Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / Feb. 15, 1912, edition 1 / Page 8
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tThuriy, rvry tl TUC CAUCASIAN. and vine mad Urge trees of every! many bore ad girls. Every worker. kind. Hundreds of years went by. tbe old trees rotting awiy and &tv ones coming oa. until st last Instead of be! dc the lovely green things, sit was black and ugly. And tben. one day, after so many years of darknets. men with lamps went down Into the from the Esaa who first receives the fioar to the driver of tbe electric mo- tor car. Is dressed la waste. Jo think of It! White Soar to start wit a, white machinery, walte walls, feite-glored aad uniformed attead IBu. white buildings and aa aaaar- TIIK IiliST THINGS. The world Is oM, but the heart Is young. And its sweetest songs are jet unsung; earth with long picks la their haads jaare of white, clean. 3o.ob sod began to loosen the black pieces bread! of rock. A boy came along and A physlciaa U in charge to see that tossed it into a cart, and along the i the workers are all ta good health, narrow covered path which led to1? both when they are first employed the earth and the beautiful sunshine. and after they haTc been there some the coal came out of its hiding place- f time. A roof garden, where the tired erenlng and apologize, but mother said it wasn't prudent for me to go out. She gueed whatever I had to say would keep till morning. But I This coal family is a large one. with I workers can rest during the noon had a bad nU&t of it. And when relatives all over the world. Their j hour, is procided. At first glance your valentine came Just now and I real name is Peat, but only in one ! the building from the outside appears Carth's richest treasure! are yet un- saw that you hatj forgiven me with- country, in Ireland, are they known Uo be a continuous line of windows. out my haviag said one word 1 , by that name. In every country coal This Arm evidently believes la gtv- sought; Karth's bravest battles are yet fought. un- Down deep In the earth in tbo blackened soil Shut out from the light does tho miner toil; Hut, sec at the sound of each ringing blow. How the factories hum and the hearth fires glow! A Llack-browed man In a humble room Sits patiently tending an ancient loom; Hut, see, from his hand what hues arise Of tapestry, rich Sn Eastern dyes' Tlie farmer wakes with earliest light. And tolls in his field from morn till night; No king could a worthier service yield. ( knew that your Mctory was the best is found in sunny Italy, cold Itus- victory of all! I'm going to have gia, China, Japan, and indeed, every that picture framed, Dick, and keep where. Some are a soft and some a hard lot," mother ended, laughingly. ing lots of sunshine and xresa air for their employes. Exchange. it forever." 1 Then a .udden light broke in on Dick's bv. ildered brain, and he knew what a mistake he had made the nisht before, i "Oh," he t.ii!ir'red In confusies, "but you don't understand ! never i meant" mid Bob, regretfully. . :v word I said, and I n enting bitterly ever i " learned a lesson; ; : vays told me that the t .k'tory that a fellow : his o-.vn ugly temper, tun me that it's true!" . tie came running up all "A coal miner has a hard life, and yet how brave he is, going deep SPICK BOX. "Why does the giraffe have such a 1 Blew aimdl Sscociii Hand ffTORJIIHTOE Oil Every .Description. PIANOS AM ORGANS You can cct 5 per cent discount it jrcu mention The Caucasian KOONCE BROTHERS 1 06 and 1 1 1 East Harffet St, Raleigh, North Carc down Into the earth to bring us thlst,oas brightness! Winter "Because us neaa is so -ar aa. from its DC-ay, cope-uny eawei comfort and "But I did "I meant ?. have Lr-nn since. P.ut mother hns. most s:! n can gain is and you've would be a cheerless time were it not for coal. It's one of tie t&lngi we should be thankful for. Hew good God is to put such comforts away, deep, down In the earth! The story of coal Is a very wonderful one, and fome day you will learn how beauti ful trees and growing things can make the hard, black rocks we the boy. Since little Paul wrote his compo sition on snow, his mother hopes that he may be a poet. ! "I don't really know what snow; is," he began, "but I think it may be air with clothes on." j Tor even the king Is served by field." the out of hr j "Oh, I: speak to .she s'ii '. i "thing' tine : . , to hum." "Perhaps I'll be a miner myself, "l wasb my face!" Dolj and wear a cap with a lamp on It," ! defiantly. paid Jack, "that is. if I pver am hrav i ".Naughty. naughty. reproeu t " she nanted. "let me f nonnh'" The Child's fiem. ; grandmother. "When I was a little 'ist a moment! Dick." Then, work and win! for the world is, wide, i told And its doors will ot'jn on every side; Look not on the path with vain re gret. Tor "the best things haven't happen ed yet." Zion's Herald. 5 Kobert stepped aside, i::?d. The ugly valen ::nt for Robert you sent !! 0 s;lad! You haven't .1. e you " -d to, and I'm going to." r..n not," cried Kate decid- AXCIKXT SHOES. , girl, 1 always washed my face.' "Yes, and now look at it." ! edl; te A VALKXTINK OV VICTOltY. "It's all very weil for mother to say, 'Let not tho sun go down upon your wrath,' but if she were a boy and another boy had been so ugly and hateful to her" "Well," said Kate, as her brother paused for breath, "what do vou think she wosld do?" "Just what I'm going to !o!" flashed Dick. "Send him the mean est old comic valentine that can 1k found. He can't bear ridicule, a:;.; if I can find a mean one it'll sting M.u like a lash." "I wouldn't, Dick," she pleaded .gently. 'No, of course you wouldn't; ou are too much like mother!" said Dick, never noticing how contradic tory his statements were. "I don't think any one could be 'too much like mother,' " said Kate. "But new I must go to my music. Come along with me, Dick." J "I'll come later," growled Dick, aad moved away. Dick and Robert had always been grea,t friends. During Robert's ill ness Dick had visited him regularly every day. Robert's illness had left -.him thin, pale and nervous. On this day he had been so hateful that Dick ft'os highly inoensed. Ho soon found a hideeus picture of a long, lank, skeleton-like creature, with just a few stray hairs standing out at 8&g1os from the nearly bare cranium. Underneath he wrote. "This i3 the way you loek te me." Oa. his way home Dick spied in the wtnJQws of an art store a small pho ograph of the splendid antique statue, "Victoria." Knowing how perfectly delighted his sister would be with it, he resolved to buy it and send it to her as a valentine. When he came out of the store with the little picture ef "Victory" in his possession, he woald have felt quite happy had it not been for that fciter Reeling of anger toward his friend. When he reached home he ran right up to his room. One he ad dressed in a queer, cramped hand to "Mis Kathryn Lloyd"; the other in his natural large hand, "Robert Miles." Just then he was called te tea, after which he had his lessons to learn. Before retiring he hastily slipped the twe valentines into the envelopes and hurried them into the post box down at the corner of the street. Then, feeling oddly unhappy, he crept up to bed. la the morning he was more un happy than ever. For some reason the mall failed to come at the usual hour, and Kate did not receive her -valentine until she was oa her way to school. As Bick turned the corner at the top. of his speed, he almost ran into Robert Miles the last boy on earth he wanted to see just then! He tried -to p-nrrj by without appearing to no tic0 him, but Robert stopped him, with. outstretched hands. "Dick, you noble fellow!" he cried, Joyously. "It was like you, and I caaaCt tell you how glad and how ashamed I am!" Dick looked at Robert in amaze ment. "I I dont understand" he muttered, stiffly. "Yes, but I do!" said Robert. "And yea needn't try to look so un conscious! It was fine of you to for- gtTe: me first! Fre been Just miser aJble oyer our quarrel, and I hardly : if est a wiak last night for thinking of it. I wanted to rma OTer last ;r vour punishment.' ' - irt joined them, they . . I to the school 't!- ' o '. 'ontine Dick sent me," .;;. lowing her the picture r u: i.c "Victory." : o ; .id, joyfully, "that rep- v' ry indeed! Don't you ; i-e that ruleth his spirit Nobody knows vho was the first ; A little girl of twelve years, the shoe-maker. There must have been : daughter of a clergyman, was asked: j a time when everybody went bare- "Sadie, does your papa ever preach; footed, and the first shoes were prob- : the same sermon twice?" After thinking a moment Sadie re plied: "Yes, I think he does; but 1 think he hollers in different places." When on his way to evening ser vice the new minister of the village met a rising young man of the place! whom he was anxious to interest in the church. "Good evening, my young friend," he said solemnly, "do you ever attend ably made of woven reeds or skins. The original shoemaker doubtless lev us me so much bet- sought comfort more than style. i!n." IJick protested. The Celt, who at times wandered I'.at you can really be over moor and morass, at others i :v;s you are, and keep over mountains, invented a shoe that suited his purpose exactly. A sole of heavy hide protected his feet from to- the sharp stones, while uppers or legs of lighter skins protected his ankl-es and legs from thorns and Hart-Ward Hardware Co. Wc have Moved our store to new building 125 Eaj Martain Street Vv c have 10,000 square fect of show rooj with Electric Elevator, every floor on the ground f or. Right in iht heart of the business center of Raleigi e will be pleased to sec all fiicnds customers, arm iL$ public generally. O Jr stock is complete and our prices the loweii HART-WARD HARDWARE Ca Wholesale end Retail. 125 E. Martin S Raleigh, N.C bushes. The buskin was so con- a place of worship?" structed that the water exuded from it as soon as the foot ceased to jbe immersed. In the modern shoe, the idea is that water be kept out, not n he that ruleth a city?" let out. !i Spencer in The Luth- -ran. 1 1 1 1 . . The "Mldren of the parish of No-V.a'.trfr-Where get the first part of the "Yes, indeed, sir, every Sunday night," responded the young fellow with a smile. "I'm on my way to see her now.' A teacher was giving to her class Marion Butler's Raleigh Speech ;;y or sx. valentine. The Celtic buskin was tough and elastic, and could be replaced wher- j an exercise in spelling and defining ever there were untanned skins at words. "Thomas," she said to a cur hand. Every Celt was his own shoe-; ly-haired little boy, "spell 'ibex.' " maker. j "i.b-e-x." "Correct. Define it." With the Norman Conquest came ! "An ibex," answered Thomas, after a the introduction into the British j prolonged mental struggle, "is where isjor's rooming sermon, and if he Isles of tanned leather, which had j you look in the back part of the book h.'.s anything left after the children long been in use in Normandy, where ! when you want to find anything that's iuive been served he gives it to tho it had been introduced by the j printed in the front part of the older folks. One Sunday morning in Romans. i book." Febrr.vy he gave the younger mem-i Shoes then began to take on style,! bers of his flock the story of St. Val- and the styles have never been dupli-; entine, because he wanted them to be cated in later days. From close-fit 11 1 J J 1 Li , uccpci ill lis cue aii ii. ui luc v-j "f- J"ut-i, taouiuu ncuk tvj lUUg, j Did you ever notice that not one ! of the Democratic orators and editors who are discussing the tariff ever at tempt to defend the tariff laws the Democrats put on our statute books? day than young folks are likely to do pointed toes, which, in time, grew so unless they have a little instruction long that they had to be fastened to , r , .. . . cm - ,. . I Why? Because everybody knows Uiauui i (ucuiiuc nuu iifcu iu lii -j-iuco gui uua ouaiis iu iuc . days of Emperor Claudius, and who Midde Ages. King Richard, the spent his life doing things to make Lion-hearted, had his boots stamped nthor nvn.A hnnn, ahtvvI 1 v nrwnr . with irnld Jnhn TnrlrlsiT.. ha nAAT.i n.-vn.i- on iuia v .i or hnnt. crn.A v. nnM.. i have suffered as a people UIJIC ouu uiu 'rrvri auu - v.- -w-. uuwvo otiui.c v niiu 5riUCU i dren; and something of Valentine's circles, while Henry III wore boots I co S' imprisonment because he could not ! checkered with golden lines, every I worship God just as the Emperor j square of which was enriched with a? Indian Killed on Track. Claudius thought people ought to;! lion. Cardinal Wolsey's shoes were 1 these tariff laws, brought more want and misery to our people than all the wars and famines and pestilence we The Un- Will Cost Only 5 Cents a Copy, Postpaid, in Pamphlet Fen Send" in Orders for Copies for;Yourself and Friends, Enough orders hara been reoelvtd to Juitlfy printing in pamphlet tan Marion Butler' speech made In Raleigh November 4th. It will make a pamphlet of about SO pages and the cost will U 4 tnj It will make a pamphlet of about 50 pages and the coit U1 Wi cents a copy, but If sent by mall the cost will be 5 cents a copy. If you have not sent In your order, do so at once. After tb ii Is printed and the type Is distributed, we will aot be able to furclii u more copies. A copy of this spech In the hands of every voter would mean tU to feat of the Democratic ring la this State. Make out your erder la the blank below and mall AT ONCE. THE CAUCASIAN, Raleigh. N. C. Dear Sirs: Pleaae hav printed and hold subject to my order . copies of Marlon Butler's Ralelgk speech. NAME P. O DATE un. and how he used to write little let ters to the poor people, and the lit tle children in whom he was inter ested, and throw the letters out be tween the liars of the window of his prison cell; and how when found they were sent to the ones to whom they were addressed; and how when he died the people began to observe his birthday by sending every year little kindly messages love messages to their friends. "Bo ye kind one to another, tender-hearted," said the minister of the parish of No-Matter-WTiere, to the older folks that morning. "The Bible has a great deal to say about what people ought to believe, but it also has a great deal to say about how they ought to behave. We have some times rather overlooked that. The history of the church is blotted with the doings of people who believ ed all right, but who forgot to be have all right. Emperor Claudius had a belief, a doctrinal basis for h' religion; but he didn't behave a man who holds a religious belief ought to. He remembered his doc trine, but he forgot to be kind to other people, tender-hearted. He said, 'You've got to believe just as I believe, or I'll make you suffer for it. And he carried out his threat. Good, kind, tender-hearted Valentine had to go to prison because he couldn't quite see things as Emperor Claudius saw them." Selected. "Of gold and stones precious. Costing many thousand pounds." Sir WTalter Raleigh wore shoes studded with diamonds said to have cost eighty thousand pounds ster ling. The gallants in Charles II's time wore the high boot-tops turned down to the ankles to show the gor geous lace with which they were lined. Indianapolis News. TO CONQUER WORRYING. Consider what must be involved in the truth that God is infinite and that you are a part of His plan. Memorize some of the Scripture promises and recall them when the temptation to worry returns. Cultivate a spirit of gratitude fer daily mercies. Realize worrying is an enemy which destroys your happiness. Realize that it can be cured by persistent effort. Attack it definitely, as something to be overcome. It wastes vitality and impairs the mental faculties. Help and comfort your neighbor. Forgive your enemies and con quer your aversions. The world is what we make iL Forward then! Forward in the power of faith, forward in the power of freedom, forward in the power of hope, forward in the power of God! Bishop Vincent. Near Rochelle, 111., an Indian went to sleep on a railroad track and was j '.illed by the fast express. He paid for his carelessness with his life. Often its that way when people ne glect coughs and colds. Don't risk your life when prompt use of Dr. King's New Discovery will cure them and so prevent a dangerous throat or lung trouble. "It completely cured me- in a short time, of a terrible cough that followed a severe attack of Grip," writes J. R. Watts, Floy dada, Tex., "and I regained 15 pounds in weight that I had lost." ulck, safe, reliable and guaranteed. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free' at all druggists. THE STORY OF COAL. It was a very cold winter night, and as Jack sat before the blazing coal fire, he felt very comfortable. Indeed. The fire never seemed so pretty to him, and he sat and watched the glowing coals so long that his mother thought he had gone sound asleep, as grandfather had done in his big, easy chair. "I'm not a bit asleep," Jack de clared. "I've been , wishing I could go down to a coal mine and see how coal is made." "But it isn't made." his mother said; "it is in the ground all ready to be taken out for our use. Once upon a time this hard coal was. a great. beautiful forest ferns, leaves, moss away to fill the hungry xnbutha of HOW A BIG NEW YORK BAKERY PREPARES ITS BREAD. On one of the streets of New York the visitor may see an immense structure of white stone. It is said that in this building many thousands of loaves of bread are baked every day. . Huge white mixers, molders and weighing machines take the flour, yeast and xnilk and prepare the loaves for the ovens. Twenty-four thousand loaves are baked at a time. The white-gloved attendants touch the flour only twice on its entire journey from the cars until the loaves are delivered, clean and white, to the grocer or the home. Two hun dred automobiles carry the bread IFiYOU ARE GOING NORTH Travel via THE CHESAPEAKE LINE ! Daily Service Including Sunday. Ths new Steamers lust placed in service the "CITY OR KnnvniX" vi "CITY OF BALTIMORE" are the most elegant and op-toate. Steaaeal i ween norioia ana Baltimore. EQUIPPED WITH MM USS-TEUPOE III EACH R0K.L DEUCIOUS L!$ 0.1 BOARD. EVERYTII.H6 FOR COMFORT AIIO COITiEMnCE. Steamers leave Norfolk (Jackson St.) 6:15 p. m. Leave Old PointCoof 7:15 p.m. Arrive Baltimore 7.00 a. m. Connecting at Baltimore for all pas -NUKl tl, NUKTH-EAST and WEST. .Reservations made and any information courteously .furnished by W. a PARNELL, T. P. A, When writing advertisers, pieasemention this paper. A MODERN ATLAS FREE! Don't YouJWant a 1911 Edition of Hammond's Modem Atlas of the World This new Atlas contains 128 pages of HAPS, printed la eelors. representing every portion ef the it Is TO-DAT. These plates have been engraved from new drawiiga, bated oa the latest surveys, aad tte P Ushers believe them to be the most complete and carefully edited aerlea f like size covering the whole rt3' The lettering is carefully graded la lze to convey at a glance relative Importance of place. Railroad! shown and named aad almost every allroad station and poct-o3.ee la named. The work contains double page map of many sections of this country and of other eeus-H while the other States and other c un tries are shews oa single pao and an uniform In style, detail On the margin of each map Is aa ALPHA BDTI CALL ARRANGED NT) EX OF COUNTIES (or ether & nor divisions), CITIES AND TOWNS. A division or plae may be lastaatly located without turning tb P The convenience of such a quick referent Index will be readily appreciated. Another valuable feature of this work is a very complete list f the dtles of the world, giving the l2 population statistics, Including the 1910 Census of the United States with the new population figures of ail States. Territories, counties and the principal cities. An Illustrated tCf l h?T description of this great enterprl. with map. In color. Iff f d P?1 05l0.Pfelde,lt, Washington to Taft la another valuable feature. ., PT?lted a hIsh;U P!per' U rons7 and handsomely bound la red cloth, with attrarf cover stampings. It measures, closed. 10 z 13 1 laches. .t. We'i V""'',"m- h W0U" a tt -"" If your .bou.d ,d to ft. p-MW.r. V it We will gjT. jroo copjr of thl. mode. ATLAS OP TUB WOULD PBEB It 70a will .end u for rtfb.Btt.,t ? d0,Ur W. ibfcvto oeer to .u.bl XtTL W . K-f fortoor labrtbr. beeatu. w. prtU paying for Atlu ia adTeAwns. and ar. rlTlar tie ta.3t of ti rertUto to all our ajenu. Eery household to the BUU ol -7. a ood lAtlai C a-" 7 f fl " of cllejt pr.nl-m. W. will . AtUa to any on. -bTtuhbw . PO1 for ..00. or r.m.mt,r. fir. 1 FREE tor FOOT. .rl- .abb. "TT. Canc-XT AdSrW " THE CAUCASIAN, Raleigh, N. C
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 15, 1912, edition 1
8
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