Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / May 29, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Dizzy? Then your liver isn't acting well. You suffer from bilious ness, constipation. Ayer's Pills act directly on the liver. For 60 years they have been the Standard Family Pill. Sn ai' doses cure. A dr2u5gg,stg. yiwir inoustuclie or beard a beautilul ,r rich biark ? Then use hru j vm iMfiuniui'Q nvcfprth U Jt iuuiinin u uil Whiskers R. P. Hall A Co. . Nashua, N. H. fire INSURANCE. Ve rite Fire Insurance poli ier n all kinds of property nil! largest home and for ifi; ecompanis. er- loss sustained on property insured in tbis agency, established filtern years ago, has been prompt ly and satisfactorily settled. We are agents for the North Carolina Home, Aetna of Ilartford, Hamburg Bremen, Hartford, of Hartford, Con. Insurance Company of North America, Niagara of New York, Home, of New York and German American. Policies placed ou our books are promptly renewed before expira ation. Wo write risks from $i00 to f Hm.'.oOO, on property in town or country, at lowest rates. Avery & Eevin, Agts. Post-office Building. AS11EYILLE BUSINESS COLLEGE. (In the Land of the Sky.) Full Business, Shorthand, Engli&h, Typewriting and Banking Courses. Extensive patronage; highest endorse ments; both sexes enter any time. 126 SITUATIONS 126 in the past year. Cheap board. In structions by mail. Address, H. S. Shockley, Asheville, N. C. N. B. If you enter now you can pay S'-jS.lO tuition after course is complete and money earned. UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL, The Summer Term begins June 9th, to continue three months. Thorough instruction in courses admitting to the bar. Special lectures by eminent lawyers. For Catalogue, address . . . Jas. C. MacRae,Dean, Chapel Hill, N. C. SYDHOR & HUNTLEY. RICHMOND, VA. Tirt: GREATEST STOCK OF FINK AND MEDIUM FURNITURE IN-THE SOUTH. (iora:B,srosoKSCE SOLICITKD. : : : : 709-711-713 EAST BROAD STREET, RICHMOND, VA. GENTLEMEN, Get the New, Novel Discovery, INJECTION. Cures Gonorrhoea and Gleet in 1 to 4 days. Its action is magical. Prevents stricture. All complete. To be car ried in vest pocket. Sure preventative. Sent by mail in plain package, pre paid, on receipt of price. $1.00 per box; 3 for $2.50. John Tull. Drug gist, Sole Agent. V-M, 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE -i . ... Trade Marks Designs Copyrights &c Anyone am dinar a sketch and description maT Onlekly asrort-tin our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent B-'nt free. O!ost aeency for securing patents. Patents taker, through Munn & Co. receive iper.UU notice, wit rtout charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. T.arerest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, (3 a J'ir : four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers. MN&Co.361 New York branch Office. iS T St Washington. D. C Womanly Beauty Sparkling Eyes & Bright Fac Are.the Fruits of Sound Nerves. Ipjl THE GREAT FRENCH " u NERVE TONIC AND VI TALIZER Cures Nervous Exhaustion, Hysteria, Dizzine-s, Headache, Back ache & Female Weakness so common attending; the Monthly Periods. U R S Passln through the trying change from Girlhood to "Wo manhood will find in it a wonderful relief and benefit. It "Quiets and vtrenrrthens the Xerves, Cleanses the Blood, Clears the llrain and Tones up me wnoie System. MAKES A WO MAN LOOK YOUNG AND FEEL YOUNG. Price 50c, 12 Boxes $5, oent by mail to any address. Sold by jumjn iill, uruggist, Morg-anton. PIGEON I UK Mi NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS As Told by the Papers in the Neighboring Counties. CALDWELL. Twenty-Five Citizens Indicted for Re fusing to "Work the Road Barn Burned 90th Eirthday Celebrated. Lenoir News. May 23rd. Mr. Lute Nelson writes back from the West that all the "money that grows on trees" had been gathered before lie got out there. Marriage license have been is sued for the marriage of Ed. Bradshaw to Lou Keller, and Clarence Triplett, of Wilkesboro, to Mary E. McDade, of Patterson. Mr. J. L. Nelson, of our town, has been elected a director of the State Normal and Industrial Col lege of Greensboro to fill the va cancy caused by the resignation of Mr. Hugh Chatham. The railroad surveyors are near Globe with the line. One party going over the route says "the line is so crooked up in the mountains that in walking over it he met himself coming back." The 90th birthday of the vener able John Nelson, Esq., was cele brated at the residence of his son, Mr. .1. L. Nelson, in this place, last Friday. Mr. Nelson is a re markable man, retaining his metal faculties and bodily activi ty to a remarkable degree for one of his age. Mr. W. M. Morris, of Hudson lost his barn by fire one night last week. A calf, some forage and some grain, with the build ing was an entireloss. The barn is supposed to have oeen set on fire by tramps sleeping in it. Mr. Morris had some insurance on the building, though his loss is considerable. About twenty-five citizens of King's Creek and Lower Creek townships were before J. G. Bal lew, Esq., yesterday charged with refusing to work the public road. Certain amendments ha ve been ordered by the county com missioners to aroadleadingfrom Lenoir to Grubb's mills on King's creek. The amendments amount to making a new road in some places and these defendants above mentioned claim the work was to be done by subscription and not by regular road bands, hence thev refuse to work. The case wTas continued until Saturday 31st on account of the absence of Mr. W. H. Bower, who is attor ney for the parties. The case is creating a good deal of interest and will be watched close! v. WATAUGA. Mr. Liney Will Not Be a Candidate Sheep-Killing Dogs Married- Boone Democrat, May 22nd. Dogs have been making some serious inroads on the flocks of sheep in this vicinity of late, and as a penalty many worthless curs have 'bitten the dust Married, on Wednesday of last week, at the residence of the bride's father, Mr. Jerre Harri son, of Deerfield, Mr. Newton L. Harrison to Miss - Harrison. David Dngger, of Vilas, had a tumor removed from ,one of his shoulders on last Saturday that has been worrying him for a number of years. He was in town this week and seemed to be his natural, jolly self, regardless of the operation. The Allegham- Star quotes Mr. Creed Stamper, a'prominet repub lican of that county, as saying that in case the Hon. K.Z. Linney was a candidate for congress in this district, he would come out as aindependent candidate. Mr. Lin ney has always been conceded to be a man. of great ability, and possessing as he does a wonder ful foresight, he will not be a can didate, and prefers to see, we are told bv those . who ought to know, E. Spincer beaten than himself. No, Mr. Stamper will not be a candidate. ALL EYES ON TEXAS. Great is Texas. Her vast cotton crops . and marvelous discoveries amaze the world. Now follows the startling states ment of the work at Cisco, Tex., of Dr. Jiang's .New Dis covery for consumption. "My wife contracted a severe lung trouble," writes editor J. J Eager, "which caused a most obstinate cough and finally re suited in profuse hemorrhages, but she has been completely ,cured by Dr. King's JNew Dis covery." It's positively guar anteed for coughs, colds and all throat and lung troubles. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free at John Tull's. Mcdowell. Distillery Burned A Valuable Farm Wide-Tire Wagons. Marion News, May 23rd. Insurance agents and candi dates are about to take the town. Mrs. P. E. Simmons, of ,Mor ganton, is visiting Mrs; A. R. Buffaloe. Oliver's railroad force, steam shovel and other equipments, ar rived this week, and pitched their tents about three miles above town. A wagon with an 8-inch tire was an attraction on our streets Tuesday. Wide tires make good roads, and we hope the time will come when they will be generally used. Mr. E. Lawrence'' who bought the Calvin Wood farm near Mica, in Mitchell county, was in town Tuesday. He is making grand improvements on this al ready valuable place. Heintends to plant 8,000 fruit trees this year. This place can be made worth 50,000, and we learn only cost Mr. Lawrence $ 8,000. On Monday afternoon the dis tillery of J. M. Ennis, near Nebo, was burned. The fire occurred about ail hour after the days work was off, and nothing was saved. There was a corn mill in the same building, which was burned together with 40 bushels of grain, two and a half barrels of whiskey, all fixture?, books, etc. It was a steam plant and the engine and boiler are almost beyond repair. Other McDowell Items. Marion Democrat, May 22nd. The little son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Neal is seriously sick. Dr. Moran,of Morganton, was called in consultation with Dr. Kirby, Wednesday, and Mrs. Malone, of Morganton, mother of Mrs. Neal, is in attendance upon the sick child. Dr. M. F. Morphew and his partner, J. B. Glenn, lost" their store building and goods at Crabtree, last week, by fire. The oss will amount to about $2800, with no insurance. This loss is a severe blow just in the midst of the season. The origin of the fire is unknown. Two car loads of stock were shipped from Marion to points in the East, last Friday. One car carried hogs to Richmond, Ya., and J. L. Morgan was the ship per, the other car carried 10 head of horses and mules which went to Goldsboro, where Cal vin Wood, who was the shipper, will dispose of them. Col. P. J.Sinclair has marketed on the average about 100 quarts of strawberries per day during the past week. His "patch, lo cated opposite his dwelling on South mam avenue, seems al most inexhaustible and is proof that if the proper effort is made truck farming would prove a bonanza for the right man. LINCOLN. Two Deaths in North Brook Township Bitten oy a Mad Dog. Lincolnton Tournal, May 23rd. The "Sanctificationists" have been holding meetings near Elm Grove for the past week. The farmers report that the strawberries were cut short one third by the dry weather. The wheat crop is looking some better since the rains of this week. Still it is safe to say that there will be a poor crop this year. The G-vear old son of Mr. Bob Snipes, who lives two miles from town, was bitten last week by a dog supposed to be mad. His mother brought him to town and had the mad stone applied, but it did not adhere. Mr. Lawsoh Bess, of North Brook township, died TuesdaT, May 20th, and was buried at Bess's Chapel Wednesday, the 21st. His death was quite unex pected, as he was apparently well until a few hours of his death. He is thought to have died of old age, being 88 vears old. Rev. Cots worth C. Wilson also died on the 20th of May and was buried on the 21st at Bess's Chapel. His age was 55 years He leaves several .children. De ceased was a prominent man. At one time he served the county in the legislature. For Over Sixty Years. Mrs. Window's Soothinjr Syrnp has been used for over 60 years by millions of moth ers for their children while teeth inp, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain; cores wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. I. will relieve the poor little sufferer imm t diately. Sold br Druggists in every part e the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle, of sure and ask for "Mrs. VVinslow's Sooth Be Syrnp," and take no other kind. ing CLEVELAND. Killed by Lightning Oil Mill for Lattimore Real Estate Deal Four Legged and Four-Footed Chicken. Shelby Star, May 21st. Mr. J. A. Smith, of Sharon, had a four-legged and, four-footed chicked hatched out last Friday. It is living and doing well. I.Ir. Burwell Harris, an aged citizen of No. 2 township, sustain ed a severe stroke of paralysis last Saturday, and is completely helpless and speechless. He is about 80 years old and his recov ery is estremelv doubtful. We learn on good authority that an oil mill will be erected at Lattimore at an early date. Messrs. J. P. Dellinger and W. T. Calton are the movers in the en terprise and already a large a mount of stock has been taken. Solictor J. L. Webb bought the Shelby Hotel property last Fri day afternoon from Mr. C. C. Roberts for $3000 cash. Mr. Webb already owns the Love building adjoining the hotel pro perty and these two buildings together make a most valuable piece of property. Our readers remember the good rain, accompanied by sharp lightning and heavy thundering last Wednesday afternoon, and it was during the progress of this rain 'that lighting' struck the house of Mr. Thomas Martin, a good farmer who lives just across the Lincoln county line, three miles from Fallston, and instant ly killed his young son, about seven years old, and also shocked him quite severely. The bolt of lightning seemed to come down the chimney and neither the house nor chimney were damaged in the least. Mr. Martin and faniily and Mr. Frances Boyles were sitting in the room in front of the fire pluee when the shock was felt. Mr. Martin was sitting in a chair and his son was on the floor, and Mr. Martin fell over and he was lifted to the bed and they .were buisy working with him and did not know the son was hurt. until they came to ex amine him and found life extinct. The other persons in the room were not shocked. The Methodist Conference Disposes of the War Claim Matter. Dallas, Tex.. Dispatch, 21st. The issue which has been re garded as the paramount conten tion in the sessions of the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Sonth, since the assembling of that body in Dallas on May 7, appears to be near its final stop to settlement. The miuority report of the pub lishing committee on the war claim has been rejected by the General Conference, and today what is kuown as the McMarray substi tute, was, in an amended form, adopted in irs stead. Tbe provis ions of tbe McMarray substitute are a mild censure of any agent of the church wbo may have need improper methods when the war claim was pending, ratifies tbe former action of the college of bishops in their oiler to the Sen ate to return the entire sum of the war claim-it that body so voted, makes this actiou of the bishops tbe legal action of the General Conference and of tbe Methodist Episcopal Church. This latter provision is embodied in what is known as the Jordan amendment, which created debate last night and during tbis inorning,'8 session. A special commistee was author ized to be appointed to revise and make more perfect and clear the provisions of the entire document. Until the reco:nmendatious or charges to be male by the special committee are before the General Conference it is impossible to state lor a certainty-just what po sition the war cliim is in in its final stages. Statesyille Landmark. Some years ago Cougress passed au act giving the Southern Metho dist Church $288,000 for damages to the Church's publishing house at Nashville, Tcnn., daring the civil war. After the claim was al lowed it developed that Barbee and Smith, the agents of the pub lishing house, had given an attor ney, one Stahllmn, rbout one third of the claim to lobby for tbe bill. The rumor bad gone abroad that tliis attorney" was to get a big share of the mouey before the claim was passed, dnd a number of Senators inquired of Barbee and Smith if tbis was true. They made evasive answers answers calculated to deceivi and mislead and after the facts developed they were charged with fraud and deception. Since then this war claim matter has beifa a source of trouble. Many Methodists thought that the Cuurcb should repudiate the action of Barbee and Smith, return the money and wash its hands of the whole transaction. Others thought' difler&nt'y and thus tbe matter stood when the General Conference met in Dallas, Tex., some days ago.! That body has agreed on a sort of compro mise which appears-to give satis faction. It is a mailer of regret that the Church's agents were not entirely candid in the beginning Congress was disposed to pass the claim not oiyecceu tr a lobbyist re nj It wou! l!d have hppn Vmrt-et- if tl.o lo -v- Vs & VUV bbyist had not been employed, but wl uen questioned liarbee and Sniit ami they b should ha vepgi yen a plain unequivocal-answer, which did not." - MAKING THE CASH FLY. Congress May Pteach to the Billion Dollar Mark This Session Close to that Figure Now. Washington Dispatch to Baltimore Sun, Republican leaders are threat ened with a "bilhon-dollar ses sion," unless an early adjourn ment of Congress is reached. In looking over the annual ap propriation bills which -have passed the House and Senate during the present session.it will be found that the appropriations already made aggregate about $725,000,000. This does not in clude all of the general appropri ation Dills, tor some ot the latter have not vet been acted on bv the Senate, and others are still in conference. Some idea of additions vet to be made to the session's budget may be drawn from the fact that the appropriation bills which have already passed the House arrieci.m round numbers. Sr00.- 000,000. When these bills reached the Senate additions were made to the extent of $225,000,000. AH of the annual nnnrom-ia- tion bills have passed the House, with the exception xf the naval bill, now uinli'i- rrnsifWntinn and the general d.lk'iencv bill. I he iornm-, as reported to the House, carries about S75.000.- 000, and :he latter about $10,- 000,000. In the Senate tour of the appropriation bills are vet to be acted on and several are in conference. A few years ago the partv in in po wer w a s seri on s 1 v troubled with the charge of briiimno- on "a billion-dollar Congress," which included two or .more sessions. Now the pros pect that the appropriations for l the present session may foot up $1,000,000,000 fills the adminis tration leaders with alarm and makes them anxious to bring ad journment as soon as possible. A distinguished republican Sen ator, wbo is directly interested in the consideration of the ap propriation bills, expressed irreat surprise when informed to what extent the Treasury is being drawn upon by this Lomrress. "It will be disastrous, from a party point of view, if we have to go before he country at the tall ejections with a record of having expended 1,000,000,000 during a single session of Con gress. W e have been condemned before for approfiriatinc a billion dollars during two sessions, and our Democratic opponents will not be slow to take advantage of fixing: upon us the responsi bility for making such an unpre cedented raid upon the Treasury at one session. e have been verv general in our expenditures both at hoi..e and abroad and some ot the ' ppropriationsareun doubtedly open to criticism. Un less we put the brake on at once and shut down on the outflow of money from the Treasury we will find ourselves confronted by a deficit instead of an increasing surplus in the Treasury." STATE PEESS ASSOCIATION. Editors to Meet at Hendersonville in June Declined to Accept Free En ' tertainment. Greensboro Dispatch to Raleigh Post. Messrs. Clark, of the Statesville Landmark, Whitaker of the Win ston Sentinel, and Sberrill, of tie Concord Times, who compose the executive committee of the State Press Association, met here yester day and after some hours in talk ing about rates for board at the competing towns, concluded to se lect Oendersonvilla as tbe place and June 25 28 as the time for holding the next annual meeting of tbe State Tress Association The only hitch about Jackson Springs and UendersooTille was that thev wanted to entertain the convention free of charge. That kind of deadheading seems to have gone into innocuous desue tude amoug the independent edi tors of the State, and after some telegraphing, rates on board were agreed upon, WON'T FOLLOW ADVICE AFTER PAYING FOR IT, In a recent article a promi nent physician says, "It is next to impossiable for the physi cian to get his patients to carry out any prescribed course of hygiene or diet to the small est extent; he has but one re sort left, namely, ' the drug treatment." When medicines are used for chronic constipa-" tion, the most mild and gentle obtainable, such as Chamber lain's Stomach & Liver Tablets, should be employed. Their use is not followed by consti pation as they leave the bowls in a natural and healthy con dition. For sale by W. -A. Leslie; druggist. ceivi ERP AND VOLCANOES. BiU'Ruminates on the Catastrophe at St. Pierre. Bill Arp in Atlanta Constitution. It is a fitting time to think about volcanoes, earthquakes aud other internal and infernal thiugs that are goiug on in the bowels of tbe earth. We can see upward aud outward to the stars aud planets tor millions aud billions ot miles. bnt the inside of this little world is all unknown. We live upon its crnst and eat and sleep and dance and prance aud tight and talk w.ir and politics aud trusts with no thought of how near we are to the fires that are burning under us nor when they will break out and con snme us all, as the'Kcertainly will some time according to Scnptnre. Those .internal fires have been burning for thousands of years, and the mystery is, why tbey have not burned to the surface long be fore this. Where does the heat all go, aud where are the escapes the chimneys for the smoke and tbe ashes and lava! Surely these few volcanoes can't discharge it all. The word volcano, or vul cano, as it used to be called, comes from Vulcan, the god of fire, and the ancients believed that the old fellow had his shons and furnaces down there, and sometimes when he blowed the bellows too hard the fire bursted out through a. hole in some mountain and the melted rock spouted up and run over the tauk and washed down in the form of lav, which is another Latin word and means to wash. Vol canoes are Vnlcan's chimneys, and as far back as we have history, sacred or profane, these chimneys have had their periodic discharges. Some writers believe tint there was one of these not far from Sodom and Gomorrah, and those cities were destroyed just like Fompeu and Ilerculaneum, or more receutly like St. Pierre in Martinique. A few yearg ago, two of my bovs took a sea voyage from New York to Trinidad and stopped at all those little islands and historic points. They told us of Martini que, where the Empress Josephine was born and Jived until she was 15 years eld a"d whose beautiful monument they saw. Unhappy lady! The world is still weeping for her. They climbed the heights of this same volcano and looked down into its crater, for it was quiet and peaceful and bad not had an eruption for fifty years The island is small, very small, not quite as large as Bartow county, out uau a deuse and mongrel pop ulation of 180,000 people chiefly Indians, negroes and Chinese. The whites numbered less than 10,000, of whom only 1,200 were French. Just think of it. Oar county is about 25 miles square and it is quite thickly settled and has 25,000 people, while Martini que has seven times as many and most of them are negroes. These negroes were all slaves until 184S. They live chiefly ou fruit and any thing they can pick up or .steal. My boys amused themselves throwing dimes into the water that was from 20 to 30 feet deep aud the little negro boys would plunge in and dive to the bottom for the money aud always got it. Then I got to ruminating about Vesuvius and Tompeii and Hercu laneum. I used to speak a speech about ancient Greece and Rome and Thebes, and I always said Po ropy eye and The bees, for that was right then, and so was Sisero for Cicero, but tbey have got new ways now and I don'i know where I am at. Vesuvius has been cut ting up for more than two thous and years. It has had nine bad eruptions, but there are still people living on its slopes aud cultivating them. Its enormous crater is 2 miles arouud and 2,000 feet deep, and the accumulated lava some times raises its briuk S00 feet during an eruption. When Spartacus, the gladiator, was besieged by the Eomans be with his little army of seventy men took refuge in that crater, for it was quiet then, and killed 3,000 Romans who attacked them on its brink. The great orator, Cicero. bad a beautiful villa at its base, but m tbe j ear lo A. y. old Vulcan fired up bis furnace and belched forth hre and smoke and lave and ashes and buried those two cities sixty five feet deep aud changed the sea shore and tbe river so their sites could not be fonnd and when fonnd by accident they were two miles inUnd. For three ceuturies excavations have been going on aud of late with great energy and the veritable homes of the cultured people have been found filled with ashes and cinders that have pre served them all these centuries. These boQ.es and halls aud cburehe3 and temples have been cleaned out and even the painting on tbe walls have been restored aud the beau tiful marble sculpture cleaned and LIKE A DROWNING MAN "Five years ago a disease the doctors called dyspepsia took such hold 01 me that I could scarcely sro." writes Geo. S. Marsh, well-known attorney oi Nocona, Tex. 1 took quan tities of pepsin and other med icines but nothing helped me. As a drowning man grabs at a straw I grabbed at Kodol. I felt an improvement at once and after a few bottles am sound and well." Kodol is the onlv nreDaration which exact ly reproduces the natural di gestive Duices and consequent ly is the only one which digests any good food and cures any form of stomach trouble. Les lie's drug store, reuewedjnst as it was when the awful Valamitv orenrrpil TI.a celebrated scu Indira fio-nrpa nf .uaocoon ana his sons strangled by r ... " serpent was found there in npr- fect condition. In some of t.hsp beautiful homes of the wealthy the tables were set for a feast and in the temple were found the vnA and silver adornments that are sual in such olaces In Mia 'I pie of Juno there were the eornsps of 300 people who had fled there ior satety, but Juno was powerless aud tbey all perished iust as did the 3,000 at St. Pierre who fled nto thelioman Catholic cathedral. The fate of all these cities wa very similar, for it was not lava i 1 - inai aestroyed them, nor at St. Pierre, bnt a shower of cinders nd ashes, aud these are nreserva tives of anything that they eucase. v uen we consider all such 01. amities a grateful and thoughtful people will be thankful to Oar Heavenly Father that we live in a ana.remarkably free fiom calami ;.v or affliction. No. volcanoes hanf- their threatening peaks over us or near us. and no cvclones visit ns. The noisome pestilence doesn't vis it ns ty day or night. Cadaverous famine does not darken our house holds with its awful distress, but we live in peace and in plenty and Great Slaughter SeJe OF MILLINERY ' Having decided soon, and wishing to dispose of my stock of Millinery before leav ing, I have cut prices on all goods away down. These goods will positively go at agreat sacrifice and you should not miss the op portunity to get I Upto-Date HHIinery atjthe prices I am now offering. This is not a sale to make room for Fall goods but a great Slaugh ter Sale to dispose of my entire stock preparatory to moving. Call early and get the best bar gains. All goods new and up-to-date. RESPECTFULLY, Mrs. R. C. Cunningham, Wanted ! 1O00 Rosnm MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN To know that I am "with you once again to. do all kinds of photo work. Viewing, and especially stereo views, the most interesting of pictures, a specialty. A large collection of home and mountain views constantly on hand for inspection and sale. Call and get some of these for your own collec tion and to send your friends, and thus advertise our fine scenery and re sources. Cloudy as good as clear weather for 'sitting. Rooms over Gaither's Bookstore. Respectfully, N. B. First 25 Doz Cabinet Photos for y2 doz rates. Come at once if you want advantage of this rate. Light Bisect Delicious Cake Dainty Past ies Fine Puddings FlafeyCftSts the lines have fallen unto ins in pleasant places. i It is a fitting time now for those who like to read, romance that is founded in fact to take up that good old book of Bnlwer's, ' The Last Days of Pompeii"and rend it again. I have just received a olea iant letter from a North Carolina friend askiug me what I think of Carroll's book, "The Xegro a Beast," and he asks, "Do you believe the nig ger is a beast!'' I answered at the bottom of his letter, "Which nigger?" NO LOSS OF TIME. I have sold flhfirnVwirTfiir Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for years, and would rather be out of eoffeo and sn-. gar than it. I sold five bottles 01 it yesterday to threshers that could go no farther, and they are at work again this morning. H. R.Phelps, Plymouth, Ok lahoma. As will be seen by the above the threshers were able to keep on with their work without losing a single day's time. You should keep a bot tle of this Remedy in vour home. For sale by W. A. Les lie, druggist. to return North ILamsour,
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 29, 1902, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75