Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Jan. 22, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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:'-" '"' moerat a VOL XIV. BOONE, WATAUGA COUNTY, N. C. THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, a g 3. NO. 4S. HairSplits " I hire used Avert HalrVlior for thirty yean, it U elegant for a hair dressing and for keeping the hair from splitting at the ends." J. A. Grueneaiclder, Grantfork, 111. Hair-splitting splits friendships. If the hair splitting is done on your own head it loses friends for you, for every hair of your head is a friend. Ayers Hair Vigor in advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting has begun, it will stop it. v. . U.N s ktflk.' AH ifMt. ir yoor druggist cannot snpply yon. Mod us on dollar and we will expnm joa a bottle. , Be ture and gin tbe nan of not neareat enre otBoe. Addrtoa, J. C A vkR CO., Lowell, Maw. And now General Bragg, freMi from a land where the.? abhor even allusions to pig tail whietlen, will soon start for a land whose people ac tual!.? were pigtail. Mil wankee Journal. A Cure for Lamia 0. W. 0. Williamson, of Amherst Va., says: "For more than a year I Buffered from lum bago. I finally tried Cham berlain'tv Pain Balm and it gives me entire" lelief. which all others remedies had failed to do." Sold bj M. B- Black burn. PROFESSIONAL. EDMUND JONES, LAWYER -LENOItt, N. C Will Practice Regularly in tbe Courts of Watauga, 10-25 1 v. J. C FLETCHER, Attorney At Law, BOONE, N. C. Careful attention given to collections. E F. LOVILL, -ATTORNEY AT LAW,- BOOSE, N. C. ffirSpecial attention given to all business entrusted to his care." 8-23, 1900. I. W. TODD. GEO. P. PELL. TODD & PELL ATTORNEYS AT LAW, JEFFERSON, S. C. Will practice regularly in the courts of Watauga. Headqu9r tets at Coflfy's Hotel during court. 5-4-99. E. S. COFFEY -ATWRhEYAl LAW,- -BOONE, N. C. Prompt attention given to all matters of a legal nature. W Abstracting titles and collection of claims a special ty 8-23-1900. Da. J. M. HOGSHEAD, Gancr Specialist, BANNER'S ELK. N. C hoKniter, No Burning Out. Highest references and endors ruenta of prominent persons suc cessfully treated in Va., Tenn. and N. C. Remember that there is no time tqo soon to get rid o! a cancerous growth no matter how small. Examination free, letters answered promptly, and satisfaction fcuanmteca. WASHINGTON LETTER. Frcm our Jlegnlar Comipoadenl. One of the sharpest dobates recently witnessed in the Uni ted States Senate grew out of the effort of Senator Vest to have i bill removing the duty on anthracite coal, in accordance with the Presi dent's recommendation, re commendation, r e p o r t e d from the Finance committee. In terms made thrice elo quent by the feeble condition of the speaker, which would not permit him to stand without the support of his desk, the Senator for the sec ond time in one week, plead ed the cause of the poor and newly. He begged his oppo nents for the Fake of human' ry to abandon partisan con siderations and pass a meas ure ogered ''by a poor demo crat" but calculated to ligh ten the hardships of the old and feeble and ol littlej chil dren who wept because of the cold. In heartless but forceful terms Senator AN drich taunted the Senator from Missouri with having consented to a 40 per cent, duty on coal when the demo "rats were in power and Mr. Vest replied that, as the Sen ator from Rhode Island well knew, that duty was admit ted to the Wilson :bill be cause four democratic Sena tors who held the balance of power were untrue tcthe par ty and made the 40 per cent, duty the price of their vote for the bill. He urged tht re publicans to rise above the sordid consideration of vest ed interests and partisan pol icy and act for once solely in the cause of humanity, but bis words fell upon deaf ears. In tbe debate between Sen ntor Vest and his opponents tbe former quoted the late Nelson Dingley as having saia that the rates of t h e Dingley bill (had been made too high with tbe purpose of having a margin on which to trade, so that the United States might make reciproc ity treaties without injury to American industries. Sena tor Hale took up tbe charge and repudiatedUhe well au thenticated evidence present ed by the Senator from Mis souri. He dodged the point at issue and pretended to re gard the statement of Mr. Vest as a reflection on t h e personal character'Tof Mr Dingley which he ably defend ed from an attack which had never been made. On Thusday the Senate, after learning that Senator Nelson believed he could con clude his speech on statehood in about three days, adjourn ed until today. The status of the statehood measure was uot interfered with however, and will be tbe regular order at 2 o'clock to-day. The im prssion is growing that the opposition will be eventual!.? forced to .yield and admit the three claimants to statehood but at present the republi cans are finding the contest a convenient barrier to legis lation which they do not care to enact. This is especially trua ofanti trust legislation which Kuch iren as Senators Hauna, Aldricb and others hope to avoid. The anxiety of the Presi dent to please the people and secure the enactment of anti trust legislation has resulted in strained relations between the Administration and th members of the sub-committee charged with the prepara tlon of an anti-trust meas ure. When Congress met the House Jndicary committee appointed a subcommittee consisting of Messrs Little- field, Powers. Overstreet, De Armond andClayton todraft a trust bill. The sub-coin mi t tee asked the President for an administration measure and it was refused. Then they asked the Attorney General for his views on the mibject. They were furnished and the committee immediately set to work to draft a bill em bodying them. Then, to the amazement"of Mr. Lit tlf field and his conferees, Mr. Knox sent to Representative Jen kins, Chairman of the Judici ary Committee, with two bills with a request that they be introduced. This was done and only when they appear ed in print did the sub coins mittee, which had been;burn ing the midnight oil over its measure, learn that it h a d heen completely ignored and that bills hud been introduc ed which were calculated to render obsolete the,tbill on which they had expended so much time and labor. Under threat ifj an extra session the members of the Sentae have consented to the passageof8ome"simple"and innocuons anti-trust mea sures. These bills, the? say, mut be so simple as to pros voke no lengthy debate and must receive the unanimous support of the republicans which is paramount to say saying that must be so drawn as to be incapable of thwar ting bill brought in with much spectacular ad vei tising by Mr. Hoar has subjected the venerable Senator to nothing but ridicule and so upset has the old gentleman become that on Thursday he moved the passage of a bill which wrb enacted nearly a yearl ago and the Senate, following his lead, passed it The President was subject ed what the French term a bad quarter of an hour at the Cabinet meeting on Friday and a verj bad quater of an hour it was. Individually and collctivelvithc members of his Cabinet reproached him with tbe plunders he.has com mitted in attempting to car ry in 1 to effect a wholly quixotic and spectacular Southern policy, lne ap pointment of one. Dr. Cru 11, to be Collector of the Port at Charleston," S. C, and the suspension of the pottoffioe at lndianola, Mies., were made the texts for the cur tain lectures deliyered behind (he closed doors of the Cabi net room. Representative Bartlett of Georgia said to yourcorrespondent apropos of this subject. "President Roosevelt is what you might cnll a spectacular statesman fond of playing to the gab leries. like all other profe sionnl reformers, he had but one object in view and that ia to better his own personal chances nt the expense and discomfiture of others. He is after a majority of the del egates to the next National Convention and he has been making a grand stand plav for the negro v:tea in the North because he kuowsthat they control the conventions that create the delegate-.". Representatives Johnson. Howard. Brantley, Cochran, Patterson, Lvpr, Senator elect Lattimer and of hers ex pressed similar views. Remarkable Cure of Croup. 1 have a few words to any regarding Chainberliain's Cough Remedy. It saved my little boy s life and I tel that I cannot praise it enough. 1 bought a hot tit, of from A. E. Steele nf Goodwin, S. D., and when I got home with it th poor baby could hardly breathe. I gave the medicine as directed every ten minutes until he "threw up'' and then I thought sure he was going to choke to death. e had to pull the phlegm out of his mouth in great long strings. am positive that if I had not got that bottle of cough medicine, my boy would not be on earth today. Joel Demont, Inwood. Iowa. For sale by M. B. Blackburn. Mr. J. P. Council!, of Vilas, N. C, has sold his large farm and bought the Rtock o Buchanan A. Council!. He will locate in Hickory to do busi ness. Mr. Conncill is an ex celleht man and will make a ualuablc addition to our town. Messrs Buchanan & Councill will accept posftion out of town. They are clever and enterprising young men and we are sorry to lose them. Hickory Democrat. A rood Recommendation. "1 have noticed that the sale on Chamberlain's Stom ach & Liver Tablets is ,al most invariably to th.ise who have once used thorn," says Mr. J. H. Weber, a prominent druggist ot Can cade, Iowa. What better recommendation could any medicin? nave than lor peo pie to call for when again in need of such a remedy? Try them when you feel dull after eating, when you have a bad taste in your mouth, feel ml a . . ions, nave no appetite or when troubled with consti pation, and you are certain to be delighted with the prompt relief which they afford. For sale by M. B. Blckburn. "Some time ago mydaugh ter va nght a severe cold She complained of pains in her cheat and bad a bad cough I gave her Chamberlain's Cough Hemeny aacording ti ilirections and in two ouys she was well and able to go to schcol. I have used this remedy in my family for the past seven years and have never known it to fairhn.vs James Prernlergnst, mercb ant, Annato Bay. luinaicu, West India Island. The pains in the chest indicated an ap proaching attack of pneumonia, which in this in stance was undoubtedly warded, ofi by Chamberlain's Lough Remedy. It counteract any tendency of a cold to ward pneumonia. Sold by M. B. Blackburn. The frequency of lynching then days east of the Rocky Mountains indicates that the center of tbe "wild and wooly Wet" has moved pretty closelo the Atlantic sfaboard of late years. an Francisco Chronicle, Extract! fraaONewipaper Law. Following are some ex tracts from the newspaper law taken from tht decisions of the United States Court, and there nre a number of our subscribers whom we trust will read them and profit thereby: 1. Subscribers who do noi give express orders to t h e contrary are considered as wishing to renew their subs scription. 2. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their peri odicals the publisher may continue to send them until all arrearages are paid. 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodi cals from the postoffice to which they are directed they are responsible until they have paid their bills and or dered the paper ducoiitinu- ed. 4. If the snbs?ribers move to other place without infor ming the publisher, and the papers are sent to the forms er address, they are held re sponsible. 5. The courts haye decided that refusing to take peri odica from the ofiicejor removing and having them uncalled (or, is prima facia evidence of intentional fraud. 6. If subscribers pay in advance they are bound to give notice at the end of the time if they do not wish to continue taking it, otherwise tbe publishei is authorized to sund it and the subscriber be responsible until anex- press notice, with a payment of all arrearages, is sent to the publisher 7. The latest postal laws are such that a 3 newspaper publisher can arrest any one for fraud who takes a paper and refuses to,'J pay for it Under the law the man who allows his subscription to run along for some time un paid and then orders dis continued," or ordered the postmaster to mark it "re fused" and have a postal card sent notifying the pub lisher, leaves himself liable to arrest and fine, the same as for theft. A MARVELOUS INVENTION. Wonders never cease. A machine hag been invented that will cut, paste and hang wall paper. The field of inventions and discoveries seems to be unlimited. Notable a mong (jreat discoveries is Dr. Kings New Discovery for Consumption, It has done a world of good for weak lunga and saved many a life. Thousand have used it and con quered grip, bronchitis, pneumonia and consumption. Their general ver diet is: "It's the best and most rslia hie medicine for throat and lung troubles. Every bottle warranted by M. Jl. Blackburn 50c. and $1 per bottle. Trial boitle free. Colonel Waterson in alarm ed over the faet that there are only four million jrallons ot whiskey in bond and that this must not last until June. Thin is not enough for Ken tucky alone. JSo wonder the Colonel id fearful 'inout New York society. Philadelphia Inquirer: Educate Your Bowels. Your bowels can. be trained as well as your muscles vr your brain. Cas carets Candy Cathartic train your bowels to do right. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. All druggists, 10c. 1 STOPS PAIN Athens, Tenn., Jm. IT, Mtt. Ever ilnos the flrat ppearmnc of mr men wi they ware vary irregular and I utfared with treat pain In mr hlpc, back. itoniBch and legf, with terrible bearing down palm In the abdomaB. Dnrlnir the out month I hare taking Wine of Cardul and Thedford'l Black-Draoght, and I punned the month ly period without pain for tbe flrat time la yean. Nasmib Daym. What it lile worth io a women tvfUN Ing Ilka Nannie Davis suffered? Ytt there are women In thousands ol homes to-day who are bearing those terrible aienstnial pains in silence. II yon art one ol these we want to say thai thhj ume will bring you permansnt relief. Con sole yoursell with the knowledge that 1,000,000 women have been completely cured by Wlno of Cardul. These worn, en suffered from leucorrhoea, irregular menses, headacho, backache, and bearing down pains. Wine of Cardul will stop all these aches and pains lor you. Purchase a $1.00 bottle el Wine of Cardul to-day and take It In the privacy of your home. ror adrlee ai.d litem toiiii, "The Ufl The Chattasoor . .r:'ji North Carolina, Watauga court ty, in the Superior Court before the Clerk. D. J. Lowrance. guardi an for Squire Lowrance, lunatic, ex parte. Under and by virtue of an order obtained from the Clei'k of the Su perior Court of Watauga county in the above entitled action, I will oiv the 2nd day cf Feb. 1903, between 10, a. m., and 4, p. ni,, the same be ing the first Monday in said month offer for s;fle to the highest bidder the following described real estate, the property of Squire A. Low. ranee, Lunatic, viz : A tract of land containing 35 acres more or less ly ing and being in the county of VVa. tauga, N C. Brginning on a large rock in a branch corner to N. M. I saaes, now S. S. McBride, thence with the branch and Isaacs, S. S. McHridc's, line up N 33 degrees W 16 poles to a small mahogany near a clift of rocks, corner to S. S. Mc Bride, the same N 32 d E 53 poles to a stake in Wilson heirs line, now S. S Me Brule's line, with same E. 55,Jd E 78 poles to a stake at the old ridge road where once a hicko ry stood, thence S. 10 d west 47 poles to a white oak, old corner to Solomon Isaacs, thence weHt 10 poles to a stake, corner to the old Ricks tract, with same N 45 d W 59 poles to a white oak on the flat ridge corner to Ricks, with same S 60 (i W 32 poles to the beginning Terms of sale, one third cash, one third in six months and one third in twclelve months time with good notes'and approved security. Deed will be executed on payment in full of the purchas money. Dec 31. 1903 D. T. Lowrance, Guardian. E. S. Coffey, Atty. Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor and cneertulness soon H.i f disappear wno tn Kid neys are out of order or diseased. Kidney trouble ha become so prevalent that It Is not uncommon for a child to be born afflicted with weak kid neys. If the child urin ate too often, If the urine scalds the flesh or If, when the child reaches an age when It should be able to control the passare, it is yet afflicted with bed-wetting, depend upon It. the cause ol the difficulty Is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these Important organs. This unpleasant trouble Is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the ara great . remedy. The mild and the immediate affect ot Swamp-Root Is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, In fifty- cent and one dollar 1 sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mail free, also pamphlet tell ing all about It, including many of the thousands of testimonial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binthamton. N. Y, b awe aa4 raMtien this piper. . fen - b o a i am . 4 - 1 Copy 'A- P1"
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 22, 1903, edition 1
1
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