Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Feb. 11, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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9 hi Bring Your Tiie News-Herald HI 1 RALE I JOB PRINTING IS THE Best Advertising ' Medium IN THE PIEDMONT SECTION -TO- V J yjevvs-Herald Office. T. G. COBB, Publisher. FnsT-CtAas Wobx at Lowest Piicii. Subscription Price, $i Per Year In Advance vol. xxrv. MORG-ANTON, N. C.f FEBTJARY 11, 1909, No. 44 NEW5-HE Rheumatism rhsv found a tried and tasted care for Rhwa J.Jnl Not remedy bt will straighten the rtsd UmDS 01 carom nvpn, nor sura rony ths back to flea Jt. That is Impossible. 1 sjstisro J Cft i can now surely kifl DM ins and pans, of 1 fv dpolorable disease. 1 in Gerroany-wlth s Chemist In the Oty of i TwT-mstaJt I found the last Ingredient with ih'ich Dr. 6hoop"i Rheumatic Remedy was mad . arfected. dependable prescription. Without fhat last ingredient. I successfully treated many, rf, .cas of Rheuasatism : but now. at last, ltuni- 1 Ermir cures all curable cases of thisJ heretofore I Jmch dreaded disease. Those sand-like granular 1 wtites. found inRheumatic Blood, seem todissolv ind pass away under the action of this remedy aa I freely as does sugar when added to pure water. J ind then, when dissolved, these poisonous wastes from the system, and the causa of I Rheumatism is gone forever. There is now no ! tl need no actual excuse to suffer longer with 1 Jul help. We sell, and in confidence recommend Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remed j 8URKE DRUG CO. j j Molasses Evaporators. j I I am manufactursng the orig I inal "Turner" Sugar CaneEvap 1 orators. With this 'pan" your j boiling is continuous, the raw rane iuice going in at one side and the cooked, finished molasses coming out at the other continu- Getting Eggs in Winter ousiy. 44 48 m. in. i Built in sizes 6x8 long, vide, 12x14 16 feet long, wide. Write for prices and other in formation. G. H. TURNER, Statesville, N. C. Chickens for Sale. i If you are looking tor nice i chickens and eood layers we 1 have them in Barred Plymouth j Rocks, White and Silver-Laced I Wvandottes and Rhode Island 1 Reds and can give you bargains. If you want show birds, we 1 have them, or if you want chick- I ens at market prices we can sell I you some young stock. I Mumford's Poultry Farm. i till! j t vriDCl L, EXPERIENCE K .: - i i II ill ,a Trade MARKS r ?aa Design rftl1 Copyrights Ac Ar.Tone sending a sketch and description maj onickly ascertain oar opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tion, strictly eonfldential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest acency for MKm ring patents. Patent taken through Mnnn & Co. receive tptetol noiict, without charge, in the Scienmic American. A handoTneIy i'.h utrated weekly. largest ett caiati-n of any rctentino Journal. Terms, S3 ..... f.r mnnthn 1. Sold bv all newsdealers- WM &Co.S6,Broa"-New York Brii--b Omoe, 6V w 8U. Washington. 11. ONE YGUB WILL CURE YOU of any case of Kidney or Bladder disease that is not beyond the reach of medi cine. Take it at once. Do not risk having Bright's Dis ease or Diabetes. There is nothing gained by delay. 50c. and $1.00 Bottles. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. W. A- LESLIE. L. E. Keyser, in Commercial Poultry. We have all been interested in reading the symposium, "Get ting Eggs in Winter." It is too late for me to tell my plan so I will comment a little on the gen eral methods employed. We speak of winter eggs as hard to secure, but do we really mean winter eggs?- Generally speak ing winter commences with De cember and ends w.th February ; astronomically it commences on the 21st of December and ends on the 21st of March. Usually hens that are well fed will be doing good laying during a por tion of the winter. The time we mostdesire to get eggs is in .November and December, for it is in these months that prices are the highest Hens are not lay ing at this time, and there is lit tle use trying to induce them to do so. Pullets that commence to lay in October and November produce practically all the eggs that are secured in these months. It takes hens 60 to 100 days to molt and get in full feather; af ter this they are somewhat ex hausted and take a rest, the period being from fifteen to sixty days. The average of the early molting hens at the Cornell Ex periment Station was 39 days, and the late molting 43 days af ter receiring their feathers. It took the early molting hens an average of 108 days to complete the molt, or 147 days in which they were practically unproduc tive. The late molting hens averaged 81 days in securing their new feathers and were un productive 124 days. By this it will be seen that there is very little chance of getting early win ter eggs" from hens Hens that commence to molt in August will naturally commence laying the latter part of December, while those that commence to molt in October will not lay until late in January, and the real late molt ing hens still later. This is the average for well fed and well cared for hens; a few may lay earlier than this but the number of eggs produced will not be material. My experience has been that yearling hens, after they get started, will produce more eggs than pullets. This is contrary to the general opinion, but my rec ords bring out the cold fact. have been wont to look upon hens as an uncertain proposition. but on examining my records, covering a period of five years, find that my hens after molting produced practically no eggs be- drates plus the fat reduced to its starch equivalent. In my opin ion the poultry keeper need trou ble himself very little about the balanced ration or special feed ing formulas. Any mixtures of grains and feeds that are rich in both protein and fat will bring eggs if the hens are in condition to lay them and the quantity of food is sufficient. Carbohydrates are elements in the food that are used to.produce heat and energy, and as by far the greatest por tion of all vegetable foods is carbohydrates there i- always a sufficient quantity of these ele ments. What we must look for is protien and fat. When the ration is rich in fat the protein content need not be as great, and where fat is lacking more pro tein is required. A too high protein ration is very apt to cause digestive dis turbances, which rather than aid, egg Where high protein rations are used drugs are usually resorted to as correctives. Some rely on drugs1 and egg foods supposing them to have some special power in stimulating egg production. The only help any such nostrum! can be is to assist the digestion of other feeds, and this alone does not insure production. Drugs are not only expensive but they are inefficient. A healthy hen needs no drugs. The drug made well in advance it is futile to attempt to force the hens to lay in winter. It is only such hens and pullets as are ready that will respond to any treat ment. 1 have never had any trouble to secure a good egg yield during the winter months. Pullets hatched In April and May lay well in the late fall and early winter and by January the yearl ing hens are ready to commence work. Leghorn pullets hatched two early are liable to com mence laying in August and September and in that case they will not make winter layers. They get their layiny out, and if they do not molt they will take a long time to rest. My best re sults are obtained from May hatche, as these commence lay ing in October and keep it up all winter. The fact that strictly fresh white eggs sell at from 50 to 60 cents per dozen in New York will check j during November and December production, j against 18 cents in April is evi- 1 dene that the majority of the ; hens of the country are not lay- ing and that production general ly is at a low ebb. While it costs . more to produce eggs in the win ter than it does in the spring this cost is not equal to the difference in price in all instances. It is necessary to winter the hens and if by giving them better care and feed we can secure some eggs there will certainly be a profit We are told by some fluent ARCTIC BIRDS AT BEAUFORT. habit in man, beast or fowl is a writers that the greatest profit is dangerous one and does more ' in winter eggs, and to the casual harm than good. Drugs are for use in case of sickness, when prescribed by a competent vet erinarian, and should never be taken into a well body. All of such matter as the hen requires observer it would look as though this was so. When eggs are sell ing at 40 ami 60 cents in winter and 18 cents in the springs it does not seem as though there could be such a difference in can be found in her natural their cost but the precentage of foods. If I were to feed any ! profit is about the same, except minerals not contained in grit and where an exceptional egg yield is oyster shell it would be those secured in winter. With the found in the blood. These can majority of people winter eggs be obtained from blood meal as cost more than they sell for. At well as the druggist j the Cornell Station during one If the hen manufactured the period from December 2 to the food into eggs as many assert 29th the eggs cost $2,73 per she does, it would only be neces- dozen, and the next period from sary to feed her the right ingre- December 30 to January 26, $1.99 dients to make her lay, and her per dozen, while these same hens bodily condition and surrounding paid an average profit during the Flocks of Little Auk Made Their Ap pearance ea the . North Carolina Coast for the First Time Since 1886. Beaufort Outlook. The recent cold wave brought to the coast at Beaufort. num bers of the seafowl identified by town parties as the Little Auk, an Arctic species, which breeds in the latitude of Nova Zembla, lying 2,500 miles north of us. In cold winters the little auk has been driven as far south as New Jersey, according to scientific record. Last week Mr. Henry Abbott of Yarmouthport, Mass., a popular Beaufort visitor, ob tained a specimen from Harker's island, and on the same day Game Warden B. F. Perkins found one dead on our beach at the edge of town, the former be ing sent to an ornithological authority in New York, and the latter to John E. Thayer, Esq., a collector of rare birds, at Lan caster, Mass. It is learned of Mr. Wiley Taylor that last week Abner Willis, of Smyrna, told him that there were small ducks, the size of a man's fist, with short thick bills and webbed feet at Portsmouth, evidently the little auk, none of which had been seen about Ocracoke since the winter the Chrisse Wright went ashore near Fort Macon, with loss of all on board, JanT uary 9th, 1886, the coldest winter remembered here. Our little arctic visitors belong to the family of the Great Auk, which became extinct in 1844. and of which but five specimens are preserved in museums, the last specimen changing hands, hav ing been purchased by the above Mr. Thayer from the British Museum at the price of $5,000. would have no effect on produc tion. But the hen is not a ma chine; she is a living organism with blood, nerves and a very small brain. This brain is suffi- i cient to tell her when she i com fortable and when she is hungry, but as she has a born instinct to eat she does not know when she has had a sufficiency. The fact is the egg is the first effort of nature to reproduce the species. year of over $1.00 each. The food cost of the eggs during THEY INJURE CHILDREN. Ordinary Cathartics and Pills and Harsh Physic Cause Distressing Complaints. You cannot be over-careful m the selection of medicine for children. Only the very gentlest bowel medicine should ever be given- Ordinary pills, cathartics and purgatives are too apt to do more harm than good. They cause griping, nausea and other distressing after-effects that are frequently health destroying and Gumption on the Farm. Farm Journal. An hour of hard work getting a stone out of the public road is well spent even if nobody thanks you for it For a farm covering, good barnyard manure is much better than a mortgage, and judiciously applied the former will speedily remove the latter. Here it is February, and in almost no time the rush of spring work will be on. We had better get ready for it by doing all the odd jobs we can now. Far above the production of wheat and corn and hay and potatoes is the growth and culti vation of character; for, after all, this is the main purpose of life. Have you done your best and been beaten? Keep a stiff upper lip. Do a little better than your best this year. You will win; only be true, fair and square. A mule may never be known to kick and yet around his heels is no place for small children; for after the explosion regrets won't mend the pieces, nor clubs better the mule. If you know a good thing, tell your neighbor about it It will helD him about his work, and it surely can do you no harm. Bottled-up goodness soon turns sour and spoils. It gets to be an old story to read "every year about the im portance of buying good seed; and yet thousands of men think they are saving money by getting poor seed. It is a great mistake. Inferior seed almost always has weed seed m it . it costs to re- clean good seed, and that is one reason why it is so high in price; but we had better pay a little more than to have our farms all crrown ud m weeds. The best is none to good. If you would have a safe yet certain Coueh Remedy in the home, try Dr. Shoop's at least once, xt is tnorougn- ly unlike any other Cough preparation. Its taste will be entirely new to you unless it is already your favorite Cough Remedy. No opium, clorotorm. or any other stupifying ingredients are used. I The tender leaves of a harmless, lung- healing mountainous shrub, give to Dr. Shoop's Cough Remedy its wonder ful curative nrorerties. It is truly a most certain and trustworthy prescrip tion. Sold by Burke Drug Co. The most highly refined and healthful of baking powders. Its constant use in almost every American household, its sales all over the world, attest its wonderful popularity and usefulness. New Government is Threatened. Havana Dispatch, 8th. Unless President Gomez and Vice President Zayas, the leaders of the two Cuban Liberal fac tions, speedily reach a harmonious working agreement, political leaders predict that the new government will end disastrously. The Gomez and Zayas factions are at swords point THE SECRET OF LONG LIFE. A French scientist has discovered one secret of long life. His method deals with the blood. But long ago millions of Americans had proved Electric Bit ters prolong life and makes it worth living. It purines, enriches and vital izes the blood, rebuilds wasted nerve cells, imparts life and tone to the en tire system. It's a godsend to weak, sick and. debilitated people. "Kidney trouble had blighted my life for months," writes W. M. Sherman, of Cushing, Me., "but Electric Bitters cured me entirely." Only SOc. at W. A. Leslie. If Lincoln told all the 6tories that are credited to hirn, he would have had time to direct a great war. no Lost:- -A wbite Collie (Shepherd dog). Finder will please returnto Mr. Robert C. Miller and receive reward of $5.00. SOLDIER BALKS DEATH PLOT. It seemed to J. A. Stone, a civil war veteran, of Kemp, Tex., that a plot ex isted between a desperate lung trouble and the grave to cause his death. "I contracted a stubborn cold," he writes, "that developed a cough that stuck to me in spite of all remedies for years. My weight ran down to 130 pounds. Then I began to use Dr. Kings New Discovery, which retsored my health completely. "1 now weigh 178 pounds." For severe Colds, obstinate Coughs, Hemorrhages, Asthma, and to prevent Pneumonia it's unrivaled. SOc. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by W. A. Leslie. March, April and May was about j a iifeiasting annoyance. 6J cents per dozen. There is no doubt that we! should strive for winter eggs, but to make them profitable plans should be laid in the spring and We personally recommend and guarantee Rexall Orderlies as the safest and most dependable remedy for constipation and as sociate bowel disorders. We It is the ovum or beginning of j is to have our stock ripe for the where it fails to give entire sat- ! f r j a. -T- J J i i a1 li-L -T J : ... fore the middle of December, but from then on their records i i;fp flru? i not a manufatured ar equalled or excelled the pullets. ! tjcie To produce these ovums' Hens two and three years old tne hen must have suitable food , have seldom laid much before . tn maintain her bodv. which is! February, and the bulk of them drawn on to grow and develop ; not until March, so I tfraw the !tne es cne can only groward the object kept m view, tnen we tave such abSQlute faith in the can have fowls that will produde supreme virtues of this remedy almost as many eggs m winter that we gell it on our guarantee as in summer. The main point nf mnnpV Wk in Pverv instance V-a etarwwM - f work, then with proper feeding and housing the eggs will surely come and the profit will be large. THE STAR Oft St 3 REMEDY roft JUL FORBS OF RI1EUL1ATISL1 LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, HEUiULClA. K1DHEY TROUBLES. CATARRH, ASTHMA and K1HDRED DISEASES GIVES QUICK RELIEF Applied externally it affords almost in stant relief from psln. while perman ent results are beta? effected by taking it internally, purifying the blood, dis solving the poisonous substance and removing it from the system. DR. C. L. GATES Hmaeoek, M1n., write.t " & little girl here bad lack a weak back caused by Rheumatism and Kidney Trouble tbat ehe could not stand on her fee. The moment they pat her down on the floor she would scream with pains. 1 treated her with "i-DROpa" and tod.T she mni around aa well and happy aa can be. 1 prescribe "S-DBOPS" ter my patients and ase It la my practice." TEST "5-DnOPS" It you are suffering with Rheumatism. Lumbago. Sciatica. Neuralgia. Kidney Trouble or any kindred disease, write to us for a trial bottle of "6-DEOPS." 5-DROPS" Is entirely free from opium, cocaine.morphine, alcobol.laud anum and other similar ingredients. Large Size Settle "B-DROPS" (SOO Deees) SI.OO. For Sale by DruMists. STYAfiSOK RHEUMATIC CURE COMPANY a Dept. 174 Lake Street, Ghieaao 1) line on old hens It may not be that hens of all breeds will lay better in winter than pullets, but this is my experience with S. C. White Leghorns. Some people place their n;ain dependence on the feed and be- ieve that some special icrmuia 3 accountable for their success. ) triers stick for the bilvnced lion containing stipulated q c.ts of protein. They lat if a feed contains the right proportion of protein it will carry with it a sufficiency of other in gredients, so they call for a ra tion with a ratio of one part pro- ein to four parts of carbohy- lay the eggs with which nature has endowed her. If she re ceives the right kind of food and care she will do this, but if the i?t?re no arr-onm ovum? re of food or her to lay. tion will induce It to orally belived That a npenture reduction, li conduci". -:n WASHIGTON ONI E GaVK UP To thrw. dxr; a- k-p: in bd for I.ve week". ii!k1 poisor. fr--m a spiil er bi'e caused lrtre, d-ep vires t - cov r his leg. Bucklen's Ar cured me," writes John Washington of Bosqurvt'le, T. x Fore. zt-m-i bon ns 3i'l iil?s 't s jitrt iiie 2vSc IkEY NEVER FAIL beleive onsumpiion is, by no means, the dreadful disease it is thout to be in the beginning. It can always be stopped in the beginning. The trouble is: you don't know you've got it; you don't believe it; you won t believe it till you are forced to. Then it is dangerous. Don't be afraid; but attend to it quick you can do it yourself and at home. Take SCOTT'S EMULSION of Cod Liver Oil and live care fully every way. This Is sound dcctrine, what ever you may think or be told; and, if heeded, will save life. Send thl advertisement, together with name of paper in which it appears, your address ari foorcasrtsts) cover postage, and w f? you a "Compfeic Handy Atlas of the World.'' 6COTT & EOWNE, 409 Pari St New York ti e rr-pOndent on bttt for tb v. i? is v.ry natural SI conciusiott, et it nas Dten prHt thoroughly demonstarted that a low temperture, of itself, has no irfiuence on egg production. Fresh air, dry quarters, sunshine and protection from winds are ail essential. So far as I have learned there is no system of ventilation that will work satis factorily for a closed house that does not employ artificiarheat. An open front, with curtains to conserve the heat, is now the most approved form of poultry house construction, and with such a house there will be no trouble in getting winter eggs so far as the house is concerned. My conclusions are that feed is not the whole thing; that drugs are dangerous and out of place; that to secure eggs we must have fowls prepared for the work and that unless this urenaration is 15. 5- " CHAMBERLAIN'S COUGH REME DY THE MOST POPULAR BE CAUSE IT IS THE BEST. "I have sold Chamberlain's Cough Rcmedv for the past eirht years and find it to be one of ihe bfsfc selling: morlicinea on the market. For babies and voting- children there is nothing better in the line of cough syrups, ur Paul Allen. Plain Dealing. La This remedy not only cures the coughs. iold and croup so common among young children, but is pleasant and .af for them to take. For sale by all m cicrganivn, and u ts Reliabl e. Another proof, more evidt- Morganton testimony to sv. the lotiir list o; local neoDlc v-' endorse the o'.d Quaker reme-U, Doan's Kidnev Puis. Read th s convincing endorsement of that remarkable preparation: J. P. May, Firground Road, Morgan- ton, N. C, says: "About three years ag-o I began to suffer from severe pains through the small of my back, which were frequently followed by neaaacnes and dizzy spells. My kidneys were disordered and the secretions were un natural. I also felt tired and languid all the time and came to the conclusion that my kidneys needed a tonic. I began using Doan's Kidney Tills and my kidneys have given me no irouDie since, uoan 8 fuaney rins cureu me and I am pleased to recommeud them. For sale by all dealers. Pncn 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Uj-. Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. isf action, and we urge all in need of such medicine to try it at our risk. Rexall Orderlies contain an entirely new ingredient which" is odorless, tasteless and colorless. It embraces all the best qualities sal" ei of the soothing, laxative, I strengthening and healing reme dial active principles of the best known intestinal regulator j tonics. j Rexall Orderlies are extremely pleasant to take, arejparticulir y prompt and agreeable in action, : may be teken at any time, day or night; do not cause diarrhoea, nausea, griping, excessive loose ness, or other undesirable ef fects. They have a very natural action upon the . glands ana organs with which they come n contrct, act as a positive and regulative tonic upon the relax, dry muscular coat of the bowel, remove irritation, dryness and soreness, . overcome weakness, and -tone and strengthen the nerves and muscles, and restore the bowels and associative organs to more vigorous and healthy activity. , Rexall Orderlies not only cure constipation, but they remove the cause of this ailment They also "overcome the necessity of constantly taking-laxatives to keep the bowels in normal condition. There is really no similar medicine so good as Rexall Orderlies, especially for children, aged and delicate persons. They are prepared in tablet form and in two sizes of packages; 12 tab lets, 10c.; and 36 tablets, 25c W. A. Leslie, Morganton, N. C. FEEBLE OLD LADY Has Strength. Kestored By Vinol ' Mrs. Miehael Bloom of Lewlstown, Pa., who is 80 years of age. Bays: "For a long time I havs been so feeble that I have had to be wheeled around ia an Invalid's chair. I had no strength and took cold at the slightest provoca tion. which Invariably settled on my lungs, and a cougk would result My son learned of tha cod liver prep- .nHni vinol. and procured a bottle for me. It built up my strength rapidly, and after taking three bottles I am able to do most of my work, and I cam walk a quarter of a mile easily. Every aged or weak person who re quires strength should try vinol. I am rieiierited with what It has done for me." As a body builflar aad strength crea tor for old people, delicate children, weak, run-down persons, and after sickness, Vinol Is unexcelled. If It falls to glvs satisfaction we will re turn your money. W. A. LESLIE, Druggist, Morganton, N. C. -To thePublic. Whereas Mrs. Nettie A. Fox and CasBius J. Fox, Jr., have induced and persuaded Mrs. L. H. Haskins to con vey to them all her real estate situate in Burke by two certain deeds regis tered in the Kegister s omce oi rsurjte county in book I? No. 3, pages 375 and 404; and whereas we propose to insti tute an action to set aside said deeds upon the ground of fraud and undne in fluence and unsound mind on the part of the grantor, notice and warningU Superior Court, Before Clerk. NORTH CAROLINA. Burks County, Mary J. Perkins srh J. Haaklns. and Sarah J. Haskins and John T Perkins. Executors. L. H. Haskins, Nettie " . A. Fox and Cassins J. Fox, trustees. It ippearing- to the satisfaction of the Court that ' his is an action f o : division by sale of real proper i in Rurke county, that the plaintiff has a srood of action, that the defendant Sarah J, t t i..- A Fat and Cajiams J. Fox are necessary parties thereto and that after j... jiiinnr. thav cannot be found in tne c. nt Nrth Carolina: it is ordered that publi- k..j.n.fnnrwMki in the Moraanton New Herald notifying the said Sarah J. Haskins ki...u. a fVnr and Cassins J. Fox .of the i r this action and to appear with in twenty days after service hereof and answor demur to the complaint which is filed m the office jf the Superior Court Clerk of Burke county, and et the said defendant take notice that if they fail o to appear and answer or demur that the ptain aff wiU apply to the court for the relief demanded. Thi. 13th day ot Jan, i,. BRISTOL, Clerk Superior Cou T ,Wh6 wouldn't give 25 cents to stop a rain 20 times? Just one Uttie "r-irs Pain Tablet" Dr. Shoop's will stop any pain in 20 minutes-, sure! Read the foi mula on the box Doctor say t can't be bettered. Checks womanly naina head oains. anv pain. 20 tab lets 2Sc Sold by Burke Drug Co. hereby giuen to all parties so as to pre vent the lurtner sale or conveyance 01 said land by the grantee, and all parties purchasing the same from said Nettie A. Fox or Cassius J. Fox. Jr.. will do so at their peril. This Jan. 521, liHW. MRS. JOSEPHINE MAYNARD. NORTH CAROLINA I Moranton Township. Burke County. I A. Blanton Grocery Company, vs. J. E. Ramsey. ' NOTICE OF STMMONS AND WARRANT OF A 1 1 AUttM.JN r. The defendant above named will take notice that summons in the above-entitled was issued minat said defendant on the 24th day of Dec 1908, K A. Bristol. Clerk of Superior court, of Burke county. North Carolina, for the sum of 236.39, due said plaintiff by account, for goods sold and Haliimred. which summons is returnable before the Superior court, Marco term 1SU3, wnen ana wnere the defendant is required to appear and answer or demur to the complaint, or the reliel demanded will be granted. This 8th day oi Jan. lyua. L. A. BRISTOL, Clerk Superior Court. Spainhour & Hairneld. Attys's for Plaintiff, S E E D S Buckbee't "Full of Life" Northern Growe e4iml cm4c have a refutation of 38 years 01 successful seed growing behind them. It pay to plant the Dest. Seasonable Specialties: BEANS Earliest Red Valentine . $3.50 Bushel Refugee Extra Early . , . $35 !nsie New Stringless Green Pod . $3 70 Bushel - Wardwell's Imp. Kidney Wax Bushel Davis New White Wax . . 4-75 Bushel Currie's Rust Proof Wax . $4.50 Biuhti PEAS Extra Early Alaska . . 3-5 gu)el New Early Graous .... 5 5 Bushel Horsfotd's Market Garden . I3 50 I1""" Unrkhee's Liehtnine Express fc- Busnel Lettuce, Radish. Tomato and a full line oi Seeds, Plants and Bulbs at lowest growing prices. Send for complete catalogue m uuuui - your requirements and will quote prices. Buy direct from the grower Save Money. : Write today. Mention thisaper. . H. W. BUCKBEE lalSSackbeeSt.. lockfera Sees Farms. Rckfsra.B The Facts About Peruna. Is Pernna an alcoholic beverage in disguise? Is it possible to use Peruxa as a 8ubstitnte for whiskey! So people buy Peruna and use it as a toddy, cr a bitters, or a bracer! It would be the easiest thing in the world for any one to demonstrate tha falsity of such statements. Let any one go to the drug store and purchase a bot tle of Peruna, Let him undertake to use it as a beverage, or take this remedy in doses considerably larger than those prescribed on the bottle. Would the result be alcoholic intoxication! Nothing of the sort Let any one try it and see. Peruna is a medical compound quite heavily loaded with' medicinal ingred ients. If taken in doses larger than prescribed it would produce a positive drug effect No one could take it as a beverage. If any one doubts these state ments, try it and see. We know that Peruna cannot be used as a bever age; that it will not intoxicate; that it cannot be used as a substitute for liquors. We guarantee that PE&TJEA CONTAINS NO CHEAP WHISKEY OS. ANY OTHER WHISKEY, for that matter. It contains a small per cent of cologne spirits, absolutely essential to dis solve and hold in solution medicinal ingredients, but the drugs contained in Peruna prohibit its use as a beverage. It would be the easiest thing in ths world for any one to demonstrate this if they chose to do so. Peruna is sold everywhere. THE INGREDIENTS ABE PLAINLY PRINTED ON EACH BOTTLE. It has been said over and over again that chemists hve analyzed Peruna and found it to contain only cubebs and whiskey. Bow we challenge any chemist to demonstrate any such statement. Let any one who has even a smattering knowledge of chemistry purchase a bottle of Percna and see whether or not it contains whiskey, find out for nim self whether or not it is composed of cheap whiskey and cubebs. Of course, cubebs is one of the ingredients of Peruna, but there are many other ingred ients. It contains hydrastis canadensis, corydalis formosa, coliinsonia, and at least four other medicinal ingredients. To be sure, no chemist could so ana lyze Peruna as to be able to identify the various medicinal ingredients. This is beyond the ability of any chemist . But any ordinary chemist would be able to say that Peruna is heavily loaded with medicinal ingredients of some Mnd in addition to cubebs. , Now why are these statements repeated when their falsity couli bo so easily demonstrated! Simply because there is continued hostility toward Pe runa on the part of the medical profession. Very likely the magazines which took up the crusade against Peruna and denounced it as a cheap beverage were misled by statements of the medical profession. Probably they were sincere in their attitude towards it But now, after all these things have been said and refuted, it would seem to be in order for such people to use a little fairness and common sense in the matter. -Every time any one says that Peruna is nothing but cheap whiskey and cubebs he is telling a lie, an absolute falsehood. Host people intend to speak the truth. But the prevalent habit of repeating other people's statements, without investigation as to their truth, has led many well-meaning people to say these false things about Permia. Used according to the directions on the bottle, PERUNA IS A SAFE AND FTET-TAHT.-R CATARRH REMED Y, but, like any other good medicine, ii taken in excess of those doses, it will produce drug effects very unpleasant to the person who takes it It is therefore up to every honest person to quit making such statements concerning Peruna, or acknowledge that he is repeating slanders about which he knows nothing. One nugnc just as weu say that castor on is an intoxicant; that if taken in large enough doses it will operate as a "booze." If people never tried to see, but simply repeated such statements abest Castor Oil, the majority of people would come to believe them, it is no easier to demonstrate such a statement about Castor Oil than it would be about Peruna, Anv one who takes Peruna knows that such statements are false. To ea? that Peruna is cheap whiskey and cubebs may constitute good material for iokes on the vaudeville stage, but there is no excuse for any one who preten Ji At. " a. 1 a w 1 to be txmniui saying over again uus uit-repeaieu laisenooa. amnimmmmmmmmmmmmmmnmimmnimm i I Trade at Morgan 's g l tin, UiytLrtuJii una n I have good values to offer in the following: j Broad Cloth worth $1.00 per yd. for 75c. 2 E All other $1.00 per yd. dress goods now on 3 hand, for 75c. All 50c. Dress Goods, for 39c. H2 g Men's Heavey Underwear, 39c. 3 HL Men's Dress and Work Shirts the usual 50c. 2 goods, at 39c. 2 H I will sell the remainder of Men's Overcoats at g very low prices. If you wish to buy any thing 2 in my line it will pay you to come to see me 2 Respectfully, IT. C. MORGAN I auiuuiiiiiiiiiiiuuiuiuiuuuiuiuiiiiuiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii I 1 a. i It i ii V. -.1 ?; :i j; m 'S i :i ; i'i ': 4 S:' ;' I: r 1; i " a- '-, H ' iff- .t r I i H 7f V, I druggists. -
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 11, 1909, edition 1
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