Newspapers / Washington Daily News (Washington, … / Jan. 10, 1911, edition 1 / Page 3
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|B. L. SUSMAN, President. if==? i WASHHISTOII HORSE EXCHAMK Clil We carry a full ^supply of HORSES J pT AND . MULES Constantly. | Also a complete line ot oos, Carts and Harness. We sell for cash or on time. Make the Home the Recipient - . .% Wa truly want you to call, and I torn how well *ro prepared to ; mm : more ' the ml',/ so Komcihla nigh freiutit mien atv nol neirly ??bea\y .. ins on in., shippers of stoci and bilirr fa>m produce an bad road* nff . Tar on Hold! Oi.lrrfotla ' * ! Mcdical authorities have announced that in addition lo Its dnst qualities a tar preparation In highly beneficial to tho community using I! OB lu roads. owing to Its dlslofectaL' properties According To tbe teolil. authorities of Batters e*. England. In fantile mortality baa ij^gely decreased In that populous district since Its gtreeta were siirfoced with tar mac First Normal School. The flint normal acbool wan ftftmded In Bheltas. France, in 10S3 There! was nc beating of big drums or Uauu!-| tag of bunting on tbat day. and jeti It would tie difficult to nay what con temporary event run compare arlth It In value to humanity. One of the good' ; old pastors of ltheliiK found out by questioning' tbo teacher* lu his par lab tbat they were teaching, accord ' ? lag to no rule? In other words, were not teaching at all -and h? forthwith began taking the stepa which Mere lo lend to the founding of a acbool which would ttteb the teachers bow to teach the children Ho little dreamed of 'be w Ida reaching reanlta of his ac New Toek American. Earnings of IWrltara. There an at least fifty writers in England who are making ?1.000 a year each by their books. In this number It is poaslhia tbat there are a dozen Who make incomes of 13.000 to 0,000 a year. Marion Crawford la aald to fcave- received ?2,000 down for aacb of h|a novels, and he often turned out Sir Walter Scott made *200,000 during: his wilting Mraw WAL phonae Daudet received ?40,000 fcra alngie novel. Law W- "ae? got In roy alties on ?BenHur" and_ia?? Prince Of l&tl*" almost lno,noo. l or any of his i stories Bndyard Kipling la routed to ?h?rge 2 ablllings n word. "Les Mis ?*biea" brought Victor Hugo close on ?16^000.? T. P.'s Loudon Thi lnn? of Chsr?o?ry. Most of the old Inns of Chancery are no more. Clement'* Inn. where Fal staff and Shallow "beard the chime* at midnight;" New Inn, of which Sir Thomas More won a member; Lyon's top. where Cobe once taught the stu denta; Furnlval's Inn, where Charles Dickens lived; Tha vies Inn. which was one of the earliest of all the legal set tlements In London; Barnard's Inn. where Lord Chief Justice Holt was among th?v "principals"- nil these his toric places hove "in tho change and chance of time" disappeared from view. Stnple Inn remains In its nn cent state by the good will of the In surance company that purchased it some twenty yearn ago ? London Low Journal. Agincourt. Aginconrt. from whleh Henry V. made his triumphsl entry into London, is our English way of spelllug Asin court. Jtwt aa Blenheim U a similar corruption of Blindhelm. In about two and a half hours Henry's little army alew 10,000 Frenchmen. nearly twice ! As many aa England lost outright In I battle during the Boer war, lasting over two and a half years, and yst we talk complacently of onr "modern arms of precistoc^" .1 monument at Agin court marks the cemetery of the alqln. Few battlefields have changed their ap pearance so little. The field may be reached within a railway hour from Boolngne, Out few tonrl?t* go to tho* ?can* of England's unost wonderful fsat of arms.? London rhroriteto When Corvantes Nodded. In "Don Quixote" Sancho continues to ride on bis ais'ifter having la masted the animal s death. American Influent. In Canada. 7 Wherever the American goes in forea an* in -proportton to M^ aytepaihetle reception he Ifsvos aa a side Issue tha Indelible impression of fat, vivid par aonnllty. In sncii wise ha Is changing tha soda to old maritime ,>mvlDce. so very rapidly that you cau hardly and any difference between them 'and Maine or Massachusetts. This Is In obedience to a natural law wklch mast FOU SALE? -One co al stove in flrxt j class condition, cost $14.00, will Hell] for 15.00. quick. Manager Getn | Theatre. 1*11 1 PUBLIC ST EN OGR A 1'lIKlt Mlw Myrtle Marsh ban changed her -Of fice from Chamber of Commerce to coom'ov?r First NaSonnl Bank.. Writer Press Work a speciality. 12-ao it. 1 WANTEIV? Party who ess o verbal 1 electric piano and put ip flrst-ciass condition. Manager Gem Theatre. 1-10 ? KOIt SAMJ? Four Bnuuwtrk Pool tablet, .pnly med nix month*. II Interfiled write iMwn "fllce oj I box' 315. 1-jBc 'Ttn Altruistic Bidullder. Because ho .was too soft luv.rted to ask hi i rick en landlady to buy now nips tor his rooui the nitrate tic yonug man bought sever.il small ?gs and spread them over the fldor. Immediately after the next sweeping day she presented a bill for tho week's expenditures. Items: Room rent, breakfasts, laundry and beatlug nigs, 25 cents. '? Hello." 8a Id the altruistic young man. "what does this mean?" -Just what It says," ahe returned. "If folks must corer their floor With extra' rug* they'll* have " to< pay for l>eotlng 'em. that's all. I can't aflford to do It for nothing." And from that moment altruism lost a disciple.? Exchange. Whwi Water Was Ayl^d. Until comparatively recent Umes there was a medical prejudice Against drinking water. Sir William Vaughnn ip his "Natural and Artificial Direc tions For Health" declared that water "ought seldom to he drunk." Another doctor admitted that It might be healthful for children, but uot for men ?"except some, odd, pbatemlon* one among tt thousand perchance. degen erate and of a doggish nature, for dogs of nature do abhor wine." Indeed; the recommendation of water as a bever age was supposed* to be the sign .of the 4nack. Even Wesley In his "Prikattlve Ptiyslc" wrote of It with caution, "Drink only water If It agrees with your stomach; if not. good, clear small There Lew Sleeplessness When Washington People I Tfcto. ? Can't rest at night with a bad back A lame, a weak or an aching one. 'JDoan's Kidney 'Pills are for barl backs. They cnre every; form of kidney ills. From common backache to dia betes. V it: : . }'? . . -,?r' '-'pi 'It They are endorsed by Washington people. y Mrs. Lorenia Hall, 80 George St., New Bern, N. C., says: "Doan's Kid ney Pills have beam of great value In restoring my health. I suffered ' from a weak back and pains acroa* my kidneys that made sae restless at night. In the morning i fit tjrod add bad no strength ?? energy. The j secretions from my kidneys were un natural and canasd mo no end of an noyanee. When 1 lend of Doan's Kid nay .Pills, I got % supply and their use removed all my pain* and aches. Since taking this remedy. I hsvs bad a better appetite and my entire sys tem has been built up." (Statement 'H'MtaWII, IM*.) derday morning from' Dethavep wh^ro be preach* d Sunday morning V "vv \'i ';? ipj ?. Mr. B. H. Thompson of'Ajirora woi ttfw this mornlag eu besisssd. Mr. Robert Ballard if Greensboro. N. C.. who has been tho guest of ,fclsj rathe? and mother. Air. and Mm. A. F. Ash burn, on West Second scree', left for his home tills morning via tbs Atlantic Coast .Line. v Mr. and Mrs. Jolwi MK'ottar of Vnnderaeie. arrived In the city -this morning on |fcjr Washington and Van demere train. ' < - ' Mea $fC C D.. Jones, W. H. West and 8. A. Jones of South Creek are Waabinicton visitors today. . J Mr. N. D, Young and family ex jpect to leave tomorrow on an extend ed visit to flrends and relatives in Winston-Salem. Mr. John T; Bell went to Wharionsl this iporning on business. Goatip and Scandal. Many people . <ionf use , gossip with scandal, bat the two things are quite different. The scandalmonger is usn* ally detested, while tho gossip is often universally popular. Iu fact the popu larity whk'li it brings In its tifeln is : one of tho strongest incentives to goo alp. A really accoinpllshc? gossip la a social iicrtylaUiou; ThoutVnda of peo ple who do not gossip themselves like to listen to it. It sates tbetn-the trou 1 ble of talking! Tho gossip is general ly good nntnred. The scandalmonger j seldom is. After al). what Is more in tetesting than beman nature? That Is the at?K:k in t ratio of tho goBsIp, ajk^t is of the u'ovellst nnd dramatist.? Lon don. Gentlewoman. Between Two Flrea. "The fad* of sovereigns with their royhl etiquette were frequently carried to such lengths." says H. T. Dyer in "Royalty In All Ages." "na to make martyrs of them. What can be more lndlerou8 than the following: The pal ace was on Are. A soldier who knew the k lug's sister was in her apartment and must inevitably have been con sumed In a'few mlantes by the flames rushed In at the risk of his Hfe and brought her out. But Spanish etiquette was woefully broken, and the loyal sol dier was brought to trial and condemn ed to death. The Spanish princess, however, la consideration of the cir cumstance, condescended to pardon the aoHUer and saved his Hfe." / Flying Predictions In 1278 Friar Bacon predicted that flying would "stiortlj" become a gen eral practice, and Blabop Wilkins in 1602 sold. "It will yet be as usual to I hear a man call for his wings when ,hq is going on a Journey as it is now to hear him call for his boots." Air Eys to His Epitaph. Edmond de Goneourt, the French novelist, admitted that he worked with an eye to hla epitaph, and be wanted the epitaph to endure for a long time. He records in his Journal that "the thought that ^ the world may perish, may not last forever, is one which oc casionally flll8 my mind with gloom. I should bo defrauded by the destruc tion of this planet, for 1 have whtten only lu the hopo of eternal fame. A reputation lasting 10,000, .20,000, even 100,000 years, would be a poor return foi; tho pains I have taken, the priva tions I have suffered. Under these conditions it would havo been better to lounge aimlessly through life dream ing and smoking my time away." ? Chicago News. Primarily life Insurance 1a a co-oper ative piau to meet the default involved in the promature death of produc tive lives. V nonproductive life is not properly insurable. A life stamped with (immorality is not insurable. A life somewhat impaired through defec tive family history or by individual weakness er disease, if that life at the same time is a prodnctfve life, la in surable at a price. Ali of which brings us back to the same conclusion? 1. e., life Insurance Is a great social plan which merges the individual into the mass and puts behind the frailty- of man standing alone the Immeasurable strength of men sta'mllng together.? Darwin P. Kliur*l?;y in I.c-IIVh. ' 'Jo; I Dissolved. "Bo you broke your engagement with Miss 8 pensive?" "No, I didn't break it" "Oh. she broke It." "No. she dldnt break it." -But It Is broken r "Yes, she told me what her clothing cost, and I told her what my Income Houston Port?0 t 1 r i v i Entitled* t6 Them. Aftpr the new arrival bad regiatered the bqtel clerk looked down the page and repd "Jeremiah {feast Chap, XXXX, Sxeezixvilte." "What do all those X's moan after yonr name?" op cited the efltoef. ??Thst mean ; u lo*" explained tbs new arrival, -rin ex-school director, ex-township trustee, ex -county eommls ootca has PM a long tluie where he ran look out or the window nnd wo the irtlded j>eak of a temple shimmer ing' >i? the equatorial bud.? Christian Herald. ?6taryc a Cold. ? 'tfjj; Nature, as a rule, takes (be appetite away when oue la coining down with i cold or cH*?r infectious disease. and nature la wit*. Don't coax Mary to Mt whan aha haa o cold. Don't allow the neighbors to tempt Johnny with rtUr? foot jc!?y 6r other dnlnties. Wben Buffering: from a cold the dlges tive orgntw !?re in no condition to car* for food. The digestive juice* ate al tered or entirely absent. .One pr two Baya* comparative fast will often as sist In averting u severe siege of cold. ? wore convenient an<f enjoyable form of fasting would ba to auhalat for one or two days upon fruit or fruit juices perhaps, with the addition of a llttls toa#t An exclualve fruit diet haa all the practical advantages of complete fasting, while it satisfies tho appetite and supplies sugar from which the llv ?r can manufacture glycogen to ana tain the white blood corpuscles in their contlnnoua warfare a_galn.it mi crobes.? William 8. Sadler In Designer. Giving film Carte Blaneha. ? fetV \years ago John Kendrlck Bangs, the Jixnnorlat, told a number of his Broadway literary confreres that be felt particularly *ela ted ovar an or der he had just received from Henry W. Savage, the theatrical producer, for the libretto of s musical comedy. The play was produced a few months later. During the long period of re* hoarsnls so much ?>f Bangs' material was eliminated and so finch other, ma terial Inserted In its stead that when the curtain went up on the flrat night aot more thun half a dozen of the original lines remained. About a 'week later a friend, meet ing Bangs, asked him if be waa writ ing any more playa for Savage. "Yes." replied Bangs. "Only an hour ago 1 aent him COO blank sheets of paper and told him to go as far as be liked."? Irvin ' Cobb In New York Tribune. Anthony Trellepe'e First Esrnings. A literary man recalls Anthony Trol Wpt's little float- over the first fralts of his pen. "I send yon a copy of The Warden,' " he wrote to Lord Houghton In 1800, "which Mr. Longman assures me is the last of the first edition. Thtre were. 1 think, only 700 printed, and they hare been over ten years in hand. But n. regard the book with af fection. as I made ?0 2s. Od. by the first year's sales, having previously writ ten nnd pub lb bed for ten years With out any auch golden result Since then 1 have Improved even upon that" Troilope. of course, "Improved upon that" In no uncertain faahion.? West minster Gazette. Not So Brav4 "fie wa? Certainly brave to crawt under the bed and engage in a lift and death struggle with tbat burglar.'* "When be crawled, under the bod He thought the burglar was In the basement'*? Houston Pont For Good of ths Community. "Have yoq ever done anything Iter the good of the community 7** asked tb/ solid cltlxen of the weary way farer To replied the weary wayfarsr. "I've jnat done ? m?nth." Sensible Man. , J' Crawford? Do you really like tc please your Wife? Crabs haw -I cant aay that I do. but Tro found out It's the best plan.? Smart Sot 'A Moon Triok. across ?ald the book agent ?"What has be doner "Kept 0+ e Anally said I It Wai Real. "My. this roust have been exciting?** says Mrs. Bllmera. who Is resdlng the paper. "A twenty foot boa constrictor escaped from the *00 yesterday and was captured after It had climbed halfway up a telegraph pole." -And I swore off when 1 saw It as I went downtown.'" growled Mr. Bu rners disgustedly. "What are you muttering?** Bbe asked. -Nothing, t Just said It must hare beeu a ticklish Job."? Chlcugo Tost . As Good s? tost. 33 "You're sure you can spare this flver. are you, Shadbolty* ? "Dltgnss, if I had not been perfect ly sure that I can get along without It 1 never would have .lent It to you.** ?Chicago Tribune. 8ksptical. Teacher? Now. Johnny, what Is the shape of the earth? Small Johnny? I dunno. Teacher? Why. I told you yes terday it was round. Small Johnny? Yes* I know, but I don't believe every thing I bear.? Chicago News. i ransient ?c fixfrrees Cubwajp jutflon .i * iin.atra afcO dtstrte*. X? * -airUM^ * "'Wllle. ? ? j>7W| ?<ii?j, aiaUojk./,;' -if ., / caflJT" ! ^?rinieuL * ^fiy7.r? ^ "*p?c* ? ' . ? '? .':? ? if ?-?a Aa(> ? ??* .& ?? V ? >i\ 8. U HOOT i Dr. Neeky's WONDERFUL Wintergreen positively cures ' Rheumatism Permanent results assured ? not only temporary relief. It troubled with this dread disease try one botile. Price 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. Tor Bael by. ' ' 1 DR. HARDY, $ Sole Agent for Waahingtoft and Tlctetty. ' - - Electric Bitter?! 8?/-eed when everything clan Mb J ?> nervous proevatioa cad fcnt*lo eeakneaees tbejr are ike supreme remedy* as thousands tu.va ucblMi FOR KtONEY, LIVER AND STOMACH TROUEM ' it k Ibe beat uudlc nc - < aold peer a drnggfct'a Norfolk, Va. - NEW Corned Mackerel [Fresh Supply of NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD . Route of The WEST BOUND 7:00 ?. m. dally except 8unday for Green rllle, Wilson. and Raleigh, con nects North, South and Weat with all lines. 4:00 m. daily ? tor Qroetnllle. Wilson and Raleigh. ' 2: SO a. m. dally ? for Green Tllle. Wllaon and Raleigh ? connects Norm South and West. SOUTH BOUND 4:15 ?? m dally ? tor New Bern,. Klnston ana Goldsboro. 10: 07 a. m. laily ? ex<4pt Sunday for New Bern. t:60 p. m. dally ? for N?v Bel's. Goldsboro and Beaufort. "Night Express" Schedule In effect December l$ttS N. B. ? The following schedule fig ure? published as information only and are not guaranteed. Trains leave Washington: NORTH BOUND 2:20 a. m. daily ? Night express ? ? parlor sleeping car for 'Norfolk Sleeper may be occupied at 12:36 a. *P. , 10:50 a. m. daily ? for Norfolk, con nects for all points North and West. Parlor car service. 8:5 p. m dally except Sunday for Belhaveq.
Washington Daily News (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 10, 1911, edition 1
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