Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / July 5, 1912, edition 1 / Page 6
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ll ji SYNOPSIS. Blam Harnlah, known all through Alae ha a "Burning Daylight," calabratee hla Oth birthday with a crowd of mlnera at tha Clrcla City Tlvoll. Tha dano leade to heavy gambling, in which over 1100.000 la aiaaaa. tiarnun loeea nia money anu hla mlna but wlna tha mall contract Ha atarta on hla mail trip with doga and led, tailing hla frlenda that he will be In the big Yukon gold atrlka at the itart. Burning Daylight makea a aeneatlonally rapid run acroaa country with the mall, appeara at tha Tlvoll and la now ready to loin hla frlenda In a daab to the new old field. Deciding that gold will be found In the up-rtver dletrlct Harnten buya two tona of flour, which he declaree will be worth Ita weight In gold, but when he arrlvea with hla flour he flnda the big flat desolate. A comrade dlacov ara gold and Daylight reapa a rich har eat. He goea to Daweon. become the moat prominent figure In the Klondike and defeata a combination of capltaliata In a vaat mining deal. He returna to clvllliatlon. and. amid the bewildering complication of high finance. Daylight flnda that he haa been led to Inveat hla eleven million! In a manipulated echeme. He goea to New York, and confronting hla disloyal partner with a revolver, he threaten! to kill them If hla money la not returned. They are cowed, return their stealing and Harnlah goes bark to San - Franclsro. where he meeta hla fata In Deda Miaon. pretty atenographer. CHAPTER XI. Daylight was In th thick of hti spectacular and Intensely bitter fight with the Coastwise Steam Navigation Company, and the Hawaiian, Nica ragua and Pacific-Mexican Steam ship Company. He stirred up a big ger muss than he bad anticipated, and even he was astounded at the wide ramifications of the struggle and at the unexpected and incongruous In terests that were drawn into It. Every newspaper in San Francisco turned upon him. It was true, one or two of them had first intimated that they were open to subsidization, but Day light's Judgment was that the situa tion did not warrant such expenditure. Up to this time the press had been amusingly tolerant and good-naturedly sensational about him, but now be was to learn what virulent scurrllousness an antagonized press was capable of. Every episode of his life was resur rected to serve as foundations for ma licious fabrications. Daylight was frankly amazed at the new interpre tation put upon all that be had ac complished and the deeds be had done. From an Alaskan hero be was metamorphosed into an Alaskan bully, liar, desperado, and all-around "bad man." The whole affair sank to the deeper deeps of rancor and savage cess. The poor woman who bad killed herself was dragged out of her grave and paraded on thousands of reams of paper as a martyr and a victim to Daylight's ferocious brutality. He was like a big bear raiding a bee-hive, and, regardless of the stings, he obstinately persisted in pawing for the honey. He gritted his teeth and struck back. Beginning with a raid on two steamship companies, It develop ed Into a pitched battle with a city, state and continental coast line. Al lied with him, on a splendid salary, ' with princely pickings thrown In, was a lawyer, Larry Hegan. a young Irish man with a reputation to make, and ' whose peculiar genius had been un- A Sudden Envy of This Young Fellow Came Over Daylight. recognized until Daylight bad picked up with him. It was Hegan who guided Daylight through the intricacies of modern politics, labor organization, and commercial and corporation law. It was Hegan, prolific of resource and suggestion, who opened Daylight's eyes to undreamed-of possibilities , in twentieth-century warfare; and It was Daylight, rejecting, accepting, . and elaborating,, who - planned the cam paigns and prosecuted them. With the Paciflo coast, from Puget Sound to Panama, buzzing and humming, and with San Francisco furiously about his cars, the two big steamship companies bad all the appearance of winning. It looked as If Burning Daylight was be ing beaten slowly to his knees. And then he struck at the steamship com panies, at San Francisco, at the whole Pacific coast It was not much of a blow at. first A Christian Endeavor convention was being held In San Francisco, a row was started by Express Drivers' Union No. 927 over the handling of a small heap of baggage at Ferry Building. A few heads were broken, a score of ar rests made, and the baggage was de I vor,' i. No one would (have guessed f it behind tliis petty wrangle was t e fine I ' ii hd of Hesran, made t fr tr a I' "' e gold of Burn !.. I; t r i l"':-!i!2cant --'.( 1. I t S strike became Involved. A refusal of cooks and waiters to serve scab team sters or teamsters' employers brought out the cooks and waiters. The butchers and meat cutters refused to handle meat destined tor unfair restaurants. The combined Employ ers' Associations put up a solid front, and found facing tbem the 40,000 or ganised laborers of San Francisco. The restaurant bakers and the bakery wagon drivers struck, followed by the milkers, milk drivers and chicken pickers. The building trades asserted Its position in unambiguous terms, and all San Francisco was In turmoil. But still, it was only San Francisco. Hegan's intrigues were masterly, and Daylight's campaign steadily devel oped. The powerful fighting organi zation known as the Pacific Slope Sea man's Union refused to work vessels the cargoes of which were ' to be bandied by scab longshoremen and freight handlers. The union presented Its ultimatum, and then called a strike. This had been Daylight's objective all the time. Every incoming coastwise vessel was boarded by the union offi cials and its crew sent ashore. And with the seamen went the firemen, the engineers and the sea cooks and waiters. Dally the number of Idle steamers increased. It was Impossi ble to get scab crews, for the men of the Seamen's Union were fighters trained In the hard school of the sea. and when they went out it meant blood and death to scabs. This phase of the strike spread up and down the entire Pacific coast, until all the ports were filled with idle ships, and sea transportation was at a standstill. The days and weeks dragged out, and the strike held. The Coastwise Steam Navigation Company and the Hawaii an, Nicaraguan, and Pacific-Mexican Steamship Company were tied up com pletely. The expenses of combating the strike were tremendous, and they were earning nothing, while dally the situation went from bad to worse, un til "peace at any price" became the cry. And still there was no peace, until Daylight and bis allies played out their hand, raked in the winnings, and allowed a goodly portion of a conti nent to resume business. Daylight's coming to civilization had not improved him. True, be wore better clothes, had learned slightly better manners, and spoke better Eng lish. But he had hardened, and at the expense of his old-time, whole-souled geniality. Even his human affiliations were descending. Playing a lone hand, contemptuous of most of the men with whom be played, lacking In sympathy or understanding of tbem, and certain ly Independent of them, be found lit tle in common with those to be en countered, say at the Alta-Paciflc. In point of fact, when the battle with the steamship companies was at its height and his raid was Inflicting incalcula ble damage on all business Interests, he bad been asked to resign from the Alta-Paclfic. The idea had been rath er to his liking, and he had found new quarters In clubs like the Riverside, organized and practically maintained by the city bosses. One week-end, feeling heavy and de pressed and tired of the city and its ways, he obeyed the impulse of a whim that was later to play an impor tant part In his life. The desire to get out of the city for a whiff of coun try air and for a change of scene was the cause. Yet, to himself, be made the excuse of going to Glen Ellen for the purpose of inspecting a brickyard which Holdsworthy had sold him. He spent the night in the little country hotel, and on Sunday morning, astride a saddle horse rented from the Glen Ellen butcher, rode out of the village. The brickyard was close at hand on the flat beside the Sonoma Creek. Resolving to have his fun first, and to look over the brickyard afterward, he rode up the hill, prospecting tor a way cross country to get to the knolls. He left the country road at the first gate he came to and cantered through a hayfleld. , The grain was waist-high on either side the wagon road, and he sniffed the warm arema of it with delighted nostrils. At the base of the knolls he encountered a tumble-down stake-and-rider fence. Wall Street Fancy Job of Trucking That Takes , , the Minds of Financier ' Off Money, Finance is what engages it mostly, but Wall street can spare a moment for other things that are Interesting, as It Is doing occasionally Just now to look on at some exhibitions of fancy trucking. . " r, ? The structural steel for the new building going np on Wall and Nassau streets la landed from lighters at a South street wharf at the foot of Wall street, so It Is only a short haul from the wharf to the new building, though it's a lively one. Some of the supporting columns on pillars going Into this building weigh from 25 tons to SO tons each, but they are -handled easily. They back one of those long and ponderous trucks with low, broad-rimmed, heavy, solid iron wheels down on the wharf, alongside the lighter, and then the lighter's steam derrick lifts off Its deck one of those JO-ton pillars and lays It gently on th track, doing this quickly and easily. To haul this load they have hooked to the team seven pairs of big horses, a from of ' 14 horses, all used to th bw '" sad all ptt'-'Irig ably. t 1 r- V a i -'wr tnomfs to a t t x t t v x c i .t r l' : ACK (Copvrlht. WW, by New Tor Herald Company.) (Copyright, 191b. by th afacMlllan Company. V "It Sure Beats Country Places and muned He tethered the horse and wan dered on foot among the knolls. Tbelr tops were crowned with century-old spruce trees, and their sides clothed with oaks and madronos and native holly. But to the perfect redwoods be longed the small but deep canyon that threaded Its way among the knolls. Here he found no passage out for bis horse, and leading the animal, he forced his way up the hillside. On tbe crest be came through an amazing thicket of velvet-trunked young ma dronos, and emerged on an open hill side that led down into a tiny valley. Tbe sunshine was at first dazzling in its brightness, and he paused and rested, for he was panting from the exertion. Not of old had be known shortness of breath such as this, and muscles that so easily tired at a stiff climb. A' tiny stream rap down the tiny valley through a tiny meadow that was carpeted knee-high with grass and blue and white nemophila. Crossing the stream. Daylight fol lowed a faint cattle trail over a low, rocky hill and through a wine-wooded forest of manzanlta, and emerged upon another tiny valley, down which filtered another spring-fed, meadow bordered streamlet "It sure beats country places and bungalows at Menlo Park," he com muned aloud; "and if ever 1 get the hankering for country life, It'a me for this every time." An old wood-road led him to a clear ing, where a dozen acres of grapes grew on wine-red soil. A cow-path, more trees and thickets, and be dropped down a hillside to the southeast ex posure. ' Here, poised above a big for ested canyon, and looking out upon Sonoma Valley, was a email farm house. With Its barn and outhouses It snuggled into a nook In the hill side, which protected It from the west and north. It was the erosion from this hillside,, be Judged, that bud formed tbe little level stretch of vege table garden. The soli was fat and black, and there was water In plenty, for he saw several faucets running wide open. Forgotten was the brick yard. Nobody was at home, but Day light dismounted and ranged the vege- Is Interested pillar on the truck, which puts him high In the air, and gather np hi lines. There are three other men scat tered along the team as leaders and guides for th horses, and then with out flummery or ceremony they get away, starting th great load eaaily. - There' broad, easy sweep from the wharf Into the broad lower end of Wall street and th outfit makes this, describing a great arc, and then it straightens out for the run np Wall street It's an up grade all the way from South street to Broadway, but the. team takes it easily on a steady trot : :V.V;' It'a as good, If not better, than a circus, and ' primarily Interested though it Is to finance. Wall street finds time to look when one of the great outfits sweeps by. New York Sun. Customer's Opinion. Seymour What do yon think of th novel that Beaner, th restaurant keeper, has written? Ashley It's too much like hla sand wichesnothing between th covers. Knlcker Tes, my dear, 1 shall be glad to go with you; I long to see the beau'. .. of the cootitry. I . f . ' i.r '.. a. 11 stay la town. 1PNDON' Bungalow at Menlo Park," He Com Aloud. table garden, eating strawberries and green peas. Inspecting the ojd adobe barn and rusty plow and harrow, and rolling and smoking cigarettes while be watched the antics of several broods of young chicks and the moth er hens. Nothing could satisfy his holiday spir it now but the ascent of Sonoma Moun tain. , 4nd her on the crest, three hours afterward, he emerged, tired and sweaty, garments torn and face and hands scratched, but with sparkling eyes and an unwonted zestfulness of expression. He felt the illicit pleas ure of a schoolboy playing truant The big gaming table of San Fratcisco seemed very far away. But there was more than Illicit pleasure in his mood. It was as though he were going through a sort of cleansing bath. No room bere for rll tbe sordldness, meanness and vlclousness that filled the dirty pool of city existence. He was loath to depart and It was not for an hour that be was able to tear himself away and take the descent of the mountain. Working out a new route Just for the fun of it, late after noon vas upon him when be arrived back t the wooded knolls. Daylight cast about for a trail, and found one leading down the side opposite to his ascent Circling tbe base of the knoll, he picked up with bis horse and rode on to the farm house. Smoke - was rising from th chimney, and be was quickly In con versation with a nervous, 'slender young man, who, he learned, wan only a tenant on the ranch. How large was ltT A matter of one hundred and eighty acres, though It seemed much larger. This was because It was so Irregularly shaped. Tes, It Included the clay-pit and all the knolls, and it boundary that ran along the big can yon was over a mile long. Oh, yes, he and hla wife managed to scratch a living without working too hard. They didn't have to pay much rent Hlllard, the owner, depended on the Income from th clay-pit Hlllard was well off and had big ranches and vine yards down on the flat of the valley. The brickyard paid ten cents a cubld yard for the clay. - Aa for, the rest of th ranch, th land was good In patches, where It was cleared, like the vege table garden and th vineyard, but th rest of It waa too much up-and-down. "You're not a farmer," Daylight said. : The young man laughed and shook hla bead. . "No; I'm a telegraph operator. But the wife and I decided to take a two years' vacation, and . . . her we are. But the time's about up. I'm going back into the office this fail after I get the grapes off." As Daylight listened, there cam ts) him a cudden envy, of this young fel low living tight In the midst of all this which Daylight bad traveled through the last few hours. "What In thunder are yon going back to the telegraph office torT" he demanded. :-. A; Tbe young man smiled with cer tain wlstfulnesa "Because we cant get ahead her. . ." (h hesitated an Instant), "and because there are added e penses coming. The rent, small as It Is, counts; and besides, Fm not strong though to effectually farm the place. It 1 owned it or If I wer a real htiity like you, I'd ask nothing better. Nor would the wife." Again the wist ful smile hovered on his face. "To seC we're country born, and aft bucking with cities for a few year, we klni of feel we Y. tbe country best We've planned to get ahoad, thonr:', and thn tome day we'll bt? a r-':- "i of li 1 nd sfy !:si It" mil GHOSTS EVER BOTHER If So, Southern Negro Folks Say The- A I I . K .1 1 1 1 I AL... oimpie rrevauiiena vf im vnaae ' 'Em. . ;j . As a part of th folklore of th ne gro folks th superstitions of slavery days are of great interest Th lol lowing art some of tbe negro's beliefs njui auvatB- To feel a hot breath of air strike1 you at twilight signified the nearby presence of a ghost Should you wish , to avoid mm, atop ana turn your raiat and trousers and bat wrong side jout and the spirit cannot encounter you. If, however, he is a pugnacious sprite and approaches despite' the change, turn and address him. thus "In the name of tbe Lord, what do you wantf Wharonnnn ha will tell VOU his business upon earth, thin depart and never, never trouble you again. It, on the other hand, it l a prowling ghost who crawls under the house, bumps against the floor, makea strange sounds, and whispers in th midnight hours, you bare only to put In a new floor and be will do so no more. Some ghosts are obtrusive and will not only prowl about th house, but creep in through the crack of the door in the wee small hours of the night and, once inside, expand to vast pro portions. To spare yourself any dis turbance in this way, sow mustard seed all about the doorstep Just before going to bed, or place a sieve on th doorstep. - Before entering, the spirit will have to count all the holes in the sieve or all the mustard seeds, and by this time daylight will come and he will have to go. As the counting for ohe night will not do for another you are aliways safe. Southern Workman. ALMOST FRANTIC WITH ITCHING ECZEMA "Eight years ago I got eczema all over my hands. My fingers fairly bled and it Itched until it almost drove m frantic. The eruption began with Itching under the skin. It spread faat from between tbe fingers around th nails and all over th whole bands. I got a pair of rubber gloves in order to wash dishes. Then It spread all over the left side of my chest A fine doe- tor treated the trouble two weeks, but did me no good. -I cried night and day. Then I decided to try Cutlcura Soap and Ointment but without much hope as I had gone so long. There was a marked change the second day. and so on until I was entirely cured. The Cutlcura Soap we have always kept in our home, and we decided after that lesson that it is a cheap soap in price and the very best In quality. My husband will use no other soap in his shaving mug." (Signed) Mrs. G. A. Selby, Redonda Beach, Cal., Jan. 15. 1911. Although Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold by drug gists and dealers everywhere, a sam ple of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to Cutlcura," Dept. L, Boston. "Mug" la Overworked Word. The most overworked word In the Englishman's vocabulary of slang is Mug.' As a noun it may mean a face, a fool, or a student who prefers reading to sport As a verb Its mean ings are still more varied. It may mean to study hard, or to strike in th face. It also means to rob or swindle, and among actors to grimace or make faces. To mug up Is also, In theatrical parlance, to make up. Finally, to mug one's self Is to get drunk, the resulting condition being one of mugginess. There is more ob vious sense in this last use of the word than in some of the others, for alehouses. In the eighteenth century, were commonly known as mughouses. Mug is the English equivalent of the German Zug, which Mark Twain found to mean everything. A new sense of the verb "mug" In the American slang Is to photograph a face. For Forty Year a Hermit Isaac Sheath, who has Just died In the workhouse at the age of seventy eight, lived the life of a hermit for nearly forty years at Newport Isle of Wight He occupied a mud-hut which he erected on a piece of waste land, in the village of Chale, but the hut became so dilapidated that th rural district council ordered Its de struction. Sheath was greatly exas perated by the council's Interference, and before he left for the workhouse he burned the hut to the ground. Mice and birds had grown so accustomed to the old man and his lonely ways that they used to come and feed from, hit hand. London Mall. . .' The New Way. - "Going to your summer cottage this year?" 'No; we've decided to stay In th city." 'But I thought you wer so fond of the country r "We used to be, but now we prefer to stay at home, where we can get fresh milk, eggs and butter every morning." .. : . First Religious Book in America. The first religious book published ot th American continent was printed In the City of Mexico by order of the Roman Catholic bishop' there. This was the first work of any kind from movable type Issued In th new world and bears date 1845. In point of col laborators th most pretentious work published on this continent Is "Th Catholic Church In th United States," which haa six thousand different co authors, all but a dozen ot whom are actively Identified In some way with th American hierarchy. Oldest City In th World. Doctor Harkov, a Russian savanv one affirmed that Samara, on th right bank of th Tigrue, near Bag dad. Is tbe oldest city extant Relics now discovered show that Samara flourished before th arrival of th Semites In Chaldea or Mesopotamia, 1,000 a C. Charity In Compromise. Tbe best methods of compromise are always the simplest, and the sim plest are founded on grounds of mutual charity. ' : ILllilE III RUSSIA It'. HI! lie 1,111 A' ALES OF SUFFERING ARB SO SE VERE THEY ARE BEYOND ' BELIEF. ' IT OVERTAXES THE RELIEF Th Area of Soma of Th Affected District Are Fully as Largs aa Eng land, 8ootland, Wales and Ireland- Call For Aid. : ' New York. A special cable from London says: Harrowing tales ot th famine In Russia are being published by the Russia Famine Relief Committee, which Is doing Ita utmost to gather enough funds together to meet th need of the thousands ot sufferers who as soil tillers will continue to suffer until after the gathering of the July crops. Mrs. C. P.' Sangster of No. 65 Oak ley St., ' Chelsea, London, secretary of the English Famine Relief Fund, states that considerable, though far from adequate, contributions of mon ey are being forwarded to the Free Economlo Society of St Petersburg, an old organization dating back some thing like a hundred years, that has the sanction of th Russian govern ment "Twenty provinces," Mrs. Sangster said, "are In a deplorable condition, and it must be remembered that Russian province Is In sis something between a halt and th whole ot Eng- )ani' "Iu the province of Samara, th peasants are selling off everything cattle, horses, land and even wearing apparel. All these bring trifling sums, only to get a stone of flour, which is never, however, eaten unadulterated. Schools In famishing districts Mr gradually emptying. Some of the chll dren are Joining their parents and taking part In public works instituted by the government; others go begging for bread. Those, that still attend school are in rags and present a dole- sight "The Free Economlo Society of Russia, up to now, in spite of diffi culties, has succeeded in establishing 150 relief centers in twelve provinces where close upon 25,000 adults and children have received daily rations.' BOATS TO SOUTH AMERICA Nsw 8teamshlp Line to Open ' Fin Market for Southern Products. Washington, D. C President Fin- ley of the Southern Railway Company, announced that be had : been ad vised of the purpose of the , Munson Steamship Line to Inaugurate regular service between Mobile, Alabama, and South American ports. The new ser vice Is to begin on September 11th, on which date a steamer will leave Mo bile for Montevideo, Uruguay, and Buenoa Ayres and Rosarlo,, Argentina, all of which ports will be regular porta of call for the new line. Sailings will be made every fourth week. In making this announcement President Flnley said: "The inauguration of this new ser vice will be of great benefit to the merchants and manufacturers of the Southeastern States and of the entire Mississippi Valley.- The markets ot South America are rapidly Increasing In Importance with a growing demand tor commodities which can profitably be produced In our Southeastern Sec tion. Many of our enterprising jnanu- facturera and merchants . are giving special consideration to the possibili ties of these markets. Our South At lantic and Gulf ports are advantage ously located with reference to the South American trade and I am con vinced that direct and regular steam ship service such as Is now assured from Mobile will result in the building up of a profitable business. The peo ple Of other Southern seaport cities are moving In the matter and I hope that additional lines may be Inaugurat ed In the near future." .. .. To Study Farming In Europe. Washington. Acceptances to mem bership on the commission of the Southern Commercial Congress, which will go abroad next May to study Eu ropean systems of agricultural finance were received by Dr. J. C. Owens, man aging director of tbe Southern Com mercial Congress from the following representative business men: Ray mond A. Pearson, Albany, N. Y.; J. C. Caldwell, Lakefield, Minn.; T. Harvey Ferris, Utlca. N. Y.; William B. Hatch, Ypsllantl, Mich., and Edwin Chamberlain, San Antonio, Texas. ' To Reclaim Valuable Lakebed. Mexico City. One of the plans in volved by th government through Its Department of Public Welfare, Coloni sations and Industry, to provide ara ble lands for division among the peo pleone of the chief planks ot Made ro's revolutionary platform Is under way. It contemplates the drainage and filling In of the great bed ot Lake Texocoo, some two and a bait miles east ot the capital. ' The work will require flv years, It is estimated, and an expenditure of 4,000,000 pesos (2, 000,000 gold.) w 8wlsa Guides To Rocky Mountain. . Paris. Tbe allurement of better wages and alHhe-year-round employ ment Is causing .the emigration of many of the best Swiss mountain guides to the Rocky Mountains, ac cording to dispatches from the Swiss mountain resorts. In Switzerland the majority, of the guides have a preca rious existence, as during the winter months they have practically nothing to do and earn no money. Agents of the Canadian Pacific Railroad have ortered many of them employment twelve months in the year. nun unu Pleasant Featur of Winter. f , Then Is this cheerful fact , about winter: Nobody makes ny money by starting report that the crops bar been ruined. St Louis Times. ' tO OBIT PJ TUa th ou.J'If aijXb3 IIIUJj TON 10. Tua know wbal 70a r Ukliia, OftUX TON 10. Tua know whM rt foravjla la plalnlf printed on avarr bottla. nowina itia aimpir uuinina ana iron in a taaieitwa form. inA thm moat affaotual fufak Ita aiuwa A th Romans Do. "How long did It take you to do RomeT" "About twice as long as it took Rom to do us." life. Dora TOPK BUD ACHKf Try Bleka OA PU DINK. It'a llqnld plaaa-ant-totaka affaota Immadlata irood topravanl filok Baadaohaa and Nervous Haadaohea alao. Ton? money back If not aatladad. 10asto.and Ma. at Mart irl na storaa. Failure is always spoiled by suc cess. Quality quantity It something to ood sMar in pnrohaalng a remedy for oonattpa Uoa or as a laxative. How about Garfield Teat The gossip of today may be tha su perstition of tomorrow. , ' IEN it's meal time and your appetite it keen and you try to think of some tatty things to eat don't tat. your mind don't fret and fume. Order Vienna Sausage Hot or cold, they are tenrable in a jiffy, and equal the imported kind in tatte and flavore Once you have learned their real quality you will alwayt want them. Always Buy Libby'i Don't accept a substitute. Libby'i Foods present a wide assortment, all the acme of quality and reasonable in price. ' . At Evty Croc re Libby, McNeill & Libby nucago yfjf Libby'$ Food Arm Alwayt Rtady to Smrvm E N Q I II E S Bo"r" Dd Engines. TanKs ana Towers. " " They are particularly RAM F D adaptedforSaw Mills, D V I L C n O on M1UBf am- nlng. We also handle Saw Mills and Gasoline Engines. If you are contem plating th purchase pi new power plant either steam or gasoline, it will say you to write us. - ., J.S. SCHOFIELD'S SONS CO., Macon, 6a. Bnnoh effloa: 307 W. Trait St. Chartotta. N. t The Wretchedness of .Constipation lan quickly be overcome Vf CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable -act surely and OUTER'S gently on the ITTLE Bihousneas, IVER PILLS. ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK Genuine must bear Signature Tha Oldest Mlm Gcl!:i9 Collet Wllllaai sad Mart. FeaneW la ISM Healthful eUneUoo and atatoris eaeoelatlona. On a O. RaUway, half-way between Fort Monroe and Richmond; 8 mL from Jameatowa) IS mU from Torktowa. Peyeeao A. B., B. ., ethletto Aeld. Total oot per aeaaion of nine month (board and fea) ' &. Write for annual aaao. U. I St.--.dl a". aiaiiaa-.tHae . It 1 avaasasMsMalsiaBMaahM I iiitwP Restore trey Hair to Natural Oolor mimnm auwir ajb ecvav tavicaraaaaand prevents thehairfrom taUlntoff 9m SaaarSMii laerSSajtaf XANTHINIOO., Richmond, Virginia a4iArc 01 1 paper kirinS' to buy xwwwwia anythirtfadVertiaed: In its col umns should insist upon having what they ask for,ref using all substitute or imitation IXODAII3 DriTLT"Q 4 T BNsjttnin , Aim flttna, DMtM tw f pinL,ulti H'wmn prm, a-t - fi. B - 1 "4 Oat j (. . . fw QQlOk t , t rHr rrtH v-, n "W daaWw tW'tt . .-ft ft- .-i m . f S, tfijaj Vfhtll4 aft. -eaW mr m BL w srvar
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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July 5, 1912, edition 1
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