Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / June 4, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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- - .. ,. , , i ; i ., i ; . . , . 1 ' ' 1 i - . ::j WVt ... i : ; ., ,. . ;.. . VOLUME 2. NUMutK I. . ; WADESBORO, N. C, JlinJt 4, pj ; ; . ; , LOp A YCR IN ADVANCE - - m w 4 Professional Cards D iR. R. D. ROSS, if.-r h pr.fK.jil rTic t the fxtln .Wa-lretvro and airroiin.UnK' -.intrr ; . hi n-w Ingram 1tuHn. r-r U ,f!in ItriliT t a it. 11 fctd J. Coxc. "r.:i.t Att-ili liifn t 11 ltral ,lumttrjt.- ! ti"jnliJUi.. Inirt-nti ' TM t. It -I K-tUIr-: 04lf t . X.ti t! IrAftuij; .rf nil ,,ft. ..rr IiTk A Xlarnhall Str-. 'altcr E. Brock. nil II. McLendon. t: n.. v m l n-w II. mt at t.iw I t ..; f Attt ftti"i i i -n t All lUiuit-M Jaiuci A. Lockhart. tt..oiT .i.l I 'na'II'r at Iw. N AH IninH Will " Attrnti.n lrompt I. h.r- W.li-lrt. S " QcLoncy 6l Boian. ' Itit a, in SUlf lr.l Ftnl'-rl i'owtv l.4UtuK Uim. NffUtiu Iviu, -t IV w 1 1 I. f.rfv Umt'-'l lut tffl.f In th Cinrt !Iin John W. Cullcdic. Aft ru-j n C-uu--"Uor at livr. Wa.U!..f... N I lr.u tit-v In :UI omrt carr 1 4k ii in th nuiiajf-tnit of t-tt- for Kn ut r. Aliniiutrat.r atil i iiutrMi inTtti4tin titU- to r-l "tAt; tt it f i Unn-. .Ir.iftin all kin.U f int riuik. li t. anl an fa ilitatt f br- iiin !u- an! f your rtal --tatr iiil -"nr- Luti fr Un t i ki rjnir C 'rjrati.n. ('itimri ial mii1 lli."in futnitfl t.i ui will lw j it-l Aitl hatf riin't an! .in-i i kiti' attntin. iftu f r W.l4r. 1 1 (hm aid ).- l'..m;ut)' tr )r. Boyette. IKNTIT .V Martin iHrn M.r- I1i. '! tV'UU.i. N V RA MULLIS. Civil titliiierr. lll .SI II WINiiATK ItaiivkAr. MuiiK ijval anl Farm Sur rn1tf I- ti.i nl ( 'i-trH Jii ii of Iit4i. H'i.hwa. I".int Mai. tWaui ir. tr lharv- in l-r.l- lrr i).l n Hii it-l M. P. TAYLOR. CUil fcafioeerjai Orifinua. JWuu-rlj Willi iltuli Ma Kac A ) Knginering. Sur eying. Mapptnir, Hircri!g. rlr. AVCHITICTVV4L OtrTtHT. 1-t me ri.-urt-titb Jon ou jronr uatrt attd prr hI 4trruitt i :. ii I t Aimi-i. Natiimal II"t-I II. KING. lOVSORUl AKIIST. Tl vla' to c-l an rnllat hair- ut. a vlroit ui-l -ay la or a j'ltaanl huita. i at KlniT Sharing Iarlr Pn-uft atVnti4i ami C'"l Tri. uar.iut-rl Uiv n a trial RttoJ Holrl Afltct. If You Had A Policy U w-mUl nc laf to wurry yonr-4-lt rtrfy titn thri tra a fir tn rMir tifinity. J vmU; , fire Insurance Policies ttat t Uit Mual man yearly anl I bat nll ui(-ly -rt t yur IIMm anl "'hr r roiTty aalnt all U by Flrv I lm mtil Litf. TtKiuwlo. Ai-lnt an.1 ILaltli IV4kia.. W. LEAK STEELE. Acnt Imoxk Ka lx HOLUSTEH'9 , j Rocky Uountain Tea Kugefs "an Mm ImjOi ani tm4 j A rrf JbrOto-ttt pMo! hAr UW i akiaf umu. hapMtk. Unai. Iapr P4 luMa. Mmuk Mwrta, m luwaa. Iu tuxir Hmmfi Tt la Ub ft Utrm. cmu a ks. ColM mh&t b tptsiN Muccm fen micnf nom IF I IVEFfc KING. Uaofin I!irat!r Mt.Hrtby.) If I wrr? kins-ah" lore, if Ilwre WtiAt IriMitarr nation wuull I lirinic Ta tuu )urv ywr-mpir anl to AlUiOano to rour lir nnl ev anl . shair. . , Do-atli fr wtLAt tyur(M I Tin -Urn inl.l jouc jarla ,njin a Th wurll a rnlr fur vmr fintc"" rinij. Anl u nhonM ha v ih miu auIiiin If I ytfT- kin JrT-ir wiM .lrt-amn ami wiMr wnrln takf wrin. in t h wooiN I hrr a 0berl A aiui4n Utllad, to a y Ivan air. r k that vrr mm Ttnr lat-e uior fair. I not tcivi von atir K'""Ui-r tiling , Jf 1 wt-rt liDjf 9-Djy Oli Btty Tilks. (lUAnokr.Va..itr-ial -Ihh nit. toCluir- lotte OWfttT.) Mrs. ItfHo Itrower, wifn of Iftwicli Brewer, n thrifty farmer living ixnir tlii North Carolina IiiH ami uhos4 iuHtotlicr aiklrev i Fox, Va., two wcks mo tf.ive birth t a uoriually iloiploutnl Uiy lahy. 'Die little fellow thrived like any heaJlly newcomer ami iLs mother iroi:rejsetl to tle roau of nxoer' without any liackset. When the chiKl -'as nine ilays okl Thoma-s Brewer. ticether with his wife nml other relatives and neighbors, .went U visit the homo in which the stork had so recently iaiilacall. While Mrs. Thomas Brewer was holding the laby in her arms calling itemlear ing names and congratulating its lroud arent.s on tlx splendid s cimen, little one btMUlenly be gan talking. It called the names f it .inrtnts und iraml itarcnts and of t!ie relatives nsent, fol lowing each name with the word 'If. ...... ;,...Io;m. l inir mail ii, tin .iiiiHuiaui'ij n., lrfect. 'Hiis monstrous behavior on the juirt of the ninenlay bale so excit el ami sea re 1 the iarty that a number of ersons thtl from the houso in dismay, believing that something terrible was about to take place. Kvery word s(Kken by the i bikl was repttited three times ami this only served to "intensify the wpeJI cast OA'e'r those whq lard tle mice." Ncws of the inarrelous action of the latest arrival in the Hrewer home spread throughout the vicinity likewildlire and threw' the section into1 a state of jiertur batton. The child dit-tl yesterday, ami the excitement has somewhat sub sided, but the jooile are yet in a maze of wonderment, Imving never liefore seen or leard of anything like a hat has haponed in their midst, and mtnj are said to be living In fear and trembling lest the child sdeath will lie- followed bv some terrible catastrophe. Dire to do Ri; ht. hen President KtHseell was a. I. told that intervention in the coal strike would blast his future. In set his teeth and said: "Yes, I supie it ends me, but it is right. aud I will do it. Oneoftlie reasons why jeople call Theodore Roosevelt rash is I ra use lie does not stop to con sider, as most politicians do, the oonsouuences of those things which he knows to be right. "Is it right: ought it to I doner" These are the rpiestioas he asked. If so. it imivt be done. If he stoiimsl to ! consider just for the effect it would have uion himself or his future chances, he would never kive accvwnplied half what he has, and would not have lieen held in half his present esteem by the American ieople. We Amer icans admire a man who is not afraid to do right, whatever the intijNMUMi(w a man w ho has the courairetocarryout hisconvictions We mat differ from the fearless man, but we admire him never thelxs. - - Kx A Touch of War. (icneral Ijtivton s division was marching Ixick to Kl Piusoaharo to take up a. -new. potion ,iuhe morning. GenerakJc', Winkler in comimny with lajor Creighton Wcbli, was standing at ,the eilge at the nad,';wAtuhingth?'. troops file st. Just as dawn was break ing a colored rec'unent'-carnin sight. It gave evidence of beihg unusually tiretl. Iwton's attention had leen at traetcd U a wrfxind of the 'JMh Infantry, a great six-foot negro, who, in addition to a couple of guns and two cartridge belts, load ed full, was carrying a dog. . The M'or t wlmtn the other min le- longed ras limping I eside his com -nnle. UwU haltctl tle nvn. "Here, coriioral, he callfil to the six-foot negro, "haven't you march ed all night t " "Ves, sir, said the corporal, saluting. "And fought all dayP 1 es, sir. 'Tlien,' asked the general, .-why. are you. carry iiur a i in ..l.litin tn rour other burdens? ,(;eneral,, said the negro, with ft a iM-in that showeil every one ol his Uiirty-two teeth, "tho dog is Yonw i n , wiwiMyj filer j. aL iaieyHoll.Lt'T Jflw agr Jiououun Ti, ltr nml ilxion U fine. Jibe la h I loaofC.aln..aif cnt. Tea or TaUt. ' "MarUn Drug Co Do Something With All Your Mighty lria Hwett Manln in Sncve.) Lokewtrm Water Will Never Rbi Ai Ejflie. Before water generates steam, it must register two hundred and twelve degrees of heat. Two hun dred degrees will not do it; two 1 1 und ns I and ten will not do it. The water must Iwil liefore it will generate enough steam to move art engine, to run a train. Luke warm water will not run anything. A great many jieople are trying to move their life trains with luke warm w.ntei or water -that is al most Uiling mid they are won dering why they nre stalled, viy they cannot get ahead. They arc trying to run a boiler with two hundred or two hundred ami ten I degree of heat, and they can't un derstand why they do not get any where. Lukewarmness in his work stands .in the same .relation' to man's" achievement as' lukewarm water does t the locomotive lxi I er. .o man can noiie . 10 accom plish anything great in this world until lx throws his -whole soul. lliuirs the force of his whole life into it- In Philips Brooks s talks to i. . young people lie useu 10 urge them to lie something with all tlieir miifht. It is not enough simply to have . ir.i. a general uosire 10 nccoiuiuisu something. There is but one way todo that: and that is, to try to Iks someliody with all the concen tinted energy- wo can muster. 'Any kind of a human wing can wish for a thing, can desire it; but only strong, vigorous minds with great purioses ban do things. There is an innniic distance ue- twren the wishers and the doers. A mere desire, is lukewarm water. which will never take a train to its destination: the purpose must loil, must le mnile into live steam to do the work. Who would ever have heard of Theodore Roosevelt outside of his immediate community if he had only half committed himself to what he had umlertaken, if he Iiad brought only n part of himself to his task? The great secret of his career has lieen that he - ha flung" his whole life, not a iart of it, with all the determination and energy and lower he couiu'raus" ter, into everything he has under taken. So diliwl allying., no faint-hearteil"elrUt4s no lukewarm 1 1 - inn I Kvery must have great mf ixse which takes preced 11 other mo- tlV is supi ciple which nm K njcra- tiv for ni- tior rereWtlfut th !rc n lie n - i KlflMlSTlll. Vfxit ergy 'ithtJut IIilu 111 wl ivacfTje OitJtr lint, a trtlntili noVVt ary where?. tiMittiitViUi n vigoroua-4ui ih is fa iHTUiive, cons ' c I hi"." , creanre:7orccv- .' 1 a " ininleiin I Im reso u reef d n - ventive,mnfliBl, or crefl wiuw OUt M HVroncenvai ft B . A - the uiu is only 'ffftusin bieiilong the at H,i the ItTe par We ca frtrni the nil ml If Jr. a 1 & thing rfOfc.inieresievi $ enthus A mattsoug v't'TtOK, uiion his career alh v lon his mast ieci ng he Ol HIS 1 sel lX)ks wit Lsfaction HCIl UTJiiUiXT et?: irive. Yu' manW iieinfe Vr hxxselv conWUHlivithlhet,: v tion that tBeV atirt!easil.vt,Sa A Suprecf Erf ArmJn-llffMeaRVSiaess 1 L-tvrnar inenrwhrsfaiii Hnxioii?Vemiin thcrlcarciTri, but in aTr5Tekf ni ng Ui&f 1 u imluj:tov'naprUidiJirng for .M.ifitmng ar39jaiThtV5 al ways wondering whelWr they are in the right place, or where their -. -r .s i 1 - THa . MUlliiy win rouiik . iinsi.. . lose heart when they strike, ob stacles; or they get discouraged when they hear of some one else who has mado a success in some other line, and wonder if they had not hvlte :tfT . mh ne thing in ine ----- - . , .... ..1 same Ihuv It 0710 so loosely at-. tachetl t his occuimtion that he can Ijc easily induced to give it up, you may l sure that he is not in the right place. If nature' has called you to a iositioii, if the call rUhs in your blood, it is a iart 01 3-our lire ami you can no, away from it. It is not a sepa rate thing from 3ourseJf. It ex ists in every brain cell, every nerve cell; every blood corpuscle contains some of it ou can no more iret awav from it than a leo- pard can get awa' from his spots. So when a young man asks mo if I do not .think Jie Iad better .rnaKe a change, 1 feel very certain urn he is not in the place noti caiieu him to, for the thing he was made' for is as much a part 01 uis reai iwlntr hm temnerameni. ii is nearer to him than his tEhV0 closer than his breath. n aero jsa phbtograph of the thing he was mla fnr- m Prrrv cell in his 1 -M mm ettbftuin ltWCj-bf bosc. iimju 11 1 won a : . . nVml ronre ftt ArtU',Vxk u i -.ill-. r MaJlOBtpif Bin iiirrn 4 body: He cannot getaway fronviujTha uieOicine that sets the whole world .1 ! u:-u : II l,n - thinkine. make the ife distinctive, which will make it 1 lie inmxr wuii.ii win .VAtx-er is this one supreme thing which wo want no-rlqr-BiTd-fpei that Jve must do, anund matted fi.n lnnrr we mV be Cl( Innrr we mV De Uein VCU J.rvJlli or how far we may oe swenpj from this one aim by mistakes or iron circumstances, we should nev er cire up hoio or a determina tion to pursue our object. Some ieop!e have not the moral courage, the persistence, the force of character to get the things out of the way which stand between them ami their ambition. They: 1 allow themselves to be poshed this way ana mai way into inings ior which they have no Utness or taste. Tlieir will power is not strong enough to enable them to tight tlieir way totheirgxal. Tliey arc pushed aside by the pressure about them, and do the tilings for which they hare little or no liking or adaptation ilf there is anytliing in tlie world a ierson should fight for, itis free dom to lHirsuo hls ideaL. because in that is Iils great opportunity for self-expression, for theunfold- ment of the greatest thing possible to him. It is Ji is ffrcat charco:to make his life: tu in the" largest, completest way, to do the most origi nalJ is ti ncti ve th i ii . possi ble to him. If he does not pursue his Weal, does not carry out his supreme aim, his life will be more or dess of a failure, no matter how much he may be actuated by a sense of dutv. or how much he may exert his will iower to overcome his handicap. There is great power in a reso lution that has no reservation in it a strong, persistent, -tenacious puroKe-Hvhich burns all bridges behind it and which clears all ob stacles from its path and arrives at its goal, no matter how long it may take, no matter what the sac rifice or the cost. Thfl inspiration of a great posi tive aim transforms the life, revo lutionizes a shiftless, ambition less. dissipated, good-for-nothing man. as if some divine energy had worked in him, as love sometimes transforms a shiftless, slovenly, brutal, ' coai-se, good-for-nothing man into a cleanly, methodical, diviner leTng,-: . : . When the awakening power of a new punose, a resoiuia mi ris born in a man. lift is a nv crea lure. He sees- everything in hew light: the doubts, the fears. the apathy, the vicious tempta tions which dogged his steps bu veslerdav." the stagnation whtch had blighted his past liferull Tan ish as if bykmagic. They are us iHilled by thti breath of a new pur pose, iieauiy ami system taKe uie . A A 1 .. 1 i)Iacc of nnsightlioess aod confti- sion. v;n,ler j-eigns in ine piace of anarchy. All his slumbering faculties uwakendo activit I he effect of this now ambition is like the clarifying change made by water way in a stagnant, swampy district, the water clarities as soon as it begins to move, to do something, llowers spring up in nlace of Doisonous weeds, and VoTPtntinn ltenntv. bin Is and sontr Thiake iovous the once miasmic at !t" , w n ll-kCIIAA.AA The Cotton Picker. (Charlotte Chronicle) Some how we have overlooked the cotton picking machine enter prise which has been launched in Columbia, but we find a' notice of it in tho Fort Mill Times. That paper says tlie Pneumatic Cptton Picker Coumpany has been organ ized in Columbia with $200,000 capital. The ! picker which it purposes to build "works on the princiiMil of vacuum, extracting the cotton from tlie ripe boll - and transferring it to another vacuum through which dirt and loaves are diopiied. It is planned to place the machine on the market at once. The weight of the machine for one or two horses will be alxut l.UUO pounds.- and it is claimed that it will do tlie the wok of alwut forty hands." The Chronicle-' does not want? U discourage the-promoters of'lhe new Taaehine. but it- would ;seem to us that the automobile engine is the motive i6wer for the cotton nicking rfiachine that is going to pick cotton. The Iwery ma chine, was given a trial in Char lotte 'two years - aco was erv nearly; a suCrss.Ttjibiy Jtoo slov It needed 'a irgh'fef frame and a more iowerful engine and it would have been about the right thing. If the inventor had mount ed it on an automobile frame, he would have had the first practial cotton picking machine. llut af ter this was clearly demonstrated, he went back to tlie factory -and got to complicating the machine with the idea of1 making it a "Com bination cotton ' chopper " and picker. The result , wyvs that ie sacrificed thte: origi rial idea1 of a cotton picker which he had gained. The, .cotton picker, however,;.;is coming: Lowery got within an ace of . sucecss.: Tf he : ges ba:k to first irinci pies and lrottts iy what he learned in his Charlotte exiriments, leaving the' lch6rper attachment off fpr another day, he By'tr? linsln tlie field with a picker that will pick. thinking. The remedy on which all doctors agree. The"Weript ton ' Till your friend are , itanK 3 l J ' 0 ! 1 s !",yigfcW wn'""""-- w Toe SoDtl aai Tte Presfiency. The,r tare ."again fJdklrj abpbt a Southern man for the Democratic .. - . . . r President; cerybodv is agreed that JtvHT' a picc of foolishness for crjbwy to offer U place. wiUout the .con sent and approval of-Mr-Avrilliam Jennings liryan; ' For mor than Iwoscor'yenrs i.'A inan bprti,; rearexl aixi an lpnahuaQt or.thatL part ior our country we call the South has beenj in-a practical sense, as inel igble to the olAice of President as Uliouglt he had been born a subject of -a foreign. kmg,.or a citizen of a foreign common wealth, n And in tikis- respect Uie;Sbuth has not'i&n: joyed Uie' equal citizenship that iiertains to a free. : people. By llrOS U will hay: ibeeiv. sixty years smco a. etouthem-manwwas elected President. Som forty- four years ago a bouthern man nvas' elected :' Vice ' lVesideht, and succeeded to the Presidency. uion ili deaUi.of.V!v JncnJhj ;but in 18C4 Amly Johnson was a Southern man . or ioj inern pricinles, and that was whu U&. vftS TTOminRted: rcom Washmgton. to. Jacksorf: lioth .inclusive, a period Of f8 years, the;, Soutli supplied;, ; fisve Presidents, each of whom wasgiveo two terms, but the scepter departed out of that land. and it will ot re turn uptil the South, shall : resolve o assert her ; fuJ and complete sisterhood in the. American Ucian, There are Democrats ;at : Une Kouth 4s capable as any ; Democrat or any Republican of any dominant wction. Any one, of a: dozen Southern Democrats who-mightn bciiamed would iK)iIa$many otes t : the North as any .oriliern )emocrat could iKll,-; ;but the, South lias acnuired the habit of uneekness, and. been content to do he bulk of; Uk3: voting m the eleot- 4ral college for men selected. ;-hy: the North. . And we do not discover any signs that tlie Soath' contemplates as serting her I rights in the: party: For threescore years the office . of ft 1 . 1 -a t . 1 iTesident has ieon-a JNorlnern assets and j.tho. .V ice -Presidency , 1 t II.. A .1.. l A I. 1 ias own cquau.v o,ui; oi.vue pouj.n each since 18.04,' ' rhD executive department Is aii, entirely .Sectional affair, and has been. ever since tlie irst sectional ticket Lincoln and Hamilton was elected. ' '. ' -. 1 ight' it hot 'be a wholegoma thing for the Southern people to assert themselves, taue upaouthr ern man, nominate him, a.jid chal lenge' the North with a shpwKtown of real Americanism, Vvliictf Deii:g interpreted, is the erjunlity of States, the equality of sections, and the etiuality of men? " The novelty of it might make it irresistible. Proofs of Heredity. (Daptit and Reflector.) !! 1- 1 a (1 Uo you Deiieve in you oeiieve in nereuiij' ? Read the following brief history. in contrast, of two large New Eng land familes one famous and the ether infamous the Jukes and the Jonathan Kdwards families: Tfce Jukej. Of the descondants of this degen erate, Jukes, 310 of tliein spent thir days in this ioor-housc or like rcfviges; 140, -'through the coarse forihs of vice, had "wrecked them selves physically and morally; 0 were professional thieves, and 50 were prostitutes; only , 20 ever lea rnecr a 1 trade 'arid 10 of these learned it in prison. 7 l?esides all tliisv they had. cost the State: the enormous sum of $1,250,000 as criminals and lmuiiers. Of the original family, half of tliem died in- infaiK'.v, ; else -the black record, might have been much longer, vot to say blacker. 1 The Edwifds. Of the descendants of the great ; theologian, Jonathan Edwards, 285 were collegiate grad uates, x AvhOm 65"Wcre college professoi-s and 13 college presidents, such as Yare, Princeton and other famous insti tutions; more tl ran 100 had become lawyers, 30 of -whom had won d is tinction as judges. ' Of this origi nal fani i ly b t 11 th ild ren,'' none rdied - in childhood- only oner re mained unmarried, "and foil rvhad reached thei r - " threo-,lbT-and -ten" lx;fore they wrere'calletl home! Instead of costing the -State aity1 tiling, one 'nieihber'- bf the fattniy alone had givelT arffiarter :"df a mil- Hon ooiiars-lo'cuucairorr uuu ;utr- hevolencc makins a longand hott- ho cable record , worthy of mi f amdy in the, world j . u a::--U. M ' Do .. v.du-. i cmeraber the econd Comiajodment?,,;The-Jattep part of-it reads thus:..;: Ttwu shalt not Jjow.down.jthysejf to them nor serve uieim .ior: l tnc, .uora my tiod am a jealousiGodv visiting the- nniquity of :tho-fatUers upon .. the cliildren.ufi.to the. thiV and fourtlt generat wn.of i tliem -. t hat; hate n-e and. showing wercy unto them, that 6 ve ; ipe, and; , leep my, commana- mentS), Dunns, (be Civil. Vaithe. , comt inander of a marching'jdetacbmeit ooked along4ias,une -jscowiea at ts irregularity. . then- shouted alontl: 'rfcc-'ifpi abses -afeVyofa fellowsf lVTiv;iftMeimy were 'Bf 'ph ni'o' tlAey col Ipi hrf'a otiof rm:r Another kotimiaTide(r, while a battle,. Wa .ih fee&Eathe'uoon'1 'stra'ggTerJ KvhJ wpfritmiAaWtf.M( rsireaming uown uis cnecKs. xn-y vman, don't be a . baby 1" the. geor nerai nomination for President;: .:butt I . remonsiraieu,., iuiukiuk., ,w i rnwa wo quiKjorisuciw RVishU kas;a bHiia LA gal-JVSaStaJSli W I BITTill TTl TQnPlnl I rUUblllHl 1 Ct , JlBulIIHriBlU H . VtlLl... LtoTjyat mat. . , ' . m w. n n ,n CONCEALED WEAPON HABIT jTa Real Slraiflcance of the Peraf I : :ti., - la- -iL- - i till if 'rjitAm nt,rvM c.ir.rA cldua CostOta Deserves Severe Pualshment. . , (Presbyterian Standard.) It was recently said in-our liear- jng that of 29 men killed in a cer tain county in South Carolina, 28 had nisio!4 hn iheir VUAnc TK. uuu vuuulv ah iniULii nriiiirm -sn ;tn;m i .i::rl. i....: .A ms tol was killed accidentalb. lliese data point to the conclusion that it- is an xoeeiltngiy -dangerous j thing for a. man to carry a pistol 4- w . . pis. . enhances of ;beiTig . tailed, as compared with Ine man who does not carry a pistol, aro as '8 to one. inis is as ii ougm to oe. it any- bodx-onirht to be killed let if he JlfL.'; l1! JT the mart who " has ;made lJltrpain won 10 Kin someone eise. as a ruJe hu: Ibseso his life because- he vas not quick" enough in : his pur Iose io taker the life of his adver sary. , ,vf course, tins is no justi fication of his adversary. He is i n the same condemnation, for he P?Jllmi?f i" ill?"0 ,w.iJh : - ,u uur vutnuumrj is ioo weaK io give any adequate expression to acter or tlio man who makes..a:.rt tuA nuui,u.tL,iA..iLJ?.t .. Ji :-i .1 ' n . piSlOl IO a a a 1 0 a 1 a? 11 may in other respects;? this " one thing puts upon hiiii the mark 6f Cain: No matter how high our esteem of vim. may. have been; the discovery that he carries a pistol sinks him at once to the position of a ve neered savage. What is th ng of such a practice . he inevitable' the necessary ence Troiji jt r , it is that the: man anticipates a' conflict. Hut why should he. If he behaves himself as a decent, peaceable, Jawabid.ng citizen, lhere,is;noti the ..slightest probability that any body will mO-. est him. Any one who fears God and. regards man can go where, he plea-ies, and enjoy the full .h.eas- ure of his personal rights, and live Ul he dies with old age with out provoking any serious ahtago- Not only does the nian w ho car ries a pistol thereby proclaim that he anticipates a conflict, hut he further,proclaims that lproiKses to UUI.bis antagonist; rather than furtheriprclaims that l proioses nmeefAfl n .IKa ownfl ft . Nnt. only so, but he will take no risk of being worsted. The man with the pistol does not ttsiially grap- pie with his adversary. He does i not test the possi Dili ty of Overcom- i UK mm wiuiuui uic uclcsshv a-A. v-K--.na - t-. r . nAArtm I .a . .a, a mi taking his life. ; He shoots before a finger has ;been laid on him. And this without respect to the justice of the quarrel. . He is just as like 1 v as not to have been the aggres sor, It is a maxim of law that no man is fit to be judge in his own case. But the pistol-toter assumes that office, and av i thou t the for mality of a trial, nasses sentence. and takes upon himself the further office of executioner. 1 here are. no words to express the atrocious ness of such a procedure. We are justified in saying that every inan who Voes around with deadly weapons is capable of penetrating such an atrocity. He has made up his mind, in ease of a conflict with his fellowman, to take the law into his own hands, to sit in judgement on his own case, and if his -personat safety is endangered, to'bass iudgemerit and inflict the extreme penalty. What the pistol-toterf usually haSt in mjnd is to protect his hon- or- tie IS: prepared iq reseni any WW . 1 A . A. a . insult done to.hls ltersonal honor. The absurdity of this is tliat he deprives himself of all right to be regarded as a xerson of honor. In the very act of strapping on a is tol, or slipping jt into his jiocliet, he is knowingly and intentionall.v makiher himself a criminal. He is violating a law which was enacted for the safety of society, a law Which is itself anf fndication of a low state of ! bivilbiation. It was niade to renress tlvose in ; whom a savage instinct is associated with an inilated egotism. It goes vyitli- pul. siiying that the. violator of such law. has do honor to. protect.. There may; be, truth -in the ladage tha?&ce.i8iWoprr even among tliieves," hut surely no liwiorV cah attach to the man "who deliberately violates one ' law ; With a '4e w to Violating another .should his over- weemnr: self-conceit furnish the occasion.1 ;; - -'; ; It remains to' be said; that " the authOritiesf, whose dirty it is to en force ' the 1 law against" carrying deadly weapons, often inake th'em AeJves rticcis :cjnnnis by a shameful derelictipn :pf duty; Fines .are i seWoiftj jpiixsc4 - and. when imposed are, often remiitedi Jrt our4idginent t)m penalty ought tb.be made farjnaore-verOj iand then itought tfy be mt$i&tp the r.utmost ; i witlioiito feac 0 :or , f a yor .This,hf 4al;;Qsj net! j ought W pe curbed and the barbarous ,habit cbnapjiet.eay: broken up DeBorem-I sunnosen ybu con- siderrine. too fresh together I uu i i MissiCatdhgioimtaitogeth eh iYottrojokes areiecrta4nly stale siroughr TO I CoUiiaatf oirttoe. . ! faloirin1dS&8tokaa'ca''c and 'jflatv uy me use Cholera and Cultivate Yoar Best Traits. . tSucoeM.) There b something in man which cannot be bribed to give its con- seMtotliatwhichiswrong.no mat- tjexdiow mqch pleasure it promises :it the moment. ISothincr else has been such I great disappointment to those who! have ffolwed together in Uie high. tlunk that money will buy all the i - .. . t" their Utter milure to find happiness in' try ingJ w iiaruiuuiu uus eit-iueuv w un the animal sk,6 of themselves. ivlen in all times.have' -tried : in vain every kind of device to iret tltc heart's connttovk'ious living, ! -No irumcau Jje reailv hanuv until .hejsjn harmony: with the higliest, thejbest thing tn bim. Iany ropic ir nna ""PP1" y liNwonmmg with th worst thing - i:n..Aj - animal side of their natare. Rut this is always .fatal, .because 'iere is thelriotone iUttiterkto vote. Never- eyerlasting protest, of the divine against the brute in man. If a man could forget that he forget that he was made to walk upright and not Kroiu nature thatimage of his divinit.vy vtho enjoyment of the "VP?' oihuii, iiini nyuiu tutu, nu lo-btest. 1iut there is ever that :nhnl.K mtux ,;4k;U :ai IU!!nU AKn1n nloAInnt l A '. iL .Iw. I cnn.Ai.;n tt,. r 1,.,, : ownit unii Hmv -'tw uk eivs -naiiASL yi miuuii wic uiuioi vo; ruicimtQ uick. 01 uiucN iour utiuung the good in him. : Men in all tiges have tried to down this higher self, to keep it is all in your direction. .More (piiet, to drown this god' in them oyer, the world in which your With beastly orgies, and ihave sue-1 joyment; but the debauch' left a Otinf in' 4liA.M Ori-ki 1 lo a l-kkl-k ' I -v a couia ncver pluck out and which Was a perpetnal reminder that they hftd faenv, Everywhere we find men and Women committing suicide after years of futile offort in trying to harmonize their lives With the lowH 1 rorwr,l t e mean-j i.pnf,linr, ,wlioi. lAir rnnm fA lAAm J Ahva nit tli Ivaa ti-nl.l !-, Af n llmii. What ISL..i 1" ' ki..i ai .- t .i i mm . infer- ,i., rZ 4i.x;77.n T;: U J ..11 ......1-1 mm... 1 Lllilli 111(11 t in I lllllll' II L VII f II- I II lll.fclll II IM M II I1IIIL Mil SI'l Ill'l I. 1 I IIs est tlung in them instead of withfstairs leading to the upier glories the highest. State and General News .h aiucrii 01 - u wwr w xin?ton k1 A ""U' 1C Hiaue imm XXiniOOU f ater shall be sold upon that Kei- ; Miss Emma Lemmonds of Char lotte has instituted divor proceed- hngs against Henry Hirsch of that! cuv; wno claims do nave oeen mar . T A . I I A I I t . ried to her in bouth . Uarouna a week ago. The ceremony isalleg- ed to have been performed by tlie; notorious 'Squire Bailes, and Missj lemmonds denies that she "was married to Hirsch. Speaker of the House of .Repre sentatives, Joseph G. Cannon, de livered the literary address at Guilford College commencement last w-eek. "Uncle Joe" was in teresting mainly because of his od dity and not much on account of what he said. He was born near (.reepshore, but has shown very few symptons of iMting a native of th is" state. . A few weeks ago a matrimonial j paiH?.r carrying a want ad." for David Pahl of Nebraska, fell into th hands of a maiden lady living near Iexington, Miss Hannah Pruit by name. She answered the advertisement, which was ror a wife, and after writing four letters ntntvp nrtl pvohnnnnntf n hnui-1 (frnh' -t.hft eoimle. was mfti- ried I last week. Pahl is 58 years of age ml l-iiu wl fA is 7ft. The. eour. e will lir-A 1 r'c PnhPt fnrni in 1 f w.,krtn r vv a a a waa raa . a m m A-X, AVOW.. WU, . . I Mrs. McKinley Laid to Rest. Canton, Ohio, May 29. -The IkxIv of Ida Saxton McKinley to night rests beside that of her dis tinguishetl husband in West Lawn Cemetery. I Ier last words, 0h, God, why should! longer waitr let me, lie beside him," have been answered. Later the remains of both will Ije removed to the new McKinley mausoleum.. AAA ' Despite the rumor of - doubtful Origin that Michael Czolgosz bro ther of the assassin of President McKinley, would-be iaCaoton to day, .the, funeral of Mrs. Jda Sax- a . '-1 :: - - 1 a. - ; - - i a? :i visit of president looseveit passed off without incident of . sinister 1 note, lakmg precautions against the ope chance in a thousand thai j here was true,. the local police, as-J - A - sisted by secret rerwep pcen, Jrpm ing the Presidents taylnijhe city.' f No trace whatever was found, of I jjzoigosz nor anyr anarcmsx ai? though three istrankers Jtf the pity we're held in; the; , jalt'dtinW the President V stay. "There was notb- ing against them, however,' and they; "were releasM this evening ' V Do Not Kerkct rle; Chndrei. At flii8(8eabd bi thVypar ihe first nn- A ' iiatnral looseness of 'a' child's "bowela fchonld have lnvoiediate attentioiiTlw T tcni thiricr. thkt cbjl ha. tnvefa is Chain- I WlalnVOblii?, Cholera aad I)iainoeiB b - : f7 ZZwvj.i jRemeay fonowe4ca8foror. as dl- l?pr sjiie By iaarna Jrug H-, , - t.M ton Aicrviniey anu inc conwogem-jAbic POTEAT'S ADDRESS. (The BjaUnreit AAAre neiiv !ta Wa.e For ctu.. tn H I . V i T ,507 I J'Genilemen. trraduates of Kki7 a the natilis whieh foe four I road of collet onrxjrtiitut v rwl i a . . . - fc fdlowship begiii to-dav todiverire. Forgive me if I dotairi you thus at i uie irung oi me ways lor a verv brief linal word! I is "Ycaifs aco Jiines Russell l-iv- eJI said that America was tJemot aamnionr schooled of the natious' and tlie least eihieated. u J sf ill far from tlo ideal condition its Irgards j general intelligence. It PV Uany years uerorw we can reach the statusj for cxnmole. of 1 Ahanlcwwi W. SaI1o.1 ..,1 I limenLarv renrokontiii-o r.ii ..v tho less, the ediicational advnmo which we are making now in U- Icpme one of tlie distinctive features ojf the time. Even more totrikinir tons:-ihe elaboraUon of indus- I trial life, the growing complej.it.v io. auiuvi iuihlious, me wuier f sll lere arid the irimnt.ei itorilof n 1 1- i ir:TI.i :.:..:.. . i J...- A.Jl-A- ' . I :..a aJ t i.: ,1 i.: i iiiuov uiMri tabUJu iierioo ill lis iiis- 1 hBrc sets) you on) the crest of the. I educational wave.. Tho movement trained howeis will do their continent of knowledge which has I 1 j-w"ia, k !isly A m,1 IT svt aII x , I ..a.1 hi svhfii continents Waifc bttirili rolling seas for their tdumbJs ? The victories of a j lofty . patriotism have not all been Vsron; " Nor are the honors of life in Hhls day and' region Drc-empted by hereditary privillege. The golden OjFtJie Doge's Palace wero open only tothe XNpoiii whose names were inscribed in ' the golden lKok of I'the Repiiblic. No sucji . handicap any d rcctioni The die aiul i ICC are f you lj ' ill-liCt A iut- ... 'J.1... PRES. mar-Lnd:finand it will not 1 chargeable to tjhe kindly Prov- idence which ha brought' you 'to this good hour. ' ' "Gods blessing be upon each ' - . M - I ' 1 I V one of vbu. and His trracious nre's- enei-lehn vnn inifn tlin Inrcrpr mh- vice in fits kink gd.om." In The Best Of Humor ! ; mrker What kind of sens nre beyond matrimonial seas i llarker Why, divorcee.-" . Marriage istlic result of firiiirjg in love at first sight. Divorce conies when you get second si. ht. Ae'ttig Fisij (iK)astfully) '-Ves, si rV" he was at least ten feet long land mukt have jweiglied five hurip dredi pounds if he weighed an ounce, put the lino broke and got away from him. f Wifef "Why are you grow ling over your steak ?" Husband-- Jt isn't, lit for a dog!" . . A Wifei 'Then you have a right to growl." it Sportsman (on a lonely road) I say. nf there anything .to snoot down here f Kustlc Boy Con his way home m a . 7 1 i from sehoo n Ay. there ikj tin? 1 1 ' A ' ' 1 Al sKuimaisier comm over uie tun. Jackj I am going to give you a kias, my dear. Kva t-Tlien give it to pie quick- ly. Jack But why quichly? Eva- Because he gives' twice, who gives quickly,"" Ol (ieorge ," she exclaimel, ve seen p my .now now.tiiatyou hat yoii simply can't regret that . I got it. Isn t it just a. poem? f, if it isL" replied (leorgeV 4 4 I snmbose a' nrdiwr r ' u i& ' for "it would, be 4Owed to a: Milliner " Jlosenburg, tlie Clothicr'-Vlittle found a bg roll .of .... . L .... oiu-s on Ider sidifevalk? 1 ; Mrs. :KosenbergVill you" ad vertise der motiev ? Rosenberg Veil, I'M put der AAI.,Vl LIZ t ill fl. lit. V aLUl,A Alll AA 1111 I ttse der goodsl (Johh Ciarles MdNeiHn cimriotte 01, ' . ' fTf1-' ' -,: I wisht 1 ; wua a hlrim nrin'-Mnl. I'd ner in a wilier tree. JJen notn'n' liut autm'u'. wnt t?o s on'' ,.! .; wings , , , , .. , 'Coiildtever git to me. : r),i J:.. -r-of'vl ''J'i''i'! ' ' I iwisht I was a sftake. I'd cru u i . , , . IDowii1 in 'a deep; stump hole.' V': oth'n5n'd ventarjBL?doA ta dar: --i j T. 'n'd be so dark nd col,'. 1 , , . .. 'i tint jis' k nigger Jri hiarrfiaolc. 1 7 1 1 1 . Su'n' pa' see 'H&aven a4 mUi ft V JJ uuiv l .! 'riL irf''"Jc It's a natchel fae'dat many a l!WtohTI Wuikpp'n wil'v t . 1 ta my bcaaiar- tBtl"tt'd. cotjiq to: niess.' Wid we y . j j i -Jt J J s r - ' s '
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 4, 1907, edition 1
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