Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Sept. 30, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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V.H n 'ft . 0 l; t rv f. ' . . t" v - 1 II 11 V 1 ' V-5 VJ liOONi:. V ATAl(i A COl'Vl Y. N.C.. rilt'lISDAY SEPTUM!!!:!? no 1 NO. Hi , i i 1 ..i.i f f :i . , I in i ' it . . .(..!.. In-, j mi. . -. ; e I . . i !.', I'.. Ill . , v'v lfo ! il! : ; .it i i ilo il.'i . . M U .N A !i . j. 11. im;M ! .V IIAKDIX, 1 'i ATE AGKXTS, "(', Tf'iiiU-WC. Vii;.-ns what voinvant in the '. oi fanning lands in tliis i! i -i mat iy and we .mSUIo our best t j.h ne you. '.i-lt. - NAT T. DULANKY, M. D., -SPEC I ALIST,- Fviirih St. BrM Teun.-Yu. Eye and Throat Diseases, lief raction for Classes. C. M. LEXTZ, M. D., Physician and Surgeon. r..N.i:u r.i.K, n. ., . . iinran 10 a mjui wiiosi? noun is DPVrs Ins pr ut- sHoi.nl Mi vins) . . . . o t he pei j.le ol ' Ihuiner Klk and s iiri oiindii coiit.t ry. (' a lis .iompt-ly attended atail hours. "-'22. u;. L, li. LOiYfi, v r ! OUNEY A r LAW, 15AXN L'H ELK, N. C. I-oT'VVi'.l practice in the courts U iitanii, Mitchell and adjoining o unties. , 7 r-H8 -,:i)MlXl) JONES LAW YEK LK.NOlK. N. IV 111 I Ui'Uiiil I) j" . . I li A 1 M 1. . he ( oiirts ot 0 ut:iu;l, ) 1 'oS F. A. LIN KEY, -ATTUUNKY AT LAW -ijoom:, n. c. Will practice in the courls of the loth .Judicial District' in all matters of a civil nature. n-ii isioh. J. C. FLETCHER, Attorney At Law, nooxK, N. V. :iivfil attention given to llections. XV. II LOV ILL vTTOIiNKY AT LAV,- JiOOSh, A. ( . i'Spoc-ial attention given iU business entrusted to 43 7-'.-'os E. S. GflFFEY, . rmnsEi ai law- ,'()( )XE, x. o. Prompt attention given to ll matters of a legal nature. ?r Abstracting titles and ''-tion ol chums n spcciiq- V l-l-'09. R, Ross D eoelly, r.NDi:iiTAKi:u & kmbai.meu SIKH'.VS. Tennessee, Has Varnished and (llass White Coffins; Black I.i road 'loth and White Plush Caskets; Hlack and White MetnJie C a s k e t s Robes, '!io"s and Finishings, Kxtra larce Collins nnd Cns kets always on hand. T'lua.c or ders given special attention. H. ROSS D0NN2LLY, lul Vf Lve isOtti. j C'i-.'-"tr.- v. I i i'l r tlif ill ove l.-.'niii.ir t 1: ( M.-!;i I.i. e s.N itnrtcr otic nil l:i Innr-t I . '.it ili'l i ! i' i i t; i !s 1 11. tt . w new ,.;i -r to rota- ,., i-.nrniliiX a ivlat : vc of lii1. i' I: i- Iiavi 'Vit n cl. It if . i .""111 iin-iit on tin' ro; iiliou to pLi'-o ijiost t li:it flip nlitor i-uMisli mi pi r'( ct we iliir" not fii 'oin. a slat no ol -I - ff i -on is in otic it tl,, si'ti.1 Iht.i a copv rf tic - tn lit on it or I'mvi- out nnv part of tin- nii'lt a!l.-l tlii State of .Hr l onlainin" saiat'. a Vv i not , of it. 1-iit ive it Immv in full. In'- i tir ll: it pv rv riiiliT of t!io Vx.s will Ik- tin' iii'ttor for hnv- ii.ir tr-;i1 it: "This i-i a world of be nil v, not 1' tli' in '.vlioliavemnncy loplin k an.! v.car it. 10-cs. but tin ni vln liiive s.i ils st-iisitizt'il to the swoct oil 'is. With love of tlie beautiful in : fei-jman nnd in nature, mme can be i poor, without it. none- can be jrich. '-Happiness is not carried in pocket but in the heart. I "The millionaire may make his j thousand tierp park in the i ich I vitlh 'V, and bv a fiction of t h e call it his own; but it all is .the front vara ol the poorest sijuatter in the rudest cabin on the rujrire 1 hillside. 'Tlie one who has paid for it owns it? No! It is most trulv IUf.s, used bv the one who mostlthev were, admits them. The ...... Icmovs it! I "What can a beautiful park l i . "And to him who lov. s the trees, the brooks, the hills the sky. what matters it who holds he title? "Why, Adam and I've never had a deed to K b n! "Descendants of theirs today hold deeds but not possession. It was not the laud itself which was taken away, but the power to enjoy it. "What we love is ours ami nothing more. "We can truly possess nothing that we sacriliee to our own selt ish purpo-es. It is only to the ilium who is iooi' iii.il i-inu . 1 . : . !. 4- ..- I 1 1. wealth glows like n bright star in the night. The law of-recompense is always in force. It is tal ly when darkness shrouds our world that we can see the light of a million others. "Did we not learn in boyhood that the bubble is brilliant only when we grasp it? "The gems in the fine lady's hair and at her throat sparkle not for her eyes, but for the eyes ol others She owns only some costly stones neycn the priceless light that dances iu them. This priceless treasure is only for them who love it, and for them it is scattered broadcast at their very feet in countless myriads of frost flakes on the brown winter earth and in the morning dew drops in the summer grass, 'What we love we own and there our real possessions end. If our love be greed and lust, then these stinting serpenls of vice will creep into the heart and make it their abode. Hut. to the soul where love is pure nil in the world that is good and sweet Hies straight nnd swift as a ho ining dove. "Yes what we loye is ours, and in the same degree as we love we own. All that is worth while in the world we may ow n, if we will. Washington's Plague Spots lie in tlie low, maishy bottoms of the Potomac, the breeding ground ground of malaria germs. These germs cause dull, fcyer and ague, biliousness, jaundice, lassitude, weak ness and general debility and bring suffeiing or death to thousands year ly. Hut Electric Bitters never fail to destroy them and cure mala.ial troubles. "They are the best all. round tonic and cure for malaria 1 evjr used," writes R. M. James, of Louellen, S. C. They cure stomach, liver, kidney, and bbod troubles and will prevent typhoid. Try them. Guaranteed by all drugyists. iii-t In rn Tth ,t; to lsvi. 1,.! , ,',:.(, . ;r:. r. ' T.i- fit it!.-t :i .-w :i :nl ('.;- rier ch.il',. :-..! sn'ifiiinv.-iri.-ii- Mississippi in SiaHiarv ll.ill in i!u cvioUn! at U iishiimion Tl ' New 1 1 i v.-ti. limn.. i;.-iftr ne- Ic - j - ti'il tin? clt-'ilVmr.' mi l pays thi stih n lid tribut'Mo the only ii:-ii!..it tho Southern Coiif'(h'i- ; arv ev r had: "Tln n is sotn'lhinir to say a- Miuiit Ji'fiVrsmi lavisainl his ml- j mission to the Niitiotial Temple : ol raine. It is hi;h time that th- j ! mist which for a half a century 'has distorted the north's view of ; this son of the south was cleared ' jnay. It is is justice lime that j the man who ia his day hiiffered j more than any othc.- Southerner 'for t he cause in which he believed j Ishould cease to be reckoned n ' j traitor and coward, and he teemed for what he was a brave trii--, Southern geiitleinn. ".JeffeiHon I'.ii is had his faults; the couih, which knows best what south understands that had its president been a nan more after the Lincoln type the result might have been different. Ibit the isoiitli , will never cease to admire and honor the man with an iron nerve, of dauntless courage, of tireless energy, of peerless chivalry, who sufl'.-rcd and dared and allbut di ed for the causrf he loved and lost. Of the host of true men who gave their best und their nil for the Confederacy because iu the'r deepest hearts they believed they were doing right, none wan more sincere than he. Of that multi tude who lined up for the strug gle against their brothers of the north none was braver and none was nobler. His saeiifice was as extreme as it was sincere, and his treatment by the victors al ter the crash came was sore med icine for a heart that was break ing. "it is a century and a year since Jefferson Davis was born. It is near to half a century since his cause was lost. It is twenty years since his death. What bet ter time could there be tosiguify, by the placin of his statue in the nation's capitol, that t he wounds of that bloody war are healed, that in the blood ol brothers shed the Union is forever cemented on a foundation that etaud.it.li sure. There let his presentment stand, erect, uoble, commanding, im pressive, as he stood in the days when he was master of the des tinies of half a nation. Let it there remind the south that it was mistaken and the north that it misunderstood. Let it picture v. martyr to a cause that, though lost, was not wholly vuin, since it taught brothers to appieeiate a relationship they were iu dan ger of forgetting. And not iila ppropria tely mitrlit there be cur ved on it the inscription which an unknown poet of the south once suggested for his statue: "Write on its base: ""Weloved him!" All these years, Since that torn flag was folded . we've been true, The love that bound us now re vealed in tears. Like webs unseen till heavy with the dew." Dysentery is a dangerous di.sc.nsu but can be cured. Chamberlains Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem edy has been successfully used in nine epidemics of dysentery. U has never been known to fail. It is eq ually valuable oi children and adul ts, and when reduced with water and sweetened, it is pleasant to take Sold by J. M, Hodges. When a man gets to arguing with hiscousciuceyou may lies u re bis appetites are busy I.M :n 13 I.!;tor M .orr. of the Topi.-. A form, r C.i!.lrti-li man. In in ; ;., ii a ilj-i.cit St.ito. --. n.N t i.r T ;ic a a full column obit u;ir .I'sirilx r. I li io i a taaa ln ;; t !i" ::!! to tl.i' i tlilof. hu' wln.M-pap.-r hiM-.iunol nlio.d ),, ,.,v tl,(. j";t t.-uu-i- of .1.no per yr:.; , to i int fiee ot charge an j (,Vi::iry norili wvciiil tlollats !i Ti l wivl :i copy of ptmcr to linn r-atis. la otir luit f c irrpr in the mnvsnantT field we have met mi- ! nierons rases like this, hut have; lofpnimd from makinjjnuy cotn- mcnt concerning them. Wehave ,!0 disposition to treat any one wjjj, undue htirshin ss, but we wju assert here that no tiht lis- )0lj skinflint who is too stiniry or ari-ow to su'ascrihe for the p . per when he is abundantly a- iile to do o, has any riht to. e-Ichiiui favora from tliis cjuarter. We will sav positively and em phatically that such people may expect to pay full advertising rates for all exaggerated praise cl their friends which they wish to appear in these coin inns. Oli, qtiit your kickin' beloved. We take it that it had nocard-of-th inks attachment, and that being the case, you should not complain. This p iper has had a vast deal of experience along this lme. One inst nice we relate. A man who never could be persua ded to take the paper, and was amply able, sickened and died, as men will do. The funeral over, three men, none of them taking the paper, were appointed to draft for publication an obitua ry in his memory. It came, l.iud ing him to the skies nnd giving Ins spiiit a smooth and sufesale over Jordan's waters and a vic torious entrance info the eternal city, and as it was short, only covering a column and a half, of course we printed it. If we hadn't a majority ol our readers would never Imve known that such a man had ever lived. And the com mil tee has never thanked us yet. Democrat. Be sure and take a luttle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy with you when starting on your trip this summer. It cannot be obtained on hoard the trains or steamers. Changes of wa ter nnd climate often cause sudden attacks of dial rhoea, and it is be o be prepared. Sold by J. M. Hodges. The following from the St. Lou is Republic of one hundred years ago shows that the world is mo ving some: "The post rider arriv ed here last post day," accord ing to an announcement by the editor, "with very few papers, owing (as we learn) to his hav ing lost one end of the mail. We hear several letters of import ance ate missing, and the blun ders of this man have occasion ed considerable enibarrainient to the public ollieera and mer chants of these territories. He contrived to convince the post master general that he made on ly t w o failures last winter and spring. We could convince Mr. (i ranger by 1,000 letters that he had no mail at one period last winter for nine weeks." Seared With A Hot Iron, or scalded with overturned kettle cut with a knife b' uised by tdatri med dour injured by gun or in any other way the thing needed at once is Bucklen's Arnica Sal ye to Mihdue iullauimation and kill th pain. It's earth's supreme healer, in fallible for boils, ulcers, fever sores, eczema and piles. 2.SC at all drug- IZUti:, Oocs not Color the Eiair AYCR'S HAIR VIGOR Stop r.illliiK ll.i.r lelroy! Ianc1ruff ComposrJ of Sulphur . Chcerin. Q iinin. RoJium Chlorkt. Cipicum. SaCc. Alcohol, Wat it. Perfume. Ask yntir disrtor W rpinion of sucli a bair prepralion. AYCR'S HAIR VIGOR Docs not Color the &iair J ' Arm i'c'nh Aim. in. unset ( onni;n la View. I;ir!pin;-!i.iiu Ae- ller.il.l. Way back iu I0S2, Mr. Ilalley. astronomer royal ol Liiuland, i concluded that the comet seen j in that year had been f-ecn in lhe heavens in 1(!07 and in I.V51.I Me predicted it woul.J lie seen a gain in 17S."i, and so it was. It; returned in lSoo. It is dueaain; in IP 10, and astronomers arej today scanning the sky for the! first appearance ol llalley's com-j et 'although it may not be seen; until near the close of 1020. j It should be remembered thntj all comets are not nlllieted with I wanderlust mere wanderers in! space. Some are of that nature, going hither and yon through the univcrs, but some have an orbit as regular mid as well de fined as that of a planet, Hal ley's comet belongs to our solar system, and its orbit as is well understood, as is that of Jupiter or even Mars, our next door nei ghbor. Af.'T l.srioit was thirty eight years in rounding the orbit of Neptune, and then it turned and it has been coming this way ever since It will soon be a specJ tacle in our own bit of blue. But let none become afraid it will hit us. If it did it is far from certain that it would diccom inode us in the least. The earth passed through the tail of (he comifc in 171 and no ill effect was felt. It was a war year, and the war went on tegnrdless of it. So if this pretty solid earth should butt into llalley's coi.iel, there ought to bo a shower of dust possibly a rain of bould ers but the chances are the lo cal atmosphere would keep us from harm. llalley's comet will do us no injury. It will simply be a big object in our sky at night, and the pnragraphers would soon begin to crack jokes at its expense. But it will hot mind the paragraphers and their squibs. 'Twas a Gloiious Victory. There's rejoicing in Fedora, Tenn. A man's life has been saved, and now Dr. King's New Discovery is the talk of the town for curing (! V Pepper of deadly lung hemorrhag es. ''1 could not work nor get a bout,,' he w riles, "and the doctor did me no good, but after using Dr. King's New Discovery for three weeks, I feel like a new man.'" I' m weak, sore or diseased lungs, coughs and colds, hemorrhages, hay fever, a grippe, asllnn.i, or any bionchi.d affection it stands unrivaled. Price 50c. and $1. Tiial botiles free. Sold end guaranteed by all druggists. Don't trust a tiuin until you have laughed wit h him. Y'oti can till him by his laugh. 1 know all the laughs there are t h e hearty laugh, the nanny-goat laugh, the tweedledee laugh, a kind of titter, the guffaw, the mere smile, the merry laugh with the eye and the middle class laugh. They are all good, but save me from the man who laughs with his ears you know, the man who sits down at an en tertainment with a sort of 'T dare you to make nie laugh" kinder air and biles hislips when he sees a jot e. ilder. Children C ry FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTO Rl A An riCRMnt rrjlnc Make Hair Crow Watrli Repairing. More good watches are ruined int helm nds ol iuc.criciii ed work men Ihaa in nnv other way. A watch is loo costly tin article to entrust to any one who may claim thetilleof Watchmaker. Purfng my inanv years of busi nes.s I have always given the clo sest attention to the careful re pairing sunt adjust ing of watches brought to me and have liotight none other than the lust niater 11 1. My charges nre never exces sive; oidy enough to cover Ihe cost ol the work; neither do un necessary work nor charge for work I do not execute. Don't wait until your watch reluseH to run before having it cleaned, ad listed and freshly oiled. J. W. BRYAN, f!radii:iteWatch-niaker& Jewele the Charlotte Observer. Till-: ...VR'il'.ST AND li E S L" NKWSl'API- R IN N.C. hvviy D;y in tho Your 5. a Your. The Observer consists of 10 to 1? pages daily ami 20 to 32 pages Sun day. It handles mnic news matter, local, State, national and foreign than any other North Caralina news paper. . TH K SUNDAY OBSERVER, is unexcelled as a news medium and is also Idled with excellent matter of a miscellaneous nature. SEMI-WEEKLY OBSERVER, issues Tuesdays and Fridays, at $1. per year, is the largest paper for the money in this section. It consists of S to m pages, and prints all the news if the week local, State, na. tiona and fueign. Ai less. . TII K OBSERVER CO. ClIAItt.OTTE A. C. Put potatoes in a cart over a rough road nnd the small ones go to the bottom. In buying a cough medicine, don't be afraid to get Chambei Iain's Cough Remedy. There is no danger from it, and l eleif is sure to follow. Es pecially recommended for coughs, colds nnd whooping cough Sold by J. M. Hodges. It is almost impassible lor a man to keep iu the straigh and narrow path if he is driving a mule. Do You Get Up With a Lame Back? Kidney Trouble Mikes You Miserable. Almost everyone U nnwst of Pr. Kilmer's Swamn-Koot, tin: great, kiilney, liver anil liluililer remedy, lie. !r cause of its reiunik able health restoring jit'openies. i-'.wumi). , Root luUiils almost ff. every wish in over- J l pain i:it!ie hack, kul W ni-ys, liver, bladder Xfl und every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water and sealdin;;paiii in passing it, or bad efforts fol lowi iifi use of liquor, wine or brer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of beinr; compelled to o often throuii'u tho day, and to get up many times dnrini; the lii(,'ht. Swa.cp-IvOot is not recommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble, it will be found jr.st the remedy you need. It has been thor oughly tijtod iu private praeiii c, and has proved so successful that a special ;t rangetnent h is been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not al ready tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a bock telling more about Swamp-Root, and how to lindoutif youhavekid- -4fc. ncy or bladder trouble. R-pSCSUf When writiugtuctttion fjj2ESK!SjS2a8- reading this generous 5jJ!3!!?8iS3S;S25: offer iu this paper and ffffi58JWa send your address toggpti! Dr. Kilmer & Co., h. oikoVup-hom. liinghamton, N. V. The regular fifty-cent and oue-dollar size bottles are sold by all druggists. Don't make any mistake but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad dress, Biaghaju;on,N, Y,,0tt. (very bottle,. 11 Cd-- f v. t; I 1 - (. 4. r. f n; ..hi A , if 1 I u ', 'if .-J - i It tii 'i , k . "ft '5
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 30, 1909, edition 1
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