Newspapers / The Mooresville Enterprise (Mooresville, … / Feb. 9, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. X¥t, N». 4*» Mooresvllle, N. C., Thursday, February 9, 1911. $1.00 per yea r How to Cure Chronic Colds and Bronchitis j Btaerok, Out, pdsy 4,1910. j “I *U sick lor two years with • i chronic cold and bronchitis and a consequent nm-down condition. I received no benefit front doctors, and had to giveup work. VINOL was recommended sad from the sec ond bottle I commenced to improve —I gained in weight and strength, mucoid and bronchial trouble dis appeared, and I am at work again. I want to recommend VINOL to anyone who is in need of such a ■rodi ciuc.'—Thrones Hmoims. Ib is the combined action of the curative elements of the cods' liven aided by the blood making and strength creating properties of tonic Iron contained in VINOL which maker it so successful in curing stubborn colds and bronchitis. VINOL 4s a constitutional rear edjr for chronic coughs, odds, bron chitis and pulmonary troubles, not a,|ialliative like cough syrups. Tty a bottle et VINOL. If you don't think- it helped feu, me wffl ttSirs yotv iBoofly, Geo. C. Goodman & Co. Sckedvle of Trains Leaving MooresvUie No. 16 for Statesville.. 9:00 a. m No. 26-fer W Salem_9 05 a. m. No. 28 for Charlotte ...11:86a. m. No. 28 for W-Saletn_12:06 p m. No. 27 for Charlotte....4:42 p. m. No. 25 from W-Sslem. 7:20 p. m. No. 16 for Charlotte_7:25 p. m. Na. 24 for Statesville...7:47 p. m %A, F. and A. M.% MOORBtfVfLLJS LODGE MO. *44,1. TT nr r if rt« n rnrj Tansria j main| *K» o’clock. All memben are reqnes M to alt—d.* Visiting brothers am always welcome. Degree work most ever? evening, A. M.— JR. O. V. Meets every Thursday night at 8:00 o’clook in Jnnior Hall. Mem* ben invited to be present. Visitors al ways weloome. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. ALBERT L. STARR, AVTMKV.AT-MW. CtBmUtm mint twi. iMRumu, . - . ■** DR. 5. ERONTIS, Dtntirt. TURUNOTON, Or. Paul W. Troutman »DBNTIfiT^ IK BOOKS U> b6oK-BUYKRS. “I say we have despised literature; what do we, aa a nation care about boohs? How much do you think gte spend together on our libraries, public or privatfe, aa compared with tehat wrf spend on our horhes? We1 talk of food for the mind as of food for the body; now, a good book con tains such food inexhaustibly. It is provision for life and for the best part of ns; yet how long most peo ple would look at the best book be fore they would give the price of a large turbot for it! Though there have been men who have pinched their stomachs and bared their backs to buy a book, whose libraries were cheaper to them, I think, in the end I than most men's dinners are. We are few of us put to such a trial, and more the pity; for, indeed, a precious thing is all the more prec ious to us if it has been won by work or economy; and if public libraries were half as costly as public din ners, or books cost the tenth part of what bracelets do, even foolish men and women might sometimes sus pect there was good in reading as well as in munching and sparkling; Whereas the very cheapness of litera ture is making even wiser people forget that if a book is worth read it is worth buying.”—From “Sesame and Lillies.” The MooreBville Public Library is open from 3 to 4 p. m. on Wednes days and Saturdays. HOWS TNIST W« offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Core. F. J. Cheney A Co , Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, hare known F. J. Cheney for the last 16 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all bus iness transactions and financially able taoarry oat any obligations made by his firm. Welding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O Hall’s Catarrh Core is taken internal ly, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testi monials sent free. 76 cents per bottle. •tote Weald Lea# One Member ef Oen - Washington, Peb. 3.—Democratic leaders in the House are arranging a canvass on the congressional reap portionment proposition. Republican representatives in cau cus hist night agreed upon the plan df Representative Campbell for a continuance of the present House membership, 391. Champ Clark, the Democratic leader, is emphatic in favoring a greater house such as shown by the Crunipacker plan, which is based on 433 as the lowest number in the light of latest census returns. The Campbell plan is based on the ratio of 234,522 population to each representative. The following States would have their representation reduced under the 391 plan: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, North Carolina, South Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia, Wisconsin, Maine, one each; and Missouri, two. California, New York, Oklahoma and Washing ton would gain two each, and Ari sons, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexieo, Oregon, Pennyslvania and Texas, one each. Wife Het Tip Tep Advlee. ••My wife wanted me to take our boy to the doctor to cure an ugly boil/’ write# D. Frankel. of Stroud, Okie* “I said 'put Buoklen’s Arnica Salve on it.’ She did so, and it oared the boil in a short time.” Quickest healer of burns, scalds, cuts, corns, bruises, sprains, swellings. Best pile cure on earth. Trv it. Only 25c at Geo. C. Goodman A Co. "My wife is one woman in a thous and.” "What now?” "I just left her at the bargain eouater.”—Boston Trahscript. IkwIHtln, Bw> frees disordered kidney. Foley Kidney Pills have helped others, tbev will help you. Mrs. J. STMlller, Syra cuse, H.x , mys “For a loaf time I gof fered with kiduey trouble and rheuma tism. 1 had severe backaches and felt all played oat. After taking two bot tles of Foley Kidney Pills my backache is {num and where! used to lie awake with rhenmatin pains I now sleep in oomfort. Foley Kidney Pills did won derfal things for me-'' Try them now Miller.White Oo. South Carolina ia tlje only State in the Union which has never, had any lav providing far-divorce from the bonds of matrimony. It has heretofore alee beat the only State which did not require any marriage lieenae. The Legislature of South Carolina has at last changed the lat ter case however, having parsed a law requiring the procuring of a marriage license before a marriage ceremony can be legally performed in the Palmetto State. The bill has pane* both branches of the legisla ture and will be signed by the Gov ernor, who favors the measure. The law will become effective on July 1st of this year and doubtless large ly.decrease the number of runaway marriages of soaptcs from across the line.—-Gastonia Gazette. After all, is it much worse to sell qaafevalMhaa is ia to give one’s vets away unthoughtedly? URLS SHOULD NOT RIDICULE OIRLS “She looks like a perfect fright, I snd just see how she is gobbling. down her food.” ; This remark attracted my atten-1 tion to a table nearby where four j young people were eating luncheon, j and J saw that they were laughing! at a pretty young woman seated at j another table. That they knew her was evident, i for I could hear at intervals criti-i eism of her manners, dress, relatives j and home; some harmless enough i but a great deal of it decidedly vul gar and unkind. The two young fellows at the table were inclined to defend the girl, but the laughter and gibes of the other girls finally caused them to laugh also. To be sure her table manners were none of the best, and her clothes, although evidently costly, were rather dowdy and ill-chosen, but I wondered, as I compared her' with the other four, which were really the more vulgar. It seemed to be that the girls who! ridiculed her and gave the men a j chance to laugh at her were far; more ill-bred than she, for their vul-1 garity came from a lack of kindly feeling, while hers came from igno rance. This spirit is often brought into the business office, where the girls, thinking to attract the attention of the male members of the staff of clerks, make often caustic and as they think witty but more generally ill-natured remarks about the other girls in the office. The men may laugh and probable join in the “fun,” but they inward ly despise the girl who holds another J of her sex up to unkind ridicule, and' among themselves discuss her and say that it is a pretty poor sort of woman who will talk against her own sex. As a general rule, unless he is a mighty poor specimen, a man will uphold his associations, discrediting any disparaging remark a girl may make, and it is this spirit devoid of ill-nature which the girls should try I to emulate. A girl who speaks slightingly of her friends will be disliked by her, own girl friends as well as distrust-1 by both men and women alike, for who knows when they will be held up to ridicule, their foibles, dress and manners torn to shreds by the little miss who poses as the model of all that is high-bred and choice, but who is really more vulgar than the worst-mannered of her acquaintance. —By Elizabeth Mason. WHAT THE KIDNEYS DO. TMr Unceasing Weeks Keeps Us •treng and Healthy. All the blood in the body passes' through the kidneys once every three minutes. The kidneys filter | the blood. They work night and day. When healthy they remove about 500 grains of impure matter | daily, when unhealthy some part of this impure matter is left in the; blood. This brings on many diseases' and symptoms—pain in the back,' headache, nervousness, hot, dry Bkin, rheumatism, gout, gravel, dis orders of the eyesight and hearing, dizziness, irregular heart, debility, drowsiness, deposits in the urine,1 etc. But if you keep the filters J right you will have no trouble with your kidneys. N. P. Wilson, 513 W, Front St..' Statesville, N. C., says: “For some! time I suffered from a pain in the j small of my back and a soreness across my hips. I was also troubled by dizzy spells and knew by the un natural condition of the kidney' secretions that my kidneys needed attention. I at length procured a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills and they gave me relief in a short time. In return for this great change for the better, I gladly recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s— and take no other. CASTOR IA for Infanta and WitM™ Thi KM Yn Han Always bight Bears the Signature of Winston-Salem, N. C.— A great addition to the textile industry of the State will be the P. H. Hanes Knitting Company,s spinning mill, west of this eity, which will begin jperation in ten days. A little card ing was done at the milt the other lay. It is conceded to be one of the moat perfectly equipped mills in the jountry. Surrounding it is a mill rillage with splendid cottages, hav ing all city conveniences. Things that cause the longest re grets are usually the things that took but a moment to do. CRIMINALS AM * CRIMINAL LAW The importance of deliberations like those of tty? Wisconsin branch of the American Institute of Crimi nal Law and Criminology can scarce ly be overestimated, and they are bound, in time, to yield abundant fruit. It has long been evident not only to those who have first-hand or pro fessional contact with the criminal law and its administrations, but even to the casual layman, that our methods of dealing with criminal of fenses and offenders were outworn and inadequate^—operating satisfac torily neither to protect society nor to reclaim the criminal. This state "oftsaffairs, which so closely touches Icr well-being, both as a nation and as individuals, the institute in question has set about to remedy, not after the manner of the radical—at pne fell swoop—but by nation-wide study, investigation, and deliberation. The problem is alike difficult and vast, ranging from the reformation of long-established court practice to an adjustment Pf our penal systems in conformity *0ith the dictates of humanity. Nor does the least dif ficult phase of its solution lie in the conflict between those whose inter est centers iq those accused or con victed of crime and those who are most concerned with the safeguard ing or society. The Wisconsin institute has al ready made noteworthy progress along several lines of investi gation, but it does well to avoid hasty recommendation. Such re forms as are proposed appear to be well grounded. One may hope that in the future activity of this important body the balance will^always be kept between the desirability of reclaiming or reforming the criminal, where that is possible, and the necessity of making crime more difficult and dangerous, and the operation of jus tice more swift and sure. —Mil waukee Free Press. Foley Kidney Pills are a reliable remedy for backache, rheumatism and urinary irregularities. They are tonic in action, quick in resalts and afford a pr. mpc relief from all kidney disor ders- Milb-r-WhJte Go. Oslo* SmS tor Spring Planting. Onion seed sown in hot beds and cold frames during January or Feb ruary and transplanted at the end of March or during April usually makes a most satisfactory and profit able crop. We strongly recommend our customers who have not made seedings in this way to at least make experimental seeding as we feel sure that they will be more than satis fied with the results. Onion seed can also be sown in beds in the open ground as soon as the weather will admit and transplanted as soon as the sets are large as a goose quill. To make Onion Sets for use or sale in the fall sow onion seed thickly in rows during April. See page 32 of our catalog for fuller information and also information as to the best varieties to sow. The White Pearl and Bermuda varieties are the best to sow to make sets to plant in the fall.—Wood’s Crops Special. Falls Vletlm to Thiavaa. S W Bends, of Coal City, Ala., has a justifiable grievance. Two thieves stole his health for twelve years. They were a liver and kidney (rouble. Then Dr. King’s New Life Pills throttled them. He’s well now. Unrivaled for constipation, malaria, headache, dys pepsia. 25c at Geo. C. Goodman & Co. •owing in Mnroh on Fall-Sown Sends. Grasses and clovers especially can be safely and satisfactorily seeded on fall-sown wheat, oats or grain crops, during the month of March. Seeding at that time not only saves an extra preparation of the land, but the harrowing and cross-harrow ing, which is desirable in order to give the grass and clover seed slight covering, acts as a cultivation and a decided benefit to the wheat and grain crops, increasing the yield to a considerable extent. In fact, even if you do not seed .clover and grasses on your wheat and fall-sown grain in the spring, it is to advantage to run the harrow over these crops, so as to break the crust of the soil, which acts as a cultivation and ma terially increases the yield of the grain.—Wood’s Crops Special. Went Swimming at M. “The Grand Old Man of Highgate Ponds,” William McKenzie, long known as “Grandfather” by his fel low members of the Highgate Life buoy* Club, has passed away at his North London home. He was in his ninety-third year. Up to six we^ks ago Mr. McKenzie was bathing in Highgate ponds, where he had bathed for many years. His unfailing regularity at the age of 92 probably constitutes a record In a nation. Until three years ago he joined in the winter lifebuoy bathing sports. His practice was to walk over the two miles from High bury and back for his swim.—Lon don Chronicle._" - There is no spectacle quite bo amusing as that of a man who takes himself too seriy Y / 1 I THE FAST CURE. Feasting, Fasting, Fat and Fats, by Mr. Sinolair. In these days of high prices and endless struggle for an existence the fasting cult of Upton Sinclair, and others of his ilk, should find a large following. Mr. Sinclair’s r rguments in favor of ten to thirty day fasts have not been kindly re ceived in professional circles, but the fact remains that the hundreds of cases recently reported show cures of many diseases by simply giving overworked stomachesa rest. One of the most appealing features about the fast cure is that it costs nothing, but a little personal dis comfort at the outset. It is said that after the first three days the “hunger pain” passes away and that the “patient” settles down to await the successul termination of his self imposed task. Common sense should teach us without much argument that those who lead sedentary lives, and eat as much as the Lord allows them to get hold of, must sooner or later settle down to an unwelcome ac cumulation of what in plain par lance is called fat. This stage of life in many cases leads to an early death, at least earlier than would have been one’s fate had he not tested the blood vessels beyond their capacity. Continuous gorging with beef and bread must in the ordinary course of events sound the knell of human days several years earlier than would have been the case if the stomach had not been turned into a carry-all and common dumping ground. Always will it be true that “after the feast comes the reckon ing;” he who is fat today begins a fast for eternity tomorrow. And now for the fast. Upton Sinclair declares that even ten days’ abstinence will in many cases pro duce wondrous results. And that is not hai'd to believe. Those of us who have had typhoid fever, and , those who haven’t know well that the typhoid convalescent, after the fast made necessary by the long weeks of serious illness, experiences hunger which almost beggars de scription. One feels that he could eat leather if it was given him. And the patient who has fully recovered j from the fever enjoys, in the ma jority of cases, a period of health-! fulness such as he has never before experienced. The old state of af fairs returns, however, when the stomach is forced to resume its strenuous work, never resting, never allowed to rest. We think well of the fast cure and have no hesitation in recom mending it to all members of the “fat and forty” class. Even from an experimental point of view, a fasting club of, say ten members, would be of great benefit to local research circles whose devotees be lieve that there is something more in life than to feast, fatten and finally fade.—Asheville Citizen. Speedy Relief from Kidney Trouble “I had an acute attack of Bright’s disease with inflammation of the kid neys and bladder and dizziness,” says Mrs. Cora Thorp, Jackson, Mich. "A bottle of Foley’s Kidney Remedy over come the attack, reduced the inflamma tion, took away the pain and made the bladder action normal. I wish every, one could know of this wonderful rem edy. Miller-White < ’n Colored Pastor’s Dream. A negro preacher in a Southern town was edified on one occasion by the recital of a dream had by a member of the church. “I was a-dreamin’ all dis time,” said the narrator, “dat I was in ole j Satan’s dominions. I tell you pahson dat was shore a bad dream!” ’“Was dere any white men dere?” I asked the dusky divine. "Shore dere was—plenty of’em,” ! the other hastened to assure his min ister. “What was dey a-doin’?” “Ebery one of ’em,” was the an swer, “was a-holdin’ a cullud pus ison between him an’ de fire!” Methodist Minister Turns Baptist. The Spencer correspondent of the Greensboro News, under date of the 12nd, sends the following to the pap er. Rev. M. B. Ridenhour, who for a number of years has been a mem ber of the Western Morth Carolina Methodist conference, was last night ordained into the ministry of the Baptist church, having resigned I his connection with the Methodist I denomination. He attended the : last session of the annual conference > in Winston-Salem, was assigned to I the pastorate of the Haywood county I circuit with four good churches, but decided not to accept the appoint ment. During recent years he serv ed as pastor in the Methodist church the charges of Big Lick, Stanley county, and Woodleaf, in Rowan county, besides other Diaces. The change from one denomination to another was a surprise to his friends. The ordinatio 1 ceremonies were held Wednesday night in South Main Street Methodist church which has been used by the Baptists durirg the process of building a house of worship in that community. uncle Hiram to his nephew. Learn to Listen, Good Advice for One Starting Out in the World. “That little piece of advice that I would give you this morning, Steph en,” said Uncle Hiram to his hope ful young nephew, ‘is this: Learn to listen. We all think that our own ex periences are the most interesting that ever were, that the things that have befallen us are the most won derful; but don’t monopolize the [Conversation, Stephen. “As a rule what happened to you doesn’t interest the other man at all; what happened to him is what inter ests him most, and if you are wise you will let him tell you about it; and beware of trying to match his experience with something greater. It will only make him think less of you, for naturally it belittles him and that is something that you want always to avoid. “So let the other man do the talk ing, Stephen, while you listen. Your interest in what he says will commend you to him as a person of intelligence and appreciation. As he talks on he will have higher and higher opinion of himself, and as surely as you listen, a better and better opinion of you. “Stephen, learn to listen. At your age you should not be talkative, anyway, reticence is a fine trait in any man and especially commended in the young, and if to that you can add the grace indeed the rare grace, of being able to listen with earnest attention you will get on. Many a man has prospered in this world by letting some other man do the talk ing. “That will be all, Stephen this morning.”—New York Sun. Didn’t Enjoy Christian Scienco. The mother of the new pupil in a New York school informed the teacher that Freddie was a Christian Scientist. “Is he?” said the teach er. “Well for goodness sake tell him not to let the rest of the chil dren find it out. They will pummel the life out of him if they do. One of the hardest things a teacher has to do at recess is to protect an ac knowledged Christian Scientist from his playmates. This isn’t a religious war. The children don’t mean to be fiendish, but they are. Some how they get into their heads that nothing can hurt a Scientist and they punch holes in him to see if he can be made to howl.” He who continually imposes on his friends soon wonders what has become of them. . S. C. White Orpingtons. The best all-purpose fowl. Snow white and pure bred. Eggs for hatching $2.50 for 25 straight. Stock for sale after October 1st. S. C. Brown Leghorn Eggs $1.00 for 15: 30 for $1.50. My en tire stoek of Leghorns for sale. Prices right. Write, wire or phone, T. H. FAIRCHILD, Mooresville. N. C. Eyes Tested Free Specs all Prices Glasses as prescribed by us are conceded the fore most remedy for the cure of headache, nervousness, facial neuralgia, etc., due to muscular or nervous Eye strain. For any Eye trouble or for new Glasses consult us. Special care of Children’s Eyes R. M. Abernettiy Jeweler and Optometrist. Rheumoddi IT CURES Rheumatism and lllood Disease* J lie cause of rheumatism Is excess uric acid in the blood. To cure rheu matism this acid must lie expelled from the system. Rheumatism is an inter nal disease and requires an internal remedy. Rubbing with oils and lini ments may ease the pain, but they will no more cure rheumatism than paint will change the liber of rotten wood. l ures HlieiiiniHi.Kin To Stny Cured. Science has discovered a perfect and complete cure called Kheuina.-ide. T< t cd m hundreds of cases, it has effect.*! marvelous cures.- Rit'oumaeide r* moves the cause, gets at the joints from' the inside, sweeps the poisons lit c«f the system, tones up the stomach, regular-s the bowels and kidneys. Sold bv drug gists at 50c. and $1; in the tablet form at 2oe, and 50c., by rn. il, Rooklet fr, Robbitt Chemical Co.. Baltimore. Md. CJctM At The Joint** From The Inside. IT CURES For sale by Miller-White Co. and G. C. Goodman & Co. Harness and Repair Shop If you want first-class Harness made or repair work dons Call on T. 8. Fleming Mooresville, N. C. Next door to Enterprise Office Easter Cards Free Not Cheap Trash^But 10 Beautiful Ones I want to send free to every reader of the Enterprise 10 beauti ful, improved, embossed, colored Easter post cards, all different, without any advertising on them whatever. I do this because 1 want people to know the high grade cards 1 carry at manufeturers’ prices. If you prefer beautiful Valentine cards say so when you write. All I ask is that you send 4 cents in one cent stamps to cover postage. Address, C. T. Johnstone, Pres., Dept. 81 Rochester, N. Y. Ask Your Grocer for Iflocksvilles Best, Stove Buster or Ice Cream Brands of Flour. You wnil not go wrong in buying any ol these Brands. Horn Johnstone Co,, Mfrs,, Mocksville, N. C. Life Saved At Death's Door. "I never felt so near mv grave,’’ writes W, K. Patterson, of Wellington, rex., as when a frightful cough and lung trouble pulled ine down to 100 pounds, in spite ot doctor's treatment for two years. My father, mother anil two sisters died of consumption anil that I am alive today is due, solely to Dr. Kiihi's New Discovery, which com pletely cured me:. Now I weigh .187 pounds and hive been well and strong for years ’' Quick; sate, sure, its the best remedy on earth for coughs, colds, Lagrippe asthma, croup, and all throat and lung troubles, 50c & f>! .0(1. Trial buttle free. Uu irantc sd by-—Geo. ('.Goodman & Co, | Crack mi When The Soup IsServel prepare to be congratulated on its fine rich flavor if you 1 ave bought it from us. Few people go to the bother of making the'r own soups nowdays. Try a can of any of the standard brands we handle and you’ll know why. Lots of other practically ready to eat good things here too. Give them a triaj and cut your cooHng work into less than half. c. a. SMITH. rOLmiWNETMCAb iter cMMtmi «af«< ttu* -mlatmai
The Mooresville Enterprise (Mooresville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 9, 1911, edition 1
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