Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / June 2, 1911, edition 1 / Page 3
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JUNE 2, 1011. THIII NERVOUS CHILDREN Often even the doctor doesn't Beem able to tell what is the matter with a rapidly growing, thin, nervous, fretful child. Some noted specialists even recommend keeping them quiet In bed several hours every day. But that sort of thing is just what an active child can't bear. Our own experience is that such children be gin to thrive and put on flesh almost as soon as they begin taking Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron ton ic, that children love to take. It is quite harmless and does them a world of good. They become ruddy and rugged, their little limbs fill out and fcecome plump and they are soon the frolicsome youngsters they ought to he. Mrs. C. W. Stump, Canton, Ohio, says Vinol restored her sickly little daughter to health and strength. Vinol is good for delicate people of all ages and you take no risk in giving it a trial for we give back the money if it does not do all we claim. Hamilton Drag Co., Oxford, N. C Mouse Routed Women. From the New York American. "Beat it quick and no talkin back, or I'll let this brute here loose among yer. Scat! Scat!!" yelled a burly workman, at the same time suspending in the air by the end of its tail a tiny mouse. It was dead.but a throng of fair residents of Etna street, in the Cypress Hills section of Brooklyn, who all day had, maintained warlike front against employes of the New York Telephone Company who had been sent there to plant huge wooden poles, did not wait to investigate the mouse's condition. With shrieks of terror and a fran-, tic grasping up of skirts, they "beat it" from the presence of Mister Mouse and his gi'imy but quick-witted possessor. "I knew this would' work the trick, he said, "Hurry up and get that pole down." Several of his comrades quickly hoisted one of the unsightly poles and dropped it into a four-foot hole. Before the women returned to the battleground two other poles had been erected. The warfare was stubbornly wag ed. The workmen would draw off, following an onslaught on them with pokers and hatpins.only to appear down the block digging determined ly. Police reserves were called from the Liberty avenue station. Wins Fight for Idfe. It was a long and bloody battle for life that was waged by James B. Mershon, of Newark, N. J., of which he writes: '"I had lost much blood from lung hemorrhages, and was very weak and rundown. For eight months I was unable to work. Death seemed close on my heels, when I began, three weeks ago, to use Dr- King's New Discovery. -But.. Jt..' has' helped me greatly. It is doing all that you claim." For weak, sore lungs, obstinate coughs, stubborn colds, hoarseness, la grippe, asthma, hay fever or any throat or lung trouble its supreme, 50c .and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by J. G. Hall. SIDELIGHTS ON WASHINGTON. Congressman Takes Shorthand Note in Greek To Honor Bur ton Harrison. News K. F. Murray, in Charleston and Courier. Would any one suppose that any meWber of Congress habitually makes notes in Greek? Hardly, yet this is true in the case of at least one member, Representative Legare of, the Charlseton, S- C. district.The other day Mr. Legare was seen to be scrutinizing a copy of a bill on which he is soon to address the House.and on the margin of the bill were written a number of remarka ble hieroglphyics.seeming on exami nation to be a combination of En glish and Greek characters, forming the most confusinf "tout ensemble" imaginable . When asked about the curiosity, Mr. Legare explained that whenever he wishes to make notes which shall be decipherable by himself alone, he uses a mixture of Greek and English letters; and i must be admitted that there was equipped for using the system, as never a more effective device for the purpose. Mr. Legare is well equipped for using the system, as he possesses a first-class university education, and one of his special ties in his student days was the Greek language and literature. The use he getsi ou,t of his learning.aside from the general cultjure it has given him, is a good answer to the claim that there is no practical value in the classics in this materialistic mod era day. C. C. Brainerd, in the Brooklyn Eagle. The Democratic members of the New York delegation in Congress propose to do honor to one of their colleagues, Francis Burton Harrison on June 71 by having him as their guest at dinner. Representative Frank E. Wilson and Thomas G. Patten are in charge of the arrnage ments. The dinner is in recogni tion of Mr. Harrison's hard and con scientious work in the present Con gress, and is also a tribute to his personal popularity. As a member of the ways and means committee, Mr. Harrison had the difficult task of looking out for the committee assignments of the 22 Democratic representatives from New York State. The fact that he satisfied almost every man in the delegation is credited to his abliity as a diplomat- It was a disagree able job, but there were no bad feelings when it was finished. In cluded in this distribution of com mittee places were two very import ant chairmanships. The colleagues of Mr. Harrison declare that no man could have obtained more recognition for New York from the committee on committees than did the young Manhattan representative. Mr. Harrison also was responsible in a large measure for getting the New York delegation almost solid ly into line for free raw wood. The recent caucus was called at his instigation because, he , wanted .to be assured that he "had the support of his fellow-representatives in the fight he was making before the ways and means committee. The vote stood 18 to 4, which was a pretty emphatic indication that the course of the only New York man who has a hand in framing tariff bills .was aDDroved. All of the rep resentatives and Senator O'Gorman are expected to attend the dinner- Horse Quits Water Wagon. ; From the New York Times. A horse hitched to a water wagon broke loose and like many a man who has displayed a similar 'iacK of horse sense, got into a terrible hole; in fact, a manhole. The man hole is at Twelfth street and Fourth avenue, around and above which roars and rattles dailv a tremen dous volume of wagon and surface car traffic, and only a tew ieei beneath which rumbles a steadj stream of subway trains. For five hours that traffic roared and rattled and rumbled around and over and under the unwise horse before gangs of workmen from half a dozen dif ferent city departments succeeded in extricating him, with much diffi culty and tearing up of the street, and landing him on the street be side his water wagon. His return to the paths of virtue was cheered and aDDlauded by thousands of moral persons, who clogged the streets for several blocks oemna a closely lined-up string of police reserves- Just Half in Bed. CIvde. Ky. Mrs. I. A. Decker, writes from Clyde, "I recommend Cardui. the woman's tonic, to any woman in need of a remedy- For five years, I was unable to do my work. Half my time was spent in bed. At times, I could not stand. At last I tried Cardui. Now I am well and happy.and can do my own work." Don't suffer pain, heartache, backache, and other wo manly misery when your own drug gists has on his shell a remedy t Cardui. Get a bottle for your shelf.; A Puzzle. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. This "want ad" is copied worn for word from last Sunday's paper "FOR SALE One Darrot. one mon key, two poodle dogs. The owner is about to marry and has no turtner use for these animals." Puzzle: Is the' owner a man or a woman? Also is there an implied compliment to the happy bride or groom, as the case may be? Prize answers should be written on two sides of the paper only. JUST IN TIME. ROUND THE WORLD TRAVEL ' I get off without making a pilgrim- LETTERS. age to all the twelve sacred places of, our religion. And in any case I shall never let my wife know that I have broken caste by eating with foreigners." My impression is, how ever, that only in a very few cases India 'c c uw is me crime oi ioreign travel nvarf8 amous tree, the! punished so severely. In Madras More About the Indaan Caste Sys tem, i (Clarence Poe, in the Progressive A' CL1 ilitJI" ) Paint Advice Let us help you, with some experienced paint advice, to select the right paint for your home; let us show you some tasteful color combinations for your home ; let us explain why, if you ask your painter to use ACMEQUAHTf HOUSE PAINT vou will save money and get better paint. The real test of paint value is not the per gallon cost, Dut tne yarcs or sunacc n. win wvci um the vears it will last. Acme Quality House Paint costs less because it takes less ana lasts longer, vumc m uiu get ui Acme Quality Painting Guide Book. It's free. If it's a surface to be painted, enameled, stained, var nished or finished in any way, there's aa Acme Quality Kind to fit the purpose. C. O.IR.aiy, 07ffoFri,M.C. Some Oxford People May Wait Un til It's Too Iiate. Don't wait until too late. Be sure to be in time. Just in time with kidney ills. Means curing the back, Before backache becomes chronic; Before serious urinary troubles set in. Doan's Kidney Pills will do this. Here is testimony to prove it. Mrs- W. R. Horton, 404 Mongo mery St., Henderson, N. C. says: "I recommend Doan's Kidney Pills just as highly today as I did in February 1908. For several months I suffered from a dull pain, irt my back and loins and often : I -waVtiS lame and weak that it was difficult for me to get around. I could not rest well and generally when I got up in the morning, I felt worse than at any other time. The kid ney secretions looked unnatural and caused me no end of annoyance. When I read about Doan's Kidney Pills, I got a box and I had not used tlem long before I received great relief. My back was strength ened and the aches and pains were so greatly relieved that I could rest much better at night- Since that time I have taken Doan's Kid ney Pills occasionally and the re sults have always been of the best." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buf falo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. K O Trn - w y D4vno it v il fiiiiiiiM cr rnTrn , t - a , . X--- -o vv c i ii i mi one. ot rna mnsr attiitiptit limbs. JS5- hundred KHindu leaders, Mr. Krishnaswami Iyer. "Caste has kept me from going abroad until now," he told me, but I have made up my mind limbS, rOOts Which fa atoni ncr tim. selves in the earth, themselves! be come parent-trees for other multiply ing limb o. ":r ".V me DU l nave m , . iwis UU.H1 me WBOie tn lot it intarfara ti 1 rrT- Tn c-f caste svS ed and he Indlan as soon as business permits, I shall SJSt.em has grown in much the UQ to Eurone and nnssihlv AmAnVa" yan Instead of 15 l b-an7 ' Christianity is another mighty iad f the four orinal "i effective foe of Caste. As in the dotes, tnere are now more than X ,nundred times that number, and the system now decrees irrevoca bly before birth not only what &ucid.i station the newborn infant Why don't hens lay at night? Be cause they are all "ROOSTERS." Roysters poultry powders makes them all lay. For sale by ALLEN & Williams. . Davis has Mowers and Rakes. Now is the time for MOWERS and RAKES, and Davis the Hard ware man at Clarksville. is tne man to buy your machine right. I sell the DEERING, none better and few as good. Write me at once for prices and terms. Davis the Hardware man, Clarksville, Va. ft) S &S fees M . 3 w !bs S 0 2 sc u White Enameled steel closet tanks. Clean and neat with no lining to rust out.Other fixtures never before shown in Oxford. STEAM FITTERS, 2 . Z P. EL Montgomery . & Co. w w Shop 46 College St. 69 W (ft H C B 5f s La W m S, ft ff n ft B t (Q M(? W J1 ? W a? a O ? S 1 ft (A MJOAV 'no op o ennoJBD qi"N hi sjaqumid leanaujj isag am io ano Bring Your Prescriptions Here i if you want them filled with I the surest and freshest drugs, and with the greatest care and accuracy filled precisely as your physician orders them filled, to pro duce the exact effects he de sires. We are proud of the record we have made in our pre scription department. And yet we fill prescriptions at very reasonable prices, and fill them quickly, too. In proprietary medicines we can offer you a number of reliable remedies. This seems to be the sea son for colds. Take REX ALL COLD TABLETS. , We are familiar with the formula of these tablets and lino-vv? they are an effective cure for la grippe, prevent colds, relieve coughs and feverish conditions and head aches that usually go with a c3ld.Sold with the Resell guarantee. J. G. HALL, Oxford, X. O. olden days, it exalts the lowly and humbles the proud. In Muttra I found a converted high-caste Brah man acting as sexton, of a Christian shall nmnnr f " ;:rrr:!LUU1,;u WUUSB memoeis are sweepers mvp fn; L 7, f- ine outcast folk whom as a Hindu he grave (or from the time the conch would hav .nmii tr. tn,, On sneu announces the birth of a inan- tJ11 tlie funeral Pyre consumes his body, to use Indian termino logy), but also decrees almost as Irrevocably what business he may not follow. A little American : girl of my acquaintance once announced that she hadn't decided whether she would be a trained nurse, a chorus-girl, or a missionary; but Hinduism leaves no one in any such embarassing qaundary. Whether a man is to be a priest or a theif is largely decided for him before he knows his own name. A( Maharaja's Defense of Caste. "But isn't the system weaken ing now?" the readers asks, as I have asked in almost every quar ter of India. The general testimony seems to be that it is weakening, and ,yet in no very rapid manner. Eventually, no doubt, it will die.but it will die hard. While I was in India a Parliament of Religions I was held in connection with the Ailab ahad Exposition with His Highness the Maharaja . of Darbhanga as the presiding officer. In the course of his "Presidential Address" the Ma haraja delivered a lengthy eulogy of the caste system resorting,: in part, to so specious an argument as the following: "If education means the draw ing forth of the potentialities of a boy and fitting him for taking his ordained place as a member of hitherto done this work in a 'way which no other plan yet contrived has ever done. The mere teaching of a youth a smattering of ! the three R's and nothing else iii a primary school, is little else than a mere mockery. Under the caste system the boys are initiated and educated almost from infancy into the family industry, trade, profes sion or handicraft, and become adepts in their various lines j of life almost before they know it;This unique system of education is one of the blessings of our caste arrange ments. We know that a horse com mands a high price in the market if it has a long pedigree behind it. It is not unreasonable to presmue that a carpenter whose forefathers have followed the same trad4 for centuries . will be - a better, . carpen ter than one who is new to the trade all other advantages being equai." ' , j In the phrase, "his ordained place as a member of society," we have the key-note of the philosophy upon which the whole caste system rests. It suits the Maharaja of Darblianga his sons were "ordained" of Heaven to have the people believe I that step a gully with," and the Su;dra's to be rulers, even if "not fit! to sons '"ordained" to be servants no matter what their qualities or jmind and soul. But the caste system is rotting down in other places l and sometime or other this "ordained" theory will also give way and the whole vast fabric will totter to the ruin it has long and richly mer ited. Some Forces That Are Battering . Down the System. ! The introduction of railways has proved one of the great enemies of Caste. Men of different rank ; who formerly would not have rubbed el bows under any considerations, sit side by side in the railway cjars and they prefer to do it rather! than travel a week by hullock-cart to reach a place which is but a few hours by train. Consequently the priests have had to wink at '"break ing caste" in this way; just as they had to get around the use of water-works in Calcutta. According to the strict letter of the law a Hindo may not drink water which has been handled by a man of lower caste (I have seen Brahamans hir ed in Muttra to give water to passers-by), but the priests decided that the payment of wate-rates might be regarded as atonement for the possible defilement, and conse quently, Hindus now have the ad Vantages of the city water-supply. , Foreign travel has also jarred the ancient system rather severely. The Hindu statues strictly forbid a man from leaving the boundaries of India, but the folk have progressed from technical evasions of the law to open violation of its provisions. In Jeynore I saw the half-acre of trunks and chests which the Maha raja of that Province used , for transporting his goods and chattels when he went to attend the coro nation of King Edward. The Maha raja ' is a Hindu of the Hindus, claims descent from one of the high and mighty gods, and when he was named to go to London, straight way declared that the caste law against leaving India stood hope lessly in the way. Finally .however, he was convinced that by taking all his household with him, his servants his priests, material for setting up a Hindu temple, a six-months' sup ply of Ganges water, etc., he might take enough of India with him to make the trip in safety; and he went. Now many are going with out any such precautions, and a moderate fee paid to the priests usually enables them to resume caste relations upon their return- Sometimes, however, the penalties would have scorned to touch. On the other hand, the acceptance of Christianity freeing a man from the restriction of a low caste, even though it does not give him the privileges of a higher caste, often wins for the Christianized Hindu higher regard from all classes. Thus there was in Moradabadad some years ago the son of a poor sweep er who became a Christian, and was a youth of such fine promise that a way was found for him to attend Oxford University. Return ing he became a teacher in Morada badad Mission School and won such golden opinions from his towns people that when he died.the whole city Hindus, Mohammedans and Christians alike stopped for his funeral. The Doom of Caste. In its present elaborate form the Caste System is undoubtedly doom ed. It is too purely artificial to endure after the people acquire even a modicum of education. Perhaps it was planned originally as a means of perserving the racial in tegrity and political superiority of the Aryan invaders, but for un numbered centuries it has been sim ply a gigantic engine of oppress ion and social injustice. At the present time no blood or social dif ference separates the great major ity of castes from the others; each race is divided into hundreds of castes; and so high an authority as Mr. Krishnaswami Iyer assured me that even in the beginning all the castes save the Sudras were of the same race and blood. Thus the poeple are beginning to realize that their division into thousands of isolated and hostile camps has rested upon a purely ar tificial basis. The idea that one man is polluted by touching anoth er is fast losing ground. The belief that water or food is contaminated by passing through lower-caste hands has also been severely jar red. Gradually, related castes will begin to eat together. Then the question of inter-marriage will be reached last of all. Among the castes of the same blood and race inter-marriage will doubtless be fostered; and all the vicious ex- croacencea ,of the , Caste System at last sloughed off, India may plant itself upon the only safe and sane platofrm: No inter-marriage of radically different races. This may be accomplished, as it is accomplished in our own Southern States, without restricting the right of the individual to en gage in any line of work for which he is fitted or to go as high in that work as his ability warrants THE AGONY OF A BABY UNDER A SKIN AFFLICTION. Froo iLsuGr Ttt is well to stoo a physical ail ment at the first signs of its approach and that is especially true of liver trouble, which can eventually give rise to so many serious complications. Many have liver trouble and imagine it is indigestion, and hence take the wrong remedy. When the liver does not store up suf ficient gastric juices it becomes sluggish, and in this way disturbs the stomach and! bowels, with which it is supposed to work in harmony. Then comes the sallow complexion, the pimply face, the dull pain in the forehead, the thinning- ot the blood, etc. A very quick and sensible way to stop the trouble as well as t cure it is by the use of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which contains ingredients especially intended to promote the ac tivity of the liver. Among the many thousands who have written the doctor about the results achieved with his remedy, and who are glad to make the facts public so that others can help themselves, are Mr. Jaa. Kennedy, St. Louis, Mo.; Mrs. S. A. La Rue of Smith s Grove, Ky., and many others. These, like thousands of others, started the use of Syrup Pepsin with a sample. If you will send your name and address you can also obtain a free trial bottle. This will prove to you that liver trouble is promptly cured with this remedy or money will be refunded. Having tried it you can then buy it in the reeular way of your druggist at fifty cents- and one dollar a bottle, and the latter Is sufficient for an entire family. This remedy is a vast improvement over cathartic tablets and salts, whlctt only do good for the time being. 9yrm Pepsin is permanent In its results. Is pleasant to take and does not gripe. It Is especially good for all those who can not stand a violent purgative. lt. uaiaweii personally will be pleased to give you any medical advice you may desire for yourself or family pertaining ta the stomach, liver or bowels absolutely rree or cnarge. Explain your case in a. letter and he will reDlv to vou in detail. For the free sample simply send your name ana aaaress on a postal card or otherwise. For either request the doctor's address is Dr. W. B. Caldwell, R.500 Cald well building, Monticello, 111. For sale by J. G. Hall. SEABOARD AIR LINE SCHEDULE No. 428 leaves Oxford at 8; 05 a. m. connection with Shoo Fly for Raleigh and No. 221 for Durham. , No- 429 arrives Oxford 10 a. m. from Henderson. No. 438 leaves Oxford 11;55 a-m.con necting with trains Doth North and South, arriving at Richmond, 5; 30 p. m., Washington at 9:00 p. m. Bal timore 9: 52, Phila., 11: -51, New York 3; 50 a. m. for the South arriv ing Raleigh 4:00 p. m., Hamlet 7:45 a Savannah 3:20 a. m. and Atlanta at 7:15 a. m. Train for Portsmouth arrives at Portsmouitih. at 5:50 p. m. connecting with Boats. No. 429 aairrives at Ox ford at 12; 40 p. m. from Durham. No. 441 leaves for Durham at 2:40 p. arriving at Durham at 4:25 p. m., aamd the Southern Ry train fotr West is due to leave Durham at 5: 08 p. m. No. 441 due at Oxford at 3- ; 2 0 p. m. which brings passengers from the North and South. ..No 442 leaves for Henderson 6:05 p. m. - connecting with Shoo irty wir Weldon. -, No. 442 arrives Oxford 8; 10 p. Bl and brings passengers from Raleigh and the North. NOTE. No Sunday trains. Oh, liberty! How many are married in thy name. un- is all the more terrible because it can't tell you how it suffers. But there is relief at hand not only relief, but a permanent cure from prickley heat, rashes, hives, eczema and all other skin affections so prevalent among infants during the summer months. If you want to see your baby rest easy once again -and a look of relief spread over its little face, just apply this splen did remedy ZEMO. We believe hon estly and sincerely that in ZEMO you will find the cure you have been praying for. We can tell you in all truth that we have made thous ands and thousands of parents hap py with this simple but sure re medy. And to prove our absolute sin cerety, we have instructed all drug gists selling ZEMO, to refund the purchaser his money if the very first bottle does not bring relief. Used persistently thereafter ZEMO is bound to cure- ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP make the most economical as well as the cleanest and most effective, treat ment for affections of the skin and scalp whether on infant or grown person. Sold by druggists everywhere and in Oxford, by J. G. Hall. Sherlock Holmes Faded! Prom the New York World. Chapter 1. "Hist!" exclaimed Police Lieut. Frank Cody, picking up a soiled shirt from which one button was missing, in the washroom of Mc Guirk's Hotel, Huguenot and Me chanic streets, Now Rochelle. "A button gone, a short with no one inside it," ruminated Cody."Guess I'll keep it and await development. Chapter II- "Phew!" exclaimed Police Capt. Edward J. Timmons, when notified that the pharmacy of M. H. Koll- man in North avenue, New Rochelle had been robbed.the cash register shattered, and money, stamps, and rubber goods taken. Dectective Jos eph Fanelli discovered the thief had let himself through a transom A shirt button was found on the floor! Chapter III. "Fine work!" exclaimed Capt Timmons and Detective Fanelli when Lieut. Cody produced the shirt demonstrating beyond doubt that the button had been torn from it, Honest Advice fo Consumptives Somehow there exists a vast, amount of? skepticism as to the possibility of curing Consumption. . . . We state none but facts, and are sincere in what we asserc. . If ourselves afflicted with Tubercu losis, we should do precisely what wer ask others to do take Eekrnan s Altera tive promptly and faithfully. . . . The reason we should do this, and warrant we have for asking all Consumptives to take it, is that we have the reports off many cures, one of which follows: 1619 Susquehanna Ave., Phila., Fa. Gentlemen: "For two years I - wast afflicted with hemorrhages of the lungs-,. the number totaled nearly one hundred. Our family physician advised another climate, as to remain would probably be fatal; However, X remained, and in Fet- ruary of 1902, I -was taken with a severe attack of pneumonia. When I recovered sufficiently to walk about the house I was left with a frightful hacking cough. which no medicine I had taken could. alleviate. I was again advised to go to another part of the country. It was at this time,. March, 1902, that I learned of Eckman's Alterative. In a short time my cough was gone and I was pronounced 'well' or 'cured.' Since that time I hava had two slight attacks of pneumonia, and I have resorted to no other medicine to effect a cure. I am at present in excellent health ana. feel that as long as I can obtain Eck man's Alterative, I have no fear, of Con sumption. I cannot speak too highly foe the good it has done. (Signed) HOWARD L.. KLOTZ. Eckman's Alterative cures Bronchitis Asthma, Hay Fever; Throat and Lung Affections. Ask for booklet of cured cases and write to the Eckman Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa., for additional evidences. V or Sale . by all leading druggists and J. G. HAIiL, Oxford, X- C. Cody went out and arrested the are heavier. A Hindu merchant of I first man he saw wearing a new Amritsar, who grew very friendly , jshirt. He was Malvin ,Bing, of with a Delhi friend of mine on a ; New Rochelle, who confessed to the voyage from Europe, said just be fore reaching Bombay: "Well, I shall have to pay for all this when jl get home, and I shall be lucky if robbery. Love and hate always remember; only; indifference forgets. WOOD'S HIGH-GRADE Farm Seeds. We are headquarters for the best in all Farm seeds. Grass and Clover Seeds Seed Corn, Cotton Seed, Cow Peas. Soia Beans, Sorghums, Kaffir Corn, r Millet Seed, Peanuts, etc. Wood's Crop issued Special monthly gives timely information as to seeds to plant each month in the year, also prices of Season able Seeds. Write for copy. mailed free on request. wood & sons, Seedsmen, - Richmond, Va. A T. 17.
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
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June 2, 1911, edition 1
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