Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / March 1, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Cfaaifiam Record. M. A- LONDON, Editor and Prop. PJTTSBORO, N. C. NEWS OF Tflb WEEK IN EPITOMIZED FORM THE LATEST HAPPEN! NGG Or IM PORTANCE TEF.SELY eiro imssnsor the world 34ws t Creates Interest From AH Parts o Ch World Related Paragraphs. Southern. La. spite. e a. temperature several degrees foetew freezing, which pre vailed thTo-asbo-at the South, it is gen erally beiievi ljy fruit growers that iry weatber and high winds have thus far sapesi th fruit frop from to tal destructicsx or froa very serious ctooage. Wa3e it is admitted that the fruit crop bas suffered censider- abtT frosa tie eoid and in several lo calities En. Texas and Alabama may "iave been practically destroyed, it is not believed tbx the damage has "bees ggueral or vf mfficient magni tude to result in serious loss. Put 3uost ea taaragins rejKxrts are being 2-eceivetL Two men arrested twenty miles frost rteiMoisesa, Ga, confessed to be ing members of the gang of bandits which, beld 3 se& robbed the South ern raili-casl's fast mail, No. 36, near While; Sulfur Swings, Ga. The men !ha& mere rb.-&n oxe tfcous&nd dollars 3n various kmOs of money on their pexsotks. ArxAhrr Jns.n, believed to fce a raembe- of the sazig and impli cated by the tw-o arrested, was arrested by ShiEriS Sargent of Lump Mu county. It railes northwest of this place. This man's name is John Luck. The raea. are said, to lie Georgia la tha- presence of the author of the 1)111 and a few friends, Governor O'Xeal signs the Parks local option 3ili "Alabajua. bas returned rrom rmmzsig after fads and th eerie to saaity asul ccsrvaiism," be said. The sxsfeatl strata! gathering of the "Jlascuic Memorial association, organ ized for the purges of erecting in Alexandria, Va, a temple dedicated to the EserDory of "Washington tne 3ia.scn wis htM in Alexandria v,T,:a dteiegaiicbs from 35 states and from Porto Rico in atte2da,nee. The alleged boll weevii conspirac Teceally ispcirtaii to .Governor-Elect Smith, is entirely- reasonable, and the saxjxrisins: tkiag is that it has not fcec-2- atterred fcefors this, according to rta.tezneEi.ts raade by Dr. L. O. Slo-wariS. chief of the bureau of euto iriilegx. Dr. W. D. Hunter, in cifc3.r3a SomfciierTi field crop mvesti ;gaacii3 e the department of agricul ture, fa an interview with State En--tomokgist fL Lee Worsham of Geor- Sevea .persons Qost their lives in a Sre Biki destroyed the home of J. HasalfcL si. Suttcn, W. Va. Only 3Lr Ksrdza. escaped, the six remain--insr Eacfubers fit Ziis family ar.fl n lit itie girl wIh n2acl fcer home with t he Ifandina perishing; in. the names. The fire was caused, by a, natural gas To 5x?psstigate the iconaTtions under which, certain South African animais might be feiparteii into this country to mhalxt tha swajEps of Louisiana and ether Soaira states, Jlaj. F. U. 23araham, Sccs& African explorer and SEiaiES eiiiseer. tefe for South Atn ea tt is tTopos&d ta use these' ani mals for daEBesSje and other purposes. At the comfction of the aviation csxhibitkxt is. Taaipa. Fla., J. A. D. .IScCurdy and Cleai iieachy, aviators, scd CoL T J. L Browu, chairman of the ceai-as celebration comwiittee; Gea J. tL Strode of the West Tampa race traci: aai Fhil Cailins. treasurer ior tha ravins asaaTK&tiofi, were ar rested 'On at c&arge of violating ihe state laws relatiie to the giving ol xMbitkis on Suodgy to which an amissicQ hs eharged. Bond.s were iiamedia.te!y furnished. The arrest of the aviators aad officials of the race tract was ee result of a concerted eSort oa the paxt of the ministers ot the city. The Ctisatsts Areiga board handed ito Russian Minister liorostovetz Chi fla's rMr to the Russian note, which jdejuantied imuiediate compliance witn the RussihCbmesa treaty of 1881. A statement simmazir.iiig Chinas atti tude was girea out i)y the foreign IJoard. It rfeciares the willingness ol ihe ClHBese tnei3iment to abide by the treaty and its unwuiJingaess to gu farther. SnhseQUHnty tie foreign of fice saM that it did -cot believe the ihjssuan. goremewnt bad gressive vdesigna. Iteiatioss fcetweea tne Portuguese SwermneEt and the navy have roxen d almost the breaias oint, Juauao f at deaiaad Ijr jyy for tho re iEstemeat of Jose Caj-ejo, leader ot the rypjji5ry i-Ltuiy, x. aal ricinity fairly feiistie wiJi -rotes ?r women " ian for the cataapafga of the suffra isfcj m favor of the woman suffrage iilUa ti oaia earnest. An extensive ddrectfeins- laa as been .put in op satioo. acd. figas fcave beeQ erect. d oa aJI fie Aads in this vicinity fcr the tenuous women bound on xaaMns "snHrgei week" a success Tbe hoaae o representatives gave its approval t the senate resolution Jiibjriidaff tiia aecinetary of war tu lei? ceJtaixt teas fiar the use of the -Cacg&ler&te: veterans- reunion in Iai iie EssEi, zieart 3t2ny, Ger t"Bcas" Cox, toad of the JpuUjcxat s&ffnUon in Cincinnati, ssaiosii bj- t.h& grand jury on a charge f ptarjuxy, Tiut basis of the c&r-r&i is thai. Cas: testified falsely J't, ja fissyrijig fc had received any. joaBSE: J3Kiti&y which several l.&ifcs i?2te& the- county treasurer tor A simple tablet cf bronze was ur veiled in Savannah, Ga., where th.. Spring Hill recauct steed during the Revolution. It niarlis the site where was fought the tlcodiest-fight next to that at Bunker FLU in the yar of the Revolution. Representing France, whose trccps, under Count d'Etaing. fought by the sice of Americans in the battle cf Savannah October fl, 1779, Viscount Eenoist d'Azy, naval attache at the French embassy at Washington, and lieutenant in the French navy, d3l;vered.an address. In the United States district court at Savannah, Ga., "finis" was written after the famous Greene and Gaynor et al conspiracy easa, which has been in progress since l03. The last chap ter which w as 'written by Marion Er win when he aakod that the indict ment against M. A. Connolly, Oberlin M. Career's seevreiary, and indicted with him and Greene and -Gaynor, be nolle prossed. Judge Speer consented and a statement cf the case was plac ed on tho minutes of the United States district court. Reports from various parts of Ala bama show that the frost and contin ued cold weather has damaged the fruit and produce crops considerably, an estimate placing the amount to be at least half a million dollars. All strawberries around Bay Min ette, Ala., have teon killed by the cold. Thermometers legistered 2i degrees. The fruit has beea damaged. Cclcnel Gaedke, a well-known mili tary critic, discussed in the Berlin, Germany, Tagefclatt, from a military point of view the fortification of the Panama canal. Colonel Gaedke says that it is to the most pressing inter ests of the United Sta.ej to foitily the canal. Haitien troops, after recapturing Ouanaminth from the rebels, got out of the control of their officers, pil laged the town and massacred inhabi tants who were uuutle to escape. The arondissements cf Cape Trou and Ouanarninth have bean Declared in a state of siege A national nicvercent to obtaip bet ter salaries for the Protestant minis ters was started in Cleveland, Ohio, at a mass meeting of tha Iayment of the various Cleveland churches. Ac cording to figures given at the meet ing the average salary for clergymen outside the large cities is $573 a year. The matter will be brought before the Laymen's Missionary Movement con vention, which meets on March 7, and an effort will be made to se cure action by the various national de nominational bodies. Former Secretary cf State Richard Olney amplifies opinions previously expressed by him in opposition to tue fortification of the Panama canal. Mr. Olney cites the Clayton-Bulwer treaty in which Great rhitain and the United States agreed that neither would ever erect nor maintain fortifications com manding the canal and the stipulation in the Hay-raur.cefote treaty which also provided against fortification, oat permitting the United States to main tain military police along the canal. Washington. The text cf a new treatv with Ja pan, designed to replace that cf and drawn with tne snecial design nf eliminating the restriction upon im migration contained in the trontv. was laid before the senate by l';esi dent Taft. The essential difference between the proposed treaty and the existing convention is said to be in the fact that it omits and leavs to the national honor of Japan tne en forcement at her own ports the lim itations upon emigration from Japan now expressly placed upon immigra tion into the United States. Because it embodies this radical departure from the existing treaty and tnnrhoa the question cf the deapest import ance ana interest to the PaciP.p 4!nn the injection cf this convention into the closing hours cf the present con gress, created a sensation. Filibustering in the lower hranr-h nr congress during this session hm a thing cf the past when the nouse voted tor a rule which, v.-hrn im-nL-Q,i by a two-thirds vote, as to any pend ing measure forthwith reduces the time of debate to tdrtv minAioa Qr,,i cuts off all amendments. Trie rule wd;, mvoseu against the fi.lihi:crr ,n the omnibus war claims bill ar.d that measure was passed. The hm.su .!i cuts out all of the French spoliation and the navy yard overtime claims. An amendment offered bv llenron. tatiev Webb of North Carolina to t-ie legislative, executive and 1udie:al hill appropriating $50,000 for the employ ment or agents abroad to wnrir fnr the extension of markets of cotton goods, has been adopted in conference ceiween tne two houses. The house paused abruDtlv in th midst of its twenty-eight-hour .nm,v session, stilled the tumult in the cnamber at the stroke of noon and nusnea tbe rancorous partisan re bate to permit tender tributes to the life and character of Alexander Ste pnens Clay, late a senator nf tha Ttni. ed States. The senate stopped the wheels of legislation to permit sena tors to eulogize the life of their late co-laborers , and die nouse concluded these exercises of admiration and affection. Senator LaFollette of Wisconsin manded an investigation of published charges that government naval se crets are being disclosed to the Ar- gentine Republic through the ' con struction; of two' battleships for that country in the United States. Mr. LaFollette wants 'information from the departments of state and navy con cerning the contracts which private shipbuilding concerns received from the Argentine Republic for the. ccn struct'on of two battleships. The res olution created a sensation in th senate. Representative Richard P. Hobson of Alabama, inferentially referring to Japan, declared in the house that the. United States might be involved in war within ten months. Mr. Hob sen declared: "You can count on the fingers of your two hands the num ber of months before the United States would have a war on its hands. This nation is net going to prepare, and the day is coining when it will be struck by a nation that is prepared.' War is a visible certainty?" asked Mr. Brisccli of New Ycik. "Yes, and jot very far off." iWfiWIWW -CTICNAL CHANGED IN THE REVENUE DILL TRUCT CILLO FAVORABLE. BILLS FOR SALARY INCREASE Majority Reports Favorably For Sixty Hour Law in Factories State Tax Commission Favorably Reported Introduction of Important Billsx Raleigh. The senate consumed considerable time debating the Sikes Beyden state highway commission bill and it was referred to the com mittee cn public roads after two amendments had been adopted, one providing that the state shall buy no county bonds until their validity is approved by the attorney general, and the other striking out all pro visions in the bill calling for a bond issue. The special order for the Tcrrens land title system bill was postponed indefinitely on account of the illness of Senator Cotten. Avery County Makes Hundredth. The bill creating 'Avery county passed final reading in the house by a vote of 80 to 9 and was ordered enrolled for ratification. This is the cne-hunrdedth county for North Caro lina and is made up of portions of Mitchell, Watauga and McDowell. Change- in Revenue Bill. The hcuse spent two and a half hours cn the revenue bill and passed sixty-two sertiens, making some not able amendments. Considerable time was spent an Section 35, taxing whole sale dealers in horses $50 and an amendment adopted that no dealer should be required to take out both retail and wholesale license. Section 35 fixing $1 as to livery stable men was then left open for future con sideration. Section 37 was amended so as to increase the tax cn automo bile dealers from $25 to $50, an amendment, by Ewart to increase ,it to ?1CD beim; voted down. Section 46 was amended so as to include all for tune tellers and clairvoyants in the $203 tax. AH other sections to and including Section 55 were adopted without further change except that tottling works taxes are adjusted for towns at $30 for towns from five to ten thousand; $40 for town3 of ten to twenty thousand and $50 fcr towns of twenty thousand and over. Section 62, taxing druggists $25 for selling liquor was adopted without change, although there was long dis cussion. Ewart wanted it increased to $100. lie charged that one drug gist in Charlotte ordered fifty- barrels at one time. Speaker Dcwd explain ed pleasantly that this was just before the Republican convention. Ewart came back that he was told one hun 3red barrels were ordered for the Dcmicratic state convention there md that the city aldermen helped to pay fcr it. Section 46, was amended to tax gypsies for selling bcth horses and mules, instead of applying to only horses as at present. The committee of the whole arose and Chirman Ray reported t'.ie progress of the adoption of sixty-two sections of the revenue bill and the house voted concurrence. Sixty Hour Bill Majority Report. Senator Ivie's bill for a sixty-hcur labor law in factories in North Caro lina received a favorable report from the Senate committee on manufac turing with a minority report. Sen ator Ivie made an effort to have the bill made a special order but, owing to other special orders already arranged, the billl take3 its place on the calendar. The bill authorizing executors and guardians to resign their trust gets a favorable report from the Senate committee cn judiciary. This com mittee has appointed a sub-committee to draft a substitute for Repre sentative Quickel's bill, which re- lieves railroad employes of being guilty of a misdemeanor for working over sixteen hours a day. the sub- titute to conform to the Federal statute. The Doughton bill for re funding the bonded debt of the state and pay the deficit in the state treasury will be merged with Sen ator Graham's bill when j is re ported from the finance committee. Favorable for Tax Commission. The senate committee cn finance, by a vote of 6 to 4, decides in favor of creating a state tax commission and Chairman Brown, who first pro posed the idea at this session, has appointed Senators Hartsell, Pharr and Starbuck as a sub-committee to draft the bill. The finance commit tee considered Senator Elites' bill to increase, the state school tax from eighteen cents to twenty-five cents and decided to amend the bill, re porting it favorably and increasing the tax to twenty cents. The Hob good bill, to avoid double taxes in assessing corporations for taxation by exempting stock held by one corporation and on which another has paid the tax getsi a favorable re port. Senator Pharr's bill to tax the stock of banks in the towns where the banks are located re ceives an unfavorable report with a minority favorable report. The bill to increase the salary of the justice of- the supreme court to $4,503 a year get3 a favor able report from - the house com mittee on appropriations The bill to appoint two additional directors of the deaf and dumb school at Morganton, as recommend ed by Governor Kitchin, gets an un favorable report from the house committee on : propositions and grievances. Entering into the fight was a contest to name two deaf- mutes and ultimately a continuation of the old fight between advocates of the manual and oral schools of instruction that has stirred the man agement of the institution so serious ly a number of years." It is understood that Avery county is named in honcr cf Col. Waighstill Avery of revolutionary fame. The general understanding has been while the county fight has been in progress that it was named in honor of form er Judge A. C. Avery of Burke ccun ty, who has spent considerable tine here working fcr the success cf the measure. The bill to establish state farm life schools and the bill to increase the salary of the adjutant general frcm- $1,603 to $2,030 a year was ordered to third reading. Many new bills were introduced, the most important probably being one by Senator Raggett for a bend issue of $530,000 for the state uni versity, the State Normal college and the A. arid M. ccllege to be divided $100,03?' fcr the university and $155, 033 each fcr the A. and M. and State Normal college. Baggett also intro duced a bill to enlarge the territory cf Harnett county cut of a porticn cf Cumberland county, and one by Senator Brown to protect the state's interest in turnpikes, railroads and other enterprises. The Turlington anti-trust bill with favorable report and the Ewart bill without prejudice came back to the house frcm committee and wero or dered printed preliminary to taking their place cn tho calendar. A num ber cf features of bcth bills have strong opposition among members cf the committee and they were hur ried from committee cn appeal cf Mr. Turlington, to gain time fcr con sideration cn tho Goor in the closing days cf the session. At the joint meeting cf the senate committee cn revisal and education there was a leng hearing cn Senator Barham's bill placing all grrded schccl3 in the state now operating under special charters, under the state textbook commission. J. Y. Jcy ner, in an extended speech, advocat ed ihe bill. Supt. W. D. Carmichael of the Durham graded schools also speke fcr it, but there wa3 strong opposition by J. W. Bailey and Dr. R. H. Lewis, representing the schools cf Raleigh; C. H. Ireland and Senator Hobgood, for the Greensboro schools; Senator Martin of Asheville, Senator Hartsell cf Concord, and Mr. McNeil of Lenoir and A. S. Dockery, rep resenting the Rockingham schools. In addition to these speakers, letters of protest against the bill were filed from eighteen graded schools in the state. The argument developed the fact, that the school authorities in Greensboro, Newborn and some other places own the textbooks new in use and rent them to the schocl children at so much per session and the speak ers argued that the passage of the bill would work a hardship oh them, and amendment, was suggested thnt the graded schools operating under especial charters be given three years in which to come under the textbook commission, but no definite action was taken by the committee. April Meeting Cotton Mill Men. The ninetieth meeting of the Na tional Association of Cotton manufac turers will be held at the Massachu setts Institute of Technology, Boston, April 12 and 13, 1911. These dates have been selected because they im mediately follow the Congress of Technology, which will be held on the preceding days, in celebration of the 60th anniversary of the charter of that institution, and it Is expected that many cf these present will re main to attend the meeting. Carolina manufacturers will be. Special Court to Try West. Goyernor Kitchin has announced that thero would be . a special term of criminal court held in Wilson for one week, beginning cn March 13th The especial reason for the calling of the special term is ior the trial of the desperado. Lewis West, arrested In Maxton after a long chase. West is charged with the murder of Deputy Sheriff George Mumiord, of Wilson, and direct statements of the murder of Deputy Mumforjl have been made by Chief of Police Giover. West is now in the State Penitentiarv. Annual Session of Doctors. The annual address cf President Joseph A. Yvhita of Richmond, Va.. before the Tri-State Medical associa tion, in annual session here, was de voted J "Preventative Blindness" and was an especially able and com prehensive paper which the associa tion direcid to have printed for the widest pessib'-e distribution. The physiciars met in annual cession with the large-s-- attendance in the history of 'the t.sJciation, which, new hds over t-?fl hundred and fifty mem bci s in so stctes. "Bill Nye Djy" a Success. Practically every school and college in North Carolina celebrated "Bil; Nye Day," with appropriate exercises, the pupils giving an hour to the ex ecution cf a prepared prcgram. Every pupil was requested to bring a penny for the memorial fund and several thousand dollars were col lected, which will be applied to the erection cf a Bill Nye mcacrial build ing at the Stcnewall Jackson training schocl, a mcvement undertaken by tbe North Carolina Press association. Other contributions were made. Want Law Prohibiting Cartoons. "Please pass a law against cartoons ir. newspapers. Lets of cartoons have a tendency to make a bad impression on tho reading public." This was the context of a petition presented to the senate! by a senator representing a number of petitioners who have decided that, the privilege cl the pencil and the pen in the Old North State is going beycad the limit when it comes to cartoon work. Nr mention was made cf the class of work submitted nor was it statet whether the moral cr artistic effect Collector of the Eastern Oittrict. A gentleman in Raleigh, who har" been in Washington, brought tho nowr that the matter cf the ccllectcrshi of the western district had been set tied, and that the internal rev-nuo dr partment had returned to Ccllecto Brown his resignation which he sen to the department last year, arid fc said it was now understood ' th" Brown would be continued aa cell tor. "You may put this I';wn as cr tain," he snid, "no mattr wlwt h be said to the central-, p.r.wn v J continue s$ ccjleetcr. . THE DRUGGIST KHEW FROM EXPERIENCE I hare been selling Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root for the past three years and those of my customers who buy it, speak fa vorably regarding it. I have used it in my own family with good results, and I believe the preparation has great curative value. You may use this as you like. Very respectfully, C. B. RUPE & SON", By C. B. Eupe, Mgr. Seymour, Texas. Personally appeared before me this 20th day of July, 1909, C. B. Rupe.f Drug gist, who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. R. C. JANES, . J. P. and Ex-Officio. IN CONSTANT PAIN. Lotwr to Dr. Kilmer A Co. Blnvhamton, N. T. Prove What Swamp-Root WriII Do For Yon Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. For fale at all drug stores. Price fifty cents and one-dollar. JUST LIKE EM. Little Rest and Less Peace for the Kidney Sufferer. - Mrs. N. U. Miller, 1509 Jackson St., Baltimore, Md., says: ."There was scarcely a moment I was not suffering from kidney trouble. Every move ment caused misery and at night I could not sleep owing to the intense pain. Dizzy spells were frequent and obliged me to sit down, to keep from falling. Kidney secre tions were generally profuse, then again scanty and. deposited heavy sediment. My ' feet and ankles were so badl7 swollen that morning3 I could not wear my shoes. Today I am free from kidney trouble. Two boxes of Dean's Kidney Pills effected a com plete cure." Remember the n?me Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. i I The Final Settlement. "A verdict for $10,000 Isn't so bad," said the Junior partner. "How much shall we give our client?" "Oh, give him $50," answered the senior partner. "But hold!" "Well?" v "Don't be hasty. Promise to give bim $50." NOT UNUSUAL. DISTEMPER In all its forms among all ages of hordes .as well as dogs, cured and others in same stable prevented from having the disease with SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CCRK Every bottle guaranteed. Over 63O,0()i) bottles sold last year $.50 and $1.00. Any good druggist, or send to manufacturers .Agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co., Spec! Contagious Diseases, Gcshen, Ind. If a man's wife can read about poll tics without wishing she were a man, he will never experience the pleasure of being henpecked. For XIEADACIIE Illrka CAP(JIINE Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or Nervous Troubles, Capudlue will relieve you. It's liquid pleauant to take acts Immedi ately. Try it. 10c., 25c, and 60 cents at drug stores Some men will do anything for the sake of a little newspaper notoriety. 9 . " OXIT OXE "BROMO QUININE." TTiat is LAXATIVE BKOMO QlftNINK. took for the signature ot E. V. iROVJ. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in Ono Day. 25c. First College Student Don't you think some people ask a good many fool questions in letters? Second College Student Yes. Nov, my father always wr.nts to know if I'm a bank. I saw a pianist last night who can play with his toes." "Umph! I've got a kid IS months old can do that!" Wifely Solicitude. Appealing to the police to find her husband, who went to work and had not returned home at eight o'clock, but requesting that the officers nei ther arrest nor "talk cross" to him, a woman left a note in the, hand3 of Patrolman Hickerson at Sixth and Ed mond streets containing information concerning the mi3sirg husband. The note in addition to giving a de scription of the missing man read that the wife "was worried nearly sick because it was the first time that he bad done this." "I don't want you to arrest him," continued the note. "Tell the police tc plrace not talk crcs3 to him." St. Jccrh Gazette. Successful Lifa Work. "He has achieved success who has lived well, laughed often, and loved much; who has gained the respect of intelligent men and the love of little thi'iircn; who has filled his niche ard accomplished his task; who left the world better than he found it, whether by en improved poppy, a perfect pcem, cr a rescued soul; who has never lacked 'appreciation of earth's beauty or failed to express it; who hps always looked fcr the best In ethers, and given the best he had; whose life was an inspiration; whose we'v.rry a benediction." President Schurman. Nine or Ten Deposits. "It is expensive to learn to fly," said Clifford Harmon at Mineola. "Your aeroplane costs more than $5,000. You must pay a fee of $500 for tuition, and you must deposit, too, about $500 more for damages. All the damage you do to the machine you learn on must be paid for, and your deposit may easily be eaten up. "I was talking one day at Nice to an English flyer. " 'I learned to fly in a week, I said. 'How long did it take you to learn?' " 'Oh, nine or ten ' "'What!' I interrupted. 'Not nine or ten weeks?' " 'No, aeroplanes,' said he." Peace with God without peace with men is an iniquitous thing. Druggists everywhere sell Garfield Tei, the Herb laxative. It acts as a gentle aid to Nature. Intervention in love is equivalent to a declaration of war. THAT . AWFUL Latest Quotations. "How would you like a game' picture for your dining room? A brace of can vasbacks, say?" "No cheap stuff for me. Paint mc a picture of a dozen eggs." Many Children Are Sickly. Mother Gray's Sweet Powdera for children break up culJs in 24 hours, relieve feverlsh ness, headache, stomach troubles, teething: disorders, move and regulate the bowels, ami destroy worms. They are so pleasant to take children like them. Used by mothers for 23 years. At all druggists, 25c. Sample mailed FKEE. Address, A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy, 2f. vn n Have to Pull Them In. Ella- There are just as good fish in the sea Stella But you have to have a pull to land them. A Frequent Speaker. A member from a northern constit uency, who was one day reproached bv a disappointed supporter for never opening his mouth in the house, repu diated tha accusation with indignation. Not a day passed, he declared, but thi-t he said something; and it was reported in the papers, too. In con firmation of his statement he pro duced the report of the last debate, and pointed triumphantly to the "Hear, hears," with which certain speeches were punctuated. "That's me," he said. Tit-Bits. TO SKIVE OUT MALA 11 1 V A0 JilliO) tT THE SYSTEM Take the Oil Stardara UliOVK'S TASTlSLKbS CHLLL TOXIC. You know what you are taking. The formula is ph-.lnly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Oniulr-e andiron in a taste less lorin. The Quinine drives out tho malaria and the Iron t.ullds up the system. Sold by aU dealers for 60 years. 1'rics j0 cents. His Light. Ella He says that I am the light of his life. Stella That's gas. ForCOLDS nnd RI7 nicks' CAPlDifiE is the best remedy re lieves ihe aching- and feverishness cures the Cold anil restores normal conditions it's liquid effects immediately. 10c., 25c., and 50c. At drug- stores. CHILDREN AFFZCTED y Mother's Food and Drink. Many babies have been launched Into life with constitutions weakened by disease taken in with their moth ers' milk. Mothers cannot be too care ful as to the tcod they use while nurs ing their babes. The experience of a Kansa3 City mother is a case in point: "I was a, great coffee drinker from a child, and thought. I could not do with out it. But I found at last it was do ing me harm, For years I had been troubled with cizzinsss, spots before rr.y eyes and pain in my heart, to which wa3 added, two years later, a chronic sour rtomach. "The baby wa3 born 7 months ago, and almcst from the beginning, it, too, Buffered from sour stomach. She was taking it frcm me! . "In my distress I consulted a friend cf more experience and she told mo to cult coffee, that coSee did not make good rciilc. I havo since ascer tained that it really dries up the milk. "So, I ruit coffee and tried tea and ct last cocoa. But they did not agree with mc. Then I turned to Posturn with the happiert results. It proved to be the verjr thing I needed. It not only agreed perfectly with baby and myself, but it increased tho flow of my milk. ' "My husband then quit coffee and used Postum and quickly got well of the dyspepsia with which he had been trcuVed. I.ro longer suffer from the dizziness, blind spells, pain in nry he?rt cr Four stomach. , "Now we all drink Postum from my hurraed to my seven months' old baby. It ha3 proved to be the best hot rrink ro hsve ever used. Wo wci'd not give ur Postum for the best coffee we ever drank." Name given by Prtum Co.. Battle Creek, Mich. Got litre book, "The Road to WrfiviHe " in pkgs. "There's Fes sot?." ti 'wrnrn f -rn time tn lrt". Th rr?nul&tt, trne, and fall of hunr.a 'lilerotit. Can a woman become a member of the Daughters of the Revolution just because her ancestors murdered the king's English. j Cured by Lydia E Pinknam's Vegetable Compound Morton's Gap, Kentucky. "I suf fered two years with female disorders. my health was very bad and I had a continual backacho which was simply awful. I could not stand on my feet long enough to cook a meals victuals without my back nearly killing' me, and I would havo such dracrsinfir sen sations I could hardlv bear it. I had soreness in each side, could not stand tight clothincr. and wa3 irreenlar. I was completely run down. On ad vice I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and Liver Pills and cm enjoying good health. It is now more than two. years and I have not had an ache or pain sinca I do all my own work, washing and everything, and never have the backache any more. I think your medicine i3 grand and I praise it to all my neighbors. If you think my testimony will help others you may publish it." Mrs. Ollis Woodall, Morton's Gap, Kentucky. Backache is a symptom of organic weakness or derangement! If you have backache don't neglect it. To get permanent relielf you must reach the root of tho trouble. Nothing wo know of will do this so surely as Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Iiynn, Mass., for special artvice. Your letter -will be absolutely confidential, and tho advice free. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum nnd Mullen is Nature's great remedy Cures Cough. Colds. Croup and Whooping Cough and nil throat and lung troubles. At druggists, 25c. 50c and $1.00 per bottle. The measure of what we love and admire is the measure of our own worth. Dobson. The Chicago Fire could have been pre vented with on? pail of water, but the water was not handy. Keep a bottle of Hamlins Wizard Oil handy and prevent the fiery pains of inflammation. It is sweet to feel by what fine spun threads our affections are drawn to gether. Sterne. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny, granules, easy to take. Do not gripe. Inconsistency often means those deeds in another which I only half uadeAtand. FIXES CTJREO IN 6 TO 14 DATS our druggist 1U rotund money If PAZO OINT MENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind. Uleeding or Protruding Piles in to 14 uays. 6Uc Sympathy sometimes means sitting in a car and passing out soft words to lame folk. CHEAPER THAN INSURANCE. Mexican Mustang Liniment is made of the best oils and pcnetratesquickly, soothing andhealingthe affected parts IT makes good all losses occasioned by accidents and is cheaper than any insurance policy. IT will take a curb off your horse or cure him of the heaves. IT will cure him of cracked heels or grease heels. No matter how long-standing or deep-seated the pain, this old reliable remedy will kill it. 25c. SOc. $1 a bottle at Drug- & Gen'I Stores. Better health is sure to follow the use of the natural Herb laxative, Garfield Tea. All druggists. What women feel is more convin cing to them than what men know. Itch Cured In 30 monies by Woolford'n SanitaryLotion.Never falls. At druggists. The ocean is crossed in love by. a number of bridal parties. Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color; REMOVES ANDRUrr AND SCURF Invigorate and prevents the hair from falling 9 for Sat by Druggists, r nt Dirsct by XANTHINE 00 Richmond, Virginia iflc SI rr ftsttlci Unilf Soul, jjc mrt4 It Circulars; If afflicted with Bora vyes, uaa Thompson's Eye Water W. N. U., CHARLOTTE. NO. 9-1911. IF YOU HAVE A SICKLY YOUNGSTER TRY THIS FREE The family with young1 children that is Without sickness In the house now and then is rare, and so It Is Important that Vie head of the house should know what to do in the little emergencies that arise. A' child with a serious ailment needs a doctor, it is true, but In the majority of instances, as any doctor know3, the child suffers from some intestinal trouble, usually constipation. There Is no sense In c-ivinar it a. nill nr j a remedy containing an opiate, nor is flushing ct the bowels to be alwavs rec J ommer.cd. Rather give it a small doso i cf a mild, gentle laxative tonic like Dr. ; Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which, by clean ; ing out tha bowels and strengthening the little stomach muscles, will immediately correct the trouble., This is not alone our opinion but that cf Mrs. N. H. Mead of Freeport, Kans., whose granddaughter bas been takin? It successfully and of Mrs. J. R. W hi tine of Lena, Wis., who gives It to her children and takes it herself. It Is sold In fifty cent and one dollar bottles at every drug store, but if you want to test it in your family before you buy it send your address to Dr. Caldwell and he will for ward a supply free of charge. For the f reo sample address Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 201 Caldwell building. Monti cello, lib
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 1, 1911, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75