Newspapers / The Graphic (Nashville, N.C.) / June 22, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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y . r- - Tlio Tradinc Public , Liberally PatrouUs Merchant V l.o Bid For Tb Trade - i -l 1111; U llUVf Watch For Tho Bidders The Nashville Publishing Co Publishers, - r' , . ESTABLISHED 1803. M. W. LINCfCE, Editor and Marcher VOL. XVII NASHVILLE, North Carolina, JUNE 22nd, 1911.:. NO. 25. t - . ' r .'. r:Ict Fcr Savings Inspected by ' the United States- Government ' and rnanaged by competent of ..: : fleers and directors. The first H:tIc?.:lBak - Cf tofcky Kotiat, ft C . Insures security and courtesy to all patrons. 4 per cent interest paid on savings deposits, com pounded quarterly. You can bank with us by mail. . Write or call on J. B. Ramscy, President ' R. B.. Days, Jr. Cashier. 8.G. Siua, Asst. Cashier. Civs Vi a X.W Ela4 of Test-leel. Professional Cards. . Bernard A. Brook ' ' Outoa W. f jlor ' fJashYlll WhlUker BROOKS A TAYLOR Lawyers ' . y Prmctlcxto All BUM sad Federal Court. ' Money Loaned on Heal Estate Security , ; . ' . ' ' ' ' . ' r" vF. A. HAMPTON Attoraay-At-Law V" --- -...Office Sunset Avenue Opposite Plan- , r. , ten Bank -' " ' Rocky Mount, N. C ... Dr. 0. F.. Smittison, , , DENTIST. ( , Office Over Kyssr's Drug Store. ! . V "Rocky Mount.1 N.C. ' A commission to select text-books for use In the public schools of North Carolina has just been appointed, and South Carolina Is also getting ready to select text-books for some years w come. Tbis fact lends pei Unence to some observations con cerning the kind of text-books that ought to be "used, not only In the Carolinas but in all the other States in our Progressive Fanner territory. . To put it in a sentence, the need is for text-books more directly re lated to the life of the people. ',, We need spelling-books in which the farm boy will early become ac quainted with such words as "nitro gen," "potash," "protein," etc., as well as such common, every -day words as "clevis." "single-tree." "mattock," and other ordinary farm terms which have hardly had a place at all in the spelling-books qsed by the million and millions of farm children heretofore. .- ' Nor are the spelling book-makers at all alone in their attitude of in difference or contempt of the farm child's needs. - The arithmetics have laujrnt an about banking ,and ex change and English money and lati tude and lohgtitude and the metric system of weights and measures, and have told almost nothing about bow toccompound a fertiliser . formula irom certain quantities of phosphor- abroad, 200 Teasels, including 60 ic acid and kainit and cottonseed I ocean tank steamers, being engaged meal pr bow to make a balanced in transporting its products and this i ration for cattle from different com-1 foreign business has brought to this binations of feeds. , , - . country more than S 1.000.000.000 of me geographies, too. have too foreign gold. often laid emphasis on naming- capl- The company employs 70,000 men, tals and bounding countries while I has a payroll of $150,000 a dav. and neglecting to teach the principal in forty years of corporate existence StaadaH Oil's Wsaltk, ' The Standard Oil Company has a capital stock of $110,000,000,. of which 1100,000.000 is common and $10,000,000 is preferred. It Is sup posed to have a surplus of about $500,000.000., ' ;; v,. . V ' . i ' The stock yesterday advanced from 675 to 679 M a share. It closed on the curb after the decision1 wss known at 50 bid and 700 asked. - The cash assets of the company. according to the annua) report, were about $388 a share. ' These as sets do not Include the value of the company's oil above ground, which is figured at $300,000,900, or about $300 a share; so that in actual liqui dation the value of the Standard Oil stock would be about $688 a share. The company has 8,000 miles of trunk plpo line, 75.900 miles of feed ers and controls 70 per cent ef the refining business of the .country, having twenty-two refineries, each with a daily capacity of from 15,000 to 30.000 barrels. , . , . It has erected and maintains, oil supplies in nearly 4,000 stations throughout the United States, holds 80,000,000 barrels of oil continually in reserve and requires 9,000 tank cart and 5,000 tank wagons to handle initial domestic distribution. . W al a.. -aore man one-nan or the com pany's earned products is consumed . Mr KUrad TalX. products of these countries dhd their commercial importance. ; The histories have laid undue em phasis upon wars and buttles (and some of them .have given as some very one-sided rar history at that) and " have- up-1 --" vfed rthe has had no labor York World.' T troubles. New WUI They Sell Nsar-leerf The construction of the Montgom ery .Lumber Company's railroad from Sprlnghope to Bunn, in Frank lin county, now .within twenty-five miles of this city, has created the general Impression that it is o be used as a part of the Atlantic Coast Line system, to bof extended from E'jcky Mount through, Nashville via, Cpi mf Uope and tuna :to Raleigh, T!e roai this lumber ,enspan has con tracted is not , a temporary, cheep and slaiy one, like roads so many lumber companies have built, but it is constructed just exactly as if the buudercwere going to . make tt a permanent and Important road. While the railroad ofHcials will say nothing for publication, the, men closest to them believe it 1s -nly a question of time when thlaxoad;wiIl be constructed to Raleigh It will be a good thing for the railroad) and a great thing for Raieigh, besides developing a line section of the coun try between Bunn and the capital of the State. : , - Now that the Atlantic Coast Line is thinking of coming into Raleigh from Bunn, why should not the Nor folk and Western be interested in being able to bring coal from the coal fields direct to Raleigh and to Fayetteville and to all intermediate points and for the Atlantic" Coast Line to come into- Raleigh from Bunn, so that, it would haul coal from the Norfolk and -Western and its own fine direct from tho coal fields in the nearest way to Bunn and Spring Hope and Nashville and Rocky Mount and Wilson, and to all points the Atlantic Coast Line reach es in northeastern North Carolina, and take such coa) at Fayetteville and carry it direct to Wilmington and to Goldsbore- and to all other points that it reaches south of Wil son t . ..'".' The Norfolk end Western railroad If Be Bad Tlat. The boy , Law laferceaseat lacreaslaf. Law enforcement sentiment Is in creasing rapidly. We are moving forward by leaps and bounds. Law and order leagues seem to be the or der of the day. Small towns , and often country sections are' organ izing for enforcement of law. Sheriffs and other county officials, as well as recorders and policemen, are oeiiig approached .ana urged to ex ecute the law. Citizens are giving assurance of moral support and there is harmony and co-operation between citizens and officers for the enforce ment of law. Evidence from un known sources is constantly coming to grand jurors; and jurymen, as well solicitors, and the judges are appreciating the responsibility that is uiion them. The ordinary sentence for the blind tiger is the county road-' In a court of forty-nine cases recently, the aggregate was twenty five years. In a few counties liquor selling is a felony rather than a mis demeanor, and m North Carolina blind tigers have already been sent to the penitentiary. ; Let the good work continue. - We advise all communities infested with I thinks it will probably be her last blind tigers , And blockaders to or- chance during life and so gives up ganize taw ana oraer leagues ana ner education to get married. come out boldly for the enforcement of law. The violator is a coward. When reputable citizens, who stand for law and order, present a bold front, the violator will generally surrender he will either quit or at in town could learn school and take a good stand among bis schoolmates if he had time, but he has to smoke cigarettes and to go swimming and play baseball, and do too many other things. : ' The town girl could do well at school if she had time, but she must read trashy novels and go to to many parties and shows, that they hold her back In her books. Country boys and girls' could get an education, but they have to work every day to pay debts, many of which ought never to have been made, or to pay Jor land which the family does not need. . The young man in the country could go to college and equip him self for life if he had time, .but feels that he must go at once to farming, or off to a store or into some other business. He goes without an edu cation and is handicapped all his life. ' ; . '-. , .;.V'T , . The young lady in the country could go to college if she had time, e ta a . out wnue sne is omy sixteen years old she has an offer of marriage and leave. . The North Carolina Anti-Sa loon League, at Wilson, N. C, will be glad to assist in the work in any part of the state. Write them.1 American Issue. , , , ." ' , ' . i A Letter x the People ef ICC. There are many thousands of your people now in the West fhd North west. The address of every , one of them Is known to soma of you, We The Raleigh correspondent of Sun -r 'flV,B-v., 'aTBP,,r i j" wuM4uiM..ua. wowwhu rawing: . ot Raleigh The road built by Mr. them to come f'back home" where , AUSTIN & dayenpcxt:' : , LAWYERS. Prompt alien tloojrlveo toall'mallers DR. F. G. CIIAMBLEE - ' y ' DENTIST. ..' ' Spring Hope, tt. C. Office In Spring Hop Banking , Co. Building achievements of the people, I There is special need of a great ad vance in, the, matter..: of, teaching herlth in the public schools Until noW we have had physiologies .that have taught the number of bones in the body and. the names of these bones, and about the different kinds of muscles and arteries and veins, ; y internal revenue, omcers say that Barr and others from : Durham to the near-beer dealers here, 'and I Bonsaf would need onlv aiihort link throughout the State for that mat-j ter, are preparing to take out liquor licenses again June 30. the plan be ing for their places to go right on after July 1, when the act of the last Legislature " prohibiting near-beer saloons goes into effect all over the but have given little or, jbo instruct-1 State. The leading dealers are free J. P. BUNN. ' Rocky Monnl. " hot , f.s.spruilL, Rocky Moioi. SPRUILL, rw ws MVJ m mh vvnaesuvi mmw m t m Qy y : Let us have a wni )la NMhrlll evert- Int Mondari ion about how to conseiv health and how. to -combat typhoid fever and malaria and tuberculosis and hookworm disease and other malai dies that have slain thousands and even millions of, people who might with proper instruction be alive to. to admit that they do not expect to close out their business at all. They will take out the government license to relieve themselves from the sur veillance of the revenue officers and then they will sell brands q. drinks that will eliminate the beer . idea. to connect that road and the Norfolk and Western with Mr. Mills' road, which he is building from Lfllington to Sanf ord. . It would pay -the Nor folk , and Western handsomely to come Into Raleigh, particularly if it could make arrangements with Mr. Mills by which It could get into Fay etteville, and if the Atlantic Coast Line would build from Bunn to Ral eigh, so as to get into all that East ern country. , The gaps to be built are so short and the country through which, the road would be built is so level, comparatively, that the cost they can aid in the development - of their own country, thus helping you and benefitting themselves., There are millions of acres of idle land in your state which will , remain idle until you get more people The best people you can get are those your state has sent to the West. The "Back Home": movement has already induced many Southerners to come-back to-the South,, and it will surely bring them back to your State if you will but do your share by sending us their names. ' This newspaper is already doing its part, so It's up to you not somebody else but you personally. Sit down right to Paul D.,Orody, Attmey and Counselor , ' At Law;?-' V?. v: Middlesex,' - "t 'North Carolina. . " m i i'r--- .'-'if.- Practice in all Courts m Nash. Wilson and Johnston Counties. .: Prompt at tention given to all matters entrusted T. T. ROSS, Dentist. - Spring Hope. N, C. r t Office In New Finch Building new kind, of text books, text-books that are related to actual life and that '.'train for the mastery of environment," in the fine phrase of Governor Mann, ; of Virginia. 'v: -1 ' The need is not for less of culture than heretofore, but for the achieve ment of culture through teaching the practical and useful rather than the useless and non-practical things. In the end the people rule in all these matters, and if they don't get the kind of text-books they need, they should have a reckoning with those responsible for any perpetua- ine iiquia may and wm probably would be very small for such a great I how and send me the names of all very mucn resempie Deer, they say, system, and the knowing ones be-1 you can remember, then hand this but there will be no beer or near- lieve that in the coming , year we I paper to someone else to do likewise. neer Drands and that the bottles will shall witness the completion of both I Thousands of names ire cominir in. of these roads into Raleigh. News & Observer. ' "a be different. The ' applications ' for renewal of government licenses are already coming in in anticipation of the expiration of the present licenses July 1. The change of the size of the bottles and the brands they bear, is said, will constitute the principal changes that will take place in the near-beer saloons and their service. The pear-beer men insist that they will comply with" the law and they will be relieved of the State and lo cal tax they have had to pay hereto- Taat Trying Telephone. Will be in my office every Wednes I Farmer. day, Thursday, Tway ana ,- Saturqay. -;. ' Nashville CKlce at Residence V.Tiere I can be found . - ' , HONDAT ANP TtTlSPAT don of present policies. Progressive I fore." American Issue, :-r:f The Last Wr4. J. A. FARttEn, A Attorne y and Counselor At Law, Wilson, N. C. ; ; Practice In All Courts ; Oflloe ?od Door New "Office Building In . t; Rear of Court Houm , ?; or t convommice of my friends and clients iu r a . Couutv, I have arrarired to be in i nviiie every Monday, teel- ,,i and thankful for the conS- (i a n i rv Tlieral patronage always i . ni' i .1 ne by tua peoKie of my native ii.u, y anU boniuir to receive a continta- w.oa of tue saaie, I am, Yours to scrre, - -- . . 4. A. c'AlvMEB. . A Picture at this season of t3 y: r Is n)cst pleasipg. ... rrj-T y nrnr The North Carolina College of Ag riculture and Mechanic Arts announ ces In another column its opening for another year on September 7. : This College continues to grow in num bers and in usefulness. Last year it enrolled 630 students. . Its gradu ates are taking a leading part in the industrial life of our State, and are in steady demand at good salaries. Young men who desire to fit them-. selves for success in industrial oc cupations will do well to consider such a form of education. ' A Charming Woman is one who is lovely in face, form,- mind and temper. But it is bard for a woman to be onarming witbout health. A weak, sickly woman will be nervous and irritable. Consti pation and kidney peisons show in pinnies, blotches, skin eruptions 1 a wret.cbed complexion. JJut our to :i : ;o::o: CUALITY? Tody L, :.lo Litters always proves a ;p,ud to women wh wbd br- Vh i .ye ad friends. ' Ttey regu!a b. Liver sod Kidneys, puri t i tiood, give strong nervr-;, t c;-ps, pure breath, smocb. ' y ti.ii, loTwIy complexion aaa , I ' ..b. Try tbea:, 63o at Vvsx Co. w The desire to have the last word in a discussion is fatal in the home. Half the quarrels and bickerings in married life spring from this, and husbands and wives might do well to remember - and carry out , Dr. Parr's advice about the lastword: "Husband and wife should no more struggle to get the last word than they would struggle tor the posses sion of alighted bombshell. Married people should study each other's weak points as skaters look after the weak points as skaters look after keep off them. By attention to ap parently small matter the course of wedded life will run more smoothly and thus insure happiness." Ex- It Starts The World when the astounding claims were first made for Bucklen'a Arnica Salve, but forty years of wonderful cures bave proved them true, and everywhere it is now known ss tbe best salve on earth for Burns, tolls, r aids, .Sores. Cut3, Prulses. L nrains,s RweiHns, Exzr-rrt, ! r --ppd handi, I'ever Tires and 1 tiei, Uiily i.a ft i.'asbviile En; Co. Several evenings ago a young man repaired to the telephone and rung up his sweetheart at her home. Is that you?" . - ' Yes, George, dear,", came the reply.' .;' iO :"Are you alone!" -.-h ! "Yes, darling." ?'I wish I was there. ? ."I wish so, too." : l .' .i-jr "If I were there do you know what I would do with my darling T No, George, I do not.1 And then somehow the, lines got mixed and this is what she heard; Well, I'd pull her ears back till she opened her mouth, and then I'd put a lump of mud in it. If that didn't answer Pd'give her a sound thrash ing." ;,;h: ;:,;y: :;,,. And then Marion fainted, ' ' ' ' Now they never speak as they "pass by, and man who was talking to farmer friend about a but we want to reach everyone of the millions who have gone from the South in the past -twenty years. Will you not help?, . -. - . , . : nr r - .. Sec., "Back Home" Association, Johnson City, Tenn. The farmer could succeed if he had time, but he must take up mer chandising or running a grain thresh er or a saw mill to keep him away from his farm. ( , w . . , The merchant could make money if he had time to devote to bis bu siness, but he turns it over to clerks and runs a farm or saw. miH or something else. . 'i; The doctor could make money at his profession, but he feels that lie must go into other business to make money faster and thereby loses out tooth ,.( " tv-- The lawyer could make niohey if he had time,' but he must go ' Into politics or. something, else, to- keep Mm from succeeding.'' r" r ', Young people could add1' much tee happiness "of the home if they had time, but there are; so many places to go to they cannot devote time to such things. ' The church member could , do good work in his church if he had time, but he is too busy with his own affairs to devote his efforts to his church. '.-,"-'-,-":"'.-. The old man could enjoy life and get some of the fruits of his labors, if he had time, but he must delve from day to day to add to what he alreadl has,: laying up money for people who will not thank him tor The old woman could get around little and enjoy life more, but she feels like . she . has no time. She must stay right at home all the while and look after things there. Smithfleld Herald.; ' r" pbotect; W m d I - In cold, unassuming - figures, ' here is our guarantee' to every , depositor, regardless of the a mount he may have In this bank Capital - . . f.ca.OBl Sarplas S rreflts - $ I1,00 StecUteUersLWa 10S,0O Total ZS50t. $256,000.00, that amount stands between your deposit and any : possible loss.' This bank wants your business.. Tour Per Cent . Interest paid on Savings deposits ' ; Compounded Qurterly The Planters Dank, Rocky Mount, N. A CLEAN SCALP V.:'., AND TraU Qttai Bet. .Xj Ufa.. . , says that anybody who will advise a man to put his arms the neck of an obstreperous horse and , whisper words of love in its ear ought . to hanged. Ex. ' Constipation brines manVailmnta in its train and is the primary cause of much sickness. Keep your bowels regular madam, and you will escope many of the ailments to which wom en are subject. Constipation' is a very simple thing, but like rcany simp'j tbinjr, it may lep i to seriou- constouences. Mature o: . n need es Utile f ' "aDce and wheaCLam' crs !n a '.-blots are given at the first i jvlic.ijn, mutb distress andauCer. i"3 r. "T ba avoided, Sold by - ail The house Committee investiga ting the sugar trust is on a trail that is getting hot. It is notorious that in the reign of Mark Hanna the hier archy of the Mormon church made that organization an annex of the Republican party. - About that time the church leaders formed connec tions with the sugar trust by which they have become very rich. What was the connection? , , 1 ; ? When Joseph F. Smith, president of the Mormon church, was sum moned to come before the committee and testify as to the organization- of the Utah-Idaho Sugar Company, Senator Smoot (a Mormon) protested and said that a certain man, named ballcy horse I Cutler, could give all the informa- .,.'' Kansas Pealteatlary Netes. Out of 821 prisoners at Lansing, Kana., 632 or 73.3 per cent are habi tual users of intoxicating liquors; of the 602 using liquors, t69 gave the habit as the chief , cause of their downfall; of these 669, 227, or about 40 per cent gave the use of liquor as the direct cause of their crime. Out of 342 others, 212, or 87.2 per cent gave liquor as one of the causes of their misdeeds. Among the 212 who gave reasons for being in the pen were whisky and gambling, women and dHnking, booze and, Idleness or equiualent terms, 77.2 persent gave liquor as the direct or contributing cause of their downfall.' It is notice able that 26.7 per cent ' claim . that they were not addicted to theuse of liquor. Kansas Issue. x f tionthat could be obtsinted from rresident mitn. wisely the com mittee refused to hear the agent and ordered the bead of the Mormon church to testify.7' If he tells all the truth, we shall learn more about the sugar monopoly than we have ever before learned. News & Observer. Work v:::i'soon Start. after you take Dr. Kiel's New Life illls, and you 11 quickly enjoy their Hue results. Coust ; :oq and in digestion vanish and oe r-petite returns. They rev.'. ' j s1 r.ach, liver and bowels at. 1 i . t new system. 'Iry t a. C!y L.j at LasnvilieLiu to. Do Ghosts HaunSwamps? No Never Ita foolish to fear a fancied evil; when there are real and deadly perils to guard against in swamps and marshes; baous,' and lowlands. ' These are the malaria gems that cause ague,- chills and fever, weakness, aches in the boons and muscles and may induce deadly typhoid. But Electric Hitters de stroys and casts out these vicious germs from the blood. ; "Thcce bottles drove all the malaria from my srslem," wrote VTm. Fretwe',1, of LucamaN. C; f'and I've Lad E.;c health ever since." TJaa tlis t sure reiiscdy only. 12a at 1 bv:;' rrua;Co. Cld V " '-Cm - Healthy Hairl " Many of your friends have found that luxuriant growth of hair sof( d glossy and a sealp free from dandruff wP ' " ,. ' , V result from using NyaFs Hirsatcr.e While it thoroughly c!cnsc3, " it also prevents -bacterial. action, nourishesstimu- w latea the roots of the ' ' , hais, prevents its re- .-, -turn and preservs " -1 its natural beau ' " ,v ' ty and color. , It Sells at 50 cents and $1.00 me bottle. , The Ward Drug Co. Exclusive Agents In Nashville.' Professional QitZs, J Dr. R.L. SAVAGE, EAR NOSE AND THROAT. . ' Office over Five Pouits Dru Rocky Mount, N.C. o. M. t, lrorirrAiK. ' : r. fomrtAiii: Fountain & Fountain, Attornevi-At-Law, ' -Rocky Mount, N.C. - Office 2nd floor 5 Points Drug Store. : rractioe la all the courts. - a P. Dickinson R. J. Uasnks. i . RiPVPC C Attorneys and Cc:2::n::$.At L:T J Wilson, ri,C.'. Practice Is i Nash; Wilson, State and i euenu courts,' ' n OOos over Raving Bank. V A. FlXCM. WUsoa. , 1 Laos t, Vaoham Nashvlile. n:x3 & m: ------ -s; 4ttor::ys Ar.J Cc:r:.r,:;:U:.v it,- A ' ' ... Prompt attention give a tor'? - ouiru!iea to our c ro. ( x ti'E .J Jury i;ui. , as. P. r 3. :
The Graphic (Nashville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 22, 1911, edition 1
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