EN' 4 A 1 VOL. XX BOONE, WATAUGA. COUNTY, N. C THURSDAY JULY X 1908. NO. 7. Tonan iinT S r PROFESSIONAL. X, D.LOWE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BANNER ELK, N. C. JWWill practice in the court of Watauga, Mitchell and adjoining .counties. 7 0VO7. Todd & Ballou. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. JEFFERSON, N. C. . Will practice in all the courts Special attention given to real estate law and collections. ; -15-'07- EDMUND JONES LAWYER -LENOiU. N. 0,- Will Practice Regularly in the Courts of Watauga, 6.1. '07, F. A. LINNEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW,- ) BOONE, N. C. 'Will practice, in the courts of :the 18th Judicial District in ;all .matters of a civil nature. .6-11-1907. . , J. C. FLETCHER, Attorney At Law, BOONE, N. C Careful attention Riven to collections. ' EFLOVILL -ATTORNEY AT AW,- -BOONE, N. C 'Special attention given to all business entrusted to hia care." . i-i-'04. , A, A. Holsclaw, -ATTORNEY AT LAW Mountain lity Tennessee, . Will practice in all the courts of Tennessee, State and Federal. Snecial attention eiven to col lections and all oher matters of a lejral nature. Office northeast of court house Oct. 11,1907, ly. E.S. COFFEY If A Tl OKNEl AlhA IV,- BOONE, N. C. . Prompt attention given to all matters of a legal nature. zar.Abstracting titles and collection oi claims a Special ity, 1-V07. TO THE PUBLIC. t I have the best equipped watch repair shop in the State. My ma terial is all first-class. Fine R. R. Watches especially adjusted and ,all defects corrected. A guarantee .goes with every watch repaired by se No matter what yon want . I have it no guess, no botch. Your watch is cleaned and re paired with the best skill known .to the trade. , See Councill house, Boone, N. C. V J.W.BRYAN, Graduate Wach-maker & Jeweler, R. Boss Donnelly 1 UNDERTAKER & EM BALM ER SHOUN'S, - Tennessee, Has Varnished and Glass White Coffins; Black Broadcloth and ' White Plush Caskets; Blick and White Metalic C a s k e t s Robes, ; Shoes- and Finishings, ' , Extra large Coffins and Cus kets always on hand. 'Phone or. dere given special attention. R. ROSS DONNELLY. ' IT rt arl ol For Indigestion. .ARVJUISA Relieves soar stomach, lalpiutioaoftlie heart. Digests whit you eat. Bound Sense From Dr. Illfo. . (Raleigh Times.) It will be one lucky day tor the cause 01 education when the world of colleges and schools con tains more men patterned after the heart and head of Dr. Kilgo, the very accomplished and very practical president of Trinity. When, not so very many days prior to' the close of the recent prohibition campaign, the busy president got down to Raleigh one Sunday to put in his word for the cold water cause, he treat ed the congregation fortunate en ough to bear him to an address that broke radically away from the dry, colorless, hackneyed phrases with which everybody is familiar, and with whose princi ples everybody agrees, and put the old subject in such new and entertaining phraseology that the question straightway took on a new interest lor every cme within sound of his voice, It was an original way of telling the old story that was then being told all over the State in a colorless and unoriginal way. Ever since then we have been waiting to hear what the doctor would say when it came time for him to band out sage observations to bis graduating class. Sunday he talked to his class and, as every body who has heard Dr. Kilgo much is by this time ready to a gree, he took singularly interest ing hold of another subject that is frequently rendered dry and tedious by men who cannot put new ideas or, language into it. Here, for instance, is what the head of Trinity has to say about specialization, the present day tendency of schools as well as of individuals: ' " ' "The result of college making specialists of their men is to put them in a world of their . own and peaking a language that others cannot understand. It has (all en to the lot of great colleges to find special studies and spheres of learning to intimidate the un learned until, it is not. unlikely, there may be yet created a de partment of learning having for study the left wing of a mosqui to I Don't understand me to op pose specialization. A man must have his work and belong to some vocation. But I am very far from saying that he must know nothing else. He who stands aloof, keeps himself isolated, takes that solidarity from mod ern society and civilization, is quivering and trembling with a looseness that is lull of prophe cies of disaster." About the best thing, though, it seems to us, in all this emphat ically practical as well as inter esting talk, is the sound, plain navor 01 democracy running through it. The young man or woman who. after four years, goes out in the forking world with the pompous and overbear ing attitude toward his fellow- men that is coming to be more and more the tendency of so-called educated men toward those supplied with less book learning, has failed to absorb one of the vital principles of education at the Durham institution. No pu pil of Dr. Kilgo who takes his ad vice, will ever be in danger of be coming a book snob, next to the Diue-oiooa snoo, tne most con temptible member of the whole snob family of which the annals of snobberv hold any record. He will not for a moment find it im possible to get out of his shell long enough to speak civilly, not companionably, to the man or woman that spent less time on the finishing touches of t h e school-room. And he will not beat his creditors to keep up ap pearances, a trick to which, to be truthful, more educated than uneducated people seem to bead dieted. The doctor says, and ev ery young fellow going out of Harvard and Yale and Prince ton and the other really big uni versities this month ought to cut out the following paragraph and paste it up in his hat for future reference: "Don't go out in lile trying to keep up with the rich. The most ol you are poor. I know you. The worst feature of artiflcial ism is that it appears most fre quently among those of us who can't afford it. The woman who debates long whether she would wear a veil of mourning for her dead husband rather than wheth er she should mourn, is an .ex ample. Many of our young girls discuss the proper age at which thny make their debut instead of deciding whether they have sense enough to come at all. Don't keep up appearances if you munt lose your credit at the grocer's. And steer clear of the woman who won't protect yon there or you'll have a divorce suit pretty soon.", So long as 'such sentiments as these permeate the faculty and student body of Trinity, the good Methodist college up at Durham will continue to send out useful, practicaland approacha ble citizens rather than the mis erable apology for a human be ing whose main object in life is to work as few hours as possible for as many dollars as possible, with the supreme ambition to spend all his leisure time throw ing his nose up and his chest out as he sneers and slurs about peo pie that start life with less book preparation than has been his portion. Nature has provided the stomach with certain natural .fluids .known as the digestive juices, and it is through these juices that the food we eat is acted upon in such a way as to produce the rich, red blood that flows through the veins of our body and thereby makes us strong, healthy and robust and it is the weakening of these digestive juices that destroys health. It is our own fault if we destroy our own' health, and yet it is so easy tor any one to put the stomach out of order. When you need to take something take it promptly, but take something you know is reliable something like Kodol For Dyspepsia and Indiges- tion. Kodol is pleasant to take, is reliable and is guaranteed to give relief. It is sold bv J. M, Hodges, Says the Hickory Times-Mer cury: Five months ago, Mr Joe Cline took off a brood of chick ens. They all died save one. Very soon the hen began to lay in a nest near where she roosted with this chick. Mrs. Cline set her. This one chick set with her all the time and when she hatched this chick took to the little ones just as a mother hen would. She is not half grown, and it is a cu riosity to see ber. scratch for and cluck to and look after the little chicks. Think of a half grown chicken acting like a mother hen Thinks It Saved his Life. Lester t. Nelson, of Naples, Maine, sas in a recent letter: have used Dr. King's New Disco v ery many years, lor coughs anil colds, and 1 think it saved my life, I have found it a reliable remedy for throat and lung complaints, and would no more be without a bottle than I would be without food." For nearly forty years New Discovery has stood at the head of throat and lung remedies. As a preventative of pneumona, and healer of weak lungs it has no equal. Sold under guarantee at nil druggists. 5oc. and $1.00. Trail bottle free. Death of Grayer Cleveland Charlotte Observer, 25th. The public will not be surpris ed by the annuncement of the death ol Mr. Grover Cleveland. he event had long been antici pated and was deferred longer than many of his friends had ex- pected. It is regrettable that in the order of nature such men can not live forever but in that order this great man had reached the period when his death was logic al and repining on account ol it were vain and foolish: Cicero's De Senecute says something like this that the death of an old man is a natural event while that of a young roan is as if a besom of destruction had swept over the 1 and. Mr. Cleveland had reached the age when death fol- ows naturally. In the maturity of bis powers, his intellectual iorce unabated, he lays down the burden of life and goes to join the majority. Circumstances forbid that trib ute which the event suggests and a tribute of words would, after all, be supererogation. The work of this man will linger in his coun try's history. , His record is a most extraordinary one. Few presidents have passed through such a period of storm and stress, and whatever else one may think of him none will deny that he met the various crises in his ca reer with superb courage, with a nerve that never faltered n c r failed. Deserted by his party, left friendless among pitiless enemies, he followed with serenity the hard path of duty, and left, unhonnr- ed and unattended, at the end of his second term, the capitol to which ne had been welcomed' but a lew years oeiore oy tne giaa acclaim of shouting thousands. Thank God that be lived to see his vindication! However they may deny it all men know in their hearts that Cleveland was right all the time and that tho' he sacrificed himself his unexam pled nerve saved his country in his second term from what was perhaps the greatest disaster that ever threatened it. The un grateful people, most of all the recreant South, must stand at his open grave to-day with con flicting emotions. lo this nothing need be added except in November, 1896, liar- vard University celebrated the twp huudred and fiftieth anniver sary of its founding and that President Cleveland attended the ceremonies; that on this occasion James Russell Lowell delivered a magnitieent oration, concluding with this reference to the Presi dent: ''His presence is a signal honor to us all, and to all I may say a personal gratification. We have no politics here, but the sons of Harvard all belong to the party which admires courage, strength of purpose and fidelity to duty. He has left the helm of state to be with us here, and so long as It is entrusted to his hands we are sure that should the storm come, he will say with Seneca's pilot' '0, Neptune I You may save ,.me if you will: but whatever happens, I shall keep my rudder .true." The spirit of prophecy was up on the speaker. Thestorm came and the pilot kept his ruder true God rest him 1 Bucklen's Arnica Salve Wins. Tom Moore, of Rural Route Cochran, Ga., writes: '-1 had a bad sore come on the instep of my foot and could find nothing that would heal it until I applied Bucklen's Ar nica Salve. Less than half of a .35 cent box won the day for . me by affecting a perfect cure. Sold un. ;'der guarantee at ajl druggitts. " A women can win nny kind ol largmneutbycryiba Oregon Polltioal Utopia. Portland, Oregon Dispatch to Baltimore Sun. Oregon is fast getting a corner on the Utopia of politics. The mil lennium of the ballot may not be here, but it has reserved a berth and paid for it. Hereafter, if the law is enforced, it will cost a man anywhere from f 5 to f 100 to ask another man on election day to vote for any candidate or any measure just to ask him, not to pay him or coerce him. In their State election the oth er day the people put their sanc tion on such a measure, and they did a lot ol other things that muke one think the old days of the politician are passing. Here after it will be "political crimnal libel", punishable by a peniten tiary sentence, to lie in print a- bout a candidate for office. Candidates are forbidden to treat, to bet on elections, direct ly or indirectly, to promise any political appointments; to em ploy workers, except challengers, ou election day; to pay voters for time lost in going to the polls or to give any voter a badge or button to wear on election day. The Corrupt Practices act, which the people have approved, fur ther says: "No person shall pay the own er, editor, publisher or agent of any newspaper or other periodi cal to induce him editorially to advocate or oppose any candi date for. nominations or election, and no such owner, editor, pub lisher or agent shall accept such payment." In the case of political crimi nal libdl, which is now crime ere ated by law, both the man who writes or offers the libelous mat ter and the man who knowingly connfves at its publication may be Bent to the State prison. He has a defense if he can show that he had good ground for believ ing the libelous charge or state ment was true, but even as a vi tal part of that defense he must prove that 15 days befor the publication of the article he sub mitted the charges to the candi date in question and that he did not receive any denial of dr an swer to them within 10 days al ter their submission. In the matter of electioneering the law is sweeping. It says in part: "It shall be unlawful for any person at any place on the day of any election to ask, solic it or in any manner try to in duce or persuade any voter on such election dav to vote lor or refrain from voting for any can didate, or the candidate or tick et of any polical party or organ ization; or any measure submit ted to the people." For the man who chooses to obev the law it will not be an ex pensive matter to run for office in this State hereafter. A candi date for Governor, for instance, will not be permitted to spend more than 15 per cent, 01 one year's gubernatorial salary, or f 750, in a primary campaign, and the maximum of hisexpendi tures for a general campaign is limited to f 500. Moreover, with in 15 days alter the primary or election he must file a detailed re port showing juBt bow and where the money was spent. Whatever the men may think, the woman suffragists are not agreed that the millennium has arrived. They tried for the fourth time to get the men to allow them to vote, but were defeated more decisively this time than ever before, the vote being about 25,000 against giving them the franchise This result is consid ered a blow to the movement in the whole Northwest. . DeWitt's Kidney tod Bladder Pills ure lour Dandruff Why? Because Jt is annoying, untidy. And mostly, because it almost invariably leads to baldness. Cure it, and save your hair. Get more, too, at the same time. All easily done with Ayer's Hair Vigor, new improved formula. Stop this formation of dandruff I Poet not than? Iht color Iht hair. 3 formal with Mk fceMto Sbew l to yea tootot yers A.k him ttxnt M. The new Ayer's HslrVleor will certainly no xnis won, dcciui. nrsi or an, it de stroys the germs which are the original cause 01 psnaruir. naving given wis aid, nature completes the cure. The scalp It restored to a perfectly healthy condition. y to .8.ywufcWwi 1 1, mm, i That is a novel and inviting idea in regard to keeping the Denver convention comfortable and cool. The committee has ar ranged to have cars of sno fresh from thn Rockies placed a bout the walls ol the great audi torium to keep the air cool and delightful during the sitting of the convention, How invitingl The idea of looking at and brea thing the ozone of real, pure, snow, fresh from the peaks, is a temptation hard to resist this sort of weather. Chronicle. Kennedy's Cough Syrup COHTAEIS HOJTXY ASH TAR Fslisvts Colds by workW them out el the sysUm through a copious and health aetlon of the bowsls. Relieves Coughs by alsanslng tht mucous membranes of the throst, ahast, and bronchial tubes. "As (feasant to the tatta as Maple Sugar'' Children Like It For BACKACHE-WEAR KIDBEYI Tn .fcWltfi KMmj ud Blsddsf m-Un tad tl There's hardly anything that weais ofi soon as as the sweet ness from kisses. Big cuts or little cuts, sAall scrat ches or bruises or big ones are heal ed quickly by DeWitt's Witch Ha. zel Salve. It is especially good for piles. Be sure to get De Witts. Sold by J. M.Hodges. Half a loaf is better than a loafer. The Cause of Many ; Sudden Deaths. There Is a disease prevailing in tbla country most dangerous because so decco- uve. Many sudden deaths are caused by it heart dis ease, pneumonia, heart failure or apoplexy are often . tf result of kid tier disease. If kidney trouble it . allowed toad vsnc( the kidney-poisoned blood will at tack the vital organs, causing catarrh of the bladder, or the kidneys themselves break down and waste away cell by celL ' Bladder troubles almost always retail from a derangement of the kidneys and a cure la obtained quickest by a proper treatment of the kidneys. If yon art feel. . ing badly you can make no mistake by taking Dr. Kilmer's 5wamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy. It corrects inability to hold urine and scalding pain in passing it, and over comes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go en through the day, and to get up many timea during the night. The mild aud the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and la sold by all druggists in fifty-cent sad one-dollar size bottles. Yon may have a sample bottle of this wonderful new dis covery and a book that tells all aboat it, both sent free by mail. Address, Dr. Kil mer & Co., Biugb uuton, N. Y. Wbaa writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper. : Don't make any mistake, but remember the aame, Swamp Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swatr.p-Root, aud tha address, BingUamton, N. Y., ott ever JtUle. S . : . ' Laxative