Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Feb. 20, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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i I Bring Your 1 THE The News-Herald TOP PRINTING ma Am. m 13 THE Best Advertising Medium -TO- Sews-Keraid Office. j T. G. COBB, Publisher. THE BURKE COUNTY NEWS 1 cnHdataJ TtJ t oni THE MORGAN TON HERALD J CnIkJfttei Nov. 29.1901 - Subscription Price, $i Per Year In Advance No. 46. -IN ,THB- S PIEDMONT SECTION VOL. XXIII MORG-ANT ON, N. 0.f FEBRUARY 20, 1908, - III bur tomaclv i jlo arcetito. loss oi strength, nervous i (-.ja-icho constipation bad breath, jcb:i:tv sour risings and catarrh I stcTuch are all due to indigestion. ;jr:s r.i.gssiioa This new dtscov jrresj i'-" the natinu Juices of digesr j. xist -,p a healthy stomach, v.sn the greatest known tonlo jcotructive propertie Kodoi Dys- j I Cui? does not only euro indigestion dvspsps'. but this famous remedy I j Vi stomach troubles by cleansing, .r.g sweetening and strengthening jU;eus membrane, lining the stomach. S S Bali, ol RaTenswood. W. Va., Mm a trcub -ei with tour stomach (or twenty years. iCurM r ana w. uvw uids ii a niua Kodol Digests What Yon Cat. only S 1 .00 Stu holding 2H ttmu the Mai l sir: w.Uch sails for 50 cents, yti ey tL O. D.WITT DO., OMtOAQO I Sold by . IRKE DRUG COMPANY. 4 tin- r lit- 19() Hoaol Aimxnac ati:i 'Jt'O Year Calendar XXTED. For U. S. Army, able- ur.:r.arried men, between ages land 55. citizens of United States, td character and temperate habits, can speak, read and write Eng- Men wanted now for service gba and th Philippines. For in iaioDapplvtoRecruitingOfficer, 15 Trade St., Charlotte, N. C.;26 i Main St., Asheville, N. C; Bank .flinc. Hickory, X. C ;417J4 Liberty Winston-Salem, N. C.;126s North i St.. Salisbury. X. C. ; Kendall .flinj. Columbia. S C. ; Haynsworth JCcnver's Building-, Greenville, i; or Glenn Building, Sparanburg. a 22iei, sie:ca or photo oi iu vt TJtioD lor rp3-i-t a ratentabilirv. For free book 4 Doosite U. S Patent Office I WASHINGTON D. C. ILEYSliOMMVR ss the cough and Heals lungs I ImImZ 30 YEARS' fcSr-' EXPERIENCE Toinr IUIabk W ..4 Designs 'mH Copyrights Ac. ruiwfc f Anyone sending a sketch and description max m'.ck'v ascertain our opinion free whetner at are-.ti n : pre ihably patentable. Commnnica Icniitr.ctivcipiin Jential. Handbook on Patent, ner.t free. OMest aeency for securing patents. Piten-s takes throoeh Munn 4 Co. receive fttiil notice, withoat charge, in tno iScientific Atnericam khaci?"Tiely strated weekly. Lareest eft ai nti-n i f anv fcientlnc Journal. Terms, t3 a ?ear: f ur munths, (L Sold by all newsdealers. INN &Co.36,Broad New York Branch Offlce, ff9 V 8U Waahlnaton. D. C pitary Plumbing, km and Water Heating, fedm fitting. )iler and Engine Setting, pairing Steam Boilers, Jeam & Gasolene Engines iy kind of an Engine, !eam or Power Pumps. iinibing, Steam Fitting or ater Heating Material of jy kind, brk and material guaran RilYNE & FLEMING. A PROMPT. EFFECTIVE REMEDY FOR ALL FORMS OF mmiim Lumbago, Sciatica, Neuralgia, mensy iroublo, Catarrh, Asthma and LaQrippm GIVES QUICK RELIEF slant rdiet from pain, while permanent ' -sjiu are being eSected by taking It in- wJ?Lsoaous substance and removing It "oai tne system. TEST IT FREE t ,,L?'.0a are suffering with Rheumatism. TiW Sciatica. Neuralgia, Kidney ,,UD'e or any kindred disease, write to M lor a trial bottle of. "ft-DROPS." and S' it sourseir. r PURELY VEGETABLE -r.;DR-''S"is entirely free of opium, RrrtT??' morinine. alcohol, laudanum, , Q otlier simiiiar ingredients. ef!,e.Ro"le"6-IROP6''80 Doses) l.oo. t or Sale by Dragglst. SWANSOU RHEUMATIC CURT COMPANY, ilpnt Mil ...... . . . . til. . 1 .RIGHT REMEDY rg &TOMARU yd oi text ce 1 ---wa nw wwathw DYSPEPSIA PIGESTIOfi l47"r;"t;BdBrtl.,Aclaree.t.tl.n, yauc wum,,?; f Heartburn, Etc. Wiatinic r , .""I'y effectively on the stomach is.jno. ."'? carrying the waste and riaus ot MvMfoi6 the "omacb. and otnar VTklT? SAKE-QOCK TO ACT rlAI. Win. CONTIJSCB TOO rj"H.o.co,lLakeBt.,CHlCAQO,ILI. B cnt Breoaid am. wv.. i - . J" K B. I 4 iWe rrc rt.v obtain I". S. and Foreign --- . 7v 3Bmrmm VirTT-'n a 11 lMm KING OF THE BUZZARDS. The California Condor Is Rapidly Fol lowing the Great Auk. One night in the eighties a heifer from the Murietta ranch, in south ern California, was killed by a mountain lion that lived in the fast ness back in the San Bernardino range. From our anv.p the next day we noticed several buzzards on a dead pine up the hillside. One of the ranhoro? pointed otit a lone 4 to another j ust - within the scope of vi The next day the old Mexican Spi K sion. took me up the arroyo, and I count ed seventeen buzzards and two other big bird that seemed twice the size of a buzzard ft.;-ting on the carcass of the" heker. I was interested in the big birds, but the only informa tion I received was a gesture back toward the highest peak of the range. Years later, as my interest in birds grew. I cou'd get comparative ly little information about this "king of the buzzards," or Califor- ' nia condor (Cathartes california nus), for not many people had ever seen the bird, and very few had first hand information as to its nesting habits. The report that it was rapidly following the great a.uk and that the species would soon become extinct was not without some foundation, for the California condor has a range more restricted than any oth er bird of prey. In the early part of the last century it was reported fairly common as far north as the Columbia river region. But now it eeenis to have entirely disappeared from that locality. Once it was re ported in Utah, and Dr. Elliott Coues saw it in Arizona in 18G". With the exception of a record in southern Oregon, the habitat of the California condor now seems to bo the region from Monterey county,. Cal., south through the mountains of the coast range and the exten sion of the San Bernardino rancre in Lower California. There is no record of the bird in Mexico. It is not surprising that collectors have searched the mountains and that museums are willing to pay big prices for the eggs, for after a cor respondence ot several years Mr. W. Lee Chambers has found that there are now only forty-one California condor eggs (twenty-six first class and fifteen second class) in the va- j rious museums and private collec- j tions of the world, while there are 1 about seventy eggs of the great auk, which is now extinct. There ar only half a dozen of the birds in captivity, and that number is not likely to be increased to any extent at present. Century Magazine. An "Unfortunate Experience." The chief constable of Manches ter in an after dinner speech told a jueer story of a Newton Heath workman's "unfortunate experi ence" with a policeman. The work man was absent from his work for a fortnight, and when he reappear- ed his employer wanted an explana- ! x.- --i i i. .... ! llOll, ami i ins is hum me mau gai'; it: ' "Well, sir, a fortnight ago I had a great misfortune. I was going Irome along street when I. found a policeman leaning against a wall, lie seemed to be drunk, and I thought the best thing I could do was to take him. to the Newton Heath police station. I did so, but the moment I got him there he came to himself and charged ma with being drunk, and the magis trate believed him and gave me fourteen days." An "unfortunate experience" indeed ! Westminster Gazette. This woman says Lydia E Ptnkham's Vegetable Compound saved her lite, iteaa tier iener. Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning Iowa, writes to Mrs. Prnkham: " I can truly say that Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound saved my life, and 1 cannot express my gratitude to you in words. For years I suffered with the worst forms of female com plaints, continually doctoring1 and spending lots of money for medicine without help." I wrote you for advice, followed it as directed, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it. has restored me to perfect health. I Had it not been for you I should have ! been in my grave fo-day. I wish every Buffering woman wouid try it. FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. Pnr thirtv vears Lydia E. FmK ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, nprindio nains. backacne, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion,dizziness,or ne ryous prostration. Wiry don't you try it r Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick wnnipn to write her for advice. , She has guided thousands to ' a- 1 a .1 .1 T.-vmn AT a ue PIP onto Hendrick Hudson. "By H.CTBE'RTXS LOVE. Set adrift in Hud son bay by muti neers, bis fate is still a mystery of the frozen north. W HEN a year or so ago a steam boat for traffic on the Hud son river was launched with the name Hendrick Hudson. somebody remonstrated, holding that the name of the vessel should be Henry Hudson, because that was Hud sou's real name. Nevertheless it seems fitting that the boat be named Hen drick instead of Henry, for it was while in the service of the Dutch East India company that the English navi gator discovered the great river which bears his name. Moreover, his own country was so jealous of his prowess as a discoverer for another nation that cn his return to the old world Hudson was practically impressed into the i': service and was not permitted " !!.; oy hi full reward for the suc-.--t-s si Uie.pd by him when he voy- -'! nucU?r 'the Dutch name of Hen I'vick. ' -on perished miserably in the rvk-e of British interests. This .was j when he made his disastrous vovage iu i-reireh of that long hidden northwest to whieb lured so many mariners ' . deii at or doom and which was final- iy discovered by Captain Roald Arnund- : sen nearly three centuries after Hud- j son's death. Hudson sailed into the vast nortnern bay which, along with the gloriously picturesque rivr. keeps his name on the map of the world. There was mutiny aboard, and the mariners set the great navigator adrift in a small boat in the icy waters with his son and a few other adherents. The fate of Hudson and his party Is still a mystery of the frozen north. For the people of the United States Hudson's chief achievement was the discovery of the wonderful river at the mouth of whfch has grown up the second city of the world in population and the first in c&nmercial impor tance. ' . Hendrick Hudson sailed northward around Sandy Hook and entered the river in September. 1G09. in the Dutch ship Half Moon. The explorer spent a month studying the stream, going up as far as the site of the city of Alba- Stephen A. Douglas. HOBEHTVS LOVE. He was a giant . in intellect. V rERY early in his career Stephen A. Douglas became known throughout the country as "the Little Giant." The sobriquet was a fit one. Physically he was short and slight a little man. Mentally he was frm bis boyhood. His head was large and correspondingly brainy. He large and correspondingly brainy. was a giant in intellect. Douglas was daringly ambitious. His goal was the presidency of the United States. As a schoolboy in Vermont and western New York the familiar para doxical fact that "any American boy can become president" seems to have taken possession of him". He settled in a new state, Illinois, to grow up with the country and work himself into lead ership. Though he failed of the pres idency, he was In the whitest heat of the presidential limelight for years. Perhaps no man in American history rose to national eminence so rapidly as did Douglas. He almost won u nomination for congress at the age of twenty-five. Only three years later he was a member of the supreme court of Illinois, resigning this omce at the age of thirty to enter congress. In the lower house Douglas became at once a national figure. Entering the senate a few years later, his fame widened and deepened with each suc ceeding year. Douglas was a tar more prominent man in 1852 than was Franklin Pierce, who defeated him for the Democratic nomination for pres ident and was elected. Douglas was still under forty. Four years later tn.i engrossing slavery problem had so divided his party that again he failed to win the nomination. In 1SG0 he was nominated by the northern sec tion of the Democracy. It was his espousal of the doctrine of "squatter sovereignty," which con tended that every territory should be permitted to vote for itself pn the question of slavery, that cost Douglas the presidency. Douglas died at the early age of forty-eight, a few months after the in auguration of his greatest opponent. Abraham Lincoln. It is to his ever lasting credit that he upheld Lincoln In the effort to preserve the republic. This fact may be taken as the moral measure of the man. His last words to his political adherents were: , "There can be no neutrals in this war." At times when yon don't fe1 j- -right, when you have a bad stomach, take something right tj t will assist digestion; not somethit f. that will stimulate for a tirre bu something that will positively do he very work that the stomach per forms under ordinary and normal con ditio s, something that will make the food digest. To do this you must take anatural digestant like Kodol For Dvsnerjsia. Kodol is a scientinc prep aration of vegetable acids with natural Hio-Mtanta and contain the same iuices found in a healthy stomach, Each dose will digest more than 3.000 wrain of trood food. It is sure to af ford prompt relief; it digests what you eat and is pleasant to take. Sold by Burke Drug Co. FOKYSIOBHEYCUItE Make Kidneys and Bladder Kigni I II I jiijl By A MAN'S HANDS. Soma Callings That Leave Their Trade marks Impressed Thereon. If your eyesight i3 keen enough it is possible to tell by looking at a person's hands what sort of employ ment that individual follows, ac cording to scientific men. It is a commonly accepted .fact that the face reveals character, but very few persons have ever paid any attention to the hands as disclosers of a man's habits. Yet it 6eems we can get just as much information out of the latter as the former if -we know how to go about it. The continual repetition of the same kind of manual work, says Dr. Alfred Gradenwitz in the Scientific American, results in a permanent alteration of the skin and muscles as well as a transformation of the bones (atrophy or thickening of the parts), displacement of the joints, etc., for in repeating a given manipulation over and over again the palm and the balls of the thumb and little finger are called upon continually to perform the same action, leading to a perma nent strain on and wear and tear of certain parts of the hand. - The greatest alterations are shown in the hands of laborer w'-o do heavy manual work. They h;iv coarse, and clumsy hand.-, with short, thick and callous finders, tluj balls of the thumb and little finsrei being especially developed and tL skin bei h and covereJ with J m , ' , ,, , , , Take he V?ft haml ,f ? PT" By continually manipulat.n i tongs with this hand the balls of t.: fingers and and thumbs are vor markedly developed, and the f.n tips are broadened. The hand of the average .li maker has a strikingly broad flat thumb, while the tips of the fingers are likewise broad and flat tened. In the hand of the typesetter who works at the case it is to be noticed that the thumb and forefinger of the right hand are tapering in the upper parts, while the deft hand thumb, which presses upon the type in the stick, is flattened. The tailor can easily be picked out .by the condition of the forefin ger on his right hand, while the pianist will be found to have taper ing finders and thumbs, which are flattened upon the parts which touch .the keys. Getting Even. On one occasion visitors to a mer- j ry-go-round on a vacant lot in the outskirts of Philadelphia were very much touched by the melancholy demeanor of a long, lean, lank indi vidual who despite the fact that he was apparently suffering greatly persisted m riding repeatedly. At last some one said to him sympa thetically: s "You appear to be in great dis tress." "Yes" replied the man on the merry-go-round. "This continual riding around and around makes me seasick." "Well, then, why don't you quit riding?" asked the inquisitive ques tioner. "I can't help it," replied the poor man. "The man who runs this merry-go-round owes me money, and the only way I can collect it is by taking it out in rides." Mistletoe. On account of its connection with heathen rite and legend the mistle toe was early banished from the churches. Clergymen have in for mer times been known to forbid its use among the Christmas decora tions, regarding it as too tainted with superstitions to fitly ornament the house of God, and from use as j an architectural decoration it has been rigorously excluded, remaps the only known instance of its use is in Bristol cathedral, where sprays of mistletoe, with leaves and ber ries, fill the spandrels of one of the remarkable tombs. London Mail. The Wary Editor. The musician was visibly annoy ed. "'But, hang it all," he said, "I told your reporter three or four times over that the violin I used was a genuine Stradivarius, and here in his report this morning there's not a word, not a word." With a scornful laugh the editor Teplied: "That is as it should be, sir. When Mr. Stradivarius gets his fiddle advertised in this paper under $2 a line you come around and let me know." Sonthwestern er's Book. A Pen Point. The pen would not write. "Shall I get you another, sir?" the secretary asked. "Xo," Baid the millionaire. "Ill show vou somethinsr valuable now." And he held the pen over the lamp a moment, then dipped it in cold water, and lo it wrote as well as when new. "That treatment rejuvenates old nen3 without fail, said the mil lionaire. "Kemember it, and it will save you money." Exchange. - THE JUMPING OFF PLACE. "fLmsumotionhadme in its grasp; and I had almost reached the jumping off place when I was advised to try Dr. King's New Discoyeryjand I want to aav nirht now. it savea my inc. Tmnrnvement beeran with the first bot tie, and after taking one dozen bottles 1 was a wen anu uxypy man says George Moore, of Grimesland, N. C. As a remedy for coughs and-colds or.ri Vnaior of weak, sore lunirs and fnr nreventiner rjneumoaia New DiS' mwm i simreme. 50c and SI. 00 at w. a. Teslie'a. drueerist. Trial bottle free. PERFUMES. - - How the Dainty Odora Are Coaxed From Freshly Picked Flowara. Glass sheets held by frames a few inches apart are 6meared rather thickly with lard, and between these sheets the freshly picked blossoms are scattered, touching the frames, but not being pressed by them. In one day the oil of the flowers exudes, and the lard absorbs the precious mals in captivity, drops. If the flowers are plentiful, How hazardous this may be is they may be changed as often as shown by the following incident, every six hours and in the case of which happened not long ago at a jonquils -thirty times. Jasmine u big zoological, garden abroad: A usually changed eighty times before fine white leopard had been added (o the layers of lard are entirely satu- the collection, and as soon as it ap Tated. When the lard has absorbed peared to have settled down the an as much oil as possible from the thorities decided to have it photo flowers, it is melted and dissolved in graphed. It seemed to be a fairly purified alcohol made, from grain, quiet creature nervous and timid, When this mixture is filtered, the to be Bure, but without any sign of concentrated extract may be redis- temper. solved in spirits, diluted or mixed ; When the keeper entered its cage with other oils, according to the it had taken little notice of him be- strength or quality desired. yond the usual spitting and hissing Attar of roses and neroly, the natural to its kind. The photogra- base of eau de cologne, are made by pher therefore followed the keeper a different method. The perfume into its cage without apprehension may be extracted by an ordinary , process of distillation if a very even heat is maintained, but . the usual method i3 the bain marie. A large kettle of lard is immersed in a tub of water at the boiling point until the grease reaches a uniform 'tem perature and is entirely melted. Into this warm lard the petals of orange blossoms or of roses are thrown. The petals remain a day or les3 in this bath, and then the in odorous wilted flowers are removed and fresh ones submerged until the mixture attains the desired strength. The women .beat the mixture into a cream. After the pomade is made the oil may be shipped in this state or distilled and sold in its concen trated form as attar of roses or ne roly or diluted to the strength of "perfume" or eau de cologne. Twenty thousand pounds of rose petals are required to make one pound of attar of roses, valued at about $200. A thousand pounds approximately of the petals of the flower of the bitter orange are nec- essary to make a pound of neroly, valued at $20 on an average. Jane Rosamond White in World Today. Clancy's Employer. Benjamin F. Butler of Massachu setts was a tireless worker when he started on anything. He and his secretary, Clancy, says the Balti more Sun, oftentimes sat in the li brary until almost daylight when the general wanted to finish up any thing. During the night sessions of the senate toward a close of congress a senator called on General Butler one morning at 3 o'clock. The same senator called again when the senate adjourned the following morning at daybreak and found the general and Clancy' still at work. "Don t you ever stopr the sen ator asked. "No," General Butler said. "Sa tan finds some mischief still for idle hands to do." "General, I never knew before just who my employer was," Clancy said, bowing. Placing the Blame. Counsel (a giant in the world of cross examiners) You are contin ually bringing actions, aren t you t Plaintiff I have brought a few. Counsel You didn't succeed in the last, did you? Plaintiff I came out of it all right. Counsel Do you mean to say you didn't lose it? Plaintiff I did not. Counsel You didn't? Remem ber, sir, you are on your oath. Plaintiff I know that. Counsel And yet you swear you didn't lose that action ? Plaintiff 1 did not. You threw it away for me. London Scraps. Mysterious Figures. Put down the number of your liv ing1 brothers. Double the number. Add three. Multiply the result by five. Add the number of living sisters. Multiply the result by ten. Add the number of dead brothers and sisters. - - Subtract 150 from the result. The right hand figure will be the number of deaths. The middle figure will be the number of living sisters. The left hand figure will be the number of living brothers. Strange freak ofjigures, isn't it? oo it any -'os is jjo Moairi oj noA" r,f.f.oo Xppinb moi MOU3J .nojr . qSno3 2uiujreM dip pdpa8au )ou pi Xaip mou ajAJl iqSmi sdAt)dumsuo: oedip jo jtoiu puy . mopdamsuoa UIOJJ 3(33M l9A9 9ip 9(d0dd 00 tj J3AO UOf9 AD SRA N' ''i-fs J-: PHOTOGRAPHING ANIMALS. Some Dangers the Man Behind the. Camera Encounters. Today the camera penetrates everywhere, and sometimes its use is attended with cousiderable dan ger and difficult'. Nowhere is this more pronounced than when the camera is brought into use in tak- ing lifelike pictures of wild ani- of trouble. He set up his apparatus, adjusted it, took several pictures of the leopard, and all seemed satisfactory. As he shut up his camera, however, the operator chanced to shuffle his feet once or twice on the floor of the cage. Like a streak of lightning the leopard, with an ominous snarl, leaped at him, and before he could move the animal was gripping his ankle with his forepaws and fu riously biting at his foot. Luckily the keeper and some assistants suc ceeded in beating off the beast in time to save the photographer's life, but it was a narrow squeak. At the same zoo some time after when an attempt was made to pho tograph one of the llamas an ani mal generally considered to be a fairly docile creature, with nothing particularly objectionable about it ' beyond its habit of spittinsr the photographer's "subject" revealed its true nature by suddenly making a dash for camera and operator, and before the latter could be rescued he was the recipient of innumerable scratches, cuts and bruises which took some weeks to heal. It is an' open question whether seals and sea lions are vicious or not. They are certainly extremely curious and anxious to find out things for themselves, and a pho tographer who tried, to take a pic ture of a troupe of performing Sea lions had an experience worth re cording. He erected his tripod and camera and was about to make the exposure when one of the sea lions wriggled off his pedestal and made straight for the camera. It was all done so quickly that before the photogra pher realized it the camera was up set and the sea lion was biting the man's legs and feet pretty sharply. The trainee got him away, and no serious harm was done, but he ex nlained to the camera man that sea I lions often did a little biting just l.4 is 1 to nnd out what an object was maae of! Fearson's Weekly. If you suffer with indigestion, con stipation, feel mean and cross, no strength or appetite, your system is unhealthy.- Hollister's Rocky Moun tain Tea makes the system strong and healthy. 35c, Tea or Tablets. W. a. Leslie. The Dragon and the Goddess. A woman was at a dinner party with an eminent Chinese philoso pher when she said: "May I ask why you attach so mucli importance to the dragon in your country? You know there is no such creature, don't you? You have never seen one, have you?" "My dear mad am," graciously answered the great Chinaman, "why do you attach so much importance to the Goddess of Liberty on your coins? You know there is no such lady, don't you ? You have never seen , her, have you V" If you have Catarrh, rid yourself of this repulsive disease. Ask Dr. bhoop of Racine, Wis., to mail you free, a trial box of his Dr. Shoop's Catarrh Remedy. A simple, single test will tell you a Catarrh truth well worth your knowintr. Write to-day. Don't suffer longer. Burke Drug Co. ner Eloquent Glance. The plea of a man arrested for swearing at his mother-in-law was that "she, commenced with him first." "Did she swear at you?" asked the judge. "No, jour honor, but she looked it." St. Louis Republic. isxsroonaa nv pjoD jo uSnoD zcpu9 uotrjniug 4 o O o t o 4 Baking PowpI II Tk only Baking Powder made flI5 l with RoyaHrape Cream of Tartar . insures healthful and fslicious food for every 'Qj J Safepards your food against Smr-rnn tond phosphate of lime jlfllflSI The Morganton Grocery Company has passed through the experiment al stages and is ready to serve its patrons with the best goods of the market at prices that are in line with all the best goods of the mar ket at prices that are in line with all legitimate compitition. WE SI AND BEHIND EVERY GUARANTEE WE MAKE On these terms we solicit your business. Shall we come for your order, or will you send it to us? We wish to thank all our friends who have stood by us in making Morganton a leading wholesale market. Respectfully, MORGANTON GROCERY CO., Wholesale Distributers FARMS FOR SALE! 1 Farm, 163 acres, 3 miles from Morganton. t $15 per acre. 1 Farm, 100 acres, 4 mi cs from Morganton. $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 101 acres, 4mic; from Morganton. $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 90 acres, 4 miics from Morganton. $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 100 acres, 4 miles from Morganton. $15 per acre. 1 Farm, 3 miles from Morganton, 150 acres. $15 per acre. 300 acres, 25 bottom, 75 acres cultivated; 8 miles from Morganton, 3 miles from Glen Alpine; 250,000 feet merchantable timber, 4-room house, barn, crib, &c. Easy terms. 1 Farm, 80 acres, 2 miles from Glen Alpine. 1 Farm, 100 acres, 2 miles from Morganton. $37.50 per acre. 1 Farm, 318 acres, 8 miles from Morganton, good dwelling and mill on premises. $3,750. Also some nice town property houses and lots and building lots These are bargains, and will be sold on easy terms. manly Mcdowell, MORGANTON, N. C. WE OFPERf OR SALE: 17 acres of bottom land near new cotton mill Price $70 per acre. 32 acres of finely located land J mile west of Drexel; 8 acres of bottom land, mostly in meadow. Price $550. Farm of 160 acres 1 miles south-west of Morganton and 2 miles from Glen Alpine. About 60 acres cleared and 10 acres bottom land. Tenant-house. Price $1,050. - Farm of 80 acres, 5i miles south-west of Morganton; 35 acres in cultivation with 5 or 6 acres of creek bottom. Good house, etc. - - - - - - - Price $1,000. Farm of 176 acres in Smoky Creek township; 40 acres in culti vation, 8 acres good bottom land. Good pasture, fenced. Orch ard; 4-room house, barn an other buildings. 150,000 feet in timber. - - - , - - Price $3,000. Place of 11 acres ajolning Morganton. This is prob- ' ably the best gold-mijfe proposition in this vicinity. Price $500. We also have for 'sale several good town properties. REALTY LOAN & GUARANTY COMPANY. " (Offiice Over Postoffice.) r I t. i iS a it nil: H If A S:)i i i ii! -' i -: i v. m m in n i; fill " i--'f I t "i VI m , i : in - 1 1 ' Mh5 ! 1 ; IV: i'-Ji . : 1 ' I,,",
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
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Feb. 20, 1908, edition 1
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