Newspapers / French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, … / June 13, 1907, edition 1 / Page 2
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,J-.i i read 1 ' - , . . --' -4 . : ; ; ' .Kir. , V.?.- -.;-,.. ; - ., o i . J v'.' il 1 a,! i.- J CM .1:11 il li X'.' :.5u ;, nl-,;:.i ZlUA i -i;Ki i v l.t- U ti .. it.- r 03 7 ' l its u'.i 1 fi -i Vyijy A n't Kick r J By.Winifred Black. HEj newspapers- are .having a fine time Tepnnung niwica.-uuim w Vi,hikAdf capitalist and theti -way he "gets mad If I -when things-don't go right ' mk une uay one ui 'u-iw biuugo su tral didn't answer the Instant he rang up that he grabbed the "telephone box, tore it from. the wall, threw it "g "dow of his office and then ran downstairs and kicked it off tne InoUier time, - so' runs the entrancing tale, he . didn't like y the w things were running in his office and he went down early to see about, it. He found a door locked that he thought ought not to be Jked andhe kicked it ifl, terrifying' the young women stenographers and the office boys almost to death . by" the vigor and the fury of his kicks . flWCtJl 'Lillllii mis liinu xuub ti .i v ctwraniiar Sweet thin? this man must oe to nread that story and mane up xneir-miu-us w u fc , C T . , ;,;.theycalfl make as, much money as he does, they'll at least showtwice as bad - temper. . . ITvery little goose of a wild-eyedclerk who thinks he ought to be a great speculator will go -home, and kick the door of his flat in just to. show the neighbors that he's somebody, after all. ' x, . '', ' ' ' I know a girl who's trying to be an actress: She has been discharged, from the chOTus five different-times. She was telling 'me about it the other day, , and as she related her experiences I could see that she .really wasn't rude and ill tempered and hysterical by nature at all. . fine Was simply : acting that way because she thought it was a mark o! genius to be a crank. Now, if she really had been a genius she could have made the. stage man agers agre,e with her, but as1 she wasn't, she spent most of her time looking f for work. r ' ' s .' Eccentricities are a good deal easier to imitate than genius, my young friends. Be' sure that you've found the genius and are ahle to make other ; people see it before you begin-to "-cultivate the eccentriciti-ai. .'. - As for the financier and his door-kicking habit, he has succeeded In spite of that, remember, my poor little envious Imitator, and not because of it. . , If you could look right into -the middle of his heart and read his real ex periences and what they have cost him there, you would doubtless find that the temper which made him kick the door in has lost him at least a cool mil lion or two in the course of his life. And he'd be the first man to confess it, too. New York American. Causes of Anglo-American By james Bfyce, Britisla Ambassador to Washington. T Is not race only that links guage that grew up, the literature that was produced, the free institutions that were framed, in the days when j-our ancestors and ours lived together in the ancient island home. Nor is this all. There are in the masses of our people many whose knowl edge of literature and " institutions is slender, but to whom Am- , , erica is the "land to which their brothers and their children have gone, the land which stands to their minds as being pre-eminently the land of human equality, the land of a free career, the land which gives the ordinary man his best chance, the land which promises a future in which the masses shall such is their belief fare better than they have ever done, before. Strong as this sentiment is and this is the point I want to make clear there is nothing exclusive in it, nothing to which any other nation can object. We do not want you because you are our friends to be any bit the less the friends of any other nation. W do not ask you to forget, nor do we forget, what we both owe to Italy, the home of poetry, painting and music; to. France, .whose intellect .has so often irradiated all Europe; to Germany, so rich in the treasures of . thought and learning. International amity is not like conjugal affection, which if it is to produce happiness must needs imply the special devotion of each to the other. It is like the friendship of men among them selves, which can take in many at the same time. And. Indeed, the more in ternational . friendship rises to a sense of human brotherhood, the more it feels how much better peace is than strife' and love is than hatred, the wider ..will it extend the range of its beneficient influence. mi Where the N Trouble Lies. By W. P. Warren. ' - - ARD problems often have where the trouble lies. I remember one cold winter morning, some years ago, I was passing a grocery store and saw a number of people waiting to get in. The man was there to open the door, but the key would not work. With the help of a policeman and one or two other men he was trying to force the lock. I joined the crowd for a : few moments. : One man asked to see the key. He reasoned that if the key had always worked if should work now unless there was something wrong . .with it. Looking down. the little hole in. the end he found a small pebble, . which kept the key from going all the way in. Picking out the pebble he put the key in the lock, and opened the door I have often thought of this experience when confronted bv nerDlexine problems. And many a time I have found that what at" first seemed a diffi 'cult problem was instantly solved when I found the pebble in the key. t if .'.Somewhere, in every problem, there is a place where the trouble lies. We v do not make any progress until we find that spot and remove the obstruction. , , AH other effort is wasted. We gain nothing by trying to force the lock. The tning to do is to find the pebble in the isks qf M erit Great By Edward M. Shepard, Eminent Lawyer arid Publicist. iF no man -lives to himself company. If public restraints be unfairly irksome ' or unduly hindering, as they sometimes' are to a legitimate enterprise; if a railroad .company cannot do as it will with its own, this Js .only part of an inexorable condition to-'which, in underlying reality and mere or less, every business is subject! If. how- - ever, there be obligations upon railroad companies if, for in- stance, it 'be right, as it is, that the Pennsylvania shall perform fully the "du ties it has recently assumed to New York there are, on the other-side, cor ' 1 responding and equal obligations to the Pennsylvania and to. the investors who, through the Pennsylvania, have made the improvements. Good sense will .j. ;. surely .recognize .that those; who take great risks and oftentimes suffer great vj, flosses that they, may perform great services to the material development of the country; must, if we are to have th&se services, be oermitted correspond- me Character mew ecentrLrefi? t.: .' I r ...... . . . i . , By Governor Charles HE necessity for co-operative , wnicn nas taken on a new character.? Its tendency is to become ,1 more .constructiv.e, "la. this spirit were framed the, laws designed ;.-.to, promote .tie j deyeiopnient of pur..natiiral resources. .There are many examples of this.', Through, public agencies, for example, information is .'gathered In' relation to 'our farming 'industry,: in all its 'branches and ' dispensed to thos6 who are enKaeed in aeri- . culture. The one thing needed1 in relation1 to this increase: of co-operation is ; . i: its. wise- uecuvjiii auuixuw vu viiijr . ue i 'uoo. u-ui -WW are oe&i, uuoruwu idiumg, our, .and by .a careful consideration by them' requiTements before-they are offered for tle attention has been given? to tnis subject. To' our Legislature bills are pre sented which have; been, hastily framed as a result of agitation. by those' who" felt the need of ; remedial legislation, but were unskilled 4n devising remedies; ) legislation, to be efficient, must be preceded not by agitation merely, but by investigation. Our lawmaking programme should be agitation, inyestigation, 4aen legislation. .. oor. ; ! ' -'". . . ' H ' v ankA. .2 Tcms Rf cross when Cen- nave in me wmu,. - - v - eomo f thf little mniieaas wno win you and us together; it is the lan an easy solution when you know just readily. key. ., Investors alone, neither does nor can a railroad .: 3 U S. Deneen, of Illinoia. effort; is seen in recent legislation. acvui ca : uy me j pamcipuon OI; tUOSe DUbiass ,ana commercial requirements, of measures proposed , to meet those- legislative actions' Heretofore too lit- the Friendship R ewards of lslation HJUDI FLOOD TvvchtyjOne People Arc Swep r Away in Flood ) MUGS : PROPERTY ) DESTROYED Thousands of Acres, of Growing Crops fituned Ciondhurst '.Canscs .Big . Creek tb Submerge Gfadyville and Vicinity, . Waters Leaping' ' Prom . . Creek Bed and Taking New Course With Force of a Tidal wWe. . ..ii 1 . ; .Louisville, -Ky., Special. Twenty one persons dead, the village devasted and several thousand acres of row- crops ruined are the havoc wrought by a cloudburst; that caused Big creek to submerge Gradyville, Ky., and vi cinity .AH the dead are residents of Gradyville and, although reports ire meagre, it, is believed that no further fatalities will be reported '. from the surrounding country. The dead: : , . ' : 1 MRS. L. C. NELL, wife of State benator Nell. . FOUR CHILDREN of Senator, and Mrs. L. C. Nell. MRS. LUMHILL. ONE CHILD of Mrs. Lumhill. ;. MRS. CARL WILMERE. DAUGHTER OF Mrs. IVilmere. GRANDDAUGHTER of Mrs. Wil mere. . v ... - MRS. HARTFIELD MOSS. , " SIX CHILDREN of Mrs. Moss. . MRS. J. W. KELTNER. ONE CHILD of Mrs. Keltner. , MISS MARY MOSS. The disaster was due to the erratic behavior of Big Creek which was al ready swollen by recent rains. Whn the cloudburst precipitated - three inches of rain in an, hour on Grady ville and. vicinity the creek leaped from its .bed and took a new course with the force of a tidal wave. . Inhabitants of " . Gradyville were nearly all in bed when the foaming waters struck the town, carrying away six residences, a mill and a large number of small houses. Near ly all the victims were drowned, but four were crushed , by the collapse of dwelings. State Senator Nell, who is a physi cian owes his escape from the fate that overtook his -family to the fact Ulat be was several miles away in the hills, sitting , up with a patient. When th.e news of the disaster reach ed Columbia, Ky., the nearest town of any size, several hundred citizens de parted for the scene with 'wrecking appliances, food and clothing. All the physicians available went along. They found the residents of the de vested village ; dazed and helpless, but by nightfall all the relief possible had been afforded. Several persons were injured, but none . of these will die. ' Gradyville is a village , .of 175 in habitants in Adair county, six miTes from Columbia and 18 miles from. '-he nearest railroad station. Chicago, Special. , Dispatches from various places in Southern Illi nois, Indiana and Kentucky tell of severe storms of tornado severity which have caused some loss of life and the destruction of muchh prop erty. Early Saturday the town of New Minden, 111., 25 miles southeast of St. Louis, was visited by a tornado which killed four persons and injured a score of others. . ' At Gradyville, a cloudburst is said to have caused the loss of from 10 to 15 lives, and washed away: eight resi dences. ... .. . ; i At York, 111., Saturday 25 or 30 houses were destroyed; and a number of people are said to have been killed Because of the loss of .telegraph wires, exact details are' not "available. . ' The storm is5 sai to have been es pecially severe in southern Idiana and at Farmersburg and Sullivan , much damage was done by wind and rain. Duquoin, 111., - was also visited at night by the same 'storm that caused the destruction at work. A number of houses were, blown down, but no lives were lost. , .; V' 59 Per Cent in Mississippi", Jackson, Miss., Special. Commisr sioner of Agriculture .Blakeslee gave, out a bulletin , showing crop' i condi tions on Junq 3, and estimating t the. average' condition 'of the cotton on that date at 59 per cent, against the government estimate of 65; per'cent. The difference is attributed to the con siderable bad weather - between M iy 31 and June 3, the dates on which: the data was compiled, , ;Blacksdale;, esti mates the cotton acreage at-83 per cent, and the, corn acreage; at 09 rper cent, or about normai; The average condition of the corn crop is "placed" Krnpp Company Sues Gen. kjrbzier. r ' Wshingtbh 'Spe'cialj'-T-? Suitwas begun here in . the 'supreme -.court "of the District of .Columbia in th'e 'name of , the, Krupp , Manufacturing :(JomI pany of, Essen, Germany, against Gen eral , William j Crozier, , chief . of the bureau 'r ordinanqe , of, the war de partment, charging an infringement of the company's patent on! reQoU gu4 brakes and asking for aax accounting. FEMININE NEWS NOTES. . Miss Heibp Qould;,i3, in; Venice. -y. A woman sixty-five ?years old has just entered Vassar College; as a freshman1 Vil J".) Sarah brne" Jewett' recently5, re ceived a legacy of $20,000 from Mrs. .Susan, EL. Cabot, . Women are endowed with full vot .ing 'privileges in V the iStates of Col orado, JWyoming, Montana and Utah; The pope has sanctioned "the long debated proposaj ; tQ . establish a Roman Catholic college for women at Oxford.; 'k!.-v;j".r''i i til 4 '. ..There is, a special,. examination In Austrian cities for female barbers,"" whb are ' yearly ' growing mot$ numerous. ' - ' -ni ; . " The Teddy' Bear has given place tof the living pet.i Monstrosities .14 the' way . of dogs and monkeys have now come into favor. .. , ' , Mrs. George Gould, it was report ed, will be a witness for Mrs. Howard Gould when the suit for a limited di vorce comes to trial. . Mrs. r T.' De Witt; Talmage, widow of the noted Brooklyn-minister, is said to .be one of- the favorites in literary clrcles in Washington, D, C The French ' Government has in trusted to Mme. Laurence Fiedler, of Paris, a mission to make an inves tigation, into the social rand indus trial conditions of women and chil dren in America. ! ; ' Though she1 is not yet a social "bud," Miss - Helen Taft has been nicknamed "the tulip girl" by her" close friends in Washington, : D. C The. title had Its origin in her fond ness for a certain style of dressing. 1 MissRObb, who recently died in Edinburgh at the age of ninety-four, had been a naval pensioner for ninety-three years., : She was the pos thumous child of Captain Robb, . of the royal navy, and was put on the State pension foil at birth. PROnXENT PEOPLE. ' District Attorney Jerome Is an la reterate cigarette smoker. Karl Blind, the German patriot, died in London from heart disease. He was born in 1826. f " Lord Selborne is the first British Cabinet minister who has accepted an appointment in the colonies. . : Joaquin Miller, the poet of the Sierras, will try to get himself elected to the United States Senate by fhe Oregon Legislature. Governor Cummins, of , Iowa, has announced that he will be a candidate for United States Senator at the next year's primary election. - . Augustus St. Gaudens has been commissioned by. the Treasury De partment (to execute a new design for the $20 gold piece. Secretary Taft has traveled over 100,000 miles on Government busi ness since he became the first Gov ernor, , of the Philippines. ' : . Lord Rosebery, formerly British Prime Minister, is an authority on gardening, though most people know him only as a statesman and author. William Aided' Smith, who suc ceeds the late Senator Alger as Mich igan's representative - in the upper house, got his start in life as a news boy. ' 5 ' " Maxwell Evarts, son of former Senator William M. Evarts, is a big lawyer who live's in Vermont, prac tices law in -New York and raises old English sheep dogs for fun. A letter of the late m' Pobiedon ostseff, Procurator-General of the Holy: Synod, tells how, but for him, the 'present Ciar's father would have granted a constitution to Russia. , . Justice Gaynor agreed with Justice Brewer that the country was- entering on its period of greatest glory, say ing that there always, came a man and a . time to correct . all public abuses. ' ' We believe there Is little difference of opinion, especially among laymen. Chat expert evidence in - criminal cases, and particularly iWhen mental incapacity is Ihe defence, is being rap idly discredited, laments, : the New York ,Post..r The ; alienist Is coming to be regarded with . as much sus-j plclon as the average handwriting 'ex pert, and his contribution to i the ef 'ficlent apportionment' of justice has been made more than doubtful by a system of which ihe is personally not the least conspicuous victim. Hll (Boobs as IRepresenret AT - ' Grocerf and Cteneral Provision, Stow Hehdei-sonviUQ. N; CI THE tafe iiid Gents' CIeaniig, and Pressing: Club '.'.. ! ; Has bought out the-Hen-dersonville 'Pressing Club. The business hitherto done bv li 1 - 'J- ' It. :t 'V "''I ' 'J ' incse xwo ciuds ;wiu iDfi aone bv thef ' Ladies Ti and Gents' . .Cleaning and Press i ng Club ar Mt;s,; omce i in !;the ' Kipley building Main street, ' Herider- .sdnville. N-Ci I'lv" " tv.iAll ZWPhl i patrons ' beir'.brk: at thebepinninV ' oif the wcek,i 'iieJ wt,. . :vt;,r-;i;uy):rE:;QR,ANT. x:, i f Proprietors A ETiclcers I . - 1 v 3 r-A'- officefwith; a fast m v. . - Li A fully jod presses, ariven nay a poweriui s electric motor. A complete line of stock always '.1 . on" hand, and .work delivered when promised. Our work is particular, and money refunded- i you are not satisfied. Id he prices are Idt&er - ' . ....... than what you have probably been j paying for inferior work. We ask an opportunity to submit J samples and prices, knowing we can1 meet your every requirement. 15he , Hustler a. iyinythingfrom a name card to a catalog 1 ttj A COUGH IS LIKE A MULE You're got to coax it to get it to go. - We havea cold cure that will - start the most stubborn cough going and -quickly make it disappear entirely. We hare witnessed its effectiveness in hundreds of cases and guarantee that U will stop your cough. COMPOUND , CHEWIY JUICE COUGH SYRUP ' T (fCofrtful eousK sm. mrinelv f erent from the old. nausea tina coush remedies. Its cteEsKtful flavor makes it very palatable, and immediately ana cure sore inroac ana neaneness. u u aoesn I siop yonr coun aim us osc. 1 the empty bottle ad we'H return your money. Three popular sk-. 25c., 50c and $1.00. THE JUSTUS PHARMACY The Rexall Store Dr. H. H. Carson i , : i . v. Surgeoa-Deutist. : . ... OHcc ' over Babk ' of ' Hendersoavlllr : Henderson villel N.' C, ) VrA44 r 60 YEARS J"1 PXPERIENCE , Trade Marks . idH Designs' .-Anyone sending a sketch and description may qnlckly ascertain our opinion free whetner an invention 1s probably patentable. Communica tions strictly couQdeutlal. HAND BOCK on Patent sent free. Oldest agency tor BouriDK patents. Pnteuts taken thronsh Munn & Co. receive tpeeial notice, without cJaarsre, Intae r; $cien(ifltHtnerican. A handsomeTf ninstraied' 'weekly; Ijirnest elr culation of ,any sclentlCc journal. . Ternrs. f3 a year; fonr months. L' Sold by alt newsdealers. -- MUHII & Co.38iBroadHew York Branch Office, 635 B Bt- WasntoBton. D. C. F. Dbtson Risers .Shoes Always i-llrllr.j 1. 1 f . 1 est'": n t ii I -i t. r 1 ! ! . , . . v. i Pants HatsfCa Ovef alls, iShirts-Fuir' U Stapl;-Groceries1 itK" r' 1 W. F. DOTgjON. North Main st. & Anderson Ave 3C3 Hustler iIPirint equipped, modern printing 5 cylinder and four guaranteed in every "... 1 Print Shop children especially take it readily, ltrdieres coughi Kortm Carolina's olxest trust rWiicrrrn mrvi with rAPI TA I -no ADORtSS-ASMCVH-LC. N.C. INDORSATION actto for rr today- 4 on ccrtihcatc. 0 7o SAVINGS PCPAffTWCW f . COMPLETE LINE. OF 5tapleand-Fancy GROPE ft I 9 o rj i ato i BurcfemyenBros., f'X O rv Ofth;Maf HStreet ' liendersonvHle N. C. Your larder supplied with the bestihe marked afford" ll 'tilt tj! 1 1 "! U.h: Bargains innFurniture i ! ! j g'AE MONEYS ON S E(y I G 1 R S G H I K ES & CR6WS hil line: -of Baby Carriap es. ele stock of nw Roods.,; ,CaU at our in the handsome new brick block. Jiiliyfl'STBPPTN. Main- ,. ; HendersonTille, rt 1 m ii tm mm mr
French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 13, 1907, edition 1
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