Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Jan. 31, 1913, edition 1 / Page 6
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I . run I wis Tin irwinr UIL.U i niiu nw sweat Prominent Doctor's Best Prescrip tion Easily Mixed at noma. "From, your druggiat st one ounce of Toil J compound ln original aealed EckR) and on ounca or ayrup of areaparlll- compound. Tak thaae two fncrwilenta horn and put them Into a half pint of food whlakey. Bhake tha bottla and take a table apoonful befora aach meal and at bed time." Thla ta aald to be the quickset and beat remedy known to the medical profeaalnn for rheumattara and back ache. Oood reaulta come after tha Orel doaa. If your drugglat doea not have Tori a compound In atock ha will pet It for you In a few houra from his wholesale houee. Don't be Influenced to take a patent medicine Instead of thla. Inslat on having the genuine Torla compound la the original one-ounce, eeal ed. yellow package. Hundreda of tha womt caaea were cured here by thla pre ecrlptlon laat winter. Publlahed by tha Globe Pharmaceutical laboratorlea of Chicago. SHE KNEW BETTER. "Did your wife give you particular fits because you come home at 3 o'clock the other morning?" "No. aha didn't aay a word. It'i too near Christmas." In a Literal Sense. Jurenlle remarks are not always so naughty as they seem. Small Sam, for Instance, had no Intention of using bad language when he got Into such severe trouble In class. Hla teacher was trying to press home certain facts concerning a vol cano. In reviewing the lesson she drew on the blackboard her own con ception of a flaming mountain, using colored crayon with extraordinary ef fect. "What la ltr she asked, the picture finished. The scholars shook puzzled heads. "Tou don't know? Well, what does It look like?" the teacher persisted. Piped Sammle, whose home boasts a colored pictorial Bible. ! "I think It looks like hell." Chicago Record-Herald. Shopping Instinct. A rural postmaster tells this story of one of the patrons of his office, a boy of thrifty, not to say penurious, stock. When the lad comes into tha postofflce he will thrust his wizened face up close to the window and, in his slow, Yankee drawl. Inquire most earnestly: "Hev ye got any postal cards?" "Yes," the postmaster replies. "Haow much be they today?" "A tent apiece." Then the boy, screwing up his eyes In tfife intensity of his thought over the question he has to decide, always stops for a while to weigh the con sequences. Finally, he will reply sol emnly: - "Wal, 111 take one." Youth's Com panlon. ; Burduco Liver Powder. Nature's remedy for biliousness, constipation, Indigestion and all stom ach diseases. A vegetable prepara tion, better than calomel and will not salivate. In screw top cans at 25c each. Burwell & Dunn Co, Mfra, Charlotte, N. C. Adv. Just Because.' "Why was the beauty doctor so an gry with Anna?" "Because she told him she was com ing to him to get a few wrinkles." For SUMMER HEADACHES Hicks' CAPUDINB Is the best remedy no matter what causes them whether from the heat, sitting In draughts, fever lah condition, etc. 10c.. 25c and SOo per bottle at medicine stores. Adv. Men are like trees; they either crooked or straight. grow Mrs. Wlnelow'a Soothing' Byrup for Chllcea teething, aoftena the guma, reducea inflamma tion, allays patn.eoraa wind collo.ttc a bottle.. Adam lost out when he parted with one of his ribs. PAINFUL, TRYING TIMES Housework Is hard enough for a healthy wom an. The wife who has a bad back,, who Is weak or tired all the time, finds her duties a heavy burden. Thousands of nervous, d 1 s -' couraged, sick- ly women have traced their troubles to sick kidneys have 4 "Bom fHdwt Ttttt a Story" n r A miliar ' An ft thorough, relief thro u eh uBiriff Doan' Kidney Pills, The trying times of woman's life are much easier if the kidneys are well. A North Car!le Ceee X W vnMrwnn, PrM-fwlll. H . C. WW ! r, nctm-iy trm aiuHJit total satnm- . t.-ii 1 liad run tiown to 'A). Doctor i! fi m outy bopa, bntl would v k vt-u up to ditj. Duaa't . . . ...nU L0 OOiilaJtoWl." t A ay S$or, BOe a Box " " " 9 KIDNEY J PILLS ro e.K:i I f n 5c. Prints 1 GREAT CULEBRA CUT N EARING COMPLETION sri T . i .J. When President Taft inspected that six-sevenths of the excavating part of the work. WITH THE Victims of 'Balkan War Saved From Death by New Surgery. Wonderful Work of Doctors , and Nurses at Hospital In Belgrade 1 Men Shot Through Head or Heart Often Recover. Belgrade, Servla. The human side of war, as shown In the Improvised military hospitals of Belgrade, pre sents many touching scenes. Every school in Servla has been turned Into a hospital. Here, where there are a great many wounded from the battle of Koumanova, and from the skir mishes about Monastir, not only the schools, but every available building. Including the local barracks and a su gar factory, has been transformed into wards with neat rows of white beds. Practically every country In Europe has sent a corps of surgeons and nurses to the war. The United States has done its share by contributing to the work of these devoted Red Cross tollers about $12.000 more than any other nation. The surgeons are all greatly interested in their cases, for modern warfare, with small, powerful ly driven steel bullets, presents re markable wounds. At the time of the American Civil war arms and legs were lopped off by thou sands to prevent blood poisoning. In these days of antiseptic surgery there Is almost no amputation. One soldier was shot through the middle of the finger; his whole linger has been saved. A number were struck when firing from lying posture, the bullet passing through the bead, straight down 'through the heart and out at the thigh. The lives of several so wounded have been saved. It used to be considered fatal to be struck In heart or bead. In these hospitals there are men who have been shot right through heart or head and who will re cover. Often It Is not considered nec essary to extract bullets which have lodged in the body. The wound Is sim pl" disinfected and allowed to heal. Nothing Is more significant of the fine quality of the Servian peasantry than the speed with which their wounds have cicatrized. The surgeons are amazed, and lay the phenomenon to pure blood, untainted by alcohol. Many brought here within the last two months have recovered, and gone back to the front. One of the most interesting hos pitals Is in charge of the Russian corps, In the local exposition building. Nearly all the nurses here are women of good family, a number of whom got experience in the Russo-Japanese war. Enter this ward. That blond young woman ironing sheets near the door In the corridor Is the daughter of the Russian ambassador. These ' are wounded Servian officers In here. It is the visiting hour. In Servla,' It Is the custom to congratulate a soldier who receives a wound. ' In comes a dumpy old peasant woman, ber wrin kled face beaming, and drawing forth an orange from her clothes she toddles straight toward one of the beds, where follows a tender greeting between her and her soldier son. Speak to this handsome young fellow. "Yes, sir, I was one of the iSO.000 Servians who went to help the Bul garians around Adrlanople after our own work was done. I was wounded in a skirmish In trie trenches. But you should talk to that officer over there. He Is aajor and a hero." ; ; ,I got my wound at Koumanova or, rather, my five wounds, his lace lighted up with pride as he spoke. "We bad driven the Turks back that day and at night they tried to retaliate. We charged them through tha dark and f was caught in their volley. The Servian officer, sir. Is always at the head of his men.' In the next ward are some private soldiers nearly welt One Is playing a rustic flute and other are dancing "kolo." the national country dance with soma of the pretty Russian nurses. r :;3 rcn r.z::ci. fcets Fund Will Ca Raised by Subscriptions of $2 a Year Writers May Re tire at Fifty-five. , Paris. Is the poet's career, so pop ular if not profitable In France, to be cnn8 a safe walk in life, assuring its f - A. rs cf a certain subsistence in ;-(' 1 r ' ?T t s! I rh r.T'.s la dv v?V t i the great Culebra cut of the Panama canal the other day he was Informed there has been completed. This has been In many ways the most difficult WOUNDED Here are more serious cases. That old man what is he doing here? "Yes, sir, I am a 'last defense' man. I was engaged with others in the rear guard, burying some dead, when a band of Moslem villagers suddenly fell upon us. I was shot before 1 could drop my spade. We drove them off, though, and they ran up Into the hills." Upstairs is a large ward of Turkish wounded. Do not tmaglne because Rus sian sympathies are with the Servians that these stricken enemies get any the worse treatment On the con trary. It Is almost as If the doctors and nurses took a pride In being kind to these vanquished ones. HAS FUN WITH SPEEDERS Missouri Boy Makes Life Miserable for Fast Autolsts Rifle Sounds Like a Punoture. Kansas City, Mo. Farmer boys In the vicinity of Oak Grove have a new trick which they are playing on city autolsts who burn up the county road In that section. Henry Sieben. with Mrs. Sieben and William Wolf, former alderman, and Mrs. Waif, while motor ing along the rock road in the eastern end of the county recently had the trick played on them. - "I guess we were , hitting it up at about a 60-mile clip." said Henry, "when I distinctly heard a puncture. I whistled for brakes and stopped the machine so suddenly I nearly lost my guests. : "Did you hear anytbingr I asked Billy Wolf. "'You've got a tire puncture some where here,' he Informed me. thereby confirming my worst suspicions. ' 'It's a puncture sure,' said the women, and then I knew I was on the right track" Sieben said be got out his testing apparatus and other tools and started in to locate the trouble. All of the Urea were found intact and the for- MAY ASK $143 Rich Mrs. Cameron Sues Husband Because He'Dldnt Get Home Early. ' New York. Whether Mrs. Margue rite Stone Cameron, who Uvea at the Hotel Savoy, will limit ber request for alimony to IX.000 a week remains to be seen when motions In ber suit for separation from ber husband, Alplh W. Cameron, are heard . In Justice Page's part of the supreme court "Mrs. Cameron will not ask for as much as $3,000 4 .week." said Mrs. Francis W. Stone of Cleveland, the young woman's mother. "VJnetber she will limit It to f 1.000 I cannot say. Mrs. Cameron Is as wealthy in ner own right as Is her husband, who is the son of the millionaire head of tne Alpln J. Cameron company, yarn man ufacturers, of Philadelphia and Cbica. ko. But the intimation reported to be conveyed in the papers filed by her lawyer, former United States Attor ney Gen. John W. Griggs, Is that Mrs. Cameron seeks to discipline her hus band by drawing heavily upon nis pocket book. No hint of serious disagreement Be tween the Camerons so far attaches to the wife's suit Mrs. Cameron will al lege, so her lawyers admitted, that the cause of estrangement has to ao merely with Mr. Cameron's seeming inability to reach home early In the evening. ; ' The Camerons made their home at Rldgewood, N. J tor several years following their marriage at Atlantic on October 7, l0z. Rldgewood. s pretty settlement of the ultra-exclusive tvne. Is accessible only by a rail road. Mr. Cameron was oftentimes kept late by business at the New York nflioaa nt hla father's concern. 260 Broadway, where he acts as manager. Recant It Mrs. Cameron came to New York to live. She took apart- number It may be read that the com mittA of the society. In conformity with the vote taken at the general meeting of 1910. Is about to consUtute a mutual aid society with a pension scheme. It may seem as If the committee had taken a long time before acting on this 1910 resolution, but the p-e-cutlons with which the French gov erment surrounds any prud"nt!l aid f.-A wj account for t!.a d ' . The e ..)' i cf tv.e society f '(t i t ar-v 1 i ; .( t'S p 38 ' f mer wharfmaster was. puzzled an somewhat worried, when Wolf dlscov ered the cause of the "tire trouble' It was a grinning boy who stood be hind a convenient tree by the rosd side. In his hand he held a rifle which he evidently Just had exploded Into the air as Henry's machln whined by. . "What'U we do. drown hlmr asked Wolf. "Never," ordered Henry, climbing out from beneath the machine where h still was searching for a break ol some kind. "Be a good sport Let him nail the next sucker." POSES AS 6IRL FOR YEARS Mother Had Too Many Sons, So Dl gulsed Hla Sax, Even Father Be ing Deceived. Victor, Colo. After masquerading as a girl for IS years the sex of Irene Moynahan was learned. He was ar rested In La Junta by Sheriff A. H. Wetnecke, who, because of his mascu line appearance, decided he was a boy in girl's clothes. Irene was on his way to visit his father in Blse, Ariz. Until the holidays Irene bad been a student In the Victor high school and all his life had been passed off as a girt Mrs. Moynahan, when told that her boy had been arrested and that bis sex had been discovered, stated that she bad always passed him off as a girl becanse of her disappointment in having two sons. Not even her husband was aware ol the boy's sex. This was borne out by the discovery of a letter In the, boy's effects by the sheriff at La Junta. The letter was addressed to his father in Blsbee and declared that the mother was "sending a son to him as a New Year's gift" Mrs. Moynahan will Join ber son at La Junta, and together they will con tinue the Journey to Blsbee. Irene li now dressed In boy's clothes, furnished by the police, for the first time In hit life. Mr. Moynahan Is a lessor of the In dependence mine in the Cripple Creek district A DAY ALIMONY ments at the Savoy hotel Tbls ellm Inated the railroad as an excuse. . Bui Mrs. Cameron's lawyers allege that despite this, business still kept Mr. Cameron away until a late hour. Cameron, who la best known to hli friends among the younger babltuet of .the Waldorf-Astoria, Plaza and oth er hotels as "OIlie," would not discuss his marital difficulties. Mrs. Cameron's father Is Francis W. Stone, director and official in many railroads. When his daughter was married to Cameron he declared the wedding was brought about "surrep titiously." He said bis daughter was a minor and that he would "hold par ties responsible for the outrage strict ly accountable." Matters were later smoothed over. - QUAKE COMMUTES SENTENCt Convict Gets Term Reduced When It Is Discovered That Record -Was Destroyed. San Francisco. "Jack" Black, 1 California convict, was able to reduce a twenty-five-year sentence to - one year, when It was fonnd that the erthauake and fire six years ago bad destroyed the record which would put the longer sentence Into force. Pend ing? the execution of bis long sentence Black escaped to Canada. When ar rested his offense was found not to 'be extraditable and Canadian officers pushed him across the line, where he was' taken by unicea states omciais. When brought before Judge Dunne he was sentenced to one year at San Quentin, it being stated that Black's tncerceratlon in the county Jail al ready represented a fourteen-years' sentence, with good behavior. . Black promised the court to straighten up and reform." his legal record, whereon any crimes for which he has been prosecuted are noted, and who pays any annual sub scription of $2 will oe able to enjoy a pension after he is fifty-five years old. Man Is Beat at Fifty. Berlin. The experts, business men, scientists and oiber men In prof. -s- slonal life ' o are contributing to t TsrfWatt's . u-,:..wa are d it ) a l a is t a unit in t at t'.e ... .-,-, inrr r iUiriS - The Highest tion Br REV. WILLIAM EVANS, D. O. Director W BibU Com. Mood? Bftla Immk Oacas TEXT-Csas to da evil; laara to da wea-lsa. MS-IT. Life's greatest work is the build ing of character. Our world . Is a college, events are teachers. happi ness Is the gradu ating point, and character Is the diploma which is given to man. Character Is more than learning and Intellect; goodness outshines genius. Character Is not so much a -thing of intellect as of disposition, therefore should be cloth ed with goodness. The only abiding thing, the only thing that you may take with you Into the future life, is character. It Is a mark of wlsdorn to look Into and pre pare for the fuftire. Herein lies the difference between a child and a man, the savage and the civilized, the rich and the poor the ability. to look Into and plan for the future. The power of the artist lies In his ability to see see finished picture. Character Is the best thing you can leave behind you. A good character is the best tomb stone. We are remembered by what we have done. The absence of character Is hopeless, weakness and wickedness. What la Character Intellectual culture Is not necessari ly character. It Is often argued that Intellect and mqral levelopment go to gether. History, however, disproves such a statement If that were true the peasant if pious, even thougir.be bad' no education, would be a Shakesv peare or a Milton: then goodness must accompany scholarship and so every scholar would be a moral man. which Is not the case. Intellectual culture may be and often Is accompanied by character, but It Is not Identical with It Did Intellect save Solomon from vice, Eacon from bribery, or Byron from Immorality T Coleridge says: "AH the mere products of the under standing tend to death." Wealth Is not character, although It Is often substituted for It People without character, but with money, often are admitted Into respectable society. Wealth In the hands of weak men Is a fearful thing. It is not true that moneymaklng has the tendency to banish great thoughts and fine feel ings? Why Is so much Immorality con nected with wealth? Reputation Is not character. Char acter Is what a man la, reputation la what men think him to be; and often these two things are reversed by the revelation of .the newspapers. Char acter Is what a man Is before God; reputation Is what he is before men; reputation is for time, character 1 is for eternity. , Character is what a man is when nobody is looking. A man's character can no- more be strengthened by reputation than a fence by whitewash. What. then. Is character? The word signifies something scored or en graved, and carries with It an abiding significance: so we may speak of char acter as that which sets forth certain abiding results which has been scored or engraved in the soul of man by the experiences of life. Character Is the stamp on our souls of the free choices of good or evil we have been making continually through life. It la that which engraves itself upon all we do. Character is what we are In the hid den recesses and not merely on the surface of our Uvea; It is not really what men takeus to be. but wnat we are before God as our Judge. Charac ter la m irua UM, m www u.au, their best and highest living out the dictates of their highest, oest ana fuest natures. The man of character la truthful. 'Hla armor Is his honest thought and imnla truth bis utmost skill."- He does not profess a thing that he does tntanit to rio: ha does 'not nrom t.. thin which ha knows la not In his power to fulfllL No considerations can Justify the sacrifice of truth wnica miffht to he sovereian in ail tne reia Hnna of life. A lie Is never Justifiable. Some one has said that otner vices m' virtnoa eomnared to lying, yet how lightly esteemed is falsehood. Ly ing ofttlmes assumes tne iorm 01 ai ninmi avnedlencv. moral reserva tion, dodging the question, twisting words, and giving wrong impressions. rhar&rtar la characterized or mod esty and purity. The bloom on a peach Is of the very nrst consideration to us life and perpetuation; and the finest thing about a man or a woman la the fine bloom on the mind and the con science. This reeling is more er fw.tnal for our protection than walls of granite or gates of brass. Take care of the aelicacy or your mino, re t.in tia nower to blush, respect the alarm and shrinking of the soul at the faintest suspicion of evil. Lei cynical people call you green; thank God for that color, and see that you keep it for it la infinitely better than the sere and yellow leaf of a wasted life. Live so modestly, so purely, so resolutely tor your God that your whole moral nature shall continue, - "Quick aa tha appla of an aya, Tba alls;hteat touch of sin to feel." 1 " , God Within Us. "Ye are the temple of the Uylng God; as God hath said. I will dwell in them." II Cor., vi. 16. God within us! Not only ever with us unseen, not 'only watching us In our secret moments and reading the very thoughts of our hearts, not only covering us with the shadow of his wlnss and lighting us with the light of bis countenance, but within us our bodies his temples, our hearts his home. Oh, If we could but grap the thought we should live lives nobler imi more fcfaut:.J. Frederick X7. J, How old Is De Swift's youngest child?" "It can't be more than a year old. It's Just learning to fly." A man may worship the woman beautiful, but he usualy marries the woman dutiful. Dr. Plaros's Pellets, smsll, sugar-coated, easy to take as randy, regulate and Invigorate stomach, Urerand bowels. Do not gripe. Adr. It takes a practical fisherman to detect the lie In a fish story. WoolfoBl Kauitarr Lolion fur all klnda of eonlag-loua Itoa. At Druggist. Adr. Nature generates facts, but fiction Is manufactured by man. ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AWtff table Preparation for As- similatifhl the Food andRrtula- ling fhe S tomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digcstion(Checrful- Cft fl ll I its irT-alilHuirvan.vviiiuiiif "" Opium. Morphine nor Mineral Not N aw c otiq , Jlx$mm Jtifmim alrJa Wimkif few re hi' A perfeel Remedy for Constipa tion , Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ncss and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fae Simile Signature of K V The Centaur Company, NEW YORK. Guaranteed under I he Foodan Exact Copy of Wrappar. MkJ III'llilMIIIIIIIIIIIUlilUlCTUl HP r i: ,mii'ili.!inT.l".;yi;T. I.i ir.,Trr rTiii.iu;,;!. 8 ! I (. r s 1L Ik Stops Bacliache Sloan's Liniment is splendid remedy for backache, stiff joints; rheumatism, neuralgia and sciatica. You dont need to rub it in just laid on lightly it gives comfort and ease at once. Beat for Na and Stiflbsia Mi. Co. Buchanan, of Welch, Okla., writes "I hara nted your tin- li nent for the past ten years tor pain ent I ever tried. 1 recommena Linim : mm arar t"a .ilLliviiiiMivJLii cood for sprains, strains, muscles, ana au auecuons t f relief at ths SI, J. Chicago. I In m..rS prevent Th nlA Potash is tt 05) S It I a " lis'' 'v 4 s V-.f V; ' vi Backache RheumaUsm Kidneys una picum FREE TO ALL S'JFFEr.EuS i.-.M aont of aorta" "rua anwa'orVf tha 1 HAIR BALSAM I fca-jAiAflfl tha 1 PnMBoM a IBMrtwu wniwvj. 1 tutwm Mia I tilt to lPrarita h to ora owm Ita Tonthnu msa. hir nulla;. u I ai.ooil I'rrarma s nnnnCV TBSATBD. Olvaqalskio UilUlvl i(t, siullr taaamra wal- Una ana tnon arwa ' w enUra reuaf In iMfdara. trial vntmt rausi Al: SolWtora If you are a live wire 2'S Vant eonw (hlna ood writ THB I C, LaJi I'OMMNV. Omaha. Xab. "WaST ted." N. U, CHARLOTTE. NO. 6-113. SEKOS AND PLANT rinsAOH PI.AWns 1 enta pet thrnnand. Sums PwSSt otiieZs. lowuaa'utUaNu.s ft Get Our Seed Catalog Only the Best Garden or Field Seed. N. L WILLET SEED CO., Augusta, Ga. fl BH"' JliUtlull Tot Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tha Signature of I. hp Use jr For Over Thirty Years Ma aawTftua aowMtav. aaw vena airv. in Daca ana sunnese ana no '""" u w wjuu, ux jmuw u, m tmm M V- bruises, cramp or soreness of the 01 wo uuuai emu vuw - ' . V Cot lAtJr Relief R. D. BoacoTNE, of MaysiUe, Ky., RR. f, Bot 5, writes: u I bad severe pains between my shoul ders; I got a bottle of your Liniment and had entire fifth application." UHDUWWU, Ul WW liuiw lit, writes!" I am a piano polisher by occupation, and since last oepwmDor na ...ttT-A with aavara naln In both shoulders. could not rest night or day. One of my frlmula toll) ma about vow Liniment. - Three applications completely cured me and I will never be without tt.- PrissMft 80., and $1.09 . at All Dealers. 8uxi for Sloan's fraa book oa hams. 1 Address -': Dr. Earl S. Sloan, ' Boston. Mass. Every Good Ecll Ccunb many cotton fields there is too "wrl" anrt the bolls fall To thil balance the plant food. An that cottoti does not need much hard to eradicate. But the longer Phosphates have been ued on the crop the greater becomes the need of more ' m a ri ""i " Try. a cotton fertilizer with 6 to 8 percent Potash and use liberal side dressings of Kainit. It will pay because Totash Tays. ' M'im ytur ld ttylt fertHmr ivtih an tgHal quantity 'Kainit. We now sell Kslnit and all Potaih Salts direct Writs as for prices and lor our tree boot, oa cotton v-uirara. crHN KALI t ? . I a.
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 31, 1913, edition 1
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