Newspapers / The Mount Airy News … / April 11, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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Mount AIRY: EvfS. VOL. 21. MOUNT AIRY, N. C THURSDAY, APRIL U, 1001. XO. 42. Mormon Polygamy Rampant Again, MYSTERIOUS WARNING. Sensation In a Murder Trial So many horuewlves suffer from ner ons depression doe to catarrhal weak Beet peculiar to their tez, and suffer oo year ater year, not knowing what their ailment 1. Mm. Mar Cook, of Pltte- fofd, W. T lulntd for .Is jr.ar. before he learned of Per una. Mn. Cook re cently wrote the followiug letter to Dr. Uartmani I " was not well for sis years, paid many doctor bill, but never Improved very much, I gave up hopes of ever recovering. I "Finally, I wrote to Dr. Hartman, and I am thankful to say that I am now well, through hi. good advice and medicine. I am gaining In flesh and feel young again. I waa yery emaciated, but now my own children are surprised in the great change In me When they Tit it mn." S. P. GRAYKS, Attorney -at-Law, MOUNT AIBY, N. O. tarPractlcea In State ana Federal Court. Prompt attention to collection of olaltna. Thomas H. Sutton, iattorNey at law, MOUNT AIRY. N. C. Will practice tn tho State and Federal court November Ito. in!. W. F. CARTER, MOUNT Alftv.N.O. J. R. If WELIVN, OOMON ..0. Carter & Lkwellyn, Mttorneys-at-fcraw. arPractlee la the state and Federal Court. Frompt attention given to all business entrust d to their care. , Dr. John E. Banner, DENTIST. OFFICE OVER TAYLOR SDRUC STORE. 'PHONE 38. Office) Hour 8.00 A. M to 5.00 P. M. Mount Airy, N. C. T. B. McCARGO. noTAHv public. OFFICE OPPOSITE NEWS OFFICE, MOUNT AIRY HOTEL BLOCK Business Promptlv Attended To. W. R. BADGETT, ATTORNEY AT -LAW, PILOT MOUNTAIN, N. C. Will practice wherever and whenever desired Prompt and careful attention given to all business. Collections a specialty. DR. W. S. TAYLOR, ornci oven droo to.c, . M Ear, Hoa ul Tiroat. Special attention given to this prac tice on VVednnadays and Haturdaj. J. a. IK1. JaJ. TOUT. TESH & TILLEY, CoitractorsvaMvBiJers, MOUNT AiRY, N. C. Estimates furnithed for any kind of building. Workmanship firat-elass. Satisfaction guaranteed. Contracts solicited. Bill, M. D Phyiician and Surgeon, Oflics: 121 S. Elm St., Greensboro, K, C. (Oti. r.mas' car. mu. Bpactal auarailua paid to the d twain of the Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat. (Xtu-ultailoa Hour. 1 1 to t. Do You Want To iti e vonreflw. and frfc-nl. trouble. If an, arid job intra tn huy I I. no. Orvaa of TVir-nrMn. tin c.nauH HB '. rultua, Kimrv' Mibkcal aappll- a. ailareaa, W. C. Fulton, Dobson, N. C. n. Csi, Mi, Elil Rotes, Slippers, 4c. A tul aiw tf ti eltf md qikkiiU. kept 'om ed, u4 at nn.nn.M. fr o. iro, Battii mt kU, W. ft. BjxN's mmt, kta ltn, newa k ifjnijitLAotLsu Mlai Annas Zlott, 72 Livingston atmal, Newark, N. J, took Parana for extreme n.rrournmw. Hhe eaytt "I wm Tery 111 and theoikt I would dl. I bad a tar rlble headache and my head .want; I thought I would nerer get wells I eemed to have a great complication of dl.va.re and bought medicine, bnt they did me no good. "finally I gave np and thought I would wait for my end. On. day 1 happened to pick np one of your book. I read of other women who were near death and had been cured by Parana, .0 1 thought I would try it. " look a couple of bottles mad began to feel better. I continued Ita ua until now lama wall woman. I praise Peruna highly and with other women would ii io It." What Sort of an April ? According to tho mcuiorandu kt'pt by tho Weather ltuicuu hero during tho past fourteen years, tho nverago month of April is ns follows: The mean or normal tempera ture, ri) degrees; tho warmest month was that of ludtl, with an average of (S I degrees; the coldest mouth wu that of lX, with an average of 5(5 degrees; the high est temjierature was Sir degrees on April 1", lW)t; tho lowest temperature was 'M degrees on April (, 1MJ; average date on which first "killing" frost oc curred in autumn, November 1st; average date on which last "kill ing" frost occurred in spring, April 8th. Precipitation (rain and melted snow), the average for the month, 3.34 inches; average number of days with .01 of an inch or more, 0; the greatest monthly "pre cipitation was 7.1)5 inches in lw'J!; the least monthly precipitation was 1.40 inches in 103; the greatest amount of precipitation recorded in any U4 consecutive hours was 2.50 inches on April 7th, 1H09; tho greatest amount of sflowfall recorded in any 24 con secutive hours (record extending to winter of 1517 only) was 3.5 indies on April 4th, leOO. The average number of clear days, 13; partly cloudy days, 0; cloudy days, 8. The prevailing winds have been from the southwest; the highest velocity of the wind was 45 miles from the northwest on April 7th, 1889. News and Ob server. A 1100,000 fertilizer factory is to ba built in Raleigh, as well as a large canning factory. There lis been a halt for several weeks in tho building of cotton mills as a resnlt of thu low price ot yarns and cotton got ds. Most of tho mills are rnn dinar on half time. Twenty Years Proof. Tutt's Liver Pills keep the bow els in natural motion and cleanse the system of all impurities An absolute cure, for sick headache, dyspepsia, sour stomach, con stipation and kindred diseases. "Can't do without them" R. P. Smith, Chilcsburg, Va. writes I don't know how I could do without them. I have had Liver disease for over twenty years. Am now entirely cured. Tutt's Liver Pills GEO. W. SPARGER, Attorney-at-taw, MOUNT AIET, H. O. i will pneoee la Sttia &o4 redertl conna. j pecii tttenuoa to ooUaeueu ot elilna utt LOOK OUT FOR Airca T. Fenn's Birlser Sign, Next Door to Blue Itidga Inn, Wim jm ra ft . 8r-l bT. B lr Hti.inpna. Hit i .iii.i a. I. larK u lii'.f la u, hrt ctj. H b.j Hrw ikMiac RoruslT . tme rrrl W Bvmlm ohV-1 r M MM CP a lUhyUt u4 f ".l rlth i r lwlf mti$ Pf. iiiiwrt . pF.mtf all .rl J I trf to wita aat Mmmrmuf, Aurca T. rezia. Mra. Anna Roe, 281 North Fifth street, Philadelphia, Pa, write.! "Pour weeks ago I believed I had consumption 1 1 took a severe cold, and although for the first tew days the mu cus In my throat and chest was loose, H finally became so bad that I had dif ficulty In breathing. Pain In the ihduld.re followed. A.I had placed my confidence In you and Peruna, I followed yourdlrrctlonsstrkt ly, and improved from day to day, and am now well again." Moat women feel the need of a loni to counteract the debilitating effect ol .nmmer weather. Peruna la such a rem edy. It cure all catarrhal condition whether It be wesknea,narvouadciiris .ion or summer catarrh. For a free IxxjI on lummer catarrh, addre.a The IVrun Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. m Big; Rents in London. Pietty nearly everybody under stand, of course, that houno rents re very considerably greater in Ixndon than they are in principal towns and that in the metropolis they vary greatly and are very etill in the regions where society hovers, lint a writer in Tit-Hits ventures to think that even few Londoners have much idea of the enormous figures paid for tho rentals of taidiioiiiiblo honaea in liolgravia and Maytmr or realizo how few square yards of the west end it takta to produce a mil lion sterling in tliic way. Kow, take, to start with, Park lane, that highly fashionable thor oughfare. It is rather staggering to learn that $50,000 a year is really not at all a very extravagant rent to pay for a good housu in this quar ter. Tho plain, simple fact ot the matter is, however, that you can not get a decent house here for lees than $15,000, and even such a one would only have three or towr bed rooms and, generally speaking, would not have greater accommo dation than a house at $'250 or $300 a year in the suburbs or at half that price in a provincial town. Cirosvtnor square and ilrkelcy eqnare are renowned headquarters of society, which pys astonishingly for its residence there. Consider tho former first The whole square comprises fewer than CO houses, but it is a fct that their combined annual rental is abont $750,000. Uig aa the rents are, get ting a house here is a matter of great difficulty, aud seldom is there one to let for long. Nothing can be go: ivr less tban $5,000 a year, and front this figure an intending tenant tnsr go np to $30,000 year. Berkeley square is likewise difii cult to get into. It is rather old fashioned and severe, aud tho aver age man or woman from the country might not be able to see anything about the honi-es which would just ify a heavy drain being mado upon a tenant's pocket, lint, all tho same, houses here are &Iays at a premium, and yon will not p t much of a residence for $2,50'J a year, nor yet, so far as that goes, is the accommodation very astonishing if $10,000 a year is paid. 8t. James square is another nltra fashionable quarter which a million aire might have to wait years to get into if he desired to live there $15,000 or $20,000 a year is quite a moderate rent for a house so sit uated while Norfolk House, where the Duke of Norfolk resides, and such others as Lord Derby's resi dence, at 33, would eatiily realize $50,000 a year io rout. Carlton llonso terrace, where statesmen and embassadors live, also coati its tenants drarly. At least $20,000 a year must be paid for anything good in this particular neighb. rbood, and Mr. Astor gave more than $300,000 when he pur chased one ot the houses in the ter race, formerly occupied by Lord Granville. et the ordinary man would remark that the houses are not even semidetached and that out wardly, at ail events, tbey are far from imposing. Jab Have too II If he'd had lulling PiU. They're terribly annoying; but liuiklen's Arniea Saive will tin- lb woraicase of PiU-ifin earth. It ha cured thous ands. For li jurU-, l'uin. or Itodily F.plior. it', tho bel alva in the worii. I'nte 3c. a box. Cure guar anty. &M by lr. Vf. S. Taylor, Drugget, Mount Airy, N. G. The fact that Mormon polygamy is again legalized in Ltah by act o the legislature, naturally attracts public aitention freshlf to that ac curst-d monstrosity. The conetitu tioii should be amended to meet tli case, since the courts in Utah are cn tqiml to cope with the crime, and legislators are corrupt and vicioo enough to countenance it. The Ms genger agrees with the Charlott Standard that af'er prohibiting po lygamy in tho constitution, that the whole power of the United States government should be worked to execute in that debased land United States laws. And it well adds that "the complication with the Sultan of bulu ought not to prevent imme diate agitation with such an amend ment. As pertinent to this we no tice a paper prepared by Uev. Ur, o h.,WiBhard, for tho northern ller aid and Presbyter relative to"Polyg amy and Politics." He lives in that land of vice, and knows much of the eotid uct of I tie high Mormon oilicials. He stales that of twelve "apostles living in that gang, ten "are living in polygamy." Ho the "presiden of tho church, who is called The Prophet, Seer and Iievclator, and 'The Mouthpiece of God,' is living in open and fi '(grant polygamy. He recently buried the only legitimate wifu he had, but ho has tiro or six unlawful wives living His fiist and stcotid Councillors. George U Cannon and Joseph F. Smith, are both living in polygamy. 15. 11 ..otxirts is still living with threo wives. When in Washington he sworo he would never give them np and ho is keeping his oath. Angus M Cannon, president of bait Lake btake, (which is the local church), is living in polygamy. Scores of bitdanns are in polygamy." He reports that polygamy is prac iced in Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada, New Mexico and Arizona, as well as in Utah. He has been travelling for nearly elevr j years in that do, graded, spotted section, lie says he bas never yet met a single old Moimon who did not favor polyg' amv. tie writes tho following aud 1 16 instructive : "Tbey are bound to believe in it and approve it. ror their prophet, Joseph Smith, said in his revelation on polygamy: 'Behold, I reveal onto you an everlasting covenant (refer ring to the covenant ot plural mar riage), 'and if ye abide not in that covenant then are ye damnod, for no one can reject this covenant and be permittod to enter into my glory.' llio revelation bas never been re pealed, and stands as a bulwark in defense of the dectrine. Further more, it is enforced by tho example of tho leaders of the church who are continuing in polygamy." Not content with prostituting wo meu in tho distant west, tbey send out their sly, false, insinuating agents of lust throughout the old statts. One of this gang of emissa ries was in Wilmington going from house to house within a week. They all lie about the prevalence of polyg amy. Dr. Wishard, writing of tho great otataclcs and even impossibili ties of reaching polygamy now in Utah, says this : "One intelligently familiar with conditions in Utah would see at once that our legtl machinery is so clog ged and hindered that we can not suppress po'ygamy. Look at the conditions. We hare a Mormon governor, a Mormon Secretary of State, a Mormon Treasurer, a Mor mon Auditor, a Mormon Superin tendent of Public Instruction. And I am informed by an attornoy of this city that every prosecuting at torney in the state last year, except one, was a Mormon. The Supremo Judges are not Mormons, bnt they can touch no case until it is brought to them The prosecuting attorney can not only prevent tb case from going to the higher courts, but can prevent every case from reaching even the lower courta." So once more polygamy stands on its bind legs and dttios law, public opinion, the American people Wilmington Messenger. A Stanly Organ Manufacturer. Mr. J. F. Oiborno, tho orgsn builder of Stanly county, waa in the city last Monday. He has built thirty two organs withia the past four years. Mr. Osborne ssjs that his organ building waa the out growth of a great desire to own an organ, and not being ablo to por chaso one and having a mechanical turn of mind, he set to work and built an organ. Ilia first organ waa a very crude affair, but it did what it was built lor. It makes music. Since then Mr. Osborne bas had many orders for inatromenta. He makes good double reed, eleven stop, solid oak case organs and sella them (or $35 each. Those who have tried Mr. Osborne's orgaus say that they are equul to the organs of northern make which sell for $75. Monroe Euquirer. Question Answered. Yes, August Flower still has the lurpett al of an j mettiaioe io the civil ized world. Your mothers' and grand mot hera' oarer thought of using any thing else (or Indigestion or b.iiou. nena. locUrs wera scarce, and thej seldom heard ot Appendicitis, Nervous 1'roMration or tt fart failure, ete. They used August flower to clraa out tba system and stop fermentation of und. td food, regulaca the actioo of I ha liver, stimulate the nervous and organic action of the system, and lb. is all the took ben teeling dull and bad with headaches and other achee. You only reed a f doaea of (ireen's August lioeer. in liquid form, to snaka iqu I tatitHed thera is Dcihuig serious th natter wi'.b fwt. tot sals ty L W. I n eat, t-'rv.g iv, ai ouci Air j, i. Omens That Foretell to Englishmen Deaths of Royalties. A grewsome story comes from London of the appearance of the "phantom barge on the I names for three successive nights preceding the death of the queen, 1 his phan torn barge is believed by the water men of the Thames to appear when a member of tho Royal family -is abont to die, just as the celebrated "white lady of the Ilohenzollcrns" gives warning of the death of a rnon arch of that family. And when this phantom barge appears gliding thro' the lowly shadows and night mists of the river the great clock of West minster, Dig Den, gives 13 strokes at midnight instead of hie ordinary dozen. Just now any number of Thames watermen Cin be fonnd who say they have seen the phantom barge and heard Dig Den strike his ominous number. There aro well authenticated in stances of Dig Deo having struck 13 at midnight, (ince a soldier on sentry duty at Windsor was charged with having slept on poet and was sentenced to be shot. It wm charged that he was asleep there at midnight of certain night. 11 is defence was that he was not asleep and that he had heard Dig Don in London strike 13 at the moment he was charged wiih having been sleeping on duty. It was proved that on that night Dig Den bad struck 13 aud bad been board in Windsor. The man was Eardoned. In is is a recorded case, ut tho record does not say that any catastrophe happened to the royal family the next day. It is said that the phantom barge ! appeared on thn Thames at mid night and Dig Ben struck 13 on tho night beforo the death of the prince consort, and that the same things bappened the night preceding the death of the Princess Alice and of the Duke of Clarence. When the phantom bargo appeared on January 1Mb. I8U2, tho night before the death of the Dnke of Clarence, an other boat, pulled by fonr men, gave chase. The phantom boat glided awiftiy toward the terrace of the onse of commons and vanished. lbe pursuing boat dashed against the stone embankment and was com pletely wrecked. A warning which applies to tho death of sovereigns only is the fall of one of the stones at Stonchenge, the Drnid relic on Salisbury plain. A stone certainly did fall theie on the night of the death of the late queen. Exchange. How to Get Rich. Truckers in Eastern North Caro- ina this season have received as much as sixty cents a bunch for ! asparagus. A Florida gentleman, who has purchased land near Fay- etteville, will put it in celery, and says celery will grow in that climate in profusion aud of superior quality. The truoking indastry, an industry practically onknowo twenty years ago, bas come to bo one of the great est id baatern ISorth Carolina, and it is as yet not half developed. It as not only brought wealth to some. comfort to many, and given an up- at in prosperity to those sections that have gone largely and wisely into trnck farming, bnt it has brot' into the State a desirable class of population. State Sonntor Drown, who established a colony at Chad bourn, waa enabled to interest North ern farmers by showing the hand some profits made in growing ber ries and truck for .Northern msrkets. hey have succeeded and brought their friends to live in North Caro lina, and a beginning has just been made in the development of the trucking business of Eastern North Carolina. North Carolina cannot get rich icept by making things to sell to peoplo who live in other btates. rucking and fishing are destined i make Eastern North Carolina rich. Much of it is already a gar. den, with improved shipping facili ties, and land devoted to the equ ation of cotton, which pays very ttlo, Will be devoted to growing rawberries and early vegetables for market, thus giving larger returns r investment and labor. rrom News and Observer. The Asheville Citizen says tie territory of the eleven division deputies who remain in has been re arranged. Those in this end of the istnet are as follows: Deputy lally burton Durke, Catawba, Lin coln and Cleveland ; Deputy D.via Iredell; Deputy Shore Yadkin and Davie ; Deputy Sides Forsyth and Stokes ; Deputy Mills David son, Kowan. Stanly. Cabarrus; eputy Albright Gaston, Meck lenburg, Union, Anson : Doputy Hayes Watauga, A ilt-ghany, Ashe, arry. A revised list of 'be dead in Birmingham, Ala., and vicinity aa result of the tornado fixes the umber at 16 and the property loss at $.100,000. CNi au tbii sails ann Jj Pain-Killer.I a icai Pert la n-M. H smrtt. rt s ewca cuat rea P Orampa, Dlarrrtaaa, Colda, Ccugha, Neuralgia, B' Rhsumstlsm, 3 riaiH CMl SeHiw. iti or o t'in fl BJV OMLV Th 64MU ( M FIRST DAVIS' H H M j 4, ' J A dispatch ot the znd from ,e Voik says: Without the slightest quaver in his well modulated voice and displaying no outward 'gn o regret or remorse, Charles F. Jones secretary and valet to the late Wil liani Marfh Dice, to day confessed tinder oath that he had ended the life of his employer and lnefactor with chloroform. The confession was tho climax of a rcmarkahlo recital in which whs laid bare detaila of an alleged con spiracy which had for its cbj ct the seizure of threo million dollars in cash and negotiable securities and the conversion of three millions in realty to cue of the alleged chief conspirator. There was a dramatic force in the directness and minute attention to detail with which Jones approached the tragedy the momont when ho covered the face of thesleeping man with the saturated napkin and 'hen waited lor bun to die. The sell confessed murderer told the story of the alleged plot from its inception. The capital crime he committed and all tho minor of fences that preceded it were, he do- dared, at the instigation and direc tion of Albert T. Patrick. It was Patrick, he said, who conceived tho idea of forging a will and forging transfers and conveyances. It was 1 atrit k who induced two persons to witness tho forged signature. It was Patrick who determined that Dice should die, and it was Patrick who sought to have him killed slow ly, and then, becoming impatient, determined upon quick action. And, according to Jones, remarkable it may seem, Dice never knew Patrick during his life time and nover saw hira but once. According to this remarkable con fession Patrick told Jones that the old man was lasting too long, that he must be put out of the wsy at ouco, that Jones should do the work and that there would really be no harm in it becauao Hice had poison ed his own wife years ago aud de served punishment. Jonos described his return to Mr. Ilice's apartments and the discovery of the millionaire sleeping peace fully in bed ; he told of bis stealthy search for a napkin and the fashion ing of it into a cone shape as di rected, ho said, by Patrick. Ho detailed the story of tho pinning i a small sponge at the point of the cone. Then he told of saturating the napkin and sponge with chloro form aud holding it over his own nostrils to test its effect. Jones looked straight iuto the eyes of Assistant District Attorney (Lborne and continued his story. without a break, without a tremor io his voice. - , Cyclone Picked a Chicken. Prof. T. O. Pearson, of Guilford College,' was here today aud was telling of some of the peculiar freaks which the little cyclone which visit ed that section a few days ago, played. The house ot the old darkey which was blown down, was direct ly in the path of the wind and not a timber of it was left except the steps, which bappened to be just out of the path of the wind and were left unmoved. A chicken was blown some distance and left hang ing by the head in a tree, about twelve feet from the ground. The chicken was entirely stripped of feathers, and was fouud banging in the tree much as if it were hanging in a market stall. Greeuaboro Teh cgram. Chief Wilkie.of the secret service, has announced the appearance of a new couuterfeit five dollar national bank note on the National Iron Dank, of Morristown, N. J. It is quite deceptive and printed on two pieces of paper between which silk fiber had boon distributed. The face of the note, apparently printed from an engraved plate, is defective in detail. Tho word "cashier," ab breviated iu the genuine to "cAsh'r," appears in the counterfeit as "cash." Catarrh lias brio me such a common diw.se that a persoa entirely free from this disguMing complaint is seldom met With, it is customary to .peek of Catarrh as nothing more serians than a bad cold, simple iiiflamnistioa of the H'se ami throat. It is, in fact, a comp!icnel and very dangerous diseass; if not at first, it Very soon tiecomes so. Tn. Mood ia quickly contaminated br the foul secretion., and the poison through the general circulation ia carried to all parts of the system. Salves, wabes am) .prats an unsatis factory and dM)poiiitini;, bersuse tliev da not reach the sent of the trouble. S. S. S. does. It cleanses the blood of the poiMjn and eliminates from the srstetlt ait catar rhal accretion, and thus cures thoroughly and permanently the worst casea. Ut T. A Willi Ilia ma. a ladlna dry-a, nbwrf. S. C, wtitr.- " rbant of Knanai 1 bad a ari-fr ra of naal Calarrt. with .11 irt diaairrrahte aflwta vhl.h Ub,aa Io that 4i.aM. nd arhlch mate lit pamfat ai4 arnliirah!. I aaed arthiw. -vr , at I hrti b IraJiaf ys .km a. ana aif.ri W aaiwtor. of f ' ,tui hut viiaoot aaniaK uy brllav. I taaa bvgao to take S a It had tkt eVwad a aat, ,nf curr.l MM J r ( i j .ha. taking aig htaa . botOaa I. v.rvm.l a a w I h. Of,' riar tviw la a, tftat rt l8Ki a pmauaot ran f Catarrh." is the nle puielr vef etabtc blood jmrit.r ka- a, aad the f rri. eat of all bloed nietlt ctaea aad toar. If Ton hav CatanB doa't ar.it antil it becoane. deej-eled and chronic, but be liaatouce ihe oe t f fi. S. S., and sen for out hook on hlood and SLia Iiiaraart aad ante our j hysroass about your ceaa. mda mrr. For 7 .-art I rt tmm sfteina ta tatui, . mm Azszivmx Makes the food more Wrte MrtMl t "Let no Guilty Man Escape." And now it seetna they have dis ensaed scandalous frauds upon the Government in the Philippines. This is not surprising. Some time sgo the discovery was made that a ring of army officers had been formed to gobble tip and control the hemp crop, as a result ot which the price of Manila hemp jumped a wy op, and the fellows in the ring pocketed lols of money. This was to lie investigated but ii investigated no report has yet been made. lbe last frauds discovered are in the commissary department. How extensive they are, or how many are Implicated in them U not yet known and probably never will be, for if there bo any "big injins" in it the proceedings will be sonat-hed before they are reached. We had been anticipating something likothis, for somo time ago we read a letter trom Manila by some correspondent who referred to tho high handed robbery that was going oo there, and re marked that practically unlimited stealing was going on ami that many trusted otlicers were impli cated in it, The announcement of the dis covery of these commissary frauds is accompanied by the stereotyped egend "let no guilty man escape." which haa been played until it has become a ridiculous farce that fools no one. It simply means that a few of the unimportant individuals who played the part of tools and go bet weens may bo. convicted and tigged, while the big thieves who got must of the loot will escape, stand by and exclaim "Jet no guilty man escape Wilmington Star. - Not in a Hurry. Ja"pan is not quite in S) much of hnrry to draw the sword as the news diep8tches accentuattd by the writers of scare headlines, wool J ap pear to make ont. Tho Minchnriau agreement has been re j cted by Chi- Tn Or.t ..una. fdnun,i,n n ,..!... nr., .u v.iij uoi'iiiiltu in jij 101 CI r, who are capable and careful stales- men, would not be likely to plung( tbeir country into war until they should have complete information of the character of tho Iinsto Chin ese tr'eaty and should have bet n c n rinccd that Japan's interests and her uational safety would be so injuri onely adected thereby as to make necessary the tremendous saciitice that would be entailed by a conflict with Hu6sia. Philadelphia Hccord. . The Charlotte Presbyterian Stand, ard says the hnge steel trust shows that one man "controls as much property as all the farmers between the Potomac and the Mississippi rivers own in farming funds. Fortnnately the farmers between the Mississippi and Potomac con trol more votes than all that money could buy." Hagus-McCorkle Dry Goods Co., Importers and Wholesalers, GREENSBORO, IN. C. DRY GOODS, NOTIONS AND HATS. g0" We solicit trade of Merchants only, and eil nothing at retail. f We cordially invite all Mervhaitt to call on us when in Grutnsboro, or to seo our Travelling 8alesman befor placing orders elsewhere. if. f r a i u i & f ' ' 'Ha? wntelorltini prleaa. oreaU anaeaamlaeaaf Thos. Fawcirr, rreaidnnt. . L. Hass, First Vice Pre. FIRST nATIOilALDAt.K of .It. Airy. IKCOItroitATCD. Capital. ., Vmi4 I . DIKECTORS. Th. Faweett C. L. Hanks. M. L. Fa-tt. A. Trotter, G. Fatx-ett. This bark solicits the aecouius of Werchart. Manufacturers Farn,rs and Individuals. The accounts ot th Merchants lo-ated in twns ad isft-nt reeeivrd on favorable terms. The fund- of our euntonwri are seeuivd by two turClar urnot steal -heats and the Vale T.me tk. Interest allowed on Ravings Dei-oarta ay'VVfi,'a4. a : - '. . . ' 9 -.mA n i u.. as il4.r l.-rt . ever t-'o'e Wi'.'s f. oire'.fniu il V t:i !"; we cn a ve xn money jj t'ue jit.tth an4 the Irt.. . .l p rrrt, fctfwy or iii.i.hu vr n., tunitf yoa cann al'urit ti a Hs twimafi-tprera. Then f'ire, a u iia eoanji .i-u ui.eeer. If y a cn ef'er rwt f"tert terms. I tmi ur ia;t ccUM. cDP-t n.y Cittct a r'atii d P3Vt52R Puns delicious and nholcsome rere , v,sr. Kindness to Dumb Animals. The following little story is told by a friend of mine : Think before you strike any eieature that can not speak. "'When I was young, atfd' lived op in the mountains of New Hampshire, I worked for a farmer, and was given a rpan of horses to plow with, one of which was a four- year old colt. The colt, after walk ing a few steps would lie down in the furrow. Tho farmer was pro voked and told me to it on the colt hetd to keep him from risit g while he whipped- him 'to break him of that notion,' as he said. Put jnt-t tin n a neighbor came by. lie said, 'There's something wrong here, let him get up at.d let us find ont what is the matter.' He pa'.ied the colt, looked at his harness, and then said : "Look at this colhr"; it i so long and narrow, aud carries the harness so high that when he begins to pull It slips back and chokes him, so that he can't breathe.' And so it was, and but for that neighbor we should have whipped as good a creature as we had on the farm, because he lav dowu when he could not breathe." lioys, always remember that all ariim its are dntnti. and can not mako their wants known. Think before yon strike any creature that can not speak. Children's Friend. Thfse ur: swet words, but hjw mucS y pain ana aurrerinjr tney use-l to m&i&.-p, j different nov. net Moiher'a T.fend tiU become known expectant mothers nv tern snared much cf the angu sh of child birth. Mother's friend la a iinimert to ha PP-'ied externally. It is rjbbed thorjyghl in:o the rmiscleaof the abdorren. It g.vfci ela..t:c ty and strength, and when the l.nal treat strain c;r.es tne re pond quickly and easily viihsut pan. Mother's Friend il never taken imunaHy. Internal remedies at th.s time & more harm than grod. If a mgf I li) I ' woman Is suppled with this jpiendid lini ment shs n-eii never fr.ar rising or sa-eilintf breads, morning sickness, or any of the dscomfors which uiualiy accompany preg nancy. The proprietor of a larpe hotel In Tampa, Fla wntes: "My wile had an awful time with her fir-it child. During her secani pregnancy. Mother's Friend was used and the baby was born easily befo-e the doctor arrived. It's certainly great. " Orl Mother's Fri.nd at ths drug .tore. Si per battle. TtK BRADF1E1D , REGULATOR CO., eg Atlanta, Ga. r iut vnt frae illustrated bejk. M Before Riby U lion..- AIRY MARBLE WORKS, Mount Airy, N.O. W. 0. HUNESt CO., Proprietor!. NJiBlIarlilfiHraiilsMfflffils A. G. T Borrsa. M. L. Fawcitt, Cashier. wi r.rA i. i t' '; cf'rrt. . a l ate . uh.lf i. 4 mi Vwvw ..a i -.i t'i 4 v.i i Lave aa oil uu I rae to -.lay. A 1 .. r i, r I U Sewitf UrS-r.u e vrnVrv'r.a .-it u' ': ' iti'e a'ie t.tA'- -u. . . v i . s.4-..uia i -an w k h,:c, i t .!. -.:.-- j: ,-, c5i o i r, t.i.itr il-, ft ! , the .Vfi'tr," -it r, w l to t t a -ist -r . in r,".,
The Mount Airy News (Mount Airy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 11, 1901, edition 1
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