Sljf 3nrtli Htilkrslumi lijtuiilrr. PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY & FRIDAY by The Hustler Publishing Company. W. E. Ph ark, Editor & Secretary R. B. Pharr, Manager & Treas. Knterad t the Postoftce In North Wllkvi boro, N. V., m Hoooud-Ciaaa mall miittcr peudlng application. Bilbao rlptlon prtoe (Invtrlably In advnuo) -tl.UOtor li months; Fifty ceut lor all months :TweDty-aveomta torttirHenitmltii. Wa will not be held ruapoimlble lor the flaws of oorraspondenta, and reserve the :llht to rejeot any oouimuutcatlon for pub HoaMon. Advertising rateireaaonableand furnished on applloatlon. TUESDAY AUGUST 4, 1914. CAlPAKiX. Now is the time to subscribe for and take the Hustler if you are not already. It furnishes you the reliable information, and early, while it is news. It will come to you twice aweek for the small sum of one dollar a year. Ask your neighbor to sub scribe and get him in the van with you. DESCRIPTION OP A KMK'KKIt. The description of a knocker which appeared in The Salt Lake City Times is well worth your time: After God had finished the rattle snake, the toad and the vampire, He had some awful "substance" left with which He made a "knocker." A knocker is a two-legged animal with a corkscrew soul, water sogged brain, and a combination backbone made of jelly and glue. Where other people have their hearts he carries a tumor of rotten principles. When the knocker comes down the street honest men turn their backs, angels weep tears in heaven, and the devil shuts the gates of hell, to keep him out. No man has a right to knock as long as there is a pool of water deep enough to drown his body in, or a rope to hang his carcass with. Judas Iscarit was a gentleman compared to a knock er, for after betraying his Master he had enough character to hang him self, and a knocker has not. more definite shape day by day". North Carolinians who do not believe in a tariff for revenue only, and other ' Democratic doctrines are waiting to: siy "I told you so." They are large in j numbers, according to the views of: ex-Senator Marion Hutler and ready j to go to it. Most of the folks who pour hot shot into Collector Watts hope for the success of the llepubli-1 cans in North Carolina, and they want j to hit Senator Simmons but lack the sand to do it. I'oor Old Austin David- j son Watts, who has slaved for the Democratic party for years, is being kicked around like Champ Clark's old j hound, just because the kickers can not find the "boss." Democrats in Washington are; watching with keen eyes the wart clouds in the State. The primary ( movement and the other live issues promise much excitement. Sot Theirs to Worry. There is deep seated interest in the tax question now up in the State, but; the members of Congress have not studied the proposed constitutional amendments. Some of them have not seen them. But, there is ono thing certain; it is this: the noise in the State over various issues that loom up is dis tracting the attention of Congress men. The Democratic leaders would like to see the Republicans put up stiff lights in the State this fall so as to keep the Democrats from tearing at each others throats. The Republicans seem to have adopted the policy of "watchful waiting," waiting for 191G. What seems to us an advantage to children and schools in the county is a suggestion by Mr. L. E. Dimmette that the teachers get up a careful selection of songs and print into a booklet for use daily in the public schools. By using such a booklet only the most popular songs would be be fore the teacher and pupils for selec tion from and at each morning exer cise songs of more interest sung with more charm would be the result, aside from the fact that the cheap ness of the booklet all of the children could get hold of a booklet from which to sing and eliminate the occurrence of two or three doing the singing only and alone and perhaps they, in some cases, standing round one large book that contains five hundred songs. NEAR DEATH BY SMOTHERING Bit Husband, With Aid of Cardui, Effects Her Deliverance. Draper, N C Mrs. Helen Dalton, ol this place, says: "1 suffered for years, with pains in my left side, and would oiten almost smother to death. Medicines patched me up for awhile but then 1 would Ret worse again. Final ly, my husband decided he wanted me to try Cardui, the woman's tonic, so he bought me a bottle and 1 began using it. It did me more good than all the medi cines I had taken. I have induced many ol my friends to try Cardui, and they all say" they have been benefited by its use. There never has been, and never will be, a medicine lo compare with Cardui. I believe it is a good medicine for all womanly trou bles." For over 50 years, Cardui has been re lieving woman's sufferings and building weak women up to health and strength. If you are a woman, give if a fair trial. It should surely help you, as it has a million others. Ciet a bottle of Cardui to-day. Writt ti; Chattanooga Medicine Co., Ladies' Advisory Dept., Chattanooca. Term., for Sttcial Inttrtutieni on your case and 64-page book. "Home Treatment for Women." in plain wrapper. N.G. 120 Do Watchfully Wait. Washington Dispatch to Charlotte Observ er, 80th. Two years is a "fur piece" off but clouds are gathering about the North Carolina political horizon. The polit ical bullets aimed at Senator Simmons through Collector A. D. .Watts are being turned a little more each day toward the real target. If the Democrats are still dominant in the Nation, after November 1916, the "progressive Democrats" or "the Outs" will go after Senator Simmons with gloves off. It will not be a Kitchin Simmons fight, for when Senator Sim mons goes the Kitchins and all others who have been in for a decade or more isill be opposed by younger, and more vigorous fighters. The war sinews that will be used against Senator Sim mons will not come altogether from the Kitchin camp but in part from Senator Simmon's own ranks. This is a Democratic outlook. These half-predictions are based on niueiifiuw that shovr on the boards here from day to day. The casual dropping in of A. W. McLean, Collector Bailey, Marshall Webb and Collector Watts and others of the old Simmons guard indicate action. Pipes are being put down for the coming days. The ever silent Thomas D. Warren, who thinks in seven languages and talks but lit tle and low and mellow, has been here. His tracks never appear on the surface. He walks in the sand nnd his footprints disappear. But, like the unseen doodle bug, he is around somewhere and can be very active at times. Republicans Shaping I'p. The Republican movement is taking Rules Given For Preventing Typhoid. The State Board of Health is dis tributing a leaflet containing the fol lowing rules for the prevention of ty phoid fever. The rules are taken from the Journal of the American Medical Association and are: For the Individual. Keep away from all known or sus pected cases of typhoid. Wash hands thoroughly before meals. Don't use "roller towels." Use drinking water only from sources known to be pure, or if this is not possible, use water that has been purified by municipal filtration or by hypochlorite treatment or by boiling in the household. Avoid bathing in polluted water. Use pasteurized or boiling, instead of raw milk. Select and clean vegetables and ber ries, that are to be eaten raw, with greatest care. Avoid eating "fat raw oysters, and in general, oysters and other shell-fish whose origin is not known. Be vaccinated against typhoid in all cases in which any special exposure is known or feared. For the Community. Insist on the hearty co-operation of all persons with an efficient health officer. Require notifications and a reasona ble degree of isolation of every known or suspected typhoid case. Exercise strict control over disin fection of known typhoid excreato. Insist on pure or purified water supply. Require pasteurization of milk sup plies. Regard all human excreta as possi bly dangerous and control their dis position in such a way as to prevent contamination of food or drink. New York Exchange Closes Last In World. N.'W York, July illst. The vast and complex machinery of the securities markets of the world came to a complete halt today for an indefinite period. It was an occur rence unprecedented in history. With Europe seemingly on the verge of war, the continental exchanges closed several days ago, with the Lon don market following suit today, the New York stock exchange would have been called npon to bear the weight of the world's financial burdens. It virtually had done so all week, for while the London market was open, transactions were nominal. The un loading of stocks here by panic stricken Europe during the last four days and the consequent collapse of prices made history in Wall street. To continue longer to bear the bur den, in the opinion of the bankers, whose influence determines the course nf mrmit-a in tho SUrrpt wnnlil lmvo I been hazardous in the extreme. Aft er a period of hesitation and excited nervous tension it was decided 10 minutes before the hour set for the iMim.iii.u' rf I'tir-im- t.'day that the, exchange would not lo opened, that j jcti.-n c!u.-ed the la.-t great nrirkvt of the world. All the other American exchanges closed. Too Much Auto. ,llll.0 iv-t. Too much automobile is set down by a college professor as cause for the little of actual learning at son e of the large .schools of the country, this teacher, a professor in Clark 1'niversily, declaring that students are affiliated with too much "swelled fortunes," "large prosperity" for their own good, and the results at such schools as the one he is connect ed with, well as Yale, Harvard, Princeton and others, speak eloquent ly to the truth of the condition ex isting on the campus, where the leys, many of them, are devoting their time to automobiles, tangoing and other great and wise things rather than to the college duties. No doult there is a large amount of truth in that the smaller colleges are similar ly effected, for it is certain that many of the students have more money than will mix with study and the spirit of the college has changed wonderfully during the past twenty years. The automobile is but one of the instru ments used so effectively to prize boys away from books and the larger schools of the East are not the only ones to suffer. Y'et the fact remains that a boy can study as well today and make as good progress as he could in the days of walking ten miles to the open school. These thing3 may interfere with many, but the poor boy who has his heart set on an edu cation is getting a showing today, and every one of them with the right sort of "stuff" in him can do well in any of the schools of the land. ATI Empty kegs. For Sale. Coco-Cola barrels and Red Tor Bottling Co. At Brown's Livery Stable. Dr. Hartsell, veterinary surgeon, will be in Wilkesboro August 10th, 11th and 12th at Sheriff Brown's Liv ery stable to treat diseases of horses and cows. If you have any such bring them in, satisfaction guaran teed. Dr. E. T. Haki fhi.il, V. MARKET PRODUCE PRICES. For North Wilkesboro, N. C. Corrected By F. D. FORESTER & co. Corn new. Kye I'KR HUSH $1.00 Oats Wheat Potatoes, Irish " Sweet.... 50 DO 1.00 50 Peaeli seed, per bu. of 5011) 75 Onions 00 Clay Peas I'KR I.B Butter 15 Hens 13 Spring Chickens Turkeys Beeswax Apples, dried, bright, slished. . . Peaches, peeled " not peeled Kggs, per doz Hides, green Hides, dry Huckleberries Raspberries Pitted cherries Blackberries, dried Ducks Geeso Mams, dry 10 liacon, country, sides new 12 Tallow Honey, sourwood 15 Apples, green 20 to i Mountain Cabbage, per lb. How's This? W e offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by dull s Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chknky & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known t . J. Cheney lor the last lo years and believe him perfectly honorable mail business transactions and Ii nan dally able to carry outany obligations made by Ins hrm. National Bank or Commkkck, Toledo, 0 Hairs Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surlaces oi the system Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all DrusJ gists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. 14 , f Am.L.. t! " ' - " ' 6c 5c surnni o EL- N KB K KESIIII m EMM m w m t i h Appalachian Training School. In building for eleven years the Appalachian Training School the trustees kave kept fully in mind three objects. First: To erect substantial and in expensive buildings and to equip them for the actual needs ot the students. Second: To secure competent, efficient and consecrated teachers. Third: To keep the cost to the student of everything at the lowest. The fall term begins August 20. Address, SECRETARY OF THE FACULTY, BOONE, N. C. Notice of Land Sale. ! liy virtue of tho power of siiln conltiincd hi ii cci'tttlii mortK'itf'' di'fd oxfcutrd on tin- A.lu-r (-omjmny by . L. Minton and vile. M. A, Minton, and recorded in tlie Register's olllt'i! of Wilkes county, S. (!., in book No. 1 tnin note, upon wiiicit i it t, n; la :i L;i!,".:,.:T due of ifll.Mtnml by reiiMon of the, non-pn-nien'. alter repented requests for same, Tint W. M. A lis her tloinpany, w ill on Salur.lay, the y.nii day of Auaiir l!d4. at the court i house In Wilkesboro, Wilkes county. N. t!.. ' olTet fur sale at public auction to the last and liinlieM bidder, the following lands d" i heri ben in the above mentioned mortae , deed, towlt: Klrst tract: nlitininn :) acres, situated 4)ii Kmlthey's creek, in Iteddles Klver town- sblpuud known as a part of the Joe lnvl:t lands and bounded as follows: llt'Mlniilnir. on a Spanish oak In Jesse Hillings' line and running north with I,, t. Minion's line to Mhoi'inini lluvU' lint" lh iwt li An,h I Molder'K Hue; thence tu.lesse Hilling" line; I thence t nst to Jack Mulders' line. Kor fur ( ther description see deed from Spencer , Crane to ,. Ii, Minton dated September l.'ith i W2, The above bounds is Intended to con vey nil of the laud covered by the above i mentioned deed. j Second tiact: Containing luncres, situat- -u in u'umub in ii i.ivt i inn I jr. nun iuiiiie-u by the lands of I,. Ii, Minton, Mary 1'aisoi and Kverett I'arsuns. Kor further descrip tion see deed from Calloway l'nrsons to Ii. L. Minton. This Hi? tfiiih davof Jnlv. I!dt. TUN W. M. A ItSM Kit CO.. Mortgagee. never fails to cool invigorate refresh ! It has a flavor all its own rare and delicious. This and its healthy effect gain and hold friends everywhere. Try it, and Pepsi-Cola will be your favorite your daily preference. In Bottles or At Fount9 5c FOR SALE B ALL RETAIL DEALERS AT S CENTS F & F Bottling & Ice Co, Bottlers and Wholesale Dealers North Wilkesboro, N. O. DON'T LET YOUR kKOmBUSMAHOLE rJ BIYOWPOCKET! If IMPRESS on the young man who is burning; the candle ftt both end 1 and who is spending his big; salary as fast as he makes it the VALTJ' OF A BANK ACCOUNT. Start him on the RIGHT ROAD toda; If he is not homeless he at once will sec the error of his ways. The open ing of a bank account has put a stop to many a youth's wild desire to be a HIGH FLIER. R. L. noucuiToN, President Ci.em Wrenn. Cashier R D. Forester, Vice-President A. Safford, Teller DEPOSIT & SAVING BANK North Wilkesboro, N. C. THE "NEW PERFECTION" LAUNDRESS Though she works next to the stove, within easy reach of her irons, she keeps cool and com fortable. That's because she uses a IQXt Oil Cook-stove New Perfection Stoves bake, broil, roast, toast everything any other stove will do. and they cost less for fuel. No handling of coal and ashes all the cook ing heat you want, just when you want it. New Perfection Stoves are made in 1 , 2, 3, and 4 burner sizes. Also a new 1914 model No. 5 Stove, sold com plete with broiler, toaster, and fireless oven. Regular oven, broiler and toaster can be obtained separately for smaller sizes. Sad-iron heater and cook-book free with every stove. At dealers everywhere, or write direct for catalogue. STANDARD OIL COMPANY Washington, I). C (New Jersey) Chariotie, N. C Norfolk, V. BALTIMORE Charlesto n, W. Vt. Richmond, Va. Charleston, S. C. er One Year Each. HUSTLER and Progressive Farm-

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