Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / April 2, 1908, 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
Brins cUr B PRINTING I . The News-Herald IS THE Best Advertising Medium rs Tax t -TO- LHerald Office. T. G. COBB, Publisher. I THE BURKE COUNTY NEWS 1 Consolidated Nov 29 1901 THE MO R-G ANTON HERALD J ute "v. Z9.1BOI Subscription Price, $i Per Year In Advance f . PIEDMONT SECTION vol. xxm. MORG-ANTON, N- C, APRIL 2, 1908, No. 52. y.Cr..Sl WCKK AT r ORIGINAL Tt 0000H SYRUP The Ret Clorer Bio i am and thi Honey Be is en ever bottle. fetfl assists in f 9- 1 ED I S LAXATIVE (YT .!NiS3 EYjeTAR JID AT THS I.ASOHATOKY OF jT 4 CO.. CHICAGO. U. S. A. 1 SoMbv V ppj'G COMPANY. V 9('7 Kodol Almanac 1 200 Year Calendar. tD.-For U. S. Army, able- irarried men. between agfes and :iti:ens 01 united estates, ieak, road and write i.ng n wanted now for. service iJ the Philippines. For in Jpplvio Kecruiting-Officer, 55 de' St.. Charlotte, N. C; 26 in St., Asheville, X. C. ; Bank fcckorv. X. C.;417 Liberty fca-Sa'.cm, X. C; 126,'i Xorth fsalisl'-jry, X. C. ; Kendall Columliia. S. C; Haynsworth jer's Giiilding, Greenville, iienn Building, Sparanburg, a ur r noto ci iEvention for i a rawntabiutv. For free book i i-tTDinj MnDVO write iiH:mo to I lite U. S Patent Office ( EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Ci1?YF:!aHTS &c. . ' xa'.r.e. C-'o;m2iuiiica I i ;ir.'i hook on Patents :- r ocMrin? patents. Mui.n a Co. receive - e, latha wpekl". Tire est di ;o irnal. Ternis, $3 a oid bvall rewedealers. KSWIOfK " 5t Washicgion. D. C. HIAR0I.IXA, County. in the Superior Court. Kr'-. tX-.-CULilX of P. B. rv.-y. etc. v-. ".rv.T. Kev. ar.d others. JEP. -OF PUBLICATION. farir.2 f ; .m the affidavit of R. ti"iney for the plain- that r. B. K. r'rench, -Tiller, Mrs. Virginia henry J. Key, Mrs. . Anna Key Pipes, rrancis b. Key, are : Iredell county, and itiiience be found in further appearing that v parties to this ac- '.': assets with which i. Jcnkin I K,y a: t fou:.d i te: ar.d it le.i lari flcoti: f nereJ' re. ordered that notice "t'.on be published once a week I weeks in a newspaper published Burke county, setting e t:t:e of the action, the parties toretner with a briet re tjtne subject matter of the same, Fn.'g tne defendants to appear fi-ee ot the clerk of the super- It ox Burke county, on the 6th ipi'ii, b'K, and answer or de- r.e complaint of the plaintiff, tti.zi therein demanded will be 1 L. A. BPvISTOL, Clerk Superior Court. day of March, 1908. 4ne tjth f li Denies Slander Charge. The Editor oFThe Madison Herald Re garding an Editorial in Whose Paper Mr. Locke Craig Recently Gave Out a Statement, Sayi He Did Not Slander Mr. Craig. To the Editor of The News-Herald: In a late issue of your paper you printed what Mr. Locke Craig had to say about the edi torial in The Madison Herald, edited by C. O. McMichael. In the interest of fair plav I ask vou to print the following reply by Mr. McMichael, who is known all over the State as one of the most loyal and zealous Bryan demo crats. When Mr. Craier attacked Mr. McMichael, he ought to have expected newspapers to publish both sides or nothing. i ours truly, A. C. Avery. To the Editor of The Observer: In your paper of date March 20th, 1903, was an interview from Hon. Locke Craig, one of the candidates for the nomination tor Governor before the next Democratic convention in which he attacks an editorial written by me and published in my pa per, The Madison Herald, in which he claims that I slandered him and did it deliberately for the purpose of injuring him and his good name. This I deny. First, that there is anything in the article that can be construed y any fair man to be in anywise slanderous and, second, that it was done through any ill will to wards Mr. Craig. I am satisfied that the Ipeople of North Caro lina that know rne know that I would not intentionally do any man an injustice. In the article referred to by Mr. Craig it was my intention to emphasize the fact that Craig would not meet Mr. Kitchin in joint discussion; and to lay stress on the fact that this was not a question of men but of measures and to show that Kitch in stood for the people and that Mr. Craig had the solid backing of the trusts, railroads and spec ial interests in the btate. 1 did not state in the editorial nor do" I assert now that Craig stands for these interests; but I .merely stated that they stood for him and it is for the public knowing the history of how these things work m politics and placing their own estimate on the man from his own acts and public utter ances to form their own conclus ions as to which man would be the safer to entrust wTith the af fairs of state. I assert again, and Mr. Craig cannot deny it and did not deny it in his interview, the Southern Railway with all its pernicious influence, the Ameri can Tobacco Company and all its satellites and apologists and the other special interests of the State are solidly behind him for this nomination. There is a reason for this. Let us see if we can find it? Now let us see about Mr. Craisr's" consistency; and thus if we can arrive at a just conclus ion of the question as to whether The Herald slandered him or not and whether or not there is any crrnnnd for our uosition that he would be more favorable to tne special interests than would Kitohin. Mr. Craier says in nis articlp. "It is an attempt to in iure me for the benefit of anoth- er bv vile and groundless accu sations. For many years I have hppn-before the nublic. The nermle know mv life. I dety any accuser to produce the slightest evidence of mv disloyalty to pnn cirjles for which i have always stood or any complicity on my PROMPT, EFFECTIVE M8QY FOR ALL FORMS OF llEUIMTISiy :Bo, Sciatica, Neuralgia, f- dney Trouble, Catarrh, j At.hma and LaGrlpp fG!VE3 QUICK RELIEF M exterajvy ltj afford3 aimost in- i-.'i rom P&ia, while permanent -sare of.ufr effected by taking it in- I le oiooa. dissolving f f rno-js s . -js;anee and removinz it tron TEST IT FREE Urnc-iff...: 1 -. . . t .. i.ciiii( wnn naeumatisoi, '-wic. Neuralgia, Kidney iA.??r any kindred disease, write to litTCnlh,Sottle 01 "MJKOPS." and PURELY VEGETABLE fcniC TfS'' Is, entirely free of opium. oth.?Phlne' alcohol, laudanum. tiSJOH '5-1 ROP8' 800 Dose.) RHF!!MlTtf rtiot rrtwoiuv rue . r- Offeror .HEM ED Y TDftlim r-r YSPEPSIA it ture in , ffe."tlTely o n the stomacli n'u'l nUlS the stomach and oUer pi!,. L Cw?iVlCE OC .. Sal, v All '-mT. red: 7i irlce. v ilOU IjiItb B PUTrnnA Tit Restored to Health ly Iiydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Read What They Say. MissIjillianKoss,530 East 84th Street, New York, writes: "Lydia E. Piukhaui's Vegeta ble Coiiipowid over- L came irregularities, pe- ! nodic Bunenns, ana I nervous headaches, f after everything else had failed to help me, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it." KatliaruieCraig,2o5 . Lafayette St., Denver, I Col., writes: "inanKs to Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound I am well, after suffering for months from ner vous nrostration. Miss Marie Stoltz- man. of Laurel, la writes: "Iwasinarun- downconditionandsuf fered fromsuppression indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made me well and strong." Miss Ellen M. Ulson, of 417 N. East St., Ke- wanee. 111., says: " Ly-diaE.Pinkham'sVege-table Compound cured me of backache, side ache, and established my periods, after the best local doctors had failed to help me. FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN Vnr thirtv vears Lvdia E. Pink- lmm'a Vflfrfitable Comiiound, made from roots and herbs, has been the stanaara remeay iui icmaic x, end has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with lisTla,npments. inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, neriodio pains, backache, that bear- in -imvn feelins. flatulency, mdiges tion,dizziness,ornervousprostratioa Why don't you try it? Mrs. Pinkliam invites all sick women to write her for advice. . ;i oil lions: nils to h i sue lias t- If- - xnitii. Address. Lynn, Mass. 1 (I ff rij?f 1- gf.M ii i n T-i. p ii 111 if Y H XJv part with the American Tobacco Company, the Southern Railway Company, or any other special interest.' I accept the challenge. As I said before every man in our State knows that the South ern Railway and the trusts are standing practically solid for him. Their army of attorneys, with a few possible exceptions, and all their newspaper organs are for him. This has always been con sidered sufficient evidence for Democratic speakers and papers to justify themselves in charging Republicans with being for rail roads and trusts. Why are thesi interests so strong for Craig if they expect nothing from hirr should a critical time arise? Did not these same interests oppose his election to the United States Senate in 1902? Let him answer. Why this change now? Who has changed? Has Craig quietly gone over to them without notice to the people or have they quietly come over to him? He says he has been loyal in principle. Let's see. In the campaign of 190C and in the debates with Pritch ard in 1902 and in the campaign of 1904 Craig was the most ram pant "trustbuster" in our State. He hurled as many and, as violent denunciations against trusts and monopolies as the most radical. He wanted to put stripes on the trust magnets, etc. His language against them was the most ex treme, and intemperate of any man in the State. And he was the father of what was known as :he Craig act, attempting to reg ulate f oreigh corporations, passed by the Legislature of 1899 and no doubt but that he was the insti gator of chapter 666 of the same acts making any corporation that went into a trust guilty of a con spiracy. Ana on account ot these acts and utterances trusts and railroads opposed his election to the Senate in 1902. They are for him now. Why? Because since the campaign of 1904 Craig has entirely changed his position on these vital questions affecting the very hie of the Democratic- party. Does he suppose that the wakeful Democracy of North Carolina has forgotten his speech, and set speech at that, as tem porary chairman of the State con vention of 1906 when he laid down his platform and made his iirst public bid for the office that he now claims he is entitled to? A man may sometimes be excused for hasty utterences that he might make in a heated discus- sion, out not when he takes a rest and writes his speech and speaks from manuscript and fur nishes it to the. State papers m advance. If any of the voters of North Carolina think I am doing Mr. Craig an injustice, let him get the copy of The News and Observer of date July 4th, 1906, and see for himself. In this well- prepared and well-studied speech he openly declared himself in favor of the establishment of monopolies and the destruction of competition. In other words, he then and there publicly sur rendered to the trusts and mon opolies and now howls slander when wTe state the simple truth that these interests that he abdicated to in the speech above referred to are supporting him and are fighting Kitchin, a man that hits an unlawful combination every time itputs its head up and will never live to see the day when he will apologize for or jus tify monopolies. We will quote some of his utterances in justifi cation and defense of monopolies and the destruction of competi tion. Hear this jewel of consis tency: In defiance of the common law and the statutory law both State and Federal, the competi tion has been destroyed and the other (monopoly) has been built on its ruins. Under the old or der there developed an attractive civilization, an individually, strong and comprehensive etc. But in that state of society the gigantic forces of modern life would never develop and materialize." Again: "The old saying that competi tion is the life of trade does not now apply. Competition sharp ened men. It made them shrewd and resourcef uL But not the law of man's higher life, either in morals or in commerce The concentration and control of cash resources are essential to any of great modern industrial institu- tutions, and every such institution has inevitably come to be a mo nopoly." Now again to show his loyalty to principle: -liMonopoly is here; it is a reality. The Democratic party is the agency through which the people may expect to control monopoly. They (monopolies and trusts) have been built up in accordance with the law of asso ciation and co-operation. This is the source of their vigor, the generative force of their growth. I would not impede the march of progress." And now listen at the whine of .the opologist: "You cannot destroy these mo nopolies. They are integral ele ments of our civilization itself." And how does the farmer and the mechanic like this? "The concern that has and exercise? an undisputable monopoly in the production of a necessity of life is as essentially in the service of the public, a public necessity, sf is a railway or a telegraph comp any." And to cap the climax: "The evil of monopoly is not in the fact that it has no competi tion." 6earch the history of our cour :ry, ransack The Congressiona' Record, magazines and newspa oers and you will fail to find such doctrines announced by any Democrat or any Republican a? for that. He has out-Herodec Herod and then claims that w slandered him when we called thr oeople's attention to these thing?. No Democratic platform, State or national, has ever breathed a line or word in harmony witr such sentiments. On the contra ry, the very cenvention in which he announced this new, startling and abhorrent policy, condemed trusts and monopolies and de nounced them for stifling compe tition. And suppose the nev convention should so far forg hemselves and what they ow :he toiling masses of the peopl as to nominate this man for Gov ernor of this great State of Nortt Carolina, it certainly would no1 change the utterances of its plat forms for over thirty years," tc iuit the doctrines laid down by Craig in the speech above re ferred to, and, of course, Craig after making these utterances could not, he being so consistent, accept the nomination on a genu ine, old-fashioned Democratic platform and there you would be. We would like to make some quotations from some of the Democratic platforms, State and national, just to show he left the oarty on this . overshadowing question, that is if he has evei been in accord with it since he voted for Blaine, in 1884. If Mr. Craig could so far for get his dignity as to sidestep for awhile to make an answer to two little insignificant weekly papers, why is it that he has to shoulder off the resposibility on to his manager to state that he voted for Blaine on personal reasons rather than from principle? Won der what he had against old man Grover anyhow? It would come with more force if he would say over his own signature, and I know that it would be more satis factory to some of the interests and papers that are backing him now, why he scratched the "Sheriff." Mr. Craig says: "They told me that they thought that the Democratic party would confer upon me the great honor in recognition of long years of service." I would like to know if in these long years of service he includes his memorable cam paign with Pritchard and if he claims any credit for disobeying the directions of the executive committee and defied its authori ty and made the same over the protest of said committee and re ceived the worst trouncing any man ever carried, until no Demo crat dares to refer to it yet above a whisper. In conclusion I de sire to say that I have no fight to make on Mr. Craig personally, as personalities have no place in politics; but I insist that I have a right to express my views as to any man's public acts that as pires to public office and to give reasons why he is not the best man to serve the people for any given place. And this is all I did in the article that raised Mr. Craig's ire; and all that I have tried to do in this is to show that I had something on which to base my belief and to repel the false charge that I was a slanderer and ' traducer of character.' I will thank you to give this article as prominent place as you did Mr. Craig's attack on me. Charles G. M'Michael. Madison, March 26th. AYCOCK SUPPORTS CRAIG. W. A. Leslie's Success. W. A. Leslie, the enterprising drug gest rather than await the ordinary methods of introduction, urged the Dr. Howard Co. to secure a quick sale for their celebrated specific for the cure of constipation and dispepsia by offering the regular 50c bottle at half-price. So much talk has-been caused by this offer, and so many new friends have been made for the specific that the Dr. Howard Co. have authorized druggist W. A. Leslie to continue this special half-price sale for a limited time longer. In addition to selling a 50c bottle o Dr. Howard's specific for 25c W. A. Leslie has so much faith in the remedy that he will refund the money to anyone whom it does not cure. When your head aches, your stomach does not digest food easily and naturally, when there is constipation, specks be fore the eyes, tired feeling, giddiness, bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, heartburn, sour stomach, roaring or ringing in the ears, melancholy and liver troubles Dr. Howard's specific will cure you. If it does not, it wilr not cost you a cent. Former Governor States Why He Fa vors the Candidacy of the Young Lochnivar From the West Has Known His Private and Public Ca reer For Thirty Years and Knows That He is a Gentleman, Patriot and Statesman. From The Raleigh News and Observer. Editor of The News and Observer: It has been my habit ever since 1 became a voter to support oomebody for nomination for various offices. I am always for somebody and never against any Democrat. This time I am for he nomination of -Mr. Locke aig. I am supporting him be cause I know him and have mown him for. thirty years. He and I were class-mates, and I boarded for one year at his moth ?r's table. I know the man in ais personal and private life: I know his public career. He is a gentleman, a patriot and a states nan. He has the courage of his :onvictions. He has the unself ihness of a genuine lover of tht ,eople. No toil has ever been too arduous for him to undertake in behalf of Democracy. He nade the first speech which was made in the year of our revolu ;ion, 1898. It was his speech which set the pace for that cam paign. I made the second speech from the same platform with him, and followed his footsteps. His speech was along the line of appealing to the old Democracy and going to the people on the bad record made by the Repub lican party. He frankly and openly avowed the thought that a straight fight in behalf of Democracy would redeem the State. From the hour he made that speech until the election in November, 1898, I never ceased to believe for one moment that we would win the great victory which we achieved that year. vVhile he was going to and fro through the State awakening all our people, his own people in Buncombe county nominated him for the Legislature and elected! him, and he came to the Legis lature in 1899 and rendered most valuable service in perfecting the constitutional amendment which has already accomplished so much good for the State. But the adoption of the amendment by the Legislature was but the be ginning of one of the greatest fights that this State has ever seen. The amendment was great ly misunderstood by the people at first and the Republicans made a most adroit appeal to the un lettered white voters and sought to con vice them that the adoption of the amendment would disfran chise them and their children. No one contributed more to the removal of this difficulty than Locke Craig. As I recall it, he began his canvass in Buncombe county in January or February of 1900, and from then until the November election he worked without ceasing. When I reached the mountains in May of that year, on my canvass, I found that his splendid work had pre- J ceded me and the Democracy was fast uniting in support of the amendment. When the elec tion came, the fruit of his work in that country was seen from the fact that the amendment came near carrying the mountain district, and I had carried it by a small majority: a thing which no one would have predicted in January, 1900. Mr. Craig is a true Democrat, believing in the right of the people to make nom inations and platforms, but when the platform is made and he is elected upon it, no number of -1 - M 1 J 1 - en, however great, couia maite him vary one iota from the re quirements of it He is a liberal and broad-minded man. He loves his friends, and has no enemies to hate. In him sis' Governor I believe we shall have not only good government, but good gov ernment with a united party, carrying out every pledge in the platform and steadily growing in the confidence of the people. I sincerely hope to see him nominated. That he would be elected follows as a matter of course. C. B. AYCOCK. Goldsboro, March 25, 1908. Ashley Home For Governor. f His Record as Confederate Soldier Without a Blemish A Sterling Dem ocratAs Farmer and Business Man He Has Been Successful Public Spirited and Patriotic, He . Leads in All Progressive, Movements. To the Democrats of North Carolina: Ashley Home, of this place, is a candidate for Governor, subject to the action of the Democratic state convention. I have known Mr. Home all of his life, and feel that it is not out of place for me, of my own knowledge, to state what manner of man he is. He is a native of Johnson county; is sixty-two years old; had a common school education, but in early manhood volunteered as a private in the Confederate army, and following the fortune of the army of north ern Virginia for four years, and surrendered with it at Appomat tox. His record as a soldier is without blemish. As a farmer and as a business man he has been successful and he has also embarked in other lines of business. Now he is re garded as one of the most suc cessful men in the State. While he has other large lines, and is engaged in banking, insurance, manufacturing, merchandising, he is still a large and active far mer. "He is not merely a farmer on paper, but every day during the crop season a visitor would be apt to find him in the field, ac tually carrying on large, active, and successful farming opera tions. And so well informed does he keep himself on market prices on farm products, that many will recall that during sev eral recent years he has published cotton letters which have con tained wholesome advice to the farmers with regard to holding their cotton. This advice has proved to be well founded, and there is no estimating the money it saved the farmers of the State, and they 'were not slow in ex pressing their gratitude to him. In fact he is on all business prop ositions a very pratical ana wise counselor. In the early 90's, when popu lism was making such headway among the people, he opposed it, but he understood the hard con ditions under which the farmers were suffering; and, instead of denouncing their movement as many unwise men did, he treated them with kindness and sympa thy, dissuading them from leav ing the democratic party, but never denouncing them. In the country immediately contiguous to Clayton, populism never made any headway, and one of the reasons it made no headway, was the wise and kindly manner in which the farmers were treated by Mr. Home and other demo- crats. After the fusion of popu lism ana republicanism carried the state, and when many demo crats felt that it would be best for us to make some arangement with the populists by which the state could be redeemed, Mr. Home was outspoken in his de nunciation of the movement. Six or eight years before he had been moderate and conciliatory in deal ing with populists, for he under stood the burden under which the farmers were then stagger ing. But in 1898 he had no sym pathy for any movement looking to a fusion with Butler, Russell and Thompson. He was . out spoken in denouncing any such proposition. He came to the state convention in 1898 and (Continued on second page.) Youth Kills Himself at Hickory. Hickory Dispatch, 26th, to Raleigh News and Ob- erver. John Triplett, a 17-year-old boy, committed suicide here this afternoon. When the body was found he was lying on the bed in his room with a shotgun by his side and a great, gaping hole through his breast. It was evi dent that he had placed the muz zle of the gun to his breast and A TWENTY YEAR SENTENCE "I have just completed a twenty year health sentence, imposed by Bucklen Arnica Salve, which cured me of bleed ing piles luat twenty years ago, writes O. S. Woolever, of LeRaysville, N. Y.' Bucklen's Arnica Salve heals the worst sores, boils, burns, wound and cuts in the shortest time. 25c. at W. A. Leslie's drug store. BEWARE OF OINTMENTS FOR CATARRH THAT CONTAIN MERCURY. As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely deranjre the whole system when entering it through the mucuossurfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescrip tions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can pos sibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure. manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. 0..J contains no mercury, and is taken internally, act in? directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure he sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally rnd made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Test im mials free. ' Sold by Druggists. Trice 75c per bottle. Take Hall's i'auiiiy Fills for constipation. NOTICE. Sealed bids will be received on or before the 1st Monday m April, 1908, for- building Fonta Flora school house,. Dist. No. 2, Linville township, with all mate ria 1 furnished. For plans and specifications apply to Kev. K. L. Patton, Superintendent. J. H. Hoffman, Chr. Bd. Education. March 9, 1908. That hacking cough continues ' Because your system U exhausted and q your powers of resistance weakened. Q : Take Scot? Emulsion. If- tmilds tm and strengthens vour entire system, z - X It contains Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites so q J prepared that it is easy to take and easy to digest ALL DRUGGISTS: 50c. AND $1.00 M WUm 1 I and strictly prohibits the sale of alum baking powder So does France So Joes Germanv r i , r . The sale of alum foods has been made illegal in Washington and the District of Colum bia, and alum baking powders are everywhere recognized as injurious. jQ protCct yourself against alum, x when ordering baking powder, Sap plainly- fliWn :..BAKK38 anc be very sure you get Royal Royal is the only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape someness of the food. 5 1 V n discharged it . by pressing the trigger with a stick. No one knows of any cause for the rash act except that his older brother reproved him yesterday for some thing he had done. The boy made some threats against his brother, but no one paid any at tention to him. He was at work in the Hickory shops during the forenoon and nothing amiss was noticed. DEATH WAS ON HIS HEELS. Jesse P. Morris, of Skippers, Va., had a close call in the spring of 1906. He says: "An attack of pneumonia left me so weak and with such a fear ful cough that my friends declared con sumption had me, and death was on my heels. Then I was persuaded to try Dr. Ding's New Discovery. It helped me immediately, and after taking twj and a half bottles I was a well man ag-ain. I found out that New Discov ery is the best remedy for coughs and lung disease in all the world.' Sold under guarantee at W. A. Leslie's drug store. 50c and $1.00. Trial bot tie free. HE GOT WHAT HE NEEDED. "Nine years ago it looked as if my time had come," says Mr. C. Farthincr, of Mill Creek. Ind. Ter. "I was so run down that life hung on a verv slender thread. It was then my druggist rec ommended Electric Bitters. I bought a bottle and I got what I needed strength. I had one foot in the grave, but Electric Bitters put it back on the turf again, and I've been: well ever since." Sold under guarantee at W. A. Leslie's drugr store. 50c. FOLmHOlOTTAt tops tlae cotxgli an 2 Hetvls lung 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. $15 per acre. 1 Farm, 100 acres, 4 mi es from Morganton. $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 101 acres, 4 mi c from Morganton. $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 90 acres, 44 miles from Morganton. - $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 100 acres, 4 miles from Morganton. $15 per acre. 1 Farm, 3tf 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 term 5. 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 Bold on eay terms. manly Mcdowell, MORGANTON, N. C. i '. i- v. f ! i 3
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 2, 1908, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75