Newspapers / Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.) / Feb. 18, 1908, edition 1 / Page 3
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LOCAL LVD PEnSOXAL. Miss Lula Gwjrn, is Tisiting 3Iis3 Mary Lewia ia Statestille. Mrs. Xed Jones and little daugh ter left Friday for Washington, D. Cnto TiaitMrs. Jones' mother, Mrs. Ashe. Hon. Lock Craig, of AaheTille, will address the people of Cald well on Wednesday 26th at the court house. Mr. Floyd Blackwell, who has been in Hickory for some time having his eye .treated, returned home Friday. ' t Misses Leila and Emma Wise, of Hickory, are visiting their brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Charley Wise. Ilev. C. A. Munroe, of Hickory, preached in the Presbyterian church last Sunday at 11 a. m. and at? p. m. Miss Mary Miller, of Charlotte, came to Lenoir Saturday to spend Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Miller. Honor RcIL Since our last issue the following named persons hare made pay ments to the News oa subscriptions: J. A. Berry, T. B. Parsons, Robert Patterson, Z. M. Wilson, D... Klutz, W. W. Williams, W. F. Decker, B. M.Tuttle, 8. H. Mabe, J. H. Blair and W. M. Xel- 19a. Trial Catarrh treatment are being mailed oat free, on request, by Dr. 8 hoop, lUeloe, Wis. These teau are proTicg to the people without a penny's coat the great value of this scientific prescription known to druggists eyerywhere as Dr. Snoop's Catarrh Remedy, sold Dy J. b Shell's Drug Htore. A UTTLE MARPLOT. Mr. J. K. Swanson has an old wooden army canteen with ''J. L Hanna" cut on it. Who knows J.. L. Hanna and where is he! Itev. It. 1 Walker, who has been to Wake Forest, his home, to attend the fuueral of his moth er, returned to Lenoir Thursday. We have heard it said and it is believed by some people, that the country roads in this part of the State are a little muddy in places. We notice a dispatch from Jack son, Miss., states that the Senate passed the statutory prohibition bill by a vote of . to 4. The bill is effective December .'51st. Mr. J. V. McCall leaves today for a trip to the Pacific coast. He will visit friends in Washington and other Western States and will be absent a month or more. Mr. T. W. Shell left last Thurs day for Greenville, S. C, where he will remain for awhile and work at his trade. He hopes to return before many moons and be with us. Mr. J. A. Hoi ry, of K. K. I. I). No. (Jranite Tails, was in Lenoir Friday. How he managed to get here over the present roads, we know not, but he did, and brought some nice pork for our markets. Mr. Joe Loving, a merchant do ing business near Rev. (J. D. Sher rill's, .' miles North of Lenoir, had his store robbed Saturday night. The robblrs took about $1 50.00 worth of oods, pretty much all the man had. Mr. K. N. Harm, of Chester, S. ('., who is visiting friends and rel atives in this Jsection gave the News office a pleasant call Mon day. Mr. Hah 11 and wife are visit ing Mrs. Hahn's mother, Mrs. Mary Kincaid. Note our new advertisements this week: Bernhardt-Seagle Co., quotations on Poultry wire; The Price-Cline Harness & Tanning Co., wants hides; W. A. Watson makes a one day wholesale cash sale; Melton, Tuttle & Ballew talk of their non shrinkable clothing and M. M. Courtney calls attcn tion to his new laces, embroideries and insertions. Mr. S. II . Mabe, of route No. 5, was in to see us yesterday and he tells us that Mr. Chas. Rader had a mule stolen from his stable near Hartland. Some one on the road seen the robber and the mule pass coming on towards . Lenoir, but did not susDect him. Mr. Rader found his, mulo on the road be tween his home Lenoir, coming home. Back From the West. Mr. W.C. Barlow, a Caldwell man, who has been in Washington and near Tacoma for the past two and a half years, arrived here last Friday. Mr. Barlow talks inter estingly of that part of the coun try aud says he has had good health and made some money while away, yet he thinks if he 'had remained in Caldwell and made some investments he would have done equally as well. He says the panic is much worse there than it is in this part of the country, there being many more people out of employment, owing to the shutting down of the big lumber mills and the suspension of mining operations. He says he saw in a Seattle pa per where King County, Wash., had arranged icamps alone the public roads for the accommoda tion of laborers and was Jadvertis ing for men to work on the public roads at '25 cents perjday and board and that the first day CO men applied and wentlljto work and the next day over 200 applied for work. It would be hard to get men to work in this country at those prices. Mr. Barlow thinks he will remain in Caldwell. Why get up in the Jniornintf feeling blue, Worry other and worry you; Here's a secret between you audjme, Hettertke Rooky Mountain Tea. )r. Kent ami (irnnite Fnlls Dm Co. New First National Ba. We were shown the rawings of the New The readers of the News have been very kind to the paper, a number of them have renewed their subscription latoly and have spoken kind w ords about us, for all of which we are thankful. We hope to gee many of tfcc subscrib V era and friends of the paper during court week, Feb. 24th. Come in and see us whether you have any business or not. You will be wcl come and wo will bo elad to see you. plans and National tank and Lenoir Hardware & Fur niture Companys building a few ays ago, that is to take the place of the old Commercial Hotel. It will be a splendid structure and quite an ornament to the town. The dimensions are 68x1 IS) feet, three stories high, with stone trimmings, pressed brick and plate glass front. The corner will be arranged to the accommodation of the First National Bank and will 1h modern n all its appointments. The re mainder of the ground floor and most of the second and all of the third floors will be used bv the Lenoir Hardware & Furniture Co. On the second Hoor over the bank and fronting the public square will be ten nice offices, for rent, and in the basement of the bank part will be a commodious room for a barber shop. The building will have tile and concrete floors on the ground floor and will be constructed through out to suit the business for which it is intended. It will be well lighted and steam heated and un surpassed in this part of the country for convenience and busi ness facilities. Mr. W. A. Otter has the contract to move the old hotel building and as soon as it is out of the way, work on the new structure will bo commenced. Much of the material being now on the ground. Marjarefe GyiUWe WatcMulasss Over a Pair ef Levers. On the return rorage of one of the big liners not long ago were two little girls, cousins, of twehe and thirteen yean. They got on beautifully together, though they differed in disposition and character as veil as in appearance, Saliie, the elder, being an extremely discreet little woman, while Margaret's methods were distinctly guileless. Sallie, too, was tall and slender and Margaret a real little ball of hard, white flesh. Both their mothers were too ill to be on deck, and when the voy age was a little more than half over Sallie descended one day to her aunt's stateroom with a troubled face. "Auntie," she said, "I do wuh you'd speak to Margaret. Honest ly, she hasn t one bit of tact There is the dearest young lady aboard, Miss Agnew, and Mr, Phillips is in love with her, I know. Anyhow, they wander oil by themselves every afternoon and are gone for hours. And esterdav Margaret followed them and stayed all the time she ought to know better." Margaret's mother sighed and Knzt'U the !;rst opportunity to have it out with her daughter. "Oh, my fat Peggy, you didn't follow M:.-3 Agnew and Mr. Phil lip?, did you ?" "Yes, mother, I did," responded Marjruret unfalteringly. "Every single uav thev go awav anu 6tav for hours, and I couldn't think what they found to talk about so long, and I wanted to know, so I thought I'd go and see." She paused for breath, and her mother's sigh became a groan. Then she resumed: "And I went, and they sat down together and never said a word! I stood right in front of them and sucked my orange and watched them. After a long time Miss Agnew said wasn't it a lovely day, and Mr. Phillips said how blue the 6ky was, and oh, look, there's a sail ! And, mother, they didn't talk about another thing all the time I stood there, 'most two hours, listening hard. Once Miss Agnew asked if I wasn't cold, and I said how could I be with my nice thick reefer? Mr. Phillips looked cross somehow, but after awhile ho got very pleasant again and said : "'Aren't you hungry, Margaret? Don't you want to go and get an other orange ?' " 'No. I don't.' said I. I'm not hungry. I've had eight today al ready."' ''And then, mother, thev didn't slav there any longer. I saw Mr Phillips go into the smoking room, and .Miss Agnew said she was so tired she guessed she'd have a nap." New York Tunes. Galveston, Tex' Feb. 16. Two well deTeloped .cases of yellow fever on a steamer from Brazil, anchored three miles from the docks. If yon suffer with indigestion, eon tipatloo, feel mean and cross, do strength or appetite, - yoar system is unhealthy. Hollister's Rocky Moun tain Tea makes the system strong and healthy. Me, Tea or TabldU. Dr. Kent and Granite Falls Drug Co. A great man is one who has worked patiently and earnestly a great many years and accomplished a little that is good I,(I worthy of remembrance. Atchison Globe. Builds up waste tissue, promotes appetite, improves digestion, induces refreshing sleep, giving renewed strength and health. That's what Hollister's Kooky Mountain Tea will do. :c. Tea or Tablets. Dr. Kent (irtuiite Falls Drug Co. Mr. T. K. Bruner, of Raleigh, died Sunday at his home. He was well known to a great many peo ple of this ection . Do you have backache occasionally or "etitcktV in the kle, and i-oiue-time do you feel all tired out, with out ambition mid without energy If ko your kidney are out of order. Take'DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills. They promptly relieve back ache, weak back, inf Initiation of the bladder and weak kidney. Sold bv J. K. Shell Keut and Uranite Falls Drug Co. The finest .Coffee Substitute ever made, has recently been produced by Dr. Shoop of Racine, Wis. You don't have to boil it twenty or thir ty minutes. ' Made in a minute" says the doctor. "Health Coffee" is reallvthe closest Coffee Imitation ver vet produced. Not a grain of real Coffee in it either Health Cof fee Imitation is made from pure toasted cereals or grains, with malt. luts, etc. Really it would fool an Xpert were he to unknowingly drink it for Coffee. Harrison & Co. Some men are born great then proceed to slump. Chicago News. Yawning. There can be little doubt that one of the objects of yawning is the exercise of muscles which have been for a long time quiescent and the acceleration of the blood and lymph flow which lias in consequence of this quiescence become sluggish; hence its frequency after one has remained for some time in the same position e. g., when waking in the morning. Co-operating with this cause is sleepiness and the shallow breathing which it entails. This factor as well as muscle quiescence . 1 ll 1 11 -JTl is apt to attend me sense 01 uore doni which one experiences in lis tening to a dull sermon; hence it is that the bored individual is apt to yawn. As in the case of sighing. the deep breath which accompanies the act of yawning compensates for the shallow breathing which is so apt to excite it. "Therapeutic As pects of Talking," by Dr. H. Camp bell. Japanese Advertising. The Japanese seem to get much more out of a trademark than we do. All of the larger concerns have a distinct mark, jpually some geo metric desijm, with which every thing in any way identified with the company is plainly marked, lm mediately upon reaching Japan Eu ropcan tourists begin to study these marks and after a few days arc able to tell a srreat deal about com mcrce and shipping simply by hav ine learned the characteristic de signs of Borne of the larger compa nies. Even in the Chinese ports many Japanese goods are known by these marks by the most illiterate coolies, who could not pretend to rend an advertisement. When the Stomaoh, Heart or Kid neys get weak, then these organs al ways fail. Don't drug the Stomach nor stimulate the Heart or Kidneys. Thaels simply a makeshift. (Jet a prescription known to Druggists ey erywhere as Dr. Shoop's Restorative Is prepared expressly for these weak Inside nerves. Strengthen these nerves, build them up with Dr, Shoon's Restorative t a b lets or liquid and see now quickly help will come. Free sample test sent on request by Dr. Snoop, Kaolne, Wis Your health Is surely worth this sample test. J, E. Shell, druggist. How Can You Do It? Is what people ask when we advertise bargains like this. Farm of 77 acres and three room house three miles South of Lenoir. This is a good bargain at $1000.00. Newland Property, ten room dwelling and 2 acres of land on the Eastern boundary of town. Price $3000.00. Lenoir Realty & Ins. Go. "We Sell The Earth." Anderson's Pressing Club- "$1.00 Per Month .Limited to 3 Suits Small Charge.for all Extra Suits. CALL OR 'PHONE ANDERSON'S BARBER SHOP, NO. 54. - wriTBsn muss V I STTW ft Th. Dsspsst Wall. The deepest well in tho world ia probably the one at Spcrcnbcrg, Germany, some twenty miles from Berlin, sunk for the purpose of ob- taining rock salt brine. A Doro hole of sixteen inches- diameter was carried down to the depth, of 280 feet, whero tho salt bed began. After a further doeoont of 680 feet the bore was reduced to thirteen inchc9 diameter and then continued till the extraordinary depth of 4.119 feet was reached. New York American. 1 2 J " ill For omur One ay's Sale. WeMay, Feb. 19, 1908. On that day we will sell for cash our entire line of Men's Pant's, Heavy Overcoats and Underwear of all kinds and our Ladies and Childrens Coats at absolutely whole sale cost. It will pay anyone to attend this sale. We need the money and must sell the goods. W. A. South Main St. WATSON, LENOIR, N. C. i! ft 1M
Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.)
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Feb. 18, 1908, edition 1
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