Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Sept. 4, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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, k. . Jk. JUL , XwrnHfC 1 VOL. XIV. Statement of THE CITIZENS IIEISDERSOiV, - JULY 15TH, 1908. RESOURCES Loans and Discounts ' $4G2,886.3S t)vtrt.li-afts. 2,6.5), Sttvks and Bonds, 29.461.25 Banking House and Fixtures, 10,732.73 lii.-uranfe department, 1,830.79 ( as 11 Oil Ills uu aiiuvaon inula, xi, ivv.to I)i:o from Jaariiis, Total, 11,073.17 $645,230.62 You Have a Right to Know. lVople who entrust their money to a bank want to know (and have a riht to know) scrr.ethiD.r of its financial strength. Ve recognize that ri"ht in full ai-d iriadly furnish depositors with this information. We puhlish reports, from time to time, showing the condition of the Bank, ami furnish copies for our depositors inspection. -:" " . , W solicit your Bank account, and call your attention to our past record of nineteen years. J. B. OWEN, President. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. CHAS. E. FOSTER, LITTLETON, N. C. - - 'Phone 43. Civil Engineer and Surveyor. K. R. Road, Park, Timber, Town, Citv and Farm Work quickly done and accurately planned, mapped platted. Farm work solicited. and Dr. EL jN". W alters. Surgeon Dentist, Warrenton, North Carolina. Office opposite court house in Fleming arris Building. Pii aes: O.lice, N'o 59; ReUience. No. 66 Dr. Rob. S. IBootli, Warrenton, North Carolina. Ofi'ice Phone 69. Residence Plione 56-4 3312m Dr. W. W Taylor, Surgeon Dentist, iiendeis any services included in the practice of Dentistry. Crowu and bridge work, porcelain inlay, and cast fillings according to the methods of to day. Office 'Phone ; 2. . 27 fim Residence : 34. Dr P. J. Macon, Physician & Surgeon, "Warrenton, ' -.. North Carolina. Culls promptly sittendeJ to. opposite court house. Of3ce DR CHARLES if. PttTE. Consultation by Appointment. Ttiephone Connection. B. B. WILLIAMS, A i t o r n e y -' at - Law, Warrentoa, N. C. S- G: DANIEL, Attorney at Law, LITTLETON, N.-C. Practices in all the courts of the State. Money to loan on real estate, Reference Bank of Littleton. Will be in Warrenton every first Mondav. i. J. Hawkins, Llidcway, N. C. T. W. Bickett, Loujsburg, N. C. HAWKINS & BICKETT. Attorneys at Law. Li. Greek. H. A. Boyd. GREEN & BOYD, Attorneys at Law, Warrenton, North Carolina. - U s for Hatching! At Raleigh, Asheville and Munroe in Competition with the best the country affords. M r Barred Plymouth Rocks, lite and Golnen Wyahdottcs, were among the winners. They excel for laying and ' growing quick, strong broilers as well as for exhibition. I guarantee a fair hatch. : John. H. Fleming, Warren Plains, N. C. tt F. D. No. L : ' the Condition ANK, IV. c. LIABILITIES Capital Stock paid in, Surplus and Profits, Due to Banks, - $100,000.00 50,126.27 916.54 Ki 1 Cashier's Ch'ks Outstandin Deposits, Total, 487,046.86 $645,230. W. A. HUNT, Cashier. If You Want a Nice Bridal or - Birthday Present you can get it from your town Jeweler, who will sell as cheap asup-to-date goods can be sold for. I carry in stock, solid Gold Watch es, Bracelets, Ring-s, Broaches, Chains Lockets, Waist riu , Sets, Emhlem Rings and Pins; Silverware, and most all kind of Jewelrv. Fine Repairing work Guaranteed. Aspecialty. All Thos. A. Shearin, JEWELER, Wakkenton, N. O. For Sale! Bills for Unbled, Heart Pine Shingles and Lumber tilled on short notice. This is strictly original growth. For prices ap ply to. W. A. CON NELL, INEZ, N. C. 20,000 TELEGRAPH OPERATORS NEEDED Young Men Prepare Yourselves For Good Positions. On account of t'ue.iie-v 8 hour 15 pa&sed by congress iu lh interest of telegraphers, n:i-l also on account of so mftuv imw roilroa'.lsbeisist built aui.1 oi.l hues extended, nn udukuhI demniil for operators has been denied. Coiift-rva tive estimates have placed tha number of additional Operators that will bo re quirt; d duriujj the next ten mouths at approximate ly 20.000. YOUNG MEN NOW IS YOUR OP PORTUNITYI Enroll iu our School NOW and in only four to sis month we will have jou qualified" for splendid p sitions. Telegraph Opera to: s receive from 50.00 upwards. Our school ha3 been established twenty years, its equipmeut is perfect; instruction thorough and practical; positions posi tively guaranteed our graduates. Hoard in Newimn is very che:.p; tbe town is healthful and the people are cordial. Two Wain Lire Eailrcad Wires run in to onr School rooms. No other school in the United States has su'jh up to date aud practical facilities for the benefit of its studente. Write at once for free, descriptive literature. SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY Newnau, Georgia. THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND MECHANIC ARTS. Practical education in Agricul ture; in Civil, Electrical an'd echanical Engineering, in Cot ton anufacturing, Dyeing and Industrial Chemistry. Tuition $45 a year; Board $10 a month. 120 Scholarships. Examinations for admission at the College on September 2. Address THE PRESIDENT, West Raleigh, N. C. PROCURE DA N DDE FEN Of t H Srawxiw orp'to-foi f tent3, trad& mark", O I copyriglitete.. IN ALL CCUNTRIES. I nTes?JirJ"n Washington saves 1? money and often the patent. 4 latent and Infringement Practice Exclusively. " ...cEUIHRTnN. D. C. mEmemszp&Fr&& w y mum- WAREENTON, OUR TICKETS! NATIONAL. President W. J. Bryan. Vice-President J. W. Kern. STATE. Governor W, VV. Kitehin. Lieut. Governor W. C. Newland. Secretary of State J. Bryan Grimes. State Treasurer B. R. Lacy. State Auditor B. F. Dixon. Attorney General T. W. Bickett. Commissioner of Agriculture W. A. Graham. Corporation Commissioner B. F. Aycock. ... Superintendent of Education J. Y. Joyner. Labor Commissioner M.L. Shipman. Congressman, 2nd Congressional Dis trict Claude Kitehin. . COUNTY House of Representative T. O. Rod well. Sheriff R. E. Davis. Register of Deeds J. A. Dowtin. Treasurer J. L. Coleman. Coroner Ed . Petar. Surveyor C. E. Foster. County Commissioners P. M. Stal ling, Walter Allen, J. T. Mills, . : C. G. Moore, F. B. Newell. Any Style or Size, Made from Photographs or tin types. Likeness guaranteed. R. Roy Smith wick. Manson, N. C. 9 us I lJlace your order for Casings. Ceiling and Flooring while we have clear lumber, and can fur nish just what is wanted. We can furnish a limited quan tity of No. 1 Bevel Siding, and enough knotty to weatherboard a town. Ask forprices on any and every thing wanted whether rou gh or dressed, knotty cr clear, thick or thin, short or long. We have a superabundance already cut and dried. W. H. Pridgen, CSSEK, N. C. Wood's illgh-Grade Seeds. 1 The King of Soil Improvers, s!so makes sp!e:idid fall, winter End spring grazing, the earliest green feed, or a good hay crop. CRIMSON CLOVER will in crease the- productiveness of the land more than twenty times as rauch as the same amount spent in commercial fertilizers. Can be sown by itself or at the last work ing of corn, cotton or other culti vated crops. Wood's Trads Mark Crimson Clover Seed is the best quality obtainable, of tested germination, and free from impurities and objec tionable weed seeds. Write for "Wood's Crop Special" giving prices and information about Crimson Clover and , other Seasonable Seeds. V (1 Sesdsrnen, Richmond, Va. If farmers would raise their own supplies at home, they need erive themselves no concern about reported advance in the prices of flour, meat and hay. But just so long as they cultivate exclusively what is called the money crops and depend upon purchasing their supplies in the West, they are going to have a hard time and fail to prosper Greenville Reflector. u-nd TRADE -MARKS promptly obtained in j all countries, or no loe. no obtain PATENTS ' THAT PAY, advertise them thori.si;y, at our expense, and iclp you to succoss. Send model, photo or sketch for FREE report on patentability. 20 years' practice. SUR PASSING REFERENCES. For free Guide i Book on Profitable Patents write to 503-503 Seventh Street, WASHINGTON, C5. G. 6Hf Portraits. Don Wast V4 PII et !Tliaed'at2 reJkf from N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1908. Achievement. , I cannot see the veiled face of success, My weary efforts in the shadow luric; I -cannot guess reward beyond the stress But I can work. I cannot find the life where I belong, The heart with need of me all else above; I cannot be the burden of Love's song- But I can love. I cannot always hopeful be, and brave; The long hard struggle will not seem worth while, - - I cannot quench the slow tears crave But I can smile. . - Selected. DEMAND FOR SPEAKERS. There is an unprecedent de mand for Democratic speak ers in every section of the country -in this campaign, ac cording to J. W. At wood, mem ber of the Natiorial Committee, who is in charge of the speakers' bureau at the headquarters of the Democratic National Com mittee. Mr. Atwood only reach ed Chicago yesterday. It did not require any great length of time for the breezy Kansan. to get things going. His is the last of the bureaus of Democratic Head quarters to begin operation, but he has perfected a thorough or ganization, -and has scheduled dates for many of the star orators of the party in those states which the Democratic leaders consider righting ground. No section of the country will be neglected. Mr. Atwood em phasized the fact that the speak ers' bureau will be just as busy in the Republican State of Penn sylvania as it will in other states throughout t ie country. The speakers' bureau will be conducted from this city, though it is possible that branch quart ers may be established in New York later on in the campaign. The volunteer speakers include most of the men prominent in the party, among "whom is Judge Alton B. Parker, the nominee fou r years ago. "I have been connected with a number of political campaigns," observed Mr. Atwood, "but the demand for speakers this year is something truly remarkable. Here I am confronted with hund reds of letters asking for speak ers, and the camrmign is hardly begun This demand for Dem ocratic argument and oratory is a revelation to me, and I think it carries its own significance. "Another thing which has im pressed me since I reached Chi cago and tackled the mass of cor respondence you see before me, is the willingness of leading Dem ocratic speakers to do voluntary work in the campaign. Nearly a score of Democrats in the United States Senate have tendered us their services and volunteered to defray their own expenses. The same is true of members of the House. A large number of them have agreed to take the "stump," going wherever needed, and with out cost to the committee. Party workers are prompted by a de gree of patriotism this year that is refreshing ana speaks wen ior i 1 f , . i i -tin 1 our cause. "You ask me about Mr. Bryan's chances in Kansas? Certainly, I think he will get the electoral vote. I have just returned. from a trip across the state, part of which was covered in an auto, and I made it a point to talk to all kinds and conditions of peo ple. Everywhere I stopped I en countered Republicans who will support Bryan and Kern. Many of them said they would cast heir first Democratic vote this -r r . "i TT"V year. 1 iau to near or a uemo- crat who will not vote the national ticket. The spirit of harmony prevailed in the organization as it has not for years. This is true of all sections. "Thomas J. ence. Watermelons are not quite so plentiful as they were. Better eave them off anyway, as it is getting late. Kakes Kidneys and Bladder Right LEPER FROM THIS STATE. In Lonely Tent on Banks of Poto macAwaits His Fate. Washington, D. C With his religious faith his only solace, Jno. Early, a leper, is isolated in a lonely tent on the Potomac river where, guarded day and nigh, he awaits his fate. At Lynn, N. C, his wife and child face the horror of becoming victims of the dis ease. The health authorities are taking steps to get him out of the country. They have appealed to the North Carolina health authori to have him removed to his home. He may possibly be sent to the leper colony in Louisiana. It is supposed that Early . caught the disease in the Philippines. He is an ex-captain in the Salvation Army, and conducted services at Oswego, N. Y. He recently work ed at Lynn, N. C, where his family now resides. The discovery of the case was made Friday, but the facts were not made public by the health de partment until yesterday. Early has been placed in a tent especial ly erected for his isolation in the rear of the smallpox quarantine station near the district jail on the bank of eastern branch of the Potomac. He will be kept there under guard until cold weather comes when if necessary a house will be built to make him more comfortable. He has been sup plied with bed clothes and cloth ing and utensils necessary for living. His food is carried to him and poured into the vessels sup plied for his personal use. Early asked the health depart ment to keep from his wife infor mation as to the character of his illness. This being impossible he expressed a desire to return to his wife and child and to be permitted to die near them. "If this is not possible then am perfectly willing to remain right here or anywhere else the authorities may say until the end comes" said he. Your Mind in Order Minds that are filled scientifi cally, like well-packed trunks, with everything in order, hold much more than those into which all manner of things are thrown man fashion, higgledy-piggledy. Woman's Home Companion foi September. Cherry Jelly From Apples. To make cherry jelly'out of ap pies, throw a handful of cherry leaves into the jelly while boiling, After the leaves have boiled some time they can easily be lifted out. Jelly made this way tastes exactly like cherry jelly. Wo man's Home Companion for Sep tember. ' If vou have vistors, and are not ashamed of your company let us know so we can put it in the paper. You owe it to your company as well as to your friends that there may be an interchange of visits and - neigh borly courtesies shown, but if fVAnTQenno r-f vloifn'TC 1Q . Tint, Ulirj Ml t JtUW VX ikjivvi-u , ' known you can hardly expect for the attentions to be paid them that thev might receive. Hen derson Gold Leaf. A Dreadful Thought. One day Mary, the charwoman, reported for service with a black eye. "Why Mary" said her sym pathetic mistress; "what a bad eye you have!" : "Yes'm." - "Well there's one consolation. It might have been worse." "Yes'm." "You misrht have had both of them hurt." "Yes'm. Or worse'ri that: I might not ha' -been married at all" Everybody's Magazine. Get our prices before buying that Buggy or Wagon. W. B. Boyd & Co. LUMBER FOR SALE! We have on hand 10,000 feet of 10 inch boards 12x14 and 16 foot lengths. Will sell all or any part of it. Warren- Supply Co. . A Large Woodworking Plant for Portland. The Grand Rapids Show Case Company, of Grand Rapids, Mich., through their representa tives, Messrs. H. and W. K. Wil liams, vice-presidents and S. D Young, treasurer, have closed negotiations whereby they con solidate their interests with the Lutke Manufacturing Company, of Portland. , When interviewed at the Port land Hotel, Messrs. Young and Williams expressed themselves in enthusiastic terms over Port land and the entire Pacific Coast. We wished to know what special inducements our city offered and they promptly outlined their rea sons for coming here: "Geographically," they said, Lhe location of your city is ideal; your ireignt rates ior our dusi ness are the best On the coast; your supply of raw materials is inexhaustible; the prices are low and all that is needed is skilled mechanics to convert it into mer chantable shape. We have been surprised and gratified to note the undeveloped possibilities for furniture purposes that lie in some of your many woods. Of course it will take time to bring their merits, prominently before the public, but it is going to be done and very soon. "No, we will not make our homes in Portland; while it is a magnificent city we feel this move would be unnecessary. We were surprised at the capable organi zation of the Lutke Manufactur ing Company, some of its mem bers having been steadily con nected with the company for more than 25 years. Our reasons for consolidation are many. Large savings will be effected in adver tising, buying and selling our product. " Yes, we will make many im provements, among them an ad dition which will practically double the size of the present factory and will add many thou sand dollars worth of machinery. We will ship the new machinery immediately upon our return East and the improvements on the factory will be commenced at once." This new impetus to the furni ture manufacturing life of Port land means more than one ap preciates at the first thought Portland manufactures more lum ber than any city in the world, her shipping: facilities are the best; her large population gives abundant labor; yet but few man ufacturers in the furniture line thus far are alive to the situation. The Grand Rapids Show Case Company are the largest man ufacturers in the world and are considered most successful and progressive and we congratulate them most heartily upon their far-sightedness in casting their lot with a combined capital of almost $1,000,000 will give them facilities that can't be offered by any other similiar manufacturer in the world and with the splen did" shipping facilities our city offers to South America and the Orient will enable them to in crease enormously their volume of trade coming from this source. This , company will do all of their Coast, South American and Oriental manufacturing at this point, which means a large de mand will be created for lumber and similar products and that they Will give employment to several hundred men. The Lutke Manufacturing Company, with Mr. Robert Lutke as manager, has been identified with the man ufacturing life of Portland for more than 25 years. Their store fixtures and showcases have gone into almost every city, town and hamlet west of the Rocky Mount ains and with their splendid rep utation, together with the in creased facilities afforded by the Rapids Show Case Company will . -1 t I 21 give them advantages not to De found anywhere in this country. Mr; Robert Lutke becomes a director in the Grand Rapids Show Case Company and remains as heretofore, themanager of the utke Manufacturing Company Portland, Oregan Telegram, Aug. 10th. j NO. 20. THE VALUE OF A SMILE. What it Did for a Scotchman in Calcutta During Plague. . On the door leading into a pri vate office of the treasurer of one of the Hartford banking institu tions may be seen by all coiners a plain white card, on which are these two words: "Keep Smil ing." Ask the treasurer the signifi cance of the placard, and he will say simply! Just "keep smil ing." That makes everything easy. That'd what smiles are for. A good unfeigned, sincere smile is a veritable battering-ram to knock hard things out of the way. Sometimes I smile out loud, all to myself, when I run against anything hard; and the invitation is out to whoever enters my door. I take it that people will smile as they' read the card, and I want them to continue the act while in here!" v He tells of a visitor who came to see him last winter, a Scotch man, who had served in India in the army. "My dear sir," said the visitor, "I am greeting that legend heartily. Many years ago, when the plague was rag ing, I was in Calcutta and sick. The hospitals were full, and with other patients I was lying in a shed, a very sick man. On each side of me a poor chap had died, when a man came around with one of the doctors to measure the bodies. As they finished the second fellow's measurement they looked at me, and the man said: 'Three of 'em heigh?' and whipped out his tape measure at my side. In spite of all effort, I could only stare. To save my life I couldn't speak or move. All I could do was to smile, and I just smiled. Instead of the measuring line I was given better attention, and recovered. The smile did it! That's right! 'Keep smiling.'" Hartford Times. "Saving the Waste." The people of Texas are being urged, because of an abundance of fruit greater than the market will readily take, to establish can neries m order to save . the waste. " The South loses through not saving the waste many miK lions of dollars annually. -It leaves vast quantities of fruit to rot on the ground and then in the winter buys canned goods from other sections. When the whole South will learn to do its utmost in raising fruits and its utmost in canning and drying fruits, not only for its own" consumption, but for shipment to other less favored regions, it will have add ed to the prosperity of its farm ers and the prosperity of all others. Manufacturers' Record. To Keep Salt Dry "To prevent salt in saltcellars from becoming damp and lumpy, when filling them put in ten to twelve pieces of rice," says Wo man's Home Companion for Sep tember. This will not come through the holes in the cover of the saltcellars, but will break the lumps of salt and gather the moisture; thus the salt is always dry and fine." The great Redwood Forest in California has been bought by a wealthy man and presented to the United States as the only way to prevent the destruction of the giant trees. The redwood is pe culiar to California, and grows nowhere else. The woods are in a primitive state, only a few foot paths leading through them until recently, when a wagon j"oad was constructed. None of the big trees have been cut down and they remain as they have been for a thousand years. Scientist have estimated that it has taken two to four thousand years for the redwood trees to grow to their present size. They cer tainly are giants in comparison with other forest trees. Some of them reach 300 feet in height, and it is more than 100 feet on many of them to the first limb. West Baden Journal. i ! r i ' b 'i ill- t
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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Sept. 4, 1908, edition 1
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