WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AI CONGRESSMAN GUDGER'S RECORD TUBERCULOSIS SANATORIUM Ws Wonderful Si::!i n::df WnffliiienEfed end Pre:::;! C . Thousands Whs Ihvo Been Rsstcrci - "I was a sick man for about three months caused from Gall Stones of the Liver and was told by three of ourtnost prom inent physicians that I would have to submit to an operation to pet relief, butheard.of your Wonder ful Stomach Remedy and secured a full treatment and took it according to directions and passed hundreds. of Gall Stones. icine I work regularly and l am praising your rS'ffAnrsof Stomach, Liver and' Intestinal j not asked to take Mayr Wunder- i?c,mach Remedy for weeks tand months &y f?el benefited. Just try one dose-- f x should mate you icei cettcr m, ncana, iK? , tViot tnn will sivtn h well and K free vou from pain and suffering and grive rTsound and healthy Stomach, as it has results it'has been accomplishing in cases iPA Whitinc- St.. Chiram 111 ' fr a ook on Stomach Ailments and many grate ters from people who have been restored; JUSTUS PHARMACY. l if vlt' I7f SEP f.fpel anv ill effects. I am pra jtJfti all my friends. I think if: Wood's Seeds. late Seed Potatoes June and early in July is 3ie best time for planting for the fall crop for winter use- Our stocks are specially selected Seed Potatoes, put in cold storage early in the season, so as to keep in first class, vigorous condition. - Book your orders early, to be sura of getting the varieties you desire. Write for "Wood's Crop Special giving prices, and timely in forma tion about all Seasonable Seeds. , Writer of 'Haywood County GiTes lOlh District RepresentatiTe Gentle Rap on His Record, in Sunday's Asneville Citizne. r Editor Citizeu: I see a squib in some one of the pa pers, saying that Congressman Gud-. ger has. been playing around and neg lecting to answe rroll calls. I have been, made to believe that he was a sticker at his post, sopn and . late. Monday morning to Saturday night; and I have heard it said that Via was always, on hand, ready and anxious to Slffn ms nav rnll hnr T i-wrMilil ViiTrn a C u a. II VUJ.U UCk f 3 JtJl Icvltc thought that he would be the last man ; atorium vu mn niiic Kjuym oam. i mux ioiu that he is. a. good voter sometimes with his party and sometimes against it -but poor man when he votes and draws his pay he is done. j The United States paid him for his first" four years, somewhere in the neighborhood of thirty thousand dol- ! 4 0, UUU UUAMXk LUUSC 1.UU1 T rai Eh ' i "MWVUi.1 v ne managed to get one speech in tha Congressional Record, but whether it went in as advertising or to show his reasonine Dowers. I do not know. Onn Vilson R. thing I do not know, it never, touched 1 secretary Opens December. First, Und'er New Jlanagement State Roard of Health Assumes Full Charge. The State Tuberculosis Sanatorium will be opened and eady to- receive patients by December first. -That is one of the things settled at a meeting ot me eiate tfoara or Health just held nt Montrose, the site of the institution. ''' It will be remembered that the Gen eral Assembly, at the extra session this fall, put the Tuberculosis Sanatorium under the crutrol of the State Board of Health.'and it was in aprnrdnnr with that enactment that the Board met and1") perfected plans for running the sana On DecemhftP first, when fhA rt will be opened, there will be capacity for fifty patients. By January first. with completion of the new building the capacity will be enlarged to the extent of sevetv-fivft more hdR sn that it will accommodate a total of one hun dred and twenty-five patients ; Another of the things accomplished I at the meeting of the Board was the 2 election of a superintendent for the in- , stitution. The man selected is Dr. Pendleton. Dr; Rankin, of the State Board of L the subject before the house. Look Health, states that Dr. Pendletou it up and read it for your own sweet comes with finer recommendations satisfaction, don't take my word for it, j than any candidate for any position and if he has done any better during the State Board, of Health has ever had these last eighteen or twenty months j to fill. The new superintendent is a I have neither seen nor heard of it. Lfcoutnern man, eaucatea at tne univer- . . ..... 1 a -tr i- . A i.x A a T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, - Rictpond, Va. - We are headquarters for - Cow Peas, German Millet Soja Beans, Crimson Clover and all Farm Seeds. Write for prices. DR. H. H. CARSON DENTIST. k- I ' pice over J. 0. Williams Store. Blacksmith agons and Carriages Hardware ran Edwd and MS fits 'anufacturer's Agents p Few-Ewbank building OTer Hen. dersonville Mercantile Co. Buy direct from Manufacturer Through Us your own canning, 12 dollar s Do p8 you a 48 can outfit from us. Ty nte us aiicl we will call 011 ypii is, '' oteam Engines. Saw Mills. Gasoline pgines, Cream1 Separators,; Caiining j ,tfit8 Electric Lighting Plants for re farmers and boarding- houses in je country. I sell hi Steam or Farm Machineiy ycu any- lng you want in Well. yes. he has done one bie tiling:. or helped to do it he helped to tear open the door of the United States treasury for the benefit of the norths err, soldiers, the Irish, the Dutch and the negro, but if he has ever, by word or deed donp aught for the old con confederate soldier. I have never heard of it The 'speech I had reference to was between six and ' a half and seven inches lone and in only one column of I the. Congressional Record. , M. A, KIRKPATRICK, Clyde, N. C, Oct 29, 1913. Puzzled Over Income Tax. New York, Oct 31. That part of New York, which is referred to vague ly as "Wall street" was in a state or confusion today. For once in its ca reer Wall street did not know which way to turn. The new income tax law becomes effective tomorrow and some of the highest priced lawyers, bank era and corporation officials in the world confessed that they were com-; pletely at sea as to its meaning. ; At seven o clock tonignt a group 01 men emerged from one of the largest banks in the downtown district, in te group were the president and vice presidents of the bank. They naa just concluded the last or a series 01 lengthy conferences which have been held every, evening this week atter business hours. The subject ot an these ' conferences was the Income tax law. Swimming in Mod. "We're swimming in mud" said one of these officers expressively. "For a day or two I thought I was goming to know what was meant Dy me income tax law,. and the treasury regulations nnncernine it. but now I'm convinced that I hardly know anything about them and my fellow officials know ess." Thp chief source of trouble is that portion of the law which provides for thp rniiection "at the source 01 uie tn-sr on. incomes derived from interest on bonds, mortgages and certain other obligations. Banks and corporations, are required to withnom tne ta m making payments of interest due to holders of securities. More than $80, 000,000 is due tomorrow in November interest payments in New xoru. The ruling in question has given .rise to endless conrusion. in cases m which bonds are not registered, tne names of their owners often are not known, to the banks or fiscal agents to whom coupons are presented for pay ment . Four Regional Banks. Washington, Oct. 31. The senate banking and currency committee to night tentatively agreed upon iour regional reserve banks for the pro posed new currency system, with a proviso that after two years the fed eral reserve board may add as many additional banks as it deems necessary not exceeding twelve. Tne penning bill fixes the number at twelve, aim ic 1,00 Kopn understood that the adminis tration,, would not consent to have it reduced below nine. First Radical Amendment. . rm,. ci,orn reduction in the number of reserve banks was the first, radical amendment the committee nas agieu upon, and it wa searnestly opposed by administration supporters in the com mittee. Senators U'liorman auu cock, however, voted with the repub licans for the reduction, leaving, but five democrats-behind the administra tion proposal. , The committee still has pending the abandon entirely the ad- ministration regional plan and to create a government-controaea ceuua. There also is pending Senator Reeds proposal -that tte. unuon reginal banKs De accumpBu. creation of a : governmeuL house- which would act as a resertolr. A Hiat to RicK Relations. In the November Woman's Home Companion a contributor , makes the following hint to rich- relations. - I have " often thought . how much happier and more appreciated a useful giffmade, by a well-to-do relative to a less fortunate one would be it could be chosen with an eye to beauty as well ag usefulness. Why do, our which are intended to be practical, SuXthat such gifts will be less cer viceable if they are pretty? Poor re latlons . appreciate, beauty richer ones Once in a while, then, 5o relieve the monotony of always con-sldering-the-pennics, no matter how unpractical it may be. sity of Virginia." As a matter of per sonal history, he himself was at one time a victim of tuberculosis and was cured -at the Saranac institution, one of, the most famous in the world. Af 'tvr leaving Saranac, he was for three years assistant to Dr.' David Lyman at the Connecticut State Sanatorium, Wallingford, Conn. . Dr Lyman is one of the greatest authorities on san atorium work in the United States and his sanatorium is regarded by tuber culosis authorities of the country as a model institution. , EUGENIC MARRIAGES. Governor Baldwin Advocates Minis ters' .Passing .on .Fitness of Appli cants for Matrimony. Kansas City, Mo. A plea fori eu genic marriages by Governor Simeon K Baldwin, of Connecticut, and an address by Rev. Newell Dwight Hillis, of Brooklyn, N. Y., on the' new social obligations for the church, brought to an end the fifteenth triennial council of the United States. Governor Baldwin urged the passage of laws by the state legislatures that will enable ministers of religion to de termine whether or not parties to tfio marriage contract are fit before the ministers perform the ceremony. Dr. Hillis said, in part "The greatest need of this hour in Amei-ican society is the need of mint if.ters and parents who will teach this generation that God is more than gold, that wealth is an obligation to pover ty; and that from those who have re ceived much, much will be required. "There is not one industrial problem that would not be ptfritan type in our ereat railways, banks and mines." The national council today selected New Haven, Conn., for the 1915 meet ing place. Other business consisted of the adoption of several resolutions and the selection of standing commit tees. ' The Income Tax. Regulations have been issued by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue rel ative to collection ot normal tax of 1 per cent at the source under the in come tPx law. Such tax shall be deducted at, the source beginning November 1, 1913, from all income -accruing and payable to every citizen of the United States or to every foreign person residing in the United States, which may be derived . A. from interest upon bonds and mort gages or deeds of trust or other simi lar obligations, including equipment trust agreements and receivers cer tificates of corporations, joint stock companies, although such interest does not . amount to $3000, excepting only the interest upon the obligations of the United States or its possessions, or a State or any political subdivision thereof. Coupons or orders for registered in terest should be accompanied by cer tificates of ownership signed by the owners of the bond upon which the interest, matured. If exemption from tax claimed, cer tificate of prescribed form shall be filed. . Tax shall not be withheld on coupon or Tegfstered interest maturing and payable before March 1, 1913, although presented for payment at later date. License and bond required-tor collec tion V Income from foreign countries. Application to Collector of Internal Revenue for license - required before Anrrr anv hiifi'llfiSS. , License must be taken out and bond filed on or before December, lyid. Heavy penalties are Imposed for failure to comply with, provisions and requirements of law. s Low Cost of Dressing. Grace Margaret Gould, fashion, editor of the Woman's Home Companion, makes the point in the November issue of that periodical that the material re quired for one dress eight years, ago will make two costumes an da blouse today. She publishes, a picture of a silk dress that was the height of fash ?tht veara aeo. She says that It required exactly thirteen and one-half yards of thirty-men material iu this dress. She says that, the fabric ..oniiirod for the. full sleeve would make an ordinary fashionable waist of nAfr Rhe E-oes on to say: "Tn these days, when the cost of liv ing seems to be constantly on the ln ooo nd fashions are regarded as i..mlrat in the extreme, it is ln- teresting to stop and look back a hit. mat, w have to pay more than we have ever paid before. for most of the .oeoiHea of life let. us De tnansiuj that we are at least paying less for our dresses." . . ,

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