Newspapers / China Grove Record (Salisbury, … / Oct. 24, 1913, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 , .,-i v try - 'i v-. THE ROWAN RECORD n h r ss k u KKiiv i iii.it faa miMmmmjM izm ms y nemcicn md on mum tem&MmivmMiwmwwwwm; : ; , Publhed Weekly' j CHINA GROVE. NORTH 'CAROLINA irs 8tylex that I changes the MseasOnfl Take time ly the" forelock ajkdif&b ten yourrturke 's Our old friend Clpriano Castro has not revolted or three -weeka: -- Less. thana-potette han erer is Mantiel hfothatTBV W Carried. The next thing to . claim tt'ehtibn "will be the wlater's supply at coaLW ' ' ' ' ' , ' 'i ' - V';.' V TheytgaVef a! tea' party aboard a Zepf pelln airship ths other dSyiNd fatal: ; Forest t fires ' generally come1 wheii they: are aqt ' heeded for heating purf poses. ,. A :x-,; . Who, looklng!npon the season's hats f or'ne&i can doabt the jfulness of ,per spnal, liberty?. 'u. . i pccasiorially "yoir meet a foreigner, or a.v college professor ' who alls If pumpkin", pie: . . ; ' "Qerms can ; get Into fresh eggs,1 f decfares a scientist. And - they can: also get' Into scientists. - ' t Woder if the St Louis debutante whc sold wall paper knows how ieems ' to' bea H?allflower: it Another thing to worry about! In: 00,000 years the Big Dipper will be no more, so astronomers say. Possibly you aoe ' thinking of the feasibility of "raising potatoes instead ofgrass On! y6ir lawns' riext year. Devotees of golf should frown upon those explosive balls. The language of the ga iis-sufficiently explosive.' Real1 language, boys, real language! HearlieM to the ? sporting - writer ' who refers tt right field as' "right plals anceJM . fx '. Twehty cent ."dinners caused the sulpide of . ft Chicago girl. And i the average man may -say it was Just cause.';. .' ' ' rThe nude in art is to be barred from the' inailrf, but there is no Indication that it will be barred from public dis- Kansas City has -been consuming a tonBf bd eggs! a day. That's1 enough; to make any ttvaear a peined' x pression. One of these days medical science, in Its hunt for fads, will 'market a virus to immunize the hungry against the- ill. effects of perfectly good y stersl V . Philadelphia designs to set wife de serters to crushing "stone. The only objection the public is likely fo make is that the work will not be hard enough. - ? . :-r ' -' Since the golf championship has been twrepted' from England,' poor old John Bull , will probably recall that, he really never did ,care for anything but cricket. ' Gold output In the United States decreased. $8,439,000 last year. .This might briog prices down little if the Rand did not keep on turning out a big production. Fame is gained In many odd ways, but one of the-queerest' bids is that of an English coachman . whose claim to have , his name go thundering down the ages !s based on the fact that this yea he has killed over '50,000 wasps. Although umbrellas were invented in ' 17T7, !no one hasi found a corner where' they might! be placed in ' safety on a raiay day. The Pennsylvania telephone girllpiosion and fall of Count Zeppelin's when told that she was heir to a large? sum of money probably , said, "numbev, please." In seven .years the United ' States government- has inspected 377,000,000 animals .ot one of whieb: appreciated tie honor conferred. Again are' the farmers in that smil ing attitude, "you. city guys can kid us all you want to, but look at that 1913 crop's money bag." f ' In time to come-maybe a man with his 'family in his automobile will take the' trouble to get out of . the ;car "at a 'railroad crossing and see whether a train is coming. According to a fashion note, wom en's drest.es will be trimmed , In fur this winter. 6 And father's pocketbook will,-however, continue to be trimmed in the same old style. Persons who travel in some coach es these days should not: think too se xiously about the good luck accom panying "touching wood." Still, that college professor. who abandoned teaching to peddle popcorn and hot dpgs may be an exceptionally learned and humane person. ': A scientist predicts that the child of 2Q13 A. D. will be hairless, chialess, bat eared, 'long armed,': tour, toed -and pigeon legged! Too bad, but what kind of a brain will fill his hea a? Sir. Oliyer Lodge, the celetrat&d English scientist, .says he is -convinced that "personality persists be yond bodily death." It would be a great relief to many people if Sir Ol iver's word were" final. : 1 ;' Of course; it sounds very Tomjintic -that a beautiful young princess Wiled herself for love of a commoner. But it would have been much more sen sational if she had given tap her titles and taken instead' a very . rich hus band, getting solid advantages by the exchange ; CONDEIfSEi RECORD OF v EVENTS OF THE WEEK. -AT AiGLflNCE : 'the World Summarized 'for - : H' . . . the Busy Reader. "' A Southern. : Twenty soldiers were killed and about oiie, hundred I hurt , when a ' spe cial troop . train on the Mobile .and Ohio plunged ;! through a tresOe- near State ' Lme, Miss. The '5wreckT was caused byr the engine tender? juftping the track , about 200 , feet frpma.tresi tie. " The '. engine was " not derailed and passed over the trestle safely; The however, and plunged, with baggage hpwer and plunged with the .baggage 'car and three coaches to ther ground, twenty-five teet below-;" Sixteen bodies were taken from the wreckage and Su perintendent. Piggord said in his re port tfiere were four more bodies leftj Three hundred and sixty-one irefu-j gees front? Mexico, 'most :of tbem? des-j tltute and a number of them victims of the long, disastrous siege and sub-j sequent capture of jQrreqn. b,X) the Mexican v Constitutionalists, ,( reached Galveston by steamer TampicoTtieyj told stories of guerrilla warfare VBe-i tween the Mexican , factions, of ; j?ob bery akd cruelty, and -thirty three Rb4 man Catholic nuns; driven at midnight under fire - from their, convent, told of hospitals put to the torch, and the. men killed for the gold in their teethe' - Gov. B. W. Hooper of Tennesee, who, has fought persistently for the passage of the 'prohibition ' lawb enforcement bills in Tennessee, - has signed the measures. The. bill prohibits liquor shipments from county to county and in quantities over a gallon: It becomes' effective at once. j The .diplomatic repersentatives of Great Britain, France, Spain, ' Cuba, Guatemala and Norway,' at a confer ence in Mexico City; decided to rec ommend that their respective govern? ments send warships to Mexico for the V purpose of 1 " affording ' legation guards, ' should conditions so require. . Judge R. R. Henderson in county circuit court, Maryland, in a decision sustained a mandamus ' petition seek ing to compel the board , of election supervisors to place the name of Mrs. Grace 'Coontz of Midland Md., on the official ballot to be voted in the November f election. - Mrs. Koontz is the" Socialist candidate. Governor Trammel! of Florida an nounces that he is investigating the question of Japanese colonization in Florida by land companies and will act as - his judgment dictates as soon as he has made up his mind as to the seriousness of the influx. An ex tra session of the legislature may be called' to pass an alien land bill as a .big protest has gone up over the coming of these Japanese from Califor nia. They are settling in the celery belt for the purpose of raising vege tables for- the Northern markets General. The entire railroad terminal of East St Louis said to be - the largest in the United States, was threatened with destruction by a fire which began on the bank ; of the Mississippi river and rapidly spread in three directions. The'; damage is believed to amount to several hundred thousand dollars. The fire raged on the- properties of the Advance Grain company, the. Chi cago "andt Alton freight house and In the 'car-filled railroad yards. William Sulzer has ceased to be governor of New York state. He was removed from the office by the high court . of impeachment by a vote of 43 ! to -12, two members not voting. Martin H. Glynn, lieutenant governor,- was sworn in as his successor, .the first in the history of the state to step into .its high office in" this - manner. Twenty-eight persons were killed near Johannisthal. German v. in theex- latest dirigible balloon, the -rL-II." The"'twenty-eight men represented tbe entire personnel of the admiralty board which-was to conduct 'the final trial of the dirigible looking to ts acceptance by ' the German govern ment as a new unit of the aerial navy, i.the pilot and crew and invited. guests. P. B. Ellis of; Cripple Creek; Colo. arrived in Juarez from -Torreon. He said his brother Joseph was killed J by Mexicans, h while a party of Ameri cane was-leaving Torreon for the bor der. P. B. Ells was shot in the arm. Three others ' of the party are misaf ing. Joe .Ellis was killed at the first fire After making a brief stand the Americans Aed. -.;": . . Prince 'Arthur of Conhaught, son of the Duke of Connaught, governor genv eral of Canada, was married to Prin cess Alexander. Victoria, 'Duchess of Fife,- eldest 'daughter of the widowed Princes Royal Louise. The ceremony took place in the ancient .chapel of St" James' palace, London. William Sulzer, impeached governor of the state of NewYork, was nomi nated for the assembly by the Progres-. sives 6f the Sixth " assembly district Mr. Sulzer beganhis public career In 1889 Aa a member bf thi branch of the legislature.' He has agreed, to ac cept the nomination it was announced at the meeting when he was chosen as the candidate. The nomination bt the impeached governor was , said i to have been , brought about against the desire? of the ;state - and - county lead ers of the Progressive party. The sen timant of Progressives in this and oth er .states was against the InoTe'W'f With an estimated r loss of 'hak 'a million dollars in grain, the advance elevator in East St. Louis, III., burned to the ground. Up and down the strip of land between the Mississippi, river and Cahokia Creek, the, pazedid; an other million dollar damage to I the warehouses of the Chicago and Alton; the Baltimore and Ohio and the Clov verleaf RAUwayi,compa'n.Th citizens of East St. Louis whd wefeitoi kept up all night - protecting their homes from fiying 'embers;'aw9keISJta find a burning mound of 200,000 bush els or wheat, 15D.Q00 bushels, of oats behcbuce Judged i - v S A P I fl if 1 ll I nCCTI III! ' ! sisss ilUillJUIbnulluN oria. y Polk Miller, "a vRchnond business man, known j throughout? the South for his; Itlantetion. stories of war, times and his- performances on tie banjo at many Confederate reunions,, 'is1 4ead,; atjthB age if 49, in'hisrhome'jn Richmond, -Virginia.; 'A - Z&v?:,; . f-'lM " tm. iatxr- th Srtnth Wftfea coal fields, s whose. annals are - c blistering w .terrible caustrhe through I ai Bxj?h)si6tt 6 colliery near. .Cardiff . v Shortly after1 the..,day shift of 931 men entered -the mine -'fan : -explosion '! shattered ; the works.?- puripgf tne ;day, and fearly in the night "about five hundred miners were brought UoMhe "surface " alive,' Includine the bodies ..recovered and Jthose killed 'at the pit head, the known death roll numbers '16. Doctors with oxygen'-and 7 medicaments descended the shaft. - , 1 . 1 - " Washington. "There never was a time when the people needed the interpretation of the Bible more than they dd at pres- ! .. . - : ctary Bryan, n addre Home 'Missionary' Society of the Meth odist -Episcopal church; in session: , in 'Washington, "and," the secretary add ed, "there is'' not a community which cannot be purified,' redeemed and 'im proved t by a better .knowledge " and larger . application of the ' Bible to the daily life. No money that is invested pays so large : a " dividend as ''money that is spent for the moral uplift of the community." , : : Imminence of a serious railroad car shortage induced the interstate com-, merce commission to, issue a vigorous appeal directed to both railways and shippers to give "close attention to methods of loading, unloading, moving and very promptly returning to use the cars now available. Complaints re ceived from all Mparts- of '-the country indicate the danger of a car shortage. The commission - believes that "the present supply of cars is sufficient for all purposes," but that It will prove adequate for the movement of all traf fic offered only in the event of its- be ing employed fully and promptly. r "Frank admission 1 that the "grandfa ther clause" of the Oklahoma Consti tution was designed to restrict . the right of negroes to vote as far as pos sible within the limits of the Federal Constitution, featured ) the argument in defense of the , clause before the United States Supreme court. Pensions for teachers in the public schools, to be derived from funds founded and administered' by the indi vidual states and without contribu tions by the ultimate beneficiaries, are advocated by Raymond W. Sies, in a bulletiin issued by the United States bureau of education in Washington. Doctor Sies recommendations are the result of an intimate study of the 'pen- sion system maintained - abroad. Ifi , suggesting the adoption of pensions h' the United States, Doctor Sies declar- ed the Scatch system," based on sci entific insurance principles, Is espe cially valuable for this country. Fifteen girls, one from each of 15 Southern states, will visit Washington, probably on December 11, as a reward for their success in being awarded first place in the girls' canning club state contests, the department, of ag riculture announced. Women agents of the canning clubs will assemble in Washington at the same time and will act as chaperones for the girls. The department estimates that 25,000 girls have been enrolled in the canning clubs or the Southern states this year. Each girl is supposed to have carried out a delnite project in gardening on the 10-acre plot. 1 ; The interestate commerce commis sion has postponed the date when its decision in the LaGrange and Vienna, Ga., cases' will become effective. The new date is February 1, 1914. The designation of five natives to majority control of the commission of nine for the Philippine Islands marks the first step in the policy of the Wil son administration, aiming at self-government and ultimate Independence for the Philippines. Governor Gener al 'Harrison recommended the native commiissioners, staung that they were was there a criminal case in the among the most prominent ' and best county undisposed of. Such a state educated 'of the islanders. In the ap- ' of affairs in' a county with -an. area of pointments three members have been 320, square miles and having a popu selected from the majority party and lation of over. 18,000 requires an ex two from the minority party. Two planation. Attorneys in the locality, have been appointed from the Visayan says' the New York World, can recall glands' Manila,' and' the neighboring- no similar conditions in' the past The provmieaare given two members, and paper .;in calling attention tojthis bheis from the'Ilocano province' in the most unusual instance fails to note north bf Luzon.' ; s " , that Yates county has been for' four t The1 United States, government has years dry territory. informed Provisional Presldent-Huer-taof 'Mexico ;thit It looked with ab horrence and amazement upon his as sumption : or both executive ad: legis lative powers in Mexico and : that in view of "his course could hot regard as constitutional the elections plan ned for October 26. Two notes, one Strongly phrased and. written by Sec retary Bryan, and 'the" other drawn In forceful language by President' Wilson The doors of the United States were opened to Mrs.. Emmeline Pankhurst and during the few weeks covered by her I lecture engagements the 1 British militant suffragette j leader Is free to go where she will in the United Ktatea An order releasing the much-discussed visitor from detention at Ellis Isl and, N. Y., and revoking the deporta tion order of the special inquiry board, was issued after President Wilson had conferred with Secretary Wilson" of the department of labor arid a fohnal hearing before Immigration Commis sioner Caminetti on Mrs:- Pankhurst's appeal had been concluded. V"r . While there was no change in either the status of affairs at Mexico City or the American policy,, an .Interna tional phase of the Mexican situation that attracted wide attention was the formal inquiry made by Ambassador Page, at London as to what was con strued an - unsympathetic attitude ' to-' ward the UnttedState3 by Sir Lionel Carden, the British minister, to Mex ico.; it is understood that -the basis of the inquiry was: a .confidential . re port to the state department the con tents of which were not divulged. It is khown, however, that President Wit (Conducted by th Natidnal Woman's y Christian Temperance Union.) ALCOHOL PROBLEM IN EUROPE; Seplylnttbmlsleading itafements: made, by James Creelman With 're- gard' to v intemperance in European .countriesVfrMrs.'.'Martha MAjUenfsn- perintehdent ' of the Medical " Temper ance 'DexJartmerit of the irld'Sand Na6nalfWT.v'T.4j., calls attention to the; following facts : ? ' i"lt yrafl i&i Paris that, the munlcfpal posters vr warning . against vJ: alcoholic . Vors of all sorts jDriginated.vi These ;wcrBvpreBarea;,.py'- pnysician S connected with the municipal govern- iiitfiii. ; ana ,were piacea in . conspicuous positions throughout the city, '- even upon the outer, walls ofjthe Hotel de Ville; (City Jlall). These posters war specifically against wine; beer and ct; der as leading to .alcoholism as surely, as brandy. .; So violent was the oposi4 tipn of .the liquor trade to the posters that they were withdrawn, but other , were wimarawn, dui oiuer COUhtries. took jap,, toat method ;of Germany, England, and, Denmark.. "That thef-e is an acute alcoholic problem ln ; Europe may '7 be -readily seen ; from the holding every . two years ; of a congress ' on alcoholism, whose delegates, appointed by - the governments - of ; different countries, meet' to discuss methods bf reducing the drfnk evils which are injuring the health and : efflciencyi of the , people, T IX . Hi a - - . . - J ia ii;iuteiy. mat sucn meetings .-wouia be . held ' were there , ho drunkenness, or crime resulting from drunkenness, in .these countries? "It is far from correct to aay that the use of the lighter drinks drives out the stronger drinks." RANGE LIGHTS. ' - A hundred years ago the hands' of ancient privilege were at the throat of the republic. Our ships were seized - and searched. ' American citi xens were impressed into an alien, service. -Our, capital was burned. De spair .was clutching at our hearts. The British guns were not our great est peril, but the love of money In the seaboard states. Six thousand of pur -men Iwere enslaved in. British ships,, but the patriotic indignation that stirred the rural communities did not touch the heart of the states that made their . money on the sea.- . The sense of brotherhood was smothered in the love of money, Now, as then, the love of money flouts the love of men. The yellow patriotism of gold sneers at the strug gles of the people for a fair chance. Let them be .wretched; let them be drunken, it says, while I exploit their savings for my own use, (and, turn their earnings into my own tills. This, too,Yill pass is passing, This will he fthWpnd of they, fair dal. This is the iamjjor opportunity. John vG. Woolley. STRIKING COMPARISON. ,' Comparisons are never odious when -they show things up in a way to bring out the right side of a question, ' Note - the following conditions in dry Kansas and wet Missouri: The per capita assessed valuation in Missouri is $300; in Kansas It Is 91. 750. Kansas' per capita bank deposit is $100; Missouri's is $20. In Kansas one farmer in five owns an auto; in Missouri one farmer in 100 has one of the buzz wagons. In Kansas the common laborer draws $14, a week; in Missouri, $8 In Kansas there is hardly a town of 1,600 ' population but has electric lights, water and sewer systems;, in Missouri numbers of towns of 4,000 to 5,000 have no paved streets, electric lights or water syBtem. LAWYERS TAKE NOTICE. Let the graduates of law schools take notice and keep away from Yates county; N. Y., If they want to earn a livelihood by practicing their profession. At : the June term of court there was not a Solitary civil or criminal case on : the docket, neither SALOON MU8T GO. ' The number of sufferers from, child labor, however great, is exceeded' by the , number of women and children ' Who. suffer from the baleful effects of the saloon. The verdict , bf thel human . conscience is, the " saloon mustgo.-r-Bishop John walden, in address to" the Knights Templar, of America at the Denver conclave. BEER CAUSES ACCIDENTS. The Western Electric plant of Chi cago forbids its workingmen bringing beer upon: the grounds. : Why? Be-" cause it was noticed that a large num ber' of ; accidents occurred uniformly after, lunch, and in almost every case the victim of the1 accident had taken beer with his lunch. LOW. VITALITY. .'-'Y. "i Sickness is always more fatakwith beer or some other kind of liquor. " BREAKING AWAY. "Big business" is breaking away from saloon alliance. Big papers and magazines are doing ' likewise. ;; Pub lic men of . national influence are, Jn droves; ; taking out emancipation, 'pa pers from Viliquor domination. The whole, situation is heading to ! a" final showdown. - A lot of Small ,fry; politi cians do hot know how to get out of, ealooh-" servitude but they . will-." .'be taught, , by vretirnent - from- the pub-' ue , service. Jxchange. City Is Not Without Beauty Prineen reet. aWto Be; Most J ropreki; y JV-of AflyTho s In 'Europe. ; .Vf- Edinburgh. Edinburgh has slums' that look and'smeil the thing Jthey are. There', is Bomething;. iiQt . only forbid- J ding, ,but almost . threatening in ths canyon-like streets of the poorer, quar ter,: with ythelrihuge "rlmr tenements built of uncompromising stone and . rising higlr above' the sunless streets' One meets on the Old -North i bridge which'; spass .the gulf . between two 1 high portions of -the town,4 pale-faced women hooded tn their -shawls, ' and -bearing'.in helr ; faces the marks of poverty, hard usage and. vice.;; One sees also ptt that historic bridge, how- ever, many a lovely girlish face, many a "daughter of the. people sucbr as In- . spired some of : Burns' finest .' love songs! The land 'is manifestly full of, -. native' vigor, and ;the ;.; eommonfolk show the '.desclpline. of "the- struggle that they and 'tneif ancestors have: long waged with .a:" thin ; soil," a , dlf-f ficultf topography' and a climate some-: what .. . niggardly r : of - sunlight, l and warmth. .,...:. V.-f-:-V.,;'j'.-r '. -:- ; Edinburgh still deserves its ancient name of Auld Reekie and between' Its 1 boldly, magnificent ' topography, its self-generated v , smoke, its . ... stormy skies," and its frowning and monumen tal ' architecture, ft - has a' sort ' of i .ni1pni. v-r, wch in other and i - " ' gayer cities. Holyrood - is surely . . a plain enough royal residence, 1 but where in any other town is there so nobly andshnost insolently dominant a pIe as Edinburgh castle. It gives the final touch of ' something like . domesticity . to that aloof and high- set mass of gloomy architecture - to see at night . the gleam of . lights through a few of. its long,- slitted win dows. Nothing can be finer than the sudden .-. holes of after-sunset bright ness that appear In the stormy skies of Edinburgh on summer ' evenings. These aspects of the -sky . suggest vi.v.-.-.-o-:.:-:.. In the Canongate. nothing less majestic than & Mil tonic war of the heavenly: hosts; It has been said that Princes street of Edinburgh Is the most impressive in Europe, and if any such assertion is to be accepted it owes its truth not bo much to the highway itself and its buildings and monuments as . to the amazing topography of Edinburgh, some of whose noblest features Jend a sort of awful dignity and splendor to Princes ' street The marvelous" view of the castle : and its slopes would alone give Princes street the highest distinction, and ' the caBtle and its steep constitute only, one of several noble eminences within, .view. The broad gardens, too, are rich and love ly, ' and ' there are fine old" historlo structures along the - highway, - while the Scott Memorial really does not look like a church engulfed by an earthquake with its' steeple still above ground. As a - matter . of fact '' the monument with that amiable and studious .seated statue of Sir Walter set within, is a dignified and beauti ful thing, even though it has:: to t vie with i the austere and . awful steep crowned with -the vast and wandering pile of Edinburgh . castle. ' . ' ' ' HUBBIES MUST POUD ; ROCK New Pennsylvania - Law Is Put Operation -for the; First' 'z Into -- -' Time., ' .r-V-::;' Philadelphia. -When six ' desertlns husbands 'were sentenced to" tfiree1 mbnths' work breakinr stone at the house of correction by: Judge Bregy ? there.- was put' into operation forT the nrst time in Pennsylvknia a new law, i passed; ; by. the', last . legislature,, which the court declared would - materially reduce the cases . of wife' desertion ' n this state. ;. --. '; ;': ' -' ' ' The law empowers the court to com mit recalcitrant husbands to the house of correction, there ' to be placed ' at gome : profitable . empyomentat hard, labor, and provides that 65 cents a day' shall : be ; deducted ; from their earnings 'and paid to the wifel The minimum sentence is -three months, but this may be .extended to six months If .the husband shows -no will ingness otherwise to support his wife. . Heretofore ;. the only- punishment within the. power of the, court , in this state was a jail sentence, leaving ' the man's wife, and family to be .taken care of, in many instances, .- by .char ity. 4- ".'.I Bags Eighty Billion Germs.' Baltimore: Having . bagged - eighty billion, germs inHhe, wild? of Ecuador and Peru, Dr.' Andrew W7 Sellards of Johns ; Hopkins university" has. arrfved here, and. will proceed ; to-make a sd ehtiflc sthdy of the creatures at short ranged Among the collection ar& jel low' fever, bubonic plague ; and.-, uta. which is really South American .lep- - . t V "i ' i i ml iialsam n TLrnsrL 'OU ' Sorea- NaUWmmaFootR ; Bstola, Bleeding EtcEtc " .'.:"'.,' mmtmm, 9m IgrWaS 1 VV . . ' ' X If Foley tlidney rimkmxiM .f - '.' - i . . i tionsiof acid 3 and Undigested f ood Wlr-fP:-!; remembervas.80on as Pape's Diapepsin active kidneys and painful bladder action, i v"y"r, T:. Z rrheyfTofferl powerful tlielp to nature 1 comes In contact with the stomach all in building np the true excreting .-: Jdd- such- distress . vanishes.. ; Its prompt est 'tissue. in restoring normal 'faction Hness; certainty: and. ease in overcoming and m'riegulatimg .bladder irregularitiaa mmmJl . Ita'"- JMlUl'tl 1 1 J 1 Tm.1 iqr ucm. LARGE 74 - PAGE ILLUSTRATED iCATALOGi of Cameras and Photographic 11 1: SapplU mti&d-XREEs?.. . PEVEtornaM rKnrniiG AsracuiTT v , Pearsons Optical Conpaayj '. Dept ' B - j CHARLESZOH S. C V . ; ' ' FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS. H'"0"w"WTMtUM' SS?1IS wwcMWwH.PttM, wrlt for Bjr FRCC book..- TK MOST IMSTBUCTIVX M CDICAL BOOK XVXK WMTTKM4X TUX1 ALL ibaat thmmm . THI NCW FftBNCH REMEDY. M.1. N.2. nJ& ITlt'stlM rwnatlr far rouRown silmant. Damt Mnd aaaat. ,, 1,... . r - , 1 mf 1 A f O SUPPLI ES ,.T,c u, Jo Send far catalogue and prices. a L. HALU OPTICAL OOMPANY Norfolk Richmond f A f f CTrVTPjC! intern! VXAIJ-O T' UlNE-Oiid ermtion. A three; week', home treatment for S5. Describe cee and get free information, n Lt . the weaderfl tetr iwert te QWBTwW movedaadrair,raM(Megrarhalr . . . , o yoaioini ooiot w. per douia. Charlotte 4 Directory TYPEWRITERS Kew, rebuilt and teoend hand, fl7.00 pBd-earBteedxUfecurT. -IF ell nppliea for ail auULea. We re pair en make. a.B.CKXTTe COXTAXT, OMrtatta, K.O. AND THE "BLUES" WENT AWAY Showing How Easy It . Is to Scatter Sunshine' If One Has It in I ' the Heart I I was going officeward onesdayin a very overcrowded" trolley car,; It was pouring outside and my gloves clung damply, to my , fingers. A stray ; wisp of hair was tickling my nose and my J hands 'were too full of dripping um brella and swaying strap to' brush It away. I could feel that my forehead was wrinkled up, and: my mouth drawn down. . I thought of all the un pleasant ' things that had ever, hap pened to me, and, glaring at the unre lenting sky, I wonderedwhy 'It had to rain so hard. Then, looking along the car, I saw another girl hanging to a strap. Efoe was. ever .so much, wetter than I. The dampness oozed out of a crack in her . worn '- shoe ; - ' the! bare hands that srlDned her umbrella and strap looked cramped , and tlred and two straggly' locks of hair tickled her rather small, inoffensive nose. But as I looked -at ' her and . pitied ; her, iehe. glanced up and caught my eye, and she smiled "at' me! ; Then, somehow, the rain drops looked very bright and jewel-like, and the gray of the ,Sky seemed , warmer and: more friendly.-, I forgot that my feet were wet' and, I smiled back: AH that day. 'through the work ' and :hurry of ithe - hours, ' I carried a sunbeam hiding my heart r Margaret E..Sangsterr Jr., -in . the" Christian Herald. ' - .'' ' ; 1 Railway. unions : in Switzerland will act as avUnlt), fpr. new -workiniregu-: lations and pension; laws, '.; "V, H v and ' Cream , There's a, deUcteus stnack , in these crjsp, appeti2ing bitis -;. of. toasted corn; that brings - brightness and ood cheer: to -I 'many ' and jnany a ( breakfast I table. : .r ::..';,;., ': .Tpasties. are. untouched py j i hand in making; and come, in ' i tightly sealed packagesr-clean u v and sweets-ready to eatvith"; cream and's'ugar. -': :; :( '-i Wholesome Sold by grocers eyerywherei; . ', . '- . . ' ' : i bunsliine "Rape's Diapepsin", sett!esSour, gas5y(5iuiHuun hi iivc ; minutesT-Tmie iti "foil don't want a slow, remedy when your- stomach Is bad-or an ttncertain bne--or harmful -oney our stomach Is too valuable; you mustn't Injure it. : ?papeV"biapepsin ; is T noted for its pedilaTiBl nessj tlts4certaih riining iiction . in itins;iicXd sonri iasy;stqmachs. .Its millions 4-of' cures; (a. indigestion, idyjpepsla gastritisand ,oth&r:Stomach 'trouble tias made It. famous the world iOverB.: ' , V v : - . f Keep this perfect stomach doctor in your liomekeepf it hahdy-et a large fif tyent? cas from any dealer and then if anyone ' should eat something which doesn't -agree with f. them; -if what they; eat lays like leadr:ferments and sours and forms gas; causes head- ! A. ' L. m. mmmm BMMAk IsnVllAM '4f W WVWJN H lation tor S : . Adv. f .Lord John, Hay, the oldest - British naval officer, has just completed his. eighty-sixth year. Like many of our old rsailors. ,he "has. . had a ' stirring : career, not the least interesting Inci j dent tin which -being the fact that he was the first British subject to admin- ? later. tTi'o 'crtvemrrMiTitr nf Crotrrna A Hp HooklposseSsion of the island after the IconvenlionTof 1878, and remained In charge until the arrival of Lord Wbtete- ; , , ... , , m iey, ine nrsi mga commissioner. Xiora .John entered -the navy two years after . ;Queen 'Victoria - ascended, the throne, and became an admiral of the fleet a Iquarter of a century ago. . :y v : - - ' - " ".-.' c I w tr n 1 1 r I p itp u rn n a n i v I f-:"';-"! . ' - ' Glenns P O Va -L"Mv h.hv'a tmn. wm . ucsau wnu au iiuumg una inea a. little ,bump would come and she tould not rest day or night The trou- t ble - affected " her whole body. The hnmnn , . '-. . kmatterjvkirid'bl ' aiyeHow'cXdor. rTn sores itched so badly until it seemed to me she would scratch herself . to pieces and then' a" sore wouJ' form and her clothes would stick, 'to her bodyj and pull off the littlescab. In some. places . She would scratch and irritate the sores - until 1 they seemed to be. large. .. She fras; affected about a year, ' "I wrote, for a sample of Cuticnra Soap and.' Ointment I bathed her body in "warm : water and ' Cuticura Soap and then I applied the ' Cuticura Ointment, and they afforded relief aft-; er ; twice using. I bought some " more Cuticura, Soap and Ointment i and, ia4 side of two weeks? she was' cured." (Signed) Mrs. - J. R. Greggs, Nov. 21.. W12.' ;,: - - Cuticura Soap .and Ointment soldi throughout the world 'Sample of each ftee,with 32-p. Skin Book,' !Address post card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston." Adv. ; , " The Objection.' . 1 Patierice--I hea'f that Montreal po lice authorities arV in favor of the pro posal, to add several rpolice; women to the" 'force. . . '. ' - - ' ' '. : Patrice The trouble Is that none of 'em want to. be plain-clothes womer, Isupposel'-.v'.i:-' ; ' - ;,: " j CHttxs and kbtteb: Aim AGUE Ar Prompt lr Cared jfcy; Elixir Babek. I recommend Elixlr Babck' to all snfferer of Malaria, and Chills. Have suffered tfor several' years, have tried everything. but Called, until' i cam !crosa.your- wondertul medielhe. Can xrujy say at nas cured me," George Ia acoe. Company O, 4th Batalllon. Elixir Babek 60 cents, all drugrgists or by ;far eel Poet prepaid from KJoczew kl & CoJ. Vashlng-ton. D. C ' " " ' :' -t ' ' ' - '- .- ": ..- ; i But l It Worth WhHe?V Perhaps thebby 'whb wants .id run awayto sea is -iustifledM It's the bnly sure way. to learn nough' hip-talk .to uuus.jvu i w UUUCitUUiU It iUtUUCHl Fwr 8TOMER RBADACRES HfckrfCAPDDmB la the beet remedy no . matter wtiat ;4diM thumilnii.ti;.. from tbe heat, sittinsr in draughts, fever ish condl tion. ilk . . 9Rn mi Anm vm- bottle at medicine stores. Adv. t - ,.Many a timid girl, courts; deain by mjaking love to a rich old codger who has uStie foot already In' the' erave.' r. t '. . - - " , , ' -: """-'-;.. . Bora' Eyesv -OranQfated'SyeUds 'aad Sties promptly, pealed--; with. Romau , Cye . Bal b4o1 .iAav.-, A ' i . . ' -- '- - : . -. ; ' - -. Vancouver, B' C, Is to have a new .$350,000 opera house.- ' TORTURING TWINGES I Much so-called rheumatism ia caused by weakeiied kidneys. - When the kid neys fail 'ta clear ;the blood of uric acid, the acid . forms. into crystals like, bits Of broken glass : in' the' muscles,' joints and ,"pn s the nerve cashes.1 Torturing pains dart through 'the affected ' part whenever itr is 'moved: -By' curing tha kidneys, . Doan's 4 ' Kidney . Pills .have feased,- thousands 1 of ! 'rheumatic -cases,' lumbago, sciatica,, gravel, neuralgia and urinary disorders. .u- ry . J ' j A. NEW YORK CASE ' '. Q vnticaeu bc. xranaio. N. T..ays:.'I was laid , up ' ' tor -' two months .with : inflam matory . i'r rheumatism and was In bed most btr the time..,: My left -limb. - " awelled -' one-, quarter , asraln ita nau vral slate.' Th - swell-' lag -v. kept - eettin worsen end th .pain-' nearly, killed me. Two '.: doctors - -- XaUed ? .and , - ' then ' ." I : began- . nil n g . ' Doan's Kidney PiUa They cured me.'-.- . ' .. j-. i'fc. "v. . - f. - Get Does', e Any Storai 80e Beat DOAN'S TS FOSTER-anBURNCO, BNtv Ywa Acreage to ten thdu . sand acres,' low priced. J rite at once with full ""B . paraeuiars to Jonn AI. -Clark, 1839 Santa Cruz fit., Loa Angeles, CaL. ontflt,ns4 - ' A TED , i; 4-: ;. V- ' : ' ",-' .; I and '75-000Wshelor'-lMbiffA;-''':'i:r -that .PreSident.-WUc;! nw"v J .-!7-y--. V-v, --v.-' i-; e;: 7 I VfryiVi-J i rUIl SAbB year:goodeoatttoalBloekSeze --. -Y:: :: ' .,.,. ' ana . uoo . Dusneis . of barley! , , son was displeased- - f. A - - -i VWv;?;, . ' "i wiw ifcB,B,tiagaertPo.Caiua.:- v -t;;: ::;;' "'U "'-;?; -;v---;-; -SvJ::-'A.'--?jfe - ' ' , ' J . ' - - - gjlBflgii - .. - ,'-: .'- :-
China Grove Record (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 24, 1913, edition 1
2
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