Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / Oct. 26, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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fin0 Kg rUBMSELED MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS JAS. G. BOYLEN", EDITOR AND PUBLISHEB $1.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADVANCE Wadesboro, N. C., Thursday, October 26, 1911 Volume 27 Number 199 mil 1 1 A act ion J ale On Thursday Nov. 2 1911 at 2 P. M. The valuable National Hotel proper ty will be sold at auction to the high est bidder. This property located in the heart of growing Wadesboro, consists of the large three story hotel building, Banking house,' and barber shop, 3 separate buildings, besides much valuable real estate not covered by the buildings. The property will be cut into several lots and ofTerered separately then as a whole. Terms of sale one third cash, balance in five years in equal annual pay ments with interest on d ferred pay ments. Anson Real Estate And Insurance Co. WRIGHT'S SUCCESS WITH NEW! eweS'tiox. I Kill Devil HilLN. C. Oct. 24.- In a fifty-mild gale today Orville Wright went aloft and remained virtually stationary r in his glider, with which, hei is conducting experi ments in aerial stability. He was up nine minutes ami forty-five sec onds and maintained an altitude ol approximately 150 feet. The record breaking "flight" was the seventeenth of a series that be gan today when the rain ceased. The first glide lasted only 54 sec onds, each lengthening' until the fi nal one. The sum of the experi ment is understood here to mark a long step forward in the science of aviation and to point the way towar solving the problem' of automati cally preserving the equilibrium of heavier than air machines. When Lorin" Wright and Alexan der Ogllvie, the English avator. brought out the machine for the ini tial flight the wind gauge showed that the gale was 35 miles and freshening. Sand carried by the wind, pelted the aviators, the tiny particles cutting, like shot; In the opinion of the experimenters' no more trying weather condition un der which to make the test of the machiine could be found. The glider was equipped with rear rudder of 24 feet spread. In front, to preserve the balance, a ten-pound bag of sand was swung on . the end of rod extending eight feet in front of the aviator's seat. The ailerons, or balancing wings on the sides of the machines, was adjusted, and Orville Wright lifted himself into the seat. 'Let it go," he shouted. Lorin HIS OWN HARVEST. Youth's Companion. He was too old a man for the THE PREVENTION OP COLDS. Youth's Companion. The first ' few days of autumn- place, some said; even those -who. not necessarily , of the autumn of loved him for his long years of . the calendar, but of autumnal weath faithful service could not help no- er are likely to be marked by an REYNARD'S SHREWD HUNTING. Youth's Companion. Not long ago a subscriber of the Companion who Uvea in Utah wrote to tell of seeing a fox catch a chick en by running in circles underneath ticing that when he mounted the outbreak of colds. Then many whai its roost until the chicken, which pulpit stairs his step "was a. little have been free from this disagree- constantly turned Its head to watch dismissed all thought of It from I dizzy and fell from its perch. A their minds, are suddenly forced to I writer in Forest and Stream thus recognize that they have noses and corroborates this bit of observation : mucous memmbranes. I I was In Pike county, Pennsylva It is indeed discouraging to find I nia, a few days ago, when a reel that living all summer virtually in dent, whose reputation for veracity the open air has not apparently is excellent, told me a peculiar story made us more resistant to the in-1 The narrator has been a resident of fluences that produce a cold. We Pike county for a number of years, have lived in drafts natural drafts, and is fond of sport with gun and through open windows and on porch rod. One day he and a friend were es, and artificial drafts made . by out with their guns, when their at- the electric fan and never so much tention was attracted by what as sneezed. Now, with the first seemed to be a ruffed grouse they drop in the temperature below the I call them pheasants in Pike county, should be and, all things consid- point of comfort, we look angrily I The bird was sitting on the lower ered. the church needed a change; for the source of -the air playing branch of a large tree, and was of pastors. j round our heads; pull down the turning Its head about in a pecu- Not a rew agreed unsteady, and that toward the end of the sermon his voice broke now and then. One Sunday he read the hymn over again after he had given out the notices, and Elder Fenwick frowned at the flutter of fans and the slight titter in the choir-loft. Elder Fenwick, who had given a hundred dollars toward the new pipe-organ, thought that it did not have a fair chance. The young people, he said, were "drifting off," especially in the evenings; many of the older ones had "lost interest;" the attendance was not what it with Elder Fenwick, but no one liked to speak to the minister. He had been long among them, this old man with the windows, close the doors," and be- liar manner. The two men aproach- gin to wonder if the weather-strips ed cautiously, and saw a fox under don't need renewing. Then in a the tree. The fox was walking about day or two comes the cold, and we in a circle, his path being well de- e-mv hair and the falterine steD. blame the air for it. The real I fined in the snow, sufficiently so He had baptized children who were cause is the lack of air," or rather I to warrant the belief that he had now fathers and mothers; : he had .the stagnation and impurity of it. I been engaged in circling about for blessed many of the men and women The bacteria which cause colds I some time. The-eyes of the fox of the parish at the marriage altar; j there are several varieties of were fixed on the bird, and the he had prayed by the sick beds of them are always close by," if not latter's eyes followed the fox, this some who sat weekly in the high- J actually in our noses, but they can accounting for the peculiar motion backed pews, and of many more , do us no harm as long as the sys-1 Qf its head. who rested in peace under the tem, fortified with fresh, air and ex-1 The men made up their minds green turf of the churchyard near ercise, is able to repress their I that they would shoot the fox, and by. - growth. The balance, however, be-1 approached nearer, wholly unobser- It was a delicate matter to speak , tween the resisting and attacking ved by either bird or quadruped about, but it was "managed" no : forces is so nearly even that it I Suddenly the bird, which had been matter how. As the old minister , takes but little to disturb it, with postively Identified as a ruffed stood up for his last sexvlce in the the result -that the system may be-1 grouse by this time, dropped to the wrient and uenvie tnrust tne eiia-i Mmroii vhcro th hst vers or bis come tne weaner 01 tne iwo. i ground, ine iox seized it, anu er into the face of the rising. gale manhood had been spent, his voice I bounded away before the astonish and it shot up. Again and again Quavered more than ever. By his STOMACH TONIC. I ed men could bring their guns this was repeated, each flight becom 1 rpn,1PRt ; it hal been made a com-l I their shoulders. i -i ing lengthier, until for almost ten muni0n Sunday. At such a service, Puts the Stomach In Splendid Shape minutes Wright soared like a brood-, Beemed to him, he could have the ing buzzard on the rush of a fifty- tenderest parting with the people mile gale. , whom he loved so well. Ogilvie made several brief flights I a. strange thing happened that at the close of the day, but none J ay There was a moment's pause even approximated the success made after the sermon and the prayer. by Wright. It was apparent that j for tne minister's eyes were too the maintenance of poise and bal-misty tQ fin(j at once the number to U T 1 0(U When you buy a can of anything of us with the Sunbeam Pure Food ja- g bel you get the best. We will Hust enumerate a few of them: and Supplies Vim, Vigor and VI-1 Negro Population in South Caro tality .to the Whole Body. I Una. If you feel all run down, out of Pee Dee Advocate. sorts, nervous and depressed, goj Tne reCent census shows that and get a 50-cent box of MI-O-NA there were last year 12,256 white stomach tablets today. , inhabitants of Marlboro countv. and lane every one or tnem accord- x 8,9 30 negroes. This Is a little ance rested as much on the, ability" in the hymnbook. In the pause a,inS to directions and when they are more than three negroes to two and skill of the aviator as upott ' young man in one of the center0116 you 'will feel like a different wnite people. In 1900 there were the mechanical contrivances byJ pews rose to his feet. " person. 11,226 white and 16,413 colored which the Wrights hope to mint-1 t bona vou will let---let me mi-u-ina stomacn taDiets wm Tne Increa8e in ten years has been mize the perils of flying. - Orville J Bpeak a WOrd," he said, abashed, ! renovate your disordered . stomach h,030 white and 2,517 colored. The Wright admitted his satisfaction for the eyes of the whole congre-.ana ooweis; mey wui put uie ""-"increase in the ten years has been with the results and declared thejgation were upon him, and he was'yur Inactive liver. I about five negroes to two whites. conditions under which the flight J h,rtiv mnrA than a bov. iney W1U oanisn nervousness. In the wlloie 'gte the whites 1 - : , , - . 1 , I was made were unusually severe. I "I've been thinking since I sat Drain iag, dizziness, ueiun.ue8, 1 nave increased more rapidly than There were more different and here that that, when the new nigntsweats, and sleeplessness. the negroes, the percentage of in differing air currents up there," he minister comes and holds his first', mi-o-na win stop sour risings, crease beinK 14 white, and 1 said,, "than I have ever experienced COmmmuni6h, a good many will join an- heartDurn in rive minutes. negroes. The total population of before. It was a novel and excit- the church. It is always so. I had arge dox &u cents at arsons mug the state was in 1900: 657,807 ing experience." " intended to be one of them, but . Co- and druggists everywhere. white, and 782.509 colored; In 1910 679,162 white, and 836,316 colored One For Each Face. Success Magazine but it doesn't seem fair, when it's Mr. Borden's influence and preach ing and the kind of life he's lived There are only ten counties in the The following interesting data is state that have more whites that S.I 7? JL Where the finest biscuit, cake, hot-breads, crusts or puddings are required Royal is indispensable. Royal is equally valuable in the preparation of plain, substantial, every-day foods, for all occasions The only baking powder made from Royal Grape Cream ol Tartar No Alum Ho Lima Phosphates 8 AXE AMID THE MAD. Attendants in Asylums Seldom Ixso Reason, Says Doctor. Washington Post. Although forced constantly to as sociate with insane persons, physi cians and nurses at insane asylums lose their reason less frequently than any other class, according to a statement made recently by Dr. George H. Schwin, assistant superin tendent of the Government Hospi tal for the Insane. It followed the verdict of a jury in the District Supreme Court that Miss Edna Moore, formerly a nurse in an asy lum, is now Insane and will have to be confined in the Government hos pital. Miss Moore, the daughter of Mis. Laura Moore, of 620 Sixth street northwest, and at one time a nurse in a private asylum In Baltimore, went violently Insane and on sever al occasions attempted to commit suicide, according to testimony giv en at her trial. Her mother said that her mind had been wrecked through constant association with Insane people she attended. She is now closely watched at the asylum .' A DOUBTFUIi BARGAIN, j 1, r 1 ... n I ' t m ii mi 1 iu uicteui, uei iiuui u&iug lie unu A Western politician had quite that's brought me to decide tnat "..." j . negroes. They are Anderson, unero- lif a reputation in his own town for sue- way. If it could be arranged so. ulca VL tuo "aiuci umcau v,u. kee Chesterfield, Greenville, Hor cessful duplicity. It was generally I that I could as late as it is now lotte. As they fit very well for this Lancaster, Oconee, Pickens and believed that his idea of party prin- I'd like to join today." section mey are very interesting SpartaIiburg. cinles was to work and vote with I The vonne man's voice died out ror tQlB locality. riiT ciAt wQ Ar.nQ ontori I 'j a T,nn to. Tr.in-1 The average date of the first the store of a druggist who hap- ister called his session together in , killing frost in autumn, is Nov. 4 neneri - A.t. tho tim. to h nnnnspd I tnnoa that wora cuhrliipd nnfl trem-' The earliest date for killing I . it n n y i . o to him politically. ulous. There was a stir here and iro8t in 04 years was uciuuer o, Dr. Schwin, an expert alienist, de clared that this 13 the first case he has'' ever heard of a nurse or other Pickens has the fewest negroes. atteadant In an asyium who be came mentally unbalanced. Strange 5,430; and Charleston the most, 56.-! "I want a jar of face cream," he j there, as one after another rose 1889. said. 'Be sanitary, Tom,' and followed the elders to the room replied the I above. druggist. "Get two jars." Fourteen young people had in 046. Beaufort has the largest per centage of negroes, 87i and Pick ens the smallest, 21. Less than one- fourth of the population of Horry Is Sunbeam Hawaiian Pineapple Sunbeam California Peacnes Sunbeam Corn Sunbeam Salmon Snnbam Salad Dressing Sunbeam Sweet Pickles Sunbeam Coffee gnsnpto The latest date for killing frost colored. lQ Bramberg. Barnwell. is Nov. 28, 1902. Beaufort, Berkeley, Calhoun, Clar- In the past 17 years, the first . Edeefield. Fairmont. Georee- their hearts decided upon the step!kming frost has occurred in Octo- towQ( Lee and Sumter, there are which must mean so much to them j t)6r nly three times. more than twice as many negroes in the future; and stirred by the In 32 years it has .occurred in aa wWteg. Ia Cherokee. Green- generous thought of the youth who;uctoDer Dut " tlmes. tnereIore ville, Horry, Oconee. Pickens and had Bpoken first, they, too, chose tno Percentage of probable occur- Spartanburg there are more than names, as if to receive this tism of a great Joy. bap- Checked and In Early Stages, Cured by MILAM the great Reconstructive tonic and blood renovater r . 1 I with the gladness that belongs to a ror consumption, out 11 nas proven so Dene- 1 hcial to such patients that we believe, and I new welcome xe supported in our belief by a practicing -1 : : .u . n 4 t t a xm :ll . : : iiysii:iiiii, iiiai. ivixi.ivt win mien iLiip- tr tia x. . . , - 1 m . . . 1 1 110 im nub uuuerstauu, stages. We know that it greatly benefits I Exchange. even those in the advanced stages. Is to give the sheaves into the faith-; xuoutu Ul " twice as many whites as negroes. ful hand that had scattered the see(, 8 Per cen-. e perceua 01 The racea are nearest even in The gray head of the pastor was,DaDle occurrence in November is Uncuter( where there are 13.624 bowed reverently, while he read the, AUU as iroSt8 aave uiw, whIte8, and 13,126 negroes. a X XT V. fpl,. n.Arr occurreu iu uycixiuct. a 1x0 iu.cbv,- The cUy q CharleBton nas more ing figures do not include dates of tha whlte8. and Columbia. Other hearts grew tender under, UI Greenville and Spartanburg more the influence of the day. When j U1 j w wniteB than negroes the service was. over, a hundred tlon- "Sat irost nas oeen reco.u- 0nly twQ statea ln the Vniollf hands grasped the hand of the ea nere M eariy m lue Xd" tta OCir South Carolina and Misslssippi.have old pastor, not with the regret , temDer. more negro inhabitants than whites tiot tyi OT-Va a final r n 7-t 1 n cr nilt I " ow" D cinity, tuai is, iium uuo o.iiiia6 frost in the spring to another lnl Woman's Foot Growing Larger. Read the following the fall, is an average of 219 days. J Success Magazine. Shoe manufacturers claim that Pat had been seized with violent pains ahd was hurried to a hospi tal. The physician in charge, af- his. career as a cowboy, and is at of Omaha, "Throws the Lar- I ing larger. The number two Bhoe , . , . . lis almost obsolete, they say, and oaac;9 &wu ouu. m V AUUU - J U- or iat ScrofuIitlC Consumption "b-p cnarge, ma. .. l moner than three. The explanation 7 1 . ter diagnosis, informed him that he-present Mayor of Omaha, and has I t 1, Edmund B. Meade, NoLy Public in had aPPendlcltis. and that an oper- the following record. Sheriff of I to lncreased use Qf Ue and for the City of Danville, State of Vir-1 ation was necessary as his appen ginia, do hereby certify that Abram Word, I dix must be removed Immediately. of Danville, Va, to me well known, did ap pear before me, and being duly sworn, de- poseth and says as follows For ten years prior to August, 1909, 1 1 formed the physician, who laughing- was under the care ot a regular physician.; 1 iy told him that after the operation Last spring mis aoctor toia me ne couid do I v u i ,. i me no good, and I tried another for four M" WUld leaVe appendlX iQ e months without receiving any benefit front I "window so he could see it when he him: I was able to sit ud in august, i pegan Uking Muam, I Some days after the operation Dawes Co. Neb., three terms; May or of Chadron, two terms; Demo- Pat had not the least idea of j cratic Nat'l Committeeman, eight feminine foot as a means of locomo tion. The constantly increasing number of women engaged in in- ji a in.'vooTi- Movnr nf fimaha. bit VMrs. ttu ayyeiiuii. Wits, aiiu I ' ' ' I Hnatrxr nrxA fhe. .rrnwll. In r.TM,lorltv and in 1910 Candidate for Govern- " , T . xt v TT7-i.t T7i , of tennis, golf and walking have or of Nebraska. Writing to Foley I. , a, , , , ,7 & Co., Chicago, he says: -"I have taken Foley Kidney Pills and they have given me a great deal of re lief so I cheerfully recommend Phone us your wants. HARBISON CO Phone 8. Parsons Drug Store and Morven Pharmacy, Morven, N. C. 0 -LSZL S "TrV Pat's curiosity got the better of, them." Yours truly. ear and digest any food. ' 1 him, and he raised up in bed to leigned) JAMES C. DAHLMAN. My trouble was said to be Scrofulitic take a look at his appendix. To his Consumption, and I was wasted awy to amazement a monkey was sitting shadow. I was so weak that I could hard- . . , . . OTT, ly walk when I commenced on MILAM. on tho wmdowsill, and when he saw I regard MILAM as a truly valuable rem- Pat he began to make faces and 'y in all cases of blood trouble, whether chatter at a great rate. freePcireuktion!Ceeding The astonished Irishman gave the I -have recommended MILAM to about monkey a long, hard look, and then twenty of my friends, and so far as I have exclaimed: "Don't do that, me boy, seen or heard from them, they all tpeak in don't do that. Can't you see your iWhlo a very sick man!" ing It was particularly beneficial to me in aid ing digestion and building up an appetite." tSigned) ABRAM WORD. In witness to the above. I have hereunto set 1 my band and the seal of my office, this 23rd day qi Marcn, A. u., mu. . lOJZUUflD a. Mb auk, (SEAL) Notarv Puhlie. My commission expires Jan. 14. 1U14. i Pretty Tall. . Pat had gone back home to Ire- had their Inevitable result, and common sense has done much to abolish the wearing of pinching shoes. The tradition that small feet are an excellent thing in wo men has persisted long and will not die without a struggle. Conserva tives need not fear that women will carry this matter too far; they know when to stop. An Earnest Student. Buffalo Express. You appear to Je studying very I How's This? hard, my boy," said the kind ' old we offer One Hundred Dollars mar, Reward for any case of Catarrh v . ., .... I inai cannot ds curea Dy naus ja- oil, miu I tarrh Cnrft. K J nHKMEV jB- PO 13 it a spelling dook you nave, i Toledo, O my boy?" We, the nnderslgned, have known 'M oil- wo tha Kocoii rir(fl r. J- cneney lor the last 16 years. in all business transactions, and f i as it may seem, he said, people who mingle with crazy people are sel dom nervous, and keep their mental balance better than others. The words and actions of the Insane have little effect on them, he declared. "I think there have been very few cases like Miss Moore's," said Dr. Schwin. "Visitors to insane asy lums often make the remark that they would soon go crazy if forced to remain with the insane for any length of time. As a matter of fact, insanity is not in any way contagious." Youth's Companion. The Rev. L. B. Bates associated with the East '.Boston Bethel, tells in his "Wonder Book" of an amus ing marriage ceremony performed by his father. This is Lis account of It: About nine o'clock one night t!ie old parsonage on Cape Cod was ap proached by a man and a woman in a "one horse shay," Hearing the wheels, Father Bates went to iLe door, to see coining up the wall: .i buxom las3 -of two hundred po'.n'-is or so, followed by a v?ry Utile man. With a giggle she announced. "We've come to be married, parson, haven't we, Bill?" An energetic nudge succeeded in eliciting the desired affirmation from "Bill." The parson examined the' license, and proceeded to business. "Please join your risht hands," he said. "Dearly beloved, you are gathered here for the purpose of holy matrimony. Do you " but he was here Interrupted by the bride: "Say, parson, before you go any further, would you mind taking your' pay ln dried apples?" Being assured that driel apples were current coin with parsons, se allowed him to proceed: "Madam, do you " but ae;.-in ho was interrupted. "Say, parson, the apples are not ripe yet, but you shall have them without fail." He assured her that her honesty was appreciated, and proceeded with the ceremony without further inter ruption. Two months later a bushel of the best dried . apples was hauled by the bride herself to the parsonage door. "I don't know as he was worth it," she said, with a twinkle in her eye, "but a bargain is a bargain for all that." A Medicine That Gives Confidence. Is Foley's Honey and Tar Com pound. Mrs. T. J. Adams, 522 No. Kansas Ave., Columbus, Kas., writes: For a number of years my chil dren have been Bubject to coughs and colds. I used Foley's Honey and Tar Compound and found that it cured their coughs and colds, so I keep it in the house all the time." Refuse substitutes. Par-. Bona Drug Store and Morven Phar macy, Morven, N. C. Why be bothered with inferior glasses when you can get a first class spectacle or' eyeglass correctly adjusted atr a moderate price from DR. RAPPORT at the National Ho tel, Wadesboro, Tuesday. Oct. 31st. After exposure, and when ,you feel a cold coming on, take Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. It checks and relieves. Use no sub stitute. The genuine in a yellow" package always. Parsons DTUg Store and Morven Pharmacy, Mor ven, N. C. 'Have they such tall buildings in America as they say, Pat?" asked Ask your druggist er writ for booklet MUSE! Medicine COInC Danvae, Va, the parish priest "Tall buildings ye ask, sur?" re- waxMjj second nana bags and plied Pat. "Faith, sur, the last burlap: Write for prices. Richmonc ( t"Se I worked on we had to lay on . . . ,,, . T i . v ui,ui.iu6 jn mmtianjr nuiv iu carry out any OD- land and was telling about New yourself when you take Chamber- ligations made by his firm. York. I Iain's Coueh Remedy for n. cnlrt WAT.niVP. lftMMiv a. uimnv - I Mmmr u ' U, MAfXlh V mat preparation nas won its great . Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. reputation and extensive sale by Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken In-! us remarsaoie cures oi coins, and ternany. actlne directly nnon th can always be depended upon. It blood and mucous surfaces of the is equally vaiuahie lor adults tand system. Testimonials sent" free. ' children and may be given to Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by your.g children with implicit confi- all Drugsrists. harmful Take Hall's Family Pilla for enn- Wadesboro Loan AND insurance Com9y WADESBORO, NORTH CAROLINA. R. T. B85IBTT, JR., Pre.. II. W. LITTLE, Treasurer J. II. K. BI F.GWIX, V. Pra. W ALTKH E. BROCK, Scy We Write Air Kinds of Insurance Ordinary Life 10, 15 & 20 Payment Life Endowment policies All kinds at lowest rates Accident Health Plate Glass -.. Surety Bonds Fire insurance written on town and country prop erty, cotton gins and sawmills. PHONE NO. 234 B35 Company. Richmond. Va. . our stomachs to let the moon pass." w aU doa" r Office over Leah & FJarsliafl ;!
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
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Oct. 26, 1911, edition 1
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