Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Sept. 19, 1913, edition 1 / Page 8
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f. I. 1" Ik if - H .-r HI N m Splendid Features : For Western Carolina ; 1 Fair. ' ' : .... r;," ', In the preparation for an un usully large and attractive ' dis play of exhibits and the assembl ing of a variety of aoiusemenU for the entertainment of the seve ral thousand visitors who will attend the third annual Wttitein North Carolina Fair at AshcvilU from the 7th to the 10th of Octo ber, the management of tho Fail association is preparing for plac ing and Insoirim? educational features, wholesome amusement and events that will be appre ciated by those in attendance. The moral standard set for the Fair has not been overlooked and as a result the Asheville Minis ters' association has endorsed the Ft work and will on tlu Sundays marking th opening and closing of "Open House Week" te be observed in Ashe ville from October 5 to 12, emp hasize the importance of this period and the work undertaken by the Fair association. The prominent speakers for the different days of the Fair are men of the highest character and integrity and everything possi ble will be done to' uphold the high moral standard set. The educational features of the Fair will be especially emp hasized on the opening for Edu cational Day, when approximate ly 10,000 school children from various parts of Western North Ciroiina will be in parade. The durational idea will prevail throughout the Fair in the vari ous features, among which... an the demonstrations of sanitatioi and health, domestic science, dairying and fruit culture, the Letter babies conies', Brother hood Day exercises, M litary Day maneuvers. Western Norll Carolina Day and events occur ing thereon, among them bein the singing contests by choirs ot Western North Carolina, athlcth contests and other incentives to local advancement. The Fair association is deter mined to permit nothing of a questionable nature on' t h c grounds and while only clean and wholesome features will be per in it ted, Fair week will not be dry and uninteresting as the thrilling, spectacular and enter taming will be combined with the elevating. Mr. Johnsing Gone. yy' By Walt Mason. . -. Jack Johnsings gone to dwell in France, to come back never more; no more in twelve-foot rings he'll prance, on this, his native shore. The other pugs may swap hard knocks, and try to gain a pile, bat never more shall Johnsing box, or smile his golden smile. The horrid ' new ome o'er , the wires: "Jack Johnsing won't return! The thankless country of his sires he lie ever more shall spurn! He clapped that eountry to his breast and made it what it is, and then it bit him on the 'chest he's done '.vitli it, gee whiz!" And yet our flag waves jt the same in sun thine and in fo& and e'en tin? fUhting game has not yet h lipped a cog; the river rambles to the sea. and in ihesumbeams dunce, although Jack Jobnsing says that he will not come back : from Erance. ;,; Our - bulwarks stack up just as higfi 'as in the d i.vs of yore; palladiums you can not buy much cheaper than be fore; our grand, old constitution still has preslage'in the land; it 8 em that sword of Bunker Hill aro larsrelv in demand, un- daunted ny one ou . misctiance, our divers $itf,luj We'll roam; and. . ... .. . . t jjunsing may remain in rrwice until tlw cows come home. : "" '; : , . T, ; J. W. Fagan serves pies, of his , n, own make. Try them. i .-. I fnnp ccamCE03isj BLUFF, N. C. ; ':'--l;. ' HONOR ROLL. -; Thea Norise, Bascomb Holt, Bert'e Bradly, Lydia Henderson, Nelda Lusk, Dulissie Davis, Zelda Brown, May Finley, Mary Bright, Ralph ; Finley, Eddie Thomas. Hardy Moore, Howard Finley, Craige Russell, Mildred Hryirht. Margrett Russell, Edd Bryght, Clarence Finley, Henry Davis. Tishia Caldwell, Maude Davis, Daisy Caldwell. Mae Holt, Otis Brown, Inez Davis, Jenn incs Davis. Frod Bryght, Lois Brown, Pearl Henderson, Ted Russell, Mabel Lusk, Bertha Waldrupe, Ruth Lust, Margia Henderson. - ' . News from Stackhouse. Here I come with another re port from the school at . Stack house. On account of mumps the school ha not been as large this month as last. We hope it will sxn take its departure and the students will be back in school again. At present it seems almost as if September belonged to the winter months instead of Autumn I am sending an "Honor Roll" which consists of the following names. Charlie Bryan, Dell Duncan, Hubert Ramsey, Roy Souther land, Hessio Pliipps Ani.ie Mae Duncan, Willie Duncan, Roscoe Sawders, Gilbert Stnc'ri ouse, Rdfert Davi, WooJwi.rd R no y, Ciitlilene Hunter, Cluy l icp, Willie May Moore, James Tread way, Andrew Tread way, ik-ssie Mae Tread way, Stella GojBiifll, Le'a Mae Gosnell, QuVen Dais, Lily Mae Brooks, Nettie Sawyers. GLENN PLEMMONS. Teacher. CO-operative Comity Educational Conferences in Buncombe Count y . A scries of six joint education al conferences has been held during the past week in Bun combe County in which educa tional agencies of State, county, community, and city made plans and received inspiration for full er co-operation in the great work of education. : J'- Stale Superintendent- J. Y. Joyner was present at the last two of these conference and was greatly pleased with the confer ences and their results. He states that it is almost impossible to estimate the great benefit which will be derived from these meetings. . 't: He highly commends the coun ty of Buncombe on the degree of educational progress which these meetings reflection the work and spsrit of its Sward of Ed j ca tion, and on the efficiency of 0unty Superintendent; and he promises that similar cp-opera-tive educational Conferences will be planned and held in a number of other counties of the State. These conferences were held in six different localities or the County so. as to reach all the Buncombe ieop)e. L. , C Brogden,' State - Supervisor of Rural Schools, attended and took part in the discussions of the1 four first meetings, which Superin tendent Joyner was'Vrevented from attending by cbbfl.ictinjr en gagements. .The meetings srere thoroughly advertised and largely attended The teachers and children of the i i. i :. 1, I swjuuis uju3h ,uv..h, catu meeting-place wer present, and yyyif.- pan-oe wi wie,. cuuuren oi toe nearby schoo!8, in which they marched, - with bannera flying, , .1 , i around the school grounds, - ,pi , t The school-committecmen ano mil I inn riTin 1 . n iiniiiiiiiii mi. i iiiiii attended and the meetings were in reality conferences between teachers, children, school-cam-mltteemen, parents, and otner Interested citizens. The County Superintendent and the entire membership of the ,'" Board of Education attended every meet ing. " ;'. ; , - ' . :.:t': . 'Every phase of educational workvas discussed and the sen timent of all the meetings .was expressed in the slogan: Better Homes, Better' Schools, Better Farms and Better Farming, Better Citizenship. Especial em phasis was laid upon consolida tion and local taxation, and spe cial discussions ot the correlation of the work of the rural schools with the life of the country peo pie were made by representatives of the State nd County Depart ments of Education.- - Mr. Millsaps, District Super visor of Farm Demonstration Work; Mr. Brown. Director' of the Corn Club and the Tomato Club work for boys and girls; and Mr. Weaver, Demonstration Agent for Buncombe County, were all present at each meeting to discuss belter 'farming and agricultural education, lie pro sentatives of the State Board of Health and , the County Board of Health were present and ' dis cussed health and sanitation and their relation to the schools of the county. . Plans for the co-operation of all these educational agencies of State, county, 'and community, and for the co-relation of the work of all for the advancement af uplift of all the people wore d pissed and will be perfected and put into operation as soon as possible. i Can't afford to have KiJney - Trouble, . ; No nmn with a family to support can sfford to have kidney trouble, noi need he fear lb with such n reint-dy at hand as Foley Kidney Pills. An hon est medicine, safe and reliable, cost ing Jittlu but doing much good. Fo ley Kidney Pills eliminate backache and rheumatism, tones up the system and restores normal action of the Kid ney's and bladder. Sold by Dr. I. E. Burnett, Mars Hill, N. C. Big Day for Women at Knoxville, Club Women are going to have a big day at the National Conser vation Exposition in Knoxvilie, on Friday, Sept. 12. On that day Mrs. Percy C. Bennybacker, president of the National Feder ation of Women's .Clubs, will be a guest of the Woman's Depart ment and will deliver an address on "Some Dangers that Threat en an American Home." Mrs. Pennybacker is one of the best know women in the country and in her capacity as president of the National Feder ation of Women's Clubs repre sent more than one million club women; She has won fame both as an author and nn"orator. Club women from a number of towns near to Knoxville are planning to visit the -exposition -. a a wJm - - - ' on Women s (Jlub Da v." A delegation from Hariman will he led by Mrs. Henry' McMillan of that city...;. A 'Delegation will al- su come from . Athens, Johnson City, Chattanooga, Cleveland, M ary ville, . Atlanta, Asheville, Greenville and other cities.. , Mrs. Pennybacker will be giv- cn u luncheon in the Van Wright In on the Exposition grounds at o cloek. All club women aro in vited. . Covers will be laid for one ..hundred or !more guests. Mrs. Geo. W. Denny, president, of the Tennessee Federation pf Women's Clubs, will be tho toast mistress. , Af ter -TMrs. Penny backer's address in the audito- r,um aninformai reception ia her . or win ba heM ln the Wo man's Building. FOR SALE New and second hand buggies and- harness at bar- ' j gabs. Soe Z. G. 'SPRINKLE MANY GOING TO CIRCUS. Barnum . and Bailey Attracting Thousands with Many New and Novelty Features. ; The Barnum and Bailey Groat' est Show on Earth is attracting unusual interest this season witl its wonderful program of Euro pean novelities, its rebuilt parade, its complete menagerie, and its recently added $500,000 wordlesf spectacle of "Cleopatra. V all of which will be seen in AhevilK on September, 27th. - " , - ' The "parade, which takes placi at 10 o'clock In the morning, it three miles in length., In tlx menagerie will be found the onl. baby giraffe on exhibition any where on earth. Tht. inaugura spectacle of "Cleopatra" is pro duced on the biggest stage evei devoted to an open air amuse ment. It is erected in the mail tent of the show. There is e cast of 1,250 characters, a grand opera chorus of 400- voices, ar orchestra of 100 musicians, bal let of 350 dancing girls, 650 hors es, fiye herds of elephants, caravans of camels, and an entirt trainload of special .scenery, costumes and stage effects. This is the greatest spectacular, the atrical, and circus event in the history of amusements in Ameri ca. " . " . - :J: ' Among the many European novelities on the regular program vftiich follows th spectacle, an Katie Sandwina's wonderful strong-woman act, and novelty feats by a company of Japanese warriors and jiu-jitsu experts, Winston's riding and juggling seals, the Fillis troup of dancing and jumping horses, a brass band of stallions, Barzac's mule and monkey circus, the Siegrist- Silbon family of high air valters and somersanllers, Mae Wirth, tl.H greatest bareback and som ersault rider in the world; Vic toria Codona, queen of high wire experts; the Georgetty family of strong arm jugglers, the Florence Lea Jardy and Les Deko families of acrobats, seven herds of train ed elephants, and the fifty funy iest clowns in the world. The Barnum and Bailey circus for more than fifty years has stood at the head of the world's amusement affairs. This yeai lb ts uiui v unci e.-biug : man cvci before, and twice as big." It travels on a train mote than mile in length, covers fourteen acres of ground, and has nearly 1,500 employes, 700 horses, near ly two thirds of the elephants in America, 110 cages in. the mena gerie and over 2,000 wagons and other vehicles. The two perforr mances that will be given in Aslieville will be exactly the same as those presented at Madi son Square Garden, New York, where the season was opened in March. Not one detail has been changed. The givat spetacle was said to be tie most ' notable dramatize vent in the history of amusements in that city, whii the circus proper was credited with being the best ever given there. - - ," Wives Take Notice The Macon (Ga. ) News has the full wing in regard to the danger of wives allowing their husbaud.- I to do tho work: ' An Arkansa. ! man, dropped dead vbiei chop . ping wood; a Missouri mau died while bringing in - a bucket of water; a New York mau fell in a tit while hanging his mother-in-laws picture,, and a Maon man was stung by a wasp while hoeing cabbage." Moral for all wives Don't let your husbands do the work. Safest Lixative forWonel. Nearly every woman needs a good laxative. Dr- King's New Life Pills are good, because they n re prompt, safe and do not cause pain.: JUra. C M. Uunlap, Leadill, Tenia., says: "Dr. KlDg'a 3sTew Life Pills helped her troubles creatly." Got a box to- d;iy. Frice .Uecommended by '1 ilarshitl Pharmacy. The Woman With the Hoe The State Journal. ' y "V ." ' .Last spring the press of . the State carried the follow- - , " ing news item, which is here jchanged changed - only enough to conceal the name and locality: ; Mrs. B.' I. , Avey, who lived about one " mile nortty ..of Axeton, was ' found dead near her home yesterday afternoon at about four o'clock.. She had been '' planting corn and had fallen into a ditch in the field. She ' leaves a large family, all of whom are grown and living in this community. She was about 75 years old and a V consistent member of the Blank church of this place.' She was buried at Sunrise cemetery today."". They' have told how she died this .woman with the hae. But no ono has thought . it worth while to explain why she died a? he did why an old woman . who had passed her three-score years and ten, and who had often trod the perilous path of motherhood, ihould be digging in the field for bread, as women 'did thousand of years ago. We have doubled Klie yield of corn, but a withered old woman must still answer thf call of seedtime and go out into he field with : the hoe, Tei thousand automobiles go bact tnd forth in this State, lifting the burdens ftom the beasts of the field, but no way was found to lift the burden of the hoe from $100 Reward, $100 readers of thla paper will b 5 leased to learn that there la at leaat on readed diaeaaa that acience haa been able to cure in all Ita atagrea. and that Is Catarrh. Hall'a Catarrh Cure la the only positive cure now known to the medical Fraternity. Catarrh being- a constitutional disease, require a constitutional treat ment. Hall'a Catarrh Cure ia taken In ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous aurfacea of the system, there by destroying; the foundation of the dis ease, and giving the patient atrength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have ao much faith in Its curative pow ers that they cer One Hundred Dollars for' any case that It fails to cure. Bead for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY CO., Toledo, Obie. Sold by all Dragniats, T5o. Take Bail's Family Fills for constipation. Southern Railway Company SCHEDULE OF PASSENGER " TRAINS N. B. Following schedule figures published only as information and are not guaranteed. . . Ea st BOuhd (Central Time) No. 28, daily........ ...due 8:30a. m No, 30, daily...... ....... due 5:00 a. in No. 12, daily...;.. due 12:08 pm No. 102, daily. .....due 8:55 p. m West BOund No. 27, daily,. ... . .cfoe7:38 p. m No. 35, daily .... .v.due 10:25 p. m. No. 101, daily.. ... . .due 0:54 a. m No. 11, daily,. ... ......due 2:55 p. m Subject to change without Notice W. A. WEST, Agent - Marshall, N. C. J. H. WOOD, Dist. Pas?. Agent Asheville, N. G REPEATING RIFLE can buy no better lor target wori small game up 200 yards. ADS HILL IT- . 4 "Pit'- I . im toad lop M XT&y !. from ban y jv J otrvm cowtructioo. . J gf quiclaiaadnM aw, V f" yi wWrtfia MtrattmwinlifMiialdMim, X ' hmi 3 ilumf (or it telar. A school that draws 399 students from 60 North Carolina Coun-' ties"; abd from seven other States comiDir half around the ''world to considering by Madison County people, v 1 ' It drew 270 students from other Counties and States, and 429 from Madi . son County. Is this a fair proportion? Its students succeed at higher institutions and In life, out of all propor tions to its numbers. . - North Carolina Education says: that do better work than Mars Hill, and The Fall Term opens August 20, 1913. " ' , : , Send for our new catalogue. ! ; ' ' . . . -R. L. f.:CC."2, Prci'Jint. v - . Kart Ii::J, N. C. her "bent figure as it tottered over the broken ground to a tra gic death. . 1 ' ; ' , : 1 Tha burden of labor, - like all other burdens, follows , the lin of weakest resistance, and it is resting heavier and heavier,' on the shoulders least able . to bear it becanse Jeast able to resist it, Jet men marvel. that women In England are moved to madness and women the. wjorld over ,are protesting against the order of life against the woman with the hoe. In his highly Christianized commonwealth many can tell of the child-widows of India and the foot-bounJ women of ; China, ' but they have hardly heeded the burden-bearer the woman with the hoe -in, their own fair land of plenty. - . . So they laid her away1 this old woman, ' whose " life . was no " less tragic than her death and in a thousand churches they can tell how she led a Christian life and hojv her soul now rests in peace, awaiting the great day wnen labor and 'sorrow shall cease and she shall stand face to face with her God to receive her ' reward as if Christ did not say, "God is not the God of the dead, but of the living." The healing demuloent qualities of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound are not duplicated in any other medicine for cougli8 and colds., Any substitute offered you is an inferior article. Re fuse to accept it for it cannot produce the healing and soothing effect of Fo ley's Honey and Tar Compound. In sist upon the genuine, which contains no opiate. Sold by Dr I. 12, Burnett, , Mars Hill, N. C. . , ' ' Oon't Let Baby Suffer With Eiiema And Sk!n Eruptions Babies need a perfect skin-covering. Skin eruptions cause them not only in. tense suffering, but hinder their yrowtli. Dr, Uitscn's Fczcica Oint ment can be relied on for relief and permauent cure of suffering babies whose skin eruptions have made their lives miserable. ''Our baby was af flicted with breaking out of the skin all over the face and Bcalp. Doctors and Skin specialist failed to help. We tried Dr. Ilobson's Ec&ema Oolntment and were overjoyed to see baby com completely cured before one box was used" writes Mrs. Strubier, Dubuque' Iowa. All druggists, or by mail, 60c. PFEIFEK CHEMICAL COMPA NY. St. Louis, Mo. Philadelphia, Pa TYPEWRITING and COPYING Work Neatly and Accurately done INSURANCE Fire, Life, Health and Accident - placed in Reliable Companies. I SURETY BONDS Of all kinds furnished on short 1 -v. : notice. . , Deeds, Deeds In Trust and Mort gages Blanks For Sale. MISS ROBERTA ROGERS OFFICE Bank of French broad buildino Without kange of mechanitm it long or long-rifle cartridges perfectly. The deep Ballard rifling develops maximum power and .20 . " handles '21 short accuracy and adds years to the life of rifles. protection Inm d-Jwiw I blown lack. 1 fa aoV ajecaoa MW Ictt wcttd MMlit nd allom quick, accaraM repul oa3. hitbampbulu rabi acdaa part, putt at ur Ji it im deaa. A tralrtotioa m. Atk uy tua cWhr, ; 7ZZjcui trearms Cx ' 42 WUlow Stmt Nmr Him, Cmmm. and two Foreign Countries, some reach it,-must have merit worthv - . , .; "There are few schools in the worli make so little noise about it." , f
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1913, edition 1
8
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