Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Feb. 23, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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' 'f 4 i iSbmyA Costly HVnr Canttotas, Ha Hastily Bought ; v JOckd Plata Beeause It Was : Gate to Be Sold to Jay , , - Gould. " y ;. . 'i : . 1 ws yen could have seen William 3tt."Waj4rbHt pon one occasion when , Jtar flntM ha was compelled to de fth whether ka would spend several .. aangjasis) la the purchase of a railroad amr let fx t- aaid the lite Charles C flSartBa, who was for many years one ; asf mm nest Intimate personal friends as Ufc Yaaderbilt and a vice-president r am. he Vanderbllt lines. ""Sal raer the better to understand .he iJcrlaUon. I am going to give . 1 acute to remind you." contln- Mr. Clarke, "of the manner in the Nickel Plate railroad was 4oBL It -was promoted chleOy by XSrau Saxa Thomas and Cal Brlce strataya called him Tal and we . aeiiiBiiilasI from the beginning that ML wsaa taut -with the Intent, by a anart f genteel blackmail, to compel VaaaarbiH to buy It It ran from Bui- i to Chicago and practically paral yse lake Shore railroad. - There H mat appear to be the slightest ne Januiu for bailding a railroad there, saai the Lake Shore could take care art .atB the Ira sines that was offered. ras the reason why we sus that the chief object Brlre i had In promoting the rail- ; to unload it at a fat profit tVanderbilta. aboat that time Mr. Vander- u having a good deal of per- aHeaity d account of the building of s4 West Shore railroad, which prac hrenlly staralle-l the New Tork Central asaaa Hew Tork city to Buffalo; and ana accustomed to declare that afit he hanged if he'd buy the West Share, and he'd be d d if he'd buy ' B&r Shekel Plate. Tet he bought the OKickei Futte. almost In the twinkling 3bT aa eye; and TVL tell yon exactly ftaar It happened, although a part of aSe anecdote has already been pub- tOBe 6ay I was with Mr. Vanderbllt asT las office when some one brought xaV htsa' a telegram that had come astor the company's wires from Buff a 3. Be peaed it and read it, and then to tit II It to me. As nearly as I can -weeaBeet. the telegram stated that J5en-"Thomas and Cat Brice had juef BoSale fa a private car with Jay as a guest, and that they were 3E to take him on a tour of lnspec atass -ever 'the Nickel Plate. . "What o yon think of that. Char MimT ashed Mr. Vanderbllt. excitedly. . Saaft know what to think of it,' 3M jcjullesX. WWJ. I know Mr. Vanderbllt acdfad. aa he Jumped out of his chair President Who McKhrfeys Unfailing Klndll and Tsadarness of Heart II- by an Incident at Cabinet Meeting, the" entire period that Wil- htcSanley was president of the fp-mm. Lyman 3. Gage was sec- al the treasury, end aa such was Into close official and personal with McKinley. """lEXa the exception of Abraham rf a. aumiy Ja all probability, i creator tenderness of heart than aaaa who has . been , president," JKr. Cage, -and his nobility of the equal of that of any of Let me illustrate by that occurred in a cabinet for the occurrence - cf X -as primarily responsible. I had been in the treasury Tor. some ; time it was to any attention that one of subordinate officials to write for publication an that, to my mind, breathed In- aT the highest degree. aaaaraOy. 1 was offended and in- so ButCh so, in fact, that I tftv Srst opportunity to call the mt President McKinley and faw eattoet to the breach of discipline. I asimisa ao words in declaring to the that peremptory removal -of la sjaestSqn was justified by his aisttrystty acd the studied Insult he m his communication. Then faB what the subordinate had wntt&aa. toerrlas all the - while the seemed greatly interested. I had finished, the president silent for a moment, then he jSCc Secretory, It ceems to me that nansucaUoo is written In a Anecdotes of 3)eaCew Ti"d Mucn Difficulty in - Keeping Occupants of the . Bunch Awake, 'n eatsnary o the Paris bar, re weattr celebrated at the Palais de ijaatfee. has recalled numerous anec 4BoSm as ihe humors of the law courts. -iKm ethers it Is told bow a well 2aww lawyer. M. Alem Rousseau, -kss i4eafn2 rather tiresome case Tiortdag that the judges were - m etttaition to him said: "As t t is aleepirg I will sus i s: y Fpeech." But the judge had - e and cried: "And t bus ' i li-nnj practicing'' for six - ' ' unfed, the law ': " - -'.I, I suspend my 1 r," and gather : r 1 crp ha left the 1 M. . ', liow - t'- t X at 1 EW8 to Vanderhilt and began walking excitedly back and forth. They've got tired ashing for me and they're going to have Gould make an offer to buy the Nickel Plate and do what he wants to with It. That must be stopped.' "It seemed to me that Mr., Vander bllt was in a good 'deal of a hurry; so 1 said that if Gould bought it he would only get a roadbed and a streak of rust " 'That doesn't make any difference he retorted vehemently. 1 'He mustn't have it We don't want any more trouble with Gould. I am going to ao cept Thomas' offer instantly, and per haps Gould will learn before he gets through the tour of Inspection that Vanderbllt's got control of the road.' "Cautious a man as William H. Vanderbllt was, and though wonder fully accurate in his forecasts and judgments, as I almost always found him to be, he yet seemed to be car ried away by this Impulse to buy, and as he did not .ask my advice, I did not give it But I felt there was some Layman Taught Head of Yale M. C. D. Bordon Showed Arthur Twining Hadley How to Raise the Bicentennial Alumni Fund of a Million Dollars. When Arthur Twining Hadley be came president of Yale university. being elected to that office at a young er age than any of his predecessors, he knew that one of the most im portant of the duties that lay imme diately to hand was the raising of the bicentennial alumni fund of one mil lion dollars. For it was hoped and ex pected that Tale would be able to cel ebrate its two hundredth anniversary not only with formal ceremonies, but by the announcement that a fund of one million dollars had been raised. The young president started out to secure this fund. What was at first enthusiasm on his part was followed by something like despair, until at last he called upon one of the most enthusiastic of the alumni of Tale, M. C. D. Borden of Fall River, Mass., the largest cotton manufacturer in the United States. Mr. Borden heard pa tiently the young president's narra tion of the difficulty he had met with in securing pledges. "Arthur," he said, at last, "you are expert authority on economics and on railroad management and accounting. But you have got something, to learn about the way to collect a big fund of money. You never will get your mil lion dollars if you continue in the way you have begun." , Was Forgiving spirit of disloyalty, and If it contains a studied insult, as you believe and de clare, then that disloyalty and that In sult affects the president of the United States quite as much as they do the secretary of the treasury.' 'That is precisely my view of the matter, Mr. President,' I replied. 'That is why I have brought this communi cation to the attention of yourself and the cabinet I do ndt believe that It is right nor for the best interests of the department, to retain in it anyone win- is so disloyal and so insulting to the president of the United States. So I desire to receive from you au thority for the prompt and peremptory removal of this insubordinate official.' "The president - looked at me thoughtfully for perhaps half a minute, and then directed his glance at the other members of " the cabinet, one after another. So far as I could fath om their opinions with respect to the situation, they accorded with mine, and it seemed to me that the presi dent also reached that conclusion after he had looked searching!? at each of his advisers. ' At last he spoke: "'Mr. Secretary,' he said, slowly, 'If It appears to you that this communica tion Involves the president as well as yourself, I wish you would let me take it I will read it carefully, and then, If I find that your opinion of it is justi fied. I think I will keep it and forgive the official who wrote It" : "With that," concluded Mr. Gage. "l handed the letter to the president who put It upon his desk, turned serenely to other affairs Of govern ment, and afterwards, to my own per sonal knowledge, actually forgave the man who had dared to be Insubordi nate and to insult him." (Copyright, 1910. by E. J. Edwards. All . Rights Reserved.) French Court tremendous blow on the desk in front of him that woko everybody up with a start, he cried: "Yesterday at this Same hour I waa. saying " and the whole bench rubbed their eyes and asked each other if they bad really slept through twenty-four hours. The -Bame counsel was' pleading at Versailles on a cold day and re marked that the judges were all turn ing more and more around toward a stove that gave out a welcome heat "The tribunal behind which I have the honor of speaking" brought them all "right about face" at once..' On another . occasion the jedge asked him to cut his speech short, as the court bad made up its mind. Assuming the air of a childlike na tive, M. Clery retorted: "Me right, you good judges, him, Innocent" and sat down. : Though not intended . humorously, the c-K - J criminal advocate Mai tre r ail i l ert made a hit when de fend . j t' 3 matricide-- Wache de Roo. trick about It all, and 1-waa.sure that it he waited, he would get. the road for practically nothing. -.!; s : "Well, that very day he bound the bargain he was not' his usual calm self until he had - done so and be chuckled not a little aa he thought of the manner in which he ; had over reached Gould. But a few days later he came to ma with a woeful face. "'Charlie,' he said, 'that was all a trap. They set it for Gould and for me, and they caught us both. Gould had no intention of buying the road he was perfectly Innocent In the mat ter.- Now that we have' got it, we must make the best of it, but I am sure that if we had waited we could have got It on our terms, and saved several million dollars.' "Had Mr. Vanderbllt lived a few years longer than be did," concluded Mr. Clarke, whose death occurred a few months ago, "he would have been gratified to know that, after all, his purchase of the Nickel Plate was a wise venture, for it has proved a most valuable subsidiary to our Lake Shore system." (Copyright, 1910. by E. J. Edwards. A11A itignts Keserveo.. "What, then, shall I do?" the presi dent of Yale asked. "That's exactly what I am going to tell you," Mr. Borden replied. "There's a good deal of human nature to be studied if you're going to raise a large fund of money. Now, what you must do first is to get four or five or even six men to say they will contribute the larger part of the fund. When you have got pledges of that kind, you will be astonished to see how quickly other rich men will fall Into line. That's the human nature of giv ing." "But where am I to find four or five or eIx men?" Yale's president asked. "I am going to show you. I will be one of six men to pledge in ail six hundred thousand dollars. You shall have the other pledges within two or three days. Then, when you have them, you will see how quickly others will join the procession, and you shall get your million within a month." Here was a new philosophy of life for the new president of Yale. . But be knew from Mr. Borden's manner that It was a correct philosophy, On the day following Mr. Borden met Frederick W. Vandervllt, an alum nus of. Yale. "Fred," he said, "I'd like to have you be one of the. sis wno are going to contribute six hun dred thousand dollars for .Arthur Had ley's bicentennial fund." ' . "It would give me the - greatest pleasure," responded Mr. Vanderbllt . Mr. Borden next called upon three other graduates of wealth, and he had simply to repeat the- request he bad made to Mr. Vanderbllt to get their subscriptions. Then, within a few hours, he .called upon James J. Hill, whose sons were graduates of Yale. "I won't do it." Bald Mr Hill, at first. - .. - "Oh,' yes, you will," was the reply; and after some further conversation, Mr. Hill offered to give twenty-five thousand "dollars. : He was told that that wouldn't do. Then he offered to- give fifty thousand dollars, but was told that that amount also was too small. Along in the small hours of the morning Mr. Hill yielded, so that within three days the fund of six hun dred thousand was raised. Take that, Arthur," said Mr. Bor den the next day, "'and well see if I was not correct" s The young president of Tale, going forth with the pledges .of six men for six hundred thousand dollars, found that It was. even aa Mr. Borden had said. Other rich men stepped up quickly, so that they might be in time to join the procession; and almost be fore President Hadley realized it Yale's bicentennial alumni fund of a million dollars was secured to the last dollar. " (Copyright 11. by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.) Benefactor of Mankind. The man who invented the wheel did much for the convenience of man kind, but we know no more of his iden tity than did the ancient Egyptians who used bis device just as we do. His labor-saving device must have astonished and pleased his fellows. and it may be that it amused them as a toy before they put it to practi cal use. - The Modern Warrior, ; There goes a chap who has taken part In 60 battles." "Plainsman?" , "No; fllmsman." He produced an act of nnrnirinHnn Bigned by the prisoner of all benefit from, the will of the mother he bad murdered and added to the Jury; "So if you acquit him he .will go forth miserable, and poor, perhaps to Mada gascar, to repent of an , act whjch he may have committed in a moment of thoughtlessness." 'And the verdict of the Jury was typical. They found that he had committed murder, but that he had not killed his mother, although the unfortunate lady was the only person who had been killed. This was in or der to save the prisoner from ten years' penal servitude, which is the maximum penalty for ; parricide whereas manslaughter with extenuat ing circumstances can be let off with mere confinement - Paradoxical Methods. 'j "No other business in the world could possibly : be conducted on the methods of the hen in the egg Indus try." "Why notr - - -"Because she lay down on thf lob." - DR. HAR VET-W WILEY, chief of the bureau of chemistry of the department of agriculture, has been the sub ject of much good-natured joking ever since the announcement of bis engagement to Miss Anna C. Kelton. At the same time; .the government's pure food expert is being warmly congratulated, for Miss Kelton, who is a resident of Washington, is most highly esteemed by her numerous friends. The wed 'ng will take place in the near future -,(.' GRAVITY Ohio Physicist GivgfJ3ld Newton Theory a JolL Assumes Ether .to Be Endowed With Vast Klnetie Energy Relative to Atoms Dr. Brush Explains His Idea of bravltatlon. St. Paur, Minn. The Newtonian theory of gravitation that has stood for ages was upset when Br. Charles F. Brush, Cleveland, ; O., one -of the leading physicists of the country, as-' cribed the falling propensities of mat ter to a "pushing" property within it self derived from the ether through which it falls, rather than to a "pull ing" power from the earth on the falling body. J ;- Doctor Brush , established the con verse theory tb at f "S? exhibited insthe gravitation restored to V is raised "action. Wibe the ether When against . the ygrr Doctor Brush &eein- endowed with a vast h. Uf. klnetli C energy, which id In wave form andisJ translated ta the atoms or molecules. In his paper on thtT-Klnetlc Theory of ; Gravitation," - read ' ; before the physics section of the scientists'' con vention, Doctor Brush, after discus sing at length the origin of the en ergy acquired by a falling hodf, con cludes ' that ' the gathered -energy comes from the ether through which the body falls. :-, "Conversely," said Doctor Brush, "equivalent energy la restored to the ether when- the body raised against gravitation attrac tion, r y - v.. iri'y -r J-:.: "The ether Is assumed to be en dowed with vast- intrinsic klnetie en ergy In wave form. -The waves are of such low' frequency, or otherwise of such character, : that - they pass through the bodies without obstruc tion other than - that ; concerned in gravitation. They are propagated In straight lines in - every conceivable direction, so that the wave energy Is Isotropic, being in this respect like radiation In the interior space of a furnace with uniformly heated walls. Distribution of the ether's intrinsic energy is uniform throughout the uni verse as modified by the presence of matter. Any kind of ether waves ca pable of exerting motive action on the atoms or molecules of matter will ful fill the requirements. .' : ., "Atoms era Imagined to be contin ually buffeted in all directions "by the ether waves In paths almost infl- nlteslmally short, but without collision because neighboring ' atoms follow very ;' nearly - paralelled paths. The moving atoms are. likened to particles of a precipitate suspended in turbu lent water. ' Each atom or molecule is regarded as a center, o(, activity, due to-lts kinetic energy of . translation derived -initially from the ether. There is continual absorption and restitution of the ether's energy, normally equal in amount. - But the ether Is permanent ly robbed of aft much of Its energy as It represented by the mean klnetlo energy of th atom. This energy de ficiency in the ether Is not wholly CHARGES LOSS Old Pennsylvania Man's "Stir Book" Kept Since 1838, Means Pay for .: .: Sheep In Blood. Cross Tcr!. Pa'. A few days ago when Philip Bostler, a small farmer on the Flrr.t Fork of Ufe Slnpemabon ing. lost !. -e sheep In a raid made upoa a ' i by a family of black bears, b. vent' to a drawer in his kitchen t oard sud marked some thing (I - In a llttla book. There isn't ar - such book In .-.11 Pennsyl vania i - A one. It is a book in which i i i t sn accurate account of tho !o CTered through the forag ing ft " - bears. In It are entries anci id remarks, until the vol umo i only unique, but one of e r. --resting. ; Tie atry wait t-nck In 1S3S, the ar stloy veat Into Ui Sinoe- i' mntry to settle, and when . -st be coed was captured nj carrtPil away by bears. Jij - purr w:is over ho -J . ..I IS A PUSH local, but extends indefinitely- Into space, diminishing In strength as the square of the distance increases. "A body of matter is pictured as casting in effect a spherical energy shadow consisting of the strfn of the shadows of its constituent units, the depth or intensity of the shadow vary ing with the Inverse square of the distance from the center of the body. Another -body at any distance will cast a similar, shadow and the two shadows will Intersect, each body be ing partially shielded by the other from waves coming from that direc tion, the extent of the shielding effect depending directly on the mass of the shielding body. : ' "Of the several components Into which the composite motion of each atom can be resolved, that one lying In the direction of an attracting1 body will be the greatest because the FARM TO SAVE CITY YOUTH T.Plhi.rn Pnln. fiitA Mll'nlnlnal E: T .; . - perlment In Training Boys for J Better Citizenship ;- ' ' Pittsburg, Pa. An odd municipal experiment in training tor better citi zenship has begun in this county with the Jurchase of 900 acres of farm land, on which 600 boys, all wards of the Juvenile court, shall be taught close to nature, to become good men. A committee of prominent citizens, led by David B. Oliver, formerly comp troller of public schools of the city and a brother of Senator George T. Oliver, originated .the idea, and, aided by the county commissioners, is car rying it out ; ; : Mr. Oliver, who is one. of the wealthiest men in Pittsburg, has found that frequently the "bad boys" make the best men, and he is giving hisi time and money to the project, which really marks a new step In the care of Juvenile court children. - The only noteworthy institution like it is at Industry,' N. Y, but that is a state institution. On the land,- which is thirty miles from Pittsburg, will be built cottages which will accommodate twenty boys. A head farmer will loos after the youngsters. ' The present plan for, the home Is ton ouiid a central colony of Ave cottages around machine, carpenter and black smith shops, where boys who want to learn, trades will be grouped.'. Re moved, however, from this central groupTwill be fifteen others cottages. They will be occupied ' by boys who want to be farmers. It Is not the In tention to segregate the boys, but to keep them apart as much as possi ble. ifx::- -V- ''" -'''v'.'- Half of each day. will be devoted to school and ha)t to work. . Of course, a time will be set aside for playing. To still further carry out the family idea there will be a number ' of school buildings constructed at . , different places on the farm. Each ; of the school buildings will accommodate a certain number of pupils. It will be so arranged that children from prob- UP TO BRUIN shot the fellow who did it, with two others besides. . ' '.Then he bethought himself of keep ing a "bear book," not only to record his losses because pf bears, but also his profits from the same source. He has tried every year since then not to let the bears get ahead of him, and because of the recent slaughter of sheep the old man feels called upon to kill at least two bears this winter. He is so old that he had concluded to do no hunting this season, but his slain sheep must be : avenged, and everybody who knows Phil Bostley knows that the bear family will sure ly pay with their own blood for the raid on the Bostley sheep flock. The threo sheep, he estimates, .would have' brought bhn at least $25, counting an other season's wool. Two black bears. If their hides are in good condition, will net him 40, and as Bostley has always charged the bears with com pound Interest that amount he calcu latcg will about even the score. til J I llmvbl. " ; 4 - waves from that direction being par tially intercepted by the attracting bod are weakest, and the atom will be -pushed In that direction by the superior waves behind it If free to fall, the atom will continually absorb more energy from the stronger waves behind it than it restores to the weak er waves in front, and will thus ac quire additional kinetic energy of translation In the line of fall, meas ured directly by the number of waves Involved, i. e., by the distance moved. Conversely, if the atom be forced away from the attracting body restitution- of energy will exceed absorption, and the energy expended In moving the atom against attraction will be transferred to the ether. "It will be seen that gravitation is a push toward the attracting body and not a pull. It Is clear, also, that the velocity which a falling body can ac quire tends asymptotically to a limit which ( la the velocity of the ether waves which push; the velocity of light, If transverse waves are In volved." . aUtir frttur cnttniratt. will .n-n tn Ach Kcuuui. . i nus . rue larm win oorre spond to a country community and the school houses to country schools. It is the purpose of tho commission to keep from the borne any semblance of a reform school or prison, so that the children who leave can go out into the world . without any handicap of any kind in the form of a past to live down. . ::-:,'' l ':v:'-' ' The only gully In the nearly one thousand pcres will be dammed up and there in the summer time the chil dren can swim in tho water flowing from Brush Creek. The swimming hole will be shaded by trees on the slopes leading to it and no sulphur from mines will mar its clearness. FIRM GRIP OF BULL-FIGHTING "Sport" Continues to Amuse People of 8outhern "France, Despite Efforts of Officials, ' Paris. The extent to which the practice or - "sport" of bull fighting still exists In the south of France, despite all the efforts of the authori ties to stamp It out. Is lltle known by the rest of the world. A meeting was recently held at Beziers of those inter ested In the spectacles and a protest drawn up against the bin of the minis ter of Justice which provides for the punishment by fine and imprisonment of those connected with bull fights. ' It developed at this meeting that there- are 27 associations' for the pro motion of bull-fighting in the south of France,' with a total membership of 24.000. According to the . protest the bill would Interfere with the fa vorite pastime of . these and many more people, would be a check to the liberties, of the south and would be against the interests of the country. Nevertheless there is an excellent chance of the bill becoming law. . Medal Fifty Years Late. Loncon. Tames Mansell, an em ployee Pf tie Hastings corporation, has Just received his medal for taking part In the storming of the Taku forts more than E0 years ago. ' . :- , i - ' There was but one season in which he was unable to even his account with the - bears ever since his residence-, in, the wilds of the "Slnnema hone," and that was one winter In which a- pair of bears hilled a very valuable hunting dog, upon which be could place no money value, and though during that season he killed and 'trapped seven black bears the ac count of that year Is still unsatisfied. It Ts a mortgage . against the general 'bear family, which the old man will never' reconcile. : - -v. ; , . . ' Bell to Guide Mariners. , London. The Trinity house author ities have placed a bell buoy on Ather Oeld ledge, a dangerous reef of rocks. Where many ships have met with dis aster. H. M. S. Duke cf Edinburgh stranded there In August last ' V e bell sounds a note-vhlch .can be heard distinctly for mny miles round. . Sixteen-Pound Tr-eut . . - London. Seiners at Biagdon laki?, Somersetshire, caught- a lC-pound trout, which is believed to be the largest ever caught In Ecglisli v.ater Alabama Man Says Tetter! Care Eczema,. Morvtn. Al., Auir"t 1, V'TS. I received your Tettorln nil O. K. t have ud It for Eciema and Tetter. Kinr worma. Old Sorea and Rulnm and us gladly recommend It as ure cure. J. R. DeBrtde. Tetterlne cures Eetema.-Tetter, Bolls. Rin Worm, Dandruff, Cankered Bcalp. . Unnlnna Itrhlnir Pile. Chilblain and v-t 1 try form of Scalp and Skin Dlaease. Tet terlne wet 'ieiienn ooap am. n "run- -slats or by mail direct from The Shun- -trine Co., Savannah. Oa. - ' ' With every mall order for Tetterlne we rive a box of Shus-trloe'a lOo Liver Pills free,-. : ; A Dry Wash. , ' , Representative Livingston of Geor gia, who, disgusted at the bath-tub debate in the house recently, proposed that a little money might be made by renting the bath tuba out, said recent ly, apropos .of this subject: "We are now a good deal like Bill Sprigging pn zero morning. . - . "Bill's valet entered . his bedroom one January morning and said with a shiver:' -:'-'' ----i- --- '"Will you take your bath hot or cold, sir?' - v "'Thank you.' said Bill; 'I'll take It for granted." : ; . : SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT OF PIMPLES ANDJLACKHEADS A speedy and economical treatment for disfiguring pimples is the follow-, Ing: Gently smear the face with Cutl cura Ointment, but do not rub. Wash; off the ointment In live minutes with Cutlcura Soap and hot water and bathe freely for some minutes. Re peat mornTng and evening. At other times use hot water and Cutlcura. Soap for bathing the face as often as agreeable. Cutlcura soap and oint ment are equally successful for Itch ing, burning, scaly and crusted hu mors of the skin and scalp, with loss of hair, from Infancy to age, usually affording Instant relief, when, all else- falls. Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Boston, Mass., for the latest Cutlcura book on the care and treat ment of the skin and scalp. Hard Luck. The big stone had rolled to the bot tom of the hill again, and the bystand ers were jeering at Sisyphus. "Boys," he groaned, tackling it once more, "if you can't boost, don't knock!" TO CITRIC A COLD IK ONE DAT Take LAXATIVH UBoMO Qulnlno Tablets. 1'ruffSlstnrefund money If It fafli to core, jc w. UUOvK'ttilfnaturoUonaaclibax. fie. It is -unquestionably true that wealth produces wants, but It is a still more important truth that wants produce wealth. Malthus. No harmful drugs in Garfield Tea, Na ture's laxative it is composed wholly of clean, sweet, health-giving Herbal . The recording angel may take more Interest In your day book than la your hymn book. ' Vra. Wlnnlow'a Soothing Syrup for Chlldrea teething-, aoftena the gruma, redneea Inflamma tion, a-U&y a paw. cures wind eollc, E5o a bottle- . Magnify your personal rights and you are sure to create some social wrongs. i " . 4 Yot'r workinp1 power depends upon your ' v iinuui! itarueiu lea coioBeTB uwiirsSL3sg ------ . ----. .... . . ., Preaching produces sol little practice because people look on It as a performance.-. . ' - Iteh Cared la SO MlMrtes ? Woolford' SanltaryLotlon.Never falls. At drusslata. The man who Is forever looking: backward never gets very far ahead. For Sale SO aere farm, 80 ctfered.ftmllMfrou Iranhue, N.O. Unoi ttnlldlnmi. PriMlll ten. IIOUSS BKOS., Oak Oltjr, North Carolina. To car caattvenceg the awdldna mart be more than a purgatlvei It atuct contaia tools alterative and cathartic prapertlee. pMNii tU qualities and peedDy rvstor to tb bowels tbetr natural perirteitlc motloev ao essential to nnlirttr n 'This Is Cjtus Ow Bates, the man who adrertlaea Mother's Joy and Goose Grease Liniment, two of the greatest thing known . to anmauity, , Mother's Joy 1st Pneumonia Cure and Rerer Falls Wood's Trade Mark Glovers Grass Seeds b?st qtiafities obtain&b1I - Sow Clover and Crass iseecls m March on your fall-sown Wheat or other grain crops. ?Wo9d'i Crop tells the ad. r Spedal vantage of these see dings, and gives prices and seasonable infor mation each month about all Farm seeds. . "Wood's Crop Special and Descriptive Seed Catalog mailed uee on request. t.v.v.toodocc::3 . . I." . Tuil fills S I
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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Feb. 23, 1911, edition 1
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