Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Sept. 8, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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:" Bring Your j 5C j . iinivmivi -TO- .He-a!d Office- Work at ssssa JILIOUS? OHSTIPATED 1 lEADACHE? SIB ! FOR SPEEDY RELIEF. Nearly Everybody T 4 K ES SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR w&tYOU,? si VLE! -r"i cottage on Evans street, desirable neighbor iJo-l. 5-ruoni cottage and office bailuing. on three acre lot, cii Lenoir street, at a bar- Choi.-e I; ts cut to suit the purchaser. A. C. AVERY, Jr. 6 the test cream made for the skin. II vou have a red, rough, blotched, acre, unsiebtly skin, try this great product of the American Druggists Svrdicate. $ You can use it for massaging r:iAlt- and for a sallow complex Ion, as it whitens and beautifi.es, is r.fe, harmless and does not grow hair. J Nm woman who values her ap pearanee and who wants a smooth clear skin should let a day go by trithout trying it for the face, neck, ftrxs and hands. Get it for 23c. at. any A. D. S. store. )1EM OEU ASOLIA'llU. With 12,tK other diUKirlsta. du! se urujj company. 1 as m w2 1 THE STftNDSRD REMEDY FOR ALL FORMS OF RHEUMATISM LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, NEURALGIA, KIDNEY TROUBLES, CATARRH, ASTHMA and KINDRED DISEASES GIVESQUICK RELIEF Applied externally It affords almost in stant relief from cain. while Dermaa- enr, results are being effected by taking it internally, purifying the blood, dis solving the poisonous substance and jsnoving It from the system. DR. C. L. GATES fl.ncofk, Minn., write si " A little ttiri here had such a weak back ranged by kbeumatlsm and Kidney Trouble tint ,he could not stand on her feet The lament they put her down on the floor ehe would scream with palng. I treated her with o-hKOPS" and today ehe runs around as well happy as can be. I prescrlbe-S-DKOPS" tor my patients and use tt In my practice." TEST "5-DROPS" RALD, T. G. COBB, Publisher. VOL. XXVI. THE BVRKE COVNTY NEWS ) ConaoIldI N.. 29 1901 THE MO KG ANTON HERALD J Consolidated Nov. Z9.1901 Subscription Price, $i Per Year In Advance MORG-ANTON, N. O., SEPTEMBER 8, 1910. No. 21 The dews-Herald I I 13 THB Best Advertising jj Medium IN THB PIEDMONT SECTION Wyoming Folks Celebrate The Days of Their Forefathers i s if r r -- , - f. - s A VERY NICE PROFESSOR By M. QUAD Copyright, 1S10, by Associated Lit erary Press. Cheyenne, Wyo., has a great celebration each year during the latter part of August which is known as "frontier dajs." when all the cowboys and Indians for miles around gather to re-enact the exieriences of the days of the early pioneers. The festivities have become so popular that even the celebra tion of the Fourth of July has been omitted for the last dozen years and all efforts have been lent toward making the typical frontier scenes of world wide interest The cowboys indulge in their favorite pastimes, the Indiana are given the widest latitude in their war dances, and the citizens of the Btate make merry at games such as entertained their forefathers. IT WAS LOVELY, BUT NOT SAFE By ELIZABETH GAINES Copyright. 1010. by American Tress Association. i L . . and oreit;Q r 1 . . " t- !.: n ; :ii'".-i, i- .:n or r oto el ltveEtion lor i : n t-a?r.tai ilitr. For free book i ; arTHUnr 23 HOlO write? Opposite U. 3 Patent Otiice' WASHINGTON O. G. IS)) JLumtjaxo. Sciatica. Neuralgia. Kidney iroubieor any kindred disease, write to us for a trial hnttla nf "s.rRnps." 5-DROPS " la ont(nlir free frnm opium, cocaine.morphine. alcohol, laud- auum ana other similar ingredients. Lrg Slu Bottla "R-DROPS" (300 Dom) '.. For Sal b DruuUU. "I have but one objection to you, Bert," said Celia "you're altogether too serious. When your face is at rest you have a very harsh look. Your siniU is delightful. Unfortunately you never smile." '"Have you ;;ny more compliments like that?" asked Bert. -For if you have you'd better dismiss me alto gether." Bert Cumrulngs left Ms fiancee very much disgruntled. lie unbosomed him self to his friend Arnold Priestley, who sat thinking while Bert talked. Finally Triestley said: I would advise you to try hypno tism. I know a man who can make neonle lauirh or ween or anything else he likes. He doesn't put them to sleep either. I shouldn't be surprised it he could make you smile. I'll take you to see him." Cummlngs assented, and they went to see the hypnotist, Smithers. s-nnthers said he could make the young man smile, but as soon as the hypnotic ef fect was removed he would become serious again. i Bert said he believed he'd try it. lie was to go to see Celia Effingham that evening and he would like to give her for once all the smiles she required. At half past 8 that evening Miss Ef fingham heard the doorbell ring ana flew to admit her lover. There was Bert with a beautiful smile oa his face. Celia was right about Beit's smile. It was entrancing. There was a delightful curl to his Hps, a dimple in each cheek, and his regular white teeth showed beneath his dark mustache. "Oh, Bert," said Celia, clasping his hands, "how handsome you are when you smile! Keep it up!" "I'll try. Ha, ha!" Bert responded. "Because Helen and Molly ami Eou are all coming in tonight to meet you. If you will keep up that smile all the evening they'll be delighted with you. You know how anxious I am that these my dearest friends should be pleased with you." "I'll be cordial. Ha, ha, ha!" There was another ring at the lell. and the girls were admitted. "This," said Celia, "Is Mr. Albert Cummin gs, Miss Helen Ward." A bow and a ha-ha! "And Miss Molly Malloy." A bow and a ha-ha-ha! "And Miss Louise Truesdale." A bow and a ha-ha-ha-ha! Albert's smile was contagious. Ills fiancee caught it, and it extended to the three other girls. "Helen," said Celia. "you are my old est friend. I propose that Bert shall sit by you first while we three have a bit of gossip by ourselves. Then ill turn him over to Molly and then to Lou." So down sit Mr. Cummings and Miss Ward to get acquainted. "I'm very glad to meet you," says the lady. "Celia and I are such very old friends that one who is to be so much to her must be much to me." Bert smiled that heavenly smile of his, and Miss Ward was beside herself. Never before had a man smiled at her like that. Every time she made a re mark Bert smiled, or, rather, his lips wore a perpetual smile which was in tensified at every remark. He made no other reply. Whether his hypnotic condition admitted of his receiving what was said to him and making a reply is a question. Probably his keep ing his mouth shut was an advantage to him. It was not very long before Celia concluded to change the girl with whom her lover was getting acquaint ed. Celia had observed Helen s gaze fixed on Bert's beautiful smile and thought it time to break the spell. So Molly was substituted. "I'm so clad for dear Celia." said Molly. "Ha, ha!" "I consider her happiness the same as my own." "Ha. ha, ha!" In the beginning cf a conversation Bert's smile was more of a laugh, After that it simmered down into a mere curvature of the lips. But the dininles were there and the pearly teeth under the mustache. The ef fect on Molly was the same as on Helen, only more so. Celia. seeing that Mollv couldn't very long keep her hands off Bert, made ihe third change, putting Lou In Molly's place. "I don't blame you for not being able to conceal your happiness" said Lou. "Ha, ha!" "It's delightful to be engaged, it?" "na, ha. ha!" "One feels like smiling all while." "Ha, ha. ha, ha!" "Let's have the conversation eral," said Celia, moving her chair to ward Bert and Lou. "Draw up, girls." Celia tried to talk to one or two of the girls, while the ether conversed with Bert. But it was no use. Every girl's attention was fixed on that beau tiful smile. Celia rose, with great hauteur, and walked Into the hall, mo tioning Bert to follow her. "Oo home." She said, "and get that Idiotic grin off your face!" Bert went to St:;:; hers, who dehypno Hzed him. Win n Bert saw his fiancee atrain he hnd his hard look on his face. "I don't like it so well." said Celia "but It's safer much safer." isn't the gen- Mrs. Jacob Wilmert; Lincoln, 111., found her way back to perfect health. She writes: "I suiVered with kidney trouble and backache and my appetite was very poor at times. A few week's afo I got Foley Kidney Pills and gave them a fair trial. They gave me great relief, so continued till now I am again in perfect health." W. A. Leslie. I SWAISON RHEUMATIC CUBE COMPANT - . Dept. so. T4 Laka strut. Chlca'F THE LASH OF A FIEND would have been about as welcome to A. Cooper of Oswego, N. Y., as a mer ciless lung-racking cough that aenea all remedies for years. "It was most troublesome at night," he writes. nothing helped me till I usea ur. Km-r's New Discovery whicn curea me completely. I never cough at night nnw." Millions know it's matcmess for stubborn colds, obstinate coughs, sore lungs, lagrippe, astnma, hemmorrhatre, croup, wnoopuig wu8u or hayfever. It relieves quickly i nd nouor tails TO Satl!lV. uiai wu- ;r, snc. 1.00. Trial bottle tree. it's nositiveiv guaranteed by Leslie's Drug Store, A Hardy Ono. He was an amateur gardener of the very green order. Nevertheless he felt he had been cheated over the last batch of seeds he had pur chased and had cailed on the florist to make a complaint. After he had ended his grumble he began to ask floral questions. "Oh, by the way' he said, "what is a hardy rose ?" 'It ia one," growled the dealer, "that doesn't mind your wife pull ing it up by the roots every day to Bee if it has begun to grow yet." London Telegraph. When Trofessor Watson took the stage at Ellsworth to ride over to Dia mondville the innkeeper liked his looks and talk. He hadn't been in the vil lage a day when we all liked his looks and talk. He was a little, roly poly man of fifty and gave out that he was a professor of metaphysics in a New England college. His age was about fifty, and he carried a smile on his face that would have pulled a crocus out of the ground a month ahead of time. In Dlamondville lived the Widow Steadman. She was forty years old and well off. She was being courted by the town constable, who was an old bachelor. It was said they were engaged, but the arrival of the very nice professor wrought a change. In a week he had made 'jer acquaintance and was celling on her. In a fort night tha nose of the town constable was out of joint. The professor ap peared to be In the best of health, but he claimed that metaphysics had bro ken him down and that he had come to the village for rest. The constable was called stupid as an officer good hearted, but stupid. We hadn't sized him un correctly as to the stupid part. As soon as he discovered that he was being thrown down he began to study the profes sor. He wrote to half a dozen col leges and was told that they had nev er heard of the man. By accident he got hold of a paper that put him on the rlsht trail. He went n to the city and had a talk with the police. One June day the stage from the railroad rolled in, and its cargo con sisted of eleven women. They might have been said to be of all ages, sexes and colors. As the vehicle halted at the inn Professor Watson sat on the veranda. lie was put under arrest by a detective and the constable as he sat, but he got on his feet and raised his hat eleven different times to the eleven females. Some cried out at sight of him, some smiled, and some shed tears. After replacing his hat the professor shook hands with the eleven, beginning at the head of the line and saying: "My dear, your name is Hannah, if I remember, and, though your call is unexpected, you are nevertheless wel come." Then he took up the case of Jane, Betsy, Mary, and so on. Every wo man there was his wife, and a wife ho had abandoned, and yet he carried that smile and his nerve right through it. He was taken to jail, and the Jailer said he was one of the nicest men he ever met!" The officers had - a case against him bigger'n a house. He had practiced bigamy for twenty years. He had married girls, spinsters, wid ows and old women. One of the vic tims was sixty-five years old. lie had got money from some of them, but it didn't seem as if that was his motive. As he explained it: "Why, I just fell in love, and she fell in love, and we were married. Really, I didn't know I had married so many." And when the women were asked to explain they answered: "Why, he's such a very, very nice man that we couldn't help it. He's Just too sweet for anything." And, would you believe it, the Widow Steadman, who would have made the twelfth, was the first one to send him a bouquet and her sympathies after he had been locked up! The professor hadn't gone far afield. He had done all his marrying within a radius of 200 miles. He had made a nice, kind husband while it lasted. He had painted kitchen floors, washed dishes and whitewashed cellars. Yes, the officers thought they had him dead to rights, but they soon learned to the contrary. Only one woman out of the eleven was willing to swear against the man. The county had the whole gang on its hands to lodge and hoard. The wife who was willing to do It was an old maid and so bony and homely as to excite general remark. For a time she was fierce to send the little man to a place where the dogs couldn't bite him. None of the ten others would speak to her. She was sent for by the professor. When she had arrived at the Jail, determinea that his cajolery should not move her, he held out his arms to her and said: "Birdie, you can't find It in your heart to do It You are too noble and generous. If I hadn't seen the nobility of your character in your face I should never have trusted my happiness In your keeping." She believed him and fell - on his shoulder and wept. When the trial was at last called not one of the elev en was complainant. When put on the stand as witnesses they were no good. They perjured themselves, and they wriggled and twisted and made all sorts of excuses for the man, and the jury had to strain a point to convict him. He got a sentence of three years, and before being taken to prison he had Interviews with the eleven m suc cession, and to each one he said: "Never mind, darling. Three years will soon rtass away, and then we will be with each other again, to part nevermore." And the constable didn't marry the Widow Steadman. She said he wasn't even a little bit nice and that it was none of his business how many wives the very, very nice Professor Watson had. Low Roand Trip Rates Via Southern Railway on Account of Occasions Mentioned Below. Ohio Valley Exposition, Cin- cinnatti, Ohio, August 29th-Sep- tember 24th, 1910. Tickets on sale August 28th to September 21th, with final limit to reach original starting point within five days from date of sale. Appalachian Exposition, Knox- ville, Tenn., September 12th to October 12th. Tickets on sale September 10th to October 12th. Limits according to rate. Sev eral low fares with short limit and higher rates with long limit. Grand Fountain of the United Order or Irue Reformers, Rich mond, Va., September 13th-20th, 1910. Tickets on sale September 11th and 12th, final limit Sep tember 27th. National Baptist Convention, (colored,) New Orleans, Septem ber 14th to I9ch, 1910. Tickets on sale September 12th, 13th, 14th, with final limit September 21st. Bienniel Movable Conference of the United Order of Odd Fel lows, (colored.) Baltimore, Md September 12ti17th. -1910: Tick ets on sale September 9th, 10th, final lima September 21st. Sovereign. Grand Lodge of I. O. O. F., Atlanta, Ga., September 19th-24th. Tickets on sale Sep tember 16th, 17th, 18th, with final limit September 28th, with privilege extension by depositing ticket with joint agent and upon payment of fee ot $1.00. National Encampment Lr. A, R., Atlantic Citv, September 19th-24th, 1910. Tickets on sale September 15th to 19th, in clusive, with final limit Septem ber 29th, with pi'ivilege of exten sion to Oct 28th by depositing ticket with joint agent and upon payment of fee of $1.00. Brotherhood ot St. Andrew, Nashville, Tenn., September 26th-October 2nd, 1910. Tickets on sale September 24th to 27th, with return limit October 5th and privilege of extension by de positing ticket and payment of fee of $1.00. General Assembly of the Epis copal Church, Cincinnati, Ohio, October 5th-2Gth. Ti-.kets on sale Oct. 3rd, 4th, 5th, Gth and 10th, limit Oct. 30th. National League of Post Mas ters. Chattanooga, Tenn., Oc tober 12th-14th. 1910. Tickets on sale Oct. 10th and 11th, with final limit Oct. 17th, and privi lege of extension to Oct. 31st by depositing ticket and upon pay ment ox SI. CO. For further intormation and rates apply to your ticket agent or write to R. H. DeButts. Traveling Pass. Agt. C5.... !te, N. C, YOUR WIFE'S BRIDGE PARTY. How to Act When You Unexpectedly Blunder In Upon It. It is inevitable that j'ust once in your life you will make the mistake of coming home early on an after noon when your wife is entertaining a bridge party. Therefore it is im portant that you Bhould know how to act on that occasion. When it dawns upon you that you have blundered into a bridge party do not stand just inside the door twiddling your thumbs and looking embarrassed. Any show of embarrassment will prove what your wife has so often said that the children get their gawkish tend encies from their father's side of the houBe. Say "Ilello, girls!" as you care- lesBlv toss vour hat into a corner. Don't waste your monev buying plasters when you can get a bottle of Chamberlain's Liniment for twenty- five cents. A piece of flannel damp ened with this liniment is superior to any plaster for lame back, pains in the side and chest and much cheaper. Sold by all druggists. EN WOM OF MIDDL AGE Need Lydia E. Pinkbam's This greeting will please your wife's Vegetable COIIipOllflCl elderly fruests and will make the younger ones admire your nerve. WTiile your wife is still gasping her admiration hang your coat on the hatrack, put your collar and tie on the mantel and as you loosen the neckband of your shirt and kick off your shoes ask her where your slip pers arc. A wife is always proud to be able to help her husband. Above all and this is very im portant do not go away and hide yourself in an upstairs room. When you have been to your den and have filled and lighted your oldest and nuttiest pipe, come downstairs and mingle with your wife's guests. Crit icise the plays made by the various contestants. Occasionally chuckle and say "Great Scott!" when your wife makes a questionable play. If at supper time the party is still absorbed in the game and the children are Bitting in a row on the kitchen steps crying for bread do not spoil your wife's play by telling her about it or by throwing out hints which probably Ehe is too en grossed to notice. The tactful way to attract her attention is to burn a smudge in the attic a few old rags in a brazier will smoke splendidly then turn in a fire alarm and go downtown Later don't forget to send your wifo a telegram to the effect that you have been called out of town on business and will not be back lor a week. Chicago News. ' "lfl'Ui Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is to-d;iy the best known medicine in use for the relief and cure of bowel complaints. It cures griping, diarrhoea, dysentery, and should be taken at the lirst unnatural looseness of the bowels. It is equally valuable for children and adults. It always cures. Sold by all druggists. WHEN MERIT WINS. When the medicine you take cures your disease, tones up your system and makes you feel better, stronger and more vitrorous than before. 1 hat is what Foley Kidney Pills do for you in all cases of backache, headache, nervousness, loss of appetite, sleepless ness and general weakness that is caused by any disorder of the kidneys or bladder. W. A. Leslie. Very Bad Coug'r; Pe-ru-na Stopped l P.ronVfield "MV. "Two vears &SO I was unable to do any kind of work and only weighed 113 pounds. My trouble nates uacii. to me time that women may expect nature to bring on them the Change of Life. I got a oottie oi Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and it made me feel much better, and I have contin ued its use. 1 am verv erateful to yoi: for the good healtl I am now enjoying." Mrs. Sarah Lousignoxt, 414 S. Livingston fctreet, lirookfield, Mo. The Chance of Life is the most criti cal period of a woman's existence, &uC neglect of health at this time invitef disease and pain. Women everywhere should remem ber that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so suc cessfully carry women through this trvintr period as Lvdia E. Pinkham's v egetable compound, maae irom na tive roots and herbs. For SO years it has been curing wo men from the worst forms of female ills inflammation, ulceration, dis placements, fibroid tumors, irrcgulari ties, periodic pains, backache, ana nervous prostration. If you would like special advice about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinkhani, at Iiyiin, Mass. Her advice is free, ami always IielnfuL Trustee's Sale of Valuable Land. By virtue of the power of sale conferred upon the undersigned trustee in that certain deed of trust dated January 15th. 1906, which i-- r. corded in the Register's office of Burke county, in book Y.tio. 2, pages 36 to 38, (to which dixu . f trust reference is hereby made.) and at the n quest of G. P. Erwin and K. K. PresnelL executtr.s of R. B. Anderson, the cestius que trust, default hav ing been made in the payment of the note for $1,000 thereby secured and interest thereon, I will, on Monday. October 3. 1910, sell for cash to the highest bidder at the Court House door in Mor ganton during the legal hours of sale, a certain tract of land lying and being in Burke county and State of North Carolina, adjoining the lands of C. S. Smith. J. X. Walton, Tillinghast and others bounded as follows, to-wit: Beginning on a stake on the south side of the W. N. C. R. R., Tillinghast's (formerly Dale's cor ner) and runs thence with the line of the railroad a west course to a stake on the west side of the culvert over the branch, J. T. Walton's comer, thence with the branch and along the west bank of the same with J. T. Walton's line a south course to T illie Smith's line; thence with Tillie Smith's line an east course to Tillinghast's line of the tract he bought from Dale, at a hickory: thence with Tillinghast's line a north course to the beginning, containing 60 acres, more or lesr. the same being all the part of the Walton home place, devised to H. H. Walton by T. George Wal ton that lies on the south side of the Southern or W. N. C. K. R., and being the tract purchased by Annie Lee Bradley and husband, W. N. Bradley, subject to the lein of the deed of trust above men tioned. This 25th day of August. 1910. W. C. ERVIN. Avery & Ervin, Trustee. Attys. Sale of Land in Icard Township. By virtue of a power of sale contained in a cer tain mortgage deed executed to me by M. Z. Chil ders and wife. Lucy Childers. on the 2nd day of July. 1909, and duly record d in the Register's of fice of Burke county. State of North Carolina, on the ICth day of July, 1909, in Book E No. 3, page 235, 1 will sell at public auction to the highest bid der, for cash, at the Court House door in the town of Morganton, State of North Carolina, on Mon day, the 5th day of September, 1910. a cetain piece or tract of land lying and being in the county of Burke, State aforesaid, in Icard township, do scribed and defined as follows, to-wit: Beginning on a white-oak stump in a hollow and runs south (north) 39 poles to a stake; thence west 68 poles to a gum tree; thence south 23 poles to a stake: thence south TO degrees east 25 poles to a stake; thence north 7 poles to a stake: thence south 14 poles to the beginning, containing 15 acres, more or less. Said sale being made by reason of default 'n the payment of the debt secured by said mortgage. This the 4th day of August. 1910. Wm. BERRY. Avery & Ervin, Mortgagee. Attorneys. Please remember that can didates' cards and all commu nications suggesting or advo cating men for office appear ing in The News-Herald are charged for at regular adver tising rates, payable in ad vance, and that this rule will be strictly adhered to. SUTHERLAND'S EAGLE EYE SALVE Good for Nothing but the Eyes. Tyburn Gallows. The last execution on a perma nent gallows in London took place at Tyburn on Nov. 7, 1783, the malefactor being one John Austin, condemned for highway robbery with violence. For centuries Ty burn had been the scene of execu tions. The gallows consisted of three posts, and around it were open galleries, resembling race Btands, in which 6eats were let. On account of the disgraceful scenes on the road, executions were trans ferred in 1783 to the area in front of Newgate, despite the objections of residents, and on Dec. 3 of that year the first hanging took place there, when no less than ten were executed. London Spectator. Do You Dread New Shoes? It takes a deal of moral courage for some folks to buy new shoes. Stiff soles and unyielding upper leath ers sometimes bring serious foot troubles in their wake. To many new shoes mean torment for a week or more. The Southern Girl $2.00 Shoe 82-50 Look for the Red Bell on the Box, Not a minute should be lost when a chiid shows s'inptoms of croup. Cham berlain's Cough Remedy given as soon as the child becomes hoarse, or even after the croupy cough appears, will pi eyent the attack. Sold by all druggists. is almost the worst thing for consumptives. Many of the "just-as-good" preparation contain as much as 20 of alcohol; 5cofr' Emulsion not a drop. Insist on having Scott's Emulsion FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS DON'T BREAK DOWN. Severe strains on the vital organs, like strains on machinery, cause break downs. You can't over-tax stomach liver, kidneys, bowels or nerves with out serious danger to yourself. If you are weak or run-down, or under strain nf anv kind, take Electric Bitters, the matchless tonic medicine. Mrs. J. E, Van de Sande, of Kirkland, 111 writes: ''That I did not break down, while enduring: a most severe strain for three months, is due wholly to Electric Bitters." Use them and enjoy health and strength. Satisfaction pos itivelv euaranteed. 50c. at Leslie Drug Store. DAUGHTER OF MRS. J. M. BROWN. Mrs. J. M. Brown, Dunnegan, Mo, writes: "My little daughter, three years old, was troubled with a very bad cough which remained after an attack of catarrhal fever, which was a great deal worse at night. "She would wake vp oat ot her sleep and cough until I feared she could not Stand it. "Nothing that we gave her seemed to do her any good. I then concluded to send for Dr. Hartman's book entitled The 1113 of Life,' which I promptly received. "I at tha same timecommenced giving her Peruna. She has taken one bottle in all, through which she has obtained a complete cure. "She also since her birth was troubled with indigestion, but since she haa taken Peruna she can eat almost any kind of food without any bad results. "She is now as weU and happy as any little girl can be. When our friends say how well she looks, I toll them Peruna did it. '1 6haU always be a friend of Peruns, as I consider it the best medicine for coughs and indigestion we have ever tried, and will recommend it to any one similarly afflicted.". 7JRS. LYDIA J. SPOONER, Santa Monies, C.il., writes that they are never without Peruna in the home, that they find it the finest family remedy tbey have e?er used. Mi APPALACHIAN EXPOSITION Greatest Ever Held in the South. At Knoxville, Tervrt., with the sole made flexible, is a positive relief for tired and tortured feet. It is as pliable as an old shoe from the very first. It is as stylish as any shoe you ever saw. The top and vamp are of soft kid but tough as horse hide. We've taken out all the stiffness. We've left in all the wear and all the style. See this shoe at the Craddock agency in your town. Made in all styles and patterns slippers pumps lace and button boots. CRADDOCK-TERRY CO.. LYNCHBURG. VA. 3 Sept. 12 to Oct. 12. Magnificent and Mammoth Build ings. More to See and Amuse than Ever Offered at a Southern Expositian. 810,000 in Purses for Running and Trotting Races. $10,000 in Aerial Exploitation, by machines of Wright Brothers, Stro bel and other Aeronauts. "See the Air Ships." $25,000 in Matchless Fireworks, Grand "Battle of the Clouds" and Pain's "Fall of Pompeii." Mulhall's Famous Wild West and Twenty-Five Other Shows of Note. Greatest Bands in all America. Admission to grounds 50 cents in Day. After 6 p. m., 25 cents. Remember These Special Dates: Live Stock and Races. . .Sept. 12-18 Night Horse Show. . .Sept. 13, 14, 15 Bench Show Sept. 22, 23, 24 Pigeon and Pet Stock Show September 27 October 1 Poultry Show October 5-12 Wright Brothers' Air Ship Days September 22-29 Stroeble's Dirigible Ballon, Every Day Sept. 12-Oct. 12 Pain's Fire Works, Every Evening Sept. 12-Oct. 12 Battle of the Clouds Sept. 19-24 Fall of Pompeii Sept. 26-Oct. 1 Special rates every day, and re markably low railroad rates to Knox ville and return on Tuesdays and Thursdays as follows: Morganton $4.10 - Hickory 4.55 Marion 3.70 Shelby 4.75 See This Great Exposition. W. J. OLIVER, President. THE OLD RELIABLE North Carolina Home Insurance Company. Forty Years of Honest Dealing has established this strong home company in the confidence of the people. Twenty-Five Years continuous business at its Morganton agency, with every loss fully and satisfactorily settled. Post Office Building. XT TT,JT?T7T"V' SUTHERLAND'S EASLE EYE SALYE Good for Nothing but the Eye ASK US. $10 per month will buy a 3-room house in Bobtown. Morganton Insurance & Realty Co., UNWKFUKATED.) FRED L. HUFFMAN, Manager. . II ,IWlT rs..i
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
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Sept. 8, 1910, edition 1
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