Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Oct. 10, 1907, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Ever Notice. The doctor business seems to be tra good at the health resorts. No man is happy in everv way. Nicoltratus. The girl who is rich may be afraid that a man married her for her mon ey, but she will at least be married. Love of money is the disease which renders us most pitiful and grovelinur. Longinus. No longer let us be talking here nor put off the work God has intrust ed to our hands. Homer. Tbe Sou-h Tasres Nw England. The intersting fact is developed by a bulletin on "Power Employed in Manufacturers', issued by the Census Bureau that the South out ranks New England. The report sets out that the total amount of power em ployed in manufacturers at the close of the calendar year 1904 was 14, 641,544 horse-power. To this amount steam engines contributed 10,828,111 horse-power, or 73.9 per cent; water wheels, 1,647,900 horse-power, or 11.3 per cent. ; electric power, owned or rented, 1.592.4S3 horse-power, or 10.9 per cent.; gas or gasoline engines 289,514 horse-power or 2 per cent. ; an other kinds of power 2S3.4G7 horse-power or 1.9 per cent. The important part of this report is that section showing how this pow er was distributed in geographical di visions. The Middle States ranked first in the amount of power, report ing 5,000,367 horse-power. The Cen tral States were second with 4.077, 298 horse-power; the Southern States third with 2,3S6,330; the New Eng land States fourth with 2,254.264; the Pacific States fifth with 474,397, and the "Western States last with 445. 937. Perhaps the most striking fact revealed by these figures is that the Southern States reported more power than New England. This has not hap pened before in' the history of the country. In this connection it is in teresting to note that the develop ment in the Southern States has been in the utilization of steam-power. In the South 87.4 per cent, of the pow er was derived from steam and 6.2 per cent, from water, but in New England 59.3 per cent was from steam and 29.2 per cent, was from water. Charlotte, N. C, Evening Chronicle. The South's Cotton. It was Mr. William S. "Whitman Oj .Georgia who drew the long bow a the meeting of the "stall-fed finan ciers" at the bankers' convention i" Atlantic City this week. He took tin ground that a panic is impossible a, the season of the year when the South 's cotton crop is moving to take its place of power in the world oj commerce. "Yes," he told the bank ers, "I left our people harvesting billion bushels of grain with which to feed the world. They are gather ing the only crop of sugar this coun try produces and of sll the rice we eat, while their exports of the grain crop this year will excel in value all the gold and silver which was mined from the earth last year. Bring ti me all of the grain, all of the provis ions all of the feed stuff, all of the steel and all of the iron of the 47 States of this great Union, which was xported last year, and I will sell the cotton crop of 190 i, and pay yon cash and yet have money enough left tc capitalize 200 national banks." That is new way of describing the wealth of the South in cotton. It is a novelty in long-bow drawing al beit, it is altogether the truth. Char lotte Evening Chronicle. A Record of Service. For fortv-four years The Times- Democrat, of New Orleans, has been the loyal friend of the South, doing all within the power of a most able daily newspaper to advance the intei ests of its entire section. In point of completeness in every department that goes to make up a great daily, The Times-Democrat has few equals and no superiors. In its news ser vice it is full and exhaustive, and its editorial utterances are always safe, conservative and thoughtful, and withal spicy and pointed. It is in deed a valued friend of the South and a bold champion of the best tra ditions of the people thereof. News Notes. "Three Cuban generals were arresi ed on charges of fomenting a revolu tion against the Government. A cfibiiit: officer believes that Mr. Roosevelt wl.i soon issue a statement finally (iee'ii.ing it accept a third term. The instalJatic n of the telephone system of giimiie control will prob ab'y delay tiie sailing of the fleet January J. Prince Charles of Thurn and Taxis was killed as he attempted to slide down the banisters in his regiment mess room in Potsdam. A Relief. "I believe I prefer the concert sin ger to the operatic variety." "Why?" "The concert singer is not expect ed to make gestures." Now that the newspapaer corres pondents have located a salt river in Greece, will they please tell us who is the Hon. William Jennings Bryan of that country? Bristol Herald Courier. Let every bird sing its own note. Danish. So. 41-'07. TRANSFORMATIONS Curious Results When Coffee Drink ing is Abandoned. It Is almost as hard for an old coffee -toper to quit the use of coffee as it is for a whiskey or tobacco fiend to break off, except that the coffee user can quit coffee and take up Postum without any feeling of a loss of the morning beverage, for when Postum Is well boiled and served with cream, it is really better in point of flavour than most of the coffee served nowadays, and to the taste of the con noisseur it is like the Cavour of fine mild Java. A great transformation takes place la the body within ten days or two weeks after coffee is left off and Tostum used, for the reason that the poison to the nerves caffeine has been discontinued and ia its place is taken a liquid food that contains the most powerful elements of nourish ment. It is easy to make this test and prove these statements by changing from coffee to Postum. Read "The Road to Wellvil!3." in pkgs. "There's a Reason. " VThe Qulo7F A SERMON rftVf.NDER$o Subject: Hypocrisy. Brooklyn, N. Y. Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, Hamburg avenue and Wierfleld street, on the above theme, the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, said: The subject reflects a feature life that is as real and general as it is unfortunate and reprehensible. For hypocrisy that is to say, the assumption of that which we are not, or the uncandor of inconsistency is a prevelant and pernicious factor in life. It is present everywhere But nowhere is it more pernicious than in our own midst. America is beset with the vice of hypocrisy. And it is especially unfor tunate that it. is so. For the position of this country in the front rank of the nations and of progress makes ic insistently necessary that we shall have candor as we consider ourselves and that we shall not arrogate to ourselves any characteristics or vir tues that are not of the bone and sinew of our national life. For in sincerity is as fatal to a nation as to an individual. He lives best who is genuine. Not otherwise is it with, a nation. Generally when we speak of hypoc risy we conceive the portraits of the men who lead dual lives, of false faced friends, of the insincere haDit ues of an insincere society. They are truly to be condemned. Their ex ample is a warning. But they are not the offenders of whom most I would speak to you to day. For the hypocrisies of individ uals are co-terminous with death so far as this world is concerned. The hypocrisies of nations howeverj, by virtue oi me i'uusuujuuu ul suuieLy, have a tendency to perpetuate them selves and to become in a larger sense most lasting and pernicious. It is because of the tendency of national hypocrisies to be, in a way, self-perpetuating that I would, this morning, have you attend to the hy pocrisy of America. Because our national hypocrisies are to .some de gree unconscious they are the less to be excused and they are more to be feared. ' '' The subject is not pleasant It Is not over nice to admit that as a na tion we are hypocritical. We may wish the truth were otherwise. But the truth has a very peculiar fashion of remaining fixed and constant re gardless of our desires or our dreams. America is hypocritical. And we are hypocritical socially, government- ally, intellectually, morally and spir itually. The counts are many but we shall have to admit their validity. And they are true despite the un questioned supremacy of our people in many fields of national endeavor and success that constitute the great ness of a people. America is hypocritical Iff her so cial relationships. Jack London in a recent story tells a weird and grue some tale of howr he witnessed as a tramp the flogging in most merciless fashion of two unruly gypty boys by the leader of a gypsy camp. The story is. horrifying in that it reveals the ex istence of such cruel inhumanity in the midst of a civilized society even in a gypsy camp. Our eyes fill with tears and our blood runs hot with in dignation as we read of such unphil osophical and unscientific manage ment of children. We can understand such conditions as they exist among among the chill snows and under the benighted civilization of Russia. But here they appeal, even though they are infrequent. But while our pulses beat faster over the sins of a gypsy camp we are strangely unresponsive to the piercing wails of the multi tudes of our own children no, not our own to the wails of the multi tudes of our neighbors' children, who, day by clay, in a land of freedom and Christian enlightenment, are crushed in the mechanism of our modern commercial system. We have ears and hearts and ready hands to help the misery of the Chinaman who cries out against the greed of "most Christian England" as she forces the the curse of opium upon an unwilling nation. But we seem hardly to bear the call of the throngs whose lives in America are wrecked because of the unholy traffic in alcoholic bever ages that to-day is permitted to exist by and with the consent and suffrage of the adult membership of the Church of Jesus Christ. And just so long as we mourn over gypsies and wax indignant over the wickedness of the English people, the while we wax our ears against the call of our chil dren in the homeland for help and a chance to live as God meant they should we are, to say the least, so cially hypocritical. And no man may deny the count. America is hypocritical In her atti tude toward government. It is the fashion to declaim about the vices of Babylon, the rottenness of ancient Rome, the sins of Philip the second, the crimes of modern Russia, the ra pacity of European nations. We are astounded that the civil corruption of any nation could be so totally in decent as to consign sailors to be sent to death inside of ill-equipped and still more illy handled men of war. We thank God that we do not live under an autocracy that is as con scienceless and as villainous as that which holds the reins of Russian gov ernment. And yet, wide-awake as we are to the criminalities of the bureau cratic government of the Russian Czar, we are but half-awake to the realities of the existing corruption all around us. For the fact is that in the face of our history, our inheritance, our opportunities, our Christian in fluences, we are a sorry spectacle to the nations. We glory that we have no autocracy of birth. But by our own consent we have allowed to reign over us as greedy a set of political pirates as ever sunk a ship. Their only distinction is that they are able to fool most of the people most oi the time. The governmental condi tions existant in nearly every hamla and city in the United States of Amer ica are so absolutely disgraceful that we ought to be ashamed. Our polit ical dictators, with few, and they lus trous, exceptions, do as they please with the sublimest self-confidence im aginable. And so long as we are grieved over the examples of govern mental maladministration, ancient and modern, with which we are fa miliar, and refuse to secure the puri fication of our own political affairs, and neglect to procure the political execution of our political thugs and thieves and highbinders, whom we have allowed to reign over us, we are hypocritical in our assumption of gov ernmental virtue. And no man may deny the count. America is hypocritical intellectual ly. We rejoice in the heritage of in tellectual freedom which is ours. We give God praise that a man may think his thoughts after God here without regard to any man. We regret that China has reverenced the past, that the church in ages gone refuse-i to r.llow the liberty of private judgment. We pride ourselves upon the oppor tunity for freedom of thought that is guaranteed to every man who breathes our air. But, what do we do with the man who dares to exorcise his prerogatives? What do we, the descendants of the men who mobbed Garrison, who ridiculed the scientific geniuses of a scant generation ago? We are as impervious to a new thought as any nation under heaven. We prate about progress and we maintain the status quo. We want no new thought until it has become old. With our refinements of cruelty we attempt to still forever the activ ities of those who would follow the gleam Oi the truth of God, who would lead us ahead and up. And just so long as we talk freedom of thought, and regret the lack of it in other lands, while we have a scant attention for the prophets of the livine God whose minds are illumined by the i elory of His truth, we are intellec- j tually hypocrites. And no man may deny the count. Then, too, we are moral hypocrites. How shocked we are at the Moham medan system of divorce, and the curse of opium to the integrity of Chinese civilization, and the vicious customs of English barroom, and the free-love of a certain sort oj Social ism! But how shocked are we over the "consecutive" polygamy and polyandry that exists under the loose sanctions of our legal systems? How shocked are we by the spectacle of our boys, and girls, our men and women, deadened with drink; forced to immorality by the social conditions that we permit? How shocked we are lest perhaps our children should be told that which they will learn from questionable sources it we do not guarantee them timely and proper information! And just so long as we deplore the moral sins of other peoples and neglect to attend prop erly to the conservation of our own morals, we are hypocritical. And no man may deny the count. America is hypocritical in her con ceptions of things religious. We look with wonder and astonishment upon the inconsistency that is appar ent between the noblest books of Eastern religions and the manner of life among the devotees of those re ligions systems. We do not exalt God by the sharpened scimitar. We do not roll under Juggernaut. We do not provide money and food at the side of the graves of the departed. We do not let our nails grow for a life-time in order to glorify Almighty God. We have more sense than to do these. But what do we do? Why, we proclaim Jesus Prince of Peace while we proclaim peace a fantasy and exalt the doctrine that the way to ensure peace is to go well armed. We magnify the philosophy that says "turn to him thy other cheek." But we keep our gloves on. We believe that "righteousness exalteth." But we acknowledge, as practical men, that it i3 impracticable to be strictly honest and prosper. We acclaim the eternal necessity for an exact con currence of thought and speech, word and deed, look and action. But we send our Bibles to China packed be side a hold of beer. We assimilate the Indians by the efficient force of arms. AVe civilize the Philippines by way of Milwaukee. We sing, "Uiiio Thee, O God, be liches," but we main tain a large proportion of the churches of the living Christ in this land by such devious and precarious methods as would put a heathen to shame. And so long as we scoff at the inconsistencies of foreign relig ious systems and are satisfied, with a false optimism, to congratulate our own with ail its incongruities, we are hypocritical. And no man may deny the count. Ana an tnis is to say that we should, with no spirit of mere carp ing criticism, look over this land of ours as patriotic Americans. For upon our candor and our sincerity depend our success, our power, our future. The American nation illumined and sanctified by the truth as it is in Jesus Christ will be invincible. We must not deceive ourselves. We must be honest. Let us be courageous. Let us cease to be hypocritical, Let uj turn on the light. A Prayer For Our Xation, Almighty God, who in former times didst lead our fathers forth into a wealthy place; give Thy grace, we humbly beseech Thee, to us their children, that we may prove ourselves a people mindful of Thy favor, and glad to do Thy will. Bless our land with honorable in dustry, sound learning and pure man ners. Defend our liberties, preserve our unity. Save us from violence, discord and confusion, from pride and arrogance, and from every evil way. Fashion into one happy family the multitudes brought hither out of many kindreds and tongues. Endue with the spirit of wisdom those whom we entrust in Thy Name with the authority of governance, to the end that there be peace at home, and that we keep a place among the nations of the earth. In the time of prosperity, fill our hearts with thankfulness; and in the day of trouble, suffer not cur trust in Thee to fail; all of which we ask for Tesus Christ's sake. Amen. A Striking Thought. Until Christianity shows a strong er grip on Christians it only plays tag with, the world- PARIS MILLINERS CONFECTIONS. For the first time on record during the last twenty years, declares the Paris correspondent of the Gentle woman, the milliners have raised their prices. There has been for some time an outcry among hat makers that they could not obtain the same profits as the dressmakers, althousrh t.hnv hn,l ) the same class of clients. They considered it unreasonable that a woman should pay as much as $1,000 for a dress, and the very high est price they could obtain for a hat was $60. To-day there is no possibil ity of complaint on theii- part, or they are making hats, and selling them, too, at $240. I had seen wonderful structures of aigrettes and marabout at $140, and thought we had reached the limit, but the $240 hat is an extravagance that 1 do not care to qualify. "Surprising?" say the milliners. "Not at all. People wear real laca upon their dresses, why should they not also have it on their hats?" I was curious to see this sensational hat, and arrived just as it was being packed in its cardboard box, a circle of admiring assistants in ecstasies at its beauty. It was a large capeline in straw with a collar of Venetian point around the crown the lace alone worth $150 and a small mountain of marabout and aigrettes on one side. Such extravagance is not only wick ed, but unnecessary, for after all, who ears a hat at this price? Not a young woman certainly? Such foolish display can only como from an old woman, and she would do well to be more discreet. WORKS BOTH WAYS. If you are disappointed in your hus band after you are married, remember that it is just possible he is quite as much disappointed in you. Human nature is faulty, and it is well to bear in mind that there is usually blame at tached to both sides, and that what we all have to do is to make the best of one another as we are, rather than lament that others arc not perfect. New York Journal, You can quote almost anything as from the Bible these days and not gst caught at it, declares tbe Detroit Free Tress. SPOKE AT MEMPHIS President Rccseve!t Received a Cordial Welcome HEARD BY IMMENSE CROWDS With Bands Playing Flags Waving and Torrents of Rain Palling the People of the Tennessee City Give the Chief Executive the Most Cor dial Greeting He Eas Received on His Journey to the Canebrakes. Memphis, Tenn., Special. With bands playing, children singing ami enthusiastic men shouting the slogua of deep waterways, Memphis threw wide her gates Friday afternoon to President Roosevelt, a score of Gov ernors and many other distinguished personages in the Mississippi valley. The President arrived on the United Stales steamer Mississippi shortly after 10 o'clock. The bluffs overlook n.g the river were iwked x with people, who gave the Chief Exe cutive a warm welcome. As t!;e steamer landed the whistles of all craft in Hie harbor were sounded. When all had landed, the President was conducted to a carriage by Gov ernor Patterson, of Tennessee, and Mayor Malone, of Memphis, and the most imposing parade ever given here was begun. The President was con tinuously cheered throughout the march. The city was a waving mass of color, not only along the line of parade, but on many other streets as well. When the President's carriage turned into Main street he was sa luted by a regiment of Confederate veterans, who thereafter acted as -i body guard. The President rose and warmly greeted the warrors of a half century ago. Rain Mars Programme. Despite a lively downpour of rain which lasted until noon, the streets were jammed with citizens and visi tors. In Second street 200 school children, seated on a decorated arch. sang patroitoc airs as the President passed. The President rose in his carriage and bowed repeatedly to the little ones. Arriving at the auditorium rink, where the deep waterways conven tion is holding, President Roosevelt alighted, ehatted with several friends and ascended t!ie platform. The huge structure fiiU-i up rapidly, to. when Governor 1 aitcrson, rose to present the 1 ';''.. ,L an immense s fciriblatc greeted !,im. 'resident Rooscielt departed fion his printed spr-ecli in several in?'. ri ces. Speaking ci the Confcdci ;i;o guard . honor, lie said it was a tout ing sight to see ti.tse old Confeder ate soldiers eariying the flag of ir.ls great Union. K any one wanted to know how they . v rdd tight for i':: t l!ag, Rt him ask the boys in blue .vw the boys in grey fought against it. He said, with emphasis, that he v..-s a; much the Piesident of the South as the President ol the North, and was devoted to the South 's interests. He said he was ;i half Southerner; and when he told oi two or three f his nuclei having wore the grey, ie was tremendously .ii.plauded. Speaking of the acep water channel from the Gaif to the Lakes, the Presi dent said he favored rapid improve ments cf the Mississippi river. "Like Davy Crocket, the great Tcn nessean," he said, "I favor his motto 'Be Sure Your Are Right, Then Go Ahead.' and this deep watci problem is almost to the 'go ahead' stage, but we want to be sure about it." Canal Doing Well. The Panama canal, lie said, was getting on well, "and the reason it is getting on so well is because we did not allow ourselves to go off half cocked." When the canal has been complet ed, he said, this nation would not ask other governments "kindly not to bother the canal; that we would pro tect it. News in Erief. Fourteen persons, among them one white, were drowned by the upset -tinr of a boat in Alabama. President Roosevelt announced that he would approve the Oklahoma Constitution. The unnamed new 20.000-ton bat tleship is to be called the North De kota. Floods caused great loss of life and damage in Spain and much damage in France. "We must have a larger and highly efficient navy to patrol our coasts, not only the Atlantic, but on the Pacific," he said. He urged the people to disregard party lines in all purely national af fairs. When the President closed his ad dress he was driven rapidly to his train at the Missouri Pacific station, whence he departed at 5 o'clock for Lake Providence, La., for a hunting trip. x The President's speech was on the same lines as those lie has made at other western points, and was atten tively llistened to by the immense crowd. To Ignore Kansas Order. Chicago, 111., Special. It is stater! tha! loading railroads hi insc head fp'ii'.itcis in this city and operating in Kanr:is have decided to iirnoic he railroad commission of that Flaic and refuse to obey its order for a two cent possenser rate. The commis sion ordered the rate to be put into effect. This ictioii was taken on the ii'ivicc of the genera! rci.i.sel of the (iTicnt road; who ;-:-!-:ie that lite ou.cis of.th commi ui-i a.r.not be eni'oiccd. If the interior waterways were com pleted a railroad paralysis would not impose serious consequences, main tains the New Orleans Picayune. As to the telegraph, the day will come when the wireless processes will be in such general use that there will not be such extreme dependence up on the "wire and the key" as at pres ent. It is the sudden failure of ex isting metnofis anl agencies neces sary to the conduct of buB.ino.-.?- that forces some great, improvvrnent and special invention. A Great Daily. Great in every feature is The Col umbia State. With a news service reaching to the remotest corners of civilization one can keep fully post ed about the world's happenings by reading its columns. Its service is full and reliable. All over South Carolina The State has special cor respondents who are alert to furnish it with the first authentic account of all matters worthy of recording in the bounds of The State. It has a special Washington correspondent who furnishes its readers with spicy special items from the seat ot gov ernment. In its editorial utterances The State is sound and able to a de cree. The Sunday issue is always filled with articles of special merit: in fact a single Sunday issue of The State is equal in literary value to our leading magazines. Altogether the South has no better exponent of its wonderful progess than this truly metropolitan 'daily, The Columbia State. Provergs and Phrases. A man is not necessarily an aero naut because he is often up in the air. Hewho has a good nest finds good friends. Portugese. Rewords and punishment are the basis of good government. Is epos There is nothing worse for mortals than a vagabond life. Homer. Even wisdom is got the better by self interest. Pindar. FITS. St. Vit,ns-Dance :TS ervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, tnal Dottle ana ireansu ncc Dr. H. ft. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. The experience of life "What fool I've been! Punch. Mrs. Winsiow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softensthegums,reducesinflammac tlon, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Oyster Bay anounces that gentle man called Mety Tiger has been ap pointed to succeed Pleasant Porter as first chief of the Creek Indians. There is a shockingly carnivorous suggestion about the new chief's name. Does lie eat 'em alive ? At any rate, he lacks the soothing so porific and thirst-allaying qualitie3 baptisimally accruing to his predeces sor. Brooklyn Eagle. A TEKKIBLE EXCEltlEXCE. How a Veteran Was Saved the Am putation of a Limb. B. Frank Doremus, veteraD, ot Roosevelt Ave., Indianapolis, Ind., says: I had been showing symptoms of kidney trouble from the time I was mus tered out of the ar my, but in all rny life 1 never suffered as in 1897. Headaches, dizziness and sleep lessness, first, and then dropsy. I was weak and helpless. having run down from 180 to 125 pounds. I was having terrible pain in the kidneys, and the secretions passed almost involuntarily. My left leg swelled until it was 34 inches around, and the doctor tapped it night and morning until I could no longer stand it, and then he advised amputation. 1 refused, and began using Doan's Kidney Pills. The swelling subsided- gradually, the urine became natural and all my pains and aches disappeared. 1 have been well now for nine years since usin; Doan's Kidney Pills." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. No News in The Paper. Frequently vou pick up one of the local papers, and after glancing at the headlines wearily, thrust it aside, remarking:, "Nothing in the paper to day." Did you ever stop to think what that phrase nothing in the pa per today means? It means that in the day no misfortune has befallen any one in our city; that no fire has wiped out a neighbors worldly goods.;, that the grim angel of death has crossed no threshold of a friend; that no man driven by liquor, hatred or fear has taken the life of a human that no poor devil, haunted by the past or the misdeeds of some other, has crossed the great divide by his own hand. So the next time you pick up a paper that doesn't announce a tragedy, give a little thanks instead of a grunt because there is no news. Nevada, Mo., Mail. A verbal pvromaniac is what is known in common speech as a hot air j artist, and unfortunately such cannot ' be sent to the Home of Incurables, : hence they are sent to legislative as sembles. Richmond J ournal. Ladies who suffer from inflammation of the womanly organs, should be careful that they do not allow the inflam mation to spread, or take fast hold, since serious dis ease might result, requiring, possibly, an operation. Pain is one of the first signs of inflammation, and when it remains constant, in the back, side, hips, head, or comes back every month, your trouble is nearly certain to be inflammation, and needs prompt treatment, with "Wine of Cardui. The great popular success of Cardui, during the past half century, tells volumes as to its merit'for Current Events. Criminal proceedings have been in stituted against Maxim Oorkcy on ac count of his novel entitled "Mother" which has br?n confiscated. Four porsor.s were killed in a col lision between a feiisrht train and a mer America next month. Further experiments were with the Zeppelin airship. , i mane work train on the beaboard Air Line j V. i fira-je. rastampa wB nwiaio) ., , , 1 r I I I a 1 AUii BOOK giving the experience railroad near Alamo, ueoigia. , I 1 A 01 a practical r-uurv naiser not L a" a,llait ur- "t a man working The Duchess of Marlborough for-' sy X 'r " nJ cuits during a " , , .. . . j tyeara. It tRacaes how to Detect t OllSllieO vanncl UilL IU l in.i (jure Kiaeaaes; reed for am State of Ohio, City of Toledo, a Lucas Couxty, f E3, Frank J. Chexey makes oath that heio senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State afiresaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of one iiusdr'ed dol lars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Haix's Catarku Cuke. l bask J . Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Cili day oi December, A. 1) 1SE6. A. V. Gleasox, (seal.) Notary Public. Bail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and nets directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. J. Chexey &. Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists. 75c. Take Hull's Family l'iik for constipation. This Lupercal Business. Caesar thrice refused a kinkly crown, ana mat enuou it. "What are you driving at now?" "Roosevelt has to enter a fresh de nial every week." SLEEP BROKEN BY ITCHING. Eczema Covered Whole Body For Year No Relief. Until Cuticura. Remedies Prove Perfect Success. "For a year I have had what they call eczema. I had an itching all over mv bodv. and when I would retire for the night it would keep me awake half the night, and the more I would scratch, the more it would itch. I tried all kinds of reme.Iies, but could get no relief. I used one cake of Cuticura Soap, one box of Cuticura and two vials cf Cuticura Resolvent Pills which cost me a dollar and twenty-five cents in all, and am very glad I tried them, for I was completely cured. Walter W. Paglush, 207 N. P.obev St., Chicago, 111., Oct. 8 and 16, 1906." There are countless roads on all sides to the grave. Cicero. GA.4LA. BUSINESS COLLEGE MACON, G A. H Hew Manajtfiim Kan txpsrt tacutty icf FINEST POSITIONS 'AMERICA'S BEST" WRITE FOR CATALOGUE THE rOTTOS PKES8 that has been used all oret tilt? colttm ctl;m for tae past c.iiarter -f a century. We can furniab It complete a- Khown. or uo: lT lrun end all fixtures complete with T i:tl instructions aud cuts for thoe that want ltl-td the -wool worn TOWER 51 FG. CO. I'hattaDOOca. Tenn union orse ana mine anoes The Best Material-Tic Kost Careful Workmanship IRON or STEEL Guaranteed to the dealer as well as the horse-shoer If your dealer does not carry them in stock, writs as for prices. OLO C0MIKI08 IRON S HAIL WORKS CO., EoiIs!s'., RICHMOND. VA. lengthens the life of the wagon saves aorse power, tima and tem per. Best lubricant in tiie world contains powdered mica a smooth, hard coating on axle, and reduces friction. If you want your outfit to last and cam inoney while it lasts grease the axles with Mica Axle Grease. STARDARO C1L COKPAKY fcrp-trf 1 rviinr rric r.ruhA. i I can dye any garaneut without ripping apart. Write 1 11 Hi ! l.inti cure Luiea3es: reed for&rei nlun lor KiiMMnia-: which Fowls 1 I r.uif'vior ;.rc-aul.ie Poultry rai 1 j. n.n. i'uhi.i.suimi ! CO, 13; t.oiour I ;Mr:ct, Jew Vor. Old Dom g P. ST fn Hammer y v4 Brand r-y FScaTxIe Grease J n PU Perfect Womanhood The greatest menace to woman's permanent happiness in life is the suffering- that comes from some de rangement of the feminine organs. Many thousands of women have realized this too late to save tHfeir health, barely ia time to save their lives. To be a successful wife, to retain the love and admiration of her hus band, should be a woman's constant study. If a woman finds that her ener giesare nagging, that she gets easily tired, dark shadows appear under her eyes, she has backache, head ache, bearing-down sensations, ner vousness, irregularities or the "blues," she should start at once to build up her system by a tonic with specific powers, such as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound the great woman's remedv for woman's ills, made only of roots and herbs. It cures Female Complaints, such as Dragging Sensations, VVe Back, Falling and Displacements. Inflammation and Ulceration, and all Organic Diseases, and is invaluable in the Change ot Lifa. It dissolves and Expels Tumors at an early staSe. Subdues Faintness, .Nervous Prostration, Exhaustion, and strengthens and tones the bToina.cn. Cures Headache, General Debility, Indigestion, and invigorates the whole female svsem. It is an excellent remedy for derang-ements of the Kidneys in either sex. mmmmmmm !Mi-iiiuiwAalJHItvwir--,a To produce a "bumper" wheat crop, it is absolutely necessary that you supply to your land one or more of the three elements of plant food which your soil so badly needs : phosphoric acid, nitrogen (or ammonia; and potash. X he UDerai use ci Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers, (say 2co to 500 pounds to the acre) will meet this deficiency. You know the highest grades are always cheaper, as they produce greater vlrlrU. Thpse fertilizers on account of the phosphoric acid they con- fj tain, promote the growth and development of the grain and hastens ?3Ma ...!. . .1 :. - : nl 1, If-K tVipv nr.- a nart. increases the growth of leaves and stalk and its potash gives strength to the stalk and assists in the development of the grain. So use Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers and greatly 'Increase your yields per acre." Don't buy any substitute brand, which some dealer may rWfyou "Is just as good." If he cannot supply you, write us direct for the goods and tell us your dealer's name. " VIRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL COMPANY, SALES OFFICES: Richmond, Va. Durham, N. C. ' Baltimore, Md. Norfolk, Va. Charleston, S. C. Atlanta, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Savannah, Gs. Memphis, Tenn. Shreveport, La. m PORATABLE AND STATIONARY D BOILERS Baw, Lath and Shirnrle Mills. Injectors, Tampa nd Fitting, Wood Saws, Splitters, Shafts, Pulleys, Belting, Gasoline Engines. LARGE STOCK AT LOMBARD, Fsundjy, Machine anil Bailer Works and Supply Stare, AUGUSTA, GA. t So. 41-'07. nmif OElW V "W '"S 3,UU Ot OdiOU Onvuw THE WCHLD SHOE8 FOR EVERY MEMBER OF MS3 THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICES. " jf5" 3 f9 n 1 To any one who can prnvc Vf. I. 3i4m&mli3U1J )0ee?0fa doom not oufca vs.ll mc.-e Man's S3 a $3.SO .-'iacJ nCWSru 'than sny other cnasttiisc'. f. THE REASON W. I. Donglas shoes are worn hy i:nro pwj.jo in all walks of lit'o than any other make, is lw:.ii-n J -'11' excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior vp.-irins quamie.-. The selection of the leathers and other miiterinis iorewli part of the shoe. and every detail of the making is looJ.e.1 niter hv the most completeorganlzation of superiiitemint.-.ff.!'oi.i'iiaini skilletl shoemakers, who receive the highest wacs pan! in the shoe industry, ami whose workmanship cannot be- excelled. I If I could ti'ike vou into mv large factories at Brockton.Mnss., and show you how carefullv W.L. Douglas shoes arc innilo. you would then understand why they hold their shape, lit better, My 94. DO and SS.OO CM Edge Shoes csnnol k? eewsffeef f mprifl CAtTTION! The genuine have W.L Douglas na.no and pwe t, u ; TJ No Substitute. Ask your dealer for W. L. Boosts shoes. Jf 1 'n.iot J"0 direct to factory. Shoes sent everywhere by mail. Catalog liee. i,X.DouE1m. Brockton, Ma FADEL j - , . , ,. . t-i for free booklet How to Uye, lileaca aud Mix female complaints .Thousands of letters are received, tp.llinor nf its fhA f nil o win Hashenlarger, of Larkin, Ka3. 'Before I took Cardui I Gu&ered greatly with inflammation. It work ed on me for some years, but hadn't bothered me much, till after my mar riage, when it caused me two mishaps. Mas HASflENBARaBR, 'After that, LeiWn, Kas. and I am so tiian&im. fWTr!7? RTtfW Wri" Frec S-Pre Boot for Women. IT yfra need A4- JCUali SSXJKMBL vice, daaoribe ajrroptoma, stEtina r-g .and w .-..! &Jn 7PgXB T ATVnFC Plain sealed envelope. Address: Lao.cs Advisory Dept. JBVii L.A1K TheChanaacoea Medicine Cc., Cl:ttancosa. t too. TO FARMERS AND POULTRYMEN! v fNICK F N V EAKLN MONEY lSJn kt& VZVjJLJ unless 5011 understand them and know L 'mm l;ow to rater r t:i- !r requirement, and you cannot spend years and dollars learning hy t?:j rier.co. so you must hiiv th knnnrioriiro rmiiirrd bv others. Ve o(; ?r ih.s to you for only 23 ents. You want them to pay diversion. In order to haimic t them. To meet this want we them as a. minx about tlir-m Tn moot tHI xva n ot a practical poultry raiser for (Only a man who nut all his mind, and time, en ralsine not as a nastime. but as a ty-five years' work vou ran save manv earn dollars for you. The point is, that you must be sure to Poultry lard as soon as it appears, and know how 13 re:ii ;oy teach you. It tells how ta detect and cure disease: 10 lecd rattening; which Fowls to save for br; Von sVirt.iM b-ni-n, ...Ki. rt v cents In stamps. BOOK PUBWSIliKQ IIOCSK. 131 LeonaV-i St.. New YorkCltj a COMBERLAHQ-EYERBEARiNB 1907 KKCOllJJ APRIL 20 TO JULY 4-TH. lit ami h.ivw berries lO I nV lvQitsnoxt Spring. Sonf! for now cilia loiniR n I kl-i,, I "How to Uanntifv Horn ft.' THE CUMOERLAHD KUflSEHJfS, WIRCiiESTEH, TESff. CURED Givea Quick Relief. Rt-novci all swelling In 8 to m iara ; effects a permanent cur iti"..ttn Trial treatment given frt-e. Nothing-can be fairer Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sons. -. mm f&1?&8ctas!2. Gai e Atlanta. Bn. 3 BEST IN - t t-ni T-.-it.r Twtrr thnn nn v othrr are. io Colors. 31tiM&4'E JJitLU CO., Vaiucy. Illinois curative loowers. oso &. from Mrs. Mabel p! Cardui helped me so much their own way even ir you merely 1 Fowls juuicuv-isli-. you must know f are selling a book Rtvins the experi if you merely keep Fcme- enca Sc.) twenty It was written by and inoney to isEtins a Ei-ces of Lnick- business and if ''-i iu;i P"V by his twen- Chicks antiu;iliy. mtike your Fowls tc-i-t trouble in th :- ir. mis coolt Will or erss find aiso for everything. Indeed. - sdin purpo nv. ti 1 n i:I t-. S.-;it ro?-tianI for twentv- n 4 It. OQdV
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 10, 1907, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75