Ik Watauga CD emocrafc VOL- XXI j. mrNcibk. J. II. ii.vhiix COUXCILL & HARDIN, REAL ESTATE AGENTS, Limestone, Tennessee. Vi it us what you want in the way ol fuiniinji Intuit in thin fer til country ami we xvill do our best to please vu. If-10. mTi .i7iuTi e ) k s a u:7 ()n oinl one half miles west ol Roone N. C irood location con venient to first class school For tern h ii n l'n rticul urn, address '. K. LONG, Williamsburg, Iiutte, Mont. ri(()l'hSSl(jAL NAT T. DULANEY, M. D., -SPECIALIST - Fourth St. Bristol Tcnn.-Va. Eye and Throat Diseases. Refraction for Glasses. L, I). LOWE, vl'TORNEY AT LAW, HAN N Ell ELK, N. C. MfWi'.l practice in the courts Watauga, Mitchell and adjoining ounties. 7 6.'(7 EDMUND JONES LAWYER LHXOIK. N C - it' Practice Regularly in ,he Courts of Watauga. 5-1 oS. F. A. LINNEY, -ATTORNEY AT LAW, liUONK, N. C. Will practice in the courts of the l.'itli . I tulicial District in all matters of a civil nature. G-ll 1!)8. J. C. FLETCHER, Attorney At Law, BOONE, N. C. Careful attention giiveti to olleotions. W. R LOVILL - ATTORNEY AT LAW, BUOSh, S. C. "Special attention divert o all business entrusted to Vs care."tU 7-9-'08 A, A. HolsclaW, ATTORNEY AT LAW Mountain City, Tennessee. Will practice in all the courts of Tennessee. State and Federal. Special attention (riven to col lections and all oMier matters of a b-gal nature. Office north east of court house. Oct. 11, 1907, 1 v. E. S. GdFFEY, -ATI OKA E I A1 LAW, tfOONE, N. C. Prompt attention given to !l matters of a legal nut ore. tS Abstracting titles and iolhction oi claims a secial tv 1-1 '09. R. Ross Donnelly. UNDERTAKER & EM HALM EI! SHOILVS. Tennessee, Has Varnished and Glass White Coffins; Bluck Hroad loth "and White Plush Caskets; 131-ick and White Metalie Caskets Robes, Shoes and Finishings, Extra large Coffins and Cns kets always on hand. 'Phone or ders given special attention. R. ROSS DONNELLY. HOOXE. HENRY li. Rogers, Charlotte New. It is human nature's prone ness to belittle and malign those occupying higher stations in life! than ourselves. Too often we are ready with slurring and caustic criticisms of men who have out distanced us, for no better rea son than we were outstripped Rich men are and ever have lietn the target of criticism. Many there he who consider all pos sessors of wealth crooks and knaves, Criticism tempered with a grain of charity, isfartoorare. After nil, "there's lots of good in the worst of us, and lots of bad in the best of us," and we know of no better illustration of this time-honered quotation than the life of Uenrv II. Rogers. Perhaps Rogers was hard hear ted in his business dealings. His faults were many, without ques tion. All iui-ii have metre or less excess baggage of this class, and the fact that some of them seem oxer-laden is oftentimes because their prominence attracts closer attention to ttieir shortcomings. lie his faults many orf.'xx-, it is not of them that xve xvi-di to speak now, for Rogers is dead. To begin a business care t as a vender of newsprpers and mount to the most enviable position in the world of high finance is an achievement which could not be wrought by a knave or a numb scull. Rogers lox'ed his mother, one of the best ear-mnrks of a ri al man. Reset by a thousand busi ness cares, bearing the xveight of heavy responsibilities, a man of affairs of such magnitude as to demand the greater part of his time, a man who did filings hour ly. Rogers never became too en amored ol business ambition, nor too married to his material affairs, to remember the ureal heart l hat first taught him love. Here is what the aged Dr. Coy ler. long-time friend of Rogers, said of the deceased at the funer al ceremonies: ''I think I am most sensitive to uncouth speech, but, I have searched my memory in vain for one coarse or profane xvord ever passed his lips. He said to me once: 'I think the memory of my mother wait ing for me xvhen I come home is the sweetest memory of my life.' I had noticed that he had absen ted himself from services on cer tain Sundays of each month and I asked him once why he remain ed axvay and he replied: 'I went to Fair Haven to see my mother. 1 never let a month pass xvithout visiting her.' " Perhaps Rogers was hard and cohl. lie xvas a winner in a hard and cold world, and one usually loses many of the softer and gen tler uttributes when daily paired for battle where the Almighty Dollar is the goal. His shortcomings were many No doubt he may deserve the bitterest excoriations for some of his characteristic and deeds, but somewhere in the makeup of the great magnate there was a spark of humanity unlike divini ty. There xvas trood in the man, and xve call for no further prool than the manner in which h e remembered her who brought him into the world. 'I'd Rither Die, Doctor." than have my feet cut off," said M. L. Uingaum, of I'ineville, III., ''hut you'll die from gangreene (whicVi had eaten away tin toes) if you don't,'' said all doctors. Instead, he used Rucklen s Arnica Salve til, w holly cured. Its cures of Eezemal Fever Sores, Roils, Burns and Piles astound the xvei Id. 25c. at all drug, gists. WATAUGA COUNTY, X. C, THUSDHAY Important Notice a ti School-Tax lxy. The attention of the people of the county, the county board of education mid the county com missioners are called to the fact that the counties heretofore re ceiving aid from the second hun dred thous ind dollars for a four months school term cannot here after receive any part of the State appropriation unless the county commissioners on t h e first Monday in June levy a spe cial tax on all taxable property and polls of the county, in addi tion to the regular school tnx, sufficient to raise one half of the, additional amount needed to pro! vide a full four months term in ; eyerv school district; and no county xvill receive from the sec- Idiot and Garfield, and other ond hundred thousand dollars ( members of the kitchen and ten for this purpose more than it ! nis cabinets. He even counseled raises by this special tax, except tlie counties that levy the muxi- mum special tax of five cents on the hundred dollars valuation of property and liftieu cents on the poll. The counties levying this maximum special tax xvill then receive from the second bun died thousand dollars all t h e ualaive needed tor a tun tour- months term in every district, even though the special tax does not provide one half of the. am ount needed. The law. as amended by the General Assembly of 11)05), re- quires the county board of edu - cation to submit to the countv 'commissioners on the first Mon day in June a tarelully itemized statement of the expenses of a four-months school iu every school district of thecouuty, and a carefully itemized estimate of the receipts from the regular school tax of eighteen cents on the hundred dollars valuation of property from fines, forfeitures, penalties, ami all other sources, showing the deficit needed to pro vide a full lour months term in every school district; and the commissioners are required to levy a sufficient tax 011 all prop erty and polls of the county to provide one half ol this ieficit, up to the maximum ol five cents on the hundred dollars valua tion of property and fifteen cents on the poll, the other part ol the deficit to be supplied out of t he State appropriation knoxvn as the second hundred thousand dol lars. The new law encourages self help and economy, and absolute ly guarantees a full four months term in every school district, xvithout any scaling, as has been necesssary heretofore on account of the excess of the demands o yer the appropriation for a four months school. This guarantees the people of these counties a better school and a longer term than they have ever had before. x e are calling attention to the matter now, that the county board of education andthecouu ty commissioners may not over look it on the first Monday in June. The county that fails to conform to the law and secure the Slate appropriation by levy ing this small necessary special tax lor better schools and long er terms xvill hear from the peo ple. A State exchange says that Rev. Oscar Ilaxvood, pastor of the Collegiate Church of the Cov euunte, of New York City, was in Raleigh a few days ago and gave it out that he owns 1,000 acres of laud iu Montgomery county. on the Aberneen & Ashboro rail way, which he is going to con vert into a school of tanning fori destitute boys from New York City He xvill not take criminal! boys but those of good charac-1 extensively or the cattle busi ter from his church and Sunday ness. School. ' Heme ni Iter Kooirvct and Don't Slop Oier. AMirville (iuzctte-NewR. Says the Charleston News and , Courier: -If President Tuft h a d enjoxed the right kind of early training, he would have been a Democrat, and xve do not for a moment believe that his evolu tion is now complete." Current events lend pertinence to this remark, but our Demo cratic friends had lst have a care, lest they have u rude nxva jkcning, such as they experienced under the Roosevelt administra tion. At one tune Mr. Roosevelt seemed to be training with the Democrats, and Democrats had the run ol the White House, much as did Messrs Lodge and 1'iu- with Democrats regarding legis- lative matters, and appealed to members of that party for aid when dealingxvith refractory Re publicans while the rate bill xvas under consideration. And then, (Mie bright morning, xvhen the blow xvas least expected, and Mr. j Iloosevelt had used these Deuio- crats as long as there xvas any ii' ed for their services, he threw them all overboard, and resum ed business with the Senate lead ership. The country will have lit tle dillicultv in recalling that former Senator Chandler, of New 1 Hampshire, told of the Roose velt-Deinocratie pact, and got himself made a charter member of the Ananias club for his pains. And so, while Democrats m ay extract a great deal of encour- l aiieiiient from the situation as at preseut shaped up. they would just as xvell make haste slowly. One of these days Mr. Tatt will begin to think about 15)12, and xvhenever he does he xvill give Democrats a jolt that will make Mr. Roosevelt's treatment of those buncoed Senate Democrats look like a caress. Words To freeze The Soul. ''Your son has consumption. His case is hopeless." These appalling were spoken to George E. Blevms a le- iling merchrnt at Springfield, N. C., by txvo expert doctors one a lung specialist, Then was fihovvn the wonderful power of Dr. King's New Discovery. "After three weeks use," writes Mr. Blexins, "he xvas as xvell as ever. 1 would not take all the money in the world loi what it did for my hoy." Infallible for coughs and colds, its the safest, sur est cure of desperate lung diseases on earth. 50c. and $1.00. Guarantee satisfaction. Trial bottles free at all druggists. Let no boy think the clothes he xvears, the horse he rides, the stick he carries, the dog t lint trots af ter him, the house he lives in or the money he spends can make him a gentleman. Not onoorall of these can do it; and yet, every boy may be a gentleman. He may wear an old hat, cheap clo thes, live in a poor house and spend but little money, but by being true, man'be honorable, by keeping hi uself neat and respec table, by being civil and cour teous, and above all, by fearing God and and keping His Com mandments, he can be a gentle man. Union Times. Wilkesboro Chronicle: Mr. Jo. Crisp, who lived near Moravian Falls, sold his place last xveek to Mr. Henkel, of the Ileukel Live Stuck Co , of Lenoir, Mr. Crisp will locate near Richmond, Ya., where he has bought property. Mr. Henkel's object in buying the property is to prepare more JUNE 3. l0i. Keith Priichard Captured. I-iioir Topic 2(ite. Sheriff Smith and Messrs. II. H. ! Liiirlc. P. P.. Hush and Kill Car. i,i,l rant. mil kith Prirrlwir.l at M o'clock yesterday morning ttt his home' seven miles above Mortimer. Refore dny light the Sheriff and party secreted themselves near the house and awaited de velopments. A few minutes be fore the arrest, Pritchard xv a s seen with a Winchester in his hand going toward the house from the barn where he had slept during the night. As soon as he entered the house the officers closed iu and surprised Pritch ard he had laid his gun doxvn mid step ted out into the yard when the otficers covered h i m with their guns. Keith had a pis tol on his person and shoxved signs of wanting to use it, but under the circumstances thought it sater to noid up ins nanus, xxhich he promptly did. The prisoner was taken to Mor timer yesterday, kept there last night, brought to lxnoir this morning on an early train, and landed in jail for safe keeping. It xvill be remembered that Keith Prichard and his brother engaged in a pitched battle xvith W. E. Garland and Samuel Smith some months ago near Mortimer, resulting in the kill ing of Honeycutt uud seriously wounding Garlaud iu the face and shoulder. Since that time it is thought the Pritchards have been lying out in the mountains ubove Mortimer and in eastern TennesseeKeitU confessed to the shooting of Garland, but says his brother killed Honeycutt. Pritchard is about 80 years of age and is a rough character. A reward of $200 was offered for his capture. Stand liy Your Town. .More towns die for xvant of confidence on the part of busi ness inenaud lack ol public spir it, than any other cause, says a floating editorial. When a man in search of a home or business lacatiou goes into a toxvn and finds everything full of hope and enthusiasm for the prospects of the place and all earnestly at work to build it up, he soon be comes imbued xvith the samespir it, and, as a result, he drives doxvn stakes and goes to work xvith the same iuterest. When however, he goes to a town where the people express doubt and ap prehension for the future pros perityof the place, moping about and indulging iu mourntul com plaints, he naturally feels that it is no place for him, and at once shakes the dust from his feet while he pulls out with all possi ble speed for some other place. Consequently, try to muke a live, enterprising town out of tin? toxvn in which you live. When you are working for your town you are accomplishing all the more for yourself. Lexington advertiser. Abdul Ilamid has surrendered $3,000,000 to the new Turkish government. The ex-sultan might prolong his existence considera bly by entering into an agree meat xvith the Young Turks to turn over each ,xear $5,000,000 of the $100,000,000 he is sup posed to have hidden away, says the Herald-Cou. ier. A Philadelphia man bet that he could drink txvo quarts of whiskey in txvo hours, lie did, but he is dead. A Chicago girl bet she could waltz one hour xvithout stopping. She did, but she is dead. These things have the fool-killer trouble, hoxveyer. NO. 2. A Hair Dressing If you wish a high-class hair dressing, ve arc sure Aycr's Hair Vigor, new improved for mula, will greatly please you. It keeps the hair soft and smooth, makes it look rich and luxuriant, prevents splitting at the ends. And it keeps the scalp free from dandruff. Port nnl change Ihe tolnr nf the hair. A formal with Mch bottl Bhow It to your doctor Aik him ftbont It. thn do m ho mti vers At the same time the new Ayer'a Hair Vigor is a strong hair tonic, promoting the growth of the hair, keeping all the tissues of the hair and scalp in a healthy condition. The hair stops falling, dan druff disappears. A splendid dressing. ITide by tho J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell. LUi. Watch Repairing. More good watches are ruined inthe hands ol inexperienced xvork men than in any other way. A watch is too costly an article to entrust to any one xvho may claim the title of Watchmaker. Durfng my many years of busi ness I have alwavs giyen the clo sest attention to the careful re- C airing and adjusting of xvatchea rought to me and have bought none other than the best mater ul. Mv charties are never exces sive; ouly enough to cover the cost ol the work; neither do un necessary xvork nor charge for work 1 do not execute. Don't xvait until your watch reluses to run before having it cleaned, ud justed and freshly oiled. J. W. BRYAN, Graduate W atch-maker & Jeweler The Charlotte Observer THE LARGEST AND BEST NEWSPAPER IN N.C Eveiy Day iu the Year 8. a Year. The Observer consists of 10 to 1? pages daily and 20 to 32 pages Sun day. It handles inoie news matter, local, State, national and foreign than any other North Caralina news paper. THE SUNDAY OBSERVER, is unexcelled as a news medium and is also filled with excellent matter of a miscellaneous nature. SEMI-WEEKLY OBSERVER, issues Tuesdays and Fridaysat $1, per year, is the largest paper for the money in this section. It consists of S to 10 pages, and prints all the news tf the xveek local, State, na. tiona and foreign. Ac ress, THE OBSERVER CO. Charlotte N. C. The man xvho minds bis own business isn't so apt to have oth er people doing it for him. Often The Kidneys Arc Weakened by Over-Work. Unhealthy Kidneys Hake Impure Blood. Weak and unhealthy kidneys are re sponsible for much sickness ami suffering. uiereiore, 11 Kinney trouble is iertnitteil to continue, serious re suits are most likely to follow. Your other organs may need at. tentiou, but your kid neys most, because they do most and should have attention first. Therefore, when your kidneys are weak or out of order, you can understand how quickly your en tire body is affected and how every organ seems to fail to do its duty. If you are sick or " feel badly," besno taking the great kidney remedy. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. A trial will con. vince you of its great merit. The mild and immediate effect of Swamp-Root, the great kidney and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It stands the highest because its remarkable health restoring properties have been proven in thousands of the most distress tug cases. If you need a medicine yon should have the best. Sold by druggists in fifty-cent and one-dol- ; lar sizes. You may Lave a sample bottle by mail free, also a. tiamnmci lemnir von n. u how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghnmton, N. Y. Pon't make any mis take, but remember the name, Swamp Root, and don't let a denier sell you something in place of Swamp-Root iX you do you will be disappointed.