Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Dec. 10, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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' .;v,''" -i ''' -.1- - ' ' - (-V . ' V t '".r-. . -......-...,-.,. ...... ,.- . J; ''"'''.' -.- ":.''.'"'vv"";-"".'.''- 7; MlX' .V V;:"-.','y ''''''V -' ?. ;VYvV '- ''-'V -mZi'- 111 VOL XV. BOONE, AVATAUGA COUNTY, X. C.V THUliSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1903. NO. 40. . , . : v. m " - ;-,V Mrs. Laura. S. Webb, Ylce-Prcaldent Woman Icm v eratMClnlMof Jiortln Onto. 1 druikd the change of life which " was fast approaching. I noticed Win of Cjrdul, and decldtd to try a bot tle. I experienced some relkf the first month, 10 I kept on taking It for ' three months and now I menstruate with no pain and I shall take it off and on now until I have passed the climax." Foinalo weakness, disordered menses, falling of the womb and ovarian troubles do not wear off. They follow a woman to thodmige of life. Do not wait but take Wine of Cardui now and avoid the trou- ble. Wine of Cardui never fails to benefit a Buffering woman of any ace. Wine of Cardui relieved Mrs. Webb when she was in dan ger. When you come to the change -of life Mis. Webb's letter will mean more to you than it docs now. But you may now Jf oid the suffering she endured, ttruggists sell 1 1 bottles of Winqfft C-ardni. ----- . . - - . - -. . . - m ,w lI-'.. ' . - . ' . . lit liri p II I rf I lll'l H HI 1 I I i murk ;v are oress tiurnnwea. OA8TOHIA. iStuttaa . yTi Kjnd You Han Always BoqgM Blgnatare ' of PROFESSIONAL. F. A. LINNEY, ; ATTORNK7 AT LAW, BOONE. N. C. ' : Will pruflicein thp oourtp of cliia and surrounding equn ties. Prouiut attention civ- . en 'to the rolleetion of Hnims and nil other business of n le gal nature. " 6 12 EDMLND JONES, L AW Y Elt -LKNoiH,N. c Will Practice Iiegularlr in . the Courts of Watnvga, 6.1. 'q3, ' - . J. C. FLETCHER; Attorney At Law, . BOONE..C. Careful attention given to collections, E- F, LOVILL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, -BOOSE, A'. C . BSTSpecial attention given to all buHi'neHa entrusted to h!care."a 8-23, 1900. - E. S. GOT, -ATlOItyEYAl LAW, ;' t-COONE, N. C- ; Prompt attention given to .all matters (A-n legal iwiture. . fitST Abstracting titles and collection of claims a special ty. - 231900. Dr. J. M. HOGSHEAD, Cancer Specialist, BANNER'S ELK. N, C r A6 Knite; No Burning Out, fligheat refereuces and emlors j nients of prominent perHons sue- ce88fnl1y treated in Vd.,4 Teim. and N. C. Remember that tliere lno time too eooN'to get rid oi A ft,ca4cerou3 growth no matter how small. Examination free letters answered proinptlv. an , jfititjfaetion; j,uranleyl, . j Boecefvllcr'a Power. Ashevjlle Citizen.. V The Norfolk Virginia-Pilot take "a rather ppHsiniisti'' view of John D. HorkHellfcr, or rathr of his growing pow r p o w e r and increasing graep upon tlie husinesH and fvn the nei!esitie of life iu this country. The Virginia paper r a y a that Rockefeller is an much ah nn.nhronim hHnn oight loot Kiant or a tw-lvadpd calf.' It sutrgests a seeming likp lihiod of a timeapproaeliing when he will dominatn th in dustnesof the country and siivk: "The Rockefeller phenome non is oo often confined iu fh rniiuKof the nverage man to Standard Oil. Rockefeller his. jn fact, become multifa rious. 4 Rockefeller, or the 'Stan dard Oil crowd,' already con 1 pole the largest banking and trust company'' interests in New Yoik city. '"""" V "The siaie. crowd i after the great stock insurance companies. "It is current rumor in Wall street finarial circles thai Rockefeller has .obtain-, ed control of the teel Trust. 'Rockefeller and (Jould are after Cassett and Pennsylva nia mi I road people. "Rockefeller has o t li e r side lines, but these are suffi cient to indicate, in a meas ure,, the .figure. .Rockefeller is beginning to cut in. industrial- affairs in this country When he has achieved his aims, as he will, to all ap pearances, if he lives, he will control I lie money market, the light, heat, and fuel Bup ply of th9 countiy, the great est of its transportation sys terns, and the industry that lies at the bottom of all oth ers." Should this rather alarm ing prophecy materialize in to fart, it may he upriously asked, r'Hjv will he us ho great, power over the peopled and how will it end?" . Such power, if left to work its will, could control b oth the government and the? peo ple, and be greater than the power of kinirs. Like thebaul der tearing down the moun tain side, it would gatheriiio mentum as it went, until all opposing force would pee m in danger of certain destruc tion. Yet to think that thin man's enormous and evcr-in-erefMrg income is not sub ject to. taxation which is a bout the only way mw sn gested by stndentof iviceco noniics to check jhetendency of hoards to accumulate in the coffers of one man. The income tax bill, which Congress paswd under Clevo land's administration vyasde dared unconstitutional by the Supreme court througn theaction of one of.theae jns t ices, who reversed himself aH well as the cou'rt in order to accomplish its defeat. As to whether the people or the government will ever undertake any other plan for the regulation of private for tunes, cannot be surmised a yt.;. - v'-:- It would be contrary t(i the present policy of lb? country to do so. and nothing short of fceH-preaervation could hardly crystalize su h a sen timent into law or action, Ilr. Brjaa as a Legatee. Mr. Bryan is always before the public ere. Ilis latest ap pea ranee is in ,a 1 twauit to which is attached ;ni interest ingKtory. PhiloL. Bennett a rich old man of Connecti cut became enamored of Mr. Bryan, and among other do inirs, visited the Bryan homo in Lincoln, -Nebraska. While there he niadea will bequeath ins Mr. Bryan fifty thousand dollars, ' Mr. Bryan himsplf drawing the will. '-In the conrse of time Mr. Bennett died. His widow objected to paying-Mr. -Bryan the fift.r tboiHand dollars hence thp court proceedings in which Mr. Bryan was called to Con neetieutt to testify, the post-, ponement of his Enropeon tour and his failure to take part in the Kentucky cam paign. But there is this in teresting feature, also, that Mr Bryau has stated that not a penny of the money would be used by him for his own benefit, but for Hie pur pose of charitable and eduea t i o n a I o h j jc I s p res u in a b 1 y much of it for the fui t hern nee of political views. He seems to think that the old lady doesn't care so much for the fifty thousand dollars as she does for the fact that it might be used in furthering his and litvtt l.ita li notion rl'u nnl i 1 ion I 1 lL iiuouiiuu o pwi(-i- III lUeaB. Wlum the old man died, it seems tint he had left nt the suggestion of Mr. Bryan, a sealed letter' of instructions to hij wife, The widow how ever did not take kindly to the instructions given hd' in the sealed letter and refused to bp bound by it. Conse qupntly ''the wholeaffair was precipitated into the courts; a most -diRtrcssincr publicity ensud, and Mr. Bryan allow ed himself to be betrayed in to writing an out burst of per snnal frankness to the widow which she did not choose to record as confidential, and which her lawyer with undis guised brutality promptly spread upon the judicial re-, cords." Monroe Journal. ONE HUNTIMCD DOLLARS A ROX is the value II. A. Tisdalo Smmer ton, S. C. places on DeWitt's Witch U.izpI SbIvp. He suys "I had the piles for 20 years. I tried manv doctors and mediciiiPH but n I foiled except, D.'Witt'n Witch Huzel Salve. It cured me." It is a combinatinn of the henlinjj properties of Witch Huzl with antiHepticnand emollients; relieve and fiermancntly cures blind bleed ing itchin." and protruding y)iles soreH cuts bruises eczema salt rbenm and all nkin diseases. Sold by M. B. Bla.sk bu n. A whinning nagging wo man is a maker of giay hairs dm nka i ils and suicides. KODOL DVdPJilVlA C1IBK Digests all classes ot food; tones and strpngthpns thestomnchand dijresti ve orprans. Cu res Dycpepsa Indicestion, Stomach lroul)lei, and makes rich red blood, health and tttrenirth. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure rebuilds wornout- tihsus pu rifiea strengthens,' and Rweclons the tsomach Gov. G. W. Atkin son, of vV. rH.,snys: "Ihaveued a nunvtter of bottles ot KodolJ Dyspepsia Cure and havefounpit td lie n vprv ifTttivo ntwl inrlporl ! a pfiwcrtul remedy for stomach - . - ' - . v. i ailments. . I recommend it to my. inenaa.; ooiu iy w. is, uiark - ! bum Penny packer and the Negro. New Orleans Daily State. It appears that. Governor Penn.vpnckcr' of Pennsylva nia, and his staff, who are now rnakinu a tour of the West on a sppciul train had decasion the Other 'day to stop off at Marf.iu, N. C , for a lew minnes, nnd therrheen gaged in a bit, of negro' cod dling that laid in th shade President Roosevelt's Book-' er Washington dinner. As usual there were a number of lazy negro loafers gather ed at the station to see the trains come in nnd depart, and it said that when Gov ernor Pennvpneker stepped off his train he i ntnediately made himself familiar with the crowd of negroes. To show how miii h he loved them he placed his arm around their neks and affect ioimte ly.stroked their faces, to the disgust of the white people on the. plathrm, who turned their backs and walked a way. .It is said that with the exception of an agf nt of the Pennsyhania Railroad, not a white man shook the Gov ernor's hand, although h i s coming was known undqui'e a crowd had gathered to show the usual courtesies. After walking up ami down the platform arm in arm with the negroes for at least ten minute the train pulled out and Pennypar ker waved his dusky and new found friends a fond adieu.. The incident was telpgraphed to stations south of Marion and when the train stopped theiv was not a soul present to welcome him and his party. It is evident that North Carolina has a way of keep ing negroes out of sight when advised hefoiehand that there is a negrophile coming to caress them. From all accounts Govern or Penny packer talked to the negro 's in Marion in a very low voice sf) that none but they could hear him, but. it is to lie hoped that he advised them toemmigrate to Penn sylvania and vote the Repnb, lican ticket. IF it had been known in advancp that hp would ha ve given them such advice it is quite safe to say that negroes of eypry town along the road would have been rounded up by th" whites to welcome Pi-nnypacker so that he would be offered an opportunity to tell them how much better treated they would be in Pennsylvania. . Tho I.ons Star State. Down in Texas at Yoakum, is a biV dry goods firm of which Mr. J. M. Haller is the head. Mr. Holier on one ol his trips E;ist to buy goods said to a friend who was with him in the palace car, "Here take one of theselittle Early Risers upon retiring and you will be up early in the morn, ing filling good." For the "dark brown" taste, headaelieand that logy feeling De Witt's Little 'ar ly Risers are the best pills to use. Sold by M. B. Blackburn. No woman should marry unless she consents to be h-r husband's p-ntner an 1 save whila he makes. . CANDY CATHARTIC ! t. soeT Genuine stampfd C.C C. Never sold in bulk. - rr.;vt :sio tell urs. h h m n vn iu am ad m m i r x wm r a ami m unr?MTii A ShfUof Idols. Thero.is an (ild stoty of how once nearly a million of slaves escaped . from their masters and journeyed to find a country andhome;and how their leader as all lead ers must went up to the heights to .fiad Ihnl and laws for them. The laws which he brought back have been the hnsr of all civilization in the world from that time to this day. But thes people tired at once of hi inland his laws, and they took out their ear rings and melted them and made a little gold calf and prayed to that. An Ameri can reading this storv today would set them down as dull asses-folks who deserve to slaves and to ha ve a metal calf for a grtd. And vet, we have liMle nutal calves ot our own whom we worship evei y day. For instance so ciety. A few years ago a de pendent of certain ri-h fami lies in New York dubbed them the Four Hundred. The name took, we made a court 'ircle ot them. We chronicle their doings daily, and silly boys nnd girls all oyer th-1 count r. imitate them. Such a ridiculous little calf to wor ship. Take tort, the masses of new novels nnd magazines that he'tp the news stands. The young prople in the de partment stores who are just beginning to read books cull these 'American Linerature.'; Nobody contra lifts them Nobody tells them that these books are as cheap and vul gar in their English as in i heir morals. Tiir 'eaders soon seizt pns and write books also. Sally Lloyd and Ben B itty throw off two or three novels yearly and Scot anl Thaei;:jrny are pushed out ol sight on the shelves Our ide.il literature just now is only a gilded calf it is not tfven gold. There are other popular ideas before whi-h we bow down and whoop Iloaann'as: the volatile club woman th young Victor in the Stock ex change or grain pit; the mod ern Jove wilding millions in his fist instead of arrows. Are tiles real. powers in l'fe or only poor little gilded calves of our own making. Saturday Evening Pos'. GOOD FOHCHILDHKX. The pleasant to takeand harm less One Minute Cough Cure gives immediate relief in all cases of Cough, ('roup and LaUrippe lie cause it does not pass immediate ly into the FZ-uaach. but takes ef feet right nt I he s'iit ol the trou ble. It draws out the inll iniiitinn heals nnd soot lies and cuves per manently b.v enabling the lungs to contribute pure lile-givingand life sustahiig oxygen to the blood and tissues. Dr. Armstrong ol IV lia, Tex , p escribes it daily and savs ihere is no better cough re medy made. Sold by M B Black burn The reason so many old bachelors do not attend, pub! lie worship is because they' are too i ndolt-nt to get reaHy i They need won. en to maki them hustle- CASTOR I A lor Lxfants and Children. ; 1)3 Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of 1 7 7 V " - - ',MtichBirMB.,r';;': Rhamkatte Roaster 1 : We notice that Dr. Kilgo made a pppech at Goldsborp in which he said: "I am big ger than any State-than alj the States. Bigger than Tex- as. Bigger than North Caro ' linn, and bigger than you think North Cajolinais." ; In Canada the is now living a remnant of r trips of lndiV a ns known as the Musquodo-1 boits. They live on a river of that name and yisitors Ire- quently make tours to, see an Indian dance. On one oo casion, while the visitors were present thelndians were having a great dance. Every Indian was participating ex cept one grum looking oldfel low wrapped in a blanket who was sitting stolidly by, smoking Ids' pipe. "Why don't that . fellow dance?" nsked a visiter of one of the younger Indians, pointing to the old Indian. The old Indian heard it, roso an&rily from his seat, and said to the mbii whonsk. ed the question: "Me no fellow. Me lag man. Me much big mon Me bigger man than theGovernordo,n at Halifax, Me most as bi,; as the devil.'! ICoughedi u I had a most stubborn cough for many years. It deprived me of sleep and I crew very thin. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured." R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it's the great est cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too, after you try it. There's cure in every drop. Tbrts sizes : 25c., SOt, SI. AlldrsRlsts. Commit ronr doctor. If lis yi tak It, thru do i lie m;i. If lie tells you nek to take It, then don't take It. II koow. T..inwa I. Willi Kim W nr. wllllndr It is a common thing for a married woman to Jboast of her maid's reliability when she is being systematically robbed. It's funny how sorry an old maid can feel for an old bachelor. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the blood In your body passes through vour kldnevs once every three minutes. 1 iic luuiicyj are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or ' impurities In the blood. If they are sick or out of order, they fall to do their work. Pains, aches and rheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the blood. dnA in nrerWt4 TL 1.1 1 muucy iruuuio. Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as 'hough -they had heart trouble, because the heart Is over-working in pumping thick, kidney poisoned blood through veins and arteries. It uwd to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, . but now modurn science proves that nearly , all constitutional diseases have their begin ning In kidney trouble. . ' If you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctorlHg your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer'a Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy la scon realized. It stands the highest for lb wonderful cures of the most distressing case? and is sold on its merits by all druggists in fifty-rfrsSCHI ' cent and one-dollar alt- :tt,'f: i ,-.v es. You may have a"43Bjaa.I:L . , sarr.plo bottle by mall hmm of iwBoo. ' free, also pamphlet telling you how to find ' out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kllmof " & Co., BInghamton. N. Y. 1. 1 J I....LI. . "i. '' mm mn j , r i , . ' ' -V -i ,i-l i- 'A
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 10, 1903, edition 1
1
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