J... " r ' : - ' ' . ; ' : ' . " " : "Ms VOL. I NO. 7 SYLVA, N. C JULY 9 1915, $1.00 THE YEAR IN ADVANCE FRANK HOLT COMMITS SUICIDE. Frank Holt who put the bomb in the Capital at Washington which exploded last Friday and who shot J. P.,Morgan at Glencove last Satur day. Committed suicide in his cell On last Friday Hlt placed a bomb in the reception room at the capital which exploded but did very little damage as no one was killed or injured. He then went to the Morgan home and shot Mr Morgan. Mr. Morgan is improving and it is believed that be will soon recover. Holt said'that his object in plac ng this bomb in ths capital was to show the people what was going on in Europe, and his object in visit ing the Morgan home was to h a ve Mr. Morgan stop the shipment of munition to the warring countries. A CASE IN POINT. "Somehow it never occured to me that I should be vaccinated ! i -a i gainst typhoid tilr yesterday, ad- a j.anu uiiiiiviug uhjudcs, aim uiuo mitted a young man quite seriously.! solve many probiems of disease "Why not you?" he was asked. . and he-.ith. The multi-millonaire "Didn't you have confidence in it?" who really seeks to do good in t; e 1111. . 1 1' t40h, yes, but I felt that it was a , men and children good tning ior wo perhaps, anl a fine thing for the army and navy, but for a strong man like me, somehow it didn't ! seem necessary and rather a trivial thing. I thought it was something iiewthe doctors had found and ' wanted to experiment with." "You said it did not occur to you that it was your duty to be vacci nated till yesterday. - Why yester day?" "Well a few days ago I heard that one of my good friends was sick and had been taken to the hospital. He was always so strong and well and rather prided himself on his goad health, that I thought it surely could be nothing serious and that he would soon be out and back at his work. However hs going to the hospital puzzled me, and as soon as I conveniently could I vent to see him. As I approached the room where he lay, he greeted me with the warning that if I had not already been vaccinated against typhoid fever to go do so at once. You see what neglecting it has done for me, he said. As I watch ed his intense suffering and noted his alarming condition, I realized j for the first time that i was no more immune than he; that his chances for passing a pleasant sum mer without illness only a few days ago seemed as fair as mine. Any way, I took him at his word and went immediately, to the dispensary and took my first treatment." "How is it serving you? Did it make you sick?" "The idea of such a thing! But I might have said it made me a little sick if I hadn't seen John suffering with the real thing. . But, -really, it is nothing to mind, and think what it prevents! Holmes Bryson left Wednesday for the market to buy a lot of ne w goods. GR0W1HG 0L0. CAUSE AND PBEV NT10N BY THE OLD BOY. (Continued from last week) Men and women grow old faster than their years when they take the dregs of boiled water in their systems. Families who use this form of cooking show their prema ture age. The vapor or steam of water, con densed and made palatable, is a solvent of old age depostis in the body. There is no reason why it should not be adopted as a drink. All mellow and sweet fruits that are juicy, are natural solvents of old age deposits. The strained juice of very sweet and mellow apples is excellent and effective if taken fresh every day. But all fruits that are I fully ripe serve the same purpose; for nature distil's her fluids in her fruits. One wrong principle of cookery is that which allows vapor or steam to escape from anything that is prepared for the table. There should j be some system invented that re-j very young for his age. He has tains the steam; or else distilled just said that he owes1 his penect water sheuld be employed. Some health to the fact that he has al day when civilization rises one ways eaten carefully and sparingly, notch higher in the scale of intelli- with due regard to the needs of his gence, there will be established in bedy. every town alld villae' Pllblic st31ls that will produce water for cooking , . . , wor,a cPUia no empioy ms money to a better advantage. Just think , - . , & . vaat it wouii mean to tne race to have this fair land honey-combed with water stills, public test labora tories to analysize and test all foods that are under suspicion; and pub - llC rist mms to produce daily whole flour from hard winter wheat, hav- mg the husks ot the brand removed! Humanity is the victim of uncount- ed ills; and very little is being done to check the source of suffering; while much is essayed to ameliorate , x the damage that lack of foresight has made possible. I am showing you the J way to , soft as a child's," rests the profound keep old age out of your body, No ; est truth in human life today. When matter what your present condition may be the way is open for you to make your body into a perfect tern- pie yea, the beautiful temple of Life the dwelling place of God. Such a body will have a clearer mind capable of winning success terial; or minerals in the foods eat while now the future seems dark en beyond the needs of the bones and uninviting. Thomas A. Edison, the great in ventor, is a man whose mind is one of the deepest and keenest on earth; and whose opinions sway millions rightfully. Edison is a little better than sixty-seven years old. To Quote h.s exact words. My grand- , - : " ed with tne story oi tne great v en tian, Louis Comoro, who, when he found himself a wreck in middle life, reformed his diet, and by keep ing it right, managed to live more than a hundred years. My grand father, after that ate- carefully, and lived to be one hundred and four. No disease killed him. He was perfectly well up to the timehe died re lost interest in life. The cells of which his body was composed were anxious to get away. So my grand father told his children that he was going to his daughter's house to die He went to her house, undressed went to bed and died. There was nothing the matter with him. He had lived as long aa he wanted to And, my father died the same wa They found that the secret of Ion life and perfect heaUh lay in righ 'eating. As for me, I eat only be-, cause I want to live. As a result my body is not poisoned with de caying iiibttcr and surplus blood my arteries are as soft as a child's. I believe in the intelligence of the cells that constitute our bodies; that the intelligence of a human being is the sum of the intellects of all 1 .11 T j. .1 . 1 - fight for life." Let us hope ttat this great man, perhaps the greatest man now living, will retain the full possession of all his faculties until j he has exceeded the century mark; and that then, having tired of life, he will di3 in purfect health, when the cells of his body become an xious to get away. To die in perfect health! What a consummation! Admiral Dewey at this writing is past seventy-five years old; he i All along the line of human ex- perience, there comes the universal , , . verciici oi tiiose who nave pioveu the truth in their own lives, that health and the posaessiun of the 'acuities unimpaired in advanced . - . ... age, is due, iirst ot all, to n;t i - I will refrain from making reference to myself liere but I lleve those who read ihh wiii ogree with me that I am correct in what I sny. I am past ninety-eight, and ; I will leave you' "to judge whether my faculties are on the wane. It has been said, that I write like a young man. He who said that spoke truthfully. I want to add, ; however, that I think like a young 1 T feel like a young man. But Behind the seeming cusual re mark of Edison, "My arteries are as the arteries begin to harden, then i old age commence; and this is ac j tually occuring in people who are j not yet out of their twenties and their thirties. A careless diet may cause the deposits of old age ma of the body, may pile up ti eir sup plus any time of life; and no longer can it be said that their arteries ! are "as soft as a child's." Here is j the secret of the disease known as j growing old. It is wholly controlled by what you eat and drink. One of the first signs of age is the dimming of the eyesight. While the eyes may be disturbed by many causes, in ninety cases out of a hundred, the Chief trouble is in the blood; and the blood is nothing more than the food it is made of. Old age deposits beginning at any time, even in youth, harden the nerves that support the vision; and they are the most delicate nerves in the body. Even where there is no other kind of trouble, the ad vancing years always play havoc with the eyes; and there is but one channel for their enmity, and this is in hardening the blood vessels and interfering with their nervous condition. The appoach of ear trouble is one of the easiest proceses to trace ms ceiis. l am certain mar uie;the fine nerves. Hearing is be t cells possess intelligence. So long ; when the whole circuiation of the as they want to live, see how they body is best; whe the blood that as age secures a grip on its victim. J The ear drum vihrates like, the Hisr. of a telephone, and its v orations set in motion the nerves ttiat com municate with the brain centers wfcera these movements are trans lated into intelligence known as sound. Many blood vessels and many fibers of nerves are involved in this sense. Their work cannot be well done when deposits choke the small blood vessels, or harden supplies nerves and tissue to the ear and its parts, is pure and whole some, vigorous and free from inju rious deposits Under such condi tions, there will nevercome a time when bad hearing will follow; for any man or woman has the power A A 1 1 lo preserve ine neanng ior more than a hundred years, when you meet a person to whom you must shout your remarks, you can always know that old age deposits have brought on the loss of that great faculty. Preserve it at ail hazards. (Continued next week.) win entertainirll the Ministers wao will Editor Journal: Noticing your be in atteiance at the Bible Con article in the Journal last week j ference an to that end ask those concerning tne strawbe nes grown! ; iiiimsLers luring uie auove uonier- m ti e eastern part of the State iiaL.i u i y ence to fillj3Ut the coupon below brings to mind more things on the and hand $ one of us committee-, subject of atoragsS.?--:.J -raeuaQnlo we may . have, ar One year ago I bought " tek" ttibiP tiiiem&V " of sand strawberry plants, set out so of all -Spears and Ministers who ,T 1 aU may be prllent. Please attend to late m the season May 1st that , . Ff I lost more than half of them, which reduced the plat of land to about .. one half acre left in berries and , i where it looked like they were all -1 dead I planted the middle in navy beans and kept the beans and plants cultivated clean and in. the fall the beans paid for cnltivating strawberries. On t'ie fourth of May I commenc ed picking berries and on June 14th the picking ceased, and when I be- gan to reckon the profits I found I had picked a little over one thous - and quarts of berries, (some of wmcn lb oernes would nil a quart busket) and these berries sold for from 10 cents to 20 cents per quart averaging more than $ZAi) per crate of 24 quarts or at the rate of ! $225.00 per acre, and nearly all sold on the local home market, and to add further to the profit of these berries, they were raised on the land between the terraces where apples are grown at the rate I of 48 trees to the acre and if the trees bore one to nve busUels per - Baptist cMfch will meet with Mrs. tree, then you have an average of; j R Ensll Wednesday afternoon, say $1.00 per tree for the apples July 14thlpthree o'clock, grown on the same land. " $;f " Every family should have two The hopM boys Pys Andrews short rows in their garden to supply th an$t'heroke? 14 th Canton the family. I picked as many as 17 th &d ynesville 21 st apd 24th 28 large berries from one plant. this a11 of thef lf,U be played at home seasonmany of which weighed . exc ""JftjM crowds out more than one ounce each. . Prof, arra Mrs. J. C. Ingrim re- This is my first experience and turned hofM last Friday from Corn- next year I am going to try to do better. - . Now is the time to set out plants, in order to get a crop next year, or not later than September 15th to 30th may do, but July and August is the best time to set them. R. F. Jarrett. U 3 I RPITT Tfl UUll. Ji Dill I I.. I U SPEAEi AT. FRANKLIN. Hon. Jatfbs J. Britt will dc" ver an address fpn the subject of aie improvements of Western North Carolina atranklin July 10. Mr Britt gyill discuss good roads as it is oneM the most needed im- 12 provementjli There wiif be. a party meet Mr. Britt here iday about noon to take him fDver to Franklin and they woul if be glad to have as many as w?l-join them here. You will&ot only hear Mr. Britt's address bit a number of very prominent lien are going to speak while the (flautauqua is g -i ii 3a. m , WESTERNS NORTH CAROLINA INTERDENOMINATIONAL BIBLE CONFEREfCE. iSf - SYLVA, NiC. AUGUST 1st to 10th 1915.; m WE, ihegmdersighned committee on Entertjfiment appointed for the Western ?frth Carolina Interde nominatioMl Bible Conference de- i sire the hejf rty co-operation of all the peoplejn and around Sylva in . . f . , c uiis ai uiic?t. - ft Rcspectfullv, jpj. Dills, Chairman. : A; Nichols. . ' 3VfD Cowan. . To the dertakiment Committee of the WeJJfern Nortrr Carolina In terdenominational. Bible Conference, I will ergrtain Minrfers or Speaker during the Bioie Con ference. med Andrewpase Ball team will be ' here Satinf y July 10 th they have 1 gotJ goodtam and you will get I yur mons . worth if you see this i gdnie. The Syl boys -had tough luck this seasopfcseing several games by dose scored Read Hipes .Bryson's ad. in this issue and in ember he has lots of bargains pgclothing, dryjgoods etc ITS St Everybp come out to the game Saturday, ifSiere is not a good crowd j it: will be tlast game here this year i '. SI. j The w olilns Auxiliary of the pabello kMJfwhere they have been visiting f niseis and relatives. Mr. aMfMrs. James Marion Knight ivisiting Mr. Knight's jsister Mrs! pC. Ingrim. Bliss Dpyi' 'McKee is visiting friends Mwynesville this week. tie ! si 1 I 4 it