Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Aug. 12, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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r A BUSINESS Da Ciiro U6 )UIC Vou are rio-ht hv ! If Yea Wist A0VERT1SI18 THAT is Worth Having IS Worth Atortising .: !.:iv ha lirnt writing an ad ver ti semen t netting forth the bargain you of fer, and itihtrt it in the (JOLb I AIM'. TIiuh prepared forbu 'moHf. jou can Then Go Ahe2d. To rtarh the Ieple of Ilrn dtnon and ur roundi&i; couu trj, let tbero you hold ont to pet thHr trade by a wll dlnjvlnjcxl adver tiaetneot in 10 THK FOUXDATIOK SUCCESS IHV Dnciurce IN THE YEAR. cJ Tls 6010 LEAF 0. JHAD R. MANNING, Publisher. " OZRorcizisr., Cabolina, HQs vTTEisr's Blessings -A-tteistd HQbs. 7 VOL. XXVIII. PttBPcni rir,v mi m ..v TTT?XTTTTC?r"VT XT f mTTTTTI OTk A "tt- a nr --rm . " Tl 1 1 neaaacr For Years "I keep Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain i ';!!- on hand all the time, and v.o':!l not think of taking a j. , rnvy without them, no mat-i-: how short a distance I am r . I have a sister that has 1 i ! terrible headaches for years, '. I coaxed her to try them ;iu they helped her so much, .-!) now keeps them by her all the time. From my own exper ience I cannot praise them enough." MRS. LOU M. CHURCHILL, 63 High st., Penacook, N. II. Many persons have headache after any little excitement or ex ertion. They cannot attend church, lectures, entertainments, or ride on trains without suffer ing. Those who suffer in this way should try Dr. Miles' Anti I'ain I 'ills. They give almost instant relief without leaving any disagreeable after-effects, as they do not derange the stomach or bowels; just a pleasurable M ii.-.c of relief follows their use. (li t a package from your drug gist. Take it according to direc tions, and if it does not benefit L'j will return your money. Notice of Sale of Land. v 111:1: v 1 M'l !. and I'.v litri'K or an on-', 1 hi Superior Court of Vniirc County tin- !--'uil jro---dinir i'ii1il!i'il V. urn. -I. M (iriHHoin, (irtrud (Iris r.t I-loyd. l.iillii ('11 H'tlmin. John in t r !-m l.-l ,1 Ml. ;,!! miiii. II.;. Mini. I 1; i. ( (iwuioni vh. . 11. driH W. II. (irissoin, piinnliiin of I'.ritt .li'ssf ( iiisKom 111111 1 iro vit OrisHom. ! 1 ii iniiiilicr 1 ,00 upon thf Si; .Iiiij; I'orki-t of Hiiiil Court, tlic 1111 t omtiiisMoiu-r will, on I. .Ill rii I hp- l-I.-ll i-.ll.-d Saturday, August 1 4th, 1909, ;ii Ill ' ini k .it 1 In Court, Mouse iloor in I it imIi-I'moii. jilli'i' "on nt y, .V. ( '., offer for mile in i lie hi client liiiiiler certnm t met of laml in K.liiell touiu-liip. Vunee County. N. C , nil i n :. i li u' the himls of Willis Knurrs' est lite, (.'. I I'.nliliitt. William llreeillove, ami more li. liii'ti-ly ileseritieil ns follows: 1st tr.n-t: lieuin nt a stone Willis Rogers' mi ner in C. .1. Itolihit t's line ami run theriee iiliuiH his line S. W. 1.-14 ehs. to n laifie l-iphir mai k.Ml K..V A; theriee S. 14. W.27.!0 rli-. to a stone corner of lot. No. .! in W. l:..'-i is' line: t henee nlorifr tin' line of lot No. .'. West L'7 '.'" ehs. to a stone; t Ik-imp filontr t'i- hue l lot N-. 't. W. itm-dlove anil J. 11. I'm- N. l"L K. -TINS ehs. to a stone ami I..: akoiI pointers: tlieuee iilon Davis anil CoMiitt's line S. sT'i K. i.T-" to the lieirin iii:isj. fotitainiit Ml neres, same heini; Kirk l ike laml. .'nil lr.nl: !i-t:iii at a hickory in Ruin Creek. .1,11. l'.i ant 's line anil run West, with his line l.'.l pules to a Heil Oak; thence South - t poles to .1 pine Peace's corner in Hrynnt's lire; theiiee West with Pence's line .'I t poles in pointers ;. i;. Unlihitt's ohl corner; thence Ni.nli ulili r.nl.hitr's line 21 1 poles to il pine slump Willi Kilmers' corner in Uohhitt line: tin in ,, l.' ist Jos pules to a sweet iuni; thence - i lis. S I;, to a hickory in creek; thence iluu n cieek a-i it runs to the hen'muinir, con I i iin nir l'ii j acres, same beinji t he home tract :n I n eiiiile,i in punk l-'l. paiie .'UK!, Kejrister n! 1. els oilice. Vance County. 'terms ..f sale I -.'5 cash, balance 'J years. This the 12th ilav of .1 ul v. litO'l. W. W . (SUISSOM, Com lnissioner. HENRY PERRY. INSURANCE. -iron- line of l.oth LI VK ANJ) FIRE 1 "1 P M KS represented. Policies issued !!! Itsks pi n-el to best ad Vllllt tlge. Tr Office: : : : : In Court House. TUB NORTH CAROLINA State Normal and Industrial College M lint aim-1 l,v the State for the Wo "f N.irtli Carolina. Four reg ular 1 "'i!s, le.-ulinir to Degrees. Special i .iurs s for Teachers. " Fall S' SsilM ...-i, September 15, 1.H9. I ins. desiring to enter should apply .is .-.il J-;IS jii).sible. For eattilogue and nth. r information address I I. FOUST, Pres., Greensboro, N. C. Cough Caution Never, positively never poison your lungs. If yott r even from a simple cold only you should a ";iys heal, soothe, and ease tho irritated bron e. il tct.es. Don't blindly suppress it with a Tying poison. K's strange how somx thinga ...y come about. For tweny years Ir. Shoop l-s c. instantly warned people not to take cough r. '.xv.-.r.-s or prescriptions containing Opium. J ;- i r.iform, or similar poisons. And now a little though Congress say "Put it on tho label. ": lioiions aro In your Cough Mixture." Good I "y P'-sxl : ! llareafterforthiivery reasonmothers. ;:-loUiers. sliouid insist on having Dr. Shoop'9 J '"eh e:n. Co poison marks on Dr. Shoop's uu. ; ana none In the medicine, else it must by :.nv i on the label. And it's not only safe, but it s a:d to be by those that know it best, a truly re i::arkahie cough remedy. Take no chance then, particular". with your children. Insist on having ' ' hooir's Cough Cure. Compare carefully the ' r- cood rackage with others and note the c .fors.uce. No poison marks there! You can 'ays bo cn tho sale side by demanding Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure "ALL DEALERS" r A, G. Daniel, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in . . Shingles. Laths. Lum ber. Brick. Sash. Doors and Blinds. Full Btock at lowest Prices. Opposite South ern (Jrocery Company. MJ n XT - I Capital-to-Capital Route The Route That win Le Most Popular for the Great North and South Public Highway h the One Leading Through Washington, Richmond, Ral eigh, Pinehurst, Columbia, Aiken, Augusta, Savannah, Jacksonville Copital Route will be Established Although Middle or Piedmont Route Has Been Selected as First Choice Reasons Why. XewH and ObHervtr. Some months ao the New York Herald and the Atlanta Journal an nounced that they would mend out scout ears to neleet an automobile route from New York to Atlanta via Philadelphia, Staunton, (Jreensboro, Salisbury, Charlotte Spartanburg. The editor of the News and Observer, who happened to be in New York city when the plan was consummate, sujrjrested to Mr. Cohen, of the Atlan ta Journal, who had originated the idea that the real route should o through Richmond, Ualeih and Columbia and be the Capital-to-Capital route. The other plan had been tentatively adopted, but the Journal Herald party accepted the sufrestion to send scout ears over the Capital-to-Capital route, and leave the final fixing of the route till after the trip had been made. The original idea was the Piedmont route, and the Herald and Journal announce that it litis been selected. This wasexpected. The Capital-to-Capital route is the one that will be most popular to winter tourists, as it j;oes through Pinehurst, Southern Pines and the South Carolina resorts, and if the tourists went on to Florida they would not ;) to Atlanta. The wide awake Atlanta editor saw the danger that his city mijht be side-tracked in the Capital-to-Capital route and he naturally stuck to his original 'plan. That decision merely means that these two papers will throw their in fluence to having a route from Atlan ta to New York that will go through the Piedmont section. It will be a good route, and the people along the line will co-operate to make good roads all the way. There has never been any doubt that there must be two lines through the South, and in time there will be three or four. The route that will be most travelled will be the good route that takes the tourists through Richmond, Raleigh, Columbia, Pine hurst, Aiken, Augusta, Savannah and Jacksonville. Several weeks ago, seeing that the New Y'ork and Atlanta papers would stick to their original Piedmont line, the editors of the Rich mond Times-Dispatch, Washington, 1). C, Post, and Raleigh News and Observer arranged for a conference to be held early in the fall to complete arrangements for the Capital-to-Capital route. The New York Her ald, in announcing its decision, has the following to say about the ad vantage of the Capital route: "There is no gainsaying the advan tages of the Capital route for a touring highway in the superior hotel facilities afforded by such cities lying within its itinerary as Baltimore, Washington, Richmond and Raleigh. The superb stretches of new roadway in the vicinity of Southern Pines and Pinehurst. N. (!.. also left nothing but the most delightful impression on the minds of the good roads scouts. That these roads are such perfect models of what Southern high ways may he made by the proper combi nation of white clay and sand is due chiefly to the enterprise and public spirited activity of Leonard Tufts, the proprietor or the Pinehurst resort. " A fatal obstacle to the selection of the Capital-to-Capital route, however, as the Hue for a national highway is the almost impassable character of the roads be tween Richmond and Washington. Along the old Warrenton turnpike, the natural highway between the capital of the na tion and the capital of the Old Dominion, so little htis been done 6ince Civil War days by way of betterment that the scouts there encountered some of the most arduous experiences of their entire series of travels. So bad are some of these stretches of rocky roadbed, so hope less some of those muddy bogs, that they gave rise seriously to the surmise that they had remained untouched since the Federal and Confederate artillery cut them to pieces forty-five years ago in the long series of operations between the Northern and Southern capitals." Not waiting for the general con ference of those interested in the Capital-to-Capital route, the Wash ington Post and the Richmond Times Dispatch have sent out scout cars and are interesting the people between Richmond and Washington. The Herald's statement that the Capital-to-Capital route is not feasible be cause that stretch of road is not good enough will be a lesson to the resi dents of that section. Inasmuch as that portion, said, to be the worst, is a vital link it is gratifying to see these influential journals that have contracted the habit of succeeding at whatever they undertake throwing themselves into this matter with zeal and enthusiasm. That link will be made ready. The Columbia State tells of active work for a splendid road from that city to Camden. The praise of that portion of its road near Pinehurst is deserved. North Carolina will not wait for those North or South to get the road in condi tion. Its people should lead in the matter. In this State, except in a few places, the scout party said the Capital-to-Capital route roads in North Washington's Plague Spots lie in the low, marshy bottoms of the Poto mac, the breeding ground of malaria germs. These germs eause chills, fever and agne, biliousness, jaundice, lassitude, weakness and general debility and bring suffering or death to thousands yearly. But Electric Bitters never fail to destroy them and cure malaria troubles. "They are the best all round tonic and cure, for malaria I ever used," writes R. M. James, of Lonellen. S. C. They cure Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Blood Troubles and will prerent Typhoid. Try them. TiOc. Guaranteed by Melville Uorsey. "i .. . i Carolina were good. Richmond, Moore and Lee have good roads in most places and aregetting ready to make them perfect to Lockville, in Chatham county. The worst piece of road is in Chatham, but its people are alive and will co-operate to make good roads to the Wake county line, but inasmuch as there is no large town and the population is sparse the burden will be so heavy that they should have outside help. Wake already has splendid roads, except in a few places, and they are being put in the pink of perfection for autonio biling. Franklin, Vance and Warren are putting such of their roads as are not good in excellent condition. There is no doubt that the Capital-to-Capital route will have good roads through North Carolina, but it will require active work and the spending of good money. The home people need, good roads if no automobile should ever go over them on the way to Pinehurst or Florida. But unless we build good roads our own people must pull in the mud and the advan tage of the Capital-to-Capital route will be lost. A Modern Farmer. Charlotte Chronicle. It is interesting to reflect upon the chanires that are coming over the farming methods. The farmer is be coming at once a business man, a chemist and a mechanic. In an ar ticle on this subject, Popular Mechan ics says that the mechanical side of farming is more easily understood. Farm machinery to-day is prepared to perform nearly all the outdoor work. Plowing, harrowing, planting, cultivating, reaping, stacking and threshing are all mechanical opera tions, in most of which the farmer rides. His machines even are fre quently propelled by their own gas or steam engine power, or drawn by a traction engine. There are ma chines for planting, digging, sorting aud bagging potatoes; milking ma chines for the dairy; cream separa tors; power churns; machines to spread fertilizer and to stack hay in the barn; the horses are curried and clipped with a machine. Most recent of all is a device which picks feathers from fowls. The modern farmer oper ates his own electric light and water works; a telephone not only connects him with his neighbors and town, but stations are establised at in tervals over the farm. When he needs a tool from the house in a hur ry, he 'phones and somebody brings it out; he has his own road-making apparatus; he lays drainage systems reaching into miles; he builds irriga tion ditches and his own gas engine fills them with water. The farmer with an automobile and motor wag on is no longer an unusual sight. Of course all this modernism has not reached the South, but it is coming, and quite soon at that. A Note of Warning. Charlotte Observer. The North Carolina Index, a negro religious paper published at Pitts boro, in this State, sounds this note of warning to the idle and vagabond members of its race: "You do not have to work very hard togo to hell. The indolent and the idle man will be found among the children of the damned in the last and dreadful day." If it could beat that idea into the heads of many of its people the whole race would be in much- better condi tion financially and morally. Independence on the Farm. Raeford Facts and Figures. Neill S. Blue has had threashed 400 bushels of wheat and rye and a large quantity of oats. A man fixed like that doesn't look at the wheat mar ket every day with a big lump in his throat. His neighbors say Ld Wal ters has his corn, fodder, wheat, rye, meat, lard, syrup and everything else to eat, and that they are going to work and get in the same fix. Such I is independence. . Visitors at the Office. Have you ever noticed about ninety-nine out of every hunderd of the people who call at your office want you to do something for them? Chicago Record-Herald. But they usually come in the guise of having something that they think will be of benefit to you. . Under the presidency of Mr. W. W. Finley the Southern Railway has been changed from vexatious delay and general inefficiency to a model of promptness and reliability. A wreck is a rare thing, though formerly it was a daily occurrence. Its trains "split the minute" and its service is superb. It is a pleasure to be able to say these nice things about a rail road and tell the truth. Thonias ville Charitv and Children. We would like to see the State take hold of the good roads work. If it has to help the backward counties in the matter of education and other things there is no reason why it would be wrong to help them in the matter of good roads. Durham Herald. The Georgia legislature lias passed a bill making it compulsory on coun ty commissoners of that State to put up sign boards on all public thorough fares in the county. It would be a good law for North Carolina. Rock ingham Anglo-Saxon. President Eliot, of Harvard Uni versity, predicts the advent of a new religion. Those who have plenty of the old religion won't need any of the new one. Moreover, brethren, they won't find much that is new in the new one. Wilmington Star. De Witt's Little Early Eisers, the pleasant, safe, sure, easy little liver pills. A salve you may always depend upon in any case -where oou seed salve, is De Witt's Carboliaed Witch Hazel Salve especially good for Piles. Sold by all druggists. Singer First Cost is the Whole Cost Of course you can buy a sewing machine for less money than you would pay for a Singer ali the world knows that. But. consider this: When a Singer is bought and paid for, it. is paid b-it lasts a lifetime:. A cheap machine is never paid for. Every cent expended for-repairs must be added to the original cost it's an endless system of instalments. These instalments, added to the first cost of the machine, soon ex ceed the cost of a Singer, and after each successive repair (if you can get another part) the cheap machine grows more and more second-hand one step nearer the junk heap. JThe time lost, the trouble and the worry outweigh many times over the difference in the cost between the "cheap" machine and the Singer. J There are two kinds of machines good and bad and the good kind is the Singer.' Sold Singer Sewing Machine Company 127 South Garnet St., Henderson, N. C. STEVENS RIFLE FREE! The premium for the month of August in the coupon contest, will be a Stevens Crack Shot Rifle. Somebody is going to get this tnose holding the lucky numbers during .June and July did the ice cream rreezer and water cooler, and the refection Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook Stove. Ther's only one way to get it, trade here and get a coupon with each pur chase, and you will be in line with as good a chance of success as any one else. OUR PROPOSITION : Every one making a rush purchase small or large duriuc the month of July will be K'ven n coupon. Euch coupon v711 b numbered and uch numbfr will cor respond with another number. The person holding The lucky number will get the prize. Everything will be perfectly fair and the small purchaser will stand just as good a .-bailee to gt the prize' hp the large one. DON'T FAIL TO KEEP YOUIt ('OUPONS given with each purchase. WatMms IBroHlhers Co. SAMUEL W ATKINS, Jr., Manager. Good Whiskey Stimulates the circulation of the blood makes the liver active and the bowels regular. For most headaches and simple complaints it is better than any drugs or medicines. Next time you feel "run down" or ill, try StfleinyBiroofe THE PURE FOOD Whiskey It is bottled in bond, therefore absolutely pure, natural, straight whiskey, mellowed by age only and with a delicious flavor. Used judiciously, its effect is both invigorating and exhilarating. The "Green Government Stamp" on each bottle is the official proof that it has been distilled, aged and bottled under the super vision of U. S. Government Inspectors. SUNNY BROOK DISTILLERY CO.. Jefferson Co.; Ky. yi FULL QUARTS$C BY EXPRESS PREPAID From any of the following Distributors: H. CLAKKE & SONS, Inc. Richmond, Va. PHIL G. KELLY CO., Inc., Richmond, Va. Lazarus-Goodman Co., Roanoke, Va. shippfo im pi f.K ens's. v.' "v '.":: r.r: Y3LR03DEft. Tobacco Fhies, Flue season will soon be here and as usual I am prepared to supply your wants in this line. Let Me Make Your Tobacco Flues This Season. I have an ample stock of the best iron that costs you no more than inferior material. It will be to your interest to see me before giving your order for Flues. Prices Reasonable. H. R. FUTRELL, Henderson, N. C-. only by 11 ifle ABSOLUTELY -FREE just as Hook-Wonn Disease. S. G. Worth writing from Beaufort to the News and Observer commend ing the action of that paper for giv ing publicity to hook-worm literature as it is doing, saj-s: lne hoot-worm is probably as much an injury in its region as the ! anopheles mosquito. 1 met a profes sional man here about two years ago woo had been treated for hook-worm while a student at Wake Forest Col lege, five years previously, and who said that he had felt fifty per cent, better every day during the five years, andyet this party would never have taken treatment, but from a desire on his part to disprove the belief en tertained by the wise ones that he wa9 a hook-worm host. I do not, of course, use the name of this party, and the percent, of infection disclosed by the investigations at Wake Forest as stated by him, was so high that I refrain from quoting his figures. The presumption is that the above insti tution has collected data which would be of public interest. After I heard the account by the party quoted, I wrote Senator Overman for the gov ernment literature, intending to pre pare a letter for your paper for arous ing an interest, but was anticipated by the appearance of Prof. Stiles in the field, an event for general con gratulation. The New Coin a Failure. Charlotte Chronicle. It was reported in this paper yes terday that the new copper cent the Lincoln penny is to be withdrawn. He hope the report is true for tins so-called coin is the worst tiling the government has put upon the public in the shape of money, t roni the tone of newspaper comment, we are led to believe that the count v has teen scandalized by the new coin. The sturdy-going Philadelphia Inquirer thinks it is dithcult to understand why the change in the design of the one-cent pieces was ordered. The head of the American Indian really meant something. 1 1 had the prest ige of age. It carried the story of the j early days of the country, when set tlers had to tight for their homes. There was no demand for a change. As a matter of fact, there is no sense in the change. It is utterly without excuse. "The nation venerates Lin coin," says The Inquirer, "but it will strike most persons, we should think, as a pretty poor tribute to him that out ot all coins we have selected the picayune cent piece to carry his head. The coin as it has made its appearance tfrom the mint, does not look like a coin at all. It resembles a medal, and a measly-looking little medal at that ' the cheap little medal that used to be given away with bags of pop corn." These remarks are altogether sen sible. The Indian head penny is known to all plain people. Not with in fifty years would the new coin be come so well known. In the mean time, the confusion will cause many a little piece of stamped medal to pass as coin. iror a long lime me new coin will be no more familiar to the people than soda water checks. Our recollection of the old twenty dollar gold piece is that it far surpassed in artistic merit and simplicity the new one produced under the Koosevelt ay ministration. Our idea is that coins should be permanent. There is no reason to make a new form in place of the old and satisfactory one. Mul tiplicity of coins is confusing to the people.muchmore confusing than the varieties of the same denominations of paper money, and it's a pity that we have so many kinds of paper money. There are gold certificates, silver, cer tificates, United States notes (green backs) and national bank notes, and perhaps others. It seems to be a fol ly to multiply coins also. i: it is done in an effort to perpetuate current art it is still a mistake. Money and art do not go together, except in eompli mentarv relations, vis-a-vis, as it were. The Treasury expert the ex pert in money is the last man to judge what particular art ought to be perpetuated. Ibe twenty-dollar Roosevelt coin is a fair sample of the inability of the Treasury Department to pose as a judge of art. The prop er thins: to do would be to ro back to the well-known and artistic Indian head. A Minneapolis minister busied him self on Sunday taking pictures of women on the street who exposed themselves when they raised their skirts at crossings, and put their pic tures on canvas at his Sunday's ser vice. He may think he is doing good, but a man of such notions of the duty of a minister disgusts all trood people and ought to be given his dis charge. News and Observer. The good roads movement is gain ing: jrround all over the State. The county with good roads, like the man with the long pole, is the one that does the most business. Look at Charlotte and Mecklenburg, for ex ample. Rockingham Anglo-Saxon. Stockholders in the Southern Ex press Company ought to be strong advocates of State prohibition. The company could well afford to pay every dollar that any State would spend in a State proniDition cam paign. Raleigh State Democrat. It is a known fact that advertising . . i g pays, out wnetner tongresHnmu (Jowles or Dr. Jbliot wui De oenenieu bj the immense amount they are getting, remains to be seen. New Bern Sun." The beat remedy we know oHn I! earn of Kidiwy &&d Bladder troabi and the one we slwv can recommend, U DeWitt'a KidDey aod Bladder Pilln. They are antiarptie and at once sestet the kid Bey to perform their imfjrtaot work. Bat when yon ak for thee pin be powtire that ycu get DeWitt Kidney and Bladder Pilb. There are imitation placed upon sale to deceive you! Get DeWftt'a. Insist upon them, and if your dealer cannot supply yon refuaeaay ttuajr else in place of them, bold by ail drag-jfistji A Wonderful Invention. r i - Rev. Baylus Cade ; Writes About His New Typesetting Machine An Invention that Will Revolutionize the Prin- J mg iraae n Claims Made for it are Anything Like Re-! ahzed-Not an Inspiration,! but the Result of "Perspira tion" After More thaii 20 Year of Thought and Effort Expended Upon it, Says Brother Cade. Baltimore Mannfacturfrg' IUvonl. Baylus Cade of Shelby, N. ('., com plying with our request for a descrip tion of his typesetting machine, writes: "I have not yet written anything for the press nlout my machine, and 1 do not want to appear at this time in public prints in t he character of an exploiter of my own wares. When the machine is ready for sale to the printing public it will speak for iteelf. I am not averse, however, to telling you justwhatthe machine isexpected to do, and you are at liberty to use such information as you may deem to be wise. "1. The machine will do any kind of work that the best Mergenthaler will do, and it will do some sorts of work that the Mergenthaler will not do, and it will do all this at one seventh of tho original cost of the Mergenthaler, and at one-half the operating cost of that machine. "2. My machinedispenses with all the complicated and delicate ma chinery in the Mergenthaler, which distributes the matrices after the line has been cast, the matrices in my ma chine returning to their places auto matically and at once. ".'1. My machine occupies only six square feet of floor space, and it can be easily carried by two persons from one place to another. ".". All the faces in a printing of ficefrom G point up to .'10 point can be put into one frame, and so In? accessible to the operator without requiring him to leave his seat. "5. The speed of my machine is limited only by the speed of the oper ator. My machine is as rapid in its response to the tourch of the oper ator as a typewriter is. " The keyboard of my machine normally will be arranged as a print er s case is arranged, so tnat any printer may operate it at once and without any previous training. In case of a strike or other shortage of printers, the keyboard can be rear ranged within an hour as the univer sal keyboard of the typewriter is ar ranged, so that any typewriting ex pert can use the machiueas effectively as a printer can. "7. The only power used by my machine is an ait compressor of one half horse-power capacity. "8. My machine can never trans pose the letters in words when the operator is faster than his machine. "!. My machine takes all the dif ficulties in the way of casting a line can be removed out of the machine. My machine is not more complicated than a Remington typewriter is, ami anyone can repair it who can mend a typewriter. "My machine can be sold for $."00 at a very handsome profit to the manufacturers, at a profit as large as anyone enn innocently make. "I have told you what my machine will do, and I have not overstated its merits in any particular. The inven tion is not an inspiration, it is rather a perspiration, as .Mr. J-jdison once said, for I havestudied it. off and on, for more than 20 vears. hilst I am not an expert printer, it is true that I have done all the kinds of work that are clone in a printing office, from that of a printer s devil to that of editor-in-chief, and I know what i am talking about. "1 have not tried to tell you how the machine i constructed. Vou would not understand its construc tion without seeing the machine . . v . It Proves Too Much. Kalritfh StHle. f-inre-rat The Educational Edition of the News and Observer, which appeared hint Sunday, contains some very ex cellent articles, as we would exject from the men who wrote them. I5ut like other wiseanddistinguished men, some of them attempt to prove too much. For instance, we take the following from one of these choice articles: "The North Carolina boy belotigs in his own tin. There i no other boy in any other Stute exactly like him. It matters not whether become from the level lands of the Las tern counties or climbs the mountain j peaks of the West, there is something j in-him, peculiar to the State of hi i birth, which differentiates him from j other boys." ; That statement a charminej opener, bat if it means to imply any innate suDeriority of the North Car- orlina boy over other State. to make. To men or women be a difficult undertaking. North Carolina boys are just as good and just ns sorry as they are in other States, and that is claim enough to make for them. 'Twas A Glorious Victory. There' rejoicing; in Fedora, Teon. A mao'a life has been tared, and now Dr. King Sw Di-oery w the talk of the town for eortsK C. V. Pepper of deadly 1udc hemorrhage. "I eosld not work nor gt about." b writw, "and the doctor did mo no good, but, alier uing Dr. King New Diaeorery three wk. I fel like a new man, aod ran do good work again." For weak, aore or dUeed lunga, Coogha and Colda, Hemorrhage. Hay Ferer, LaUrippe. Arthma or aoj Bronchial affec tion it atanda aoriTaled. Price 50c and f l.OO. Trial bottle free. Sold and guaran teed hr Melrilla Doraey. that of the iovk in ; r4 the proof would be hard j If grade Ixij or girl, j n . r. .1 J H bv ftuue lines womi , i . a50cboxofBloodtn rpo f BloodaKidnyTi. mwwIt. Tli.-r rnro !!..-!.-- ache, they remove tho cause and the Backache is onc, a positive cure for Sick Kidney. Mailed to anvone who ha never tried them FKtiE if you enclose loo to nay postal and packinr. Aiimx. Tfc Blood m. Corpor.tioa. lio-.o. M.i. W. W. PARKER. Special A.ent. QfflCHESTEB S PILLS fecnx ..WVLVUA JWtlol.lcSMl.l;rtK soio by rmcisnRnrtRr i ill in 1 nmJ' i i1 il. I m 1 1. Xmt BRIGKW0MS H.L.&RAHT ti Son Propks. UOLDSBORO.N.C. CAPACITY 1,000,000 PLR ROKTH HIGHEST QUALITY PROMPTEST SHIPMENT i , i , i , i , i: ri.i'iT T 3C Executor's Notice. H AVISO Ql'AI.l FI i:i AS I:Ij I ToU of the r.tat of tli lnt Thoron. J. Taylor, Oiinowl. o! Vnii County, all r Hon hitTing (-iHiitmntfiiiiiiit uniJ l-vnwl nr liotilli-il to pn-ortit thctn to m duly Vfriflwl, Wtoro AtiKUxt .", 15UO, or tlim initio will pli-nil in Imr of th-ir nvorrry. IVnuum in -di'htetl to theeHfltt will liim !Iiftli IIIUII diiltu n vnietit. ASPIIKW J. UAKItlS. Kxw-ntor of Tliomn. J.Tiivlor, I-.-himm. Heiiclfrnou. N'.C, AupiKt L'ml. ll'O'.i. Administrator's Notice. H AVISO qlULIFIKIl ASAPMIMSTIU. tor of ih wit at r.f Mr. A. . IM warlo. di-criuM!. iK-lorvtliH t'lrk of tlifSui rior Court of Yhmo count y, nil jx-rmoim Imv ini; rliiinm uRiiitml 1ln-ttat- of wnid 1---iiimm ur hi-rt-hy notillwltojirwM'iitthftntoniduIy voritled on or ln-fort ih tlnt day of July, I'.OO, or thin nut will Im' jilciuh-d in Imr of thHr wovcry. AH M-rnoiii indlit-d to nid Mtnt will jilfiiitc nuiLe iinnH-iliuto jm vinriit. Thii Juue I'M, Uo'.. J. C KITTUKM.. AdininiMt riitor of Mm. A. X. IMward, d reoHpil. Trinity Park School A First-Class Preparatory School J C-rtiflriit' of (irndtintion Ai--t4"l for Klitrittirpto lndiliKHoutln-rn Colli-K! t Uvst AVmZimh Vri'imrittory St hool 'm tho South Family of tn oftlivrn mid tiu'lr. Ciiuipun of twvmty-tlvc u-r-. I.l brary rontniniriK lorty thoimand volume. Well pui(H-l KyninMnium. Ifilih utandnrd nnd modern method of iiiHtruftion. Frequent l-turv by prominent Irtturem. Fipenne eedinjrly moderate. Fleven yearn of phenoroennl Bneeem For CtetaloRue utid other Information Addreen H. M. NORTH, Headmaster, Durham, N C. if M lMMHI MMM t The North Carolina. COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND MECHANIC ARTS. The State's collepf for vocational training. Cours- in Agriculture and Horticulture; in Civil, Ilectri al and Mechanical Kngineerinjr; in Cotton Milling and Iveing; In Industrial Chemistrv. Why not fit votirwlf for life by taking one Address of these court? D. H. HILL, President. West Raleigh. N. C. Pain Nearir s3 vcmaa suffer corrapalaat times, due to f .i tha ailments peculiar to their P4l cx. If your trouble 1- yet la a mild firm, take Cardu! to fcj prevent it becoming mere Hi sertcta. If you have suffered S cz years, get Cardul at H, c-xc. Use penlstccUy aad ItvJlhe!? yea C3 1 Mrs. L EeUs. cf Nev Hartford. li.rj afflicted fcr 24 years. She writes: Tcr tbo past 24 years 1 have Un cfflicted vlth vomb trouble csudng extreme nenrous ne's, pain la right side and back altogether making life a burden. I tried doctors and various ctber remedies without relief. Finally I be gan using Wine cf Cardul. Nov I am entirely cured. I cheerfullx advise all vomen similarly afflicted to try Car tful. Sold everywhere. . E44 TT DeWITTS CARBCLIZEO WITCH HAZEL GALVC For P'lo. Bum. Sores. Fi
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 12, 1909, edition 1
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