Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Nov. 14, 1907, edition 1 / Page 2
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. The ifiiluii Bulletin, fii HUSHED EVERY THURSDAY. 'i'.-CE ONE DOLLAR A YEAR U. S. HAYES, Editor and Publisher. Entered as second-class matter June j iiid. 1905, at the post office at Asne o to, N. C, under the net of Congress ofjtfarch 3rd 1879 The murder of Miss Mary Ann Harper a maiden lady of Mont gomery county should be a solemn warning to all who let it be known that they have money hoarded on their premises. Had it been generally known that Miss Harper had her money de posited in bank no doubt she LET CONFIDENCE RETURN! Let confidence return! Noth ing else is needed to restore ordinary normal conditions in the twin worlds of business and of banking. Stability and sol vency have returned to both. Nothnig is left to remind any one of the financial convulsion in New York but the wide spread lack of confidence which has spread over the land in widening waves from its financial center, For any fear as to the general solvency and security of banks and credit there is no longer any basis whatever. The banks are secure. The Clearing Houses in each city are protecting all of tliem alike. Every depositor in our city banks By Andrew Jo; server. M1LLIKAN reunion old time country sort, plenty ol -,er in News and Ob-jit and on nana ait the tim t rnod old Randolph stvlo. Greensboro. N. C. Oct. 26 j immctilr l;'n. t; names of visitors and neighbors were familiar, there beine- Cobles Staulkers, Hinshaws, Gardners, Brilses and Foxes a plenty. . The j country was just one big neigh-j borhood village oat there, j Farms were in squares of 80 acres, few owning more, and t everybody was in holleiing dis-j tance of each other. i These lands, not for sale, j ill". Home comings, reunion of famil ies, are always interesting events and North Carolinians, by reason of this being one of the parent states, generally connect such happenings with an idea of- the participants coming back to the State or the county or the com munity where the original head of the family had his span of life and action. On a larger scale like the reunion m Greens- f wnen sold brought from $100 boro, three years ago, of native j to $125 an acre. The principal : non residents, the home coming j crops was corn, which was large-1 was connected with the thought j -v fe(j to hogs, cattle and horses. I of folks returning to old North generally a farmer would plant! Carolina from the newer state. I ,.Airi tPt- to fifteen ares onlv in! .1 i t L. i- U would not have met cieatn a "it . , b k b A 1 1 v., hands of foul robbers. who hoard money at home not only run the risk of losing it by being robbed but may be murdered besides. As a matter of safety to both life and proper ty banks are the proper deposit ories for valuable papers and ready cash. When Wall street calls for money, the republican ad ministration carts over any number of millions. When the cveat southern country. hind every dollar of his bank de posit. The sudden failure of any bank has ceased to be possible. For the first time in our history tire small, isolated rural banks are protected. They are acting together. They are protecting each other by common action. No danger longer exists of that general collapse in banking which in 1873 and 1893 swept terror over the land. Leave your money where it is. It is safe. Use your check book. Let check pay check- in the pay ment of bills and obligations. The Clearing Houses, by their common and joint action, have mnde a check on one bank as g-ood as on another, and placed all the banks on a common basis of mutual solvency. Currency exists for all the day's needs in exchange, in retail sales and in wages, if a return of confidence permits its free circulation and ends hoarding and needless de mands for it. Where checks have been used in the past it is a crime now to ask currency. Danger is over. The New York banks, the financial center rounds ...f the democratic press, me umuu,, "--"-"' - . ... iRtonned name. -protected threat- i rm sinister uaruw&e wi wmi - newspaper comment is to preju dice the irrirKb of the people against the republican party. The ecrecar:' of the treasury had a perft-ct right to deposit : , 1 1. it ri tne national o with a mnun uonai cuuuu crop needs a few millions to keep the crop from being sold at a sacrifice, the repub lican administration turns a deaf ear to the appeal. And yet our cheerful republican friends boast in every cam paign that they are friends of the south They have never been friends of the south and never will be. A southern man cannot vote for any such party and be true to his country. Lexing ton Dispatch. The above quotation is a fair sumpie o the rot going the as they did. But recently out i . )nii getting about j.; 1 monev witn tne lu.uonai of New York, but he had no legal right wnatever io deposit money with southern banks and take ware house cotton receipts ns securitv as requested by a Texas congressman. This de posit was asked for to aid cotton dealers to hold their cotton for a bigger price. It is not the duty of the government to aia combination in holding certain products in order to create a "corner" on that product. The secretary of the treasury has just as much right to aid the kunoermn, the ranchmen, the . ,,ai operator, liquor dealer, to bacco farmer, or wheat farraei any other farmer or dealer to hold their products for higher prices as he has to aid the cotton raiser. Secretary Cortelyou act ed within the bounds of law, when ii deposited governmem funds with tne New York Na tional banics and we presume he will aid other banks, East, West and whenever opportunity permits within the bound of law. SQUANDRiisQ OF MONEY. Some wee.is ago, with a migh ty blast of trumpets, the taking of testimony before Special mas ter Montgomery in the railroad investigation case began. The people supposed that the investi gation was being made in their interest, but recent develop ments lead us to believe that it was intended on the part of the State officials to give a fat job for a few months to a few Demo cratic politicians who were fe.-.xious to get to the public seat. Why was it necessary to em ploy eight lawyers to look after the Stage's interest in this case a hen the State already had two able attorneys the attorney general and his assistant who aVe paid a regular salaray to look after the State's interest? No man will dare say these officers are incompetent for the duties r,.m;ired in this case; they are a-wne the States best attorneys Then again it is well known that .-ill easses. where a large army o-' attorneys aie employed, that t, few do the work and the re mainder are onlookers. It is rumored that a contract was made with these attorneys to nav them $2,500 each and ex nenses. It further reported that ' Knpakpr Justice's expense ac count to date was $250. Now if the expense accounts of the oth er seven attorneys run up in like proportion, the salaries and expenses will amount to quite a sum, and if the thing goes on much longer, it will empty the Treasury. The whole thing is a farce and the quicker it ends the bet terShelby Aurora. ened points and stand secure. Nowhere else in no other city have the banks felt any strain. Before danger came they pro tected themselves by the action of their Clearing houses, trust companies and all other like in stitutions enjoy a common pro tection. There have been no savings bank runs. In this city more is being paid into savings banks than is being taken out. The foanKs are sate on one side. The great masses art quiet on tne other, business men as a body need to show the same confidence. It is a time to build up and not to teai down to deposit and not to withdraw, to ameliorate existing conditions and not to make them worse, to improve credit and gain credit by giving credit and not to push at the cost of all credits for cur rency transactions. The monetary stringency is over and gone. The rate foi loans was lower in Philadelphia yesterday than in London. Head long panic has been checked. Runs on banks and trust com panies have ceased in New York. There have been none elsewhere. The New York trust companies in difficulty have been supported and placed on a secure basis. No where else were trust com panies even threatened. Let confidence return! If busi- Indiana there was a family re union, A which meant to some North Carolinians, not only i delightful trip and visit, but ; reversal of the incoming prac tice. The Randolph Count Millikans, who moved to Indian in 1859, had in this year of grae become so large a majority o that family, the North Carolin; branch had to go out there to ; home-coming week, or go with out a family re-union. Face t face with this realization, Mr. Benjamin Millikan, of Guilfor College, formerly of Randolph now in hi3 77th year, his soi United States Marshal James M. Millikan, of Greensboro, and D vy. aiiumuu, ui xwuiuuipu cuuxil. ;;ne settle fS ou years oi age, lett ten day i .r Friends, they ago for .Hamilton county, Inch- 1 ndants sticking ana, to attend a reunion of tht J rn ast Tue Millikan famines, representing two brothers,, who., with then wives, left. Randolph county ii 1859 in covered wagons anv journeyed over eight hundre miles to the county in Indian, where they have since reside and where all except one of tht brothers are living. These tw Millikans were William an. Milton. William is now dea out his widow, eight iivh children and several granu children were a part of the farnit. tnousanc i .mshels. This he would iv ':ae stock being raised for mar ket, the balance of the land h ng set to hay or pasture to ran .he stock on. Ten years a; .hese Indiana lands could b iought for $50 an acre. T: Illinois farmers, where Ian 'vere selling for $125 per ac inding that Indiana lands w iust as good and cheaper, to-. j selling their land?, and rn ng over to Indiana. This raisf rices of lanes until now ti; vere as high as the IIU: lan-i.-: '"'It's a fine country, I tell you xclaimed the Jiirsnal, "bu; ad rather take ny ' V' ! v.-o.U -r-v. !.: f v tb 1 t --. -M-.r, :s : When purple grapes are on the vine, and anp!e in bs bin, When far across the level fields is borne the crow's harsh call, Then in the garden lifts its head the bravest flower of ail. Chrysanthernum-the name is long for little lips to speak, Vat Ethel loves the cheerful bloom, and holds it to her cheek: For on the Winter's icy edge it sets its banners bold, iVith fragrance keen as myrrh and spice, with colors clean and -old. Clematis twined its airy wreaths, ar.'l fsded from the land: No more the sumach rears its plume, by gentle breezes fanned; Dear Mother Nature tells the rose 'tis time to hide her head, And every tiny violet is tucked uway in bed. The birds which sang in Summer days are flying to the South; The fairies lurk no longer in the morning-glory's mouth: And Ethel, sitting down to rest anear the eld stone wall, Sees, bright and strong and undismayed, the bravest flower of all. Its petals may be tipped with pink, or touched with palest hue Of yellow gold, or snowy white, their beauty smiies at you; And little recks it though the f ro3t may chill the nipping air, It came to see the curtains drop, this flower so debonair. , vyyswthemum-a harrier word than e'KV-.er. often say, y.-.t" little Ethel croons it oVr to musw b!-.i- - .ay; '"'Far East," she cries, "at.d We.-t th-J hve- -:y icUn- and !hvy And still I find chrysanthemum the brave-.;, ilcv.- i .-iS." Oh, by and by the fierce north wind in wude.-.t wr-.ith will blow, The sleet upon the panes will beat, and Nature swift .,h::U ;vo And whisper to chrysanthemum sho.il Y'.V.i V : v-rui-v -'Ccm .;. darling flower; the play is done. I'iilir.! yva baek nf xr ArTOilN'-'-V - AT - LAW Ash V.ov i-,. :v-?ine and Boiler, j Lumber Co. .7 I'., or bonm li"lnn will nractice in the Stale and Fed'- rai courio. . - See nd the settlement cf t Office: North eide court coubs. o W. H. Sash Allen Turning This America of ours is a very ee country. Many of us think sat our liberty gi :ght to do just as ;.nd even the littlc his generatioii who y oi ireeoj.'ni ers were sulow .'PR us . :1 Lnv; Y we P'ast children o Molding Dressed LumVer f.nd all kinos jf building matf vhi. Write him for pr'ces. W. H. ALLEN. Brown, N. C. Arrival and Dep arture of Trains. Southern. K: ilroau. TRAINS GOING .NORTH: Vo. 136 11:15 a. nr.. " 142 4:25 a. m. " 'a 4:00 p. ni. 144 6,50 a. m TKAiiMS ARRIVU FROM NORTH: 3:35 p. in. 10:30 a. m. 0:40 p. m. 840 p. m. d 144 Sun trains week " TiIAl. S. FERRKE.I nfsrti I A TTORNKY-AT-1 AW. ?.anufactures!ASHEBOROf - - N. C. Doors j All matters attendee? to with care Brackets ! and promptness. j cpes:ic!i iir.ciuivM f-- I and settlement of e6tates. (1 :21 :7) i jaiaes T. MoreiwaJ. Oscar U 9mn M0RES1EAD & SAPP ATTORNEYS AT LAW Greensboro, - N. C. Will practice as hef tof oro in Randolpt county. Principal ofCic-e in Greeneborg. Telephone in ofhes and in coromvmic- Mo: 'with all parts of Ka4olph county.. . 107 141 143 DR. D. K. LOCKHART. DEXT1ST, Asheboro, - - - N. C '..: liU- i Ahovo i-ch : onl-. - OHce: OVER THE BANK HOURS) 9 iPifl 4 I 2 N. P. COX ASIIKBOI-tO, N. CV ij-athering which was held at ti dale figures information I ' ; ' l!;..ilroad. j W. O. STEDMAN Co : OUTH: j DEALER IN HIGH GRADE GROCK11J15S, Depot St. West side railroad 'Phone 66. m. ! m. i Yestfield, Marshal ne of the St. Louis .-.&cing b.-ti-oons fly over the town, at as. iliitude so high that it look-st. ibout the size of a fiouf barrel, ind going at h rapta rule, ih-, A'hole country was excited ove. i,ne races, ancx an nnmeusv jrowd on the watch for dome oi die balloons were rewatdeu .vith this sight of one at 9 o'ciocr. luesday morning. iw sue au .. 1AF fore home of Milton Milikan, whor. 82d birthday was celebrated dui mg the happy reunion, his wiu seven children and 19 gran.. children being among the happ celebrants at the modern horu three miles from the thrivit town of Sheridan. For a wee the North Carolina Millikan were getting acquainted wit, their kin, first at one home thei at another, the largest numbe together at any one time bein;. on the day of the birthday din ner, when 85 Millikans in nam or direct blood sat down to hea the old patriarch's blessing an jat the royal feast. All thei. Millikans and their descendenu-: the sons, the daughters, th grand-children, still live i; Hamilton county, Indiana, where William and Milton fu settled nearly 50 years ago. A . are farmers except one son o. Milton Millikan, who is a pros perous physician and businea man of Sheridan. At this rt anion Mr. Benjamin met a son, and Marshal Millikan a brothtr, d. F. Millikan and wife, o. Dodge City, Kansas, whom the., nad not seen in many years He is United States register o. ae laud office there. I felt very much interested h sta cornea ciw AS TO Eighty of beam a;. and aft, From here to yo lithe of jo.iii, faking some ti ne point, Jehold the trim lev he Lusitania of i 3y spendthrift nature wc-ihtilj dowed ; fo stamp out treason and to sit oil graft. ;le'rf not one patriot, but a mergertd crowd. Both earth end ocean for his flag ha's plowed, lis shoulders lift ap a mountain range of care. .Veil may his friends proclaim, in accents loud, That he could fill the presid iitil chair. He could and more; for him 'twould be but sport To fill a presidential davenport -From Collier's for October 2t ioly things. The t-- i. ! ".e I.U(.i.".i':i. - . . I :i to reverse the Pauniii' ion, " Children, obey . i --its," in order th-a ih, nay obey their enii-ivvi:. io ut; extent that this notion ootanis ,v'e see the chilcren ici; resptct t :,!' narents aiui iov every iovih j of authority with winch the lare to meet in ail the after years : hara to control at Little money SIbut big money. i V.'--" ' I A 1 P.: t; itOOl '07 anywhere, for their .-cry training or lack of training, ..yveiops an overhearing and tVr.cuous spirit of disobedience, aid as that spirit matures, they .ra ready for anything foi eally the child who rules the a rents at home will want to .ale the teacher at school, and is he grows older will be ready ,o defy all lav,', both human and dvine. Parents.t herefore, wh. . )ve their children should leao tiem baqik to the old paths and c.iough prayer and precept ant; example teach them lessons of obedience and self-denial that t.iey may be led to f ear God am' do his will, for note well if tht generation to come is not taugh; thoroughly the lessons of revet nce and godly fear the effect, will surely be periious.- !'l. in Book 120 Pa;o 242 office of the Register of for Eandolpii County, .1. r- !-al;ened con ufclcr., rest'l 2-.? give tern ng the organ; North Carol ii; ft on the bib. day . of March 1001 and duly recorded n tno : i;eeat- , . . r... North; 'V::- i ' r i i J! ; jt i ' oaron.'.a: tne unaersigneu mori- hrfh. Tragee will offer forsale on account j GFiRMA K GRA1 NFS o? default being made in the! 525-Wt :-st. 12th St., payment oi the debt secured in! N.- w York N.Y. he said mortgage the lands! therein conveyed to the last and You will save money by pay ing cash for what you buy, and will avoid paying for goods you haven t bought to call on J. L. NORMAN and buy cheap, where you will net be bothered with book ac counts. A nice line of Grocer ies, Notions, Ovt rails, Suspen ders, Pants, Shirtd, etc. JONES OLD STAND north side Depot st. Asheboro. discover'. Notice to Colored Teacher?. Ail colored teachers of th county are requested to met t A Hard Debt to Pay. owe a debt of gratitude the Asheboro colored Gra off,' highest bidder for cash at the Court-House Door in Asheboro, ; N'orfh Carolina, on the 2nd day .-f December 1907 at 12 o'clock m., the following tracf of land n Randleman Township, Ran dolph county, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of S. M. Hike, Will Harshaw and others arui bounded as follows to-wit: Beeining at a stone in S. M. Hike's lino Will Harshaw 's cor ner and running North 27 rods so a stone in Harshaw's line, G rods to a stone, 7 rods to a stone thence East 6 rods K' and containing or less. .- . Mo; '.nafiree. - '907. Mil .. movt: hat can never be paid off, benoo'. building on BaturJ rrom i?,- a d-. k.- e.orn- ntJSS IliCXl Will K1YC aiivy j . . j . . T ii v j n -ii Me chis family reunion. I could b ko;mo .TO,-n ha wnw ,u:9 think of these two good Quaker shock. The country as a whole dnd ,th.eir wlves 5ettl,ni can pick itself up and go for ward like a man after a bad fall, xt. umir scene oi war s iouu diania, nup- W1LU llULlliiig iiiua.cn, oiiianicui - . . or strained and all safe for an out half a century ago for thit trackless wilderness of the West, seeking a home away from tht enlarging future and a prosper ous advance. Phil. Press. ing to get away from their con ception of the unrighteousness of human slavery, and the rancid aristocratic order it had estab- that lost report. lished m the boutn. inen, too, Tha rpnnrt of the committee 1 1 thought of how many North L 1 1 Cl L 111 V CO C "-V tUV -iS IHUVI I - iniAiu vj. j management of the Atlantic and acter has in that old prairie North Carolina Railroad and srhooner transnort. and how which could not be found in the L. had build8(i out their in Governor's office a few days ago, w , T,.,i;or,o on easy when the investigation oi Illinois principally, two of the the management of other roads most wealthy agricultural regions began, or has it been missing on the face of the globe. And I for some time? This is a ques- hh ht t hmv stranee it was tion the public would like to have that during. the war the Indiana solved. . , and Ulinoia soldiers were the iilven ii tne wires are uuwn between the News and Observei dhtingest and the vrites G. S. Clark, of vvestneld, ; Nov. ovva. lor my rescue eath, by Dr. King's New Dis .iverv. Both iunffs were so ,erioiisly affected ' that death ' so eemed imminent., whej aenced taking No w f i'he ominous dry, ha.-ki lint before the first b ased, and two more h, '. t complete cure." J-lt aver equaled New D s. coughs, colds and sli t iung complaints J, . ivlCtfc'av schoc'l. dent of the colored ion, and is j : ;.)' . 'is ores eaers ; "ENTENN1AL Vr-, April , IS07. CUKES BLOOD, SKIN DISEASES, CANCER. GREATEST BLOOD PURIFIES FREE. If your blood is impure, thin d :peased; vhot or full of fcumoiv: x you have bloo 1 j'oison, t'ar.eo-, tarbuncles, eating sores, scroful; eczema, itching, risings am bumps, scabby, rimply skit., bone pains, ca.arrah, rheums tism, or any bl wd or skin di sease take Botanic E-ood Bah; (B. B. B.). Soon all sores heal aches and pain:? stop and th': blood is made pure and rich Druggists or by express. $1 p large bottle. S anple tree by writing Blood B dm Co., Atlanta. Ga. B. B. B. is especially advise' or chronic, de-'p-eated cases a; it cures after all fclne fails-. I'H'C mAISE GIVI N BLISS NAT r."Z HiKi'S BY TEOF1 E INT YOl'K T.O C.U.ITY IS TH2 ST RON K- f T PROOF THAT THIS rAMO::5 HOUSEHOLD REMEDY -'.) .; ALL Ti'AT IS CLAI. E) lOSl.' .: t: For BARGAINS in Shoes, Groceries,, AND Merchandise GO TO , JONES, On Depot Genera! i O treet. V. HUNTER, M. 1. ASHEBORO, N. C. c Day enswered fro;n A f EBOKO DRUG COMFANV. Mi?ht calls from CE.V1 KAL HOI ; - TO OKP, rufur with VS t p J il '?s, Cnnsti- y Asheboro Drug Co. ; caauara : Jrug Co. 50c and $1.00. Tiial ottle free. How To Make Money. If you have an hour to spare each day, write to the Circula tion Department of "The Phila delphia Press," Philadelphia. State what paper you read this . in and they will send you a hand-: some book of advice that will; tell you how to make more money for a little work you can per form, easier than anything you ever tried before in your life. You can veryfy this statement for the price of a postal card. Do It To-Day-Now. A Significant Pr-v "May the Lord help Bucklen's Arnica oaiv;; . to ail." writes J. G. JonV.r.: Chapel Kill, N. Cv It took the pain out of a iol.;n me and cured it in a woncerf'.; short time." Best on earta xo: sores, burns and wounds. 25c at Asheboro Drug Co. Standart Drug Co. ax Chrvsantheirjums are now the height of their beauty. To keep them at their best for several weeks and make them last longer remove all dead leaves, give plenty of water and keep in a cool place. pnsse: vise to anil from Norfolk on account of thi'j occasion. For further information, and Pullman reservations address any Agent Southern Railway or write W. H. Tayloe, G. P. A. Washington, D. C. R. L. Vernon, T. P. A. Charlotte, N. C. icct or cnrr-iAev : SOU i:i :;v 7-Ioncy .'Ac;-..' . ..e a.cd;ch?e ia K. teres, orJ.y by agc;r TVS, M f,-;f O. 3LISS COM? AN Y. I V'--;"':? X?i G:. I). C, ARE F. A. HOOVER, Tho.r.r.vvie f i C. R F D No.t Sent prepaid any address upon receipt of $1.00. Jndertaking J. W. JOLLY. Keeps in stock offins and cask- s ranging in jriee from $3.00 ;o $90.00. His es :ablishment is on che 2nd floor of Asheboro Grocery Co. bidding. SAsheboro, N. C. office and the town in Davidson toes we had, an 1 after tne w; in which the defaulting Demo- they kept it up longer than an ratic Sheriff of Davidson lives, other part of the Am or !:;. It seems that the Observer is rjnion. near enough to the, scene of ac- fiut T wanted to hear from tion to give the public some in- . . , T c " A: r.an- this reunion, so when I learnet. trnm the Governor's office. That that Marshal idillikan naa re- paper has never stated that the turned Thursday night, I sought report ot that committee was nim out early Friday morning to missing and if it is not m-ssing t th t fter being it should inform the public of , t,. , . o . the fact and at the same time B1w TT- give us an opportunity to make father and uncle had return a correction. rne uuserver mgwu isuui anci -lavms w bras-s that it nublishes the news, "time of their lives", I gleaned jnow cms is a diz oi news il uat the prece ding facts ot the iami not published. Not too late yet, , catherinir. T soueht more nrosaic information. Mr. Milh- v t kan told me in answer to my in ; puoiisnea. inol i, - gathering, neignDor, xo puDiisn uus mi w . . . news and teU the people wny you had not published it sooner. Certainly the Observer is not trying to shield anyone in this matter! Caucasian. quiry, that it seemed just like tinmp FnlUa nut thprp The eat ing and cooking was the good mm FOR - Neuralgia. ! Sciatica. Rheumatism. i Backache I Pain inchest! : 3 HlCTH ! ifv iiieve i , w FOR 118 !i S s - Crafo, X&77777777, have lacne Try One am Quickly-, leaving no bs-d Aft3r-effects oses ife Never Sold in iiuik "4 r
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 14, 1907, edition 1
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