II II II t I 1X W ..... -V- HERALD, g. cow. T. Editor and Owner. l IISiSSSS Consolidated Nov. 29. 1901. Subscription Price $1 Per Year in Advance. Ad Uneasy Feeling iTSaSfWKLWS SIMMONS RED Z LIVER REGULATOR (THE POWDER FORM) fe removes r.H unties or fermented food, cleanses and :re5t:.o; :::acliand bowels and restores that fine feeling Price, Large Package, Sl.OO. :!J l'y Dealers. KiHi Z on the label. .T,5 I If you cannot r it - ... Uer Rejabto, is put ud also in li;. ,".?"" . .. " Look for the Rei Z labeL '"" WDO ZL1L1N & CO.. Proprietors. St. Louis. Mis sourl MORGANTON, N. C. SEPTEMBER 28, 1911. Monument to Livins Powder King Will Be Highway Across Delaware, No. 23. Si? Fanrs oar lown lor $aie. :..-vo ?alo several small 'Zee: M-.m-st: nton. One of is part of the Fiv.ior lands. - miles v-; r. cottage home. v-. Ar.other one share X. A. Harrison lands. 3 L-r.: tr.wr.: -1-3 acres. See :;' vo.i want a small i. Estate Co.. Hallyburton, Sec. Special Bargains in Real Estate. Y;.:er rower, with r.:ru.?ted. Could ea uv: 40-horse-power. :::'! si:e. and 36 acres w::h dwelling-house :. Five acres in culti- This must be sold bought at a Bar Kr. 'vrn as the Somers ?r site, 2 miles luorganton. r.j desirable lot for rehead avenue. ery avenue. use and Lot on avenue, near D. TV. - r Cl.'.'t-.. T!.TPrT TTCn A TTT COMPANY, a. Hallyburton, Sec. IM Enoines and Boilers. "K" Peerless r on wheels. Engine Good -:Mcll Stationary En 2" H. P. Boiler on mplete rig. Price Terms. P. Boiler on sills. . A bargain at 125.- G. K. TURNER, I ealer in Machinery, STATESVILLE, N. C. WANTED ! Reciprocity Pact Rejected By Canada. Victory ef Conservatives Means Closed Door to the United States -Annexation the Bugaboo. Montreal, Canada, Dispatch, 21st. The Laurier government and reciprocity suffered an over whelming defeat in the Canadian elections held today. By a veritable political landslide the Liberal majority of 43 was swept away and the Conservative party secured one of the heaviest majorities, upward of 50, than any Canadian party has ever had. Seven cabinet ministers who had served with Premier were among the defeated candidates. The Liberals lost ground in practiclly every province of the Dominion, small. Where the con servatives won. Where they won their majorities were remendous. Ontario, the leading province of Canada, declared almost unani mously againstthe administration and reciprocity. Robert L. Borden, leader of the Conservative party, will shortly become Prime Minister of Can ada. He will be supported in Parliament by a working of mem bers far more than ample for his purposes. The government defeat means that the Fielding-Knox reciproci ty agreement, ratified by the Americarj.congress in extra ses sion, will not be introduced when the twelfth Parliament assembles next month and that a revised basis of trade with the United States looking to closer com mercial relations, will not be pos sible in the immediate future. The Conservatives are committed to a policy of trade expansion within the Empire and a closed door against the United States. Although re-elected in two constituencies in Quecec, the de feat of the Liberals also means the retirement from public life of Sir Wilfred Laurier, who for nearlv two decades has directed the destinies of the Dominion. By Garrett Stev It is still considered by many persons an invitation to a speedy uedtn " Plan one's own monu ment. However, there be per -.nt, 01 enlightened class who are brave enough to scoff at silly superstition. Of these comes ro. l in the person of General Coleman du Pont, powder manu facturer and millionaire. He is going to build his monu ment right rpw, and it will be a horizontal instead of a perpendi cular one at that He will build at his personal expense of $2,000,000 a highway clear across the 105 mile width of Delaware that will be 200 feet wide, have room for two trolley lines, for two lines of vehicular traffic, for two rows of trees and for a central highway on which automobiles may speed according to their best or worst. And furthermore in the three years that will be needed in the work he will give freely of his own engineering genius. and swamps filled from one end to the other. The whole propo sition is the same as beginning to build a road through the sands oi Arizona. Under the laws of Delaware and the special act of the Delaware general assembly General du Pont will be forced to organize a corporation for the construction of the road, and it will most likely be named after the corporation, which will be directed and financed entirely by Mr. duPont Throughout the promotion of the proposition the General has expressed the desire to name the road the Del ware road, but his friends call it the Du Pont road, and it is likelv that this name will stick as long as it exists, and it will be a road for centuries. Postmaster McKesson At Asheville. Historical Highway. Avery County Vim. It is proposed to build a great historical highway on or near the old roarl-hpr! Further he hopes to establish J and Shelby and their Watauga men traveled to fight the battle of King's Mountain, Oct. 7, 1780. L U M BE R U ftfl,. Qorf 1nrh T have a man on my yard he old Piedmont Springs p ir. Morganton to meas- and pay for all kinds of Good cash nrices naid for i t 5 on delivery. Will : any amount of mer- &table lumber. J. B. ATKINSON. Wood's Fall Seed Catalogue Wst issued tells what iops you can put in to m- ke the Thickest erazinsr. or hay. to ta'-D Out tT-i ckf trmnt. Alw tells about botl .' Vegetable jnd Farm S ,-sds can le plar -d . the fell to advantage ar i profit , Every Farme , 3k;ket Grc wef JE1 Gardens sho-l-l a C0Pyofth;3 r.b!o It is tKe best a.-..:" -.-osc corr Pfete fall seed catalog ssued. Mailed free. Write for it- T-W.WOCDGSOriS, tadsmen, - Richmond, Ya. - Mr. Taft Disappointed. Kabmazoo, Mich., Dispatch. 2l3t. President Taft heard the re- turns irom tne uanaaian elec tion here tonight while attending a banquet tendered him by the citizens of the city. "I am greatly disappointed," 1 T-1 il ll J1 " If- he said, r urtner man tnis iur. Taft declined to discuss the sub ject tonight. President Taft at the banquet tonight said: ' 'I have just been informed that reciprocity has failed in Canada. For me it is great disappointment I had hoped it would be put through to prove the correctness of my judgment that it would be a good thing for both countries. "It takes two to make a bar gain and if Canada declines we can still go on doing business at the old stand." . i i a.u every ten mues an pxnprv mental agricultural station and so really open up, or, rather, re vive one of the most fertile sec tions of the whole country. The road will start at Claymont and run along the Pennsylvania state line through Wilmington, Dover, Harrington, Georgetown and Frankfort to Selbyville on the Maryland border. "I might build a hospital," says General du Pont, "but that would benefit only the sick. I might build a library, but that would benefit only the educated. I might build monuments, but that would appeal only to the artist. I might build any one of a dozen institutions of artistic creations, but none of them would benefit the people of Del aware so widely as this road. "I think it combines all the benefits this state could derive. It opens the waste country, it makes way for education, it opens the way to markets and in this way benefits the people m the small towns and in the cities. In fact, I think every person in the state will derive benefit from having the state opened to traffic." In traveling over and over again the territory to be opened up by the road General du Pont has a "fleet" of six automobiles, one oi wmcn is a camp tax, a thing of his own invention. When the resting place is reached the servants bring out tent poles and guy ropes, fasten big canvas flaps with hook and eye to the roof of the car and in ten min utes have a comfortable home for the night established. They light it with the lamps on tne machine and fix up a perfect din ner on a folding stove that is heated by electric storage bat teries. Folding cots are put in place, It is the intention of the promo. ters to make this a great inter state thorough f aref romCharlotte, N. C, to Sycamore Shoals, Carter county, Tenn. This will not only commemorate the battle which Jefferson termed "the joyful turn of the tide," but will be an ex ample of road-building to the mountain counties of North Car olina, Tennessee, and adjacent States, It is expected to be built by direct taxation 'and contract; by contributor' labor; by bonds and contract; by convict labor, or federal aid any or all these me thods, as may be decided on. The originator of the scheme is McD. Guinn, of Cedar Creek, Greene county, Tenn, who will be glad to receive historical inf or mation or any relic that will throw light on this battle, the location of the old road or the where abouts of any of the relatives of the old King's Mountain heroes. Mr. McGuinn says that "The Sycamore Shoals K i n g ' s Mt. Highway Associatioa" will be organized to put the road through it mends oi the movement so desire, and he urges that the mat ter be taken up at once, as the great Appalachian park is now being surveyed by the federa' government. As the longest part of the road will be in North Carolina, this State is expected to help the pro ject along in every way possible. Senator Kobert u. Taylor oi Tennessee indicates his interest in the matter by the following words addressed to McD. Guinn : "My Dear Sir: I like your great scheme to build the Syca more Shoals - King's Mountain highway, and will do my part. I have now a speech about ready on good roads, which I am going to deliver in the Senate and then Correspondence of The News-Herald. The ball-room of the Battery Park Hotel, at Asheville, was well filled last evening, with a representative assembly of some of the best men in the State, to listen to the opening address of the Postmasters' Convention, by C. F. McKesson, of Moreanton. After the hearty welcome ex tended to the visitors by the city officials, and the cordial response by W. J. Leary, of Edenton. Mr. McKesson announced as his sub ject "The Village Postmaster and His Relations to the Public." He humorously protested, with great apparent indignation, against the absurdity of assign ing subject to him the postmas ter of Morganton a town which he was not old enough to remem ber as a "village," if it had ever been one. Incidentally, he paid glowing tribute to his town, I with its lovely location, its pro gressive manufacturing enter prises, its two great State insti tutions, and its eminent citizens in all the walks of life. Indeed, he went so far as to say that if anybody was to speak on "The Village Postmaster," it should be an official of Charlotte, or Raleigh, or Greensboro, or Wil mington. He did, however, have a warm spot in his heart for Asheville, having just revelled in the won derful view from the Battery Park Hill, with its immeasurable sweep of miles upon miles of magnificent mountains and fer tile valleys, peopbd by a race descended from an ancestry of which any nation may be proud. He welcomed those who had come the splendid array of the State's postmasters and spoke with enthusiastic appreciation of the work of Postmaster General Frank Hitchcock, and of the helpful presence of Assistant Postmaster J. J. Britt two names which were greeted with copious applause. The attend ance on the convention of some of the postmistresses was not forgotten, but was the text for a really beautiful tribute to woman, whom he likened to "something midway between the roses and the angels." Letting down to his main sub ject, Mr. McKesson delivered a most earnest and inspiring ad dress on some of the qualities needed by the postmaster among them efficiency, promptness and politeness. He emphasized es pecially the latter. "Pay no at tention to the grumblers; life is not long enough. Insist on con formity to the regulations, but be polite to the humblest, as to the greatest. " He showad how Money Powers Will Not Permit Nations to Indulge Further In Antiquated Game of War. By George Waugh Arnold. Over the situation at Morocco, where it seems at a first glance a3 if France and Germany, both straining at the leash for forty years, might come together in a third clash the money interests have become alarmed. And that probably means more than all the deliberations up to date at The Hague. War is a waste of money. Fi nancial magnates abhor waste. War lords are merely underlords to said magnates, and if the mag nates double lock their money chests there will be no war. This may seem harsh to the patriot who likes to whistle the Wacht am Rhein" or the "Mar seillaise" or "My Country, 'Tis of Thee" (generally out of tune), but it is very much in the nature of a cold, hard fact. Thanks to the public schools and the penny newspapers war is becoming as unpopular and as unnecessary as street car rowdy ism, and the big stick of finance will keep war in check as does the club of the policeman the oyeroffensive ruffian. SOME WARS ARE WORKING. But of war there is still some, and of rumors of war there are many. Turkey has two uprisings, one of Arabs and the other of Alban ians. The Arabs count for little in these days of machine guns, but Montenegro has interfered to help the Albanians, and back of Montenegro stands Russia. There is still trouble in Mexico and Haiti, while Venezuela is bubbl ing over the chance of another revolution. But these peanut affairs affect not at all the world's equilibrium Whatever of interest is shown among the civilized is in the German-French possibility, with i dash of English intervention thrown in. The United States can hardly become involved because of the nice new peace treaties recently signed at Washington with France and England, but as a militant American statesmen once said, "What in the torrid regions is a constitution between friends?" GERMAY'S GREAT RESOURCES. On paper it looks as if should France and Germany fight each other again, with no assistance on either side, Germany would win by sheer force of bulk. It seems like the old sporting pro- position oi a good little man against a good big man. Concerning the armies, Ger Mob Jeered Aviator to His Death. Dayton, Ohio, Dispatch. 23d. Forced into the air by jeers of thousands, who called him a cow ard. Frank H. Miller, aged 23, a Toledo, O., aviator, shot into the sky at twilight this evening and at the height of 200 feet was burned to death before the eyes of the territory spectators on the Miami county fair grounds at Troy, O. Miller had circled the race track and was just starting on a spiral glide into a neighboring corn field when something went wrong. Suddenly the whirring of the propelers ceased. The craft then dropped like a shot f cr a distance of 50 feet. A tiny blue flame was emitting from the engine and in an instant the gas oline tank exploded. The machine, wrecked by the impact and debris, was hurled hundreds of feet in all directions, what remained of it and its driver burning almost to a crisp as they dropped rapidly to earth. In a short night shortly after noon today Miller's machine acted unsteadily and he did not care to go up. The crewd jeered him this afternoon when he said he would not make a flight and this evening he went into the air. Let ner go: 1 11 be glad when this is over!" he shouted to his mechanicians. Supply Your Kitchen Needs Nn You can't afford to risk health , by using old lcooking uten- ' sas worn ' l out enamel. Which chips off 'and causes stom ach diseases or rusty, leaky tin-ware. which spoils flavors and wastes food Replace the old ware with "1892" Pure Spun i Aluminum Ssft one of the many relia- . Die lines we carry.. i we cave just I F ceived a new lot. Come In and see these superior sroods and get a souvenir free. You can depend on anything you buy here W. L. KIRKSEY. Do You Want to. Buy a Farn; ? We have it for you and at the right price. Fifty acres, 3 miles south of Morganton on the Ruth erford road. Good dwelling house and cut buildings. Farm produces wrell and there is ample timber for fire-wood, etc. On D. & D. School water line. For price and other information see or address Burke Real Estate Co., T. N. Hallyburton, Sec. A DREADFUL SIGHT to H. J. Bareum, of Freeville N. Y., was the fever-sore that had plagued bis life for 3-ears in spite of many remedies he tried. At last he used Bncklen's Arnica Salve and wrcte; 'it has entirely healed with scarcely a scar left." Heals Burns, Boils, Ec zema, Cuts, Bruises, Swellintrs, Corns end Piles like mafjic. Onle IS; i t W. A. Leslie's. It a step to Texas the postmaster can be a help in the community can stand for what is best and highest. He urged his hearers to encourage the Good Roads Movement, and look out for the farmers "some of the best people on earth." As an example of the "grumb lers," he gave some amusing in stances of patrons of the office many has 620,000 men in uniform and 3,380,000 on reserve, a total of 4,000,000. France has 600,- 000 in service and 1,500,000.. on reserve, a total oi z,iuu,UuJ, or practically half of Germany's showing. Concerning the navies, Ger many has 28 modern battleships and 307 other fighting vessels s mst mmw mm f mm mm I c via the Cotton Belt Route the direct, quick line from Mem phis, through Art ansas, to the Southwest Derating too splendid trains daily, with through sleepers, chair cars and parlor cafe cars. Trains from all parts of the Southeast connect in Mem phis with these Cotton Belt trains Southwest Neither time nor money should keeD you irom making this opportunity trip, for it won't take much .5ss5 MEMPHIS viaCgpTBelt Route Sow fare excursion On the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of ench month ex cursion tickets are 6old via Cotton Holt Koute to points in Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas and Oklahoma, With 25 day return limit and stop-overs free. The great chances Southwest will soon be grabbed let the next Cotton Belt excursion take rou. Send today for complete schedule and cost of ticket from your home town I will also pive you our oppor tunity booklets, brimful of pictures and facts you'll liko to see they're free. H. H. SUTTON, District Passenger Agent H. E. ALLEN, Passenger Agent 109 W. 9th St.. Chattanooca. Tenn. rubber mattresses inflated, and preach it all over Tennessee this who would come day after day with crews of 35,500 men. France the tired tourists may go to sleep summer. I have asked the Good- for letters, insisting that he must has 13 big : up to date fighters tar. nnor ns luxuriously as if tmj Rnro,,, coriri vnn nil have opened, read and destroyed and 393 other vessels with crews them, while said letters were I of 30,600 men. Erance is ahead & rr f rip Pnrineers now at or,,Tfi,; cico t .on cond vrvn rvr piling up in another town, on ac- m numbers in the lesser vessels, work on what will be called the doto help you. command me to count of wrong direction from because she has 150 torpedo boats Du Pont turnpike are oyaney the uttermost." P A Rossell. M. tt. XJ.clll.jr, Shock. J. H. Dallett, H. E. Breed, m r,mm onri k. t. Mexham. 1. iU. VJUiimi -- , nUnatpv 93rd. In addition to tnese wuvi Mail Carried By Flying Machine. She first Tnited States mail the crrumblers." These in stances, given in the speaker's inimitable style, tinged now with condemnation and now with good natured leniency w ere vastly amusing to the audience, i -n i z . vTrnn fnv. wwnHiltinff engineers from uu- r ' II-ITII Z . ZiII : wno enjoyea me numor u, another iron fisted Bismark. w . i was rwrr h i (jih.v iiciiii li e avi- i x. leading French roaa ; - - utmost. icauiub "- . I 04 rrt Mo coon K-nlairo wi I . - Gan Once Owned By Andrew Jackson. ni:i, M.wa md observer. I rra Q ifMi 1 1 1'icuv.u iv.v- ! . . . , . i iidu:iK I lUUvi uv . I niAm tSa H rr Nqccoii hnn ovarii I . , .... . , 1 j? Mr. James S. Lucas came in Wilder and the other a leader m " rZ,: Atter a priinant portrayal oi 7 rx v,r,HronrI I A nnetrilrinn. Df wug wuu, w vzaxUCn v". - the Dossibiuties ot good worK baturaay uumyLuw-- -- jgn iiu ?rr i' distance of five miles, by Earl L. -a . ,n t a cor i Urn, tn h m n crnn wmcn. ne l.iu ofh sinri ttneuisn lame. - : . . . : . .. wiuuu i lwavui.v.l uruusm L " 1" ""j Z?- a wv. " rr " Zm flnend a Ovington, in a bienot maenme. f earim, lest , e might have over r uTrtc nnrnon nv hi new uav.u- rvr thpvh iiitrii nm ouv' - . - . m . to, -- j His nurntior tnis purpose was a v,;0 Mr mpc L C IMA I I IM II 1 I I J I V -J A. IvAJVU f- w--7 mati T ri III im T. CJL V I . m V "I " f I . I It. " J I - - :: " . 1"U1"" " . . . i4.- tne leaamg ieature 01 trie inter- Col. Lucas said: "inis gun Pont and his engineers t national meet's opening day. . i i Trrimi i - - owned by Andrew jacKbo iw falL Ovimrton took only one bag of Old Hickory lived at Salisbury. of croing to 1 J UU11 WiV vww-- closed his eloquent and helpful address with the quotation from Bildad the Shuhite, "How long t .1 svm ATT aC hW Id it between his knees, before make an end 0f roads in Delaware, and especially Garden ll.,, It is all sand, and when he was over Garden City he dropped it on the signal R S PILLS .... ,i . Willsboro to court he tooKtne gun . nplaware, with him and when he returned materiai must be imported. of a man who waved a flag as to Salisbnry left the gun at , f must be cleared pre-arranged. The bag contained xT ii-i o;.,Q tVion if bas been ine ngnt ux , -i ... j nuisuuxu, oni - - i about to pounds oi letters anu in the hands of many peopie. i se cured it from Mr. Brooks barker, who has had it for a long time, and it has been a tradition in nrono-P county for generations that this is the gun owned by Andrew Jackson. Tradition is, as you know, the truest nistory. IIVHIIMIII11AMI, A. A-L nr lruerla for j ( r'n Ilium..- d Ttrmnd '..id a:i 1 Ould nietallicNA 1 with Kl.ie RIUkio. f ,Ilu-p. Itny of roar I. A if.r lll.CirHS.TEBB i'Jl M lillANI I'il.l.H, for 83 : licit. Safest. Always Reliable ' ORIGGISTS EVERYWHERE Histressed feeling after eat inff, belchinff and nausea between Rloodins. It cures Dys- strengthening the digestive organs s8 that they are capable of tui- r.r functions. Leslie'6 Drug Store" Special Agents. is the only emulon inu tatecL The reason is plain it', the best. Insist upon having Sco" W i world's standard flesh and strength builder. ALL DRUGGISTS post-cards. He left behind fully 300 pounds of mail matter which was later sent by automobile to the Garden City postomce, al though it bore the special post- office stamD of "Aerial station No. 1; aerial special service." words!" Annie Noble Baldwin. Asheville, Sept 20, 1911. Obliging. Excited Author (rushing behind the scenes) Why are you cutting out the second and third acts of my piayr Manager I am not cutting anything out. I'm merely varying the order of the acts. Several Influential persons In the audience have asked me If It would not be possible to have tne nero die In the nt act-Chicago Tribune. to Germany's 70. GERMAN MINISTER STORM CENTER. The stormy petrel iu the situa tion seems to be Germany's for eign minister. Alfred von Kider- len-Waechter, who bids fair to be He is as paid in nair as ne is in speech and is what we Americans love to call self made that is, he was not born to the purple. His father was absolutely noth mg out a very prosperous and highly Tesponsible bank director. He got into the diplomatic ser vice in about 1880 and was sent to St. Petersburg for three years. In 1888 the kaiser had to pay a visit to the czar and naturally had Waecater accompany him. On the trip the kaiser found him master of the Russian language, well versed in the underground state affairs of the country and a good story teller. They have been friends ever since. & VJ iff IT TRADE-MARC FOR SALE BY. PRESNELL & HOGAN. OUP! No disease of Poultry is to be more dreaded than this disease, and this is just the season to be on the lookout. Hot days, cool nights, crowding the young stock, poor ventilation, drafts m poultry house are tactors in bringing on roup. Try to avoid all these and keep your fowls healthy. If you should fail, however, and find some of your most promising youngsters sneezing and running at the nose, isolate them at once, ltmay oe only a com ana can be cured quickly, but if neglected it will develop into roup. Rust's Roup Pills and Rust's Soluble Roup Powders are splendid for this disease, also as a tonic and preventative. Diarrhoea is always more or less nrevalent duriDe September. Be pre pared lor it. namoeriain s 0111;, Cholera arid Diarrhoea Remedy is i prompt and effectual. It can always be depended upon and is pleasant take. For sale by all dealers. to As usually treated, a sprained ankle will disable a man for three or four weeks, but by applying Chamberlain's Liniment freely as soon as the injury is received, and observing the direc tions with each bottle, a cure can be effected in from two to four days. For sale by all dealers. WHEN TRIFLES BECOME TROU BLES If any person suspects that their kid neys are deranged they should take Foley's Kidney Remedy at once and not risis naving ungnt's disease or diabetes. Delay gives the disease a stronger foothold and you should not delay taking Foley's Kidney Remedy. w. A. iesiie Tell your poultry troubles to us. We can Kelp you. We have helped other?. Everything for the Poultryman. FORNEY & COMPANY. Ji