Newspapers / The North State (Lexington, … / March 13, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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ii it r 1 ft - Y i f a ,1 YY-- I; t.j' V -v i-- 3 " r .... - 5 t 1 s" 5 J. ' It- i i Ji," 4.' ' ft.'; u y r pi, 0 Sit m tt:. -- ''--.v -iu t I f ... ' - f -"'IT ' f v-' ." - T 1 11 r - ' 1 r . - ' - " ' 7TZ T "" " , TT-: T " 1 "T . 1 -v '-v ' - . ' i - T 1 1 ' Ti ' ZZ L - 1 ' 7--Vr Tke t'fdiowiW Schedule 1 of : trains went into ; effect January 6, 1907: : " . ' "M - - -4 Southbound, j -V?- ' ('lit 17 AtZ A TUT - - 11-7.45 A. M. " r29-9.6i:P. M; 129:46 P. M. 30-1.1Q P. M. 32-1.20 A. M. 34-8.42 P. M. 36t12.33 P. M. 3811.05 P. M. "... 40-3-23 A." M. ; 447T23 A. M. " Treasurer-r-E. Rothroefci "Cotuxty CoBmussioners- J- A. Green, J. a Ripple a irDavis: ' k -County Su penntendent-Prof . P. L. : Ledford, v 1 v ' iCounty Board of Education W. S. Owen; ch'm'n.; S: Finch, J. C. Skeen. " ' ' CITY DIRECTORY. . Mayor Ho. Jno. H. Moyer. AldermenG. W, Montcastle,; J. W: Nop11 T,. .Weaver. B. G. Robbins, 1 T . WftlseK Meetings third sfr ;ir?coui5Tnr DIRECTORY. - $ - -? ' register, ot JJ sects Luwen.r ; ";V;'.Moiiday-night in each month. Trpjtswrer J. W; Noell, Clerk I. Walser. : ' foUcemen JJ. x.- nepier, vmex, o. ' .-i tt. .1... r- : r . t .V..Hiytrorth,.0.'C, Ford. CHURCH DIRECTORY. :xT3lwififcTlev J. Ilugglns. pastor. Ser- '-,VV'2-''c8StoaBty mornjzig atii:oo and-Sunday ' Evening at-00. PrajW meeting Wednesday ' - -I v' 'VilijSt at T83. SuffaivSchopl Sup day Homing Babtisfc?t?f T-x?ldfck; -paster. Scr Presbyterian Rev. G. L. Leyburn. D. D. Services Sunday moraine: at ll ;:0 and Sunday evening at 8; prayer laeennj? Wednesday night at 8 o'clock; Sunday school Sunday afrernoon at 3 o'clock ; Mr. Otis ilendenhall ; Superintendent. Lutheran llev. E. Fulonwider. pastor; Services Runday morning at ll and Sunday evening at 8; Sunday school cunday aftrnoon at 3 e'clock ; Mr. II L Propet superintendent. First Reformed KeT,: J . C. Eeonard. D.D, pastor. Services Sunday morning at 11 o'clock and Sunday evenifg at 7. Sunday schocl Sunday morning at 9:30: J TSHedrick. Superintendent. Methodist Protectant Rev. Edward Suits pastor. Services on first, third and fourth Sundays at ll a m and Sunday evening at 7 o'clock. Prayer meetin Monday night at. 7 30, Sunday school in the morning at 10 o'c'ock. Episcopalian Rev J C Davis. B V. rector; aervioeeecon and fourth .Sundays. Morning service at ll and afternoon services at 4 p.. m. Sunday school Sunday morning at 9.45: C. A.Hunt. Jr.. superintendent. West End, Methodist Rev. S. S. Higgins. paator. Services second and fourth Sunday at 11 a. m. and Sunday evening at 7 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday night at 7:30. Sunday school at o:45 a. m. S. J. Coley, Superinten ent. Wade H. Phillips, attorney at Law, Lexington. - N C Pratices in the Courts, State and Federal. Office in Henderson Block. Zeb Y. "Walser. Zenobian I. Walser & Walser, Wajser Attorneys at Law, Lexington. - - - - - - N.C. Practice in all the Courts, State and Federal- Money to loan in any amounts. Dr. J. B. Everett Dentist Lexington N. O Painless Extraction. All work guar anteed. Office over Geo. A. Adderton's Store. Dr. C. M. Clodfelter, Physician and Surgeon Lexington. - - - - N C. Office in Hotel March. H. S. Radcliffe, General Insurance. Fire, Life, Accident, Employers Lia ility, etc. We insure ladiessame rice as male risks. Office in Dispatch Building. Office Phone No. - .- - - - 115 Residence Phon rfo. - - - 1ES NOTHING IN THE RUMPR;a fr V- v v President of the Pee Pee?&GIennT Anna Denies lu Sale to tlie Koolk: V V & es.tern.r- C,,-' ' ;3The HigKPointcorrVapottSent of the Cj&fto? to--;Obseryerisaya : ,4An item tn' tlie ' LexfngtonDia- 1 patch of . this' week wjas' tathe eitect tnat tne jNonoiK wes tern" JRaHroadl CJompany, Has Hought itock', if not Ihe entire ownership of the . Glerm Anna, & Pee -Dec?. Kail way i proposing tp buitd v'fionV Winston-Salem to High,3?oint; with Thomasville in thelist and downward to. Wades- bqrp"4an tljat the deal .wcHjId meaA a;Coast Line connection at Wadesboro ; Mr. 0. Allen, presk dent rof the Glenn Anna toad, With home offices in High Pointy today. states emphaticaly that there is -naword of tniwm.tht rmori -that oio saie;or . arty : part of stocl& has ixeen made "orjill be tm'ade -and-that the contractor will begin -active work: wiimaa menth in tne name of the com-J pany or rather as it is now known, the Carolina Valley RahV way Company. . The technical parts of the deal onlywill have to be arranged ' and progressive steps will be taken. " A. W. Black No Better. Mr. T. C. Loflin carried the young insane man, Mr. Pre;o, who has been confined in. jail here for some time, to the hos pital in Morgan ton Monday morning. Mr. Loflin tells us he gave him no trouble on the way. Mr. A. W. Black, son-in-law of Mr. Loflis, who is confined in the hospital, refuses ta talk. -r ' - " L.'?-ZL!a. LJ J Mr. Loflin was' with him -two4 hours,- and,he didIiot; speak: but t.enwre lime;-' ne 1 .weign ine same as he. did three months ago and eats as much as usual. The doctors think he will recover. Mr. Loflin also saw the son of Mr. Amos Yokely, who is in the hospital. He is improving and hopes to be home in the near future. His friends can find out more about Mr. Yokely by calling at Mr. Loflin's store. No Drinking on Trains. A new law passed by the Leg islature makes intoxication of any employe of a common carrier a misdemeanor, to be punished at the discretion of the court. Conductors and agents now have the right to make arrests and keep order same as policemen. Another bill prohibits drunken ness on trains and boats, and any drunkard who boards a train or any one who gets drunk after he gets aboard, may be put off or punished or both. Drinking on trains is punishable by fine or imprisonment. The Philosophy of Love. To love is to be useful to your self ; to cause love is to be useful to others. Nothing but love has ever reigned on the throne of creation; nothing but love will ever reign. Love imputes no motive, sees the bright side, puts the best construction on every action. Love is never satisfied with doing or giving anything but the best. That which is to be loved long is to be loved with reason rather than with passion, says Woman's Life. As love without esteem is ca pricious and volatile, esteem without love is languid and cool. To love for the purse sake of loving is almost the characteristic of angel. Those whom love cements in holy, faith and equal transport, free as Nature, lives disdaining fear. !. DAVIDSON stcruoRXouRT: Court Adlouflied SatuVdayMany j Cases .;v7Tried. .Vir--t;-;:Court ai6urtied1tatijrc:rY evening. MQcHwork'w&s ' done atid everybody 2please4iWith judgi Mpore Nothing 'ifibbh interest was" tried.x;-' : the case of. SpencerDav: ; theevidence showd'efear 'cas I ofelf-defns. andVtheV' Judr Hents if of vpthosthe typical discharged DaYis" without. ykb:fiJeityror.tee dog'td 'the' Huty mitting thequestioiUx theiuhicfrriay before him and.the . ln-tn&caserpt-'M n. i? leerMcgrpicai devotion of the" Virginia huntinfithout first obfeininpiSigro to'his f avorite dogi : bu.t Judge Moore set th . yerdicl igpeech whic habWome aside. v . - ;r-lMkssie.v has naid an Ptjdiirincr ..at Tht next term of cjourt wili bq tor tne trial or civn jcasespm: PJlgrimVtMighty WhistUngi; visited-luVister, Mrs: Walter Walter Leonard; Saturday night. I B. F. Green, the lumber man has ;been at nonie'or, the plts and will begin , April ndc and will last for one weeTC'i'f Vit fOU; avq ,v"tpalm, in order Mr. J. Bverlv visited JMr.Silas M. Everhart Saturday night: i Charles Thimsa: clesed his. rer? spholl at ' Pil&m"Academy IvA Wednesday, ' with spelling match on Tuesday mgnr... Mrs. C. A; Clodfelter fiigtechment between the wander- v.a of T.1Tf Aihi1ng. . Ulysses- ..and-,hi-j iaithtui week.'- - ;r X, - . t . miss Oracle loareiter leiqypft terday to visit her,. sister, John W. risKriage, oi inomas ville. She will he absent I or. a 5. - ,tt i,- vveek (Sir. Mrs, AJleru Everhart", who nas been very'siek for the past few are .glad to note. Kuben H. Grimes has sold his plantation, near Lexington and some other property. The price paid was about $2100.00. "Hewers of Wood and Drawers of Water." There have always been in the world "hewers of wood and drawers of water" and this con dition will continue until time is swallowed up in eternity and all men have become equal as they have been gathered back to the dust from which they came. It is" certain that up to the present men have not been equal and the truth in the law of the survival of the fittest bears out this prop osition. It is a fact, however, that the condition of all men in sections of the civilized world is much better today than ever be fore in its history. The laboring man is better off, materially and intellectually, and his children in this busy life have fine oppor tunity to put themselves in a po sition to reach the top in any re lation of business or professional work. But through all the pro pitious surroundings there run numerous notes of discord and the people are advised by dema gogues and politicians who want places for themselves that so much wealth in the hands of the few, the railroads and other great corporations, will yt be their ruin and the country finally wind up in the "deminition bow wows." There is no truth in these wild statements. The country was never better off. More men are employed at living wages than ever before and there is a chance for everybody who has the inclination to do something. And the men who have the millions at their com mand are using the same in the great channels of trade of every description and this country is a hummer in spite of those who 'are crying ont against the men who hare succeeded. Exchange. d:-for:hi3,coon dog. The newspapers of the Old Do- t imon'aredwelling with touch- jg emphasis upon they fact that hJTavbtacooridog, which a 1 1 This' atoryibresents all the'ele- trihntA t f hp Wrnho- from a , iury on that jnemoable. occasion have :beel ITiSI AW&n rtr foam ahtiAliir,niniAiiA jSnd profuse ever since that time by the mere reading of that! toenOorse thkMlly coddling ota spaniel ; of highegree pf . sofne simpering oeauty who allows beggary ,to hold put an empty to justify the pee, wholesome love ot ataith- L"11 Q0 ine nrsc welcome, f JremoSt to defend' l This . trait is strong in huMan feature. It was nlurtrated m' the; tviu wumcyv uo uic mubi Kirgus,.'wuu wKgu wewuxuo- With his" ageu tan when his legs f- fy,0Y.rM fiiJr k.M(:uainL?,'nWi f - . , , rf ? ' , - ulew the wolf and thenas iiiutju, in 1 urn oy nis ; nasL-y. nias! terjm the suspicion of his having' killed the child he had; irreality Byron's devotion a splendid trib ute . to the big Newfoundland, Bos'n, and- a score of other fa mous dogs of history. But most of all is it illustrated in the homely every day devotion of the negro to his'coon dog. He is quick to resent the charge that such a dog will "run rabbits." He will share his last crust o corn pone with him, and it has become a sort of proverb, here in the South, that when a negro of the shiftless sort decides to move, all he has to do is to 'slam the door and call the dog. " You never fail to find the faithful 'coon dog among the household god.-s however few. Dave Temple, of Virginia, who gave his life for his 'coon dog, deserves to be remembered in the folk stories of his generation. His name will be recalled when the nine knot torches flicker through the clear and frosty nights, and the horn of the hunt er answers the distant bay of the hounds when Tray, Blanche and Sweetheart are in full cry on a 'coon or 'possum hunt. The sleepy murmur of the Pamunkey will be vocal with the name of Dave Temple and his 'coon dog. Atlanta Constitution. Jackson Creek Items. Jackson's Creek, March 8. Misses Sirona Morgan and Janie Rush visited Misss Ermie Mor gan Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Samuel Varner closed his school at Pihey Grove Saturday. Mrs. Erastus Wood died March 1st, only living 14 hours after taken sick. She was buried at Farmer on the 2nd. Rev. Mr. Ingle conducted the tuneral ser vices. She leaves a husband and three little children to mourn their loss. We extend our sym pathy to the bereaved ones. There is lots of sickness in this community, mostly la grippe. Guess Who? cmptihg; tovi drown in the'murkey fvitcrbof the Painun&ep river. r PERSONAL MENTION; C. B. Hull is spending a few days with his f ather-iri-law, Mr. N. H. Slaughter . Mrs. W. M. Koonceas been on the sick lisJtiimprov ing,: we' are glad tailbte Mr. andJdrsl-HWo.poTsett arrived last Fridajf jjm'd fara at the HoteLMarch. , 'f Mr.: E. H. Render" spent last' Friday eieninglinoinasvillebn business . Mrs. Dr. Leonard" -went to Concord last Saturday to visit her uncles, Messrs and &i J. Yorke. v after awo weeks visit, hdreto liis sistrHr5J. jWSexton Mr. N. Slaughter yllij terdayfor a busmessfaptfirotfgiH Georgia'artKlprida; S MrSlaugH ter, is oneif 'theXbest salesmen on the road. ' . The Dispensary Again. rA bill has been introduced in thpouse;by Mr. Hankins to grant an election on the question 6i a dispensary in the town of .Lexington.' At this - writing we are n6jtble2i4-say what the re- suit .Wiilrber&itwe ; are.: able to 'Davidson;6ifas:cOT'5sed to a '.dispensary f tid .-we are inzor med jnat a majqripypr n voters oi exingnKaepetSion it; tne propusu3uii uuo tsjp a c r'-as j we J. ' w --!L I ; Mr.Tulhjs . Harris, Jf Ken tucky;l returned hom?yesterday say vthatu the Jjui 4jasses .it-will be ;4nbutf age iniaV shame. coterie of -men' autIxmgtQnTwlio paw thaair'for the eepul' who hope to keep fthe streets of the town with money made from the profits of dispensary liquor. The ' "blind tiger" is the ostensi ble reason, but the significant fact remains, as pastor Huggins so well said, that ihe temperance people are much better satisfied with paesent conditions than the men who heretofore have . not been noted for their loyalty to the temperance cause. Charity and Children. Kentucky Will Go Republican. The present prospects are that Kentucky will swing into the Re publican column at the next elec tion in that State. The Demo crats in that State are divided, while the Republicans are united and growing in strength. Maj. M C: Hutchins, a promi nent politician of Ksntucky, gives the following interview to the Washington Post bearing on the political situation in -his State: "The Republicans of Kentucky have a better : chance to elect a governor at the next guberna torial election than they have had in several. years, " said Maj. M. C. Hutchins, of Maysville. at the Ebbitt last night. Maj. Hutchins for several years was a member of the Republican Cen tral Committe. "The Demo cratic party of the State is di vided, about half of them sup porting Beckham and the other half opposing him, ' ' he continued. fIf the Republicans are wise enough therefore to nominate the right man, they will have a good chance to elect him. There are numerous candidates, of course, but there is a well defined senti ment in favor of Gus E, Wilson, of Louisville, and the impression is prevalent among the most prominent and influentiol Repub lican that he will be the choice. He will make a strong candidate." A CHANCE TO TALK. . . v.- . fhedd Man of "this establisbf :: mentwent tolJew.Y6rk the otixl er Hay. ;5e -walked . W to th& dttietbceandrHanded.th agent a :bunof money and .told theagent - to Jgiye, Him' a tkket- - was no thrili:;lierVats.-no tremor, ed;tord not feel ?; Inat -he hadlWmenlancipatedl ' ': tie aiaTiot ieex that the subsidy had ffi raised jHe . sirnpr understood that a there 4 was coughed; He ,has. coughed :sev V epa . times ;herenf11ate arid Want3say-f Kenstlll' believes that" thate, railroads of ; the Uountryyiave .neSniore:fer its ' upbuUdinthaft airy mother bgehcy save dlohe'thi Christian religion. He sMllyeKiasi'oirno pass 1 that the ranfoadscsliould 'be at rpile and f dre&jmtja c?rit:anrl into i-oad beds and rolling tockj He believes that while v corpora? tions may wn the roads andL:"'v o'. H(MitifTT aim plie'd with them, and - a commis-. .. sion to regulate them,-is betielr v off than a country with a sip-: shod lay out." " v t -v.-5 much time and space to the rail'- - " - I roau question irom Wiii passes have , been cut-out ,ia: railroads do not careoadvr o y. thererore we wui;trvto Sv - some seed fox the ; benefit'of the ' people. We7 willMrytoysWvVrc; v them thatan hones'tmanan;bew for a-corporation if tHa 'corpora- A- a,IlU WI1U wain luatr uy uuaa . announce that they are standing: for some office. With the'passesi gone, thank Grod, an editor cam. : ocv Y ii io say aim. iivt auuuuwi by the v enal mindea oir navmgr - been bought. Fairbrothers ; - Everything. Blind Partizanship.' " , ' It appears that Representative ' Kitchin from Halifax county is a Democrat beyond redemption. He said in the House Tuesday that he had voted for a Demo crat that had voted for. a negro. and he added that he would vote for anything she Democratic pri mary would put up. Mr. Kitchin is one of : the "white supremacy" crowd, too. With many the name Democrat covers a multitude . of sins that would be unpardonable under any other name. But the state ment last week of a minister of the gospel takes the lead so" far. He was an advocate of a tem perance measure, but said if the measure would hurt the Demo cratic party he would not, favor it', that he would not favor any thing that would hurt theDemo cratic party. To say the least this minister shocked us, and we imagine his declaration alsa shocked his church. ' Religion is needed in politics, but there is nb need for politics in religion. Caucasian, The United States Senate, voted last week that Mr. Reed Smoot, Mormon; was entitled to his seat in the Senate. The North Carolina Senators voted in the negatiye.5Senator(Simmon8 voting to unseat Smoot! We have no idea but Smoot felt greatly amused at this! Geo. W. Grouse, the Imple ment Man, has '" new ad. thisv week. Look it up. : 51
The North State (Lexington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 13, 1907, edition 1
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