Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / March 25, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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Po 1 JOB PRINTING I The Hews-Herald IS THE Best Advertising Medium IN THE PIEDMONT SECTION -TO- 15he ' News-Herald Office. T. G. COBB, Publisher m Fr8T-CLAB3 WOBZ AT THEBVRKECOVNTY NEWS )ca.i,a..j . 90 iom THE MOR.GANTON HERALD Consolidated Nov. 29.1901 Subscription Price, $i Per Year In Advance ill VOL. XXIV. MORG-ANT ON, N. C.. MARCH 25, 1909. No. 50 tiring Your NEWS-HERALD. odigeslion 3 Ptomaeh trouble is but a symptom of. and not i In itself a true disease. We think of Dyspepsia, t Heartburn, and Indigestion as real diseases, yet they are symptoms only of a certain specific Kerve sickness nothing else. ' It was this fact that first correctly led Dr. Shoop I In the creation of that now very popular Stomach ' Remedy Dr. Shoop' s Restorative. Going direct to the stomach nerves, alone brought that success and favor to Dr. Shoop and his Restorative. With- uuw n uu viuii principle, no uoh lasting accomplishments were ever to be had. For stomach distress, bloating, biliousness, bad breath and sallow complexion, try Dr. Snoop's rWorative Tablets or Liquid and see for your. .-f mo it win on1 will An - 1 1 . 1 ' - huu uwi i t a mvu luiu viieer fully reconunend Dr. SKoop's Restorative KlJKKr- RR 1(4 Ufl Molasses Evaporators. I am manufactursng the orig inal "Turner" Sugar Cane Evap orators. With this "pan" your boiling is continuous, the raw cane juice going in at one side and the cooked, finished molasses coming out at the other continu ously. Built in sizes 6x8 long, 44 in. wide, 12x14 16 feet long, 48 in. wide. Write for prices and other in formation: C. H. TURNER, Statesville, N. C. Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! White and Silver Laced Wyan dottes, Barred Rocks, and Rhode Island Reds. Our last year's customers raised prize winners from stock bought of us. Our stock is better than ever and our prices for eggs are reasonable. A few choice cockerels for sale. Munford's Poultry Farm 50 YEARS' i bade marks Designs Fv'v Copyrights &c Anyone sending a sketch and description ma; nui?ls!v ascertain our opinion free whether at. Invention is probable patentable. CoaimunicR tions strictly conn ieritial. Handbook on Patents tent free. Oldest airenev for securing patents. Patents taker, tbroueh Munn & Co. receive medial notice, wit host charge, in the aeiiiifsc jfimencatn A handsomely ilh srrated weekly. Largest cn eii!ati?n vt anv pcientific journal. Terms, $3 a year : four months, L Sold by all Tiewsdealera. MUNH & Co.3618"5 New Yorf; Branch Office. 6Tr 8t, Washington. D. C. 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. 2 THE STANDARD REMEDY FOR ALL FORBS OF RI1EUL1ATISL1 LUIJBAQO, SCIATICA, UEUMLCM, KIDNEY TROUBLES, CATARRH, ASTHUA and KIHDRED DISEASES GIVES QUICK RELIEF Applied externally it affords almost In stant relief from pain, while perman ent results are being effected by taking It internally, purifying the blood, dis solving the poisonous substance and removing it from the system. DR. C. L. GATES Haaeack, Mima., writes i " A uttla girl hars had m oh a wsak back aaacd by KaauaukUsm aad Kidney Trouble that abe coals not stand on bar fees, Tba moment they pat her down on the floor aha woold scream with pain. I treated her with "fr-DROPS" and today ahe runs round as wall aad happy aa aaa be. I prescribe "S-DROP8" far my patlenta and Bee It In any practloa." TEST "5-DROPS" If yon are suffering with Rheumatism, Lumbago. Sciatica, Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or any kindred disease, write Vo us for a trial bottle of "6-DROPS." DROPS" is entirely free from opium, oocaine.morphine, alcohol, laud anum and other similar ingredients. Larse Size Bottle "-DROPS' (SOS Deeee) ei.oo. Far Sale by Drusslsta. SW&RSON RHEDHATIO CURE COMPANY Dept. 80. 174 Lake Street, Chleaae 1 S? 1 FREE NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS A Batch of Live Items Culled From the Papers of the Adjoining Counties. Watauga. Boone Demcrat, March 13th. Some dogs made a raid upon the fine flock of sheep owned by Mr. J. B. Councill last week, and but for his timely appearance upon the scene, sad havoc would have been wrought upon his fine flock. One of the pesky animals was slain, but others are still at large. Dr. Little, with the aid of a stump puller and a squad of men, succeeded Monday in getting his drug store building back on its pillars, from which it had been dislodged by a heavy wind a few weeks ago. The Hon. R. Z. Linney, of Taylorsville, must be rapidly im proving, if not entirely well, as the Hickory Democrat of last week announced that it had been reported that he was soon to wed a dashinsr widow of Hickory- Of eourse, if this be true, the learned gentleman is surely on the high road to recovery, and must be in the best of spirits. After a pilgrimage of seventy, four years, JSghting the battles of life bravely and upon a high plane, and gaining friends all the way, at his home on Monday af ternoon, that good man, Mr. Mil ton Brown, quietly, peacefully passed from life unto death. The remains were interred yesterday near his residence on Middle Fork of New river. Mrs. Geo. Hopkins, aged 69 years, died at her home at Hop kins, on last Sunday, and the funeral services were conducted on Monday at the residence by the Rev. Mr. Rudisill, after which the loving mother and devoted wife was laid to rest amid a large concourse of sorrowing friends and relatives. She is survived by an afflicted husband and a large family of children, all of whom, save one, were present when the final summons came. Rutherford. Rutherfordton Sun. March 18th. Messrs. Carpenter, Taylor & Company, through Mr. B. F. Massey, the representative of the Carolina Ice & Machine Company, of Charlotte, who was here last week, purchased an up-to-date ice plant of three-ton capacity daily, which is to be delivered and put in operation at their factory at the Southern depot by the first of May. The auction sale of the city lots of Mr. Henry T. Green on Mitchell evenue, Court, Hospital and Meridian streets, advertised for last Friday, took place accord ing to schedule. The property, which was placed in the hands of the American Realty & Auc tion Company, of Greensboro, some weeks ago, was auctioned off by the famous double twins, Penny Brothers and Thomas Brothers, and brought handsome prices. Bidding was lively from start to finish, the entire forty eight lots being sold in some thing over three hours. The property is situated within about three or four blocks of the busi ness part of town, fronting all of the above named streets, and wa3 considered valuable and very dssirable building sites. The boundary contained about seven acres and brought something over $3,300, the lots ranging in price from $35.00 to $250.00. Alusic for the occasion was fur nished by a brass band from Charlotte, Mr. G. B. Hollifield was the lucky one who drew the iot given away by the auction eers. Mr. Deck, the oldest man in the crowd, drew one of the $5.00 gold pieces given away ana Mr. E. B. Qumn drew the other. How To Gain Flesh Persons have been known to gain a pound a day by taking an ounce of Scott's Emulsion. It is strange, but it often happens. Somehow the ounce produces the pound; it seems to start the digestive machinery going properly, so that the patient is able to digest and absorb his ordinary food which he could not do before, and that is the ! way the gain is made. A certain amount of flesh is necessary for health; if you have not got it you can get it by taking SCOTT'S EMULSION Send thi advertisement together with name of paper in which it appears, your address and four cents to cover postage, and we will send you a "Complete Handy Atlas of the World." SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St. Nw York Cleveland. She'ty Star. March 19th. It becomes the Star's sad duty to chronicle finriTVior cnrM n ! death which occurred in upoer ;eveiana Monday just after the noorr hour when Mr. W. H. Hull, familiarly known the county over a3 Squire Bill Hull, fell to the floor and expired within a few seconds. Mr. Hull had just finished eating a hearty meal and as he arose from his chair he was seen to stagger forward a tew steps and sink to the floor. He was dead by the time mem bers of the family reached his sidft. Hf is Riirvivpfi hv his wifo and six children, three daughters and three sons. His remains were laid to rest at Clover Hill church yard, the funeral services beins: attended bv a larcre num ber of friends and neighbors. Mr. Hull was indppd nnp nf tHa landmarks of the county, having ; attained the ripe old age of eighty-one years. Dr. Joe C. Osborne, of Cleve land Mills, seems to stand in a class by himself when it comes to raising big hogs. The Star! made mention sometime ago of ! the big Tamworth he killed which tipped the beam at 700; pounds. We learn that the hams from this immense hocr weighed 85 pounds each. j Mr. Henry P. Dixon died ' March 3, 1909, aged 59 years, 11 ' months, 11 days. All thataloving hands could do was done to stay hat dread disease, consumption, j but all to no avail. The residents of Grover route 2 were greatly shocked last week i when it became known that Miss . Sabilla Ware, one of the moi t highly esteemed residents ot that section, had died suddenly on the night of Wednesday, March 10th. Death came to this go6d woman without a moment's warn- I ing. In company with her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Whisenant, with whom she lived, she was spending the evening with a friend and neigh bor, Mrs. Susan McMurry. Ap parently Miss Ware was in the best of health. She had suffered no previous symptoms of illness. When they were preparing to return home, Miss Ware arose from her chair, walked a few steps, wavered somewhat, then sank to the floor. By the time her friends raached her side she was dead. A quiet but happy marriage was celebrated in upper Cleve land, on the evening of March 5th, at the home of Mr. Phillip Carpenter when his charming and popular step-daughter, Miss Minnie Davis was united in wed lock to Mr. Lester Welch, a well known young man of that com munity. Caldwell. Lenoir Topic, March 17th. Register Miller has issued mar riage license to the following par ties since March 10th: Felix Thompson to Lelia Ernest, J. M. Tugman to Bessie White, Bluf ord Keller to Mary C. Deal. A number of Lenoir citizens who recently purchased lands in Southern Florida have organized a club and have appointed Mr. J. E. Mattocks as their representa tive to go to Florida and investi gate the proposition and see if it is as represented. Mr. Mattocks will leave next Monday. The work of putting in the water and sewer pipes is going forward rapidly now on the main streets of town, and with favor able weather the system will be complete early in Apnl. Dr. Ivey returned Saturday with his son, Vincent, from Rochester, Minn. Vincent's con dition seems to be improved in some ways, but the improvement is not as encouraging as his friends could hope for. Mr. A H. Courtney died at his home at Hartland this morn i ig at2 o'clock after a few days' illness with pneumonia and other complications. The burial will take place to-morrow morning at 11 o'clock at Littlejohn's church. Mr. Courtney was 72 years old and is survived by his wife and s?ven children. Mr. Courtney was a faithful and - consistent number of the Methodist church, anti he has always wielded a great influence for good in his community. He served through the civil war and lost his right leg in the famous charge at Get tysburg. In the capacity of treasurer of Caldwell county for a number of years, he served his people most acceptably. A CARD. This is to certifiy that all druggists re authorized to refund y.jur money if Foley's Honey .and Tar fails to cure your cough or cold. It stops thecouirh. heals the lungs and prevents serious results from a cold. Cures la grippe ccusrhs and prevents pneumonia find consume' I'm. Cuntiir no opt t The eenuiae is in a vellow pack Refuse substitutes. W. A. Leslie. Lincoln. Lincolnton News, March 19th. Little Mary Crowell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. B. Crow ell, was successfully operated on at the Lincoln Hospital yesterday and is doing well. Charlotte claims to be the first town in the State to adopt clean-ing-up day, but Lincolnton had a cleaning-up day the 22nd of last December and will have about four in each year in the future. Hev. and Mrs. W. R. Dye ar rived several days ago from Santa Fee, New Mexico. Rev. Mr. Dye is serving St Luke's parish temporarily and may be come its permanent pastor. Lincolnton warmly welcomes Rev. and Mrs. Dye and hopes that they will decide to cast their lot with us. They are stopping for the present with Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Reid. Mrs. Dora Hoke Dellinger, widow of the late Mr. Lee R. Dellinger, died at her home near Laboratory at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, after an illness of only one week. Mrs. Dellinger was taken with a severe cold last week that devel ped into la grippe. She took her bed last Friday but her condition was considered in no wise serious until Monday afternoon, when she was suddenly taken worse and it was found that her heart was affected; heart failure caus ing death the following day. The deceased was about 45 years of age and was before her mar riage Miss Dora Hoke, daugh ter of Mr. Frank Hoke, deceased. She is; survived by her aged mother, six children, two sons and four daughters; three sisters and two brothers, Mrs. A. P. Rudisill, Misses Fannie and Etta Hoke, Messrs. William and Alex ander Hoke. A married daugh ter, Mrs. Moore, of Virginia, was with her mother during her last illness. On Tuesday afternoon about 3 o'clock a barn on the plantation of Mrs. Lydia Fox, near Daniels church, was destroyed by fire. It was a large, convenient structure and had been built for more than a century. Mr. W. M. Seagle is living on the farm and the lo?s falls very heavily upon him. Be sides losing a valuable mule, a quantity of roughness, a wagon, harness, grain drill, horse rake, two cultivators, several plows, harrows and other farming im plements, a quantity of cotton seed, potatoes and peas were burned. The origin of the fire is unknown. McDowell. Marin Democrat. March 18th. Plans and specifications for the new hotel for Marion have been agreed upon, we are informed, and work on the building will b gin at an early date. Miss Malie Stacey, daughter of John Stacey, of Nebo, and Mr. W. E. Nucholls, of Bristol, Tenn., were married at the Fleming Hotel, Wednesday af ternoon, the Rev. H. H. Jordan officiating. The Asheville and East Ten nessee railway was chartered at Raleigh, N. C, last week with $450,000 capital. It is to build and operate a road through , Buncombe, Yancey and Mitchell counties, North Carolina, to con- ' nect with the Carolina, Clinch field & Ohio railroad, built by George L. Carter and associates. Mr. J. F. Sprague, who came ; here about two years ago to con ' duct the business of Gorman & Green, jewelers, and who has j since had charge of the business I for their successor, JMr. A. Green, has bought the interest of Mr. Green and becomes sole owner of j the establishment. He will con- tinue the business at the old stand. Marion is to have a $300,000 cotton mill. Mr. D. D. Little of Spartanburg, Mr. Caroll Bald win of New York, Messrs. Sirrin and Dent, mill engineers, ar.d Mr. Aug. W. Smith, one of thy largest cotton mill men in the South, met with our people Fri day and Saturday, located Uil plant, signed the contracts for subscriptions for stock, signed the charter and prepared for work at the earliest moment possible. Mr. Little with Messrs. Smith and Baldwin have already been to New York and Boston, where they selected and con tracted for the mill machinery. On Saturday after very full in vestigation, the mill was located on the land of J. I. Morgan just beyond the cemetery on the north side of t e Three C's railroad. The land wa:: nlnttPfl hv Mr. Dent, and Mr. Sinine, one of th foie:nost it i 1 engineers in the Soutn, who w:r. make the plans and have them readv bv the first of next month, to commence. A LIFE AT STAKE Your life may be at stake when you notice any sign of kidney or bladder trouble, as Rrisrht's disease and oia- : betes start with a slight irreg-ulari. that C"ii j : Kidney k-in .. ., ' at the first sign of danger. Catawba. Newton Enterprise, March 18th. The town of Maidpn is nnw having its turn with a campaing ior a graded school election. And in has reached the fighting stage. At the meeting of the town commissioners Tuesday night, Mr. D. P. Rowe, who had hand ed in his resignation as Mayor to take a position in the depot, consented to fill out the term which will expire on the first Monday in May. There was about as big a frost Tuesday morning as we have had this winter and ice was a quarter of an inch thick. Peaches were given the hardest jolt they have had since they began blooming. But the prospect of a good fruit crop is not seriously hurt yet. This is tha rasp in Npwtnn Tha --w v -a- Win A V damage was possibly more in some parts 01 tne county. Mumns and measles are srreat. ly reducins? the attendance at. the Newton Graded School. In some of the rooms half the children are kent at home bv these two epidemics. But they will about spend their force bv the end of this week. Countv Sunerinten d en t. T .on o- tells us that there is unusual interest in special tax elections just now. Petitions are in circu lation m a number of districts and the prospects are that more elections will be held about, the first of May than in any year since iyub. mat was the banner year in the establishment. vf special tax districts in the coun- i mi ty. inis year promises to al most equal it. At Mr. Mark Sigman's. two miles north of Maiden, last Sat urday afternoon about 1 o'clock, there was a very distressing tragedy. The children were playing in the house and having a big time. Claud Sigman, the eight-year-old son of Mr. Sig man, picked up his father's gun, pointed it in the face of his little four-year-old niece and pulled the trigger. The load entered just above the little girl's eyes and tore the whole top of her head off, causing instant death. The boy says he didn't know the gun was loaded, but it was a shocking case of thoughtlessness even for a boy. The little girl was a daughter of Mrs. Richard Lay, who lives with her father, Mr. Sigman, during her hus band's absence, who is in the United States army. Out of the Ginger Jar. April Farm Journal. The tomato can but will it? The cheaper the shoes the louder the squeak. The wife of a henpecked hus band is usually set in her ways. the man who persistently sits down is sure to become hard up. No matter how well mother may feel she is continually on the mend. It is important to have a clear vision. Lven the potato must FEARLESS, HONEST PREACHER BIKES HIS OPINION OF PE-RU-NA. ;r,uii!lll!!inl!mii!. An Up-to-Date Clergyman Describes an Up-to-Date Household Remedy that Has Had the Test of Time and Is Known the World Over. Some preachers are afraid to give an outspoken opinion on any remedy, however highly they may esteem it. Others are not afraid. One of those who i3 not afraid Is quoted below. Read what he says. He means every word of it. If you doubt it write him a letter, enclosing a stamp. He will tell you what he thinks. I j aLaaaKWiiiiaCiiianiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiniafi Kane j I k Rev:J.T.Peeler Catarrh of Stomach REV. J. T. PEELER, HendersonriUe, S. C, writes : "I desire to make known for the bene fit of suffering humanity my experience with Peruna. 'I was afflicted with catarrh of the tomach, and though I tried many rem edies and applied to several doctors, it was all in vain. "Had it not been for Peruna I believe I would have been in my grave to-day. MI have every reason to believe that Peruna is the greatest remedy for ca tarrh known to the world. Therefore I hre been, and shall continue to ree ommend it to tho66 who are nnweU." " . . . . . have sound eves Neither a boil nor a cabbage amounts to anytning unless it comes to a head. If young Spendthrift would settle down he might soon be able to settle up. One of the most insidious and unexpected forms of attack, is to tread upon a tack. You can not alwavs ennrro th . " bmuv importance of a man by the angle at which he wears his hat. there is auite a difference be tween the door-jamb and the jam that mother used to make. There is the wreck nf timet" exclaimed Jones, as hia clock' fell from the second-story window. mere are no stripes on a flag stone, but if one falls nn it hard enough he will be likely to see stars. Some of the neckwear urn-m hv fashionable young men is so load that you can hear it in the next block. A simple worm went out to play Upon an April morning:; An early robin chanced that way Without a chirp of warning; And that is the end of the story. Most anvbodv can retail butter eggs and vegetables, but we have never met a man smart enough to re-tail a dog. Sometimes when a woman throws a brick at an old hen in the carden. it is harder nn h scenery than it is on the hen. mi la -. ine oest way to cultivate an anDetite is to cultivate n fioiri and then you will have both an appetite and the wherewithal to appease it. borne lolks have rats in their garrets, some have rats in their cellars, and while not a few young ladies have good-sized rats in their hair. HOME ENDORSEMENT. Hundreds of Morganton Citizens Can Tell You All About It. Home endorsement, the public expression of Morganton people, should be evidence beyond dis pute for every Morganton reader. Surely the experience of friends and neighbors, cheerfully given by them, will carry more weight than the utterances of strangers residing in faraway places. Read the following: James C. Cloer, Lenoir St., Morgan ton, N. C, says: "I have used Doan's Kidney Pills and the results were so satisfactory that I have no hesitation in recommending them to others. Some months ago I began to suffer from a soreness across my kidneys and at times the kidney secretions were very un naturel I procured Doan's Kidney Pills and used them in accordance with the directions. In a short time I felt a great deal better ane continued taking them until I was rid of every symptom of my trouble. I know Doan's Kidney Pills are a reliable kidney remedy ana can speak of them in the highest terms." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. fOLEYSHOHFTTAR Curts Coldsi Prevents Pneumonia REV. J. G. DUKES, Pastor of th Unitarian Church at 'Pinetown, N. C, writes : "My wife has been in a very bad state of health for several years, and noth ing seemed to do her any good until she began to use Peruna one month ago. Since then the color has returned to her face, and she is gaining in flesh every day, and I beUeve she is a well woman to-day. "My little boy, ten years old, was pale and had but little life. He began to us Peruna the day his mother began. To day his face is rosy, and he is out in the yard running and jumping with the rest of the chUdren." Throat Trouble. Rev. H. W. Tate, 930 Lincoln Ave., Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio, writes that for several years he has been troub led with a peculiar spasmodic affection of the throat, which interfered with his vocation as a preacher. He took Peru na and his trouble disappeared. il3r Itak I. The Only Baking made rrom Royal Grape Cream of Tartar Made from Grapes A Guarantee of Pure- Healthful, Delicious Lend a Hand. Lend a hand to the tempted. Lend a hand to the snni i shadow. Lend a hand to those who nr often misjudged. Lend a hand to the soul pniskprf with unspeakable loss. Lend a hand to the Door fio-ht- ing the wolf from the door. Lend a hand to those wrms lives are narrow and cramped. Lend a hand to the boy strug gling bravely to culture his mind. aT 4 m .Lena a hand to the young peo- Have you a tain of anv kinH any where? Stop just a minute and think! It matters not whether it Vo nrnrr.-,ni.. pains, head pains, or any kind of a pain, one oi jjr. Snoop's little Pink Pain Tablets will surely stpp it in 20 minutes. Formula plainly printed on the 25c. box. Sold by Burke Drug Co. Perfection At Last! I All doubt removed as to the reliability of the Gasoline Engine. 'pfi rp " " -j'- . Agency for Roller Mills, Shellers, Feed Cutters, Shred-1, J. A.. SHUPING As Soothing as a Is the effect of our White Pine Cough Syrup upon the tired lungs, the-aching breast. It stops the tickling in the throat, It brings greatf ul sleep, It aids the appetite, It renews health and vigor. Once used, WHITE PINE Cough Syrup will always be in the house. BURKE DRUG COMPANY. MaKing More Money Out of Cotton Crops is merely a question of using enough of the right kind of fertilizers. Virginia-Carolina are the right kind. The cotton plant cannot feed on barren land. Study your soil. Find out what it lacks. Then apply the necessary fertilization and the results will surprise you. See what Mr. W. C. Hays of Smith Station, Ala., did. He says: "I planted about 30 acres of some 'gray sandy land' that had been in cultivation for over 20 years, and used 300 pounds of Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers per acre, and I expect to gather SO bales from the SO acres." This is why we say it 13 the right kind. We have hundreds of letters like this, and even stronger, in praise of Virginia Carolina Fertilizer for cotton. Get a copy of the new 1909 Virginia-Carolina Farmers' Year Book from your fertilizer dealer, or write our nearest sales office and a copy will be sent you free. It contains pictures of the capitols of all the Southern States. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. Sales Offices Richmond, Va. Norfolk, Va. Columbia, 8. C. Atlanta, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Memphis, Tenn. (Vjrginia-cmHna) Powder fSB Food pie whose homes are cold and re pelling. Lend a hand to those whose surroundings are steadily pulling them down. Lend a hand to the girl who works, works, works, and knows nothing of recreation and rest Lend a hand to the prodigal sister. Her life is as precious as that of the prodigal brother. Lend a hand, an open hand, a warm hand, a strong hand, an uplifting and helping hand. KILLS WOULD-BE SLAYER. A merciless murderer is Appendici tis with many victims. But Dr. King's New Life Pills kill it by prevention. They gently stimulate stomach, liver and bowels, preventing that clogging that invites appendicitis, curing Con stipation, Biliousness, Chills, Malaria, Headache and Indigestion. 25c at W. A. Leslie's. The Stickney -is the Best. Mother's Touch. ! , Sale Offices Durham, N.C. Charleston, 8. C Baltimore, MJL Columbus, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Shreveport, La. I'!
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
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March 25, 1909, edition 1
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