Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Oct. 29, 1908, edition 1 / Page 4
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7 mnn T1(.rr 1 "I Jium :i', in, C I'lr ,,..) . " ' i.'ff. "If 1 OL. r i.n,,,. irw'i,l i ?-'-'. . s R A I:,.- i:.r. , Ircices t'( Ifi;,!., .'" (.,., I satisfactory, kxce at co: (TRE FQgriLES tw 4i me jv B.t fnntr" T 41 l.llili tsxMVLE treatment of R4 Cross Pile ( ployes and their iamiiK-b. , i "TS-Mserilous O and Fistula Car and hook expla.innc I aes ..just before leaving I I ""tTomntTfl reach yntjreet.Ai.v..i;.DL.o.ru ..aid Mr. Collins. "1 met arch ot the gold, I y-,rnc, coTlt (lOWIl by tt mission xwice . " uvswaarowLSAMi t.a.M. i ;UDer. tie v.aa -V :c;i,ave never allowed any smrangers to YvASTEU-uvr. wil.i tchkeys. Also S:nitnsonlan Institution to study the 1 have nevei i.u interlorTVHe was NVfiQuirreU. Tame Peer. Bed Foxes, Par- ditloM ot tne San Bias Indians, penetrate into mieii or. Jaw" tnteeT .wmmi.. wild ateyfoji E I conamon interttjr ot the Re- only there on sutf ranee, andVhad to ;uter. He was sent out by the 1 search rrnns. He 81373 m as IFn his nrovisions last. HlIs ac- ipd bv his brother, a H-feideF stndent. Tne Daron i-araio. n. for any wi-ite man the moimntams in as time natives rangers to for Trbf the cam- Thc New York TVorld, a Bryan pa per, gives Taft 205 votes sure and credits Bryan with 178. In addition to the nation ticket nearly all the States and Territories will vote for local officers on Novem ber 3. Tr C ec French. amrallst. W ahlngton. C Some men are so very slow that if is imnossible for them to even WHO live iu uu '""""I "1 T" nr, trie alert. r,f Panama, &uuui tc"-' i -: . . , Bide. H.e tola some TheirV!oun- "Pacific trv is ricn In coal and all Tslnfft cf ot the most 1 minerals. run a chtnee. So. 44-'03. r-nnnriine Cures Indigestion Pains, Belching, Sour Stomach, and Heartburn, from whatever cause. It's Liquid. .Lffects immediately. Doctors prescribe it. 10c., 25c., and 50c., at drug stores. Don't Doubt. "When young Dr. Merle D' Aubigne was a student at Kiel, he was oppres sed with doubts, and went to Klenken an old experienced teacher for help. ? The old man refused to answer ftiem, saying, "Were I to rid you of these others would come. There i.s a short er way of destroying1 them. Let Christ "be to you really the Son of God, the Saviour, and his lirht will dispel the darkness and his spirit lead you into all truth." A certain minister lived thirty seven years without a certainty as to his spiritual safety. "When dying, he asked: one who was present "What will you say of such an one who is going out of the world and can find no comfort?" "What will you say of Him," was the reply, who when going out of the world, cried, "My God, my God. why hast thou forsaken me?" This prompt reply administered consolation to the troubled spirit of his friend, who de parted rejoicing in the Lord. Its Main Attraction. - The children who are growing up Will on the past look back And speak about their childhood as The nTA of crackeriack. A nlatonic friendship by any other name would sound like a flirtation by experts. Matrimonial. Mrs Visitor Do the girls in your Bchool have any training that will fit tlipm for the duties ot a wue i Miss Vassar Yes. Every graduate from this institution is an authority on fairy tales. ASTONISHED THE DOCTOR Old Lady Got Well With Change ol Food. JAPAN'S CORDIAL WELCOME. r iho American Fleet Was ElaborJ . and Perfectiy Carried Out. flet has merely afforded tne Japan ese an opportunity for that expres- Tokio, Japan. The reception ac corded the American Atlantic fleet by the Government and people of Japan is conceded by the American naval officers to be the heartiest and most nerfectlv carried out of the many re LpUons recelred by the fleet since it sailed from Hampton Roads. Kear Admiral Sperry said that he was ut terly unable to say how it had been accomplished, but that the welcome given the fleet and its officers and men here had been so carefully planned and carried out to the most minute details that lasting impression has been stamped upon the mind of every American who has witnessed it. It Is impossible to doubt the sin cerity of the Japanese. The Ameri can officers and sailors are already beginning to understand the fact that the evident desire on tne part or tne Japanese for the friendship of Amer ica is not founded upon opportunism, but finds its source in a sincere wish to show that such friendship, at least on "the part of the Japanese, has ex isted always, and that .this visit of the sion. . , Admiral Sperry was received at the imperial palace. On the next day the admirals and captains of the fleet were .the guests of the Emperor at the palace. Admiral Sperry conveyed to" the Emperor a message from Pres ident Roosevelt. This message breathes a spirit of friendship and sympathy and expresses keen expres sions of the traditional friendship be- Foreign Affairs. The new Chinese Constitution has been promulgated. The American warships were greet ed in an effusive manner at Yoko hama. An understanding is declared to be in sight between Bulgaria and Turkey. Bulgaria refuses to accept some of 'he conditions agreed upon by France, Great Britian and Russia. The American fleet was caught in a typhoon and two men were washed overboard, the ships being also great ly delaj'ed. Miscellaneous. Reports from manufacturers show tween the two nations and an earnest that the country is recovering from wish, for the strengthening and con tinuance of the friendly relations of the past. Three thousand sailors from the American fleet were granted shore liberty da'ly, and it is remarkable that notwithstanding .their long con finement aboard ship not a single dif ficulty has been reported, bearing out the statement of Admiral Sperry, ma'de in one of his speeches here, that the American sailor of .to-day is the result of that development and edu cation which Japan is seeking in every department of her national life. FORTY FOOT FOSSIL FOUND. Complete Tyrannosaurus Rex Now For Natural History Museum. American New York City. Dr. Henry Fair-l field Osbofn, president of the Ameri can Museum of Natural Historyvre ceived word from Great Falls, Mon., that a research party from the mu seum, headed by Barnum Brown, had discovered part of the skeleton of the Tyrannosaurus rex, a prehistoric ani mal, in the Bad Lands several miles south of Glasgow, Mon. The fossil, which is forty feet long and twenty-two feet high, has a per fect skull, an entire set of ribs, back ! bone and hip girdle and practically supplements the specimen discovered in the same section in 1902. Ever since the first fossil or the "king of the reptiles," as the Tyran- covery. nosaurus rex is called, was found, re search parties from the American Museum have been searching through the Bad Lands for a specimen that would complete the missing parts. The first fossil had good hind limbs but incomplete back bones. Dr. Os born said that he believed the two specimens are about the same size and that the museum will now be enabled to mount the anim-al complete. During the five years of search fragments of Tyrannosaurus rex have been found from time to time. Dr. Osborn said zoologists would be highly elated over this second dis- Vu-ITV t;!! I 5 from ' "i is l.rTTZ ! '-a -:'" I Pitting "'rr-.M CO!ort an.i . V.' : I from in -V rv&J r c"u "l it. r -. - v- .-m Hi" v in - - ' I" V f lho:a.a4 Ti.,.' . of of a.-?? &K.C,A 1,ui is rr.i ... . myiii 17 ..:.i V,'0rt'l liOthi, U.er i:rrt.i t "f. :i;,t. ."ie CCS-.- h-m lIo vri; cj istimate Rains an do 1 . Condi oration. s genera ut very tlantl her cond nd marl Jjottom 1; Il'lf-n.-JslnV. is bet lC'r tJ,o; ! the f);,i w . s -u..L 7vr,. u i""- Shoves t..,. -1 wkl -11 6 Jr.-i)"-.,! 'Ii'(5 lour Oaks it all Ti led ; we :etin:r s from iid in en. oOo. iorui ...iwjCls, j. y-ja 0tri. " -uaJy pmit7 i'r tfiirfr rars L-P1" cent '-'Hi roots and hr-r,,' i is eiial ' tnm:nv i .... J'J-a. i-,.r ; med; ; positively cured heir en .le the e is a g ginned fper's Young People. THE COUNTRY PRESS A great scientist has said we can pat oft "old age" if we can only nour ish the body properly. To do this the right kind of food, f course, is necessary. The body manufactures poisons in the stomach and intestines from certain kinds of food stuffs and unless sufficient of the right kind is used, the injurious ele ments overcome the good. "My grandmother, 71 years old, writea N. Y. lady, "had been an Jn yalid for 13 years fVjj; tailed consumption of the Btomach and bowels. The doctor had given her un to die. . , I saw so much about Grape-Nuts that I persuaded grandmother to try it. She could not keep anything on her stomach for more than a few min- Ut--She began Grape-Nuts with only a teaspoonful. As that did not distress fc a Rh could retain it, she took a little more until she could take all of four teaspoonf uls at a meal, "Then she began to gain and grow strong and her trouble in the stomach entirely. She got to enjoy j -hoitii fnr one so old. and we k.nm nrane-Nuts saved her life. "The doctor was astonished that instead of dying she got well, and without a drop of medicine after she began the Grape-Nuts." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Brtle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wpllville." in nkgs. . ji,..w.iittn'? Anew .E tn tlmi 1 heT e, and full of human Nebraska University Orders Girls to Go Bareheaded. Lincoln, Neb. The State Univer sity senate adopted a rule forbidding young women students .to wear hats in classrooms. . The order was made necessary by feminine headgear which had grown so large that it not only tested the capacity of the classrooms but interfered with recitations. An other rule adopted prohibits students indulging in shirt-tail parades or kid naping class officers to break up so cial gatherings, on penalty of imme diate expulsion. Shirt Sleeves For Church, Says Bishop Hamilton to Ministers. Boston, Mass. Bishop John "W. Hamilton, formerly of California, speaking to Methodist ministers of the immigrant and how he should be assimilated, said: "I return to New England and I find a new New Eng. land. I tell you to gather them into the churches. Break down your prej udices, social barriers. They will come in if you want them. Get down to shirt sleeves and make a pair of them the Methodist church's coat of arms." Feminine Nod's. Mme. Schumanu-Heink sailed for Europe to bein a year's concsrt tour. Thirty-five entries were received for the national women's golf championship. Miss Mary R. Sanford, a member j of a wealthy family of New York j City and New Kaven, has become a I Socialist. A storm of protest followed the removal of tiio Professional Woman's League from its fine club-house in New York City to humble quarters in a hotel. Suffragettes who tried to register in New Yorli City wera threatened with the police reset- eg. Italy's King hr.s fi.ialiy consented to the ntarvlagj of the Uaie of the Abmzzi and Miss Ilatiiarino KlUius. Mme. Curie, v. ro l?r:-i;i2i nor hus band to dissuvs:- raiianj. bus just been elected a eov.-ssT:on.ii.is mem ber of the SC. Pecsrsi.'ur Aeadsmy of Sciences. Miss Anna Morgar. cla-ijic:- .ot J. P. Morgan, hsiissj 1. $100. 00J. 000, says a Vienna p?.;.", v?.s u.v;:n out of Eeriin, where sisa hoped to study politico-social conditions, by the beggars. Jottings About Sports. J. Mara, of Paterson, won the one hundred yard championship of the Eastern Y. M. C. A. at Williard Park, Totowa, N. J. The Boston Globe is of opinion that the Cleveland Club pays too much at- not enough to securing competent Dro.ter atter telephoning; to ll 1. 1 . m ine panic notwithstanding the re tarding influences of the campaign. The trial of Charles "W. Morse re vealed some peculiar financial deals. Fire conditions in Michigan are improved, but there is great need of relief. Twenty-one persons were burned to death in a train sent to the re lief of forest fire victims in Michi gan. Jewelry worth $17,000 was stolen from Mrs. Howard Morton, at Green wich, Conn. Six persons were killed in an ex plosion of dynamite at Fort Collins, Cal., and 21 others injured. In a speech at Alton, 111., Mr. Bry an declared the Republicans are now getting together money to buy the election. Tornado and cloudburst in New Mexico killed four persons. Taft's voice has "forsaken him and many of his engagements must be cancelled. Secretary of War' Luke E. "Wright made a speech for Taft in New Yotk City. At Sherman, Wyo., a tornado blew a caboose off the "railroad track and killed two men. Death list by forest fires in Michi gan has grown to forty-one, with fall eports not yet in. "Wife of Capt. Peter C. Tlains loses her application for alimony and cus tody of her children; sensational charges made in her affidavit. The battleships Maine and A!a bama have" completed their trip around the world, begun at Hampton Roads last December and reach'-. home last week. Bryan and Taft in joint discussion of the Philippine question.. Six people dead in Colorado as the result of snowstorms. The cornerstone of the $2,000,000 Catholic cathedral to be built in St. Louis was laid by Archbishop Fal-conio. Sewell Sleuman, an Omaha grain the One of the finest tributes to the country newspaper that has ever been endered was c-ontaiued in a recent iddress by Senator Chauncey M. De pew before the New York Press Asso ciation. Mr. Depew said: "I pay aiy respects to and express my admi- ation fof the eountry editor. His lines are not cast in the places of he great and profitable organs of the aictropolis, whose profits are reckoned often by the hundreds of thousands of dollars every year. But the country editor lives in and is part of the com munity. His virtue is not so much what he prints as in what he refuses to print. He could easily destroy the peace of the community by admitting to his paper the scandals and gossip of his neighbors. But he stands as a censor and guardian of public morals and I know of no conditions under which the public is appealed to in a certain measure where the utterance is so free from criticism as the gen sral tone of the country press." ECZEJIA CUBED, J. P.. Maxwell. Atlanta, Ga., says: "I iuSered a?oay with a severe case of ecze ma. Tried six different remedies and wa in despair, whan a neighbor told me to try Shuptrine's tetteeinb. After using 43 worth of jour tiitsbisk and soap I am completely cured. I cannot say too much in its praise." Tettebinb at druggists or by mail Sue. Koap 25c. J. T. Bhupibins. iiept. A, Savannah, Ga. How'S This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot b cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., ToledoiO. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all bawDesa transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his rar, , WAL-niwo. Kisiiak & AfARVLT, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucuous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. 'lake Hall's Family Pills for f.onstipation. Of Course. "I have found my ideal mar "What are you going to do wit him?" What will the American heiress do for excitement and amusement when she has bought up all the titles in Europe. Truth cind tzeility appeal to the Well-informed in every walk of life and are essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accor mgly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is' the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it is free from all objection able substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug gists. Little Bright Eyes Agaiav Not the Spirit Medium this time, but a medium of far greater wonder, one that brings back the brightness and vigor to poor, sore, inflamed eyes with but a few external applications. Who is so ignorant not to know of Dr. Mitchell's famous eye salve? Sold everywhere. Price 25 cents. c.i.;ac-enients, inrlamrnn-' l-c':h :-oid tumor, ivf Put a : IouiQ pains, baekaehofk -...iieeimg-, nat-ale::?1 1UWCI i;i'-'i-,aizzines3ornerTouf!rlto th!S r fVriy don't you try it ? 7f orris vi! -Birs. .Finkham invito llttle Kf women to write lrr Aonth aso , P,.ba3 guided tho-iised it t INothins N Trust in the Lord. Sometimes men are dissatisfied with their work and with the posit ion they occtfpy. They think they are not apprecated, and that they are competent to fill what they re gard as much more important posit ions. This may sometimes be true; but if such persons are faithful in the positions they occupy, their worth will be recognized, and they will be called to such positions as they are found competent to fill. But a man of real worth may be success ful in one positions, to which he is adapted, while he would be a total failure in another to which his tal ents are not suited. Men are not al ways the best judges of their own abilities, or of the positions which they are best qualified to fill. It is always better for the place to seek the man than for. tne man to seek the place. Modesty is generally an evidence of worth, while presump tion is almost invariably an evidence of shallowness or unreliability. If a man has but a small field, let him cultivate it well ; when it becomes too small for him others will perceive it; and he will be called to more ex tensive labors. A man who is al ways laboring to do good will suc ceed ; while a man who is always seeking for place will fail. If one believes that he is m God's hands and engaged in God 's work, why should he not so commit himself to God's will as to allow God to put him forward. Does he fear that God may neglect him and allow some one to supplant him? This is a most un worthy view of God, and ought never to be entertained by one who believes himself called of God and living in communion with Him. The meek are to inherit the earth, according to the Saviour's teaching, and he illustrat ed it ia his own life. "Commit thy way to him and he shall bring it to pass," says one whose experience taught him lessons by which we may profit." The trouble with most per sons is, they want to choose their own way and are unwilling that God should lead them. Methodist Recorder. fitter gva Mysterious FaK""1- "ASK Ve or 1 YOUR PMfwU For cuny mar- i : recojy" . Love's Brightest Dream. TnnpK T1 rn tr-rHl widow ried the youner fellow would have nothing td her money. Bones And now? Jones And now sn just $6 a week. CAN A WOMAN LO MEN AT THE m Love Vizm both equally, but -Mrs. Ruth Everett in h MAN FROM WALL STREE1 den lov3 story published), cl cai. Whit do vou think aba wcl th PRIZES the two. second best, one on Two. third best, one on either e fourth best, two on either side.l fifth bzst. twenty on each side. 1 test closes Mch. 1, 1909. Award! Regular Prio S 1 .50 My Prkl L ii. 1USSKITT. 400 MANHATTAN d 4 leti herl 1 1 1 1 V . J Can-tA BEST i We have told yon howl phate, by mixing 100 lbs.l Have you arranged to I cost of less than 10 cents! If not, telephone to yoil furnish you with a 2-8-6 f ertt ; Potash is profit. But neJ delivered in time for use. 1 Send lor Our B crops, manure GERMAN KALI WORKS New York 93 Nassau Street I P V T N AM FADUl- 7 ;. ur.gnrer ana lamer colore than aay other dye. One lite, packmjre col, .11 u . , .. ., .rin anvotbir Jw dye a"y garment without ripping apart. Write for free bootlnfHniTTL,,?" They 40 fa 00U water 1- ;;T afir,v. ill ; coaca and Mix Cnin mn-nnn. Hill ' " ' -a rfJ""TTr'ir 1 1 pitchers. Captain Currier of the Harvard varsity baseball team, announced the appointment of L. P. Pieper, 1903, to be coach of the team next season. Pieper has served as coach for the last two years. Princeton was played to a stand still at football by Lafayette, Penn sylvania was lucky to beat "Penn" State, and Harvard had a hard time to beat Williams. .Tohn R. Payne, long a foremost Biifisii achts!nan. is convinced that if America adopted the rules prevail ing abroad there would be no limit to international raciug. George Gano, a pacer with a record rf 2.0.1 "i, by Gamberta Wilkes C;-ediuop, by Nuthursi, belonging f . the Chvistbii Hiils Stables, was :xl.l at J.etintcn, Ky., to C. M. Grsenuug'ii, of New Hampshire, for ;i police that a tragedy would be en acted, killed the woman to whom rjr was paying ; attentions and himself. The National Association of Grain Dealer? has adopted new rules for nniform .grading. Lady's Words B 32 ivs not so much what we sav. but what other laA. oa -i-x , . .7- &uuu.s varuui, as a ci ments, that we ask you to believe. 7... Ti., - bo many ladies, that it should surelv hJn tj less, vegetable mgredients, it is a lafe, xSural cZllIyTl, rtSoS for female cu- :cl from harm- Tak GairM Mrs. Verna Wallace, of Sanger, Tex., writes: "Cardui has done v:-- for me than I can describe. Last spring I was taken with female inflammation sad consulted a aoctor, but to no avail, so I took Cardui, and inside of three dans.. I to do ny housework. Since then my trouble has never returned.' v Try it. Foisonous Nettles of the Tropics. In tropical regions there are nettles far more powerful than that of our own country. The one ca'led Urtica stimulans, which is found in Java, and that called Laportea crenuiata.. found in Hindustan, when bruised emit "an ef fluvium which poisonously affects the eyes and mouth, and if handled pro duce convulsions and serious swelling and pain in the arms, which may last for three or four weeks and in some cases cause death. London Telegraph. k s 1 1 U 8 BUB! IrJ 1 1- 3 PROTECT YOUR, LUNGS If every cough you catch sctucs on your FS. VAN 1 " ' 1 1 A1 . . lOTUM. kVJ I inn if thA ronafi nine era. Himm rM.u i " atta-oa " r,i. :. j - ttrouB lunes doubly so to weak one. Get rid ofT 5n XlT??.0 - -3 .. . f. .1 f rr .. , fggi with fiso i -Uie. acu prompuy una reduces the passages and congestion, frees the throat of phlegm, dears the clS stop, the cough. F or newly M a century lhe JZZlS s oi cougns, colds and PISO'S CURE remedy for the worst forms of coughs, colds and chest compUumsSkT ITKra ermt? oai Dees m HEN on of shoe FO n, f ii!ri-J:i!'on 01 shoe '. "Tt be atthebot- f and if t'! om ot torn, ana i ,,.Teront from ;RS bVfV.i ymr foot it SJS. nro' ' "-i"1 'm the w FIT. Look S?ntht 1VM. H yon Jon-t eSsllrpr a thrto shoes, write M Yoi r directions how to SScnre thevi. FIELD CO. PCED. F- ytrue
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1908, edition 1
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