I,1
4
terests cf the People of Wilkes
and Adjoining Counties.
s
A A. I ' .
!
n
A
t! V?
33
- Ij , H M M il !J ii
A
NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C, MAY 27. 1910.
NO. 43.
VOL. XIV.
Advertising is
lion of Success in
If your Busing i
Having it is Worth
Every Day in the Yar
A Duty To
One's Self.
The ufeLBanl for
safety anronence
is a duty every ptrson
owes himself. In (very
paper almost we rd f
theft or fire. The stnn
thing is that a person
intelligence will canyfcr
conceal money, when
risk is so great a
earning power deitri
ed. . In duty to self y,
ought to take advaatage
o f the protection this
Bank affords. Start to
ird s
Doesn't Nix Id Pelitia.
Nt-ws aiut Observer.
The reason why had government
flourishes and why selfish machines
control political action is because so
fumy men neglect their public duty.
The tirst duty, of cours, of every man
is to provide for his own household.
il' is a Rood husband ami. father who
Iocs that, but if he stops there he is
a wry poor sort of citizen. There
arc irood men in their homes who
actually sneak of their failure to do
their duty as citizens as if it were
virtue. The Monroe Enquirer thus
tells of such a citizen of Union coun
ty, who on a recent visit to Monroe
was asked about politics. Turning to
the Enquirer man this citizen said
"You put it in the paper that lots
of fellows know more about every
body's business than they know about
their own. I broke a mule colt to the
plow this spring and when you plow
a mule colt all spring you have no
time for much else. 1 broke a mule
NOBODY WANTS TO BE RESPONSIBLE, i CONVICT LOSES UFE TRYING TO ESCAf C.
I YELLOW BITTER LAWS GETTING
I WITH SmiATiON.
AWAY
1 ;j.J k kl..;m P.lcnitor Ha MalfS V,.tif fc
The Republic. Count, Committee to Decide m . ' " . , .
I Postmaster For Statesville Wag-
net Declines .nd . Chairman The following ,s,.a eh cent,, on.
,f the Cunt, Will Not ; lUdeigh to tin-1 luulotte .
I jt.iti. lo-i.jnn miards lounil it noc
turne one.
The latest scheme to decide the ,
postoftice contest in Statesville is to
have the members of the Republican
township committees meet and name
a man. These committees are com
posed of about TO members and it is
understood, unless the plan is chang
ed that a meeting will be called in
the the near future and the balloting
will proceed until a candidate is nam
ed. It is stated that Congressman
Cowles, who for some reason does not
care to make a choice among the
postofiice candidates since Mr. I.. C.
Wagner declined the appointment,
ha9 suggested this plan and desires
that the candidate be named in that
The idea has not met with
colt last spring, too. I have been busy . . T. -.. ,1i,j,,(.tion
urp-ed is that representatives
day.
yr
It. A. Spaiidiour, Pres.
C. b Morrison, V. 1'.
C. 11. Sheets, Cashier.
BANK OF WILKES
N. C.
with mv own business,
It is a virtue for a citizen not to
meddle with his neighbor's private
business and a virtue for him to at
tend to his own affairs, and a man
who "plows a mule colt all spring"
has very little time for anything else.
Hut, when the spring plowing is over,
it is inst as much a dereliction of
duty for a citizen not to interest
in securing good government by
proper participation in pontics us w
fail to "plow a mule colt in the
spring" when it need to be done.
The Union county farmer who Uoesn t
mix with pditics" is thereby turning
litical control over to those who
have a personal axe to grind and is
tbdicating his high public duty. Sup-
. . rt (.!.. I 1 1.., 4
pose lus iore-iamers nau ueen w
busy "plowing a mule colt" to throw
the tea overboard in Wilmington har
bor, the man who "doesn.t mix in pol
itics" might have a King as ruler and
be denied the blessings of the free
government under which he lives
It is not a virtue to be claimed tor
anv man to lay he does not"niix with
politics." It is an advertisement that
he shirks his public duty and leaves
in the j
rural districts should not be called j
to name a postmaster in Statesville,
seeing they are not within the juris
diction of the office; another objection
is that the balloting might result in
favor of some one who for good rea
sons might not be acceptable. It is
also stated that Mr. Wagner, who is
chairman of the county committee,
could decide the matter by endorsing
a candidate. Mr. Wagner, however,
has declined to make a choice, leav
the ilifixiun to Congressman Cowles
and now the Congressman has sidi
stepped by offering the committee
election method.
The active candidates for postmas
ter are J. L. Sherrill, R. V. Tliarpe,
H. V. Furches. Other names men
tioned are those of R. R. Reid, .1. C
Duke, D. L. Raynier, -I. S. Leonard
Statesville Landmark.
Put Intelligence Into Our Itoait Mak
Insr,
ProgiTSHlvn Farmer
We are in receipt of a copy of the
report of the Committee on Agricul
ture of the United States Senate, re-
State prison gnare
essary this morning to shoot to deal!
. ... i .. , ,t it...
U convict in omer ui o-vni.
cape of a number of convicts who had
evidently conspired to break away
from their squad even at the oust of
killing a guard or so. The convict
kill was J. L. Tox, serving a 12-year
sentence for manslaughter from An
son county. He escaped from the
prison nearly a year ago o imiMon "c
a dummy that he left Ins ceil to looi
the guards while be made good his
escape over night. The dummy was
tucked away snugly in the cell cot.
Very recently Fox was recaptured in
Kew London, Conn., and brought
buck here. He was a comparatively
young man and nice looking when
dressed in c:tizen's clothes, lie is
said to have killed two men and was
regarded as a desperate convict.
Fox was orp of a dozen convicts
Will Not Permit Officers to Go on Premises and
Search Without Consent.
ia a statement before the House
committee on appropriations, con
cerning violations of the oleomargar
ine frauds, lnturnal Revenue Com-
, . 1 II 1 . "TL. .a.,.,!,!-!!'
missioT'er i anen, saio. io-
CO MINTS ANDMHSCIMRAL.
Pieces Clipped Trorii Various Newspapers ot In
terest to everybody.
The Republicans, in convention at
Shelby last week, noiniliateil Mr. S.S.
McNilich, of Chailotle, as their con
gressional candidate in that district
against Congressman Webb.
i
! The l'avidsuii College ( omaicnce-
garine situation haspretty nearly got-; meat will begin Sunday May 2."th.
ten away from us; it is getting worse The annual address at that institution
and worse a, I the time, and we are will he delivered by President S. C.
confronted with the condition, there-1 Mitchell, Columbia. S. C, and the an-
fore, that the iolatioiis are increas
ing greatly."
"There has been a steady increase,"
he continued. "The decisions of the
courts have uncovered some very ma
terial defects in the oleomargarine law
from an administrative standpoint.
"The chief decisions that have giv
en us trouble have been those that the
oleomargarine statutes are not part
of the general internal revenue laws,
but constitute a complete body of
laws of themselves, and.consoquenUv,
no internal-revenue statutes are up-
olienlne to the enforcement of the (de
signed with -hree guards to do grad- j nlmir imv mVM cxpreesly made
Program Tor Quarterly Conference and Laymen's
Missionary Meeting.
To be held at Lebanon Methodist
I'hurcli, .lane 1 and ".
l'UlRW, .IfNK o, li'lil.
:;::'.0. Address of welcome by .lam -s
Philips.
Devotional service by Rev. t'liver
, Hawkins.
i ipen discussion of the missionary
: outlook for Wilkes county an ! of its
! progress during the last decade in
; Wilkes county, led by W. L. Forester
' and Mr. Hawkins.
i S:Ut. Address by Rev
I "The pastor's relation to
1 ivmcii's missionary movement,
! lowed by open discussion led by
1 hubbard and oti ers.
! S.vrn:AY.
! 1 1 :.",( Devotional service.
j Address by R. P.. Crawfon
.. Paris,
c present
fol-Wm.
of Win-
mial sermon bv Rev. II. ('. Hammond
of ( leorgia.
steamboats of the Lelb.y
Steamboat Company brought in car
goes Saturday to r.lizalieth City of
loii barrels of Irish potatoes from
different points on its line. The
weather is extremely tavorauie t" ston-Salem, "The missionary num
the trucking crops and sweet potatoes j m,1t ()f tho ,x0 fallowed by open
are reported to be coining f.rw:ir-l I ,j;scusson i,y Ceorge IX lieason.
very promisingly. A big yield el, i:oo. Sermon on missions,
this crop is expected through the ; ...,, practical review of the
eastern North Carolina section, which j Wt,rl(rS missionary status, by Rev. 1!.
is a great Irish and sweet potato , i.,,.,fplt . fll,,ved bv open disctt,
countrv. Prices on Irish potatoes
Bank
Of
North Wilkesboro
K. Kniley, Pres.,
1!. W. (iwyn, Casliier.
V.A. l'inlev.Ass't Casliier
Capital. Surplus and
1'roliis. ..:t.ir.H.14
1). posits aa.osL'.so
Resources SJNI.VMO.'.U
( li''.
IS vc
ani.ed lsif. I ii luisini'ss
u s. Oldest, Strongest.
gill!
If
vith I
r' US
ai' ,
once.
By ;
doing I
this
it
win
enable
you
to
keep
"tap"
on
every
dollar
spent.
of the Office of Public Roads in ant
ing the road authorities of the conn-
n !l
mi
.j pverv ten cases of
Fully nine out henmatigm 0f
r?OTmatlf rto cold or damp, or
( ho mnaelea tlUe " ... .viu
chronic rheuf' si . treatment AU
' ' ,fford relief is the
AO!' '""""""
i trial. x!u nio vio
to other men to preserve the liberties commending the passage of a bill
bequeathed to him. The Union farm- appropriating $."00,000 for the use
er would not have boasted that he j
shirked plowing his "mule colt" when
duty to his family demanded this pri
vate service. He would have regard
ed himself as "worse than an infidel"
if he had failed to perform his duty
as the head of his family. Is he not
just as much subject to censure if
he neglects his duty as a citizen?
There is no call upon the citizen in
ordinary times to leave his farm and
go to war, but if his country is in-
njptled can he be a good citized if he
Ties not serve lus country in tne way
he is called upon to serve it? Uut,
consistent with his private business
is he not as much a shirker not to
mix in politics as if he shirked his
private duty?
Peculiu Rental Training -Case ol Conductor
Clirksn.
Writing of the late Mark Twain as
a Mississippi river pilot and the abili
ty of the pilots in the old days to
handle a boat on the darkest night
and recognize every turn in the river,
the Hickory Democrat tells of Con
ductor Clarkson, who is well remem
bered as a conductor on the run be
tween Statesville and Charlotte:
"The nearest approach to any such
mental equipment as this in another
line that we ever encountered was
that of the late Conductor Simons
Clarkson, of Charlotte, who used to
run on the Charlotte, Columbia and
Augusta railroad. The editor of this
paper was riding with him one night.
both were siiiuig in lite Car tog6iu6r,
and the blinds were down, when Cap
tain Clarkson remarked that we were
passing such and such a farm. I
asked him how he knew and he said
he could just tell; that he could sit
blindfolded all the way from Char
lotte to Columbia, then on to Augus
ta, and toll every foot of ground they
were passing over, every curve, every
cut, every fill, every trestle, etc., etc.
"How is this for memory-training?
itur work out ;u the rilie range that
is being constructs! northwest of the
city for the North t arolma national
1. They drove out to the range
a wagon and as Fox went to get
off the wagon he seized (iuard lloney
cutt's gun, at the same time shoving
him off the wagon and cutting at bun
with an Ugly looking double edged
knife that he was secretly carrying.
t the same time a negro convict,
Mcintosh, from Scotland county, sent
up recently to serve ..uye.oMoi man
slaughter, seized (iuard liny es in an
attempt to get his gun. The third
guard, Smith lived at Fox, inflicting a
fatal wound. Hayes was equal to the
assault bv Mcintosh anil order was
quickly restored, some of the cohvicts
coming to the aid of the guards in
the stirring experience.
uuard Smith wounded Fox twice,
..mi,1 Haves once, three shots being
fired. Director (leorge Hunter of
the prison board made' a personal in
vestigation and filed a report to the
Covernor to the effect thar there was
no occasion for any ii quest mi'i' th"
bodv of the dead convict.
'ICS
with the nuic.lt re-
Sold 7 Brame
Never can telltell when you'll mash
a finger or suffer a cut, bruise, burn
ii i-i i n mi
or SCOIQ. lie prepareu. or. liioinua
Electric Oil instantly releives the pain
quickly cures the wound.
Stops itching instantly. Cures piles
eczema, salt rheum, terror, itch, hives,
herps scabies Doan's Ointment. At
any drug store,
try to do the work of road-lmihlmg
in an intelligent and economical man
ner. N. J. liaehelder, master of the Na
tional Grange, says:
"The enactment of this bill will re
suit in widespread and permanent re
forms in the present methods ot pub
lic highway construction and main
tenance, under which it is estimated
that of the $90,0(10,000 annually ex
pended for road improvement.at least
onehalf, or $-15,000,000, is practical
ly wasted, through lack of knowledge
on the part of the various local road
authorities. The greater part of this
money could be saved by giving these
local officials the benefit of expert ad-
iinil assi stance bv the trained
engineers of a properly equipped Of
fice of Public Roads, and it is with
t-v;a oinucf in view that the proposed
i7..jv - .
appropriation is sought."
ti,u,-u is no loncer anv doubt but
the people of the South are interest
ed in the making ot better roads. The
majority of leading men everywhere
are willing to pay for improved high
ways, and in most sections more
work and more money is being put on
the public roads, but as Mr. Hacti
elder savs much of this money and
i effort is wasted through a lack of
knowledge of road-building by those
who are spending the paltry !f:0,000,
000 which the country is devoting to
the building' of roads.
Some of those who aro spendin
the public money trying to improve
that tliev do not
UUI H'uwo i" -
know how to build roads;' while oth
ers don't kr.ow, but don't know that
they don't know anything about road
building. Public money, a national
1 1 t 1- .-v n
appropriation, could not oe pui w .
better purpose than in sending out ,
over the country everywhere, expert
road-builders to show and instruct
those who are seeking to improved
our public roads how the work can be
best and most economically done.
Can Use Tobacco.
N'.'W mill ill-oi V'T.
Sam Junes was fond of saying
that, "a man can be a Christian and
chew tobacco, but he will be a mighty
dirty Christ aim" Sam didn't love to
bacco. Probably if he bad been a
smoker and had been as great a lover
f a good cigar as the venerable liish-
Wilson, the Georgia evangelist
nig one
and the packages
J 1"
mild have been of a more rellective
turn of mind and lived longer. Some
body introduced a resolution in tin j
Methodist General Conference that
ministers be not allowed to use tohar-
lt did not pass and would have
been a great mistake if it bad been
approved by that body. The use of
tobacco in moderation is a matter for
every man to settle for himself, and
no rule should be enacted by any
church about the matter.
Referring to the use of tobacco by
. ., , i i . m . i .
pram workers, tne ureensuoro icie
gram says:
The debate at Asheville over the
use of tobacco makes a newspaper
lipping about J. M. Parrie, the novel
ist and journalist, pertinent. I'arrie,
says the clipping, once gave the fol
lowing reply to an inquiry as to Ins
method of work:
'Journalism 2 pipes, 1 hour; 2
hours, 1 idea; 1 idea, 3 paragraphs.
" 'Fiction -S pipes, 1 ounce; 7
ounces, one week; 2 weeks, 1 chapter;
20 chapters, 1 nib; 2 nibs, one novel.'
"All of which is very clear except
the nib. For ust rs of the weed de
clare that, used in moderation, the
weed is provocative of thought. It
is a stimulant, to be sure, and, as a
man can get along without it, is a lux
ury. To put it under the ban from
religious scruples seems to lie a step
in the direction of asceticism."
applicable thereto. That deprives us of
all our summary rights and remedies,
such as the right to go on the prem
ises without the consent of the person
and without a search warrant to
search the place where we have rea
son t : suspect that products not bear
ing the proper stamps and marks are
located, and also our right of assess
ment of penalties. It deprives us ot
many summary rights under the internal-revenue
laws which are essential.
"Then there is the further decision
that a package is not empty so lung
as any merchantable oleomargarine
remains therein.
"The common fraud that we run
against - and it has gotten to be so
prevalent that there is in my judg
ment, mere fraud connected with ole
omargarine than with the distillery of
spirits is like this:
A dealer purchases from a manu
facturer a small number ot packages
stamped as artificially colored, at 10
cents a pound, the package containing
fi , c,n to I oo pounds, and the stamp
1 .
.. .... Hw, , mter nackaue. a wouuen
,ne. lie will then purchase an indole
lite number of packages of uncolor
,1 cleotnargarine, the tax on this be-
uurter id a cent a pound
tax-paid at iOceiits
ii.und never become empty, ineie
always being a small quantity oi mei
chantable oleomargarine there. Then
he will have in a cellar we had one
case where a man used -a barricaded
portico -or in some other place, bar
red and protected, a small mixing de
vice - perhaps a churn and paddlocoi
oring matter, and a stove for heating
the oleomargarine, making it plastic,
and, there, manufacture his own col-
l ..h.nnifivo-arino. using the 10-
iii iu v.--... .
cent-a-pound tax package to put it in.
"In this way be defrauds the gov
ernment out of nine and three-quarter
cents a pound."
Later, Mr, Cabell said: "The incen
tive to fraud has now grown equally
as great with respect to oleomargar
ine as to alcoholic liquors, and conse
quently where the incentive is com
paratively similar the statute, wotim
have to be comparatively strict.
"If the artificially colored oleomar
. -1 .... i i ...... .. .,
garine was all tax pam at jo itiw
pound, 1 think, it would amount to
seven or eight million dollars in ex
,,f what, we are now collecting."
"What are we now collecting',
asked the chairman.
'Last year, if::2i ..so, at iu
cents and at one-quarter of a cent,
$205,525."
This is an interesting showing al-
. . ,i i : i. . . l l .
though it may not nc a crouiiaei.- one.
Oleomargarine blockaders defrauded
the government out of more than
seven million dollars in one year.
During the bearing Mr. Sherley
are fair and the outlook for consider
able circulation of money from this
crop alone looks good to the truckers
of Fastern Carolina. Some big ship
ments are expected to go forward
next week.
The I'.ingham School commencement
gan Sundav. The honorable Jeti-r
C. Pritchard, Judge of the I'nited
States Court for the fourth circuit,
delivered one ot the most practical
and wisest addresses that has been
heard at Hinghan for many years.
He was urged to come again next
year and promised to do so. Judge
Pritchard is one of the ablest, best j
ami brainiest men in the nation today
in.l it is to be regretted that he can
not give his entire time to nnloct.il-
nate the people with his sound and
u e views on morality and good citi
zenship, lie could do vastly more
good in this way than on the bench.
What an inspiration is the life of such
a man, who from being a barefooted
mountain boy, has by integrity, indus
try and application climbed to some
of the highest positions in the gift
of the nation.
The increased cost of living is hav
ing its effect on the Christian ministry.
From various quarters comes the news
that owing to indoquate salary many
ministers have given up their charges
and turned to other occupations that
promise better remuneration. Not
unlikely this fact may prove a bless
ing in dsiguise by reducing the num
ber of churches in small towns that
are over-supplied. It is no uncommon
thing to find four or more churches
in a town of 1000 people and of acon-
seqnence pitifully small salaries are
paid, and to pay these a constant
drain is made not only on the pockets
of citizens, but also on the various
home missionary boards. Fewer
churches with better salaries and
mor. ffieicnt preachers would advance
the cause of religion and bean advan
tage all round. N'o doubt the above
writer knows much about running the
church.
The best plow is none too good fo
the best farmer -we mean you. Yu
ought to have the best. You can
buy it at Smoak l'.rothers the best
plow on earth The m. J. Oliver.
Kxamine them, buy one, try it a week
and voti will say we told you the
truth, the whole truth and nothing
but the truth.
sion led by W. M. R. Church, C.C. Faw
and others.
4:00. Quarterly conference.
S:0O. Address by Dr. Arthur T.
Abernathy, "The relation of Sunday
school to the missionary movement,"
followed by opened discussion led
by J. II. Pennell, Dr. James W. Davis
and L. P. Laws.
St'NIi.W.
DiliO. Missionary love feast led by
R. L. Sei'oggs, Win. Hubbard and
Cicero llix.
10:00. Modem missionary Sunday
school by Misses Eva Uouchelle, Mary
Watson, Rose McNeill, Mary Lizzie
llix, Peatrice P.enson, Nellie Parlier
Carrie Pearson, (Ira rennet, naisy
Church, llattie Hawkins, Ruth Fores
ter, Ella V.'yatt, Lou Hall and Mes
dames R. L. Scruggs, George D. Pea
son, Will Hubbard, Josie Davis and
M. C. Williams.
ll;O0. Missionary address by Rev.
U. M. Tavor. P. E "World-wide
Evangelization."
:!:00. Address bv Hon. R. Dor
Laws, "Man's mission in the world,'
followed by discussion, "The money val-
, 1 1 . .. I W. ..I 1...V
ue ot a human soui icu o ei. .nimu
T. Abernetby, R. L. Profit and others.
S;O0. Address by Ex-Congressman
Richard N. Hackett, "Am 1 My lb-oth
er's Keeper," followed by Missionary
Round Table and discussion of the
question, "Can a man be a Christian
and be opposed to foreign missions'.'"
Come and bring your family and
friends and tell your neighbors to
come.
I Uir highest aim is to give
every one the be; t possible ser
vice and accomodations in keep
ing with sound banking. We
run no risks with the money
intrusted to our keeping.
We will appreciate any busi
ness you give us.
flXLKr & HKNDHEN,
Alforncys-nl-Liiiv,
WILKESBORO, N. 0.
Will practice in all the courts. Col
li speeKilty. Keal entiite
lections
olil on i
oinniissiott,
I,. S. 11 KN Ill.W II. VI VKSS
BEN COW & CAV1NESS
Attorneys and Connectors at Law
Ollice liliiiiitililioii in l!n- court
liouse at W ilkeslioio.
Prompt attention given to all
matters placed in our hands.
Phone number 124 A.
D. C ABSHER, M. D.
Physician & Surgeon
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
Office at Residence
Phone 188.
Holbrook & Hayes
Atlornoys-ctt-Law
North Wilkesboro N. C.
not an offense," continued Mr. Cabell.
The present law, declared Mr. Sher
ley, is not for the purpose ot raising
revenue, but for prohibiting the use
of oleomargarine in competition with
butter, and in that law you have two
rates of taxation, one very much i
greater than the other, and there isj
always the inducement to the fraud- j
,11 1 --Li
ulent man to pay the lower, anil yet
In every community in the United
States there are houses -homes,
churches, public buildings, factories--that
stand out distinctly from the
neighboring buildings, sharply defined
in beautv and condition by the roofs
that cover them. This very distinct
ive roofine- isCortright Metal Shingles
the de-
ti issue the oleomargarine as it it had
... , 1 1. i.ir :.. 1 .1... I,
ll..m,ier-ll, ot KelltUCkV, aSKCU: 11,111- oiune tne iuh" '
stead of having your present law, i It is just this situation that the cot- i
with n 10-ocnt tax in one instance and l,,n seed oil men ol the country are!
nt in anoUi-r, you Irving to remeuy oy nauug eungie
emovmg the incentive
Sunday School Cimventiim of the
Itnisy Mountain Assoaitiiui.
Edgewood May 28 and 20, IS 10.
Svitupay.
1 1 :00. Opening exercises, Ilev. W
C. Meadaws.
11;:10 Routine business enroll
ment of delegates, election of officers
and appointment of committees.
12:oo. Dinner.
1:00. "The Layman's Movement,"
Rev. C. M. Rock, Rev. J. W. Ihirchett.
1 :30, The orphanage in its rela
tion to the Sunday school work, Rev.
W. C. Meadows, R. A. Spainhmir.
2:00. The relation of the pastor
to the Sunday, School, Revs. M. Mc
Neill, A. T. Purdue.
2:;!.). Sunday school literature,
t vv C.-irvov. J. T. Nichols. D. F.
Huffman.
8:00. Opening exercises and song
service in the Sunday school, V. A.
Miller, N. J. Steelinan.
3:30. Teachers meeting, C. ('
Wright, F. P.. llendren.
4:(l(i. Cause of missions in the
Mnnih.v school. ('. T. Critchcr, J. 11.
Johnson.
-I ;(!. ( losing exet'ci.-itw.
I SrxiuY.
! 10:00. Sunday school lesson for
i the day.
I 1 1 :00. Use of the blackboard in
!the Sunday school, II. W. llorton.
11 -.30. How to increase enrollment
and attendance in the Sunday school,
Y. McGbinnis, J. R. Jones.
12:00. The relation of the church
to the Sunday school, Rev. Parks
John R. Jones
Attorney nt-I.aw
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
All I in siness, especially col I net ions,
will have most p.ouipt and sure attention.
Dr. L. A. Hauser
Dental Surgeon
N. Wilkesboro, N. C.
Calls attended where the
amount of work is sufficient to
justify it.
v
Frank D. Hackett
Attorney-al-Lnw
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
l'raeliee in nil the courts. State and
Federal, Collections, commercial
practice and bankruptcy proceedings
a specially.
All business entrusted to me will
nave prompt anil earelu.1 attention.
Otliceo frditizens i,ou A- Trust Co,
Rooms No. i and 5,
IF
Dr. II. F. Baity
Dental Specialist.
01the.11
1 i.ii..-., Kesldcnal US
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
Gwaltney, C. C. Gambill.
12:30. The library in the Sunday
...1 . j..,mo,.li nml T.iver
;namoenM. -""""",,. th mllv ;Ml(w that satisli,
b7th ds' mand," Write Cortrigbt Metal roof
of women who have been restored to ing ompany, M north f-"i't,
heXh thrmigh their gentle aid and , Philadelphia, Pa., or see the , 1 Ik.
SlproArtie... Sold by Brame ro Manufacturing Co., North W.Ikes-
Drug Co,
a quarter ol it ce
were to have a revenue law. a law 111- pass a
i,i tn raise revenue and not in- i the U'-cent tax. Oleomargarine man-
tended to prohibit the use of oleomar- ufueturors do not want to sail their
garine, taxing it and requiring that it product under false colors but let it
be propeily marked so as not to de-;seii wim ouue ... , R M N (, jlpn.
ceive the public, most of the troubles Dairy people onject 10 u.e inn,,.,,, o.
that now confront the department , the tax, arguing that it will hurt their
would disappear, wouldn't they?" j business. If enough oleomargarine is Amuja 80rmon, Rev. ('. M.
To this Mr. Cabell said: "I couldn't 1 sold to cheat Uncle Sam out of seven 1 ,
answer as to that." millions annually, they already have! ;W)0i Knutine business reports o
"Selling oleomargarine for butter is competition, committees, etc.
A. TAYLOR.
Surgeon Dentist
NOU, II WILEE.SHOKO, N.C.
OMlec over Abslier, Hayes, Black
burn A ( 1. . Crown and Hridgfc
Work a specially. Careful atteu
lion given to fill work.
HacKett & Gtlreath t
Attorneys-at-Lttw
Wilkesboro N. C