Will fMrfflrW r JAS. G. BOYLIN, EDITOK AND PUBLISHES PUBIilSHED MONIATS AND THURSDAYS $1.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADVANCE ' Volume 27 Wadesboro, N. C, Monday, September 19, 1910 Number 85 II I I I I I I I I C I I I I I I I I I I I i iOTOICUECimL REPUBLICANS CAST ' DOWN. Hi I WITH ECZEI Until I was Cured by Cuticura Remedies. Body and Face were Covered. Terrible Pain and Itching. Made Up Mind Death was Near and Longed to be at Rest. Began to Feel Better After First Bath with Cuticura Soap and Appli cation of Cuticura Ointment. No tongue can tell how I suffered for fire years with itching and bleeding eczema, until 1 was cured by the Cuticura Remedies, and I am so grateful I want the world to know, for what helped me will help others. My body and face were covered with sores. One day it would seem to be better, and then break out again with the most terrible pain and itching. I have been sick several times, but never in my life did I experience such awful suffering as with this eczema. I had made up my mind that death was near at hand, and I longed for that time when I would be at rest. I had tried many dif ferent doctors and medicines without success, and my mother brought me the Cuticura Remedies, insisting that I try them. I began to feel better after the first bath with Cuticura Soap, and one application of Cuticura Ointment. , I continued with the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint ment, and have taken four bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, and consider myself well. This, was nine years ago and I Lave had no return of the trouble since. Any person having any doubt about this wonderful cure by the Cuticura Rem edies can write to my address. x (Signed) Mrs. ALTIE ETSON, Oct. 16, 1909. 93 Inn Road, Battle Creek, Mich. Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., 131 Columbus Ave., Boston, for 32-page Cuticura Book, a guide to the beat treatment of skia affection, from pimples to ecaema. OiatDoYouDrink? If you drink Coffee you will find our Royal Blend High Grade always uniform in quality, packed in 3-pound sealed cans for the price of $1.00 per can. As a coffee of excep tional value and superior merit, we offer our Gold Medal Brand Coffee which is pleasing many of our most particular coffee customers. Packed only in 1-pound cans for the price of 25 cents per can. If vou like a cud of good tea, try a small can oi our White House Llixed Tea which is high grade and has perfect ciip qualities. Hardison Co. Washington Special to Raleigh News and Observer, 13th. , . The Republicans regard the great Democratic victory In Maine as a ! catastrophe, and have given up all hope of carrying the house in the November election. They are now concerned about saving such States as New York, Ohio, Indiana and Massachusetts, which threaten to fol low the lead of Maine and elect Dem- ocartic Senators. The House is gone; it is the preservation of a majority ki the Senate that is now. worrying Republican leaden io the Nation. There has been do such political upheaval since the elevation of Abra ham Lincoln to the Presidency as occurred in Maine' yesterday.. It I must be remembered that the Demo crats have not elected a member of Congress in the Pine Tree State since the administration of Martin Van Buren, which is reaching back more than half a century. - It ia apparent therefore that the discontent that drives a Maine Republican , to - vote for a Democrat or stay away from the poll must be of a very serious character. And if conditions are jsncn as to drive Republicans io Maine to vote the Democratic ticket, is it not more than .reasonable that Republicans in New Yoik, New Jer sey, Unio and other States that are more or less independent, politically will get aboard the Democratic band wagon this year? That is the trend of all political talk today. Batting Ilia Minister Right. Youth's Companion. He was a rather small boy which makes what the New York Times : relates concerning him all the more amusing. The minister, in one of his paro chial visits, met the boy and asked what o'clock it was. "About twelve, Mr. Bent," re plied he, for he knew the minister. "Really! I thought it had been more." "It's never any more here; it just begins at one again." HOW BIG WILL CONGRESS GROW? OF MEN WHO GLORY IN THEIR i ' SHAME. THE SCHOOL AGE. w iii m How can the baby'arow strong if the nursing mother is pale and delicate? Scott's Emulsion makes the mother strong and well; increases and en riches the baby's food. ir.Vit. Buy Money Orders OF THE Southern Savings Bank, FuchUnd Wadcabora AnsoavllI thereby keeping your money at home, instead of patronizing out side Interests, as you will if you buy money orders of the post office or the express company. Youth's Companion. One of the most important duties of Congress in the near future eith er the present Congress or the one to be elected in November is the re apportionment of Representatives among the states. The Constitution requires this to be done after each decennial census. After the census of 1900, the num ber of districts was increased from three hundred and fifty-six to three hundred and eighty-six. To prevent a still greater increase, the unit of population for a district was raised by about twenty-five thousand. The admission of Oklahoma as a state has since added five members to the House. The director of the census has late ly estimated that the country has gained fourteen million population In ten years. If Congress makes the apportionment, on the same basis as after the last-census, there will be four hundred and fiity Congressmen in the near future, or fifty-nine more than at present. If, on the other handt it should attempt to prevent an increase, the necessary enlarge ment of the districts would deprive some of the states of one or more of their Representatives. Some conservative leaders tried to check the growth of the House at the time of the last reapportionment but the Representatives from' the states which would have lost men)' bers under the plan combined in op position. As a result, thirty new districts were created, and no state lost a Congressman. The size of the districts' has con tinued to grow for more than a cen tury. In 1300 thf re was a Congress man for every thirty-five thousand of the population. In 1900 a Con gressman represented about two hun dred thousand persons. As no one expects fifty or more members to be added to the House, the new unit of representation will again be enlarged. If it should be proposed to make it so large as to decrease the representa tion of a state, the Congressmen from that state aie likely to fight against the plan. . The size of the House has been re duced but once, and that was after the census of 1840. New York and Virginia then lost six members each, Pennsylvania four, and a few other states one or two. But Illinois gained four, and Indiana and Missouri three, and Ohio two. Tbfe was at a time when a district contained only sev enty thousand population. Even if the unexpected should happen, and the membership of the House be increased to four hundred and fifty, it would still lack more than two hundred of equaling the number in the British House of Commons. Baltimore Sun. It is said that at the outbreak of the French Revolution the ill-starred Marie Antoinette inquired what all the fuss was about, and, on being told that the people had no bread, very naively asked: "Then, why don't they eat cakes?" The poor Queen's remark was not due to beartlessness or indifierence, but to a dense ignorance of conditions; yet, if I children in its schools. Youth's Companion. With every year that passes more and more thought Is being given to the subject of the physical care of children. Attention is especially turning to that class of children whose parents are either too igno rant or too careless to pay proper re gard to their bodily welfare, and es pecially is the state growing to a sense of its duty in regard to the r DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs oyer Tomllnson's drug ttore. Phone 79. ? t : Wadesboro. N C. ROY1M. H.UNTL D. D. S. EY Office Second Floor of New National Bank Building. Work Done Day Night. PHONE NO 90. or mall Boy Stops Wadding Memphis Tenn., Dispatch. Although parental objections to the marriage had been overcome, small boys, led, it is charged, by the young brother of the bride, took exception to the match yesterday and by throwing dirt in the eyes of the groom, James A. Jones, of Jackson, Mlas., as he was on his way to the residence of the bride, Miss Hubert Dammann, in this city, successfully checked the ceremonies tor the time. The carriage containing the groom and attendants had almost reached the bride's residence when the charge of the youngsters was made, which ended in a specialist being called to treat the groom and caused tempo rary adandonment of the wedding. Coffins and CasMs When yon want a nice Coffin ei C&sket. at a reasonable trio examine the line I earry. I have them from the cheapest to tie neatf It Saved Ilia L.g. "All thought I'd lose my leg," writes J. A.. Swenson, of Watertown, Wis. Ten years of eczema, that la doctors could not cure, had at last laid me up. Then Buck- ten's Arnica Salve cured it, sound and well." Infallible for Skin Eruptions, Ec zema, Salt Rheum. Boils, Fever Sores, Burns, Scalds, Cuts and Piles. 25c at ! Parsons Drug Co. For Sale at Grass Farm. Dale ice Hearse Pure Bred Scotch-Topped Shorthorn Cattle Bulls, Cows and Heifers. These cattle will be sold at very moderate prices, considering (.breeding and inviduality. WritA fir mmti nnd m Is always m readiness, and every 1 &. u. CARPENTER, feature of the undertaking btui I Rout l, AnsonvUle, N. C ness receives my careful attea tinn. whnthnr titm nr niartit BUMAL BOES.""1' " W. F. GRAY, D. D. S. S. S. Shepherd The Undertaker Notice. (OFICS IN SMITH A PUN LAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C. All Operations Warranted Notice. , What can you think of to elevate the mind of man, girl or boy more than the blending of beautiful musical tones. If this be true let us take the king of musi cal instruments and improve ou spare moments by uniting these tones with the lovely sentiment of song. In the meantime if you have such' violins that are out of repair or. not properly adjusted, bring them to J as. H. Ingram, Wadesboro, N. C,. and have then looked over. Notice Notice is hereby given that an applica tioa will be made to Gov. W. W. Kitchin for the pardon of Lewis N. Jones, convicted of murder in the second degree in the Superior Court of Anson county in 1905, and who is now serving a 20 year sentence in the State prison. This Sept. 3rd, 1910. State of North Carolina, I , Anson County In the Superior Court. Sarah Ann Douglas " vs " Henry Douglas. 5TOTICB TO NONRESIDENT DEFENDANT. Henry JJouglas, the defendant above named, will Aake notice, that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Anson County, the same being an action for a divorce from the bonds of matrimony; said defendant will further take notice that he is reouir- ed to appear at the next term of . the Su perior Court of said County, which con venes on the third day of October, If 10, and answer or demur to the Complain! of the plaintiff or the relief therein demand ed will be granted. Done at office In Wadesboro, this this the 10th day of September. FRANK L. DUNDAP. Clerk of the Superior Court of Anson carried to the ears of the already over-wrought populace we can easily imagine the effect it must have had on it. We are reminded of the incident by some remarks infinitely more shocking than that of the French Queen, and made.vnot in ignorance, bat with full knowledge, by a cool, calculating man of the worljTUn the recent eviction trials in New York. According to the press accounts, no tice to vacate was served on a striker while bis wife's dead body lay in the house and himself and seven children were gathered about the corpse. When asked by the judge if he had known of these conditions, the land lord coldly replied: "I cetainly did bat they are undesirable tenants, and I want to put them out." "Haven't ym any feeling?" roared the judg. U's merely a matter of business," came the answer. It is not difficult to estimate the effect of such inhuman utterances on the strikers, and the poverty-stricken generally. Men like this unfeeling landlord do more tof promote the growth of socialism tbi ,n all the socialist orators and so cle '1st literature combined. , Ve are not concerned just here and now with the merits or demerits of the strike, or even with the justice or injustice of the Eviction, but only with the altogether needlessly severe in fact, almost incredibly brutal circumstances attending some of them, and particularly with the un eviable type of man revealed by fore going replies. The landlord in ques tion gave his answers ' apparently without any hesitation or regret or diffidence. II is act brought no blush of shame to his cheek. It appeared to him quite the proper and natural proceeding. "Certainly I knew it," said he, "and what of it? What else di1 ,yea.expect? It's purely and simply a matter of business, and of course business is business.'" No doubt he felt proud of himself as a competent rrpresentative and spokes man of his tribe the Qradgrind tribe v ho live for money alone, who talk ohly money and think only money, and judge and value all things by money standards. They are of the class so well portrayed by Dickens, the men who believe that "all is fair," not only "in love and war," but also in the pursuit of gain. They are the men who glory In their hard sense and strictly business makeup; who seem to regard, not love and sympathy, but red rapine and the use of tooth and claw as' "creation's final law." There ss no mawkish or maudlin sentimentally about them, no woman-hearted weaknesses or vain blubberings from pent-up emo tions. The truth is, they are glorying simply in the absence of the traits that make men human glorying in tneir uaeness to the beast or prey. The love of money has sapped their humanity and transformed them in to brutes, ruthlessly and relentlessly crushing whatever hinders their mad pursuit of the money-god whom they adore. It is by contract with such men that we come to realize the full force and bearing of Roosevelt's dic tum, "I am for human rights above property rights," and Bryan's, "I am for men above the dollar." It is incidents like this that enable us to see clearly the reason for the words of the wise man: "There is not a more iniquitous thing than to love money, for such a one setteth his own soul to sale." Ortalnly this stoical Indifference to the sufferings of others may be due to other causes besides money greed though that is its most fruitful source but whatever its cause or wheler it be natural or assumed, it is assuredly no matter for boasting. The Stoic philosophy bas its good pciuts. It may help to develop in us a laudable self control, but it is not the proper guide in our attitude to ward human misery when the misery is not our own but our fellow-man's. It would be an evil and a bitter thing for the world should men generally come to be ashamed of displaying human feeling and emotion and let the brute that Is in them get the up per hand nf the man. NO AMERICAN "WONDER." The schools are no longer looked upon as dumps,, where children can be placed and kept without discrim ination as to age, capacity or physi cal condition. Parents as well as pedagogists are growing more and more awakened to the absolute loss of-time involved in sending little children to v the public schools who have no right to be there. A sick child has no place in the school atal, a defective child has no place among children who are normal, and all children below ten years of age. are being treated with nothing short of cruelty when the full complement of hours is exacted from them. There was never yet seen a normal child who was fitted to sit still in doors from nine o'clock until four, with a break of only one hour at noon. Such an arrangement means in the winter no daylight playtime at all. The child is kept at an unnat ural tension when attention is de manded of him for hours at a stretch, and study is made odious to him, so that lessons become associated in his mind with all that is wearisome and to be avoided. Many a poor little boy plays truant and takes his punishment again and again. He knows that retribution is inevitable, and yet he faces it be cause, although he could not express it, the alternative that of spending the long day at the school desk is intolerable. He is not a natural crim inal, he is not a potential tramp, al though he may become one under the system. He is simply a natural, healthy little boy, able to attend to his teacher op to a certain point, and then ablif no longer, do what he or his teadber wlll If truancy and backwardness and inattention i iult from some physi cal defeat, such as Imperfect eyes or deafness, theaae ia-eveo-more cruel, and natural mental development is a physical imposibiiity until the de fects are remedied. Much good work has already been done in the direction of physical ex amination of defective children, and mucn nas also been done to remedy the partial or actual starvation which is me piteous state of so many chil dren of the poorer classes; but much remains to. be done, and especially in the matter of the number of hours In scnooi demanded of children under ten years of age. OLD PEE DEE WARSHIP. O Warkaaftb World, Viva Arc Utilitarian 1st Idlaa. Harrington Emerson In Engineering Mag azine. Of the seven modern wonder works of the world not one is American. One of them, 400 years old, has its inspiration in religion St. Peter's at Rome, the largest church ever built; the second, 100 years old, ia the great est triumphal arch evr erected, com memorating the victories of the great conqueror, Napoleon I; the five others are modern engineering works. It ia typical of the changed ideal of the agea that only one of the ancient wonders was utilitarian and ODly one of the modern wonders ia religious, five being very distinctly utili tarian: yet noble ideals gave al! birth. Of the utilitarian works the Suez Canal easily comes first. It shortens the sea route from northern Europe to the Orient by 5,000 milea, between certain ports more than half. The canal was begun in 1855, estimated to cost $30,000,000 and to be finished in 1864. Its actual cost was SO,000 000 and it was opened in 1869. The ideal was realized, but none of the 11 other efficiency principles was thoroughly applied, most of them not at all; hence both the double time and trebled co-it. The next great engineering work was also French, the Eiffel Tower, rising a thousand feet into the air, at once the highest structure erected by man and the prototype of modern American steel construction, which as a matter of course followed when passenger elevators or lifts were prac tical. m The third great wonder is the Firth of Forth Bridge; cantilevers, similar to three pairs of great Eiffel Towers, each pair joined at its base, each half stretching out horizontally 900 feet without end support. This bridge ia massive indesign because wind pres sure is more dangerous thon train- load. The fourth modern wonder ia the SL Gothard tunnel, 12 miles long, under the Alps. There was a Bren ner Railroad route over the Austrian Alps; a Mount Cents tunnel under the French Alps, but Italy, Switzer land and Germauy combined to di vert the century-old trade between South and North to a shorter new route, the key to the situation being the long tunnel, more than twice aa long as any American railroad tunnel. The seventh and last of the modern wonders are twin cousin ships, the Lusitania and the Mauretania, sub sidized and designed to restore to Great Britain the blue ribbon of the sea. Of these seven wonders one be longs to Italy, one jointly to Italy and Switzerland, three belong to France and two to Great Britain. HUtarta Old VnnI Ballt at Pas On Brldg Jul Bcfara tfca Claaa af laa War. Cheraw Chronicle. The old Pee Dee man-of-war, baiit at the Pee Dee bridge, where the A. C. L. crosses the river at Pee Dee, was raised from its watery grave near Georgetown recently, where It had lain since the war. W. F. Clayton, E?q., ol Florence, was a lieutent on the Pee Dee and assisted in its construction. The older resi dents of that section remember dis tinctly when the vessel was built, but only a few were aware of it fate. The old Pee Dee was expected to accomplish wonders on the sea bat she was Bunk by her officers to keep ber from falling into the hands of the enemy. The following is from the News and Courier: "After lying at the bottom of the Pee Dee river, near Georgetown, and proving an instruction and a menace to navigation for 45 years, the Con federate steamer Pee Dee has been raised, some oi her boners and ma chinery removed and the hull blown to pieces with dynamite to clear the channel. The work was done under the supervision of Captain J. C Templett, in command of the dredge Cheraw, of the United States engi neering department A number of cannon balls were found in the steamer's hold, but no guns were aboard "The Pee Dee was built near Pee Dee bridge for the purpose of des- cending the river and breaking the blockade in Wlnyah bay. She was launched just too late to accomplish this object, however, for Sherman's army had formed a junction with the Federal squadron, and the whole country was infested by land and sea in such force as to make the attempt impossible of success. The steamer was a powerfully built vessel of war, her hull being constructed of sea soned oak eighteen inches thick, and her frame of exceptionably heavy timbers. She was 150 feet in length with a 25-foot beam, and she was fitted out with powerful engines. "Very little information can be ob tained aa to the exact causes which ed to her destruction, but It Is cer tain that she was sunk by the Con federates to keep her falling into the hands of the enemy, and it is proba ble that this took place Bhortly after she was put in commission. Only a few milea intervened between the bridge where she was put into the water and the place where she found her resting place for all these years. Captain Tamplett states that the timbers were perfectly sound, with the exception of the boards which lormed ber deck. FOri BALD HEADS. GOOD WAY TO USE HYOMEI FOR CATARRH. A Treatment That Casts Nothing If It Vails. We want you to try three large bottles of Rexall "93" Hair Tonic on our personal guarantee that the trial will not cost you a penny if it does not give you absolute satisfaction. That's proof of our faith in this remedy, and it should indisputa biy demonstrate that we know what we are talking about when we say that Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will-grow hair on bald beads, except where baldness has been of such long duration that the roots of the hair are entirely dead, the follicles closed and grown over, and the scalp is glazed. T . rcuieinDer, we are basing our statements upon what has already been accomplished by the use of Rexall "93" Hair Tonic, and we nave the right to assnme that what it has done for thousands of others it will do for you. In any event you cannot lose anything by giving it a trial on our liberal guarantee. 1 wo eizea, 50c. and $1.00. Remem ber, you can obtain Rexall Heme uies in id ia community only at our store The Rexall Store. The Par sons Drug Co. Besides breataing through the in haler a lew times a day. many ca tarrh sufferers write that tiny find inhaling HYOMEI (pronounce it High-o-oie)from a bowl of steaming water each night before retiring a great aid in curing stubborn cases. Fill a bowl half full of boiling wa ter; pour into the water a teaspoonful of HYOMEI, cover head and bowl with a towel, and breathe through nose and mouth the pleasant, medi cated, antiseptic and healing vapor that arises. This method relieves that stuffiness at once, and makes your head feel fine. You can get a bottle of HYOMEI at druggists everywhere or at Par sons Drug Co. far only 50 cents. Ask for extra bottle TIYOMEI Inbalent. But bear in mind that a HYOMEI outfit which includes inhaler and bottle of HYOMEI costs $1.00. HYOMEI is guaranteed to cure ca tarrh, sore throat, coughs, colds, as thma and croup, or money back. Try it on that generous basis. Jay la Mala. - Portland Eastern Argus. Glory be! "We are the people." Carry the news to Beverly. It was a landslide all right. Uentlemen, Governor Plaistedl 'Tis a long lane that .has no turn ing. It was a bad day-for protection, graft and grafters. On with the Democratic dance; let Joy be unconflned! You cannot even fool all Maine Republicans all the time. At this writing it looks as though Maine t had gone "h ' bent" againl The Kicker-Fernald combination can now drown their sorrow in Po land water. It bas been a long, hard, up-hill tug, Brother Democrats, but we have got there at lasti Maine starts the Democratic ava lanche. Now watch it go thunder-: ing along through State after State! The Democrats of Maine send greetings to the nationat Democracy. Long live Jeffersonian Democracy! The Republican party of Maine has got what it has long deserved -and thousands of Republicans sa; Amen! i 200,000 First Class Brick ready for delivery. Write or phone for prices POLKTON BRICK CO. Nature's greatest gift to the hnma family is Hollister's Rocky Mountain Te. With it your family is fully protecte Best baby medlcinein the world. S5cent Tea or Tablets. Fox & Lyon. 1 MONEY LOST . If yon. fall to carry INSURANCE I write Fire, Accident, Health. Liability and Fly-Wheel Insurance. W. LEAK STEELE. PHONR NO. 163. Daa't Break Da wit. Severe strains on the vital organs, like strains on machinery, cause b&akdowns. You can't overtax stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels or nerves without serious danger to yourself. If you are weak or run down, ! or under strain of and kind, take Electric Bitterstbe matchless tonic medicine. Mrs. J. E. Van de Sande, of Kirkland, I1L. writes: "That I did not break down,! while enduring a most severe strain, for three months, Is due wholly to Electric Bitters." Use them and enjoy health ami v In South Central Kentucky Eight (8) good Farms in noted Burley Tobacco District and farming section; virgin soil; churches, schools and stores near by. Two (2) big Stone Mills, one (1) Saw Mill and Grist Mill, 1-4 to 1-2 mile from farms. This land is located 9 miles from Campbellsville, the county seat, one of the most thriving and enterprising towns in Kentucky. Payments Made to Suit the Purchaser. Kentucky farm, save this advertisement (as it will not. appear If interested in a again) and write TAYLOR, PRUETT& J ARVIS Carapbsllsvitl Kentucky County. . - teed. 50c. at Parsons Drug Co.