Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / April 22, 1910, edition 1 / Page 6
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CUl¥ED OF BROKEN NECK TRACK Hair Health If You Have Scalp or Hair Trouble, Take Adiraiitage of this Offer ' We could n6t afford to ^o strongly endorse 'Rexall ‘^03” Hair and continue to selljt ^ ifecr^io, if we: were not certain that it would do all we claim it will. Should our enthusiasm carry us away, and Eiexall *'*93^' Hair Tonic not give entire satisfaction to the users, they would lose faith in us and. our statements, and in consequence our business prestige would suffer. Therefore, when we assure j^ou that if your hair is beginning to unnaturally fall out or if you have any scalp trouble, Rexall ^‘93’^ Hair Tonic will promptly eradicate dandruff, stimulate hair growth and prevent premature baldness, you n^ay rest assured that we know what we are talking about. 'OjEit of one hundred test, cases Readall “93” Hair Tonic gave entire' satisfaction in ninety-three ca^s. It-has been proved that it will grow' hair even on bald heads, when, of course, the baldness had not exr isted for so long a time that the follicles, which are the roots of the hair, had not become absolutely lifeless. Rexall “93*’ Hair Tonic is vastly different from other similar prep arations. We believe that it will do more than any other human i^ency toward restoring hair growth and hair health. It is not greasy and will not gum the scalp or hair or cause permanent stain. It is as pleasant tc use as pure cold water. Our faith in Rexall “93” Hair Ton ic is so strong that we ask youMo try it on our positive guarantee that your money will be cheerfully re funded without question or quibble if it does not do as we claim. Cer tainly we can offer no stronger argument. It comes in two’sizes, prices 50 cents and $1.00. Re member you can obtain it only *at —The Rexall Store. ALLISON & MACFIE Is Feared'Ear6pean Reds Have * Maiied Him For Victim. IS 'toiNG CLOSELY GUARDED 50 YEARS* EXPERIENCE i EX’Pretfdeni‘diving European Secret Service Poiice Concern on Account * of. Rumors That Anarchists Are Dogging Him With Sinister Intent. Rome.—“What Is known as the Paterson group of anarc^sts by the European secret police uas agents following Thebdore Roosevelt for the purpose of assiassinating him.” This statement was made to cor respondent Clement Archon by a man high in the Italian secret police, who had much to do in protecting the fa mous American while he was in Italy. The, statement was made as the re sult of the reported arrest of an an archist at Chiasio, Switzerland, under ^ustJifcibtis circumstances. ■ About the time of Mr. Roosevelt’s arrival at Khartoum, word was re ceived that anarchists had left that country presumably for the purpose of doing harm to the noted traveler and the secret police were requested to take every * possible precaution. Rooseveit Well Guarded* ! No more elaborate preparations for protection against assassination have ever been taken in Italy, even for the czar of Russia, than have been taken in the case of Mr. Roosevelt, and tlie same will be the case in all the countries he travels in In Europe. It will be next to impossible for an assassin to get close enough to the president, to harm him. It is being said that Mr. Roosevelt is an extremely difficult person to guard. He seams' to be perfectly fear less, and whfen in' Italy took chances which gave those to whom was in trusted the task of looking out for hia safety many an • unhappy half hour. It is understood, hcrwever, that both he and his son have been in duced to arm themselves with auto matic revolvers, and In case of trouble they would be very likely to glVe a good account. of themselves. To Strike Terror to Rulers. The Italian police declare the idea of assassination of Mr. Roosevelt is solely to strike terror to the hearts of the European rulers, and if the assassins are not able'to accomplish theli* purpose before he embarks for America, he will not-be molested. Trade Marks Designs .... Copyrights Ac.. ^nyone sending a fiketcta and desciipUon may quickly ascertain*our opinion free whether an Invention is probably patentable. C(»mmunica. tlons strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest acrency for secunnK patents. Patents taken tbrouirh Munu & Co. receive wpedal notice, without charge. In the Scicmtfic JlnKriCiiii. A handsomely illustrated weekly. I.arsrest cir culation of any scientiSc journal. Terms. $3 a ^ear; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. ^UNN & Co New York BrancD O^flce. 625 F St.. Washlneiw... IT. .. Are You Looldng for a PtMsitlon? We can offer you good Paying Employment that you will enjoy and ^^thome. Write to-day • Addrtss / Tlie Biifferlclc Pabllsblng Co. Butterlck Building, New York, N. Y. We promptly obtain U. S, and Foreign mmrn ^nd model, sketch or photo of inventioxi for report on patentability, for free bock, WORK OF STRANGLER. Little Girl is Cruelly Done to Death In City of Chicago. Chicago.—Six-year-old Alfreda Dov- eriska, daughter of a baker,- was found dead in a shed two doors from her home, ^he finger prints of a strangler on the child’s throat. At her side the police found a little bag of candy. Penny in hand, Alfreda went to a neighboring store. She purchased the cent's worth of sweets, and tHat was the last seen of lier alive. The police conducted a search, but with out result. Paul Sellendinger, 10 years old, playing hide-and-seek with compan ions, hid in the vacant shed. He lay down merrily in the 'darkness, but touched the^ corpse and ran shrieking from the place. The police were notified. Detec tives are working to capture the strangler. BANK DYNAIVIITED. HowtoS^nre itents and patentability. For free TRADE-MARKS NOTICE. 'Having' qualified as administrator of the estate of L. C. Neill, deceased, late of Transylvania county, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims ag^ainst the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigrned at Brevard, N. C., on or befo^ Dexj. 31st, 1910, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov ery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. R. jy. NE.ILL, Administrator of L. C. Neill This Dec. 30th, 1909. Yeggmcn Get $10,000 From National Bank at Spring City, Tcnn. Chattanooga, Tenn.—The safe of the First National Bank at Spring Glty, 57 miles north of this city on the Cincinnati Southern railroad, has been blown open with dynamite and $10,000 stolen. ^ There were at least four of the Tbb- bers. Nitroglycerin was used, several flasks of whicH were found. It is believed the naen were inexpe rienced. The operator at the Cincin nati Southern depot wag h.eld up to prevent him from giving information. The safe was blown to pieces and the building greatly damaged. Rome’s Aqueducts. The eight aqueducts of ancient Rome brought 40,000,000/gallons of water a day into the city^ Had the Romans been aware that Water always rises to its own lev^ these huge erections on arches seventy feet high need never have been built. A Youthful Inventor. Samuel Colt was only fifteen years of age when he invented his famous revolver. It Died. Barber (after shavej—Hair dyed, sir? Customer (baldheaded)—Yes; it died at>out ten years ago. Man Passed Safely Through Remark able fexperfence. St. Louis.—Ralph Owens, 27 years old, of Memphis,'^Teim-, who was taken to a hc^pitajj^llour months ago with a broken ne<^„ i^f^which he wAs unawaT^, has beeu discharged as cured. . When taken to'the* hospWal little hope was cJntertained for his recovery. His head was pla^d in a brace and his refusal to die attracted much at tention to his case. Physicians now declare his neck is as dOund as ever. He suffered a fall four months ago, and attributed the stiffness in his neck to rheumatism. SUIT FOR $93,000. Mrs. Thav»r Wins jn Action Brought By Former Savannah Lawyer. New York.—Mrs. Mary Copley Thaw has been awarded the verdict in the suit of Attorney Clifford W. HartrWge against her for $93,p00. He claimed nhajt ^kfriimoney wa« 'd»e for services In thi^,; trials of Harry H. Thaw for the murder of Stanford White. The verdict, which was reported only after the jury had deliberated six hours, was returned sealed and was read by Judge Holt. Hartri<Jge was not awarded .a cent. Mr. Hart- ridge, it is said, formerly practiced law at Savannah, Ga. Victim of Moonshiners. Almond, Ala.—Bud Orr, a well-to.do farmer near this place, had his cot ton warehouse burij^d, together with its contents, consisting of three bales of cotton, one wagon, a barrel of syr up, various farm ' implements and« 1,600 pounds of .«uimo. The fire is > supposedorto t^^^jfojk of moon shiners, of whom Mr. Orr was an avowed enemy. Fires Jail and Is Cremated. Charlotte, N. C.—Charles Barnhart, the regro who at night set fire to the Mooresville, N. C., Jail, was bun» ed to death in the^^fire. LInney Stricken By Death.. Charlotte, N. C.—Former Congress man Romolus Z. Linney, famous as politician and orator, and the most picturesque statesman North Caro lina ever produced, dropped' dead as he was entering his law oflftce at Tay- lorville, N. C. Apoplexy was the cause of his death. Victims of DTI Explosion^ ^ Snyder, ' Texai<.^^&ree are dead and four other persons were badly burned here as the result of ah ex plosion of a gallon of coal oil. The explosion took place when an attempt was made to light a fire in the ^orn' of John Phillips. The flames quickly enveloped the hOtM^. Won't Quit Under Fire. Jackson, Miss.-^State Senator Bil bo. whose resignat4on was demanded alTer the senate refused to exppl him, declared that he would net quit under fire, but would compel the senate to oust him. Anti-Betting^ Bill Passed. Albany, N. Y.—The Perkins ant!- oral betting bill hatif passed the as* ietftbly, r* Your tongue l8 coated. Your breath is foul. Headaches cotne^aii,d go. These symptoms show that your stomach is in trouble. To remove the cause is the first thing, Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets will do that. Easy to take and most effective. Sold by all dealers. Undaunted. Nervous Employer—Thomas, I wish you’ wouldn’t whistle iftt your work. Office Boy—I ain’t working, sir; I’m only just whistlii^. Habit tends td'^iftkke fis permanently what we are for the moment. - — ' Saved From the Grave. “I had about giyen up hope ai'ter nearly four years of suffering from a severe lungr trouble,” writes Mrs. M. L. Dix, of Clarksville, Tenn. “Often the pain in my chest would Ije al-, most unbearable And I could not do any work, but Dr. King’s New Dis covery has made me feel like a new person. Its the best medicine made for the throat and lungs.*’ Obsti nate coughs, stubborn colds, hay fever, la grippe, asthma, croup, bronchitis and hemorrhages, hoarse ness and whoB^ping cough, yield- quickly to tliis Wonderful medicine. Try it. 50c and jiloo. Trial bottles free. Guaranteed by Allison & Macfie. 81 4iO 91 ‘W^TTH the commgof 1910, tfie HaJTtford Pijre insurance Coxnpa.xiy' has rounded out a century of business history. That means something in the hazardous business of fire insurance, for four out of every five companies organized m this country have either failed or retired. It meslhs imshaken 'stability. The smoke of every great American conflagratioQ has d^k)^^ ^6^ sl^r oyet tKe ** jy^prd’4” head, hjt San Fr^cisco done it paid ten millions. But emer^g tnumphant from the ordeals of 100 years, it enters its second century stronger than ever. Unshaken stability for a century is no mean heritage, but age is venerable only when adorned with honor. Honor implies more than honesty. It is the quality which impels an institution to meet every obligation, not only wi^ promptness and exactness, but with faimess and a spirit of equity. That is the “Hartford’s” record in the past, its aim to-day, and its ideal for the future. Its policies afford unsurpassed indemnity, and by co-operating with its patrons to lessen fire dangers, it offers continuous service. Its busi ness, scattered among more than 13,000 communities throughout this great land, b the largest of any fire insur ance conq>2uiy in America.- Insure in the “Hartford” AGENTS Brevard, North Carolina MIXIK SHINGiZS ARE FIRE PROOF .'T'HEY will not bum. Will not split or curl like wood shingles. Will not crack and roll off like slate. Will not rip at the seams like plain tin. Neither v^l they rattle during high^ wind storms. They never need repairs ^d last as long as the building. ^ And last of aU, they make the handsomest roof and are not expensive. For Sale by MILLER-DeVANE SUPPLY COMPANY. j t — ■ — — Lime Lime We can sell you from one bushel to one hundred car loads if you will give us notice of the quantity you need. Cureton Lime Works At* the Cflslk and Sms old Kilns Leave orders with E. H. Mason, Supt., Brevard, N. C., R. F. D. 2; Miller-DeVane, Brevard, or J. C. Deaver-Patton Co., Pisgah Forest, N. C. GENERAL FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE Office-Rooms 8 and % MeMinn Building 14 good, strong Fire Insurance Companies One of the strongest Life Insurance Companies One of the standard Accident Ins. Comr anies. WELCH GALLOWAY, Manaeer I 7^^® § wheh th€ § yield b: I Mew Hygiei Stai Good ( And that Good You can get ai ^ affords served ii warm dining ro( place of busine^ phone 48 or call j keep on hand made bread, oak «arly or late. | of Mrs. Mary AI A. Ti H. 7a Spring ing fre derwe Torch Gingh are se to all. Dry Unde Skirtt Men: i9ie IS Clotlii You can sav cleanedt press ^summer hats work is strict! work done at leave work ju Remember^ tt work at the Ic I am yours H 'West Main S FOR
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 22, 1910, edition 1
6
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