Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Jan. 31, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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j"i iiiar ---- :- - v--- irTTn V mq.b 1 Bring Your JOB PRINTING The news-Herald IS THE Best Advertising Medium IN THE . -TO- .Herald Office. tlR,T-CLASS WOBK AT : ,v.i Pricks T. G. COBB, Publisher. THE BURKE COUNTY NEWS 1 ConoIIlted Nov. 29.1901 THE MOR.GANTON HERALD I wMO,il, ov- Subscription Price, $i Per Year In Advance J PIEDMONT. SECTION VOL. XXII MORG-ANTON, N C, JANUARY 3 1 1 907, No. 41. 3 taviftfri NeWSHERAUD)o ii 11 11 1C 11 COUGH SYRUP , r.rs arS assists in '- "'r'.is from the sys- ':V-'y moving ths ?l A certain The Red Clover Blos som and ths Honey Eee is on every bottle. IIOYS LAXATIVE wSfi mo TIB fSFPASSD AT THS LABORATORY OF , DsWlTT & CO., CHICAGO. U. 8. A. iilil In ckkh mini company. . Lil t Y-a (alndr iN'itL' twi U. e. Army, abit X uii-.uarried men, between ages ami 33. citizens of the United t el -"-' character and temperatf .. ri! i ;' i-ak read and writ' F i ttiUTtuatiuu apply coR .;,,s '..sheer 15 West Trad 1: tinriutie. 5. C..40 South Main i; -.lie. X. C . Bank Bulding, .v. N C , G'enn Building. :yrz. S. C. or Kaynsworth and 'sBaiiJinsi. Greenville, S. C. .itr rganton Pressing Club. ' :'..;s e'eaned and pressed. Pants ' ; . .-. or shortened and fitted up sen a:ui boys. Coats re-lined and co:i r put on overcoats. All oi repairing done If my work . , jtsiv ou bring' it back and ii.i bv: .'lie over free of charge -,ou: work to the Morg-antoi 5 : .nid it will be done righ. at a reasonable price. Ladies' ..-tsc'.eai.-ed and pressed. V.v ne Wishing to join the club can Vtuir suits per month cleaned and -j ed for ;1.0 per month. ; have been cleaning clothes for sii rsanii think I can give satisfaction. uv. ill find my pressing club on the -rer ea.st of the Postofnce. ALFONSO KINCAID. At a Bargain. WILLIAM TATE POWE. Eulogy by Mr. G. S. Brad--haw, delivered in the grard opera house in Greensboroon Sunday, the 2nd day of De cember, 1906, at the annual memorial services of the Elks: A sad and sweet day this! We are not alone in sorrow at this hour The whole country is aLodge of Sorrow. The heart of ou r goodly Southland bleeds today at the bier of Samuel Spencer the foremost leader in her strenuous and busy life. Over the cold door of his silent chamber the great North drops a wreath of choicest flowers. The Capital City of his country with weeping eye and reverent tread gives him resting place at this hour am.n the choice sprits of her reatd-.'U But I am to speak cf anotner whose woik was in an humbler sphers I bring a wreath to the in nury .f one-whose simple life of unsung virtues owns no place in the public eye ami lays no claim to space on the printed page. His name is and will ever be among the uncrowned in that vast armv ot workers who toi; and do ;. .1 J and die for mankind. On one pa.-e a sacred page and only on that, per haps, it has been placed and traced by the finger of parental love. There sleeping in the Word of Life between the lids of the old family Bible it lives and is secure embalmed with sweft tears enshrined in the tender affec tions of the old home and guarded by the sweet vigils of a mother's love. In the little town of Morganton, N C, noted for the culture, the refin - nent and the w inning graces of i s eople. William Tate Poe. on th" 8 i day of the beautifol month of May, loftv oame forth as a flower and with dower, and on the 25th day of Septem ber, 1906, in the same place in the same home, was cut down as as a fl jw er and with the flower. The freshness, the beauty and the sunshine of the Spring-tide attended his coming The fading flowers and the falling leaves of theAutumnal-tide marked his going The tender years of his childh od and the joyous hours ot his boyhood are not noislessly steadfast and generous. His religious convictions were to him per sonal and sacred. Another has well said that he will be missed, and that the world has lost a force in a direc tion where it now needs new recruits. There is pathos deep and keen in the storv of his going. How freshly how sadly how vividly do we recall the handsome form, the robust figure, the picture of seeming perfect health, we saw a year or more ago. How sudden ly, how unexpectedly; how violently did the heavy hand of disease seize him! How swtftly; how tenaciously; how ruthlessly; how relentlessly; did i shake and shatter his superb figure! How pat-ently; how bravely; how un complainingly, how hopefully, he suf ered and fought! How touchingly sad fo watch him, week after week, day alter day, shrink and stagger and grow paie as that dread enemy sapped his life's blood! How deeply touching to witness the certainty of the end, the final surrender of a young life so ra dient in promise; so rich in hope and ambition, and so eager for longer years of service and honor. In the silent and lowly cemetery of hts native town by the side of his a .i...-eu father under the lengthening shadows of the cold and barren peaks of the Blue Ridge there is a green couch where faded flowers lie and die. As the parting rays of yonder setting sun retire before that titanic range of peak and crag, so do our finite minds recoil before the mystery of his untime ly taking off. In the fine phrase of a great orator: "We cry aloud and the only answer is the echo of our wailing crv. From the voiceless lips of the un- replying dead there comes no word; but in the night of death hope sees a s.ar and listening love hears the rustle or -i ving. He who sieeps tne-e whv n dying, mistaking approach of death for the return of health, said to a friend, "I am doing n i iely. I am bet ter now. " Let us believe in spite of doubts and dogmas, of tear and tears, But the remedy is a giOs uu ,itf administering he night time, when she ought to be in her little trundle bed beneath mother's wings, tacked snugly inj wuen we eee knee pant kids and beardless youths loafmg up and down tne streets too lazy to work and too trilling to think, and too stack ap to do odd jobs around home; we exclaim, it is uot stat uary law that we need but it' parent 1 law. Then, with this datk picture be fore as, we taru our jiaz and peer into the future and we see still a dark picture. It's crowded jails, with criminals peeping tbrougb the barg, asylum, boipituls, poor Louses and squall 1 poverty, gvtmb mg uens, court dockets and hell of prostitut o i. Then we hear the people cry ou: ''Give us a law to save our oys and Uirl.s t-rior: medicine at the wrong place on the sore, you are doctenug too far av from the near nf the difsp. Nnnln:l RDIiI 7Sfhaf l?rnn nc needs is motbers." That is what i his country needs just now: dili gent and watchful mothers, pure, frngal, economical homes and old tanioned daddies, who can wield a willow with greater ease than tt-eir sous can haudle a billiard cue r pc'&er chips We read in a newspaper tbe other ia.v of a court record in tbe State fTrXis wuh three hundred di . . . . . .-. . . . . -i .i,.... i . i . , "'ra tilers uucufiru lueieou we 'bought m.v God! whither are we j . p m m . lruuugi xne oniasfOgue savi: -Givy ud a striugeut law to regu- lare the great evil " But that's -tooiher gross error. You cannot that these dear words are true of him entwine around the marriage a'.tar and all the countless dead. One thing , a.Armnt nf matriflfft vow kai-run nrith thu out into the night and asked the grim ij . . , Ferryman to take him over the dark riv- " 'cltoi "l m vvneo you er that marks the unknown shore there "U"rue us ooeaieuce Wltn the Must Work Together. S jathern Publisher. No town will become a good business center so long as its business men rely on a few merchants to make the effort to bring trade to town. Too often tne men in a few lines of trade are about the only ones that i each out after custom. Other merchants wait until these men induce the people to come to town aud content themselves with trade that naturally drifts to their place. A public spirited mau should ask himself if he is doing part to attract people to come to town to trade in helping the entire businesb community and no town is a success unless all lines are working to extend the trade as far as possible and try ins to bring a larger territory in the circle in which the town is the business center. A pair of heavy mules and a heavy e. Perfect workers. Easy terms -jora Goats, 35 of the flock from one tne finest herds in Kentucky orobred Yorkshire hogs, bows in -row service, boars and pigs. Also m and Berkshires. Mammoth -rze Turkevs. finest strains for reeding-. J. E. COULTER, Connelly Springs, N. C. for us. They are unrecorded memories went the stainless soul of a gentleman mandates of the law, you prone who wore the white flower of a blame less and loyal Elk. OLD FASHIONED COURTIN' liary team and Water Heating, km Fitting, pier and Engine Setting, epasring Steam Boilers, team k Gasolene Engines ny kind of an Engine, team or Power Pumps. iinbinq. Steam Fitting or ater Keating Material of fuiiU, ,nd material guaran M. & E. RHYNE. which, let us hope, shall sweeten and brighten the twilight hours of the life of her whose tottering foot steps now approach the "realm where each shall take his chamber in the silent halls of death." Before he had reached the years of madhood he ventured into the Legislation is Not the Remedy for the great drama of life to play his part. Wronrj DoinQS Of the Times. lis sole mnernance was nis cnaracter i , ... . - . , -4. Tr- Just at this time all the world in and the stamp of maternal purity. His I only capital was his strong will and Clamoring lor a law to remeuy every the henedictions of a Christian home eeil. We are DOt mUCQ ot aU 1! - I!! 1U 01ES RHEUiATISL! imm, sciatica HEURALQIA ant! KIDNEY TROUBLE of tbe poisonous matter and acids which ve tne direct causes ot these diseases. Applied eitarnailv it affords almost In stant relief from pain, while a permanent ure Is being effected by purifying the blood, dissolving tbe poisonous sub stance and removing it trom the system. DR. S. D. GLAND B Of Brewton. Ga.. writes: S3 MI k-. i . . . . -11 ' utcd a suncrer ior . nurauw wi j w - th Lambftiro rif, RhMimtMm In KIT ftlllll 4lgt, and tried .11 tb. ramedle. that I con Id fftk . . . . ... I itum meaicai worKB, ana aww mwwiw g lth a number of tbe best physician,, bat found --.mute (uu iraTa uib rsuei omuuw 5-DRops." I .ball preacrlbe It In my plaotlo wrrbeuiaatlim aud kindred dlieeiwi " The fruits of the first half dozen years of toil, invested in the mercantile line, were swept away by the fire fiend. Undaunted he ventured again and af ter a year or more of toil he accepted a subordinate position with the Odell HarfTware Co., of this city, in Decem ber, 1897, wThere he commenced at the bottom and by diligent application soon rose, round by round, to the head of the management of cne department of Greensboro's largest wholesale estab lishment. Here for nearly a decade he has gone in and out among us. Here was his real work; here was his suc cess; here were his friendships; and here was the scene of his touching and pa thetic battle against his last enemy Here are those who can testify to the purity of his life and the whiteness of his soul. Need I attempt to draw for you a portrait of his manly form, whose handsome face, whose clean life, whose high character, whose stately bearing, whose generous deeds, whose kindly words, whose knightly impulses, whose unselfish nature, whose kindliness of thought and gentleness of speech, whose uncomplaining surrender to ?the ravages of a dr ad and fatal malady, and whose brave and pathetic fight for life in the prime of his young manhood are so fresh and so vivid within your recollection? There is peculiar reason why Elks should give him a place of honor in this annual memorial service. He was a charter member of this Lodge and no Elk ever illustrated in his daily walk more strikingly or more beautifully th" cardinal virtues of our order Justice, Charity, Brotherly Love and Fidelitv The world did not know the better and finer side of his nature He was not a man wno xmxea wirn tne cruwu. Modest always, unostentatious in all things, high minded, he was one of the brayest and gentlest of men who never gave effense and was quick to re sent one. Loathing hypocrisy and hat ing sham he was the soul of honor and the defender of virtue. His devotion to his friends was surpassed only by his devotion and loving deference to his aged parents. He sought not the ip plause of men. He cared naught for the to his church the Episcopal was uarmist. but as wc see it. this na tion is drifting toward paternalism We leach our bovs around the fireside to make money, get it hon- .ii it tuev can out sex, money Get mouev is ingrafted into the curnculm of our schools and we wend oar boys there that their wits may be shaipened and their hands the trained for school offlnaucial graft. And thus we send forth into the marts of trade cultured hnaciai sharks to rob and plunder and away its beautiful verdue and snap the vigor of tbe fragrant rose ot wedlock and it withers away and dies, as it's more of a divine than a civil institution. What we've got to do to remedy this evil is to go back to tbe old ra6hion way of courtiu'. Iu our raising up it was fashionable for men and women to get acquainted with each other. A fellow would go over to his girl's house Satur day evening and stay all night, ud help bis sweetheart wash the dishes aud rope of tbe calf while he milked, go a coon hunting Soturday night with her big broth er, aud stay all day Sunday and help chase the spring rooster down lor dinner. He cot acanainted with the whole household, sparked her daddy and mother and culti vated a familiarity with the whole business, even the dogs. He sparked bis girl in the cowpen, Food don't dierest? Because the stomach lacks some one of the essential digestants or the digestive juices are not proper ly balanced. Then, too, it is this undigested food that causes sourness and painful indigestion. Kodol For Indi gestion bhould be used for re lief. Kodol is a solution of vegetable acids. It digests what you eat, and corrects the deficiencies of the digestion. Kodol conforms to the the Na tional Pure Food and Drug Law. Sold here by Burke Drug Co. Mortgage Sale of Land. By virtue of a power of sale con tained in a mortgage deed of convey ance executed and delivered to me by J. L Navey and wife, M. S- Navey. on the 7th day of Augu t, luua. ana duly recorded in the Register's office in Burke county, book X, No. 2, page 10, I will expose to sale at publio auction to the highest bidder for cash, at the Court House door in the town of Morganton, N. C, on Monday, the 4th day of February, A D. 1907, the fol- fowing described piece or parcel of land, lying and being in the county of Burke andstateOof North Carolina, known and designated as follows: Ad joining the lands of H. B. Branch, josepn Williams ana otners; Deginning on a dead chestnut, ana runs east oi poles to a pine; thence with the mean ders of the ridge a southwest course to a stake in H. R. Branch's line, near tbe foot of said rid ire: then south with Branch's line 60 poles to a stake, thence west 23 poles to a stake, thence north 13 east 18 poles to the beginning, con taining 155 acres, more or less. Said sale made by reason of default in the payment of the debt secured by said mortgage, the same being evi denced by note for $170.00, the full amount whereof is long past due with interest thereon at tbe rate of six to) per cent per annum from the 7th day of August, 1905, until paid. This the 3rd of Jan., A. D- 1907. DAN WHISENANT, Avery & Ervin, Mortgagee Attorneys, It is said th it railway official prefer now to take reasonably short journeys in an automobile neal and court and marry for dol- down at the big spring, under the lars, and social prestige. They drooping willows, behind the grind human flesh aud woman's kitchen door, in the big sitting virtue into dollars, and make a j room as well as the pa.Ior. bargain couuter of wedlock 'a holv aitar. Then the people rise up aud ay: '-Give us a law to restrain our robbei chiefs and put a check rein upon our fasbson queens." But toa.-- uot the remedy, because the American hotes are turning them ut taster than we can turn them owu. It's like greasiug a borweV il tor (be lampers, we are doc oruig too Ur away iroin tne sore It's uot law thaj we need in nis country, tnt it's willow switch es and cowhide whips, rockpiles 'tionmiiEr w3od. hoeiue in the eard- In those good old fashioned days when a couple stood at hymen's tltar, it meant a sate enough wed ding. They were not strangers to -aeh other, and a hundred cbances to one, it meant a union that death alone wonld sever. In those good ays a divorce case in court was rarely beard bf. the own mi tbe barn, feeding tbe ho ud plopping the pigs, making tbt 'rater nills and sticking the beans oi wet days and picking cotton and shelling corn at odd times. Yes, we need more knitting needles and darning needles, patcb ing pants and darning socks, ds I wnsbing, scrubbing n;ort nd pl ug Taukee Doodle with the rolling pin at home. We are raising tor muy society lops, parlor so'diets cigarette muckers and street loafers ISC OI II It. II IIC lai W UaUtllt av m - , " a fv'.en we r-ee a little foppish sb r empty honors of life. His loyalty It, .... te-Mi-, gaddmg np aud dowu V Keei, talking &'-g and flirtio wuh i he buys, entertaining jouut jobless bloods in the parlor in th Over 800 Mormon Converts in Past Year. The annual mpeting of the presidents of the 16 Conferences f the Church of Jesus Christ, of pulling weeds n tbe backward, I -The Latter Day Saints, better 1 -.g the cows, shuckiDg the cor kdowd as the Mormons, was neld at Chattanooga, lenn., last NOTICE. - Janes Thrown enters and locrtes 150 acres of land in Upper Creek township. Burke conntr. on the waters of Upper Creek, ad ioinine the lands of T. W. Keller. Uibbs, T, M. Keia ana otners. .Beginning ou x. m. Reid'4 line formerlv the A. L, Carpenter line and run, various courses and distances for compliments so as to include vacant land Entered 17th December. 1906. An v person or persons claimine the above entry or any part thereof will file their pro test against the issuance ot a warrant ior tne same in the Entry Taker's office, and if said protest is not filed within thirty days liom xne aaie oi mis nuuix, x sn.ii issue m, a rant for the same as the law directs. IIThis Dec. 19th, 1906, I. B. HOLLO WAY, Entry Taker. veek. President Benjamin Rich, if the Southern States Mission, presided. Over 800 converts in the past year were reported, bringing the Southern m mber ship to 11,000. President Rich stated that the church intended to make an innovation within the next year by sending out oiaer men on me missionary work. The Honest Printer. Portland, Me., Advertiser. Various newspapers in the country have commented mirth fully aud otherwise, on the fac that the Ohio Penitentiary News has been forced to suspend publi cation because tnera are no printers in that institution to set the type and zet out the pa per. Very natnrallyv the circum stance is considered creditable to the craft. There are more than twenty bankers in the Ohio peni tentiary, with lawyers, doctors brokers and other "highly re spectable citizens to spare, but not a single printer is numbered amon the convicts, and the Lord only knows when there will be. Hurrah for the art pre servative! your tongue t And look in the glass you will see the effect You can't help puckering it makes you pucker to think of tasting it. By the use oC so called cheap Baking Powders you-take tfris puckering, injurious Alum right into your system you injure digestion. ruin your stomach.. and AVOiB AlrVM lF 'ffH ; j , aiviu 1CUIICU VJldUC V1CJ.1U J1 1 ATV 1 DQtC tnAfO , . - ..v. inan Alum but you have the profit of quality, the profit of good health. By a striking coincidence, a book on Jamaica was announced by the McMillan Co. on the dav when the news was received of the earthauake at Kino-ston. - o Nothing like knowing where fa- will break loose next and having your man on the spot. The saloon keeper in Brown vill who was killed, owned tbe "Tillman saloon". Perhaps it was the name that the negroes fired at. Gen. Punston seems aggreived because bricklayers in San Fran cisco are paid better ' than army officers. The bricklayers work sometimes, don't they? The Great Holiday Sale OF J. A. BEACH & S6N Begins December 8th and lasts till Januarv 1st. We are offerinr our entire stock of Dry Goods, Hats, Caps, Shoes, Ladies' Skirts, Facinators, Capes, fchalls, Men's and Boys' Pants, Overcoats, Boys'- and Youths' Suits, Men's and Boys' Shirts, Ladies' Vests, Misses' and Children's Caps, also a large lot of Jewelry. All the above at reduced prices during this sale. Com at once. Rugs. Rugs. Rugs. We have a pretty line of Rug-s and Lace Curtains and Table Covers cheaper than you can buy them in town. We have everything1 for the house l ne largest stock and the nicest selections of bran nev goods at New York prices, i ou can t atrora to miss this bargain sale. Christmas Goods. Wc have now displayed the prettiest and cheapest line of Christmas Goods ever shown in Morganton. More dolls and the prettiest dolls you ever saw at half the usual price. Horns and Toys for the little ones. A fine assortment of China and Glassware, Glass Vases, Bisque Vases, Opal Vaces. Cups and Saucers, Cake Plates, Shaving Mugs, Baby Rattlers. Trumpets, Musical Pipes. Fancy Whips, Return Balls, Jap Cap Pistols and many other toys. Everything nice for presents. Every corner in our magnificent store is abso lutely alive with pretty things. Call early and make your selections. Don't forget dates. From December 8th to December 30th, inclusive. YOURS TO PLEASE, J. A. BEACH & SON. A Word to the Farmers and Mill Men of Burke: We are agents for the new Huber Traction Engines and Threshers and supplies for same. Anyone wishing to buy a traction engine or thresher will make no mistake when they buy the Huber, manufactured in Marion, Ohio, and is the beat on the market. Power runs from 6 to 40 borse. If you are in the market for machinery, see J. A. Beach & Son. saie oi vaiuaoie Lands. By virtare oi a consent decree in the case of Charles M, Bince, Trustee, and others, against Carolina Queen Consolidated Mining Co. ant others at the December Term, 1906, of Bnrke Superior Court, tbe undersigned commissioners appointed in said decree will. on the first Monday in February, 1907, sell for casbone-third;and balance in twelve and twenty-fonr months, one-third each, title ' retained until the purchase money is paid in fall, with the privilege of paying purchase money at any time and taking title, aU the right, title and interest of the Carolina Queen Consolidated Mining Co., in and to iac iracn oi ianu composing tne Carolina Queen Consolidated Mining Co., lands de scribed in a deed Sep. 3rd, 1883, to said Co. by the Glen Alpine Mining Co., in Book J, fiom Charles W. Wellington registered in Book I, page 97, and in a deed Sept. 3rd ' 1883, from the Carolina Qneen Mining Co. described in Book H, page 509 and in Book I, page 916, and in a reed from the Soap Stone Hollow Mining Co., described in Book I, page 380, and in a deed from the Little Princess Mining Co., by deed recorded in Book I. nacre 445. and also bv deed from Kirksey, trustee, to the Carolina Queen Mining Co., recorded in Book I, page 79, 80, and 81, to which rcfei ence is made for par ticular descriptions, and to any exceptions nt of the same, said lands as a whole being aescrmea as ioiiows: Beginning on a white oak in White's old line on the north side of Hall Mt ; then S. 34 W. 80 poles to a stake in the old Hall tract and Dower tract; thence S. 80 W. 36 poles to a dogwood; thence S. 61 W. 20 poles to a stake; thence S. 86 W., crossing tbe creek, 114Jpoles to a denble postoak, the S. W. cor ner of said Dower track; then N. 80 E. 40 poles to a stake in tbe Morganton road; then S. 25 W. 32 poles to an apple tree. Settlemyre's corner; then N. 32 W. 20 poles to a stake in the Morganton road, then 9. 60 W. with the said road 60 poles to a stake; then S. 30 W. with the road;l20 poles to a stake in the Wilkerson line: then K. 9 poles to a Spanish-oak; then S. 35 poles toa stake in the Brindle line; tben E. with said line 90 poles to Brindle corner; then S. 174 poles to a stake, then E. 20 poles to a corner af Brindle's 70 acre tract; tben N. 110 poles to a stake; then E. 64 poles to a stake; then S. 110 poles to a stake in Sudderth & Erwin's line: thence E. 12 poles to a stake: thence S. 264 poles to a stake; then E. 120 poles to a nic ory near jonson-s nouse; tben S. 190 poles to a stake at the summit of the moun tain in the coanty line; then E. with said line 140 poles to a white-oak, then N. 30 E. 190 poles to a white-oak; then N. 85 poles to a stake, then B. 38 poles toja stake; tnea S. 26 poles to a stake in Walton's line; then E. with said line 20 poles to a stake; then S. 20 poles to a stake; then E. 30 poles to a stake; then down the N B. side ot Mill creek to a stake in the Corrll line, then E. to the S. E. corner oi saiil tract in the Glen Alpine line; tben 3 20 poles to a black oak; then E. HO poles to a black gum; then N. 31 W., cross ing three branches, 270 poles to a stake in the line of a tract of land formerly owned by John Sudderth, Tames Hall and others; then B. 60 poles to a pine; then N. 38 pol -s to a stake; then W. 20 poles to a stake; then 50 poles to a stake; then W. 40 poles to a hlcic ory; then N. 90 poles to a Spanish oak near the summit of Hall's mountain; then N. 56 W. 110 poles to the beginning, containing 1600 acres more or less. Said lands sold subject to a prior sale of all the merchant.! ble timber, tan-bark and tanic acid wood thereon, and subject to the right of ingress and egress over said lands for cut ting, sawing, and removing the same for the period of six years from Jan. 1st, 1907. L.M.SCOTT, ' JOHN M. MULL, Comr's. This 3rd, Jan. 1907. FROM THE ANTILLES. H yoa are sufferine with Rheumatism, neuralsia, Kidney Trouble or any kin urea disease, write to us for a trial bottle oi 6-DiiOPS.'' and test it yourself. "S.nnnrxMi v, i.nrth nt j , V . J fOTL. ir worn. 6 -. i "ffie without acquiring "drug habit." 4 ii i3 entirely Iree or cplum, cocaine. Alcohol, laudanum, end other t'mil" fciredients. -. ltSUe Bottle, "R-DBOPS" (80S Das) (1.00. 1 or Sale by Urngcl.ta, Sn'AKSSg BKE8KVri8 CORE CORFJLSY, ept. 80. leo Lake Street, Chicago. 1 '-orvri?":.- VOUHG PEOPLE rirr.costaKyoan.T persws, nomattei cb--.:-!::n'-' ':er Orleans or f?ation, who vish tc ,'-l''-Oi:rh bus!nesstrr.'.iiraTv.i ooi posi oi'ij "V first mail for our ggoat half-rati ,v 't'3-, iitder endncean! pfobaMe i .rtun SM VIMMsSH VVMWVf WVJStf HALF THE WORLD WON DERS How the other bait lives Those who use Bucklen's Ar nica Salve never wonder if it will cure Cuts, Wounds, Burns, flrtt-oo arirl oil Skin ernntiona: thfiv Irrmw it. will. Mrs. Grant Chambeblain's Cough Remedi i - . : ., I i i "i i - .... fihr. Y Kpvn? as rv d nefits a i,rrx v.uuJNuiiijyiAi- AT iVlNGSTON, JAMAICA. Mr.' W. O'Reilly Fosrarty. vho is a member of the Cit ounci1 at Kingston Jamaica. West Indies, write as ioiiows: "One bottle, of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy had good effect on a cough that was giving me trouble and 1 think 1 should have been more quickly re lieved if I had continued the remedy. That it was beneficial and o nick in relieving me thei'r is no doubt and it is my inteu - tion to obtain another bottle " For fcale by A. Leslie, Sunugheld. III., as: re gard it one of the absolute ne cessities of housekeepiug." Guaranteed by W. A. Leslie and Burke Drug Co., druggists. 25c. - v - A Guaranteed Cure for Piles. .- Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Druggists refund, money, u paii OINTMENT tails to cure any case! no mat ter of how long standing, in 6 to 14 dav Firat nnnlication eives ease and rest. 50c If yonr druggist hasn'l it send 50c in stamp and it will be forwarded post-paia oy rant Medicine Co. .st Louis. M 4 O 1 For Indigestloa. Relieves sour stomach, palpitation oltiw heart. DiU whatyoueat. A Grippe or Influenza, whichever you like to call it, is one of the most weakening diseases known. Scott's Emulsion, which is Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites in easily di gested form, is the greatest strength-builder known to medical science. It is so easily digested that it sinks into the system, making new blood and new fat, and strengthening nerves and muscles. Use Scott's Emulsion after Influenza. Invaluable for Coughs and Colds. ALL DRUGGISTS! 60o. AND Sl.OO. o o o o o o FIRST NATIONAL BANK, MORGANTON, N. C. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. . . . Open for Business January 1 st In connection with our Bank we will open a Savings Department tc proyide a safe and profitable place for the earnings of all persons in either small or large amounts. DEPOSITS of $1.00 and up will be received, and a pass book given -with the amounts entered therein, upon which interest will be paid. . COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY. We invite'ou to open an account in our Savings Department, promising that you will receive every courtesy and consideration. If you are interested in an account of this kind, or if you have children and would like to open an account for them, thereby encouraging- them to saye, suppose you come in and let us talk to you about it. FIRST NATIONAL, BANK, MORGANTON, 1ST. C- Capital Stock, -Shareholders' Liability, Surplus and Undivided Profits. - $35,000. 00 35,000.00 -15,000.00 SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT. 4 ii ft j ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft. ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft 5 Grove's Tasteless Chili Tonic has stoc tl the test 25 years. Average Anncsl Sales over Oca cad a Half filESca hnttle Tkwi rcrarrl Ctf Itterit scneal to VOfl? No Cure. No Pay. 50C Closed with every bottle is a Ten Ccst ?a dCW h p sr
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 31, 1907, edition 1
1
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