Newspapers / Webster’s Weekly (Reidsville, N.C.) / Jan. 18, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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"THE WEALTH OF ' THE MIND IS THE ONLY TBJE WEALTH" VOL. XXXIV I. R. UEBSTBR, Editor and Prop'r. REIDSVTLLE, N. C, JANUARY 18, 1906. SDBSCHIPTI03 OXE DOLIIR 1 TEAS. NO. 3 v : Does your baking powder contain alum ? Look upon the label. Use only a powder whose label shows it to be made with tream of tartar. NOTE Safety lies in buying only the Royal Baking Powder, which is the best cream of tartar baking powder that can be had THE UNSEEN HOME. Looking out in" the light of -day, Avross the valley tliat li;s .between,- More than a mile -and a half away, The 4iili' slopes upward, .woody and green. Woo ly and green, to the very top; 1 strain my eyes, but I cannot see The house, though I know -the very spot ' ' '' . ; 'Almost--where its' shining walls must I cannot see. the-gleam of the walls When-, t lie miu in the heaven is bright ami high ; Ent when the shadows of evening fall. Ami the stars tome out in the'qniet kv. An ..-.answering'- .star on the mountain sbie. ' . CJ.leaus oier the gloom in the vale below ; So. though the jealous trees ruay hide, A happy home js there, I know, As I sit in the du.div eve and watcli W .1... 1 V .!.. lining "A pleasing picture my fancy weaves j mnary of six years ago, many prom Of a tire I man coming home at j inent Democrats have been heard to night; . sav that thev dread another. Of. the loving welcome ho there will j -. Knderst00:1 hat the thiee meet ' From one who lias watched for his" principal candidates for the Senator- coming long; f ship 'will be Senator Simmons, Ex- Of chil iish prattle, and pattering feet; J Governor Aycock and Chief Justice Anfi niv faitli in the lncture is very strong. So wlien I wearily turn.my eyes lo the stars th at arc shining up above. Each steadilv ke ping its nightly ' place. ... 31y ta it l grows strong hi the Father's lov And . thoWli the walls of mv heavenlv - home. ination of legislative candidates in Are closely hidden away from sight, ; the Democratic county conventions. I know that a gleam from it will come i .it Al . . To guide me ou, through the darkest with the view of securing the elec niglit. j tion of men who are partial to their Selected. ; resiective favorites. The situation HAS STOOD THE TEST 25 YEARS. is not 3'et clearly defined, however, The old, original GROVE'S Taste-' d ifc is a little to earlv Perhaps, to less Chill Tonic. You know1 what.' accurate! "-edict results. ; ' you re taking. It is iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure. No iay "0o. LET -THE TROUBLES OF EUROPE ALONE. Washintgon, Jan. ' 15.-!-Mr. Bumii introduce 1 t lie following resolution in the Senate : Resolved by tlie Senate, That any interference with any con t ro v e rsy or "participation in board is composed of five of the lead between ropean ing cotton planters of the state, in Governments relating to Euorpean in ternational ipiestions is a violation of the well-settled and "well-defined policy of this government, which has been reei agnized and observed for more , than a century past. He stated that he had lneu induced to offer the resolution by the action of the Senate on his Moroccan resolution. -i 8 Ayer's Cherry Pectoral quiets tickling throat?, hack- ing cuugns, pain in int luup. y It relieves congestion, sub- fl Cherry Pectoral dues inflammation. It heals, strengthens. Your doctor will explain this to you. He knows all about this cough medicine. "We, hmre ul Ar'i CherVy rtfrl In our fnn:j fr er for throat nd lapj trouble, and tlilntt no m!Kn eqult It. M uv A. 1"oji kko v. ApRlfion. Mina. 2V5VT..f J.O0. J. C. ATI co ! All lrtigeif. for Weak Throats Ayor's Pills greatly-aid recovery. Purely vegetable, gently laxative, lAmrsi OUR RALEIGH LETTER. Raleigh, N. C, Jan. IT.. Politic ians and party leaders who come to the state capital on various missions esneeiallv- lawv'prs and narrienlarlv 1 - . mt . ; those from the eastern and central! .. ... , ; counties, are beginning to discuss the . c- Mn4.-rt ; 4!ni i ' eastern benatorsnip now lined by 1 . t Senator Simmons, whoso term expires a little more than one year rom now and whose successor the legislature to be elected this ear will choose. The discussion is not confined to the personality of three or four gentlemen whom it is understood will enter the contest. They are very earnest ly can vassing also the question of a sate primary and the possible outcome, which some of them predict would result ia no choice. Remembering ! theunplcasnat features and party dis tracting results of Walter Clark, and it is believed that there are one or two dark horses in the. woods ready to come out in the open and join in the race as soon as a favorable opportunity presents itself. t It is said that numerous friends and I partisians of thesevseveral gentlemen are already laying pipes for the nom- The c( a planters of North Caro lina, e.-. ally those identified with the Cotton Grower Association, are in better spirits and iut homfnl of future results than in many-years. The now board of directors selected at the recent meeting of the state as sociation, are greatly encouraged over the results of their labors during the .last two or three weeks. This telligent and energetic men. Col. Henry C. Dockery is the chairman and. Dr. R. H. Speight of Edgecombe, S. R. Alexander of Mecklenburg, Ashley Horae of Johnston and A..C. Green ef Wake, are the other mem bers of the managing directorate. Those gentlemen have during the last two weeks securod several thousand dollars in subscriptions with which to begin 'defraying the expenses of the work of the state cotton as sociation, aivl they now announce that tboy will soou put the new president, C.C.'Mooro, of Charlotte, in the field, he is to devote his eiUiro tiuio to the growth and npbnilding of the organi zation, on a regular annual salary, which it is stated will be twenty-five hundred dollars. They hope by this an I other means which thev will em- ploy to soon bring the great majority of cotton growers in North Carolina into the asfoeiatiou as members of the organization and to thus make their work more effective. The action of the general convention ot the Southern Cotton Growers Association at New OrL?!n3, last week, in declaring for fifteen cents for the balance of the crop of ltXi5, lias alo enthused the meniebrs of the organization. This waiter observes, also, from reading rl nf tliA North. I e:n textile journals during the last few weeks, that those papers which mi - n -K-.rx- rwimt wrivl Illltle Hl?ht . ' , of the cotton growers organization fare now concedinz the sterngtb and I possibilities of the association. It is 'apparent, too, tliat the Northern stock ! and cotton market gamblers, who j hare been reaping the great bulk of j the profit on cotton for so long, are greatly disturbed oTer the actual probability that the southern farmers ; will hereafter fix the price of the ! staple, instead of those sharks. There was a remarkable and unusual I scene in the Superior Court of Wake Tountv here last week, which marked I the ending of the sensational shooting affair in this city last Jnne, when policeman Isaac Rogers shot and very I nearly killed Deputy U. S. Marshall John Dockery, the affair growing out of the discoyery of intimacy between Mr. Dockery and a daughter of Mr. Rogers. When the case against Rogers was called he plead guilty to a charge of assult . with a deadly weapon, the charge' of secret assault having been withdrawn. Thereupon Hon. James H. Pou, special prosecuting counsel employed by Mr. Dockery, arose andlfrom a moral standpoint to warrant earnestly importuned juage warn not to punish Mr. Rogers. He stated i hat. this was the desire of Mr. Dock- "under a misapprehension of. the j facts, " had acted only as any brave father would be expected to act. That both were brave men and they wanted , j i -r t tt i . - , . , after stating that this was the first m , , stance tLat he knew where the prose . , . . 1 I Jl 1 3 1 L X It.. I tutor had pleaded in court for the freedom of the defendant, imposed oiiby a fine of fifty dollars upon Mr. Rogeis, adding that he could not dis- 1 miss the case without some punish ment and uphold the dignity of the law. Counsel for Mr. Dockery stated that while his client had suffered much he now believed that was for his good and did not desire to have his assailant punished. Mr. Dockery was in a hospital here for the two I months following the shooting and for several weeks his life hung by a thread. During his critical (illness Mr. Rogers remained in jail for a period of about a month. Governor Glenn spent yesterday (Sunday) in Charleston, S. C, where he deliverd two addresses, one before the Young Men's Christian Assoica tion and the other in the Scotch Pres byterian church. He Was the recip ient of much attention and many courteses at the hands of the officials and citizens of Charleston. Under a special charge from Judge Ward the grand jury of Wake county is investigating the official conduct of some of the magistrates of Raleigh This is partly due to the fact that many of the cases sent on to this term of court by some of the magistrates were based on such flimsy evidence that the grand" jury declined to re turn true bills. But there has been a loud complaint for sometime abou some of the official . acts of several justices of the peace here, it being alleged that their courts are run principally on the "financial plan," the .magistrates governing their acts acording to the means best affording the - largest financial returns in the way of court costs. But the criticism which has been so liberally indugled in does not apply to all the magistrates of the citv. Llewxam. NINETY-EIGHT PER CENT. There is fascination about big pro- 'fits to a buisness man. But the con servative and cautious trader prefers to have the lesser per cent, of interest and the larger per cent of safetyin his investments. There is no buisness man who would not consider it a sound proposition to invest in an en terprise in which absolute loss was impossible and which offered ninety eight chances in a hundred of a rich profit. The statistics of cures effected by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery show that ninety-eight per cent of cases of 4 weak lungs'can be absolutely curel. Almost if not all forms of plij-sical weakness may be traced to starvation. Starvation saps the. strength. The body is just as much starved when the stomach can- uot extract nutrition from the food it j receives as when there is no food, ! 'Ytak lungs," bronchial affections, obstinate coughs, call for nourish- ment. supplies tliat nourishment in its jnosri condensed and j assimilable form. I makes weak lungs' strong, y strengthening the stomach and organs' 1 0r digestion which digest and di j tribute the foods, and by increasi it),e supply of pure blood. TO CURE A COED IN ONE DA Take Laxative Bromo Qninin& Tz lets. All druggists refund the mony if it fa iU to cure. R. W. Grpve'a fl: nature is on each box. 2Gc WASHINGTON LETTER. Washintgon, D. C. Jan. 11, 190G. Things come around curiously in politics, and now it looks as though there might be a public building bill, in spite of the Speaker's previous pronounciaments to the contrary, to coax back into line such insurgents as are not amendable to discipline. The fight in the House is by no means over. Both sides still claim the vic tory and it is anybody's fight as to whether or not the joint statehool bill is killed for the present session. The question of bill is simply a passing the Hamilton question of politics. Of 'course all concerned want lour of the territories statehood. But there 13 a strong sentiment in all of them against joint statehood. Whether that sentiment would be strong enough to defeat 'the. bill if it were put to a referendum vote is a question, but it is strong enough to be a factor worth lavinj. ont the Hamilton hill for some jears to come. But the reason for pressing the issue just now is the be lief of the Republican leaders that they can get the states into the Union with only four senators instead of e'ight. When you consider that three of the states, or six senators, would be almost certainly Democratic and the other at best doubtful, it is easy to see the reason for this anxiety to bundle the two states into the national constellation and have done with it, rather than risk putting off the evil day and geting perhaps a larger num ber Of opposition senators. 21 has been blazoned abroad that the President is warmly in favor of the Hamilton bill As a matter of fact it is doubtful if he is more than luke warmly in favor of it. There is reason to believe that some time ago, there was the evidence of such strong op position, that he promised Senator Beveiidge who is a warm champion of the measure to recommend it in his message. This promise has been ful filled, and it is doubtful now if Pres ident Roosevelt cares particularly about the matter further than he would naturally wish to favor the reA sentiment of the various territor ies 'xhatever that is. , Hut as to the pork barrel.i This is of - course a retrenchment congress. Tliat was heralded loudly before the session when the deficit looked even worse than it does now, and that it is bud enough. Among the measures of retrenchment there was to be no pub lic building bill. That would mean tjiat the bulk of congressmen would e cut off from one of the easiest and jfcost satisfactory methods of "-paying campaign obligations. Of course pub lic buildings are a good thing even if ihey are expensive, and every com munity, especially the younger and smaller communities want them. Ind there is enough log-roll ing and iiutual compliance about the most of och bills to be called plain grafting ' xcept that the communities do usual y get the benefit of the money spent. Cow it is ititimated that the. Speaker fci&y be previled uiou to sanction a jaill. an 1 if he jis coerced thus far, t!efe are a good many weak kneed jusurgeuts-who... will wash o if their war paint an 1 come into camp quite gleefully an i tne tiammou wiu go through. But the Sjeaker may te ble to acomnilsh his -purpose ..with- mi beiu driven to that extremity. iShat the President is vitally in trestel in, and what is of course tied ip somewhat with the statehood bill, h tlie rimippine tarin. xi it is liown that this measure is in serious tnger, the weight of the White House doubtless will, be tlirown into fn? scale. The sugar and tobacco men lave plaved a very clever part in rerging tlieir cause with the single titers. But it is not believed they vlll be able to keep the tariff bill from vote or defeat it when it does couie P-. fThere is a great deal of capital be ing made just now out out of the plorris case. But the probability is (tliat the excitement has reached, if it Las not passed its climax. Dr. Harris, the husband of the lady who was 'I . . m . T-t i IT. .- 1.- -X.rom me m.ue au, number of well meaning people liave been before hini, and he lia placed both Jiiineelf and tle President in a position where it is unlikely ths cae will be reopened. Several things stand out very prominently in the case. First the Preidfcnt knew nothing of the incident till it was all over, and no one would fterrtute.him of willingly injuring or inconveoienc ing any woman. Then it is quite plain that assistant Secretary Earn., UEUTEfiATiT BOlYMAfi. ; . 3 v :,v.-: . ? -J i-. VV III FDRTY-QGHT HOURS PE-RU-IKD HI. Cold Affected Head and Throat Attack Was Severe. Chas. V. Bowman, l8t Lieut, and AdJ.t. 4th M. S. M. Cav. Vols., writes from Lanham, Md., as follows: "Though somewhat averse to patent medicines, and still more averse to be coming a professional afadavit man, It seems only a plain duty in the present instance to add my experience to the columns already written concerning the curative powers of Peruna. lI have been particularly benefited by Its use for colds in the head and throat I have been able to fully cure myself of a most severe attack la torty'dght hours by Its use according to directions. I use lias a preventive whenever threatened with an attack. "Members of my family also use It for like ailments. We are recommend ing it to our friends." C. W Bowman. Pe-rn-na Contains no Narcotics. One reason why Peruna ha found per manent use in so many homes ia that it contains no narcotic of any kind. 1 1 can be used any length oi time without ac quiring a drug habit. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbua, O'.io, for free medical advice. All cor- rcsvondence held strictly confidential did not display ins customary tact in the way he handled the case. Also it is plain that Representative Hull the brother, of the ladj, did not display a large ainouut of brotherly affection in the case. And that is the particular story that' is now goiug round. It is intimated that tlie White House secretaries were warned in advance that Mrs. Morris was a dangerous woman, and were told to Ik? on their puard when she called. This is t-aid to be the secret of the promptitude with which she was bustled off the premises. Of course the whole in cident is regrotahie. Hut in uo ouutrv in the world is the executive hea I of the nation so easy of access aa in the United States. Congress hai failel to enact legislation for the pro tcefiou of the President, mainly en account of the objections of wine Southern senators. The cut ire country demanded such protection when the McKinlcy horror- was frevh in mind, au I :!ie Secretaries in tlie Executive La'iti-i banN r I ave u hard tinm and a wrions respfjn.ibilitv in protecting the President from cranks, lunatics and bores or worse. It iuvigorates.strengthens and builds up. It keei you in conditio njl ynta ly.. mentally and morally. That' what HoliisterV Rocky Mountain Tea will do. & cents. Tea or Tablet. Fetzer & Tucker. TUESDAY AFTERNOON READING CLUB Met with Mrs. Oliver, on Jan ICtU. Only nine members wer present, a several were sick and some out of town, but notwithstanding the pro gram was Minrt it was very trtijoyaUe. Mis Pannill in her delightful original style gave a most intending and instructive paper entitled. "In Italy with English Poets." Mrs. A. E- Harris liad a niot de lightful subject. "With Mark Twain in Italy." Tia needlciss to ray tliat ercrjone was convnlscd with laughter at our own Mark's redicclous charm ing and instructive comment on his tour through Italy. After refreshment the Club ad journed to meet with Mb Pannill at tLe hoa:e of her aunt. Mr. Prank Hall, on Jan. 3S,:J0C. You will not find U-acty in rouge jiot or complexion whitewash. True beauty come to them only that take IloUisier' Ilocky Mountain Tea. It U A J f a 1 t iiit. a cent Tea or Tablet. Fetzer & Tucker. i To Close Out, These Goods will go as fol lows. Men's $io Suits now $7.50 S.50 6 00 7.00 " 5.00 Boy's knee pants Suils 50c to $4 00. - -.- i 100 Pair King; Quality Shoes $3 50 now $2.75. Heavy Wool Underwear at cost. Heavy Cotton Fleeced Unv dcrwear, best 50c grade now 35c. Smnll lftt Tittle nnt' 'ii Shoes, sizes 11 to 1. at 50C. $ Lot Heavy Pants for men, good every day rants $2.25 now $1.35. :j . Now is lyour chance, if you will look yon will buy. THE CLOTHIER. FETTER deEOKDENAVE. Cards were issued to out-of-town friends yestrdav announcing a mar riage that v . , heard of with much iuereftt. U tvitations were inucd in town. Ol i the most beautiful and impreiive home marriages ever holcmmzcd in Franklin took place at the Episcoiai Iletory when Dr. de IJordenavo claimed as his bride Mis Jessie Hooper Fetter amid a fcene of lerfect loveUnev the jtarlor and hall bciug artistically di-coratcd with jialui. fern and cut flowers of rare beauty and fragrance. Juit licfore the ceremony "Oh I'romlM Me," was sweetly and effectively ung by MU Kate Anderson,- charmingly attired in cream cretx? cie chene and carrsiiic carnations'.-The' bridal praty then en tered the parlor to the trains cf McniehlsonnA wedding marcli beauti fully renderc! by Mrs. H. I. Lcary. TUe4 bride, becomingly gowned in blue with liat and gloves to match, and carrying hrldcji rose, entered with her. sister, Mrs. Htocls, as dame of honor, wImj was strikingly handsome in a drexs of green chiffon tafeta. tbek picture hat and gloves, carrylca: cariiat jodi. The crrjum entering with his brother. Mr. Livins deUordcnaTe, the rite of matrimony were solemn ized by the father of the bride Iter. ritual of the Episceji church. The bride Is a talented and cultured yonng lady of charm iag perionality wbo enjoys a Urge circle of friends. The groom a son at the bte Major deUordenave is a highly etectucd ami fiopular young physician of our town much beloved professionally and socially and will be warmly congTat ulated on the happy event of bis life. After a tour of northern citie the bridal couple will beat home to their friends after the 20thv , The numerous presenU were quit handsome and useful attesting the general popularity of the bride and groom for whom we wih a long happy and prosperous voyage through life. Tidej Water News, Franklin. Va; - , I utc e
Webster’s Weekly (Reidsville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 18, 1906, edition 1
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