Newspapers / French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, … / Sept. 9, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
C3ca ' Over " Hunter Pharciasj ' LTcndersonville, H. O. dr. e. a. McMillan (Successor to Dr, W. T. Wallace.) ; DENTIST OScet Burckmyer, Building, 4th Aye. Phone 442. ; Hendersonville, N. C A. H. MOREY DENTIST Morey Building PHONE 60 DR. EHRINGHAUS Dentist Office over; J.O. Williams. HENDERSONVILLE. N. C. Dr. W.H. Vander DENTIST Orer S. Maxwell & Co Storr Phone 351 lira. LETITIA TERTBEES PULLMAN Christian Science Practitioner. Hendersonville, N. C. Edneyvllle Road. R. P. D. No. 1. ;drs.hale osteopath Over Rose Pharmacy Roots, Kerbs, Barks, Etc. WANTEDJ We are in the market for laige Quantities of : . ; JSeeswax, -Lady Slipper Boot, ; - May apple Boot, 'Sassafras Bark of Boot, Select "Bright. J Slippery Elm Bark of Tree Spikenard Boot, v Star Grass Boot, . Star. Boot ' f YTE - ALSO BUY ALL KINDS OF Barks Iferbs, Leaves, Boots, and Ac. We pay cash . upon receipt of goods. Write for shipping tags and any J other information that yon , de sire.. .Price list mailed upon request Address II. B. LATHBOP & CO. INC. 86 & 88 North Lexington Avenue, 3 . . . Asherille, X. C. ninSTON-SALEH MAN SAVED FROM DEATH J. E. Erwln Says Wonderful Remedy , Brought Him Astonishing Relief. ' J. E. Erwln of Winston-Salem, N. CV was for a long time the victim of seri ous . disorders of the - stomach. He tried all kinds -of-treatment and had many doctors. 1 One day he took a dose , of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy and was aston ished at the results. The help he sought had come.. He wrote: " "I am satisfied , through personal use of the life-saving powers of your 'Wonderful Remedy. You have saved my life. I could have lived but a few weeks more had It not been for your remedy. I am inclosing a list of friend sufferers who ought to have some of your remedy." Mayr's Wonderful Remedy gives per manent results for stomach, liver and intestinal ailments. Eat as much and whatever you like. No more distress after eating," pressure of gas in the stomach and around the heart. Get one bottle of your druggist now and try it on an absolute guarantee if not satis factory money will be returned. WHYNOTTRYpOpHAfr.S iSTur.m niniDY Qlrea Prompt and Positire Belief in Every Ca8e'?id Jy "Otor gists. Price tJ .00. "CHEMICAL EDISON v THE NEED. Doctorvfrorton Arrives to Aid; Dye v stuff Trade and Hopes to find One. (From, the New York Sun) ' pr." Thomas H. Norton, agent , of, the Department of Commerce, arriv ed in this city yesterday to begin his work of accelerating the development of the country's dyestuffs industry.. He said there is no doubt in his mind that with the proper co-operation be tween the -various branches of the in dustry and with the assistance of.- a few men of technical and commer cial ability : the United States should find Itself before, the end of the wa ; on.. a competitive' footing with Ger many. , ", : ' ; "Somewhere there may be a dor mant chemical ' Edison floating around," he said, "and the finding of this man is what the industry needs. We have the raw materials, we have the brains, we have the. capital and we have the market. All we need is organization." : . Doctor Norton was enthusiastic over, the prospect; that he sees before this country if it goes .quickly and earnestly , to work to , produce ' the chemicals It needs from its abundant sources of supply. Immense quantities of.' raw products from which ' chemi cals and dyes are made are going to waste, he said; in the refuse of cok furnaces, the sawdust piles of the Northwest woods and the kelp that grows in almost limitless quantities on the ocean bed within the thre3 mile limit; ' ; - ' ; 1 - Doctor Norton and his assistants took possession of a room yesterday in the Custom House which they will use as a headquarters while visiting leading chemical and dye producing houses In New York and. near by. ; "We are taking up every phase of the chemical industry," he said, es pecially as it is affected by the lack of supplies from the other side of the ocean. We are anxious to see how we can utilize the coal Industry, in which we are now wasting products worth $100,000,000. "Germany utilizes every ounce of coal by-products, but only 16 per cent of our coke furnaces are equipped for reclaiming coal tar products. Only a few are actually recovering benzol, napthaline and carbolic acid, which are the bases of most of the coal tar products. Unfortunately benzol and carbolic acid are used largely in ex plosives, with the result that these products are mostly taken up by the ammunition factories. "?Tbe potash problem is large. We import annually from Germany $15, 000,000 worth of Potash, while on the coast there are supplies of kelp which are believed to have a value of $150,- 000,000, now going tto waste. We have at out door enough potash to meet the demands of the world, and to supply the needs of our crops, to bacco, grain and other produce, in the way of,. fertilizer. ; We hare-always been : dependent on . Germany for potash. "Photographic chemicals are van ishing. Every photographer in the country is facing the problem of get ting developer, but all the necessary chemicals are in this country in the form of coal tar products, and most of them can be obtained from napth aline which is not used in explo sives. "We don't want to get caught In such a plight again, and the Depart ment of Commerce wants to stimulate American development so we can sup ply our own demands and then branch out into the world's trade in chemi cals. . "It can be done, I know. Look at Switzerland, for an example. There is not a pound of coal in Switzerland, and yet In proportion to her -population she makes more dyestuffs than Germany. She has no tariff, either, while we are under a tariff of 30 per cent. Switzerland accomplished this by buying the intermediate coal tar products from Germany and then bringing them to their required state of chemical development." Doctor Norton said that steps should be taken by Congress to protect the infant industry from the competition that will inevitably follow peace. He said that if great stocks of dyestuffs are dropped on the -American market by Germany there, should be a way to punish manufacturers who conspire to injure American competitive trade. Dr. Maurice J. Langdon, a gradu ate of the "University of Munich, and who was formerly an assistant to one of the leading dyestuffs author!-J A M m 'mm ... 4 ues 01 Germany, is Here to neip Doc tor, Norton. He was asked about the report from Philadelphia that specula tors had cornered the dyestuff mar ket. . , - i "It is true that a number of men. who know nothing of dyestuffs have gone Into the market because of the scarcity of these products," . he said, "but it can hardly be said that a cor nner exists. I know of a number of men both in New York and Phila delphia who have bought dyestuffs to get the top price, but the Philadelphia men who talk about a corner , are ex aggerating. Most of the lots held are small. LEABNS NEWS OF BELATIYES Squire G . J. Milward has 'just re ceived a letter from his relatives in England in which he -learns that his nephew is still alive fighting on one of the largest British battleships at the Dardanelles. Mr. Milward has a sister in England whom he has not seen since he was fifteen years old when he left that country for the United States. ' ; BALOONISTS UNLUCKY DAY. That Friday is an 1 unlucky day seems, to be true as far as John Galr lagher, the auronaut who was here the opening days of the deflunct Midway, Is concerned. It will be remembered that he made 4 three unsuccessful at tempts to fly In this city on Friday, August 13. Several days ago A. A. Carter received a telegram from Mr. Gallagher In Cincinnati statine that ion Friday, August 27 he had received a ran resulting in two ribs being broken, otherwise he was alright V LAST LIVING SURVIVOR OF .CONFED SHIP" ALABAMA IIEBL' S J. GallamoreV Who. Once Lived Here TeUs Interesting Story of His Life . -, ; - ' ' ' Silas J. Gallamore, ' the last living survivor of the crew . of the privateer Alabama,- the- little ship that sailed the seas for the Confederacy in the Civil war, andiwhose faring. drove he Union commerce from the ocean, is In Hendersonville. ' r ; : K- ' ' Seventy-seven" - years old ' he ; Is remarkably well preserved,, and the calmness of his countenance tells noth ing of the young adventurer,, who ship ped with theaudasious Alabama in England, 1863, which lived through the most tempestuous career of any of the old time wooden men-or-war. : Just the old sailor he appears, and his presence here now is due to the fact., that he wants on the , pension roll ' so that he mav eet 'the $10 .' a month that the bill passed by the low er house will sive the old Confederates of Oklahoma State. ' - ; "There Is not a single record-of the crew of the Alabama- everything went down, with the ship," said the' old man today. "That's why I came up here to see about it, and my old-tar-heel friend, Bill Alexander, is going to help me." . r.- , . : About Gallamore. .-!. Gallamore was born' in Buncombe county, North" Carolina in"1837. While still in his teens he went to Jack sonville, Florida and began life-as-a sailor. -From there he drifted to New, York, where he signed with a whaling ship,' rounded Cape Horn, and went as far ' as San Francisco. Here he tired of the whaler, and by stealing a boat, he went ashore and stayed. , , At Frisco he became one . of the crew of the Primadonna, a merchant packet of an English company, and on this ship he cruised, the world. The Primadonna took him to Liver pool finally, and from here he made a trip to Glasgow, Scotland. At this time England had Just commissioned the Alabama to fight for the cause of the South in the Civil war. In Glasgow, the crew was being signed, and Gallamore signed with them. For eighteen months thereafter he lived on the liveliest little war boat that floated at that time. 'We were out to capture anything from the Yankees that would help the South's soldiers live," says the old man In recounting his story. "We were either fighting or running all the time. We sank several ships, and off Mobile bay, we put the Hatteras to the bottom. We made things so hot for Yankco commerce that we drove it from the seas." , "Finally, on the 10th of May, 1864, the Kearsarge, a Union warship, under Captain WinsIow: found us at Claus burg, off the coast of France. We fought 'em hard, and we would agot 'em. but we. were Just a wrden ship while they had their steel cables wrap ped ; around her hull for armor. Any way, our last shot tore her rudder off-" One of Last Two. "Captain' Sims and mvself were the last men to leave the ship fl was the quartermaster, the man who steered) and when we Jumped, the water was al ready up to our hips on the deck. Half the crew was. lost, but the rest of us were nicked out of the water by an English yacht, the Deerhound, which took us to Glasgow again. I left the captain there and that is the last I ever saw of him. I think he died at his home In Alabama." Gallamore is the only one left of his father's family. He auit seafaring and came to Oklahoma City in 1900 ' and has lived in Pinsburg county ever since. "Dr. Lew Allen, the surgeon of the Alabama, died In Dallas two or three years ago," he said. "If IM known there was one that close, I would hav walked all the way to see him. Cap tain Sims was the last one of the boys I saw." r "I am a democrat." he continued, "and never voted anything but the straight democratic ticket, and I've voted In places where I was the only democrat there. I never voted for but two presidents that were elected Cleveland and Woodrow Wilson. FRIENDS OF PRESIDENT ARE PLANNING FOR RENOMINATION Washington,' Sept. 1. Indications were apparent here that President Wilson's closest friends expect him to be re-nominated in 1916 and are lay ing their, plans accordingly. The President himself, it was said author- nauveiy, nowever. is taking - no part in such plans. Gratification felt by the President over the action-of Democrats in the Tenth Congressional District of Wis consin in endorsing his Administration was expressed in a letter from Sec- j retary Tumulty which became public here tonight. A telegram to President announcing the endorsement, stated it was voted for "unanimously at a mass meeting called for the arranging for the campaign of 1916." Word that Kentucky Democrats as sembled in a State platform conven tion had endorsed President Wilson for re-nomination also was welcome news at the White House, but no for mal comment was made. , Senator James, "author of the . res olution adopted in' Kentucky, is one of the President's political advisers. v Last September Secretary Tumulty sent a letter to a New Jersey Demo cratic leader asking that no steps be taken to endorse the President for another term and saying "the Pres ident feels that it might seem as if h were taking advantage of the ex traordirary situatio now existing t gain a personal advantage through such an expression of confidence." , . As far as the President himself is concerned, he is understood to take the same position at present, but many of his friends are -declared to believe that no further efforts should be made to stop political indorse ments .which may; be offered. Of British 'peers 177 are. or have been, serving in his Majesty's forces. Oh,' You Larabee'sBest Flour: In sist pn getting it. -" . ' ' 9-3-4tc TTrr TO TTAVT7T A nnDF) TIME XXV IF . A V - v . ACCORDING; TO, A .MINISTER (By the Rev. Charles E Jefferson in Farm and Fireside): , . v When happiness is missed It is .be- ' cause it has: been, sought in the wrong -way. The caost "common of all the ( wrong ways of seeking it. Is to 7 run, after it." It Is a queer universe in j which we are living, and' life has many paradoxes. There' are treasures which, 1 li.in.ey- are .10; pe.goneu, wubi, uub,uo-j too ardently pursued. They will come m i 1 . mm , ' ' 1 2 A ' 2 I 01 tnemseives 11 one Keeps ma wci iu the path of life. Much depends on put ting, first things first : Woe tor the xuan or woman who places a good time at the top of his list! He will never get it. Paradise shapes itself only in mind's intent on doing the will I of God. - One can say of happiness-what Charles . V said of fortune: "Fortune hath somewhat of the nature of a woman who, if she be " too closely wooed, is commonly the further off."; We err. when we. expect a good time to be handed to us. Happiness is not a. cake Which can be passed oyer the counter to any person who asks for it. We speak of giving a good time . 'to children. We take the boy to the cir cus, or the girl to the seashore where she makes pretty things in the sand. But good times such as these are pps- j sibiy. oniy to children.. Jrown-up peo ple cannot receive good times from others.? Each must create his - own. Happiness is an affair of the heart. It ia an-art of the inner man. Many a woman who is now moping would be joyful if she ' set out as a - girl .to be the architect of her;: own happiness, and . had not. formed the habit. of ex pecting others . to .give i her a, good time. Happiness is a heavenly plant, and it blossoms only in gardens culti vated and -cared 'for 'by their owners. ; A good time, does not depend' on place. There are those who are air ways certain -that - they , would " bo happy if they were only ' somewhere else than where they are.: They " are ever wanting to go somewhere. Their present environment never 'satisfies. If they were In another house,-or in another position, or in another citv then all would be well..; They do not know tnat nappiness comes from one s state, and not from one's station. It flows from one's condition, and not from one's situation. It depends upon character, and not upon surroundings. A woman who is fussy in a cottage will be fussier In a. mansion. A man who is disgruntled In a village will not be better humored in a city. The poet who wished he had the wings of a dove so that he could fly was not un like the rest of us when we get fool ish. Wings are. not provided, and if they were they would never carry ns wnere nappiness Is found. The fasci nation of the farway is an Illusion. Many would have a good time If they did not postpone it They build their in next year. It is not until $hey; reach a certain point, finish a certain course, amass a certain amount Of money, secure a certain honor, tset- ue a certain problem, complete a-certain task, that they think it possible to Settle down and begin to enjoy life. Their good time is always coming. It never arrives. He who is not master of today, need not expect to make a conquest of tomor row. "It Is too bad he had to die, for he had Just gotten ready to live." so I heard his neighbors say of a man who had died at the age of sixty. What he had been doing through all his sixty years I do not know, but according to those who knew him best "he had not yet begun to live. It is an ancient delusion that hannf- ness is dependent on things. Never bad It a firmer grip, on the imagination tkan now. The world is fuller of Tova- lj things today than ever. They never have been so bewitchingly displayed. Our neighbors ' never before had so many bf them. The advertisers were never so eloquent and persuasive. Tney make us unhappy because they flaunt in our faces thin n Wo Ara nrtf atle to buy. . Oh, if I only, had that!. mt . . - inis is tne sign oz many a twentieth century heart But one's life" does not Cdllsfst If! the fihiinr?artsA wnicn ne possesses. If it didfc then ! W MWMUUCMAV i Ul lUiUKS people who possess most would , be hippies t But are they? Are there no 'etched homes on the nrnndpRf avo. ne, no cheerless faces in the-finest carriages in the park, no accounts of suicides of men who li(ihs? The barns mav h full atih the heartf em$ty. . Carlyje is right wien he says you cannot hv p-fvino- him half the universe make a boot black - permanently v happy. Nor does happiness ddj what one pleases. The tired work eri sometimes wishes he could play all th i time, but he would soon get weary of it Charles tamh ,i - . . o U1U dekki ong' for liberty, and when at last libertv . r.a m a Via . fo a few days, and . then be thi man or woman. wh n nn kwom.,- i th morning, finds; standing at the oeisiae a line of duties waiHmr k. formed. Wordsworth, in his "Ode Duty." confesses 'that hnvi loved his own inclinations, he was wipa. oi zma rreeaom, and ends with a irayer for the spirit of elf-sacrifice anl the privilege of living the bond mah of Duty. ' Sow then is It possible to secure the vejr best of times?; Jesus of Nazareth gives us the answer. A It i renA th NeV Testament aricht fii mAacn T I . . " O" v iUCBOOgC Ul j esus is : "Try in all of I " W , w mm, W pxekse God because He is your Father, and uirive aiways to nelp others be- cause they are your-brnthprn on ter , and let merby my spirit and ex am ile, assist you in all of your en deavors." This is the road which lea s to a good time. - . SAYS JEWS WILL FIGHT. Epston. AU8T. 27. -OftVArnrtf. Alexander, of Idaho, one of the few Jes ever ' elected governor in tht couhtry pleaded for preparedness at a reci ption in his 'honor tonight '! Tie Jew by nature is a pacifist," he said "but I would -urge every Jewish mot ter In the land to send her sons to the nearest recruiting, officer if the coui try should"' face , war. "God save us- f om such trouble but If It should com the first volunteer' from Idaho wou i be the governor of the State." 1 . - " r ; iiENDEBSoN yille; k c. - 1 "Education is Costly; Ignorance More So." ', . This - school ' develops v manliness, bullds'characterrv and trains mind 1 and body at the; formative -period of the -boy's life. It offers indi ;.;vidual' instruction in' studies and lays stress upon teaching the boy ' correct methods of study. Courses of study lead to a thorough . preparation for entrance into the best colleges and universities. .-I -Next :. session "begins September 16th. , s For particulars, address ; ri-'tYy:AH''jC- -'. j; y or Accredited .by the University ; of Colleges. Open September Preparatory Department wiil for catalogue and. tor terms to iiMiss Kate 1899 A Christian School Prepares for College, Teaching arid Practical Life ; - Session Opens Aiigt 24th THOBOUGU UrSTCUCTIOJr, EE ASO ABLE BATES. MUSIC ABT, EXPBES SlOJf, H03TJE ECOJTOmCS. Faculty of eight teachers who live in homes with boys and girls. FIyo buildings and fourteen acres of land consisting of orchards, gardens, etc. New administration building in course of construction, for the completion of which funds will be gratefully received from friends of the school. v Address ' N. A: MELTON, Principal. 7-29-4tc i i nrat I "vfi'9l c J Safety ;., -..jgr ..t? jjug una I ii Farmer 'q Hardware Hendersonville, N. C. visitors 5 suid J Tourists fe Always Welcbihe at U IIU I OF HENDE BSONYILLE, f. C. v The Old Bank The Strong Bank ; The Liberal Bank a Can ifal Stoc burp Ins & Profits, $28,000 Small Checkj ' ) Hllas the Large Ones ' -;;f ' - K'-l '": '."OFFICEBS: t-;::d , W- J.: IAVISPresident: : K. G. MOBRIS, Vice-President. P. PWyieiesiaeiit. J. MACK RHODES, Cashier. L THE BENEFIT. FROM ; SUBSOIL1NG. Stanly county farmers have yet to learn the great benefit to be derived from ' sub-soiling. The few who have tried would not go back: to the old way of farming ?f or love or ! money. One good farmer in ' the county who was once satisfied with a. yield of- from 20 to 35 bushels 'of corn, after the old method of plowing,; now looks for a' yield of over 125 bushels to the acre. The first year that he tried sub-soiling he made 50 bushels to the acre; the second year,, after the purchase of a sub-soiler, he ; made 75 -bushels; the 3rd year he in yield was not due en tirely to sub-soiling,, but largely made possible, by it With abundant use of compost and a' iudiciona followed up his . plowing so as to put xauu m excellent condition. Xirco B SAXDIFEB. HeadmastP. A. G. BAirpOLPH, Bns.Ianager. Hendersonville. N. C. t ' of N. Oj" and the Southern Association 7 1915. be opened with the new term. day : pupils, apply; to the principal. C ; Shipp i; 4; V . -t rr t H for Boys and Gil Hendersonville, N. C. s' ft r r -.. ; r- -,t i. . . Avoid the tire nsk by . nreprooi, stormproof' and (tC f-v durable roofing. Wf Last as long as the hiaildirigte! iA k andnever need repairs ? WJm "'V.? - ' ' "'-' -'sj-;:'u;i"' ?y fr ","Pj'l For Sale hy !s, $125,000 his days of experimenting his work has been lighter by reason of the fact that his soil has been kept loose vege tation proving a feeder rather than a bleeder of the soil. Ten acres cultivated-well in this way prove of more profit than 100 acrs ' with surface merely scratched by the plow and the soil poorly fertilized. Hard and for bidding as most' of the hillsides in Stanly county look, it is only stating the' truth: when. we say that they could be made to blossom every year as the Tose if only they could receive the proper attention in the way of sub soiling and fertilization. Albemarle Enterprise. "Ask your grocer for "Larabee's Best Flour. , ' 9-3-4W SuddIv IV rfl "IT m m wmm 3
French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 9, 1915, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75