Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / July 30, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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HE 11ERA The dews-Herald 1 ft f TOBPBINTINft IS THE Best Advertising Medium IN THS P1KDM0NT SECTION -TO- .Herald Office. flXST-CiASS WOBX AT. Lowist Pxicm. T. G. COBB, Publisher. THE BURKE COUNTY NEWS 1 Consolidated Nov 29 1901 THE MO R-G ANTON HERALD nouoiea nov. ssf.xuui Subscription Price, $i Per Year In Advance 1 VOL. XXIV. MORG ANTON, N. C, JULY 30, 1908, No. 17 Bring Your NEW5!r LD ites tne nerc, a a tonic to off-set hat weather Nerve and You will teel Tn th n. tr : Lilt; 1 1 i -3'trl.. 4!i hours after beginning e.i. Its prompt action in re- the weakened nerves is supris-:afv.-iure. vou won't get entirley itavs. DUt eacii uy yuu Tin a to-.v a."-u-: -ire " feel the improvement. spiritless feelinsr . R. en a failing appetite; it aids j A CAMPBELL VICTORY Texas Goyernor Was Re-Elected By Probably 50,000 Votes. COMPLETE RETURNS NOT IN GEORGIA LEGISLATURE. QUIET MOW REIGNS TERRIBLE MASSACRE RECALLED. Will 1 strengthen sharps Kidnevs and Heart by sim- n 'the worn-out nerves mat e:iu upon, lesi il ci , convinced. Sold by J the i From Present Indications It Appears That the Sumbrssion Amendment for State Wide Prohibition Has Been Defeated. rf. nr . 11. w aKeneia, ox will De ai noiei luur- or. Tv.o-iay. July 3'Jtn, ior iv oniv. His practice is ..- n ureases oi tne n.ye, iJ i ti 4-. j rvi-i-; ia iiu ucti ctiiu r it ting FI.SI prc-an T. IE CONDITION OF THE iATIONALBAfiK - IV THE STATE OF NORTH 'r THE CLOSE OF EUSI LY 15th, 19WS. .MX 3i.SK. Vi UuUKCES. and unsecured ;:v circulation :-:'.;:ure, rixtures i Banks vnot reserve d rerve agents L--.h i'ems i r.:--l t':mks urrtricy, nickels $149,087.46 370.40 15,000,lO 7.000.00 53.fi3S.74 15,000.15 721. 4S 4.450.UO 14S.24 v Reserve in 9.910.50 t r - itos 4.-.OJ.00 j.i i h I. S. Treasurer : circuiationt 14.410.50 730.00 Dallas, Tex.. July 27. Partial re turns frim the democratic state pri maries held Saturday indicate a vic tory for Governor Campbell by CO. 000. The prohibition submission amend ment appears to have been defeated on the face of the returns. Interest cen tered in the race for attorney gener al. In that contest it is claimed Sen ator Bailey and his friends made fight against Attorney General David son. Davidson appears to have won by 23,000 majority over his opponent. Colonel R. M. Wynne. STRONG FRIEND OF BRYAN. stad Reported. THE TROOPS ARE WITHDRAWN 262,576.97 It Is Thought Extra Session May Be Necessary. Atlanta, July 27. An extra session may be necessary for the legislature : further Outbreaks at Willem- iu receive unu aui uu iub leyuii ui the legislative investigation commit tee, now engaged in unearthing horri ble disclosures in regard to the con vict lease system, provided the inves tigation committee goes as deeply into the ramifications of the testimony, in the future, as it has in the past. Already there is pending in the house a resolution calling for a ten- day recess, and unless this is approv ed, it looks as though an extra session will "have to be held. Tragedy of every variety, of every shade of gloom, and responsible for every degree of misery and for sev eral deaths, was the order of the day at the hearing before the Felder in vestigating committee on Saturday. The committee met at 9:40 o'clock and at 1 o'clock went into executive session, after which it adjourned un til Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock. The somber story ran the gamut of human misery from divorce to 'death; from sickness and cruel persecution to broken bodies and final forgetful ness in the grave. Men who had suffered tortures at the hands of cruel convict bosses and guards, told of the cruelty visited upon them and upon others. They told of the supine Indifference of men whom the state paid to guard and protect them. They told of these men being subsidized by convict lessees, and of being forced to work beyond their strength under the fear of the lash. There will be precipitated in the house this week a fight over the pending resolution, which calls upon LIABILITIES. $ 35.000.00 16,000.00 1. 425.91 500.00 15,000.00 175.00 118.868.37 74,941.44 666.25 262.576.97 Sc-i"prof.:5, expenses and m oral v-i; Baa',; r.:'?s outstanding Thai dvp.wits subjt to cheek jer's ccecS! outstanding al for North Carolina. '. ss. Cuvsty uf Burke. A. M. 1"-' -j'id. Cashier of the above-named iidos- iemniy swear that the above statement --o'nc btst of mv knowledge and belief. A. M. INGOLD, Cashier, mbvc ar.J sworn to before me this ISth day '' L. A. BRISTOL. Notary Public. ( A. M. KISTLER. -ec:-Ves:: -1. I. DAVIS, ) S. R. COLLETT, Directors. i 50 YEARS' EXPERiENCE Weaver. Former Populist Candidate for Presidency, Meets Him. Oes Moines, Iowa, July 27. When William J. Bryan awoke Monday he found awaiting him General John B. Weaver, of Iowa, who, in 1892, was the Populist candidate for president. General Weaver boarded the train at Colfax, Iowa, while Mr. Bryan was dressing, but soon the two men were engaged in earnest conversation over j genera gecure fjpom moment o the United States supreme court a departure for Porto Cabello. decree absolute, closing flown tne Every possible protection was ac me No Casualties Reported from the Dem onstrations of SundayA Strong Armed Force Conducted Consul Lo pez to a steamer. Wlllemstad, Sunday, July 2G -Great joy was manifested by the population here when it became known that the Venezuelan consul, Senor Lopez, who took refuge in the German consulate after a mob of Curacoa natives had stormed the Venezuelan consulate, had taken passage for Porto Cabello on the steamer iMaracaibo. The population of the island is quite calm. The troops "have been with drawn and returned to barracks. No casualties resulted from the attack made Sunday night on the dwelling of a Venezuelan resident and the demon stration before the residence of the Venezuelan consul. As Consul Lopez was going from his residence at noon to the consulate, escorted by triops, to remove the offi cial papers, the mob nearly caught him, but he was saved by the arrival of more troops. Monday afternoon the consul's wife and children were escorted to the steamer Maracaibo by the attorney general. They were not molested.. A strong armed force took the consul on board the steamer, which was guard- Pitiable Case of Patrick McGuire, a Survivor of the Samar Tragedy. New York, July 27. 'The terrible massacre of men of company C, of the Ninth infantry at Balingiga, Island of Samar, on September 28, 1901, by treacherous Filipinos, when Captain Connell and more than forty others ! of the command were massacred, is recalled by the case of one of the sur vivors of that day, Patrick McGuire, of Brooklyn, who is in a hospital dy ing from poison taken with suicidal intent. McGuire was only eighteen years old when he enlisted in the Ninth in fantry. He did his part in the at tempt of the survivors to drive off their foes and was one of the eighteen to escape. But the liorrors of that day so preyed on his mind that two years ago his mind failed entirely. He was sent to St. Blizabeth'3, the gov ernment insane hospital at Washing ton, and remained there until ten days ago, when he had so far recovered that his mother was allowed to bring him back to Brooklyn. But the old terror was still with him and Sunday night he escaped his mother's watchful eyes and took the poison which the doctors fear will cost him his life. I, E, MAP CHOSEH Chairman of Democratic National Committee.' TO HOLD THEIR COTTON. SECRETARY, UREY WOODSON After a Confeernce with Messrs. Bry an and Kern, Sub-Committee Made! Its Selection of Officers for National Committee. Chicago, July 27. Chairman, Nor man E. Mack, of Buffalo, N. Y. Vice chairman, L. P. Hall, of Ne braska. Treasurer, Governor C. N. Haskell, of. Oklahoma. Sergeant-at-Arms, John L. Martin, of Missouri. Secretary, Uurey Woodson, Kentuc ky. After a seven-hour conference with Probable Action of Farmers' Union of Mississippi. New Orleans, La., July 27. A Times-Democrat special from Jackson, Miss., says: That the Farmers' Union of Missis sippi has determined to hold cotton off the market, is evidenced toy many surface indications, although the meetings are secret and aembers give out nothing for publication that has not been striotly censored. The union is thoroughly equipped for a practical test. Its membership now Includes a large majority of the farm ers of the state. Warehouses have been established in almost every com munity. Over fifty have been organ ized within the past three months and applications for charters continue to pour In at the rate of half a dozen per week. When the season opens and cotton begin to move in volume, the union will have clGse to 150 to 200 warehouses of Its own in which cotton may be stored to await the caprices of the market. A SURGIG OPERATI V CAUGHT IN QUICKSANDS. g!r$Q&pj;i Trade Marks rpSSi Designs t f yr f 11 Copyrights 4c X-Tr-o r.z a pefh and description H3E5 .:r in ou&pinion free whether an t."'--. iMv patentable, Communka- i.-. t." ioiitiai. Handbook on Patent ; jencT for securing patents. r.W: ta...r. throutrh Mann & Co. receive toinrve, vci- 'mat cbsrge, in the 'mM nmerican. i5c.lK'T!'Tr.! rrated weekly. Lareest civ ia;..i ..f frientifl journal. Terms, $3 a w:'.irK..rths,fL Soidbyall newsdealers. SiJNH & Co.361Broadway New YorK Errh office. Ci V St, Washington. D. C the political situation. General Weaver some time ago iden tified himself with the Democratic party and is a strong friend of Mr. Bryan. Mr. Bryan had a good night's rest. Before going to bed he was serenaded in his car by a male quar tet from a theatrical company, boun-d west. He greatly enjoyed the treat and clapped his hands frequently. At Newton, Iowa, Monday morning, a large crowd gathered about the car and called for Mr. Bryan. He was only partially dressed, but putting his head out of the window of his state room, he said: "Good morning, gentlemen," and ex pressed regret that he did not know a speech was to De maae, eis ue would have been up to say a few words. FATAL EXPLOSION. mm A PROMPT. EFFECTIVE SEMSDY FOR ALL FORMS OF Uimbago, Sciatica, Meurmlgla, Kisney Troublo, Catarrh, Aathnsa and LaGrlppm GIVES OUICK RELIEF Ipf.iea externally it affords almost in "listK'iie rom paia. while permanent sits are being effected by taking it in- r-a;.y. punlyicg the blood, dissolving e poisonous substance and removing it toatie STstpm. TEST IT FREE ,Mrou are suffering with Rheumatism, i'ffibago. Sciatica, Neuralgia, Kidney iroub.e or any kindred disease, write to a lor a trial bottie ot 'o-DROPS," and 'w it yourself. PURELY VEGETABLE "!-DROPS" is entirely free of opium, wtoe, morphine, alcohol, laudanum. Mother similiar ingredients. jefUc Bottle, '5-!ROP8'(80Doe) l.IO. for Bale by DrucsUU SW4N50H RHEUMATIC CURE COMPANY, 104 uie street, t,'Bicas One Boy Killed, Another Fatally In jured at Red Oak. Atlanta, July 27. One boy was al most instantly burned to death, an other is expected to die, and the depot at Red Oak, on the Atlanta and West Point railroad was burned to the ground , as a result of the explosion of a barrel of alcohol Sunday afternoon. The two boys struck a match near the barrel, causing the explosion, and but for the heroism if a third boy who pulled them through a win dow, the second as well as the first boy would have lost his life. The dead boy is Walter Smith, 15 years of age, son of Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Smith, the former a blacksmith at Red Oak. His companion, who is Ducktown copper mines, across Georgia line in Tennessee, on account of -objectionable fumes from the plant proving disastrous to vegetation for miles in the vicinity. This question has been In litigation for a long while. Measures which, if passed, will save the State Agricultural college at Athens , and the eleven district agri cultural colleges over fte state, were introduced in the house Saturday morning and will be rushed through with the utmost speed. The first of these was by Mr. Chan- ler, of DeKalb, chairman of the house appropriation committee, Mr. Martin, of Elbert, and others, making a di rect appropriation of $25,000 for the State Agricultural college at Athens, for the year 1903 and $5(T,000 for the year 1909. The other, by Mr. Candler, of De Kalb, Martin, of Elbert, and repre sentatives from each county in which an agricultural school is located, of fered a measure to appropriate for the use of these district schools all of the fees arising from the sale of fertili zer and pure food tags and all inspec tions, except the actual expenses of inspection. corded the consul by the Willemstad authorities and with the exception of a few insignificant bruises caused by stone3 thrown at 'him, he was not harmed. There was a great popular manifes tation Sunday night to the leaders of the demonstration at which several speeches were delivered. MYSTERY SURROUNDS SHOOTING Sister Had Stranae Premonition of Brother's Death. East St. Louis, 111., July 27. While I her twin brother Fred was being sucked to his death in the quicksands 1 of Long Lake, near Mitchell, 111. Sunday, Merle Huber. seventeen years of age, who was 12 miles away at home, alone, shrieked and fell to the front porch in a faint. Neighbors ran to her assistance and revived her. "Fred is dying. I can hear him calling me. He is drowning. Let me go to him," moaned the girl. Merle made frantic efforts to leave the house, but was held back by friends who assured her that Fred was all right. Tne girl could not be quieted. Five minutes later a message came from Mitchell that Fred Huher had been drowned. When the news reach ed his sister she again fainted and up to a late hour was in a critical con dition. DISTRIBUTING $4,000,000. Money To Go to the Descendants of Cherokee Indisns in the South. Bristol, Tenn., July 27. Fred N Baker, assistant, and Special Commis sioner Miller, who has the task of dis tributing 54,000,000 among the descen dants of Cherokee and other Indians in the south and southwest, Saturday heard the cases ef seven Bristol ap plicants. In most of the Bristol ap plicants were found unmistakable ev idence of unbroken Indian blood. All told, there are forty-five thou sand applicants for their share In the fund, many of them being in Virgin ia, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Caro lina, Georgia and Alabama The money represents a judgment against the United States government in fa vor of the Indians. The original sum was only one million, hut the Interest for seventy-five years has quadrupled It Jealous Man Kills Wife. Toledo, O., July 27. Returning to his wife's home after an absence of sixteen years, Louis Armour, aged 50, murdered the woman, fired a bullet at his daughter, and then tried to com mit suicide . The revolver- failing to explode the cartridge when he sought , . 1 1 TTT.-II TTTV 1 CAt perhaps latany injured is w.u wu, , w Qwn j.fe Armour diappeared, and is now being sought by the police and son of Mr. and Mrs. John White, or Red Oak., Mr. White is also a black smith. Charles Suttles, son of Frank Sut ties, of Red Oak, and a friend of the other two boys, had his hands badly burned while pulling his companions through the window of the depot. citizens. Jealousy because or the re fusal of his wife to take him back is attributed as the cause for the shooting. Police of Cleveland, O., Puzzled Over Strange Affair. Cleveland, O., July 27. -A. bullet wound just over the heart, a young man who registered as Louis Weber, is said to be viying at Charity hospital. ack of the shooting is a mystery which the police of Cleveland and Cleveland Heights, a fashionable sub urb where it occurred, had not been able to solve. The shooting occurred not far from the scene of the Carl Bernthaler and Lena Zeyehman murder several years ago. Weber was walking on the heights with a Miss Agnes Atkinson, the police say. Both principals say Weber was shot by two men, while the couple was sitting on the grass. The girl helped the young man to the residence of F. P. Root and asked for water. To Mr. Root she said taey had been sitting at the side of the road not far from the Root residence when two men dashed through the 'bushes at the rear of them. She said the men seemed greatly excited. One held a revolver in his hand and as he ran past them he ifired. The bullet struck the eirl's companion, passing through his arm and into his breast Just above the heart. The men disappeared as quickly as they came the girl said. LAND BOOM BEGUN. FIVE STATES REPRESENTED. Mississippi Valley Drainage and Good Roads Association. Memphis, Tenn., July 27. Dele gates from five state were represented in the Mississippi Valley Drainage and Goid Roads association, which con vened at the Business Men's Club on Monday. The convention was in session only one day. Between 200 and 300 dele ates were present when the convention was called to order by President Kil- lough, of Arkansas. The states rep resented in the association were Ten nessee, Mississippi, Missouri, Louisi ana and Arkansas. Kentucky was also invited to send delegates as this state was considered in the Mississippi valley with much overflowed land to b ereclaimed by drainage and much work to be done in the way of good roads. The address of welcome was deliver ed by Mayor M alone, with a response by President Killough. A number of. congressmen were pres ent as delegates from the five states, and they took an active part in the proceedings of the convention. Ad dresses were made by prominent men relating to drainage and good roads. NORMAN B. MACK. William J. Eryan and John W. Kern; respectively democratic nominees for president and vice president, the sub committee Saturday made its selec tions of the officers of the committee, It was the first time in many years that a national chairman had been se lected by the democratic party only after a bitter contest had been waged. The choice of Mr. Mack was made possible only after the New York lead ers, Charles F. Murphy, of Tammany, and W. J. Conners, chairman of the state democratic committee, had yielded to the personal desires of Mr. Bryan. MOTOR BOAT CIRCUIT. ALL TURKEY IS REJOICING. Boy Husband Suicides. Chicago, July 27. (A special to the Tribune from Sergeant, Ky., says that Leonard Hall, the fifteen-year-old son of Elder Joseph Hall, a Baptist preach er at Hilliard, committed suicide on Buhday, in the home of his father, by shooting himself with a shotgun. For several weeks the boy has been de spondent. He was married two months ago to little Miss Rhoda Profit, barely twelve years of age, his school mate, with whom the boy husband had not lived happily, it is said. JHE RIGHT REMEDY FOR STOMACH TROUBLES DYSPEPSIA INDIGESTION Breath. AcW FrntiriitatUn, terU?' ,M ,n tiacb, Heartburn, Ktc. mirir Prt,niptljr and effectively on the atomacb sow7" "att"'e In carrying off the waste and ton. JT'tter- baling tie stomach and other ot digestion. I AtI.T0 take-qctck to act 1HIAL WILL CONVINCE OC -JT s"'e b AU I' r r'ots jl 8 vo m! pr"JatJ receipt of price. a C CO , 150 Lake St., CHICAGO, ILL. Met Death In Bathtub. . Manila, July 27. Lieutenant Os walt, of the Twenty-ninth infantry, met death here accidentally, by elec trocution. The officer was preparing to take a bath and had entered the bathtub when he endeavored to ar range the lighting current to take an electric bath. In some way he came Into contact with the wires, receiving the full charge, which proved instant ly fatal. Thousands Cheer Sultan. Constantinople, July 27 Demonstra tions over the new Turkish constitu tion, which was promulgated on July 24, continue. A crowd of over 200,000 persons gathered outside the palace Monday morning and cheered the sultan. Persian subjects in Con stantinople have telegraphed the shah informing him that the sultan had granted a constitution to his subjects and declaring that if the Persian con stitution is not restored they all will adopt Ottoman nationality. Committed to Jail. Birmingham, Ala., July 27. Marlon Ccnnell, alleged murderer of his wife, whom, it is charged he killed at the town of Brooksdale some time ago, was given a preliminary trial and is held without bail. Connell fled after Nine Million Acres Went on Market in Oklahoma. Muskogee, Okla., Jul 27. At mid night Sunday the naw removing the government restrictions on nine mil lion acres of Indian lands in eastern Oklahoma went into effect. Every real estate office in that part of the new state is crowded with anx ious buyers and sellers of land; money is changing hands by the hundreds of thousands; agents are busy corrallng the allottees that have been in cap tivity during the last few days; leases are being taken on land that is not bought, and actual cash is passing from hand to hand, making the night one of the most exciting in years in Okla homa. Every one is striving to get the first chance at the property. West Virginia Bank Suspends Washington, July 27 The comptrol ler of the currency was advised Mon day of the suspension of the First Na tional Bank of Friendly, W. Va., with a capital of $25,000. R. D. Garrett has been appointed receiver. Over the Granting of a Constitution by the Sultan. Constantinople, July 27. Sunday was given up to patriotic demonstra tions and speeches in the general re joicing over the promulgation of a constitution by the sultan. All the steamers on the Bosphorus were gaily decorated with flags and 10,000 peo pie marched in procession to the Yil dez kiosk, cheering the sultan contin ually. The evening papers published an im nerial rescript pointing out that owing to the previous conditions of the country it was impossible to apply a constitution but that now the time had arrived to grant it to the people. The hope was expressed in the re script that the people would co-operate with the parliament and the sultan. The rescript concludes with the impe rial thanks for the popular manifestations. If there is any one thing that ai woman dreads more than another it is a surgical operation. vve can state without fear of a contradiction that there are hun dreds, yes, thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hos pitals which are entirely unneces sary and many have been avoided by' LYDIAE-PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement read the following letters. Mrs. Barbara liase, of Kingman, Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: " For eight years 1 suffered irom tne most severe form of female troubles and was told that an operation was my only hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs Pinkham for advice, and took Liydia u. f lnnnam a Vegetable Compound, and it has saved my life and made me a well woman." Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes : " I feel it is my duty to let people know what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound has done for me. I suffered from female troubles, and last March my physician decided that an operation was necessary. My husband objected, and urged me to try liydia K. Pinkhams VegetaDie compound, and to-day I am well and strong." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. JAnk- ham's "Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills. and has positively cured thousands oi women who have been troubled witn Savannah. Jacksonville and Another City May Form Circuit Savannah. Ga., July 27. -If pres kno -.f mntnr hoat. owners here . . I j. , ... - a i.: .,1... mature Savannah Jacksonville and aispiacemeuis,uiiia,miiictiiuii,uic-cia- one nthpr Florida city will he form- nun, iiuxuiu lumuis, iuckuioiu., ed into a circuit ior annual iuut.oi boat races, the three events to come in quick succession. Savannah won the right to form tne third course for national races by the local events Just held. There are sixty-eight boats in the fleet of the Motor Boat Club, and about 100 In Savannah waters, The Carrie, owned by E. W. Carton, won the 18-mile race Saturday in the Wilmington river, at a speed of 20 miles an hour. On Trail of Stolen Money. Kansas City, Mo., July 27. Postof fice officials claim to have obtained pos itive proof that Charles Stevens, the negro arrested here Saturday charged with having stolen a mail pouch con taining $50,000 from the Union Sta tion three weeks ago, is the man wanted. Late .Sunday inspector The steamer Magdala has arrived t in Auckland from 'Newport News with Thn removal means that nine mil- coal for the American fleet. lions of the 9.000.000 acres of Indian I Mrs. Edwin G. Weed, wife of bish- Gives Himself Up. Bessemer, Ala., Jul 27. A. J. Caldwell, who cut Thomas Parsons severely, surrendered and was held Id J yickery, during a severe "sweating" of small bail, being a prominent citizen I -h DriS'oner, obtained evidence which it is believed will lead up to the find ing of the greater part of the stolen money. There were sixty-two pack ages in the stolen pouch, making it possible for the lodging of as many counts aeainst him. and this may mean life imprisonment. and of good standing. Parsons will re cover. BRIEF DISPATCHES. Went to the Woods and Hanged Self. Bremen, Ga., July 27.-HPenalton Fuller, thirty-three years of age, com mitted suicide by hanging himself at his home near Waco early Sunday morning, Fuller had dressed and was preparing to attend church, and excusing himself went to the woods, climbed a tree, and fastening a plow line to a limn jumped out. Not re turning, search was begun, and his dead body was found hy his ratner in-law and neighbors suspended from a limb several hours after his dlsap pearance. No cause can be assign' er for his rash act. periodic pains, and backache. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has fuided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. CLING FAST Wood Fibre Plaster. "SECOND TO NONE." Experienced Plasterers pro nounce it the best plaster on the market. The best is always the Cheapest, ask for booklet, it will pay you. Statesville Plaster & Cement Company, STATESVILLE, N. C. Died in the Midst of Gaiety. Atlanta. July 27. While Watching the children enjoy the merry-go-round at White City unday afternoon at 4 o'olock. Will Threlkeld suddenly died He was seated in one of the rocking chairs on the pavillion when other spectators saw his head suddenly drop, his body collapse, causing him to fall forward. Before ony one reached him he toad expired. Threl keld was thirty-eight years of ag, and had been an employee of the Ful ton Bag and Cotton Mills for the past four or five months. Says He Is a Cousin of Gould. Los Angeles, Cal., July 27. MeMn Constipation taw iS?? j1""- with some people, bi iraIli,K l"J tnstipation. With oth -can.?, heat ...in i i a ".'OTP np.l, . l will UC fcllW NUllt CllWk -:veeverr- i y has a egetable remedy to but fiPH v ent known to man, if physicians Rg'y tr,, tw?'9 way to health. And this is Th. ? "Uf; with ........ -rl r !SS,i, 01 a Certain trws in Cftlifni-nin. TSia. H kT.", .aV?rs a most excellent aid to thi lElmifarL. 'ir,lth Egyptian Senna. Slip UsraAfk.' Extract of Prunes, etc, this t"1 to f ls Kiven its greatest possible ffTai.lM . 'm fnstipation. A toothsome JL&'d Ll .u1.Lax-fet6-is nw made at the Jefftif. Intones, from this ingenuous and Biiio-i Vfnption. Its effect on Consti ComV.h I?3" feour Stomach. Bad Breath. :5,?in v t'iion- etc- is indeed prompt and Potter Palmer Weds. Chicago, 111., Jul 27. Miss Paul ine Kohlsaat, daughter of H. K. Kohl Baat, and Potter Palmer, son of Mrs. Potter Palmer, were married here on Monday at the home of Mr. Kohlsaat Only relatives of the contracting par ties were invited and the arrangements were simple- After a brief stay at Mattapoisett, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. Palmer will tour Europe in an automobile. the killing to Tennessee and was re- land ln forty counties of eastern Ok- J op of the Episcopal dioceses of Florida B ' 'I la a 'cond cently captured there and brought back to this state Three Trainmen Killed. Fort Smith, Ark., July 28. Three persons were killed and" three others more or less injured between Good land and Hugo, near here, Sunday afternoon, when the 'Frisco passenger train No. 6 was derailed. inhnma which nart was formerly In-1 died at Jacksonville. Fla., recently. dian Territory, becomes saleable. J Professor Walter Leistikow. one of ' the best known German painters, died Died During Honeymoon. I i Berlin. He was one of the lead- Chicago, July 27. 'Mrs. Don Farns-J era ef e impressionist school. He $10,000 Fire at Girard, Ala. Columbus, Ga., July 27 The plant of the Chattahoochee Chemical and Mining company at Girard, Ala., was destroyed hy fire Sunday morning at an early hour a an estimated loss of f 10,000, which ls nearly covered by fcisurance. The engine house alone was saved. SOUTHERN BASEBALL GAMES. Saturday's Results. Southern" League. Atlanta 6, Little Rock 1. Nashville 4, Mobile 2. aiemphis 1, Montgomery 0. Memphis 5, Montgomery 0. Birmingham-New Orleans rain. South Atlantic League. Jacksonville 1, Columbus 0. Savannah 6, Charleston 4. Savannah 2, Charleston 2. Augusta 5, Maoon 0. worth . whose husband managed Cbas A. Towne's canvass for theJttemocratlc vice presidential nomination , died here Monday after a honeymion of only three weeks. Mrs. Farnsworth before her marriage was Miss Edith Baskett Mulheron, of Brownsville, Tenn. (Mr. FarnBWlirth is known in business and political circles of New York and Chi cago as well as in other parts of the country. Mr. and Mrs. Farnsworth made their honeymoon trip to the Denver convention.- Sunday's Results. Southern League. New Orleans 3, Little Rock 0. (Nashville 2, Memphis 1. was horn in 1865. sin of the late Jay Gould, is danger ously ill at the county hospital. He Is seventy years of age and ls suffer ing from lack of proper nourishment. The old man has been living ln nis own cottage and has been cared for by The Asiatic cholera lias reappeared foster daughter, whom he had toe- tr;'-r.c'inf:"0 Pleasant after effects areex pL' mJf,xb are pt IP in beautiful fcox. J m al boxes at 5 cents and 25 cents 1 $0$00C'00000$0$&OC'0&g X Rickets.4 g Simply the visible sign that baby's tiny bones A are not forming rapidly enough. fr Z w fl- r 1 a al ,e-trj a box of nice, economical and BURKE DRUG CO. Lack of nourishment is the cause. jScoffs Emulsion nourishes baby's entire system. Stimulates and makes bone. Exactly what baby needs. : AIL DRUGGISTS 60. AND $1.00 Sultan Will Reorganize Army. Paris, July 27. A dispatch to the Petit Parisien from Constantinople says that the revolt of the second and third army corps having been the main factor in forcing the granting of a constitution, the sultan has hastily summoned the German general, Baron Von der Goltz, for the purpose of re organizing the Rnny on stricter lines. . DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED Hv local aoplica tions, as they cannot reach the ! diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness and that is by constitutional rem edies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining- oi tne bciiu When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entire ly closed, Deafness is tne result, nu uiiicoo '"r flammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal coudition. hearing will be destrosed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by U tarrah, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. , We will give Une nunuiwi juiu&ro mi of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Cattarrh Cure- Send for circulars curea iy m CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, vac. Take Hall' Family Pills for constipation. i stops the cough a beal lanrf v In Russia cases having been reported from Astrakhan and 6amara provin ces. Two deaths have oecurrei at Astraghan city. Dr. S. C. Mitchell, head of the de partment of history of Richmond col lege, Virginia, has been elected presl-1 was wealthy. dent of the university of South Caro lina, vice Major Benjamin Sloan, re signed. The United States cable ship Burn side has sailed for Manila to repair the government cables., work to com mence with the Cordova loop of the Valdez Seward cable. " Count Klmura, who is retiring as Japanese ambassador to the court of St. James, to assume the portfolio of foreign affairs in the' new Katsura cabinet, has left Londcm for Japan by way of Siberia. fc friended in former years, fehe is saia to be no longer able to care for him and he must become a county charge. There is a mortgage on the cottage, and if he die3 there will ,be hardly enough money to bury him. He once Died on His Honeymoon. Asheville, N. C, July 27. Gustavs A. Klocke, of New Orleans, who ar rived in this city ten days ago, on his honeymoon, died at a boarding house on Chestnut street Sunday, the cause of death heing attributed to ptomaine poisoning. The remains will be tak en to New Orleans, accompanied by his bereaved widow, who.waB a bride of hut fifteen days. Mr. Klocke was was a well known Brinter in the em, ploy of the New Orleans Picayune. Mystery of Hazel Drew. Troy, N. July 27. For three hours Saturday District Attorney O'Brien closely questioned William Taylor and Frank Bmltih ln an effort to discolse new evidence that might lead to a solution of the mysterious death of Hazel Drew whose body was found ln Teal pond on July 11. The two men were brought to this olty from their tomes near Averill rant. After their examination, they were nermitted to return. District Attor- rvRrian said nothlnff new was UCJ V . w revealed. Rome's Tag Day Profitable. Rome, Ga., July 27. Saturday waa W riav in Rome, the proceeds to be devoted to the Berry Industrial school. A large number of Rome rniinr ladies with their chaperons, en md as helpers . and the proceeds amounted to more than $360, which will be turned over to Miss Martha Berry, the head of the school, to be used for the beneflt or tne scnuoi. Sale of the McCarthy Lands. By virtue of the authority vested in me by a power of attorney executed to me by the heirs of Mary McCarthy, deceased, I will expose to sale, at public auction, to the highest bidder, at the Couic Houm door in the town of Morganton. county ot fiwrfee, Btnte of North Corolina, on Monday, the tfi nv ef August, 1908, the following described feiarA parcel of land, to-wit: Lying and being in KStcty of Burke and State of North Caro tm, k-mdad as follows: Beginning on a ekst i fena standing on the north side of the old State rmn: thence south 150 poles to a pine ana ; mui thence west 80 poles to the south torlc ot KIwiJr ereek; thence down the meanders of the voki&k fork to its junction with the north fork of aid rek; thence down the meanders of great titta-Jr eroek. as the main channel now runs, to u Aiih standing on the east side of said creek, faoatttt 1 George Hodge's corner, or the cond it ion- ll viUHv-i thwice south 44" east 1UU poles; tnenca iuw6 tn art FO Doles to the beginning. Contain- ' mp'.ittion (140) one hundred and forty an mm or less; reference being made to deed it tmm Ilodge and wife to Francis Hodge and fSJit. win January iztn, 1B(Z, ana registereu in ttm Onci-wAai'm office of Burke county. N. C. Book tgica XI 8 and 219, for a more particular descrip tion sit aula lana. Tenns of sale: One half of the purchase money to be paid in cash on day of sale, and the balance in two equal installments; payable in six and twelve months. Title to be retained until purch- se money is paid in full. This the 2nd day of July, 190S. I J. M. BRINKLEY, Agent and attorney in fact for the heirs o2 Mary McCarthy. Avery & Ervin. Attorneys. Italians Are Returning. Natalbany. La.. July 27. 'Many ol the Italians who fled from here dur ing last week's race troubles have re turned. Among these arrivals is Chas. Lamblasi, whose wife last week said she feared her husband had .been lvnched. Unless further troubles de velop, the state troops now encamped here protahly will h withdrawn soon, The function of the Kidneys is to strain out the impurities of the blood which is constantly passing through them Foley's Kidney Remedy makes the Kidneys healthy. They will strain out all waste matter from the blood. Take Foley's Kidnev remedy and it will make yju well. W. A. Leslie. US" WANTED FOR CASH. All kinds of old books and papers, stamps and coins, War" or Indian Relics, old furni ture, school books bought, sold and ex changed. Largest stock, lowest prices, oldest house. Send for price list. Southern Book Exchange, Raleigh, N. C. davenport College. "Fiftv-first session beerins Sept 9th. Abetter place for girls and young women would be hard to find. Charges low. For information, address, - - -' CHAS. C. WEAVER, LENOIR, N. C SALE OF LANDS FOR ASSETS. 4 Bv virtue of an order of the Superior Court o Burke county, 1 will, on the 8rd day of August1 1908, sell at public auction, to the highest bidder, at the Court House door in Morganton, N. C, that certain tract of land beloning to Gabriel Pearcy. being Grant No. 7481, and bounded as follows: Containing Ml acres, lying in ine county oj. Burke, beginning at a stake and pointers on Fox Camp Hill in G. Pearcy's own line, and runs south with his own line 320 poles to a black-oak on the east fide of the path; thence west 20 poles to Webb s corner, thence east with WebD's line isu poles to Bettis line; thence east with his line 80 poles to Lingafeldt's line; thence east with his line 60 poles to Taylor's line; thence north with Tay lor's line 240 poles to a maple; thence with said line 80 poles to a pine near the old road leading to Jonas Ridge In the fork of Angles Branch; thence south 75 east 10 poles, crossing a prong of said branch, to a white-oak; thence north 4s west witn Pearcy's line to the beginning. Terms of sale 25 per cent, in each, balance in six months. This June 24th 1908. E. S. WARLICK, Admr. Gabrial Pearcy, deceased. NOTICE. By virtue and the power contained in a deed of mortgage executed on the 1st of June, 1908, by J. G. Gibbs and his wife; Robbie Gibbs, to the Henkle Live Stock Company, a corporation, the under signed will, on the 15th day of August, 1908, at the Court House door in Morganton, N. C, sell to the highest bidder, for cash, that certain land in Silver Creek township, adjoining the lands of Beginning on a stake 45 feet soutc 57 west from a stake in Brinkley's line on south side of Ashe ville road and runs south 65 west 36 feet with game street to a stake, thence south 30 degrees east 106 feet to a stake; thence north 60 degrees east 20 feet to a stake in Brinkley's line; thence north 36 feet with said line to a stake; thence north 30 degrees west to the beginning. Except ing from thi3 conveyance, nevertheless, that part of the lot above described which is caused by the right of way of the Western North Carolina Railroad. This sale is made on account of failure of mo rtgagors to pay a note for $222.80, dated June 24th, 1907, and bearing interest from date. Sale to be made between the hours of one and three o'clock p. m., at the Court House door in Morganton. July 7th, 1908. HENKLE LIVE STOCK COMPANY. WOMEN. Before buying Corsets you will do well to see Mrs. Sallie Gaither, Morganton, agent for the sale of the Spirella Perfection Corset, rust proof and unbreakable. Sales far beyond her expectation. I r j i:. ; !' '---'j'ri
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 30, 1908, edition 1
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