Newspapers / Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.) / June 29, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
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pppllliiip e .>1 si\!iu«n ascii II L%i: “Cooking Never Tires Me” My kitchen nnrkl—-tVip is comfortable and cool—there is no coal or wood to carry—and no fires to build. I use a New Perfection Oil Cook Stove.*’ A New Perfection Oil Cook Stove^ the stove with the long blue chimney, gives kitchen comfort in 2,000,000 American homes. It turns on and off like a gas stove. Its fuel cost is economy itself, 2 cents a meal for 6 people. The long blue chimney gives'a perfect draft and assures a clean odorless heat and a lasting satisfaction. New Perfection Oil Cook Stoves are made in many styles and sizes. They are sold by most good dealets. Look for The Long Blue Chimney Use Aladdin Security Oil to obtain the best results in Oil Stoves, Heaters and Lamps STANDARD OIL COMPANY Washington, D. C. Norfolk, Va. Richmond, Va. (New Jersey) BALTIMORE MD. m THE lONG Charlotte, N. C. Charleston, W. Va. Charleston. S. C. BLUE CHIMNEY our house js imprayed in sppearance. THE STORMmOOF ROOF C. W. Buchanan, Marion, N. C. PATENTS I trade marks and copyrights obtained or no fee. Send model, sketches or photos and de- ' Bcription for FREE SEARCH and report on patentability. Bank references. PATEMTB BUILD FORTUNES for you. Oiu'free booklets tell how, •whal; to invent and save you money. Write today. D. SWIFT & CO. , PATENT lawyers, 1303 Seventh St., WashingtoB, D. C.^ Advertise in The Progress. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as the administrator of the estate of W. B. Ramfelt, deceased, late of McDowell and Cleveland Coun ties, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them, to the undersigned at Shelby, N. Q., on or be fore the 25th day ^f June 1917, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery, All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay ment. This the 19th day of June, 1916. F. E. Ross, Admr. of •W. B. Rumfelt, deceased. C. B. McBrayer, Atty. Subscribe to The Progress. What Some of The Scattered Sons Are Doin^. We rejoice oyef the achievements of our absent sons. They daily i^ive us cause boastfully to exclaim, when others recite their worthy deeds, *"He was born in North CairoliDa.” They are at work in every laod; in every country of the old world; in the awakeuing Orient; remodeling the acqueducts of the Caesars, and repairing the abutments of the Bridge of Sighs. Id London a North Carolinian is building an electric railway with American capital, and another is there the master of trade the world over. A North Carolina drummer sells blankets in Manchester and another more enterprising disposes of raz ors and blades on the streets of Damascus. The fastest train in Continental Europe is engineered by a native of Guilford county, and North Carolina engineers pull the throt tle up the slopes of the Andes, in African jungles and across the island of Japan. A North Caro lina contractor has thrown a can tilever bridge over the river on the road to Mandalay. An engi neer, graduate of our A. and M. College at Ealeigh, installed the machinery which lights the most southern beacon on the habitable globe at Terra del Fuego, and a Bertie county sawyer cuts timber today in the far north of Sweden in the light of the midnight sun. A North Carolina plumber installed the electric plant at Bagdad which out-shines the lamp of far-famed Aladdin. Today a North Caro linian is carrying laundry ma chinery to China and another has carried to Germany improved ma chinery for brewing lager beer. The listless looking Coolie by his tepee in India cools himself with ice made on a Charlotte ice ma chine, and a North Carolina gin outfit gins cotton in the islands of the seas. From the coves of Yancey and the mountain fastnesses of V^tau- ga we are shipping cheese to the soldiers fighting near the Swiss border. The world rocks in com fort in North Carolina chairs, and chambers and polaces of royalty are beautiful and gorgeous with High Point furniture.—Hon. Fran cis D. Winston before the North Carolina Society at Atlanta, May 1916. Rock Creek News. Nealsville, June 22.—Miss Ida Mosteller and John Arrowood were married a few days ago, taking their many friends by surprise After a brief honeymoon the young couple will go to Mut Cut where they will reside. The Sunday school at Bethel is progressing nicely with J. D. Mashburn as superintendent. Jethro Morgan, who was injured by being thrown from a buggy when his mule became frightened at an automobile, is improving. E. Y. Lawing made a business trip to Marion last week. Construction work is well under waj^ on the new steel bridge near Bethel and if the weather permits it will be completed within a short time. This bridge will be of great benefit to the people of this com munity. The Memorial exercises have been postponed for an indefinite period, as this is a very busy sea son with the farmers. Crops in this section are looking fine.. Corn has been much improv ed by the recent showers. Most of the wheat crop has been cut and a good yield is expected. Board of Health Advises. Vaccina tion As Preventive of Typhoid. On account of the very large number of deaths from typhoid fever that has been reported to the State Board of Health within the last few weeks, the Board is urg ing the people to lose no time in taking, the immunizing treatment against this disease. It says that on account of every case being a new source of infection and its spread and contact so insidious and unsuspecting, that no intelligent person can afford to neglect taking this means of protecting himself. Furthermore, the Board says that June is the month when the death rate from typhoid fever begins to rise and that already the incoming death certificates are showing an unusually large number of deaths from this disease for this season of the year. Vaccination as an effective meansof preventing typhoid fever,” says the Board, “has been well es tablished, but the main reason why people continue to get sick and die from typhoid is indifference and not ignorance. The indifference and neglect that tolerate fiies, filth and the spread of typhoid from in dividual to individual is that same indifference that makes a person neglect vaccination as a means of nrotecting himself. Indifference is now the cause of more deaths from typhoid fever than ignorancc. ” If you have a farm or real estate of any kind you wish to sell, an 4idvertisement in The Progress will do the work for you. Remedy for the Chiggers. If a bath in hot water, or in wa ter containing salt or strong soap, is taken within a few hours after exposure in shrubbery and weeds infested with “chiggers” or “red bugs,” no ill effects will be ex perienced. After a long exposure, however, a bath bas practically no effect, and direct remedies are necessary. After irritation has set in, and small red soots appear, the aopli- cation of a moderately strong so lution of ammonia to the affected parts is recommended by the De partment of Agriculture’s ento mologists. A supersaturated solu tion of bicarbonate of soda, or common cooking soda or saleratus, will afford relief. Liberal applica tions should be made until the ir ritation subsides. If the suffering is severe, a dilute tincture of iodine or col Iodine should be lightly ap plied. Vance Statue Unveiled^ Washington, June 22.—A bronze statue of Zebulon Vance, for many years senator from North Carolina, was unveiled today in statuary .hall at the capitol. Members of the North Carolina colony in Washington attended, and Vice President Marshall made the principal address. You are liable to an attack of some form of Bowel Complaint and should provide yourself with the best known Remedy, Dr. SETH ARNOLD’S BAL SAM. Warranted by Marion Phar macy, DAVIS’ CARRIAGE PAINTS are colors ground in tough, elastic Ooa^h Varnish and one coat will make your faded automobile or carriage loofe like new. They are easy to apply and dry with a strong, high gloss-clinching Enamel finish. Made for wear and tear. Ask Your Dealer or Write Us. THE H. B. DAVIS COMPANY, Baltimore, Md. ' Renew your subscription, please. ■ AFTER THREE YEARS Marion Testimony Remains Un- shaken. Time i» the beat test of truth 18 a Marion story that has stood the w of time. It is a story with a no^ which will come straight home to man® of US. J. P. Williams, mgr. Telephone Co. Johnson St.. Marion, says: “I was all run down from kidney trouble and th© best doctors in the state had no hope for my recovery. I had rheumatic twinges throughout my body. I was extremely neryons and didn’t sleep well. The kid ney secretions were scanty and scalded in passage. I got Doan*s Kidney Piiig at Streetman’s Drug Store and they cured me.” (Statement given Febrnarv 10. 1911.) ^ Over Three Years Later Mr. Williams said: “Since I recommended Doan’s EKdney Pills, I haye had no sign of kid ney trouble. I think they saved mv life.” ^ Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t sim ply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s ^dney Pills—the same that Mr. Wil liams has twice publicly recommended Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo n’ MEN ^ All men look neater and feel bet ter when their clothing is neatly cleaned and pressed. We do all kinds of dyeing, clean ing, pressing and repairing. PALM BEACH SUITS cleaned and press, 50c a suit. PANAMA and STRAW HATS cleaned and reblocked. Our prices are reasonable. Beaux Monde, (Under new management.) S. C. Roberts, Mgr. Eagle BIdg. Main St THE CLINCHFIELD ROUTE CAROLINA, CLINCHFIELD & OHIO RAILWAY AND Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railway of South Carolina Effective January 16, 1918 Eastern Standard Time Southbound Pass. Pass. Elkhorn City Dp *2:10 pm Dante Dp 3:33 p ia *8:30 a m St. Paul Dp 3:56 p m 8:52 a m Speers Ferry Dp 5:15 p m 10:17 a m Johnson City Dp 6:50 pm 11:45 a m Erwin Ar *7:40 p m*12:25 p m Erwin Dp t3:30 a m 12:35 pm Kona Dp 4:37 a m 2:04 p m Aitapass Dp 5:23 a m 2:45 p m Marion Dp 7:00 a m 3:55 p m Bostic Dp 8:03 a m 4:57 p m Spartanburg Ar tl0:30 a m *6:05 p m Northbound Spartanburg Dp f2:00 p m*ll:00 a m Bostic Di) 3:26 p m 12:07 p m Manon Dp 5:20 p m 1:05 p m Aitapass Dp 7:05 p m 2:20 p m Kona Dp 7;50 p m 3:03 p m Erwin Ar tlO OO p m *4;30 p m Erwin Dp *8:15 a m *4;35 p m Johnson City Dp 8.55 a m 5:15 p m Speers Feixy Dp 10:35 a m 7:02 p m St. Paul Dp 12:17 p m 8:30 p m Dante Dd 12:38 p m *9:00 p m Elkhorn City Ar *2:00 p m ♦—Daily. t—Mixed daily except Sunday. Patrons are requested to apply to near est agent for definite information or to Chas. T. Mandel, Gen’l Pass. Agt. Johnson City, Tenn. THE THRICE-A-WEEK EDITION OF THE NEW YORK WORLD gactically a Daily at the Price of a Weekly. No other Newspaper in the world gives so much at so low a price THE THRICE-A-WEEK WORLD'S regular subscription price is only $1.00 ^r year, and this pays for 156 papers. for one year for $1.60. The regular subscription price of the two papers is |2 00. CHICHESTER S PILLS THE DIAMOND BRAND. " A«kyrapDivi I^IU in Se4 and TOxjs. sealed with otber. J rcan kaown as Best. SafiKt. Always RdiabI* SOID BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Take advantage of our splendid club offer—^The Progress and three magazines, with McCall pattern free, all one year, for only $1.35.
Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 29, 1916, edition 1
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