Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Sept. 25, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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V UJj. V . WARRENTON, N. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1908. NO. 29. Cob A checking account with a Bank is a great con venience, not only to the business and professional man, but to the farmer as well. I v More people would .keep such accounts if they knew just-how to go about it. We gladly assist those who need help in getting started. . ; We desire the accounts of firms and individuals and we extend to them every reasonablo courtesy and facility. THE CITIZENS BANK, HENDERSON, N. C. Resources,- one half a million Dollars. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. CHAS. E; FG STER, LITTLETON, N. C. - - 'Phone 43. Civil Engineer and Surveyor. R. R. Road, Park, ' Timber, Town, Citv and Farm "Work quickly done and accurately planned, mapped and platted. Farm work solicited. Dr. II. nST:-Walters4 Surgeon Dentist, Warrenton, North Carolina Office opposite t;ourt house in Fleming arris Building, fhonss: Oaiee. So 53; Re lence. No. 65 Dr. Hob. S. 13ootli, Dentist, Warrenton, North Carolina. ' ORice Phone 69. Residence i'hone5S-i 33-12ro Dr. v7. W. Taylor, :" Surg90H ZDexrtist, Renders uuj services included iu tbe of Deutistrv Crown and bruise work, porcelain mlay, ana casi F,ii;o ft.-i.iordiucr To me mewuua ui tn ,U. Office 'Phone 1 2. 34. " 27 fim Residence Dr P. J. Macon, Physician & Surgeon, Warrenton, North Carolina. Calls promptly attended to. Office opposite court house. DR CHARLES H. PEETE. Consultation by Appointment. Telephone Connection. B. B. WILLIAMS, Attorney - at - Law, Warrenton, 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. - M. J. Hawkins, Uidtreway. N. C. T. W. BlCKTT, Lonisburg, N. C. HAWKINS & BICKETT, Attorneys at La w. B. li. Gbeek. H. A. Botd. GREEN & BOYD, Attorneys at Law, Warrenton, North Carolina. Eg gs for Hatching! At Raleigh, Asheville and Munroe in Competition with the best the country affords. My Barred Plymouth Rocks, White and Golnen Wyandottcs, 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, Warrer Plains, N. C. U F. D. No. 1. vemence When you want a nice Birth-day c r Bridal present I can supply your wants, as I carry most anything you want. ' My nice line of Cut Glass and Sil verware will he in, in a few days, and you are cordially invited to come and inspect my nice stock. Remember I make a specialty of fine watch repairing. Thos. A. Shearin, JEWELER, Warkenton, - - - - N. C. 20,000 TELEGRAPH OPERATORS NEEDED Young: Men Prepare Yourselves For Good Positions. On recount of tbe new 8 hour Jaw passed by congress iu the interest of telegraphers, aul atao on account of so many new roilroads being built aud olJ 1 1 ii t-s extended, an uunsual tleman 1 for operators has heeu crest led. Conferva tive estimates have placed tha number of additional Operators that will be re quired during tbe next ten mouths at approximately 20 000. YOUNG MEN NOW 13 YOUR OP PORTUNITY1 Enroll in our School NOW and in only four to six month we will have jou qualified for splendid po fiitiouo. Telegraph OpnratKS receive from $50.00 upwards. Our school has been established tweuty years, its equipmeut is perfect; instruction thorough aud practical; positions posi tively guaranteed our graduates. Board iu Newuau is very cheap; the town is healtlifnl and the people are cordial. Two Main Lire Railroad Wires run iu to oar School rooms. No other school iu the United States has such up to date aud practical facilities for the benefit of its students. Write at once for free, descriptive literature. SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY Newnan, Georgia. Commissioner's Sale! By virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of Warren county, in the Special Proceeding, therein pending before the Clerk, wherein Charles J. Fleming, Admr. of T. R. Fleming is plaintiff, and Allie Turner and wife et al , heirs at law of T. R. Fleming, deceased, are defendants, I will sell by public auc tion for cash at the Court House doop - in Warrenton on Monday, . October 19, 1908, all that certain tract or par eel of land, situate nearBrodie in said county, adjoining the lands of D. P. Ayscue, Byron Brown, S. J. Pritch ard, and others, containing one hund red and fifty-three and one-third acres more or less. The sale will be made subject to the confirmation of the Court. This Sept. 1, 1908. - THOMAS M. PITTMAN, Commissioner. Wood's Seeds. Seed Wheat, ats. Rve and larley. 57 We are not only the largest aeai-vi ers in Seed Gram in the ooutn, duj, we sell the best, cleanest and heaviest qualities. Our stocks are secured from the best and largest yielding crops, and our warehouses are fully equipped with the best and most improved machinery for cleaning. If you want superior crops Plant Wood's Seeds. Prices quoted on request information about mailed free. n Descriptive Fall Catalogue,! (giving full information about all seeds, mailed free. 1 T. W-wood a SOUS, ) Seedsmen, - Richmond. Va. 1 1 OUR TICKETS! NATIONAL. President W. J. Bryan. Vice-President J. W. Kern. STATE. ' ' Governor W. W. Kitchin. 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 Kitchin. COUNTY House of Representative T. O.-Rod,-well. Sheriff R. E. Davis. - 1 Register of Deeds J. A. Dowtin. Treasurer J. L. Coleman. Coroner Ed. Petar. Surveyor C. E. Foster. County Commissioners -P. M. Stal lings, Walter Allen, J. T. Mills, C. G. Moore, F. B. Newell. Virginia State Fair and Its Fine Premiums The premium list of the Vir - ginia State Fair is being widely distributed, and copies can be ob- umed by addressing, Mark K. Lloyd, General Manager, Rich- mond, Va. It presents a large and excellent classification. The premiums have been increased over previous years, and amount abundance of fruit, but closer ex to $33,000.00. More than two- amination showed that the ground thirds of this very liberal sum under the trees was completely will go to the farmers of the State, the total premiums in each of the several departments being as follows: Cattle. $0,3000; Horses (exhibition) $3,400; Swine, $1,862; Sneep, fci.ado; -ounry, ,vw; while nearly $10,000 will be dis tributed among the exhibitors in the other departments. The race premiums amount to $11,500 di vided into 36 purses. A splendid feature is the offer ing for county exhibits of farm products and fruit. The sum of $225 has been set apart for the former, to be awarded for the best display in each of three di visions: (1), the section west of the Blue Ridge; (2), the Piedmont district; and, (3), the Tidewater and Middle sections of Virginia. The first premium is $50, and the second $25. The premiums for county exhibits of fruits are $100 and $50, respectively, to be award ed in two divisions, with the Blue Ridge as the line. There are more than one hundred classes in the Horticulture Department with prizes for both plate ($3.00 first and $2.00 second) and com mercial exhibits of fruit, 'lne classes for the best acre yield of hay and corn carry $50 first and $25 second premiums in each class; and the tobacco premiums are very attractive, nearly $300 being offered. Every farmer in Virginia is in terested in some department of the Fair, and, in fact, in most of the departments, and the wives, daughters and sons of the sturdy jrgmia yeomanry are equally fprps!-p,q At the head of the Virginia State Fair as President is a practical farmer, the Hon. Henry C. Stuart, of Russell county, a large shipper of cattle for export, and interested in every branch of farming. The Vice-Presidents are mostly farm ers, or otherwise prominent in hnsiness. and every officer and stockholder is promotion of horticulture. working for agriculture the and Kodol without doubt, .makes your stomach ttrong and wiJli!mosl iustiut ly relieve yon of all the ymptoms of indigestion. Jt will do this because it de iid of tbe natural digestive juices of the stumitoh so combined that it completely aigesis me iwu juo o the stomach will do it, so you see Ko dol ean't fail to help you and hely you piomptly. It is sold here by Hnnter Drug Co. In God's world and under the government of Christ, no evil has "come to. stay." Dr. S. F. Soovel. - " A Sure-encngh Knocker. J. C. Goodwin, of Reidsville, N. C, says: "Buckleu's ArnicaSalvaisa sure enough knocker for ulcers. A bad one came on my leg last summer, but that wonderful salve knocked it out in a few rounds. Not eveu a scar remained," Guaranteed for piles, sores, burns, etc. 25o, at O. A. Thomas drug store. - SYMPATHY. Not by sorrow or by sighing - . : Can we lift the heavy load Of the poor, the sick, the dying, ' Whom we meet upon the road; ; For we only help when bringing Faith and courage to their need, When we set the joy bells ringing In their hearts by word and deed. . By the glow of thoughts uplifted - - To God's everlasting hills. We can melt away the drifted Snow some lonely life that fills; By the hand-clasp strong, unfailing, i Thrilling hope from palm to palm, We can nerve some soul for scaling Heights that rise in sunny calm'. All around are those who. linger, Weak, despairing, full of fear, While with feeble beckoning finger They implore us to draw near. Let us pour the oil of gladness .- On their hopeless misery" :-'y. Banishing their grief and sadness By our radiant sympathy. ' - ' Parish Visitor. The Apple Bitter Rot. Occurrence in North Carolina. mis disease occurs in very ! destructive form throughout the Piedmont and eastern sections of the State, though it is possibly j less destructive further west. In 'a recent trip through the middle ' section of the State, the writer saw dozens of orchards ruined by this rot which, but for the pres ence of it would have yielded .largely. In many of the orchards Vistedf the trees were in fine 'condition, showing suitability of so an(j climate and they bore an covered with rotten apples and j that the apples still on the trees had numerous specks of soft brown rot. In many villages and towns all apples offered for sale ja stores were affected with this rot. The facts as stated above show the very destructive prevalence of this disease in this State. This rot has been known in de structive form in the United States since 1867. It is estimated to have done $1,500,000 of dam age in four counties in Illinois in 1900. In the Middle States the losses are estimated to be from one-half to three-fourths of the entire crop. The President of the National Apple Shippers Association estimated the dam ages in the United States in 1900 at $10,000,000. Description of the Bitter Rot. There are many different types of apple rot, some are hard, some soft, some wet, some dry, some of one color and some another, etc. The bitter rot of the apple, sometimes called the ripe rot, is a soft, wet, yellow rot, occuring usually as circular spots on the fruit. These spots, of which there may be from one to twenty or more on each apple, enlarge rapidly, lun together, and the whole fruit becomes a soft, rot ten mass. The disease usually begins while the fruit is still haneine: on the tree, and as the disease progresses, many of the apples fall to the ground below. (Jause of trie Kot. This rot is caused by a fungus, known as Glocosporium,the spores of which fall upon the apple, grow, pene trate it, and cause the decay. Spores are produced in immense quantities in small pustules, which appear upon the rotted surface. In many instances, the fungus passes the winter in can kered spots on the twigs and bark. . Treatment. There are two forms of treatment, both of which should be followed. First, inasmuch as the fungus is known to winter in the canker on the branches, it is important when the leaves are off the trees to carefully inspect the orchard, hunt out these cankers, cut them out and burn them, and thus re move the most dangerous source of spring infection. Second, the trees should be sprayed with Bordeaux Mixture in order to kill all spores which fall upon the fruit or twigs. Sprayings should be applied be fore the buds begin to swell in the spring, just after the blos soms fall, and every ten or four teen davs thereafter until the fruit is almost ripe. These two treatments combined will, to a very large extent, serve to control this very serious dis- ease. x . J-. Tjavujxs, . Biologist. FGIEYSiflBMYCURE Makes Kidneys and Bladder RiflM The New Bryan. It would be unfair not to recog nize the moderation of language, the directness and suavity of statement and the clearness of argument which distinguish this and other recent addresses of Mr. Bryan from the oftenf renzied rhetoric of his earlier , produc tions. The Sun. But nobody can deny that his speech at Des Moines yesterday was effective. It was, in fact, the most effective and soundest speech the man ever made. Much that he says is cruite be vond dis proof or denial. We recall no other public utterance of his cf which that might be said. The Times. These, testimonials to the changed tone of Mr. Bryan's ut terances refer to his recent ad dress at.Des Moines on the sub ject of the tariff. In this, as in his speech of acceptance, the moderation and dignity of which were nrst commended by The World, Mr. Bryan has done much to convince the country that he has outgrown some of the errors of youth and inexperience. A political leader who has a serious message to convey to his countrymen adds, weight to his words and gives strength to his cause by clothing his thoughts in language of soberness and wis dom. . Mr. Bryan's power as an, agitator is admitted. He makes a creditable beginning this year in a much higher role. New York World. Maine Goes Republican. Portland, Me., Sept. 15. Re turns early to-day from 468 out of 519 cities, towns and planta tions in the State gave for Gov ernoi Bert M. Mernald, Republican, of Portland, 72,117. Obidiah Gardner, Democrat, of Rockland, 64,993. This gives the State to the Re publicans by about 8,000 plurality as against 26,816 in the most re cent presidential year and 8,064 in 1896. The fight was really on the re-submission of the prohibi tion law to the voters. DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve reoimmended as the be6t thing to nse for piles. It is, of course, Rood for anything where a salve is nee led. Beware of of iiritahon. Sold by Hunter Drug Co. COME. Anything mi LIVING EXPENSES. Steady Upward Movement During Republican Rule. An interesting report from the Department of Commerce and Labor shows that last October the month which brought the Re- j publican panic from the depress ing effects of which the country has since suffered the wholesale prices of 258 representative sta ple articles reached the highest point known in the eighteen years for which the figures are given in the report, and doubtless the highest since the Civil War period. With the commodities divided into nine groups, everv group shows an increase of price in 1907 over 1906. For farm pro ducts tne increase was iu.y per cent.; for food, 4.6 per cent.; for clothing, 5.6 per cent.; for fuel and lighting, 2.4 per cent.; for metals and implements, 6.1 per cent.; for lumber and building material, 4.9 per cent.; for drugs and chemicals, 8.3 per cent.; for house furnishing goods, 6.8 per cent.; and for the miscellaneous group, 5 per cent. Thus were the people of the country impos ed upon in the period when their earning capacity was equal to the strain. After the panic, some reduction occurred, for the rea son simply that the masses could not pay the former prices, and the holders of stocks were com pelled to sell at lower figures. But it is known to all, at least to all heads of families, that the cost of living is yet out of proportion to the average incomes, kept so by a system which shuts out competition and privileges mo nopoly. Have the people not enough of the Republican panic and the Republican high prices? Buffalo Courier. A Paying Investment. Mr. John Wln't, of 38 Highland Ave. Houlton, M'liue. snys: "Have been troubled with aeonghevery winter and spring. Last winter 1 tried many ad vertised remedies, bnt the cough con tinued until I bought a 50o. ltottlc of Dr. Kiuy'a New Discovery; before that war half gnne, the cough was all goue. This winter the same happy result has followed; a few doses once mote ban ished the ntinual cough. I am now con vinced that Di. King's New Discovery is th best of alt cough and lung reme dies." Sold under guarantee at C. A. Thomas drng store. 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. SEE. a Man or Boy Most Complete Stock Shown in Warrenton. Hilliard-White Co. Advertisements, Like Clocks, Should Keep Running. A store's advertisements tell the people what is "doing" at that store what is new, what is inviting,, why to-day is a good time to visit the store. , . People look for the adv. to tell them these things just as naturally as they would look at a clock to tell the time. Sometimes a clock does not run sometimes a store's adv. does not. A "run-down" clock or adv. I are about equally unsatisfactory, 1 unserviceable, misleading, Curious things about it is that a merchant who would think it absurd to have a run-down" or out of-repair clock will, ; some times, deliberately let his adv. stop running. , It's not wise, nor "good business," nor defensible on any known grounds but, it's sometimes done. Ex. To Clean Furs. Furs may be readily cleaned at home by rubbing them with bran. Light is more troublesome than a darker kind, but it is worth the trouble and costs so little!. Buy a pound of bran at grocery or feed store. Divide it into two portions, placing one in the oven to heat. Spread the fur on table, put paper underneath, and rub it well with cold bran. Shake free of bran and brush with soft hat brush. Then rub the hot bran quite evenly into the fur, going over it with infinite patience. Afterward brush, then hang in the air. If the lining be soiled clean with a little gasoline, being careful not to dampen the fur. New Idea Woman's Magazine for October.. The New Pure Pood and Drug Law. We are pleased to anuonnco that Foley's Houey and Tar fsr coughs, nolds and lung troubles is not aff- cted by the National Pure Food and Drug law as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugt, and we recommend it as a safe remedy for children and adults. Hunter Drug Co. A man who has no sympathy for others is not a man. Healthy kidceys filter the impurities from the blood, and uuleas they do this .good health is impossible. Foley s Kiduey Cure makes sonud Kidneys ana will popitively cure all forms of kiduey and bladder diseases. I strenghtens the whole nvstem. Hunter Drug Co.- EE3 a BUY. Wears. Ever :::::::::
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 25, 1908, edition 1
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