Newspapers / The Graphic (Nashville, N.C.) / May 18, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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tiii: GiiAPUic. Fublbhed by r:2 nasuyille ru:Lis:$xa co NASHVIM-t, M. C. M. W.LINCKE. Editor ciMgr. . One Year, 1.00 BusscBirnoS: J Six Months .60 f Three " Publisher's Announcement. All orar flttma llnse wtH ba ebarrd sat Un lor oWw aolioes, W. NeeoainiualoeUoB will ba pabllahea If to im ot wriUr U wlUihsld. . . Tba paNtshar ol Tbb Gun will ao torwpoaalMslor vknra eapraaasa bj Its aomspoadaata. Notion nd 1 ol BpNotfcj" will ba charged a U raw o lOo. per KM or each iaaartloa. AdrertlMr dIHnf a cbanfs oljdwr IsesMDt should baa copy lu oBca aoi UtN tbaa boob oa Tuesday. AdrertlaeaMutsdlsooDtlaaed bsfors i ba Hum eontnutea lor fcu ehar.ed transteai rataa lor tba ' ae taally pabllsbsa. AdrsrllaemMts oa which bo PJf'Jf umber ol Insertloaa U narked will be narked "Ull forWd" aa ebarfed "F data ot diMSoatlauaaoa. Communications Bad Items ol aewa is landed lor pubitcalloa. and all boalaaaa , teller suould ba addrassed to Ta a Ua ra le and aot to Indlrldnal BMabera ol the sta THURSDAY. MAY 11th, 1911. Thii is indeed a very busy time for the tax list takers, who are now on the rounds performing the duties assigned to them when they were appointed to these responsible po sitions. Some of them report their work indeed trying, owing to the fact that in many instances they call at the homes of property owners to find them away and no one present who can give the desired informa tion. This necessitates a second vis it and riding several miles to accom plish. Some of the list-takers are having very little trouble and will possibly complete same within the time prescribed by law. There should be no trouble in get ting the progressive citizens of Nash' ville and the promoters of the Cas Ulia railroad together on a basis as will insure the proposed railroad terminating at this place. No other point is more accessible or would be more beneficial to Caatalia and that entire section than Nashville. Cas- talians would prefer their outlet at this point and Nashvillians would be standing in their own light if they stood in the way of making this place the terminus of the road. If the people of Nash county are really in earnest over the matter of good roads they had just as well make up their minds that these blessings cannot be obtained with out the expenditure of money. This problem can only be solved by and through a bond issue and the wise application of the funds after these bonds have been sold. Wherever and whenever any other system has been attempted there has been sig nal failue. There are several, very important - problems now confronting the busi ness men of Nashville, matters mean ing much toward the material growth and welfare of the town and ' k. . . 1. .I-, a. rTL Is no better place to discuss these matters than in a meeting of the Nashville Board of Trade, which should always be on the alert for any proposition tending to a contin ued growth of oar every interest The news service of The ' Graphic this week is not up to its usual high standard owing to the fact that Editor M. W. Lincke has been quite sick. Monday evening he suffered a severe attack resembling acute in digestion and for several hours his condition was quite critical. - For the past day or so he has been able to be at his post of duty, but fully incapacitated for the responsible de ties devolved. rZH :-:y.rSMy;': is its its The Town Ccaiihissioners are to be ccr-t'..:J rron the "action talen in f r ' " ' ' j rctsnt medicine ven ? -, i ' d:i!ars in goods, : Ir '.;: '.'.-8 fJJrs from " i c l t'.a streets cf : ' " -9. TL!3 e'-p 5 i ' :' j r ; t The Ketlea'a treeless asset, TVi. material DroflTess of the South u mnrtarul mart imDresaing itself nnui th country, and there is ln- .lnr ferritorv belna- offered as to hanrMl of knowledge about it. The time Is coming when the South will be recognised as the greatest mi nf this entire country. It is astonishing how little is known nf h raJ South. It has been mis- nrmfjrf so of ttn that it is hard overcome all that has been said of it. but as year by year there are great er numbers of visitors to it. mere a growing first hand knowledge of affairs that will tend to add to and prosperity. In New York a few days ago was Mr. Richard H. Edmonds, the editor of the Manufacturers' Record, and while there he declared that the nancial people of that city had very little real knowledge of the South. He discussed the material prosperity of this teztion ai it exists, giv ing information a to some of the things that go towards making the South the biraest asset of the tion. In an interview, Mr. Edmonds is quoted as saying in regard to the iirnorance of financial New York con cerning the South, the following: "For years they were inclined to look noon that section of the country a the 'Door relation In the family of States. Few of them have ever yet really waked op to the real truth that the South is the nation's biggest asset. It is to the South that the na tion is comoelled to look for the $500 000,000 which Southern cotton annu ally brings us from Europe. "But that is only a small factor in the South's importance. The cotton cron in its raw state, seed included is worth nearly $1,000,000,000 a year while almost as much more is added to this value by that part of the crop manufactured in thiscountry and the utilization of seed in eight hundred cottonseed oil mills. "Comparatively few stop to think of the fact the South has more than three times as much coal as Great Britain, Germany, France and Aus tria combined, or 60,000 square miles aninst their 17.000 square miles. "In water Dower it is equally a highly favored, and while about one million horse-power has been devel oDed on Southern streams there ii available for development five or ten times as much, according to the methods used. At the present time 200,000 to 900,000 horsepower is be ing developed in the Carolines, Ten nessee and Georgia at an expenditure of probably $40,000,000 or $50,000, 000." News & Observer. Asaee4 the Law, Oat trey the DecUWa The opinion of the United States Supreme Court in the Standard Oil cases handed down Monday while it is gratifying in that it decides that the Standard Oil Company is a mon opoly in restraint of trade, is a most dangerous one in that it reasons away the Sherman anti-trust law, Virtual ly annulling it, leaving it in a shape satifactory to the trusts. The country will recognize that the opinion of the court,, in its in itial effect, is a most unfortunate one, and it leaves the anti-trust law by its construction, in such shape that it will prove of little avail, as the decision destroys the law. The decision of the Supreme Court puts the act m the shape ; for which the trusts have been contending, and it will therefore be an aid to them in their conspiraces against trade, the Supreme Court adoptinga classification of good trusts and bad trusts, and by the decision changing the anti-trust law. " The court, in its decision overruled its own decision in like casesin which the anti-trust act was construed as prohibiting all restraints of inter state trade, and reasons away the law, destroying its value. Senator Culberson, in his statement publish ed in the correspondence of Mr. T. J. Pence, in which he endorses the dissenting opinion of Associate Jus tice Harlan, points the way for Con gress to act He is right in the position which he has taken and Congress should act. on the matter if it has to stay in session all sum mer,'. It should act without delay and sq strengthen the anti-trust law as to make it of some account In the condition in which it is left by the decision of the Supreme Court it is useless, and Congress should amend it so as to destroy the de cision and so as to make sure that its purpose can not again be over thrown by judicial legislation. , , Do Ghosts Haunt Swamps No, Never. Its foolish to fear a fancied evil, when there are real and deadly perils to guard against ia swamps and marshes; baous, and low'. !hK Tbese are the malaria ir:3 1 ' cause sijue, chills and .'3Vr. v ' aes. aches in the bones it, u.l Uvt..i. J UiEOo:, It k SecoaKl b Are ol States Cast ol tlte l&aMppt ' '" -A ajBBJBBBajB8 InuMftM Wereae e "aeaet, faram, Flahartoa, H-fbiri - H.r aofl saw Cnmete MvWs Capital and tettkwe to Mac , Florida Is eosttag hte hat ewa, aaja tte Nadaaal Maculae. H r wmat aa4 farot. bar (Uharlea, bar pbeapbaU dapoalU, bar oil sad cnasau are nraix ud tnunlxratioa to bar kboraa. Ot tba ttatos east el the Missis. alppl nerlca ta aaoaad la arw r ooly a vary sbmS awxta, Wfng II.0M afaare aUtos ta extoat Ske baa ever atltos of saaeoaat. a kradag wbat ia arobably tte ot wmdarml svMa ot UadJoekad kar bora ba tka World. tw .kaL. aarteM W doUad with .m. ht aid broad lake, naia taag her. la eoejaacttoa wltk a eeV work of State camatf, cbosr MtaHn few ail time to coma. Hr oil caa prodooa fractleally every kaowe frutt of tte eana, w tbaia la aboadaace. Her eltroa la diutry Is aaeond U stte oaly to that ot California, while ia tnaUty ot products it has ae superior to the wort. Her trockiaf industry Is ta a cUa by Itoott. She has a subtorraaoa ainfbflllv Aaf fovAtM VstaUs? that will par. mlt the lakinc ot rtodaa walls to daptk ot from twaaty to bto on imNd tt aarwhare la the Bute, thus prevtdlac saalast ev the poa. afbllltr of dltmant. Har aoii .v.. Miiii iutr loom that will raadlly abwrt evae the haartoat rain fall. She prodoeas ever iwowi r th wnrM'i anoolv of pebble aae rock phoaphato. Har peace ladoa. try la seooad oay to taat Har aaval storas ladnstry Is equal Af ail tba other aaval stores predudag States cf the Union. Her ptae Udoatry has a greater mnmw tkaa wan the world famad ptae ladustry ot Oeoraia. Har ey- praes ladwtry, yet m iu uuuacr. holds forth a future of greet promnw. Her acrteaKaral predeeto, embraa. Inf loag and aaon siapie couoo. poeaaa, eom, oats, Hco, cow poaa, velvet heaas, peaauts. tobacco, hay. sugar eaae. sweet potatoes, an kinds MMlalilaa and the Chief ettrUS aad tropical fruits, are more dlvarrt- fled thaa thoM of any ouar ow Rar nat aeaaam of erasing lands. available an the year, are the foun dation of a cattle Industry tnai is mniiif annnallr la bnportaace aad promleM one day to beeome one of the moat Important la the United BUtes. , TvMtr raara am the Krapefrult, which was Introduced Into Florida by old CapL Shaddock from the Kan Indian Islands, was hardly known to tkis country. It was a monstrosity, something pleaalns to the eye, hut not the taste. The flrat twe earloads that were hipped ffota Lakelaad to , Cnicae aad war mnrhiaai from the grow er as a epeeulaooa at a coat ot M eenU a box, aaalast bin b dot w day. aot only eld aot retnm the origlaal tsveatment. bet . coat the buyer tSU la freight - The Chicago people did not want any Florida grapefruit thank you. teat season more thaa alae hundrad oars of the fruit that has beea pro- annual tba World OVOP BS B food flt for the gods entered the Windy City, brinaing from 14 to II a box m retail, aceordlag to season. The growth of Florida'! citrus in dustry has been aa remaraaeie as n haa haaa ramantla. - FlftoM years ace middle Florida produced prae- tlcally au of the euros mm grown In the State, ever threeeuarters ot the aaaual output being hipped from Ocala. The ladustry at that tlmt waa la a Broanerous and grow lag eondltioB. Money was being made en. every side, but this money was being lavestoi ia new and larg er (TOVeS. V? '-;VX: '-r.-l; rham eeme the treat freeaes of 1S aad 1185 and la a single night as It were the citrus Industry of that section ot Florida was wiped from the map, nearly every grove being killed aad ever four mintoa boxes of Inacloua fruit drln on the tree. Aad it was a blow that shook the whole Industrial fabrie in the State, for Florida at that time depended ' al- moat wholly apoa her euros industry tor her eceamereuu upoauauig., . 8a mrolntieaarr waa its effect In deed that almost eTarythlng in the Florida of to-day may Be seis to eats from the year et the big freese. ' For time tt locked ae though the citrus industry ot Florida had bean killed beyond resuscitation. Many of the rowers retoraed to the Northern homes, ethers started life anew la some otKar field of endeavor. A few, howarar. confident that the two auo- eesslve forces that had spelled such disaster to their interests ware one of those eeeuUar fresfci of nature that cannot be sc:;-t::r"y explain ed, replanted their groves. - Is there anythlhg ia all this world that is of more importance to you than good digestion? Food must be 3itosvstain l. re and muftt ce ested and convertfi into t' 1. Important Malice. - The taxes for the town of Nash' villa are long paat due in some in stances and must be paid by whom soever due, and notice ia hereby given to all persons who have not met the requirements of the law by paying their taxes, that they must come forward and settle same on or before Saturday, May 20th. or the Chief of Police and collector willfro ceed to collect same by levy and sale. This notice is given by order of the Board of Town Commission ers, this the 8th day of May, 1911. J. H. T. Baku, Mayor. NOTICE ' ' ' - By virtue ot the power contained in a treat deed made by W. Ft. Black well and wife, Fannie E Black well, to the undersigned on January 17, 1910, and recorded ia Book 1& at page M9, Nash Regiatry I will Bell at peblio auction for cash et the court bouae door ia Nana villa N. C. oa Monday, tba Uih day ot June; 1911. three certain tract or parcels ot laud iaCaatalia Township Nash county, described aa followa. (a) A certain lot lyinr la the town of Caatalia oa the North East aide of Nash street, containing one acre and In a deed dated Jan. 10th, 1904 made by F. B. BVks. IT. H. Arrlngtoa. et al, to W.B Black well aad registered in Book 144 page 645, Nash Registry, tblalot being the present residence of said Blaok well and wife. (b) A tract of land la the town of Caatalia adjoining the lands ot S J. Bartholomew, W. R, Black well elal and being situated oa the East aide of Main atreet. and containing &5O0 square varda, more or lees, and bounded particularly in deed from S. J. Bartholomew to W- R. Black, well and registered in Book 160. page 196, Nab county Registry, aod dated Feb. 9(8. 1907. to which re. (erenee ia had. (c) A tract of land in Caatalia Township adjoining tbe laoda of T. W. Bartholomew, J. A, Harriaoo.et al, and definitely described in deed J. H. Harrison to Fannie K Black well, dated January l?th. 1906, and recorded in Book 1&4, page 106, Nash County Registry, to wbiob re ference Is bad. a F. AUSTIN, Trustee. Thia May II, 1911. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. ' The undersigned having qualified as administrator of J, T. Mtnuara, deoeeHed. late ftf Naah county, M C, entice la berebv wlven to all per- aoua baviotrolalniNatfalaHitheealate uf aald df erased to pri arat tbem ) tba undersigned admloitUratornDor before tbe Bib day of Mart 1 913. nr lb is notice will be plead ia bar of tbelr recovery. All persona iadebt ed m aaid ealate will come forward and make Immediate aett.'ement. a H. FINCH. Tbla May 8, 1911. Adro'r Tbe man who first said that there is a rocker born every minute lived in a day when the birth rate was much lower than it ia now. For Oood Service Oo To P. A. Richardsons New . Barber Shop Otd Bess Bteck Bstwsssi bVard DrwgCe. aad Peat Office . ".' aBaBBBasBBasasawacwaaMaawHsaat ,We have larger and bet ter facilities now than ever before and shall be glad to have our friends make our shop Headquarters when in town. We can take care of your over coats, parcels, etc, have Laundry and Pressing done and can give you any service usually found at a first class Dajberahop. Thanking my friends for past pat ronage and asking a con' tinuance of the same, I am yours to serve P. A. Richardson. WWiHWwaMie FOR SALE! Farm known as George Hedgepeth property consisting of 202 acres situate 6 miles from Nashville. 35 acres cleared, balance in wood, - - Timber sold. ' ; Property consisting of 654 acres, 60 acres cleared. Timber soid, i time of cutting Jan. 1912. Two tenant houses. This farm is near ' . Hilliardston, and is known as a part of the Hilliard place - ! Farm consisting of 671 acres. Situated 2 miles from Caatalia. ' Known as tbe J. U. Sherin place. 60 acres cleared, balance in wood : w . Two tenant houses x ' House of six rooms on lot 100 x 57 yards, in Caatalia, with out I . -. buildings. Very reasonable. L. F. TILLERY A SON, Rocky Mount, N. C, Phone 207 Phillips Building. eae afcweiiheiajiieiitaevaxtaay fraSaBvMaeMfcgaHtHfcte a-? .i. . w v I i r T-S : .. z Manufacturer's Agent and Dealer In Qasollne and Steam f ( ENGINES Wheat Threshers and Binders, Saw Mill and Cotton Ginning Out ' fits, Webber and Columbus' Wagons, Til'age Implemenis , ' ..' y and Farm Machinery Generally : Ke bib's Two-Horse Manure Spreaders Roc ley Mount N. C. Dug WellsDangerous ! The dug well with its dead animals and dirt is merely a cess pool filled with germs and death. Bad water means bad health to man and beast 85 per cent of typhoid comes from impure water. 1 The 'iivi.r--: Drilled f When :i - Properly Well " " -: " O ; " Drilled Is A Ouarantee Against Typhoid and Contsgion . '- It means sn inexhaustible supply of pure, Bpark- , . - - , ling water for all purposes, A drilled well does ' , not dry or freeze up, leaving you without water. ' Let Us Figure; With You On A Drilled Well - We guarantee absolute satisfaction. You cannot afford to risk the health of your fn)ily and stock with -a disease spreading dug well. . e will call and give full information. RODL2RTCON Ct DRIDCERO, Naahvl51, North Carolina. ' : " 'tit - Ui Ukiv. . . . i 1 . i , v Commencing with Hay 18th and continuing until June lstl we are offering our stock of Millinery at a reduction of ' One Third Off - Or in other words 663 cenjts will now buy $1.00 worth of good clean merchandise. You will also have the assistance of an ; Expert Milliner 1 In helping you decide what is best for you in shades and shapes. Don't miss this op portunity. Never before have you had such - an offering of . V Hiflh Class Millinery At such a low figure. Come early and. get -. - v the advantage of best selections Tbe Arrington Bissette Co, aTsataAaVBAJafjaVBlBVaVaa We Are After Your S DIGVGIO Business WE CAN SELL YOU Racycle, Rambler. Cleveland, Iver Johnston and Reading Standard. Every One Guaranteed. Talking Machines and Records. Base Ball Goods, Eastman Kodaks and Sup plies , T V G. F. HARRELL, RocKy Mount, N. C A SUCECSSFUL MERCHANT! f Because He Was a Depositor Of The , . Savings Bank . On October 4tb, 1904, a young man walked nto the . Savings Bank at Rocky Mount, N. O., and said to the Cashier, "I wish to make a small deposit, to which I expect to add from time to time, for a special purpose ,. He deposited exactly $13. which amount began to draw Four Per Cent Interest from the first day of October, , 1904' True to his word, he added to his 113.00 a little v every month, and each interest quarter his interest was little more, for he received compounded interest On Jan. 2, 1907, he came into the bank and drew out his v balance, which amounted to 1689.30 and went into , business. Today the young man ia one of our leading, Srosperous and most up-to-date merchants of Rocky lount. He did it and others can do it. We welcome small accounts. The Rocky Mount Savings & Trust Cop: ny. S roer In Addition To Our- Grand MILLINERY Display We Are This Week Showing An Exceptionally Fine Line Of FLOUNCINGS AND EMBROIDERIES That Are The Cream of The Season Our Stock Of ' A WHITE GOODS AND. FOULAHDS - Was Never Prettier . y- . - Nor Mas It Ever Before Embraced Such Variety and ft obbiness cs Our Present Stock Does at This Season Come And See Us THE JONES-COOPER COMPANY. ' ' NASHVILLE, N. C. l t ll.w... ...ti . . . - . . J las Vs i Mr c ""-' c : C -zilv r r. 1 T ' ;r : :7at:r and 4. J I i rJ J ! - 1 rv tn 1 cry iadwa dc--!y j L t Llctirio L.:.--"s da. t f il 1 C'.'t t'''9 Vii'iOUS ; i ! ; i ' 1. "i. . i -: , f 5 ; . "a tl d'.-: "nt, I s the :. c.
The Graphic (Nashville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 18, 1911, edition 1
2
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