Liberty Herald, Volume 60, Number 49, Plymouth, Marshall County, 7 December 1911 — Page 2
Liberty Herald. C. W. & O. L. STIVERS, Ilitoivs and l"nllislioi.
"1 p rn IT" i i. i I 8 1 f i t 5 :i k. i . 1 ORION L. STIVERS, Business flanager. 1 ..T1 l-n uJ OFFICIAL PAPER OF USIOH CODHTT. j 8 ooocxjeecKxxxce ccoocooooooooocoooooooo oodocoockxxoocxxxdooooo ooockoxoooooocoooco SUBSCRIPTION fc.dtT.:?8 n n o THIS PAPI7 UIPRESENTED FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE
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GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO fPANCHIS IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES
To Whom it May Concern Due notice has been given to those in arrears, by letter, and all those indebted to The Herald on subscription are hereby requested to send the amount due by money order or registered letter. We will appreciate your promptness, and will greatly appreciate your renewal for 1912. On the 25th of this month, Andrew rarnpsrie will be 74 years of ajre. To celebrate it he ha9 given away another $26,000,000, his gifts to the cause of education, science, peace and the general betterment of mankind now reaching the princely sum of $220,WO.OOO. As the self confessed maker and .sponsor of 4;J uiillianaires the survival of the fittest of that vast army of young: men, who starting as pedUiers, laborers and workers-in-ordi-ary in the great steel toundaries of Pennsylvania, have risn to wealth and eminence under him, the Iron Master acquires new interest as the weight of time crowds upon him. To the youth of the nation, ambitious for material power, n- career in the whole galaxy of famo s Americans, either native or foreif i born, furnishes greater inspiration or offers more encouragement, than that of the .teel magnate, who said a little while ;rn "Tld rather be born poor than a iIiTrriouHiit'' Snu x Lavx "bad "CXpTrl tuce in both directs is." lletween the youth of Carnegie's Jay and the youth of today there is this analogy although those with i he pessimistic bent profess not to believe it the world is constantly evolving. Evolution means new opportunity for some one and inversely .toss opportunity for those who do not i . :-ken to the call of the times and i p up with the procession. Of this .'r.d was Thomas Carnegie, fair . Andrew, who supported his ram.: operating a hand linen loom n i home at -Dunfernilin, Scotland. Wedded to tradition, the elder Carnegie could not foresee the advent of iteam looms which performed as much work in one day as he was able j to do in two weeks or of the still more efficient Oxford processes which ac- ; opmplish here in two days that which , iskes 30 weeks to effect in his native town. With the abolition of the Land loom, the Carnegies found theoiselves face to face with privation and T-ame to America. As good fortune oft lines comes in the guise of misfortune so it was with them. In re--ounting the hardships of his boyhood, the seamed and grizzled old Iron Master counts as the proudest moment of his life, the day when he got his first job iu America as a bobbin boy iu a Pennsylvania mill and was able to take home to his mother bJs modest wage of $1.23 a week to,vard the support of his family. The experience of the elder Carnegie was valuable to the embryo ronmas.er in that it impressed upon Mm the ruth of the modern business hilo '; y that to rest is to rust and that L .n ogrcs3 it is necessary to move with the surging tide as it k weeps by. Those who succeed are those who seize opportunity when ifc tits into focus and travel to the crest of the wave with it. This is what Carnegie did ard what he says every youth i f-.e land pushed by the cosmic a. y 'iy still do. In Carnegie the ' industry was rampant an:' ' .rings did not gravitate hi :nt after them When ev : ; ii-ned their back on tho ?nv : ;iie sleeping car, claiming 4hat if - - --..ol's conceit, and no$)odv rakft it seriously, Carntg.i : ' h'm for all he had and cou!" - 'His shrewdness netf t'Xl was the real ". rrpat future, and vrii"- in the early day j .stry were ploddt:, olete methodg, the v..-.: -rd across the Atlantic ai.cl : . .i.-ai the American right for tLo iiewly diacorered lies
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is an attraction and a delight to behold. Beauty appears on every hand, and on 1 each of the floors. But while all this is true, the main feature and attraction is
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siiu xne great couecuon or i,ii,tUJiii'iDiSJ. Herein vre believe greatest credit; for the collection of so vast a variety of goods, suited to conditions has required much labor.
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seiner process of manufacturing that product, This act of enterprise made him the world's foremost steel magnate and one of its richest men. Has the young man of today like opportunities to these? Carnegie says he has but he must strike out along new lines and hew his path through unbeaten fields as he did. "We who now live'' said he recently "are developing successors who wili far surpass and who in turn will develop successors who will practically reach perfection." The Indiana Bankers' Associa tion unanimously endorsed the I Aldrich central bank ;.dea, but Governor Marshall does not like it and does not hesitate to say so. The governor, you know,, has some original ideas in finance, and as head of an administration that has spent more money than any in the history of Indiana, he is entitled to a hearing when high finance is being discussed. Goshen News-Times. Dr. J. F. Sudman,' a Jackson (Miss.) veterinary surgeon, was sentenced to life imprisonment Jn Jackson prison. He confessed murdering his Trlfe by putting cyMiicLe of potassium in medicine that she was taking. C. 13. Brown, a Iawrenco (Kau.) brick masou, unexpectedly finding himself heir to an estate of $16,000, baa pli d; half his fortune to the Salvation army. Brown Inherited the money from an uncie in Philadelphia. Strong objection has been mad to the settlement o lands, which are clAlmcd. by Ir.dlans, In tlia Pine Rids (S. 1).) reservation. Batoa, tbe lax-l 2cnC t PiT, &srt that the laPitts' daliss bare priar rlxMa,
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Are found a great variety of fancy and useful articles in China, Glass, Brass and Leather, Jewelry, Fancy Combs, Brushes, Ties, Scarfs and myriads of Handkerchiefs of great variety. Also Dress Goods and SiJksof every kind" an entire room devoted to this collection. Linen Tablings, Napkins, Towels Table Sea. is, Mats and Doilies. Gloves, Hosierv, Underwear, Shuts, Ties and Scarfs in endless assortment; Cardigan Jackets and Sweaters.
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Is found the great stock of Ladies', Misses' and Children's Heady-to-Wear Merchandise Cloaks, Suits, Skirts, Petticoats, Kimonos, Dressing Sacuues, Aprons, Children's and Infants' Dresses and Ladies' Sweaters, Also the Fnr Department stocked wiih handsome Fur Pieces such as Scarfs and Muffs in Mmk, Lynx, Siberian Squirrel,- Jap Mink, Coney, etc. A beautiful collection aud at popular prices. i
UA U , Couch Covers Ottomans, Baskets, TriIn fact our store combined. We are, as. ii1 mr l;lnf ?i nd . in,v
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! OF ft ! I WEEK'S HEATS j - Latest News of Interest - Boiled Down for the r I Busy Man. Z eBitt(f W ashington leclarlng that unless the friar lar.ds In the Philippine Islands are speedily disposed of they will become a heavy financial drain on the Philippine government, the chief of the bureau of Insular affairs, in Washington, In Ws annual report, recommends that tht-se lands be sold. In his annual report, which has just been submitted to President Taft, Secretary of the Navy Merer reiterates the old theory that th best safeguard of International peace is preparedness for -war. and advises that the American navy bo not Increased, but kept at its present strength of about forty battleships. The deficiency of the federal government continues to grow. Up to dato the disbursements of the current fiscal year have exceeded the receipts by 120,641,000, while a month a-fo th deficit was 520,181,000. ? Employees o the postal service are being warned by the government against forming secret organisation within the rvlce. Th9 e&st&ra t runic lines a are ia granted by to lntertt commerce j J
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3 Com.foiJ:s of beautiful design, Blankets of choicest ciualitv , Table Coders, Lace Curtains, Carpets, Pugs, Fancy Pillows',
-uiL uases and Traveling Bags. v of th useful, needfu' and beautiful .rvanrr for that whi.-h i- embraced ". .
n o commission until February 1 to file their joint passenger fares within trunk line territory, which extends from the Atlantic seaboard to Chicago. Headed by Chief No Shirt, fourteen of the wealthiest representatives of the Indian tribes of the northwest left Spokane, Wash., for Washington, D. C, demanding constructive legislation from congress. Marines of the United States may soon have winter uniforms more comfortable and serviceable for severe weather than the uniforms now worn by this branch of Uncie Sara's service. A board of officers U inquiries into the subject. The United States 13 keeping in readiness at Manila an expeditionary force of from 500 to 2,500 soldiers Tor immediate dispatch to China for the purpose of protecting foreigners and to keep open railway communication between Peking and the sea. The order for starting the troops awaits only the word from American Minister Calhoun at Peking. Government control of corporations to protect public Interests and insure stability of business; publicity of corporation affairs and less presidential politics were urged by Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the board of directors ot the United States Steel corporation, as remedies for trust evils and business unrest, before the senate committee on Interstate commerce la Washington. . The president's message to congress, 6,000 words long, revised by him In a five-hour consultation with his cabinet, will deal almost exclusively with the trusts, which he terms monopolies and Illegal combinations In restraint of trade, ae a remedy for which he suggests "federal incorporation." Domestic) Capt. Edward Swaay anfl four ot Uz exjv wr fc'4Tisl t9 Ivl'T CtoHU
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and five ethers were rescued la a j thrilling manner when the steamer Diamond was blown up in the Ohio river near Pittsburg. Two of the men rescued are terribly injured and may die. The boilers let go, but the cause of the explosion is net known. Mrs. Gertrude Gibson Patterson ate her Thanksgiving dinner outside tfce Denver prison walls. Sne was declared not guilty by a Jury in t district court of the murder of her husband, Charles A. Patterson, wncm ibe shot to death while the couple were walking together in a suburb of that city on September 25. PUIBLO
t The undersigned will e!I at public aJe on Li farm one and one- ! half miles South of Kite! : and five miles .North-east of Liberty, on TUESDAY, BSC. 14, 1911, I TlIC FOLLOWING PERSONAL PROI'ERTY :
en Head of Horses; 13 lieadof attle, 23 I?82,d of sIieeiD. One
jBuclr, 25 head
i-iay, jj arn? implements, tr" mum
mess, ii'umiFor further i Sale begins at Greenwood
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r i S it ; i I: i i i is due to us the all classes and 1 i 4 f i f! I ! n Surel Alderman Bowling of New York f aya that lf four or five women should sit in the window of a cafe smoking cigarettes a crowd of a couple of thoiuani people would gather about acd blocs traf5c Sure.! And ir four or five cen should stand In a store window s.rd try cn bonnets the crowd would also gather. : Don't trifle with a cold is good adI vice for prudent men and women. It jmay be vital in case of a child. There J i nothing better than Chamberlain's i Cough Il!rHHly for coughs and colds i in cl.ildrriu It is safe and sure. For JfalebyAll Iealers. of Hogs, "Grain, , ili'CC.
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ulars and terms see bills. "ock. Lunch served by Society.
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