Newspapers / The Mountain Scout (Taylorsville, … / Sept. 17, 1913, edition 1 / Page 1
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i-W-i rffpf r . DEVOTED TO THE SOCIAL, MORA L AND FINANCIAL INTERESTS OF THE CITIZENS OF ALEXANDER COUNTY AND WESTERN CAROLINA. VOL. XII NO. 594, Taylorsville, N. C. . Wednesday, Sept. 17, 1913, $1.00 PER ANNUM J.' X' THE MOUNTAIN SCOUT. Published every Wednesday, J. P. BABINGTON, Entered at the Post Office, in Taylorsville, N. C, as second class matter," Feb - ruary;6th, 1902 Junderf Actfofngressof,March 3, 1879. PERSISTENT rersistency in advertising is being constant and steadtast in carrying out an advertising campaign. "It is the 'constant drop ping of the water of publicity indifference." - The advertiser should hammer never being afraid of repetition, for advertising may be said to be repetition. A few advertisements may or may not be profitable : the chances are they will not But regular and judicious advertis - ing is always profitable as it keeps the merchant's name before the people all the time. . It is also in the nature of useful information to the public, as it educates the public to look regularly in a certain paper and place for certain business news relative to a certain store. The merchant who is persistent and masters every detail of his business is successful. But if he has not studied advertising and become familiar with it he has not masteredohe - of ...the very important details of his business. The reason why only about otoe in twenty merchants are successful (as Dun's and Bradstreet's statistios show) is because only about one in twenty merchants master adverting as it relates to their business. . - Persistent advertising is not merely to hold business or to. pull business away from competitors, but to gain new customers, - and satisfy existing demands and create new demands. A merchant must be constant, steadfast and regular to accomplish this desired result ':-.. "r-,. V. . :. - " :- '.,.'-". One celebrated retail merchant who has a perfect knowledge of every detail of his business and reaped a rich reward has this to say. "A good newspaper good advertising in that newspaper persisted in backed up by the right kind of merchandise and the right kind of store, service that's a ' combination that will spell success for any merchant who has foresight and understanding enough to give it a fair trial.' ' . v ' Copyright 1912 by Geo. E. Patterson. V .. V rtrrrrrsrvrv rnrrraxrorinnrS LISTEN We have the Right kind of Goods, at the Right Prices, and when you buy at the , BEEHIVE you always buy right. Our stock is complete, Ladies' Suits, Coats, Sweaters, Hats Etc. The Biggest Line of Clothing ever 3 , shown in the county you can PS i 1 i i ni 1 T1 CU- tionary Etc. In everything. Call for what you want, 'we have it, if not we will get it." Bring us your Produce, ; Cross-ties Etc. Yours to please, . m BEE HIVE, , Taylorsyille, N. C. '- : v- ..(. ; at Taylorsville, North Carolina. Editor and Publisher. ADVERTISING that wears away the stone of -:'. , home one proposition at a time, 3 o o & o o o TO US ! 3 o o o o 3 i fact we handle 3 4 esc Confederate Soldiers ;' from VV;;"" . ' , Ellendale. Township. The, following is a list of the soldiers who were in the Con federate Army from Ellendale Township, Alexander County, N.C.:. Furnished by W. E. White. L Elijah Burgess Austin Samuel Pickens Austin Hilman E. Austin. o i James Reynoldson Austin " Philip Austin ' Elijah Tilman Austin Jehu Austin Samuel Austin, Jr. Azor Austin ; William Austin, Sr. William Austin, Jr. Noah Baker Henry Baker ' Robert S. Barnes J. Robeson Bell J. Columbus Bell Miles Bowman ' . David Bowman Joseph B. Bradburn Isaac Newton Bradburn George Franklin Brown , David Bedford Brown Abner Elkanah Brown Jesse Alfred Brown Washington Deal John Dison, Sr. William Dison i George W. Echerd Henry Franklin Echerd Peter E. Echerd David Fox Elkanah Fox Miles Fox Wallace Fox Ambrose Fox s- Moses Fox, Jr. Pinkney L. Gryder David Herman f William Herman Leander Herman Marcus Herman . Sylvanus Herman Miles Huffman Thomas Icenhour Noah Logan Thomas S. Long Joseph Long, Sr. Henry Medlock . Cornelius Medlock .. J. Alva Medlock Elijah Medlock Elisha Medlock Elihu Medlock William H. Milstead Frank Milstead D. Alexander Meadows Hugh A. Oxford , William Wallace Oxford James Harvey Oxford John M. Oxford Elisha Chambers Oxford . James Jefferson Oxford Coleman Payne Alexander Palmer William Parleir Benjamin Parleir " ' William R. Pennell' Calvin Pennell " . Franklin Pennell ' , Mack Pennell Jesse Pennell John R. Pennell - s '- WUliam Pennell, Jr.' . Archie M. Pennell . "James Benjamin Pool Christopher C. Pool William Pool ' V Amzi Presnell Rev. James Reed . Andrew Jackson Reed - ughReed . ' Thomas Reed Jesse Reed " - Larkin Reed ' ' . " Jesse Anderson Reed George Reed Joel Reed, Sr. Joel Reed, Jr. William B. Reed - ' II-r.ry T-oed, . . Henry Reed, Jr. James Reed, Jr. James W. Reed Andrew Newton Reed William Jasper Reed : J.-Samuel Reed William G. Robinson Robert Smith, Sr. John Elkana Smith , William Ira Smith Thomas Wilson Smith Leander Franklin Smith Robert Burton Smith Philip E. Smith Rufus D. Stine. Noah Stine Jonas Stine Noah Sigman Andrew Miles Sigman" Jonas Franklin Sigman Jesse Washington Sigman James Tant Robert Hood Teague John Anderson Teague -"Francis Marion Teague William W. Teague Absalom Travis James A. Watson Levi L. Watts William Watts, Jr. Magnes Watts Wiley Woodard George Washington White William Riley White Henry White Diarrhoea Quickly Cured. "I was taken with diarrhoea and Mr. Yorks, the merchant here, persuaded me to try a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. After taking one dose of it I was cured. It also cured others that I gave it to," writes M. E. Gebhart, Oriole, Pa. That is not at all unusual. An ordinary at tack of diarrhoea can almost invariably be cured by one or two doses of this remedy. For sale by All Dealers. Advertisement. The Farmer and His Milk. A farmer was arrested and fined the other morning for sell ing some adulterated milk adulter ated with a little harmless water. He wore at the same time a suit of all wool (?) clothes badly ad ulterated with shoddy materials, and boots ' whose soles were adulterated with paper, or wood shavings. For breakfast he drank adulterated coffee, his meat was spiced with adulterat ed pepper, his cakes powder, his pickles soured with adulterated vinegar, his pie was seasoned with adulterated spice, his wife was out of sorts because she could not make bread out of adulterat ed flour that had been run in on her for the "best." In fact he saw and felt the affects of adul teration which ever" way he looked, and had never heard of the adulterators being arrested and fined. Yet there are those who blame the farmer for . com plaining of being discontented. Charlotte Observer Caught Bad Cold. "Last winter my son caught a very bad cold and the way he coughed was something dreadful," writes Mrs. Sarah E. Duncan, of Tipton, Iowa. "We thought sure he was going into con sumption. We bought just one bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and that one bottle stopped his cough and mroA him mid Mimnletelv." For sale by All Dealers. Advertisement. mi trade marka nd copyright, obtained or no fee. Stmt model, sUetchor or photo. nd do icrtptloo for FREB SEARCH Mid wort on patentability. Bank reference PATENTS BUILD FORTUNE8 tor yon. Our free booklet toll how. what to iarant and save yon monor. Write today. D. GIVI7T ft GO, PATENT fcAWTEW, "JSevenihSt., Wasliin- i,D.C. Cure for Whooping Cough. . Take 2 large onions and slice them. Add one cup of sugar and one quart of water and boil. Stir in the liquid and add a teacup of strained honey, one half cup of olive oil and three cents worth of rock candy. Mix these and boil. After boiling add sufficient water to make the concoction thin enough to'strain. Then strain it. In warm weather add enough whiskey to keep syrup from souring. Give in teaspoonful doses as, A Full FEED. I pay CASH for PRODUCE Morrison's Old Stand. U lunopei Our Fall Millinery Opening, for 1913, will take place on Thursday and Friday, SEPTEMBER 18th and 19th We .have all the Latest Styles in ' Ladies' and Children's Hats : We extend a cordial invitation to all to come and see our Goods and get our PRICES THE' WATTS CCLPZi Taylorsville, N. C. J o i v . v. often as necessary. By Denis G. Leahy, of Knoxville, Tenn. Mother of Eightee Children. "I am the mother of eighteen child ren and have the praise of doing more work than any young woman in my town," writes Mrs. C.J. Martin, Boone Mill, Va. "I suffered for five years with stomach trouble and could not eat as much as a biscuit without Buffering. I have taken three bottles of Chamber lain's Tablets and am now a well woman and weigh 168 pounds. I can eat any thing I want to, and as much aa I want and feel better than I have at any time in ten years. I refer to any one in Boone .' Mill or vicinity and they will vouch for what I say." Chamberlain's Tablets are for sale by All Dealers. Advertise- ment. Line of 1 FLOYD LIPPARD.y:
The Mountain Scout (Taylorsville, N.C.)
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Sept. 17, 1913, edition 1
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