Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / Nov. 21, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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' i lir li "1' !' TIIE MESSENGER AM) IXTELLIGEXCEIt PHONE 2 PHONE 2 The Parsons Drug Company Delicious Candies Prescriptions Cigars and Hot Soda Steaming Hot, Delicious And Invigorating Who mindi the "Cold north winds of winter," to gether with the ice, sleet, snow and blizzards, when they linow they can always (from six o'clock in the morning until ten o'clock at night) find a cozy corner at The Parsons Drug Company, where they can sit and chat while our dispenser prepares them one of those cold defying, nerve invigorating Hot Tomato Bouillons, Chicken Bouillons, or one of our delicious Liquid Beef and Celery drinks? Are You Ashamed of the Cigar which you sometimes have to offer your friend? If so, don't forget to ask the salesman for a Nurica, El Toro, John Jr., Almozei, or Cuesta Rey the next time you buy, and watch your friend's face show his appreciation of your good taste. Are You Wasting Your Time trying to write with the old style pen and ink? If so ask our salesman to show you how The Ink Goes Shooting Down In The "Lucky Curve" Fountain Pen. The Parsons Drug Company. PHONE NO. 2. Watch Our Candy Department During the Next Six Weeks. Friendship, Love, Courtship, Marriage. What Next? Where? In Polkton, one of the coming villages of Anson county with a lumber plant, a planing mill, a tannery, a bank, good hotel facilities, a brick plant, three churches, and last but not least, a statfc high school, the town having pro vided for its everlasting perpetuation of this school by voting a special tax for the maintainance of the school, in this way showing genuine faith in the fundamentals of her future citizenship. ' On Dec. 4th, 1912 At 10 O'clock I Will Offer at Public Auction To The Highest Bidder The V J. E. Boyette Home place in the town of Polkton. It is a three acre lot, f on which is located a 5 room house modern in its ap pointments and built only 2 or three yeers ago out of selected lumber. Mr. Boyette has enclosed the entire lot with beautiful wire fence, set out orchards, hedges, etc: a good well of water and wood house and smoke-' house. " . - I will first sell the property in one acre lots and then will sell as a whole, accepting, of course the high est bid. ' TERMS: 1-3 cash, 1-3 in 6 months, 1-3 in 12 months. J. Lee Philips, of Charlotte, a splendid auctioneer, will sell the property. It is a great opportunity to have the chance cupying a splendid house on so short a notice. "IJieirt Ilrowii Civtk" Exhorts the Mmhwh lo !iilt l'iMn Tlnlr KiklitM, mid hwijB They Are llolng illtvM-4l ly Hi ('! lie Tlilnkn Tm Should Xot 1U lo Suj.H.r1 Colhgtn, unit That th Hthool Fund In Xot I"tomt. , ly i:xM'inll. The tltMllon Is over, Iai tin hope tho changes that will occur will be beneficial to tho masses In every wtlon. This will not he no unless the musses insist upon their light", which have been too long Ignored by the classes. When will men do right because It Is right, and not as now, forced to do It because of law or public opinion? fiu h charac tera donorve no credit for being hon est. History repeat llself. Solomon was right when he said, "there In nothliiR new under the nun." What la now has already been, und what is to bo is simply what hag been. Let us hope that some things that have occurred to us as a nation and people may never occur ngiln, when equal rights to nil and special prlv llages to none, seemingly, were for gotten. If this slate of affairs con tinue much longer there will bo a disruption of this government. Men will not tolerate oppression forever. This Is history, past and present, Instance, the present war against Turkey. Here In our own land I would not advise the classes to be too insistent in their demands against the masses. For the most part, the classes have ruled this na tion every since its formation. The masses have no one to blame for have been wold, and they simply have inadtf a place for the other fellow's goods. What does progres sion mean but to go forward, even If we do have to pay for the go ing? Yes; your taxes are over 100 per runt higher, yet your school terms have not increased In length. I am in favor of education, but I am opposed to the uso of so much grease. There Is no sens, In greasing an already well greased wagon. I am glad, "T ". the masses are beginning to think. When enough of you go to thinking, things will change, let us hope, for the bet ter. As long as the maius tamely sub mit to injustice the condition! will grow worno. They are Intolerable now, and will grow worse unless the masses assert their right. You have the power, why not use It? If the golden rule obtained, everything would De all right. Then men would cease to prey upon each oth er. So thinks LITTER BROWN CREEK. Motive Count. "Yea, your Honor," said 'Rastus in police court, "I'sse guilty; I stole them pants. But, your Honor, there ain't no sin when the motive am good. I done stole them pants to get baptized in." Life. IKwfnetis Cannot lio Cured. Dy local applications, as they can-l not reach the diseased portion of this state of affairs but themselves. ! tho ear- There ,s on'y n to They have too tamely submitted to curo deafness, and that Is by con- thls condition. There will come a 1 8l,tut,onal remedies. Deafness is day of awakening, when men learn caused by an inflamed condition of to consider for themselves, and not.!ine ulucous lining of the Eusta as now. let the few do their think-' cnian iudo. vvnen tnis tube is ln- ing and acting. Equal rights to flamed you have a rumbling sound all and special privileges to none never has been carried out In this land. Why? Because the masses tamely submitted to the other crowd, or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed. Deafness Is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube re- who have run the government in!Btored to Its normal condition, hear- every line of endeavor. They have framed your constitution and passed the laws in their lnterestst, and the Ing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Ca tarrh, which is nothing but an in- masses have been too blind to eeerlamed condition of the mucous sur- It. Some in the beginning of ourlace8- government were, we believe, truly ve WU1 &lve on Hundred Dol- altruistic.but only the fewtweit thus lars for any cas of Deafness (caus- S of oc- J. E. KERR; exercised. I, for one, do not believe it Dem ocratic" to tax the masses for the ben efit of the favored few, but this state of affairs has existed since the foundation of our government. This was brought about largely for the benefit of the favored ones, mak ing places for Buch; the result, too' many dead heads to keep up by the producers, and every year more of these are being added, and this will go on until the masses, for them selves, go to thinking. . Oh, well! some will say, let this go on. For some people to be wise would be the sheerest folly, and the powers that be might kick against any change that would relieve the masses. I, for one, do not believe it to be Democratic to tax the masses.to ben efit the few on any line of endeav or; more especially is this so In re gard to any colleges maintained by taxing the masses. Is this equal rights to all, when not one in the hundred ever will Bee the buildings, much less enter them? I believe those who would enjoy these higher privileges should be willing to pay for them. Besides this, for the most part, we are ed ucate. our boys and girls out of the State, as we have been so heav ily taxed to maintain these institu tions we are not able to meet the competition from some other parts of the country for their services. I want an intelligent citizenship, but want, after having obtained it, the power to keep it. Hitchcockism, or bureaucracy., should not be tolerated in, a government pretending to be free, I say pretend, for there is no actuality in it. Besides, this bureau cracy is catching, or contagious. It ought to have been quarantined be fore it reached our State, but it is here all the same. I never scratched a ticket, al ways voting the Democratic ticket straight, but in the last election I was tempted to scratch the name of J. Y. Joyner. He insists upon too much red tape," as we view it, for the good of the common schools of the state. And this red tape -is i lor the most part, a tax on the teachers. Why require weekly re' ports, then monthly, then one at the close of the term? These reports are mailed by the eachers. What does this "Tom foolery" cost the teachers of North Carolina In the way of postage, to say nothing of time? He has no right constitution ally to take one cent of the public school funds to hold his teacher's meetings and county institutes. Let him properly construe the part, of the constitution he quotes, and see where he is at. Since the above . was , written The M. & I. has come, and I see where "T " is disgruntled because he has to buy new books every time the moon changes. . Why, Bud, can you not see the-point? The old ones' ed by catarrh) that cannot be cur ed by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY, & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. WOMEN SHOULD BE PROTECTED Against So Many Surgical Op erations. HowMrs.Belhune and Mrs. Moore Escaped. Sikeston, Mo. "For seven vears Ismf- ferod everything. I was in bed for four or nve aays at a time every month, and so weak I could hardly waiK. 1 cramped and had backache and headache, and was so nervous and weak that I dreaded to see anyone or have any one move in the room. The doctors gave me medicine to ease me at those times, and said that I outrht to have an operation. I would not listen to that, and when a friend of my husband told him about Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Comjxnind and what it had done for his wife,. I was willing to take it . jnow i look the picture of health and feel like it, too. I can do my own housework, hoe my garden, and milk a cow. I can entertain company and enioy them. can visit when I choose, and walk as far as any ordinary woman, any day in the month. I wish I could talk to every suffering woman and girl." Mrs. Dema JJethune, Sikeston, Mo. '',,.., ' Murrayville, III "I have taken Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for a very bad case of female trouble and it made me a well woman. My health was all broken down, the doctors said I must have an operation, and I was ready to go to the hospital, but dreaded it so that I began taking your Compound. I got along so well that I gave up the doctors and was saved from the opera tion. "Mrs. Charles Moore, R. r. No. 3, Murrayville, I1L FOR SALE Lewis Long Staple Cotton Seed. I have for sale a limited Of bushels of fine Lewis Long Sta ple Cotton Seed. This cotton brings from 6 to 8 cents more on the mar ket than short staple cotton and yields as much seed cotton per acre, but not quite as much lint. Will sell seed for $1.00 per bushel, i Will deiver seed either at Wades- boro or at my home in Gulledge township. ' : J. E. TARLTON, Wadesboro, N.'C. R. F. D. 2. GIN BH7 a rey Our Gin No. 1, on the Camden road is now in operation. The gin has been placed in first class condi tion for clean ginning and quick service. We run night and day when necessary. Bring Us Your Cotton. I'ADESDORO OIL JILL PHONE No. 63. r ur e 1 TT ooas When you buy a can of anything of us with the Sunbeam Pure Food h- ..' rj? uci uu gci. uic uesi. vve wur.just enumerate a few of them: Sunbeam Hawaiian Pineapple Sunbeam California Peacnes Sunbeam Corn Sunbeam Salmon Snnbam Salad Dressing Sunbeam Sweet Pickles. Sunbeam Coffee Phone us your wants HARDISON CO Phone 8. SuBScqiDEFoq TtE fj. 3 I. Only Semi-Weekly in Anson ' $1.00 Per Ypnr R01T M. HUNTLEY D. D. S. Office Second' Floor of Ingram Mnilding. Work Done Day Night. PHONE NO 90. or Fire Insurance When you wish Fire on Wind tonn Insurance, See, Vffono, M write to of th d. A. McGregor, He represent eighteen best Companies. He will give yon the test Fort!' n i 1 u 4 tUe rat; ana wta rl fc? f -
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 21, 1912, edition 1
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