaf, remaining an old scold. When he was young and full of fire, and political friends made him believe, after he was governor of Ohio that he could be President, he took them at their word. In those days Ohio seemed destined to fur nish all the Presidential timber, as Virginia had once done, and Foraker imagined that he was a great man. He was always doing circus advertising. He was continually shooting off his mouth, and always at the wrong time or at times when he didn't Itnow it was loaded. After getting into the Senate; after the fires of youth had had. opportunity to cool people thought that perhaps he would settle .down and-Become a grand old man. But instead of that he still clings to his fire-alarm title; he is bent on raising mischief within his party if he can -and all this monkey play about the Brownsville riots is done to attract attention his way-: to make the world believe that Foralcer should be President. . : But the impossible cannot happen in his case. , He will never be called to officially preside at tjie White House. The Fateshave decreed and he should uncierstana it; appreciate it and ring off. He is only making the world tired and certainly doing the President no harm. wait . iirttii tru' millr to nUTA4 - A ana , men enr over the grease spot. , - tThey do not of ten enough try to so conduct themselves that they won't spill the milk -Home training is the one grand thing Ibut the person trained must remember it all the! "?7 There is ;no consolation in waiting un til it is too. late and then boo-hoo because thf deed is done. ; . and flowery but he opposed Bryan in the St. Louis convention. -It be recalled that' he was almost insulting and Bryan wantim the place himself will never forgive. There fore Daniel is not among the number. What is left? Naught but the Peerless One. The Sixteen to Onester. The Government Railroad Own ershipster. The Dreamster. The Bully Boy with the glass eye who wa3 twice defeated and -who will be the third time defeated just as sure as he dares to run. Poor Old Demo-. cracy isn't she in a ''bad way ? But when was she in any other way? Never. . No, never. :It seems strange that the people of South Carolina allow Tillman to hoodwink them a' ways. Even in his own State there is a fac tional fight what- is known as the Tillman and an ti-Tillman factions. And there is the strength of Tillman It is because 'the anti-Tillmanites make the other fellows mad and. old Ben rides in be cause of the fight. He has posed as a great anti-monopolist He has posed as being opposed to the rich He has worn old clothes in his own State and played the dude in other places. He has talked against railway passes and when he lost hi pocket-book in the Northwest it was found and found to he filled with railroad passes over all the roads. He -has snubbed the Presi dent of the United States thinking it would aavertise mm. Ana oecauseine did this the papers were full of Tillman. And then what? Why, we see Him. going from place to place delivering lectures for what money there is in Jt. ... He is a better advertising agent th?n Tom Dixon and his dirty Clansman. He poses as a great reformer and he lives only to court notoriety and make money. His dispensary job that, he put upon the people of South Carolina debauched moce men and im poverished more homes, made more unhappy wives and orphan children than all the bar rooms this side of hell. He fattened on the spoils of that nefarious scheme. All through his whole record of insincer ity and mendacity he has ever been for Till man. He has never been a moment for the people:. When he first discovered himself his high est ambition was a small office. " He saw op portunity and he embraced it. He is smart but he is unprincipled. . And yet Democracy allows itself to be humbugged by him and it is because Democracy is so rotten itself that it cannot detect the decaying carcass that it still delights to carry. When South Carolina awakes from its stu pid dream there .will be an awakening but not so long as the State is hopelessly Democratic. COREY AND THE ACTRESS. It naturally does all good to see that. Corey is afraid to marry the Gilliam woman the pretty faced actress who was the cause of him leaving. his wife. It is said that because Mrs. Schwab liked the first Mrs. 'Corev who was a good woman, that Schwab has promis ed that if Corey marries the woman he loves he will be fired from the steel trust. The big salary holds him back. He is say ing nothing these days. If he marries the woman who came between the happy coupl-3, he loses his job, and he will lose his nerve. This is not a political question, it is a moral ; question, and we are very glad indeed to know that the magnate is held down. For once, and perhaps for once only, vre can take off our hat and sing out wildly: "Hurrah for Schwab." It is refreshing to find among the butter flies of fashion one real woman who doesn't endorse the divorce proceedings. Subscribers' Advertising Deportment. This Departcnient Is for tbe exclusive use of Yellow Jacket' subscribers. No ad3 of r.ny . kind will le ii- scrtcd In this paper except such as come under t'.e specifications herein set forth: You must be a jiiihscri- l-er; what you offer for sale must be devoid o" all t:;e characteristics of humbuggerj-; It must bear the st:ur.j of usefulness and respectability; if matters of amiisenicnt they must be pure and elevating. The price cliarcrca will be three cents per word for each insertion and ca:-h must accompany copy. No. cuts or display will he u.-eJ. If yoxi have anything to offer or want anything that will come under the f oresoing rules, you are invitetl t try this "Department.. EOOKICEEPING AND SHORTHAND taught by mall. Positions free. KNOXVJLLE BUSINESS COLLEGE, KnoxvUle,,Tcnn., Dept. 76. 4,000,000 PEACH TREE3. June buds a specialty. Tennessee wholesale nurseries. rso agents travciei. i-t sell direct to planters at wholesale prices. Absolutely free ' from disease and trne to name. Write for cata logue and prices before placing your order. e guarantee- our stock true to name. Largest peach nursery in world. Address J. C HALB, Winchester, Tcnn. DiPnPdV CURED with vegetable remedies; r? .LRSftVriO I moves all cymptoms of dropsy in 3 to '20 days; 30 to GO days effects permanent cure. Tnal treat ment furnished""free to every sufferer; nothing fairer. Fr circulars . and free trial treatment write Dlt- II. II. GREEN'S SOJSTS, Box C, AUanta, Ga. PATENTS procured and'def ended. Send; model, draw- iiur or photo, for expert search and free report. Free al- -vice how to obtain patents, trade marks, copyrights, e!-'-. In "aU countries. Write or call upon C. A. fcU &: t 523 NiutU St.,-N. W.. .Washington, D. C. FE.EE. FREE. FREE. The Editor of the Yellow Jacket proposes to euter yournarae cn a permanent list and tl.'is make you .a Tegular paid up subscriber lor uie k.i-'. Jacket riffht on and on. if you will eecure a cluh or i - subscribers to the YeUow Jacket at 2o cents Foraker's mistake was in imaging that all I UiifiTTfl TF1 I fll K2SunT.iJ J Sky rr rt TYion wre ffreat." . Rutherford R TTnvoc t II till I IU JLU-nialir.).t mrti me after 4:. years of suffering. Write me and learn of something fJ which you wUl be grateful the rest of your life. U- I ALEXANDER,'" 0 Exchange Street, fortland, Maine. - Airr OKE -wanting watches or watch repairing will u'I it . to their interest to write to the Orleans Watch Co., ol Orleans, Nebraska,, for their new price list op watches aiii watch repairing. Reference, The Bank of Orleaas. Ohio men were great. . Rutherford B. Hayes suffered from this same strange delusion GENERALLY TOO'IiATE, A negro was hanged in a Southern- town- not long ago -it was a legal hanging, arid be fore the day for his stepping off had arrived a colored preacher -had talked things over with" him and the poor devil was thoroughly convinced that he was going straight - to his Maker. The song sung on the gallows was "Tell Mother I'll be There." ; On the witness stand the other day Mrs. Jhaw told the sad storyother life gave out before the crowded court room "things that would have shocked the walls of a confes sional hut she didn't tell about it until it was too late. - -V - - What we are trying to get at is-: that so many people" wait until they have raised the devil and then come in trombling and verv pious, suppose tne man wno was hanged had FARM A1TD TTRTK KR T.ATJT FOR SAX. l'-U aero Wilkes county, 12 miles from Wilkesboro, N. C. Al-o mineral interest in 235 acres, on which has been fcun-i gold, craphlte and garnet. - Parties 'wishing to purchapt such property would do well to, write to the unuerruri'.ea for full particulars. - G. S. FERGUSON, Boomer, N. 7 1 KORTUS. II The most ecientific and fascinating of ll games. Now played in over o:ie .-Knilrml tlmnsand narlors. Full pack oi. fine cards "with fuU instructions for. playing all the differ ent games mailed to your address for only .25 Cents. Address, LADIES CAME PARLOR, Moravian Falls, - "WANTED. To correspond with peopte )at want to com Wst where land is. rich and cheap, healthy climate, emus, no Douweevu, no negroes, auxess, u. v. Eden, Tex. . i ' LIFE SAVER; Emergency Doctor. Vlck's Croup, riieu- been thinking about his mother wheirhe took w not deiigutedL l. richardson, Mrg chemist, Greene tne numan me me cnances are nine to ten f mrJt - v .Me?uoa -"UflW -- . ADVISEMENT. We. are enrra-red in oracticlnc law before the courr., Government departments and Congress, in Washington. Tandle revenue matters, pension claims, patents, ua marks, copyrightsand coUections. We have had ion e i;rw -art. snonAoa " TTo rafsr in t crS f Pil D AT ties tO 1 1 fYeUow Jacket'-' for information as to our personal a na pru- fessicnal standing. Address ns care or uonu Washington, D. CMcNEILL & McNEILL, that he would not have committed murder. Suppose, the girl who trodthe primrose path had gone and confessed her first sin perhaps -she would not have been on tho donH trying to save the life Of her. fool, but devoted' perience and success. We refer Interested parties to n nusDana. - 7 - r :. The, trouple Jn th;prldis that people ... .:;-""'-i: ..i-
The Yellow-Jacket (Moravian Falls, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 21, 1907, edition 1
2
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