Newspapers / French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, … / May 9, 1918, edition 1 / Page 6
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e m s H For Chestnut Poles Payment made when loaded at siding. Write for prices and specifica tions. New prices offer big inducements to set poles out NOW. ERSKINE POLE CO. UTeaTerrille, N. C. CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS If? MOSTRiLS Tells How To Get Quic!: Relief from Head-Cclds. It's Splendid! j In one minute vour clogged nostrils will open, tlie air passages cf your hecu will clear and you can breathe frcelj. No more hawking,, snuffling, blowing, headache, drynecs. No struggling for breatL. ai mgnt; your cold or catarrh will be gone. Get a small bottle of Ely's Crcnrr, Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of thi3 fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It pen etrates through every air passage of tco head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane, and relief comes in stantly. It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed-up with a cold or nasty catarrh Relief somes so quickly. BLUE BB0N EXTRACTS THE BEST AND TAKES LESS AT Phone 3 Phone 4 RUB OUT PAIN uuu uii uiument. i nat a tJxe surejfc way to stop them. The best rubbing liniment is T AW in rpfr jyil IS k Good for the Ailments of Horsey Mules, Cattle, Etc Good for your own Aches, . Pains, Rheumatism, Sprains, o Cuts, Burns, Etc , 25c 50c $1. At all Dealers. tlFTYOUR CORNS fo OFF WITH FINGERS Tells how to loosen a tender corn or callus so it lifts out without pain. You reckless men and women -who fcre pestered with -corns and who have at least once a week invited an awful death from lockjaw or blood poison are now told by a Cincinnati authority to use a drug called f reezone, which the moment a few drops are applied to any corn or callus the soreness is re lieved and soon the entire corn or cal lus, root and all, lifts off with the fin gers. . Freezone dries the moment it is ap plied, and simply shriveU the corn or cal lus without inflaming or even irritating the surrounding tissue or skin. A small bottle of freezone will cost very little at any of the drug stores, but will posi tively rid one's feet of every hard or soft corn or hardened callus. If your druggist hasn't any freezone he can get it at any wholesale drug house for you, SCHICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Try It! Hair gets soft, fluffy and 4 beautiful Get a small bottle of Danderine. . If you care for heavy hair that lens with beauty and is radiant with life; has an incomparable softness and is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderine. Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it imme diately dissolves every particle of dandruff. You can not have nice heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and if not overcome it produces a fevcr ishness and itching of the scalp; the hair roots famish, loosen and die; then ' the hair falls out fast.. Surely get a r small bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store and just try it. RI II id y 1 HFH OVER THE LAND OF THE LONG LEAF PINE SHORT NOTES OF INTEREST TO CAROLINIANS. Ae far as is known the Asheville Barber's union is the first body of or ganized labor in this section per haps in the whole south to go on rec ord by formal resolution as. boycotting all goods of German manufacture. Mr. W. N. Gregory, president of the East Cotton Oil Company at Hertford was elected president of the 'North Carolina Cotton Seed Crushers' Asso ciation -at the eighth annual conven tion of the association held in Raleigh. Statesville can now boast of a pop ulation of between 7,500 and 8,000, a considerable bit of territory being taken in as a result of an election last fall. If that part added is as good as that to whick it was added, every body ought to be proud. Transylvania county is putting par tisanship out of business for the time being by the appointment of a com mittee to draft a propostion to be sub mtted to both arties. Perhaps Gov ernor Bickett's .proposal is practical wherever it is approached in the spirit in which it was made. An interesting fact about the work on the grading of the railroad which is now being done in Boone is that Captain W. M. Hodges, an ex-ConfeJ-erate soldier, now 86 years old, is put ting in ten hours every day with his mattock on the work. The pool rooms of Raleigh were or dered closed at midnight on May 31, when the city commissioners unani mously adopted -resolutions declining to renew city license and describing pool rooms as harmful and unneces sary institutions, encouraging idleness, fostering gambling and tending to in crease crime. The R. J. Reynolds Tobacco com pany of Winston-Salem is filling a gov ernment order for 27 carloads of Prince Albert smoking tobacco for American soldiers in France, and 125 cars more are to be shipped by May 15. In addition the company is shin ping large quantities of cigarettes to soldiers in France. Monroe people are very much inter ested in the proposed cement high way to Wilmington and are willing to lend this movement tr air support. T. L. Riddle, secretary of the Monroe chamber of commerce his written a letter to the Charlotte chamber of commerce, pledging the aid of the Monroe organization in the movement. Mr Robert Webb and his son, Rob ert Webb, were killed at a grade crossing near Selma by a northbound Atlantic Coast Line train. Mr. Webb and his son were in a wagon, which was being drawn by a mule.- The ani mal was also killed and the wagon demolished. Young Webb was killed instantly. , , , So far as the records now in posses sion of the college indicate that 351 pion students and alumni are with the colors. Two of these are young ladies, one of whom is inthe navy and the other with the Red Cross. A service flag is to be presented the college on commencement day in honor of those who have gone to serve the cause of freedom amd democracy. The O. Henry hotel, Greensboro, is getting along in fine shape. The height is now seen since the frame work for the roof is on, and this building will be a beauty. There are rumors again afloat of a first-class sevenstory concrete building down the street, a modern commercial ho tel, and the rumor this time is per haps based on actual fact. Provost Marshal General E. H. Crowder has announced that 160 men will be detailed to the Agricultural and Engineering College of West Ra leigh on May 16 for a two months' sci entific course for preparation in the pursuits of such trades as automobile mechanics, radio or wireless-telegraphers, machinists, electricians and teleg raphers. ' , purham County: Economic and So cial is the title of a new one hundred page illustrated bulletin jthat has just come fro mthe Chapel .Hill press. It is the second study of county economic and social problems to appear in North Carolina the first being. Sampson County: Economic and Social, issued In late 1917. .. . It is learned that a large per .cent ot blackberry vines were destroyed by the extreme cold weather the past winter. In some localities the entire growth Is said to be killed. No little excitement was occasioned 3n the streets of Greenville when news became current that J. H. Ketchuei, r.f alleged German descent and a resi dent of the city had been placed un 3er arrest by governmentn officials for pro-German utterances the warrant sharged him with violation of the es pionage act, section three, which for bids, among other things, unpatriotic remarks. DaVld A. Houston of Monnroe' ha& been appointed president of the Co lumbia Farm Loan Bank. - THE OTPS OTTS IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATE, NA TION AND THE WORLD BRIEFLY TOLD . ROUND ABOUTjllE WORLD A Condensed Record Of Happenings Of Interest From All Points Of The World Orders for thirty thousand box and coal cars to, cost in the aggregate be tween eighty milion and ninety mil lion dollars have been, placed by Di rector General McAdoo, with the American Car and Foundry company at fixed prices which will represent about five per cent profit. Helmuth Schmidt, who killed him self at Detroit, Mich., and on whose person was found sketches of the for tifications of New York harbor, was probably a German spy. Mrs. Adele Ulrich Braund, who says Schwidt mar ried her in Lakewood, N. J., in 1914r, as "Emil Braun," makes this accusa tion. The new Japanese minister to the Unuited States, Viscocnt Ishii, togeth er with his staff of secretaries and his wife, has arrived at Washington. He is well known in this country and is very acceptable to the United States. Indictments were returned against sixteen persons by the gva.nd jury, which investigated the lynching on April 3 of Robert Paul Prager of Col linsville. Twelve indictments were against civilians and charged murder, and four indictments were against po licemen, charging malfeasance in of fice. The house adopted the senate reso lution for the registration for military service of young men who have reach ed the age of 21 years since June 5, last. Chairman Dent of the military committee opposed the amendment. Mr. Kann of California also opposed I the amendment, and declared there are I thousands of young men now under 21 who volunteered at the beginning of the war and who are now serving in France. In connection with the measuring placing young jgen reafching 21 since last June, it is recalled that 'Germa ny recently called into service its class of 1919, consisting of approximately 550,000 mn. Direction of the army's great air craft production program has been placed in the hands of a civilian, John D. Ryan, copper magnate, railroad man, and financier. Brig. Gen. William L. Kenley, for merly head of the aircraft production program, has been made chief of a new division of military aeronautics to control training of aviators and mil itary use of aircraft . Three fires at .Lima, Ohio, breaking out simultaneously in the Lake Erie and Western shops, pratcicaly wiped out the five hundred thousand dollar plant. Water pressure was reported cut at some unknown point, while fedr eral agents said a hose was cut in two places with a knife. One man has been taken into custody by the police. Three firemen are missing and a work man was seriously injured. The chief of the fire department was badly cut and several others injured. Washington- Kemmel Hill, a height which has been looked upon as the key to the southern side of theYpres salient in France, and one of the most import ant strategic positions on the north ern battle front, has been taken by the Germans. This loss brings to the allies a realization that the whole Ypres position is in peril from the German drive northward from the lowlands lying to the west of Armen tieres. ,' . Germany's losses thus far in the war have been only two million men, ac cording to a statement credit by the Frankfurter Zeitung as having been made by General Schulze before the main committee of the -German reich stag. Some of the third Liberty Loan post ers sent to General Pershing in France will be dropped from airplanes' behind the Gentian lines on thevestern front to impress on the German soldiery and civilians the importance of America winning this war. The total losses of the brigade of marines with the; American expedition ary force in France so far reported is announced as 27822 killed in ac tion, 10 died of wounds, 2 died of ac cidents, 244 wounded in action. The shipping board has decided on a substantial increase in its building program for 1919 oveT the tonnage planned for this year and indications are that the increase will be continued; in 1920. For military reasons the ex act size of the future building program is not made public. . , A Guatemala City dispatch says that the national assembly at its session declared the republic of Guatemala to occupy the same position toward the European belligerents as does the United States. , , Before January 1, 1919, all the new shipyards will be in full operation and many old yards, which have demon strated their ability to build Qfficient ly, will be expanded. It is estimated that the construction during 1919 will be in excess of ten million tons. Ex-United States Senator Chauncey M. Depew, at a reception given by the Montauk Club of Brooklyn to, celebrate his S5th birthday, said that if the American m-mv pt tores tit-Ut, . j j viiiu, its uia- toric monuments and art treasures will (safeguarded,;. itrv houses and j shops protected an! its women treat odwith'-'respect and courtesy. ' , . COUNTRY SUNDAY SCHOOLS; SOME OF THEIR PROBLEMS AND HOW TO HANDLE THEM. Rv E. L. Middleton, Secretary S. S. L Department Baptist State Conven tion.) In these times of stress and uncer tainty we must . not neglect those agencies that deal with the greatest things. Our Sunday schools are such agencies. We are largely a rural people. More than two-thirds of. our people liye in access to country and village Sunday schools. These schools ought to -be made just as large and efficient as possible. This is not entirely a rural prob lem. Go to any city in North Caro lina and you will find 90 per cent of the leadership in business and in the churches comes from the country. Imagine conditions a quarter of a century from now in cities, towns and the country if our country churches fail in this great hour. Some. Facts. There are about 1,280,000 white people in North Carolina living in the country. Not over 400,000 are in any Sunday school. There are 140,000 babies too small to go to Sunday school. This leaves 740,000 people old enough and in no school. Many of these cannot go but could be en listed through a home department. If our Sunday schools are helpful to those who go they would help the others who do not go. Orie reason why so many stay away is because of the inefficiency of our schools. I am convinced that of all public agencies our country Sunday schools are the most inefficient in or ganization, management and equip ment. I do not say this in a spirit of pessimism, but try to get our people to face a stern fact. In spite of this fact our Sunday schools are render ing untold good to our churches and as factors in our social and civic life. Some Helpful Signs. Our Sunday schools are growing. They have increased in membership at least 300,000 in ten years. This is a gain of 65 per cent. This in cludes both races and all schools. North Carolina has a larger per cent of its people in Sunday school than any State in the Union except' two. Growth in teacher training, grading the schools, new buildings and im proved equipment and general uplift has been marvelous. Our schools are in a stage of tran sition. They are' passing from the mass meeting stage to real educa tional institutions. It behooves all Christian men and women to realize their obligations to this great enter prise. In our religious life these mat ters of readjustments in our1 Sunday schools are as vital as the proper rearing of our children is to our home life. To neglect now is to suffer ir retrievably later. Some Problems. All the work we, can do resolves itself to three things: 1. Enlistment, or reaching the peo ple for the Sunday school and then keeping them there. 2. Organization involving suitable buildings and equipment, necessary officers to run the schools and the proper grading or classification of the the pupils. 3. Teaching these pupils efficiently. This involves adequate preparation for such a high and holy task. By the kindness of the editor I shall try to deal with these matters in a series of monthly articles. It is my earnest desire t ohelp my people, and in such a time as this I know no better way than to do something to make our country Sunday schools larger and better. Ihave' carefully studied these problems, giving all my time for ten years to Sunday school work in every section of our State. I shall use such subjects as "Build ing up the Sunday schools," "Officers and Their Duties," "An Adequate Organization," "The Country Pastor and His Sunday School," "How to Get Trained Teachers," "Special Days in the Sunday School." I shall not in any way deal with the teaching material. , You will find this in the periodicals of your denominational publishing house. REGISTRARS AND JUDGES HENDERSON COUNTY. Following is the list of registrars and judges of election in tne various precincts of this county: Bat Cave: M. L. Edney, registrar; C. P. Freeman, George WalU judges. -Bowman's Bluff: R. J. Fletcher, registrar; N. M. Brown and J. B. Patterson, judges. Clear Creek: R. M. Pryor, regis trar; T. P. Rogers and J. M. Garren, judges. Crab Creek: John Brown, regis trar; J. F. Gibbs and T. A. Drake, Jr., judges. ' " Edneyville: A, S. Edney, regis trar; W. P. Maxwell and J. H. Mer rell, judges. ; , -. ' East Hendersonville: J. A. Fletch er, registrar; J. T. Wilkins and P. B. Ramsey judges. :u Etowah: J. W. Morgan, registrar; J. N. Murray and C. O. English, judges. Y ; ' - Flat " Rock r W. B7 Bassett,- regis trar; O. M. Drake and D. E. Brock, judges. ; Green-River: J. O. Bell, registrar; J.' W. Wood and J. C. Pace, judges. Hooper's Creek: R. W. Fletcher, T 3 PUB uaxiB) (! '. fjBistSaj Baldwin, judges. ' Mill's River: H. C. Jones, regis trar; J. H. Burgin and W. H. White sides, judges. Rugby: J. L. Allen, registrar; D. S. R. Willis and R. V. Evans, judges. Horseshoe: J. P. Johnson, regis trar; Silas Case and A. Broyles, judges. Blue Ridge: W. A. King, registrar; F. C. Whitaker and B. A. Merrell, judges. - Upward: W. S. Young, registrar; A. S. Jackson and J. G. Justus, judges. ' Raven Rock: C. J. Heatherly, reg- So long as the - boys are at the front, difficulties are to be subdued, impossibilities to be trampled down. PARK HILL Now Open for the Season T OCATED in Heart of Residential section of Five J- Acre Estate. Golf, Tennis, Croquet, Etc. RATES MADE ON APPLICATION MRS. M. A. BROWN Hendersonville, N. C. Can You Us If you need a thousand or so see us at once. We have one of the easiest money loaning plans in exis tance. $ 1 00,000 to loan at 6 percent. Smith, Jackson & Morris Co. Asheville Summer School OF THE NORMAL AND COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE Asheville, N. C, Six Week, .June 11 to Jtily 24, 1918. Exceptional opportunities to those teachers who desire professional improvement.. Strong courses in education. Complete courses for all grade s of both elementary and high school teachers, supervisors and superintendents. Special attention to cooking and sewing, manual training, drawing and other handwork, music, writing, physical training and health, Bible. Faculty composed of members of the Normal and Collegiate faculty and of heads of departments in recognized colleges and normal schools. Especially strong in primary work. Certificates granted upon completion of the six weeks' course will be accepted by the State Board as satisfying their requirements for pro fessional study. Tuition fee, $8.00 for the term. Board and room in the dormitories, $5.00 per week. For announcement, information and reservation of rooms, address PRESIDENT JOHN E. CALFEE, Director, Normal and Collegiate Institute, Asheville, N. C. THE GEISER LINE OF THRESHERS Is well and favorably known all over the South, and has proved to be the most satisfactory ma chine for this mountain section. We have two carloads of machines bought, and a part of tne3 already sold and delivered. I; If you need a thresher in ; pur section, take the matter ur us at once, as we do not exr ect to be able to get enough Threshers this 'year to supply the trade. Write for catai prices and terms. T. S.-.MO'RR!SOM'&-C0.. "h for WESTERN CAROLINA. FOR GEISER THRESHERS, ST-A '1 ENGINES AN DSAW MILLS. ? WORLD FILM COMPANY VISITS BAT CAVE. A troupe of twenty persons resenting, the World Film co 6p" were visitors' in the Bat Cave! for a few days before leavin! Saturday for their studio in x. York. n ew The movie makers filmed Several scenes before returning tn f al studio. the ; ; e. GIVE r SYRUP OF FIG? TO CONSTIPATED CHUjj DaUcJous "Fruit Laxative" can't i,, tender little Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Look at the tongue, mother' t coated your little one's stomach,' iiv -and bowels need cleansing at o When peevish, cross, listless, doeS sleep, eat or act naturally, or is feVo ish, stomach sour, breath bad; has so" throat, diarrhoea, full 0f cold, rive teaspoonful of "California sVran nf Figs," and in a few hours all tffijf constipated waste, undigested food and sour hile gently moves out of its littu bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. Ask v0Ur druggist for a bottle of "California feyrup of Figs," which contains fun directions for babies, children of all vL and for grown-ups.
French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 9, 1918, edition 1
6
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