tf". '-. I i NEW5oERALDo f The nil -TO- -Herald Office plKST-CLASS WOBK AT L0W3T PHCH. Best Advertising Medium IN THI P1UDM0NT SECTION s T. G. COBB, Publisher. THE BVRKE COVNTY NEWS 1 Conciliated Nov 29 1901 THE MOR.GANTON HERALD J Consolidate Hov. 29.1901 Subscription Price, $i Per Year In Advance 11 VOL. XXIV. MORGANTON,N. C.t APRIL 23 1908, No. 3. X feeling' that ffltn :f, n,i to a feelintr of S'1 V .,n,,rv bv the iudici- iir. iiwf ;-- -- genuine tonic to ,.rvp. and but a. 'imd. lifeless ,vraiiv c 1B , "1 is. needed to satisfy the i'tV- ' Snoop's Restorative is r rea'chinirthat tired spot. The '"Wot winter nearly always iUr, 1 Tl in m eenerai. j.ne tus- to 41- lack ot exercise duuuuiuwi cm Sti the liver, stagnates the kidneys, a-. ; retimes weakens tne nean s ac- I'ie Dr. bfioop s xvestui ciiive a. Tk5 and all will be changed. A ijvstest will tell you that you are he rii'ht remedy. You will easi- -rv note the change from day Sold by isurtce lrug v-o. STRAGEST OF SECTS. How .jr. XTEP. For U' S- Army able 4 unmarried men, between ages "aiid 3?. eitiens of United States, jchaVaeter and temperate habits, "lan 'speak, read and write Eng " Men wanted now for service 'ba'anJ the Philippines. For in- f.;,:n apply toKecruitingumcer, la Trade St.,Ciiariotte, m. ; soi - Mai" St.. Asheville, N. C; Bank "'-' Ii;ckorr, X. C ;417JS Liberty Xtewn-SV.ern, X. C; 126 North Salisbury, X. C. ; Kendall :'i-".Coluir-tia, S. C; Hay ns worth Confers Building, Greenville, V(jle:i:i Building, Sparanburg, ! itk 50 YEARS' I EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights 4 c. - q ssetrh and description ma) . r'-r opirion free whether au - t r-Heritable. Co'-nmunica-il Handbook on Patenta ,v rev tor securing patents. . - ta Munn 4 Co. receive - -:--t enp'-ee, in the ic American. Tared weekly. I.areest dr "..Sc Journal. Terms. 13 a s. ti. Sold brail newsdealers. ;i:U Co.35,B-adwa)r' New York x.rh uoe. t '.: v St, Washington. D. C, jliliU r:H CAROLINA. :ll CoL'NTV. i:i the Superior Court T Ky. executrix of P. B Ke;--, ere. V3, Hcr.ry J. Key, and others. Or.i.'r.K Ut i-L t5LHJAHOJN. appearing' from the affidavit of R. - this action, that P. B.K.French, . F. E. K::r;gender, Mrs. Virginia iir-gcrr.d. Henrj- J. Key, Mrs. C. Jer.Kins. Anna Key Pipes, Ij B. Kev and Francis S. Key, are be found in Iredell county, and after due diligence be found in rite; ar.d it runner appearing that are necessary parties to this ac :o sell land tor assets with which ;t debts: ii, therefore, ordered that notice is action be published once a week ::ar weeks in a newspaper published !::ganton. Burke county, setting . u.e title of the action, the parties '.esame, together with a brief re jf the subject matter of the same, squiring tne defendants to appear "c office of the clerk of the Super .urt of Burke county, on the 6th -f April, lyu. and answer or de :o the i rnplaint of the plaintiff, r relief therein d.emanded will -be red. L. A. BRISTOL, Clerk Superior Court, the 0:h day of March, 1908. arris' Steam Dyeing AND Cleaning Works, RALEIGH, N. C. Ladies' and Children's made new. Panamas kinds of hats cleaned. ii;1. and rebanded. Clothing, -.shoes, trims, pistols, watches t all kinds of personal nroner- -aken in exchange for work or on consignment. Established j-eign in 1888. Everybody P'S us. Don't send anv shod- goods. we don't work on the Doukhobors Pnnish selves to Attain Purity. Detroit News-Tribune. -Of the many strange sects which find followers in some portion or other of the globe there is none more eccentric or more Spartan m self-discipline than the Douk hobors. It is a sect which re sponds to a call that brooks no caviling, no hanging back. The people who voluntarily accept its obligations impose upon them selves a penance which is calcu lated to test the limit of their en durance. Humiliation of the flesh is part and parcel of their creed. To such extremes do they carry their fanatical beliefs that they are frequently to be seen marching through scorching heat or bitter cold with practically no clothing beyond a loin cloth to cover them. The Doukhobors make sacrifi ces which surpasess in severity those of the most rigid ascetic. They have been ordered by their leaders to sell their cattle. They have done so. NowT their chil dren are dying for want of sus tenance. Last autumn they were ordered to sell their sheep, and they disposed of 15,000. They then sold their chickens. Now they are paupers. Their leaders have abolished time. Nearly $8,000 worth of watches and clocks have been taken away from the people by their head men. Mirrors have been for bidden; to make sure, special agents have collected all the look ing glasses. Tea, coffee, sugar and pancakes are under the ban, and their food is now narrowed down to potatoes, carrots, onions and turnips. According to the statement of a correspondent wrho has studied their customs, 500 Doukhobors live in two houses. Every man and woman has a space allotted, which is just four feet wide. They have to get into their beds from the foot, so cramped are their quarters. All eat at big tables in the centre. The young men sleep like sardines in the garret And, under a new rule, no Doukhobor may own more than one shirt. So poor and indi erestible is their food now that most of the Doukhobors are real ly ill and diseased. They let the law 0 as a dead letter, and births, deaths and marriages go unrecorded. m as to "I pig i .For Sale:. L a r g e Yorkshire Pigs at reduced prices. Also Orpington eggs for hatching, 13 for 31.25. Riverside Park Gardens THE GOME AND SEE SIGN iEXTS WANTED. MIS-STEAM 0YEING CLEANING WORKS, ILEIGH. N AND APROassT, EFFECTIVE KEKiSOr FOR ALL FORMS OF HEUMATISr.1 lumbago. ariarfa. nWnejf Trouble, Catarrh, tithrna and LaOrlppm GIVEt QUICK RELIEF 'S;.1?"1!? affords almost ln- :" rom Pain, while permanent are bein eflected. by taking it in ,ie'. Purine the blood, dissolving tie T suos'anee ana removing it TEST it core lIA'J 5u?erin8 with Rheumatism. r:"?0' Viatica, Neuraleia. Kidney or auy kindred disease, write to .i;t'na' bottle ol "6-DKQPS," and ... UE-Y VEGETABLE Kctno ",s entirely free of opium. ilaotv,porphine- alcohoU laudanum. U s, Sinii"f r ingredients. l U 0ti'e' "5-lROPS (800 Dose) fiS! mm CURE COMPANY, i4kc Direct vmcn THE BY B 1 -nwn IKUUKLta PPP.Q1A JPI6ESTI0N r1',r. r..v. ,:.' "iEUectl-eiTonthestornart, '"iiisn.'. ;'. c'""jing off the waste and 4tUi iAFE-OnCK TO ACT ''RICE 60 CENTS -" ( 1 i: . ' r This signis permanently attached to the front of the main building of the Lydia E. Pinkliam Medicine Company, Lynn, iMass. What Ioes This Sijrn Mean ? It means that public inspection of thft laboratory and methods of doing business is honestly desired. It means that therft ia nothins about the bus iness which is not " open and above- It means that a permanent invita tion Ls extended to anyone to come and verify any and all statements made in the advertisements of Lydia V. Pinthnm's Veeetable Compound. Ta it a Turelv vesetable compound made from roots and herbs with out drugs ? Come and See. tv thfi wnmen of America continu ally use as much of it as we are told ? Home and See. Was there ever such a person as Lydia E. Pinkham, and is there any Afr-o Pinlrham now to whom sick woman are asked to write ? I'limfl and See. Is the vast private correspondence nHrh Kir-lr womfin conducted by women only, and are the letters kept strictly confidential r Come and See. Have they really got letters from over one million, one hundred thousand women correspondents? Come and See. Have they proof that Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured thousands of these women? Come and See. v . -This advertisement is only for ioubters, -The great army of women who know from their own personal Experience that no medicme m the world equab Lydia E. Pmkham s Vegetable Compound for female ills will still go on using and being ben efited by it ; but the poor doubting, suffering woman must, for her own sake,be taught confidence,for she also might just as well regain her health. President Finley on the Situation. - President W. W. Finley, of the Southern Railway Company, who has been looking carefully into commercial and industrial condi tions in the Southern States, was asked recently for a summary of the result of his inquiries. While business conditions the Southern States are not favorable as we would like have them," said Mr. Finley, think the situation in that section is fully as favorably to an eai ly revival of prosperity as that in any other part of the country. Throughout the South, the bank ing institutions are in sound con dition, and, althought their mana gers are generally pursuing care ful and conservative policies, sound business enterprises are generally able to obtain all of the credit needed. From most locali ties come reports that Southern farmers are in a prosperous con dition, and have substantial bank accounts. In the United States as a whole, and especially in the Southern section, agriculture is the predominant industry. Last year's crops were sold at re munerative prices. Largely as a result of the purchasing power of the farmers, retail, trade in most Southern communities is "fairly active. In .those localities where cotton mill employees and other industrial workers are most numerous, there has, of course, been more or less falling off in retail business as a result of the industrial depression. As in all other sections, there is a tenden cy on the part of retail dealers in all lines to buy very conservative ly and reduce their stocks of goods. This necessarily has the effect of curtailing the business of jobbers, who in turn are con servative in their purchases from manufacturers, and this, in turn tends to accentute the industrial depression. "That the depression should have been so widespread and serious is due, I think not so much to fundamentally unfavor able economic conditions as to the general uncertainty as to the fu ture which has prevailed and to the consequent tendency on the part of the American people gen erally to economize in their ex penditures. The cumulative ef fects of all these individual eco nomics, passed on through retail ers and jobbers, have fallen with full force upon the manufactur ing and transportation interests of the country,, which are, conse quently, feeling the depression much more acutely than other interests. "The question of how soon a revival may be expected to be gin is one which no man can an swer with certainty, for the rea son that some of the reasons for the continuance of the business depression are psychological. This being true, one of the most important results to be brought about is the creation of a con structive sentiment based on faith in ourselves and in the fu- ure. The few weak spots in our banking system have been elimi nated; the natural resources of our countrv have not been di minished, and the industries and enterprise of the American peo ple are as great as ever before. Under the circumstances, before, as a result of the prolongation of existing conditions, economic complications arise, it is the duty of each one of us to look to the future, rather than to the past, and to contribute, to the best of his ability, to the bringing about of such a sound constructive sen timent as will substantially aid in a return to prosperity." News Faking in Asheville. Greensboro News. A news dispatch under an Asheville date line appeared in a number of Northern newspapers last Thursday saying that Dis trict Attorney A. E. Holton had begun a suit in the United States Court claiming title to all of the extreme western portion of North Carolina, including the greater part of eight counties, many towns and villages, a por tion of four railroads, the Toxa way hotels and property and the greatest part of George W. Van derbilt's Pisgah forests. A representative of the Daily Industrial News called the dis patch to the attention of District Attorney Holton yesterday after noon. Mr. Holton said there was absolutely no truth to the story. The whole matter started, he ad ded, from a suit brought about six wreeks ago in the District Court at Asheville to eject the Hiwassee Lumber Company and a man by the name of Brown from a 5,000 acre tract of land in Clay county belonging to the United States. District Attorney Holton says that this tract is no part of the lands described in the fake story from Asheville. It is a tract which fell into the possession of the United States years ago as a result of a case of the United States against one Olmsted, an official of the gov ernment, who then conveyed the same to the government. - It is alleged that the lumber company and Brown have built a cabin upon the land in order to claim and maintain possession. Fake stories similar to this have appeared in Northern papers heretofore, and it seems that these publications have a fond ness for such fabrications when the mountain sections of North Carolina is involved. Only a few weeks ago a Chicago paper con tained a half page story under a Greensboro date line about the "Clay eaters of the mountains of North Carolina." The Chicago paper went on to say that a large number of people in the moun tain sections of this state lived principally on dirt, and it printed the photograph of a cabin pur porting to be the home of the dirt eaters. This article was dated from Greensboro and con veyed an impression to the unin formed reader that the residents of the citv exist principally upon clay. Governor Glenn Tells Why He is Not in the Race for the United States Senate. Raleigh Special to Charlotte News, 14th. Governor Glenn issues a lengthy statement, in which he announces that he will not be a candidate for the United "States Senate, but will support Senator Overman. The statement declares his cherished ambition was to be United States senator and the withdrawal from the race six years ago in favor of Mr. C. B. Watson was for the sake of har mony, it he should get in the race against Senator Overman the contest would be fierce, so he again retires for harmony. He reviews his "strenuous" administration as governor and says the people having made him what he is politically, he would not fear again to put his destiny in their hands. But in the pres ent action he is actuated by the desire to serve the State" by pre venting a bitter contest and still higher motive to help humanity. With hostile persons and pa pers saying he is using the tem perence campaign as a stepping stone to his own personal ad vancement, he desires to be un trammelled and have it under stood he is working for what he believes the best and greatest good. He appeals to"all to rally to the support of State prohibition. He says he realizes this is the "flood tide" of his political career and in refusing to take the political 'current" he loses all his "ven tures," surrenders forever his ambition, but better than hold ing office is duty. STRONG FAMILIES' STRENGTH. It Does Not Lie in Money But Some thing Else. Harper's Weekly. Sundry divorce suits and re marriage propositions that take up space in the papers just now illustrate that it makes less dif ference how much money a man leaves behind him than in what hands he leaves it To leave abounding means in foolish hands is failure. To leave wise children in the world issuccess.andif they can be left in a position of fiscal advantage, so much the better. To found a good family, or give good human stock a lift, and put it in a position of enlarged op portunity and increased power, is a work that is legitimately at tractive. But it is the human stuff that is important. What every country needs is families that will breed true to high standards and give superior indi viduals to the service of the world. We have such families, that generation after generation turn out high-class men and women. JUvery progressive country has, and must have, such families. Whether at a given time they are rich or not is a matter of secondary importance If the human matenal is strong and good, money is sufficient quantity will come to it first or last. If the human stock is in ferior, immoral, or ill trained, money dumped upon it will mere ly advertise its inferiority. r AVR BEL a W nmvT fm mi Revival in Jail. Asheville Dispatch, 20th. As a result of the visitation of and strictly prohibits the sale of alum baking powder So does France So does Germany , f , rV:. ; 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 i injurious. jq protect yourself against alum, ; when ordering baking powder, Sap plainly- 1L POWDER and be very sure you get Royal. Royal is the only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape f Cream of Tartar. It adds to the digestibility and whole- someness or the rood. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea never fails to tone the stomach, purify the blood, regulate the kidneys, liver and bowels. The greatest spring tonic, makes and ketips you well. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. W. A. Leslie. Receipe for Making Money. tLFirst catch or seize your oppor tunity, embracing it fearlessly. Next take some well-laid and in telligent plans and put them into execution, together with common sense and up-to-date methods. Add industry, honesty, fair deal ings, punctuality, civility and at tention, with perhaps, a suspicion of shrewdness and a measure of judicious advertising,- should the nature of your business require it. Bestir yourself and study the public taste. The whole matter may then be left to develop in patience, brightened by optim ism. - PLENTY OF TROUBLE Ia caused by stagnation of the liver and bowels, to get rid of it and head ache and billiousness and the poison that brings jaundice, take Dr. King's New Life Pills, the rel'able purifiers that do the work without grinding or griping. 25c. at W. A. Leslie's drug store. The Best Half of Zeb Vance. From Ex-Gov. Aycock's Speech at Fayetteville. There isn't any danger in being a man!" flashed the Gov ernor, and, making the contrast with the names cited, asked: "What has become of the anti prohibition leaders of those days? There is not of all that army but one man who has not been for gotten. There was one man who never shall be, whom the people loved then as they love his memory now because of what he did for them in the days of '61 '65, so that he could do anything and say anything without fear of losing his hold on the affections of his people. That was Zeb Vance, But although he was asrainst nrohibition he told the truth about it. "Do you remember, "asked the ex-Governor, "what Vance said when Dr. Abernethy asked him to vote for prohibition? "My God, Abernethy," said he. "My heart's with you but my stomach's against you." "We had the best part of Zeb Vance," exclaimed the speaker. "We had his heart and you liquor people had his stomach." an alleged "spook" or "pres ence" at the county jail Friday night, when the prisoners wrere so badly frightened two of them fainted, has resulted in good. Saturday night all the prisoners in the jail, including probably 30 J or 40, requested "Rev." W. G. Whitaker, the United States prisoner, charged with using the mails for fraudulent purposes, to hold services. For two hours the services continued, all of the prisoners joining in. Two of the white men were converted. All were afraid. Today the prison ers handed Jailer Mitchell their playing cards with the request that he burn them. The pris oners also told Mr. Mitchell that they had agreed not to use any more profanity and . to cut out vulgar talk. Mr. Mitchell de clared today that his bunch of prisoners were certainly changed men. Weak women get prompt and lasting help by using Dr. Shoop s Night Cure. These soothing, healing, antiseptic sup positories, with full information how to proceed are interestingly told of in my book "No 4 For Women". The book and strictly confidential medical ad vice is entirely free. Simply write Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis., for my book No. 4. Sold by Burke Drugr Co. Foley's Orino Laxative is best for women and children. Its mild action and pleasant taste makes it preferable to violent purgatives, such as pills. tablets, etc. Cures constipation. W A. Leslie. Sale of One-Eighth Interest in Christo pher Shuffler Land. TTnHr nnH hv virtue of a morteatre deed exe cuted and delivered by John W. Christenbury and a,ifa tn th Piedmont SDrintra Lumber Company. on the 31st day of July, 1906. duly recorded in the Register's office of Burke county on the 25th day of August, laue, in book a mo. 2. page iwei aei.. tv,a nnHaroicmed will exDose to sale at public auc tion to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Court House door in the town or Moreanton, JNortn ar- Monday, the 4th day of May, 1908, h. fnllnnrincr described real estate, tc-wit: The same beingfbne undivided one-eighth inter est in the Christopher snumer lana, containing Iuitio- on I Tuner Creek in Burke county, State of North Carolina, adjoining the Shuffler Mill tract, now belonging to urey Turner, ana tne lands of John Shuffler, the Spainhour tract and others. . Tt,. o rt wiio Tuinr made bv reason of default in the payment of a jiots or debt of two hundred ($200.00) dollars, with interest from the 31st day of July, A. D. lauo, secured Dy saiu murusage. Thic 9nd dair of Anril. A. D. 1906. uirrvMnMT SPRINGS LUMBER COMPANY. By Alvin C. Birdsall, Secretary & Treas. One Girl in Ninety Miles. Los Angeles Times. Miss May Ferrington, now at tending the Girls' Collegiate School in Los Angeles, lives a part of each year on her father's great ranch near Crater, in Muno county, on the border of the Yosemite park, and she is the only girl within a radius of ninety miles. Hither every summer Uncle Sam sends a squadron of cavalry to guard the park, and the khaki- clad scouts have voted this slim little maid the queen of the whole countryside. She has yellow hat cords, buttons and trophies ga lore. She has a splendid chain of tiny gold nuggets for -beads and the men of the squadron Dresented to her a uniform of their companies blue, with yel low cavalry stripes on the jaunty skirt. Her gentle sway over her soldier subjects included inspee tion at stated intervals, when the younp; commandant by brevet rode her prancing steed up and down the line of mounted sol diers. Never Saw But One Man. The Baltimor Sun a few days ago printed a picture of Mrs. Mohamed Ali Bey, wife of the new Turkish minister to the United States. In connection with the publication of her picture, Mrs. Ali Bey made the somewhat remarkable statement that she "has never set eyes on .1 tt i i any otner man man ner nus band. ' ' The Sun thinks this will make American women wonder, The picture shows that the Turkish minister's wife is "good lookingstylish and uncommonly attractive." and is fitted out in the height of Paris fashion, Moralizing and philosophizing, The Sun remarks: It an American woman had to reserve all these charms exclusively for her husband, she would feel that she was wasting her sweetness on desert air. What would be the use of Merry Widow hats, stun ning gowns and all the frills and furbelows, if you couldn't parade in some places where men could enjoy their beauties?" The Turkish minister is of respectable appearance, and he is his wife's ideal of man. It would be in teresting to see the effect upon this Turkish woman, if it could be arranged to have her brought face to face with an average specimen of American ugly man. Would she think him a monster or would she go into rhapsodies over him as an American beauty? Two to one she would regard him as a honey, for such is the way of woman. H ' 'Thar never was a boy born into the world that don't have to have the hickory put to him more than once, and the ottener the better, said Mr. Billy Saunders. You may think my talk harsh, but the more I. love a boy the more I want to see him come under some strong an' heavy bond, bekaze I know it is his only salvation. You may look back on all the youngsters you've know d, and you'll find that we ain't got any more wisdom than Solomon, ef as much. He tore the bottom out of the basket in a mighty few words. 'Spar' the rod an' spile the child. Ef he'd a' never said nothin' else them seven words would a' made him the wisest man the world ever seed. No newspaper paragrapher has ever beat it yit. If brevity's the sole of whitleather, your Uncle Solo mon has got it down mighty fine; ef he ain't you may call me Ma bel, an print . in the paper I've done gone an' eloped wi' a college fiddler named Clarence Raymond. Joel Chandler Harris. DEATH WAS ON HIS HEELS. Jesse P. Morris, of Skippers, Va., had a close call in the spring1 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 hall bottles I was a well man again. I found out that New Discov ery is the best remedy for coughs and lung disease in all the world. bold 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. Farthing, 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 drug store. 50c. tops the cough and heals lungs A TWENTY YEAR SENTENCE. "I have just completed a twenty year health sentence, imposed by Bucklen's Arnica Salve, which cured me of bleed ing- piles lust twenty years ago, writes j. a. wooiever, oi iercaysvuic, N. Y. Bucklen's Arnica Salve heals the worst sores, boils, burns, wounds and cuts in the shortest time. 2sc. at W. A. Leslie's drug store. Some Definitions. If a man takes a piece of steel worth a quarter and makes of it watch springs worth $100, that is skill. If he takes a piece of paper worth a cent and writes on it a poem that sells for $100, that is genius. If a man takes a hammer worth a dollar and in a day's use of it earns two dollars, that is hard work. If a man buys a silver mine he has never seen and it makes him a millionaire, that's luck. If a man buys an article to-day for a dollar and sells it to-morrow for four dollars, that's business. 5 A New Orleans woman was thin. Because she did not extract sufficient nourishment from her food. She took Scoff Vr Emulsion. Result: : She gained a pound a day in weight ALL DRUGGISTS i 50c. AND $1.00 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 Morg-anton. " $15 per acre. 1 Farm, 100 acres, mi es from Morganton. $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 101 acres, 4 mi c - from Morganton. $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 90 acres, 4 miits from Morganton. $10 per acre. 1 Farm, 100 acres, 4 miles from Morganton. . - $15 "per acre. 1 Farm, 3j4 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, MORGAJ7TOJJ, J C. r