Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / March 30, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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' i : - . i i i m-j jt 1 ' '- -- wL - " ''''ssssasssjssss.. j fl.COBB. Publisher. THE MOKGANTON HERALD ! C""IUd Nov. 29. 1901. Subscription Price, ?1 Per Year In Advance. gad Taste in ihe Mouth Tfrnness. and a general "no " fvliiK is a sure fta UT liver. The rprnedv is Simmons Ked Z Regulator (The Powce-r ro.i..). It exercises its greatest .-e-nive enect in the liver, vet" it is effective in the '-vrvh and bowels. Indi cation, constipation and the;r attendant evils disap pear before its powerful, Palatine: influence. Try its wholesome purifying proper t';e. It will give you a good anpetite. sound digestion and make you feel well. Sold by Dealers PHc Large Package, S1.00 rrLe cr.uir; w-li trie Red Z on the j; v ca:.:io: it. resit to us. we - ; '.- r.-.a:!. pi'srpaii. Simmons ..r :? a:- put up in liraid form IZ . r-rf-r it. Price 51.00 per U k f.r tie Red Z label. J. 3. ZE''-11" & CO.. Proprietors St. Louis. Missouri ti For. Sale: 4 neat cottages r::3 one-ieurth acre lots, 3 of -ve eortages 4 rooms, and one of 5 rooms, on Morehead and Wai '.vr streets. North Morganton. Terrr.s to suit purchaser. Apply Avery & Ervin. Attys. Wit Engines and Boilers. j-e S;xlO "K"' Peerle?s Engine and Boiler on wheels. Good i a; new. :e SjxlO L:. I. It'll Stationary En gine and 20 H. P. Boiler on sills. Complete rig. Price S2T5.00. Terms. 0:e 20 H. P. Boiler on sills. feyle:-. A bargain at 12o. C. H TURNER, p-r-'er in Machinery, -TATESVILLE, N. C. When red, rough, Bs:ght:- and sore, ", car. be quickly i iealed and greatly improved in ap- ....... Ju:..77Tn J .liberal use of r$kr--hi Vfif A.D.S ERCXIDLL This is an ideal preparation for keepir.g the skin smooth and white and the complexion fair and beautiful. It is a f r.e, greaseless, fragrant toilet cream. A mild, harmless bleach, which every woman who values her,ap pearance should use regularly. Get it at any A. D. S. Drug U.ii CvKp-i.y. r"rcT.VE -IrXKMSOF l;f - USEI ; -.- . u UWIII kr 7 : - ' i- sjt, Jcuraglm. 3 ens Ia,-'-"".""''"-"0"3-3' ML;"r' ' t-or,Js almost to r.""' ' 1 -t- irie ilnrw Hiiaftlvfni, tu.-.sc aud reoioving it ll1'- .!, . . . '-;'"'-y Iroubie that - '.i. - .. ; ' ' Il';r Tue ntomeot ti '! ' ' lt floor vou:l 8r 6. !-; .-- ::t Wtih L OrtOPS- iii'-y Jruui, e that ne Te&m 1 1 - ' '.' , ' 1 :! ana hat-py ucmn rmv patleniA azul HLm,.., t. ... , .." . - v ; ! - s mnr Dotes) m -!!,' ."-W CB32 C38PAHT, L'.S"'Jj.i '-- street, Chicago rttl ... - -b ft : t l"ryinir off the u r--. ..i ' ' P"'1 establishing cpon the -J U the li i I rl- : SKIM M A : - ,-.. 150 Leap To Death. Fire in New York Leaves Piles of Dead and Dying in its Wake. New York Dispatch, 25th. More than 150 persons, 50 of whom were girls, lost their lives in a fire which swept a large building in Washington Square late this afternoon. The fire started on the seventh floor of the building in the shirt waist factory just before the time to close down. Most of those who perished were killed by leaping from the factory windows before the hook and ladder wagons arrived on the scene. The girls were among the first to jump, the men not leaping until they were scorched by the flames and all the exits were cut off. The rescuers rushed to reach those cut off by the flames above the seventh floor, because the building from the seventh to the tenth floor was occupied by the Triangle waist factory and was stored with much combustible merchandise. The firemen in a frenzy were compelled, by their inability to give aid, to sec the girls leap to death to escape the flames which were fast wrapping their tor tures around them. A young man and a girl ap peared at a window on the eighth floor, clasped in each others em brace. The young man pressed a kiss to the girls lips and then she leaped to death with the man following. Hundreds in the streets and the square, and girls from ad joining factories, ran shrieking with horror as they saw their friends leaping to death to es cape the flames. The fire had been burning an hour before the firemen made their way to the inner air shaft at the :op of a one-story building at the rear and were paled by the sickening sight of the dead and the dying. At 6 o'clock seventy-five bodies were piled in the street. Fire Chief Croker said: "This calamity is just what I have been predicting. Tlure were no out side fire escapes on this building. have been advocating and agi tating that fire escapes be put on j the buildings just such as this. This large loss of life is due tc this negligence." Fireman Dissroth, driver for sputy Fire Chief Binns, re ported that he had seen 55 bodies piled up on the ninth floor. Death of Two Youcg Ladies Caused by Lamp Explosion. Wadesboro Dispatch, 24th. Two persons lost their lives ast night when an oil lamp ex ploded at a neighborhood party at Olive Branch, in Union county. The dead are: Miss Giace Bau- com, aged l i years, anu ivusa Wilma Davis, aged 21. TVio victims had e-one into a room with another young lady. I JL ii www CJ and were arranging their hair, when, to obtain a better . view, Miss Baucom held the lamp slant ingly, so as to direct its rays upon the mirror. It exploded in her hands, saturating the clotn insr of both with kerosene and inflicting burns from which they died early this morning. Ihe third member of the party was not seriously injured. It is be lieved they also inhaled the flames. The party was at the home of K. Pritchard, and at the time of the fatal accident there were more than 25 merry young folks present. Miss Baucom was a daughter ofH. L. Baucom, and Miss Davis a daughter of the Rev. "Cul" Davis. Both families are well known in this section and the deepest sympathy is felt for them. Both young ladies w-ere popular and universally admired for their splendid personalities and high Christian lives. A FIERCE NIGHT ALARM is the hoarse, startling cough of a child, suddenly attacked by croup Often ita.oused Lewis Chamblin ct Manchester, O . (R. R No 2) for the.r four children were greatly subject to croup. "Somtime in severe attacks, he wrote, "we were afraid they would die, but since we proved what a certain remedy Dr. King's New Discovery is, we have no fear. We rely on it for croup and for coughs colda or any throat or lung trouble." So do thou- j f .unWc Rn miwou. Astnm I, Haw Fever. LaGripne. Whooping Cough, Hemmorrhages fly before it r. 31 nA Trial hottle free. Soid 3UC 41 - by W. A. Leslie. f0IY5H0NETm Cures ColUi PrtvenU Pneumonia KITCKIN AGAINST SIMMONS FIGHT ON IN DEAD EARNEST. Present Govemsr Will Wage Strenuous Fight For Senior Senatorship Other Candidates May Enter tie Race. Mr. II. E. C. Bryant, writing from Washington under date of the 24th, says: . Tarheel democrats are on the warpath, they are launching one of the liveliest" campaigns that North Carolina ever wit nessed. Senator Simmons, the game cock of the state delega tion here, precipitated this fight by two acts during the closing days of the last congress. His voice for the acquittal of Senator Lorimer, for whom Senator Bailey and others battled so royally, is the red rag to the "progressive democrats" of the Old North State. "Progressive democrat" is what the anti-Simmons men call themselves. The speech of the senior senator against Presi dent Taft's reciprocity treaty with Canada is another reg rag to the "progressives." I hai-dly landed here when I first got wind of the promised battle between the North Carolina "regulars" and "the progressives." Several names are mentoined daily in connection with the con test the contest over the seat now held in the United States senate by Mr. Simmons. Gov. Kitchin, it is understood, wTill be the principal opponent of Mr. Simmons at the outset but others will be brought out later. The most interesting story, which comes from Raleigh in connec tion with the situation, is that Ed Justice, the brilliant, daring democrat of Guilford county, will move to Raleigh in the course of a few months and enter the race for keeps. It is argued that he is the "real progressive" of the state. Claude Kitchin, now one of the heavy weights on the house ways and means commit tee, helping Oscar Underwood and others to make a few tariff schedules, is picked by.jsome to win in the event that his brother Bill, Senator Simmons and others deadlock the legislature. Charles Brantly Aycock is called the favorite dark horse of the lot by some. Claude 'Kitchin told me that he would not be in the race. The friends of Judge Walter Clark would like to run him, it is said, but for reasons best known to themselves they will not enter him at this time. F. M. Simmons and William Walton Kitchin are in the field. The boys are already at work. Simmons, who has already shown the courage of his convictions, is standing pat downright pat on his record. Thirty thousand copies of his speech on reciproc ity will be sent to the state, and he is making no excuses for his vote on Lorimer. The fight is on and will be to the last ditch. Heretofore Senator Simmons has been backed by a majority of the representatives of the house from the state, and it is believed now that he will have most of them when the curtains fall. Hovever, Claude Kitchin, the clever politician of the famous Kitchin brothers, has a mighty whiD in his hand. As a member of the "committee on commit tees" he can come pretty close to assigning the North Carolina congressmen to committees. Wil Scott's Emulsion is a wonderful food-medi-cme for all ages of man kind. It will make the delicate,sickly baby strong and well will give the pale, anemic girl rosy cheeks and rich, red blood. It will put flesh on the bones of the tired, over worked, thin man, and will keep the aged man or woman in condition to resist colds or pneumonia in the winter. FOR A2e by. all dbuggists Bend 10c. name of. paper and this ad. lor 001 beautiful Saving. Bank and fchlld's Bketch-Book. Each, bank contains a Good Luck Penny. gCOTT & BOWNE. 409 Pearl St, New York MORGANTON, N. he use his power for political purposes? That is a question. North Carolinians at the cap ital are intensely interested in the matter. Claude Kitchin is looked upon as the plum man for the Tar heel delegation. It has been so long since the democrats had a look in on party patronage that some of the applicants are over anxious to land. Mr. Kitchin is hearing from . every section of the state. Some dozen or so places may be filled by North Carolinians. These are some of the things that are entering the old Sim-mons-Kitchin controversy. Prize Lie of the Year. Asheville Citizen. Mr. Howard Banks is the edi tor of the Hickory Democrat. He is also the author of the fol lowing story, which is respect fully submitted as the biggest "lie" of the year, and for which the Mendacity medal, annually given by Col. Wade Harris, of the Charlotte Chronicle, should be awarded: "Did you ever hear of Stuart Coffey's pipe organ at Boone?" asked Mr. J. Lenoir Cilley of a Democrat man in tve First Na tional Bank. "Never did?" "Well, it was this way: You . 1 Know tne wina comes roaring down through a narrow gap there at Boone. All the wind from Tennessee rushes through at one time, and it so happens that all the chimneys in Boone are built in a straight line from the gap. When the first chim ney that of the hotel was built it wTas soon seen that when the wind blew down from the gap it mpde the hotel chimneys whistle . 1 1 on tne same principal 01 a noy blowing into a hollow cane. "Now the brick masons of Boone took note of the phenom ena, and when they built other chimneys from time to time, as houses were added to this charm ing little mountain village, they built some lower than others, so tnat tne wind, as it blew over them, would run the chromatic scale. Stuart Coffey, Tom Coffey's boy he's a bookkeeper for Hin kle Craig Live Stock company at Lenoir now was a musical genius and he made some apparatus to go over the tops of the chimneys, attaching ropes to each one. Of these he collected the ends in his room at the Coffey house, and on blustering, Boreal nights he would sit in his room by the hour and play grand pipe organ music, which would startle the belated driver of the covered wagon hauling Watauga cab- basres or apples to lowland mar kets, so that they would almost think that doomsday was at hand. "I am surprised you never heard of Tom Coffey's house chimney pipe organ. Ask old man Josh Winkle or Bill Fletcher about it. They know it's so. Medicines that aid nature are al ways most successful. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy acts on this plan. It lcosena the cough, relives the lungs, opens the secretions and aids nature in restoring the system to a healthy condition. Sold by all druggists. HAIR HEALTH. If You Have Scalp or Hair Trou ble, Take Advantage of This Offer. We could not afford to so strongly endorse Rexall 93 Hair Tonic and continue to sen it as we do, it it did not do an we claim it will. Should our en thusiasm carry us away, and Rexall "93" Hair Tonic not give entire satisfaction to the users, they would lose faith in us and our statements, and in conse quence our business prestige would suffer. We assure you that if your hair is beginning to unnaturally fall out or if you have any scalp trouble. Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will promptly eradicate dandruff, stimulate hair growth and pre vent premature baldness. Our faith in Rexall "93" Hair Tonic is so strong that we ask you to try it on our positive guar antee that your money will be cheerfully refunded if it does not do as we claim. Two s;zes, 50c. and R1 no. Sold - only at our store The Rexall Store.. W. A. Leslie. KILLS A MURDERER. A merciless murderer is Append! with manv victims, but Dr, Kintr's Near Life Pills kill it by pre- ...ntinn. Thev trently stimulate stom ach liver and bowels, preventing that clogging that invites appendices, cur in" Constipation, Headache, Bilious nels, Chills. 25c. at W. A. Leslie's C, MARCH 30, 1911. PRESS MEETING IN LENOIR. Jane 20th the Date Editors lo Go Also 1 to Blowing Rock and Linville. Concord Times, 27th. - A meeting of the executive committee of the North Carolina Press Association was held at Salisbury Friday morning in the Empire hotel. Those present were: M. L. Shipman, president; J. B. Sherrill, secretary; ' R. M. Phillips, R. W. Vincent, H. B. Varner and T. W. Edwards. This is the entire committee ex cept Maj. H. A. London, who was represented by proxy. . Invitations were extended to the editors from three places, Lenoir, Morehead City and Ro anoke, .Va. Mr. H. C. Martin, editor of the Lenoir News, Mr. W. M. Moore, editor of the Le noir Topic, and Mr. J. Harper Beall, president of the board of trade of that town, were present to extend a cordial invitation to meet there. Mr. L. T. Nichols, general superintendent of the C. & N. W. R. R., and Mr. E. F. Reid, general passenger agent, of Chester, S. C, were also present to emphasize the invita tion and to promise the editors every courtesy possible for their line to extend. Mr. D. V. Conn representing HAS MILLIONS OF FRIENDS. How would you like tt number your friends by millions as Bucklen's Ar nica Salve does? Its astounding cures in the past forty years has made them. Its the best salve in the world for sores, ulcers, eczema, burns, boils, scalds, cuts corns, sore eyes, sprains, swellings, bruises, cold sores. Has no equal for piles. 25c at W. A. Les lie's. A Fire Fighter's OF THE UNPARALLELED MERITS OF "HI frtniM!i ft Ult-'"' '- .......1 . .......... ... en aura which mr. qTiAzihb Signs o! Danger. Backache, dizziness and headache, " species before the eyes," irregular heart action and liver troubfe. The severity of the early symptoms depending upon the amount of poisons which the kidneys have allowed to remain in the system. " SYMPTOMS. Aohlsg Pain Over Hips, Backache, Sed iment 01 Deposit in Urine, Irritation of the Bladder, Pain in Urinating, Rheumatism (urlo acid in blood). Sadden Stoppage of Urine, Highly Colored or Milky White Urine, Pass Blood or Moons In Urine, Re tention 01 urine, straining aner unnaung, Thiols or Bin isglan Urine. Stone In the Bladder, cystitis (Inflammation of Blad der), Oatarrn 01 Bladder or idoweia, fnn inesa Under Byes, Voracious Appetite, Pblrsrt. Gall Stone. Gravel. Pain In Uretha. Swollen Ankles, Dimmed Vision, Specks Before the Eyes, Scanty Urine, Frequent Caiii. Month Drv. Blllioasness, Drlbbllne. Xjnmbago, Weakneas, Iioss of Flesh, Irreg Vlsr Heart Action, Ulceration of the Blad W, Skin Pale, Waxy and Dry, Baa Odor of Perspiration. SIMPLE TEST FOR KIMEI DISEASE. Fill a bottle with nrine: let it stand for Imlw hnnrs ? if there is a sediment or cloud iness of any kind you have kidney or bladder trouble, and you should commence taking Bloodine to-day. Dont wait until the disease is too far advanced. R1wKne Kts toe a hcttle for the usual 1 1.00 size. Mail orders rilled. Large sample bottle by mail 100 loodine To Raise flore and Better F-.R U I T Buy a Myers' Spray Pump. -We can now these pumps price. MORGANTON the Atlantic Hotel and' the Nor- folk & Southern Railway, was present and cordially invited the editors to meet at Morehead City. An invitation was also received from the Oceanic, the new hotel at Wrightsville Beach. Col. A. B. Williams, the able editor of the News and the Times at Ro anoke, Va. , came all the way to Salisbury to extend the news paper men a pressing invitation to meet in that progressive city of Old Virginia. Mr. Wade Harris, of the Char lotte Chronicle, was present, and spoke for the selection of LenoT on account of the fact that a trip to this section of the State would be educational and the editors would have an oppor tunity to become better ac quainted with its wonderful nat ural resources and scenery. After these kind invitations had been received the committee went into excutive session and considered them. After thor oughly going over them" it was decided to go to Lenoir. June 20 to 23 was fixed as the date. A side-trip to Blowing Rock, Boone and Linville will be ar ranged and altogether the 1911 meeting promises to be one of ATTACKS SCHOOL PRINCIPAL. A severe attack on School Pprincipal Chas. B. Allen, of Sylvania, Ga is thus told" by' him. "For more than three years," he writes, "I suffered indescribable tortue from rheumatism, liver and stomach trouble and diseased kidnevs. All remedies failed till I used Electric Bitters, but four bottles of this wonderful remedy cured me completely." Such results are com' mon. Thousands bless them for curing stomach trouble, female complaints, kidney disorders, biliousness, and for new health and vigor. Try them. Only 50c. at W, A. Leslie's. Astounding Story tt si HARRY A. GLAZIER 1 A Prominent Fireman ot Maiden, Mass., writes: Mar. 28th, 1003. Last winter I had a severe cold and it settled on my Kidneys, causing the most excruciating pain almost every time I attempted to move ; I had tried evreything imagin able to get relief, with no success, until I was ad runs. vised to try " Bloodine." which to my great surprise, gave me relief almost from the first dose, and before I had taken one bottle I was completely cured. " Bloodine" is a wonderful,' vitalizing tonic. It tne Diooa is impure, com plexion bad, appetite lost, strength gone, and the whole system is upset by an accumulation of humors, it is time to try ' Bloodine " today. . 1 Bloodine Cured Hemorrhage of the Kidneys. Marshfisld. Vt.. Sect a. iqoa. Thb CLoeonrs Co., Boston, Mass. terday. I have been a great sufferer for thirty-thres weeks, passine bloody water, have been to the hos Genuemen : I received one ot your books, yea. - pital, have una tour dmerent doctors. I ney caned it most everything, and I got no better. Please send me a sample bottle of your Bloodine for which I en close ten cents in stamps to pay for same. If it will do me any good i win take it the rest ot ray lite. Signed, XdKii. UC1A VIA . tAKftMIW. Mahshfibld. Vt.. Sent tt. toot. Thb Bloodins Co., Boston, Mass. Gentlemen : 1 received your tnal Bottle ot Blood ine. That was not enough to do much for me, for I cm very bad and weak, passing quite a lot of blood, Now, if you think that Bloodine will help me, yoa may send me one dollar's worth, I think by the tim I take that I can tell if it will do me any good. Signed, MRS. OCTAVIA E. CARPENTER. Masshfihld, Vt., Oct ss, 1904. Ths Bloodinb Co., Boston, Mass. Pear Sirs: Please send me six bottles of Blood ine. It has dona me a world of good ; it has stopped the hemorrhages; and I am feeling much better. Respectfully, Signed, MRS. OCTAVIA E. CARPENTER. We will forfeit 1 1.000 if the orieinals of ths above letters, proving genuinenesscannot be produced. Chronic Constipation, Side Headache and id Bil I liousness. 2 b CT8. A BOX furnish you with at a reasonable HARDWARE CO. (WE Absolutely Pur The Only Baking Powder Made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar. Safeguards against Chemists tests have shown that a part of the alum from biscuit made with an alum baking powder passes into the stomach, and that digestion is retarded thereby. Read the label and make sure that your baking powder is not made from alum. the most delightful the Associa tion has yet held. After the meeting Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Moore entertained several of the editors at a de lightful luncheon in their charm ing home. Dr. Bell's Antiseptic Salve Good for all Skin Diseases. QUR $RPING JJNE IS NOW COMPLETE ' Dry Goods, Notions, Low Cut Shoes for Ladies, Children, Men and Boys Ladies' Trimmed Hats Street Hats and Sailors Ladies' Skirts Ladies' C. B. Corsets Triangular five-ply Collars 10 & 15c, 2 for 25c Men's Work Shirts, the 50c kind for 45c Dress Shirts for Men and Boys, the Ferguson McKinney brand, the best to be had for the price. Men's and Boys' Suits cheap. Our prices are right. WE SOLICIT YOUR TRADE. T. C. Morgan & Co. Ice ce 0 BROADOAKS ICE. Manufactured. at Home. We are pleased to quote you prices on Ice. Ice 1 00 lbs. pieces 50 25 tt 10 tt WE WILL APPRECIATE YOUR ICE TRADE. orncy & R0ST PROOF' m!B"aori GUARANTEED TO I FROM THE ORIGINAL CABBAGE PLANT GROIVERS. JERSEY WAKtTlELD. Th. Ear! I cat CaMmc. Grow.. CHARLESTON LARGE TYPE. Wakefield. M Euliut TRADE MARK Established 1 868. Paid mtZZZ w nTm K9T rnoor PLANTS in 1868. Now have over twentv thousand satisiloU ...... JlTi.-Lj hK?,S?n nd ld "no cabbage plants than all other persona in the South.- ft i. t,t . .VWHY,? Bense our plants must please or we send your monev back. Order now; thLrI, 'these plants In your section to ett extra early cabbage, and they are the ones ior cne most money. sow three tons of Cabbage Seed per season gZ&Z,1?. rnat tn.-8 and ornamen tHls. Write for free catalog of ffiiet-proof plants oftbebrrt - ari. ties, containing valuable information about fruit and vegetable groinff. Prince on t'sul"'- Plants: in i,,tR of sno at SLOO: 1000 to fiono $1 so per thousand: 5,000 to 9.0uOl.S5 per t hncan-1: i'. two and over SL.00 per thousand, t, o. b. Yonc-s Island. Our special upress rate on pients very ' Wm. C. Geraty Co., Boxos Yosges Island, C. C ttr it . No. 4?. food tne alum Notice of Dissolution cf Partnership. Notice is hereby given that the firm of McDowell & Company, heretofore doing business in the town of Morgan ton, and composed of the undersigned, J. C. McDowell and J. E. McDowell, is this day dissolved by mutual consent, J. C. McDowell having purchased the entire business and assumed all the ob Jigations of the firm. J. C. McDowell will continue the business hereafter in his own name. This the 20th day of March, 1911. j. c. Mcdowell, jas. e. Mcdowell. $1.50 to $3.75 50c to 1.C5 $2.75 to 5.50 50c, 75c and 95c 9 the following extreamly low 30c per hundred. 30c 40c tt 50c tt CABBAGE PLANT SATISFY CUSTOM SUCCESSION. ti. E.n,, rtet Hcvl Vuinr. AUGUSTA TRUCKER, SHO:T STl. VMKD " A little l.ier FLAT HUTCH th.n Buccttwion. Lust iwl Utn; Cabbsff COPYRIGHTED In Canital Stock S30.00Q.00 ai " ' VUA Company. T -V "7
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
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March 30, 1911, edition 1
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