Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / March 14, 1912, edition 1 / Page 1
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r THE NBS-HERALP. . L: cOBH, Editor and Owner. THE BVRKE COUNTY SEWS I Consolidated No 29 1901 THE NOR.GANTON HER.ALO frCoixsolIoated flov. 29. 1901. Subscription Price $1 Per Year in Advar.ce. !0i. xxvii. MORGANTQN, N. C. MARCH 14, 1912. - No. 46. :9 it -1 al rj n er ,cy zt ail i .S Iuu . . t work its own way through- isagrees with vou. don't ork its own way through ; 'j 3 -'"v ; tvo of quickly by -.'.-i! 3 itn -w IT -mi RED Z LIVER REGULATOR (THE POWDER FORM) ,ou: i: r-ritios and badly digested food in the stomach and bowels' :es the torpid liver and restores regular bowel movements. It is a fine v:c"i puntier that puts the vital organs in sound, healthy condition. Sold hy Dealers. Price, Large Package. SI. 00. 'vi'h thc RcJ z on ,hr lalcL If yon cannot get it. remit to us. we will send nunon liver Rcpilator is put up also in liquid form for those who prefer sis f J. !!- "1 'Wing fit Look for the Red Z label. ZEILIN & CO., Proprietors. St. Louis. Missouri IDEAS OF A PLAIN GIRL BY DOROThY MITCHELL. aristocracy. sometimes lie between the backs mi . 1 mere is enough vanity in the I have never sirca had the human race to make us all prond reverence for him that I have for oi out kin, provided that kin has i some other heroes. Someway, a DIRTY EGGS DECREASE VALUE 10 y discom-bother ;Iown-ri work-1 -: -j 3 ac Tablets. a cold coming night. Take In directed, you will ;-r ;i'e only by feel y w 5 . I V 4 DRUG CO. HOUK, r and Embalmer. . j t. C of of Embalming under Stat his service. V NT0N, N. C. 'm and boita ." Peerless Ea. " wheels. G" i ! ' ; :ideil Scationary L, ) d. P. Boiler .1 ?Ze rig. Pfi P. Biler on sil. A bargain at $12 j C. H. TURNER, Dealer in Machinery, STATESVILLE, N. C HUBBY'S SCHEME A FAILURE His Declaration of Independence Not Such a Success as Was One More Famous. Erasmus J. Proudfoot was the hus band of a suffragette, a fact wpII j known to himself and to the neighbor- ! hood in which he resided. Nobody i ever had an opportunity to forget who i wore the bifurcated garment in the j household. It had been many round, ! pale moons since Mr. Proudfoot had j been able to tear himself away from I his fireside in the evening. Upon this eventful evening he had decided to is sue his declaration of independence. "I will be out this evening," he remarked quite casually to Mrs. Proudfoot. It was his plan to break the thing gently but firmly, and to stand by his colors to the bitter end. I is that so?" she asked with a slight touch of polite sarcasm. "May I ask why, pray?" "I have a directors' meeting." "No you haven't. Your board of di rectors always meets in the after noon. Mr. Jones told me so." 'Well er, then I have an old col lege friend from out of town, and I promised to spend the evening with him." "Old stuff!" snorted Mrs. Proud foot. "You act as though I was a tenrtwent'-thirt' vaudeville audience, ready to bite on anything. If you have an old college chum in town you can phone him to come up here." "But I have got to meet our senior partner at six o'clock and go to the train with him," said Mr. Proudfoot, desperately". "Your senior partner went away yesterday. You told me so your self." "Well, even at that," said he, in a final attempt to get by gjacefully, "even at that, I promised to make the fourth in a game of whist over at Mr. Podsnap's tonight, and I've got to go." "Mr. and Mrs. Podsnap are up at Charlevoix and have been there ever since July 1. Your work is really course, Erasmus." "Well, you know I never deceived you In my life, Matilda," said Mr. Proudfoot, weakening. "I know perfectly well that you have never deceived me, Erasmus, and you are not deceiving me now. You had better get out your slippers and Temain at home this evening." And he remained. j ... uone anything a little above the average man, or whose record was, comparatively speaking, spotless. Any man should be proud enough of great ancestry to live up to and maintain the stan dards which they established. But when I see a marked mani festatim of the gloating spirit over ancestors dead and gone, and whose deeds I might have never known had I not been for tunate enough to have met their degenerates, who by frequent references to the things their family use to do and what the "Newly-Riches" sprung from, it brings a smile about surface deep. There is some sort of feel ing I have akin to pain and pity which forbids a laugh. And if s e of these aristo crats wTould be satisfied to raise their own families to the skies 'vgaseous matters usually rise) vvithout trying to punch nearly everybody not connected with them into a pit, mav bx- I should not be skeptical about their elaims. I am democratic, and if I meet a-soul worthy of pra:se, it matters not what foundatio . may have apparently had to the eyes of the world, if it is in tune with mine, I accept it proudly. On one occa -i t: I met a young girl of whom I at first' formed a high opinion, and it continued to grow with renewed acquaintance. I spoke of her once in th presence of an alledged blue veined lady. and very condescendingly shi vision of one of his namesakes comes before me, and I wish they had not claimed kin to a hero in my mind whom I could never know. After all, what does it matter to a man if he is kin to great ness so long as he himself is a man, and if he is not a man, then to me it is more of a dis grace than an honor to have groat ancestors, for I always feel that he has been weighed in the balances and found wanting, while if he had never had any opportunities cr known anything great, I can feel more charitably towards him. un tne other hand, it he is a man, it matters little vhat his family may have been, and a long chain of ancestry and rela tives who have been prominent will have little effect only with those who look upon the outward view, for "A man's a man for a' that." Count over the great men of the woriJ, and those who de scended from rank will be equalled if not Mitnumbered by those who ascended from obscurity. I can not but help think of the man who ascends in life more worthy than the fellow who descends. Suppose men shonld boast of nobility. What of that? "The rank is but a guinea's stamp, The man's a gowd for i' that." And nobility? It is but the "breath of kings." And kings? Ah! yes, they are simply humans, sharing alike even with the hum- Agrlcultural Department Estimates Loss to Purmers at $5,000,000 Every Year. While there are a few egg producers who take the best of care of their product, the average farmer considers the eggs produced on the farm a by product and makes very little pro vision for their care, aside trim gath ering them. A large loss is caused by dirty eggs, the number being enor mous, and according to the estimate of Secretary Wilson of the depart ment of agriculture this money loss to the farmers In the United States amounting to about $5,000,000 annual ly. This loss Is very largely brought about by not gathering the eggs often enough. In wet weather more dirty eggs are found than at any other time. This is caused by the fact that the hen's feet are often covered with mud or other filth, and in going on the nest to lay she soils the eggs already in the nest. An insufficient number of nests is often the cause of many of the dirty eggs found. Eggs are laid on the ground and around the hay and straw stacks, and becoming stained, are classed as "dirties." Again, when too many eggs are allowed to remain in a nest some are broken and many of the others become smeared with broken yolks. This condition is often brought about by allowing the broody hens to use the same nests with the layers. On a farm where one nest to every four hens is provided and the nests are kept clean and well bedded, it is found that very few dirty eggs are produced. After gathering the eggs, care ahould be taken not to put them where they will become heated, or near oil, oniens, or other vegetables, as they readily absorb odors. Although dirty eggs may be perfect ly fresh, they invariably sell as "sec onds," and when but a few dirty eggs are mixed with an otherwise fresh, clean lot, they materially decrease the price of the clean eggs. Getting Ready (It is the evening of the an nual children's party at a fashionable Chicago club. Mrs. Gunnle is prepar ing her offspring for the occasion. The room is littered with cast-off shoes, hosiery, skirts, neckties, and other ar ticles of apparel.) Mrs. Gunnle If you don't stand still, Geraldine, I'll Geraldlne Will there be ice cream? An' kin I take my new doll? Say, kin I wear the new apron Aunt May gave me with the pink bows on it? But why can't I? I want John Aw, mother, honest, have I got to go? Please, moth Mrs. Gunnle You'll drive me crazy, both of you? The idea of your acting so, Johnny, when all the children of every human being I know will be there! Do you think I'm going to have folks say I didn't take enough in terest In my own children to have them thereftoo? Put that perfume bot tle down this minute, Geraldine! You'll be a regular barber shop John Aw, mother, have I got to wash? After I took a bath this morn ing, too? Aw, I hate parties! Who's going to look at my neck, any now 7 Aw, gee! Geraldine Ouch you pull! You did my hair this morning, and what are you fixing it again for? I don't want it braided I want it curled all around like the cook does hers please, mother! Why can't I have it curled. I wa-wa-want It c-c-c-curled! nothing." "Ah, well, she must be a god iesV I surmised, "for Venu- pro r. C? in v'1 EUlEEE'S seeds SUCCEED ! 5e jiftwiALurrLii; iiietobiMl New Bni'ieta. Atrial will o:;r ripraanent enstomer. v" tn, 12 kinds :Tommtov ";: 1 z'n-.o. 7 e: r!d.l : Oio. 8 best yane- a.ijp-,K. wt.ir. Boibtti varieties in aU. blAKANTEUD TO PLA6E. to-dav; Mention this Paper. SEPiD 10 CENTS r:c-.w - zt'c t? an-i receive this valuable z -.: si.: r-.-tpald, topether with my big - : Lett var:e;i:3 ?f ycj, Flsntstc ! 5 14iJ BUCKBEE STREET Airn -istra'cr's Notice- .'lrr.ini-5trf.tor of t'ne er ed. Lite of Burk hi- is to notify a 1 per T,e eptatecf said d 'i he urdKTi'srne'i lul; N. C. o- or befoM .r thi.s ncti: ! will t- .-' ry. A V p i "-ons ir P easo m e promr A. RJCHRPSON. H. Edwards, deceast-r WW! YEBSTElfc (U NEV o V InternatioualWI Dictionary . 1 "ft HERRIAH WEBSTER? Breakfast for a Man. Just what is the correct food for breakfast? Some hold that the Scot tish hardiness is directly due to the national devotion to oatmeal. On the other hand, a famous physician once adduced, as proof of the superior vigor of the inhabitants of Scotland, the fact that they can survive such a lot of oatmeal. To add to our confu sion, here are the views of old Mr. Jordan. He had brought up from the village station the trunks and express pack ages belonging to the artists from New York who were spending the summer in the cabin on the old Jor dan place, and had waited good-naturedly to open the boxes for the ladies. On opening the box of groceries, ho found that one package had been pierced by a nail. As he looked at the contents sprinkling themselves Iiber--ally over the floor, he smiled toler antly. "Curious now, ain't it," he remarked, "how folk's tastes differs? I've seen folks that reely made themselves think they liked that sawdust, and that it done 'em good! Now I got no use for them breakfast foods that digest on you. "The kind of breakfast I want is plenty of buckwheat cakes and sau sages" old Mr. Jordan straightened up vigorously "suthin that sets heavy on the chest, and nourishes on you." Youth's Companion. Because t ia a new ceea- - - , covering every Of tr;fi wrtrlrt'n thmiffht. "-'.on a. i euiture Tbe OBJy Jv ndged. dictionary in c&a$e 11 "finei over 400,000 K'or is ; more than ever -ore appeared between two 7ers' -Too Pages. 6000 11- 5Carjie !'i "3 the oafy dictionary w;th the new divided jfe "Stroke of Geniua." kcaiHo :'t 13 an aixigio volume. it is accepted by the --.-c . . Utility 0"e suPTem0 " t Saiise U who knows Wins JcmTT- UCCes Let us teU J-1 lias new work. D - r frLL' 'claen o uw divided p&c. -.txauftonoipcin Are All Men Born Equal? "Why is one man able to gather others with capital about him, launch a business enterprise of large propor tions and carry it to success, wnne his neighbor spends an entire lifetime plodding at small things in a smaii way?" This is the question James Laurence Laughlin, professor or political econ omy in the University of Chicago, asks and in the Outlook he proceeds 10 an swer it: "Because Nature has distributed Jis gifts unevenly between men. ieur judgment and a genius tor managing large affairs are not cnaraciensuca common as to pass unnoticea. "The competitive spirit is born in us. Every normally constituted hu man being has in him an impulse to be or to do something better than his neighbor. The world is the gainer by this common impulse, for it inspires nvention, promotes resourcefulness, ncites emulation, makes Itself felt everywhere In life." said: "Yes, she is a right nice girl blest of toilers those free and they say. but she came from universal qualities of being good and bad. And The honest man, though e'ersae poor, Is king o' men for a that." But this blue blood! Oh, well, I have nothing against the blood. It is just the way some people have of carrying it around, and the way others have of trying to pass theirs off as the real 'article, that amuses me. I have seen people who think more of their so called blue blood than they do of the blood of their Saviour. Maybe someone will ask me how I know these things. Actions speak louder than words. How many people go to church who do not speak to members of their own congregation, save only in a pious moment when the world is beholding their good deeds, and other blue bloods are offering the tips of cold aristocratic fingers to some hard and roughened hand grimy with the dust of toil. And yet, the blood which gave pulse to that roughened hand may have had more ot the whitening from the Blood of the Lamb than the blue veined ladies. But convince them? Never! But you can have that job; I do not want it. Aristocracy may take a fellow or a woman through society: it may give the former a position of trust and honor, and marry the latter to some worthy-eoul, but it cannct make a lady cr a gentleman. God and not blue blood makes men. I am Presbyterian enough to believe that God makes men and ordains their lives. It may b in the cabin or mansion, but when God wants a leader, I belitve He ouches the child and that He alone can place the elements of manhood or womanhood there. If He makes man of the blue blood variety, so much the better or easier for the man in his journey among some men, but I have my serious doubts whether the Almighty cars morp for him than the other kind of blood. Right here I j-.i .v,.,d vt kind of blood Adaai had. any way. Did you ever see a real blu ? veined person? I saw one win claimed to befrom both sides! f the house and she looked i There was not a drop of color i her face. I compared her wit ' the healthful glow in the che of one of plebiah origin 1 thought that if the two of t were fair samples, give me -olood that is red nnd runs. Of course, there is a lot RECORD NEST IS PRACTICAL Children are much more likely -to contract the contagious diseases whet hey have colds. .Whooping cough, liphtheria, scarlet fever and con'ump ion are diseases that are often con racted when the child has a cold. That , why all medical authorities say be ware of colds. For the quick cure o Lds ,ou will find nothing ter than Chamberlain's Cough Keir.cd It ca always be depended upon and is pleas ant and safe to take. For sale by al dealers. Neuralgia means nerve pain. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills sive relief. sprang from the seafoam." Oh! it is amusing the number " people one meets during life no descended (step fashion, if 'u please) right down from me noble ancestors. Actually btlieve I have met enough peo . ie who cam from the nobility ) fill up all t e English peerage. Ore fellow told me one-; tbft' ha could trace his ancestry back to the battle of Hastings, and confidentially not meaning to be gossipy about his family -but I would consider it quite a problem o figure how long it will take them to become enlightened with nine hundred years association with the most intelligent class of people on earth. And I meet people by the hun dreds who descended (again) from some family which achieved something, or rather had a, name well known in their day, but they re "not a bit of kin" to some family of the same name living in adverse circumstances right at them. One very strange case ot an cestry which I ran across once was that of a man who claimed a direct lineage from an old Ger man gentleman who was said to have had an enormous estate, both real and personal the latter of which I never doubted in the least, because there was a tradi tion that many a time the old man was seen tottering along under the weight of such an im mense burden of personal estate, and of times he would fall down from mere exhaustion. (I've a'ways heard it was unpleasant to be rich. ) But the strangest thing abet t t was that the man was so close ly related to this old German who lived a hundred years ago, and lid not claim kin to his father's n phew who lived in meager cir cumstances. A few years after wards the nephew's son began to prosper i 1 the world and this other man became his cousr. This is another problem. Were I Puck, I should y "What focls these mortals be," but as I am one myself Oh,a mortal, I mean I have to keep my mouth shut and think. I knew a family once who claimed kinship with General Lee, and they really had a right to the claim. Every member of that family had "Lee" tacked on rx his name somewhere with the tccent on the "Lee" at that, and they!seemed to think that it was a oassport through the world. It is narrow, I know, but 1 n wing General Lee only through books and also knowing that pages Device Works Automatically and Accu rately, Identifying Each Egg as It Is Laid by Hen. The wide-awake poultrymen who are trying to increase their profits by systematic breeding and selection will certainly welcome the new reading nests which are now placed upon the market for the first time. These nests !Mflrj-l?wiEi Absolutely Purel Makes Home Baking Easy No other aid to the housewife is so great, no other agent so Useful and certain in making delicious, wholesome foods The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar No Alum No Lime Phosphates Hen Going on Nest, work automatically, accurately identi fying each egg with the hen that laid It. They were invented by two prac tical poultrymen who realize the great value of individual records, but, like other busy poultrymen, have no time to watch trap nests. The nest designed by the inventors, for one purpose to make the keep ing of individual records a simple and Hen Leaving Nest. easy task. This effort was a complete and unique success. They are in no sense a trap nest, and the hen Is at liberty to leave at will. Mrs. Gunnle Geraldine, I shall whip you if you don't stop this in stant! Here I am, trying my best to give you a perfectly lovely time, and you act like all possessed! Why, every woman there will criticise every other woman's children, and do you think I'm going to let you go looking like a curled up little fright? Stand still, for mercy's sake! John Aw, what do I put on now, mother? Aw you hurt. I did wash Mrs. Gunnle I believe you do it on purpose to torment me! There's a black streak all around your ntk and your ears John Gunnle, you march straight back into the bath room and use the soap! Lots of it! Or you won't go a step! John Honest, kin I stay at home? I'd lots rather, an' I'll ask Billy come over and bring his airship Mrs. Gunnle (in tones of tragedy) You're not going to stay at home! Go and wash this minute! Geraldine I don t want to wear that petticoat! I don't like that petti coat, mother! Please let me wear the blue gingham one with the ruffles! Mrs. Gunnle Blue gingham! Under a white lingerie dress that cost $25! If you are only 12 years old I should think it isn't asking too much to in Bist on your having a little common sense, Geraldine! Stand still! Geraldine Kin I wear your dia mond hair comb? And your sparkly necklace? Oh, please, mother, let me wear the necklace the one with the emeralds an' diamonds an' Mrs. Gunnle No! John Oh, mother, I forgot an left the water turned on In the bowl, an it's runnin' all over the floor an' Geraldine Goody! Goody! I'll put my fan on this chain an' 0-0-oh, I broke it, mother your long gold one John Hurry up, mother-r-r-r! It's runnin' out into the hall, an' Mrs. Gunnle (ten minutes later) II you stir from this room, John Gunnle, till we go, I I don't know what I'll do to you, but it'll be something aw ful! Geraldine, stand still till I get your dress fastened! Put down that tube of paste! And don't handle your hair ribbons you're smashing them all down! John, put on your collar! John Aw, I hate parties! I hate girls! I won't dance! I won't! Mrs. Gunnle Now, see here, If you don't act like a little gentleman, with every woman I know watching you, I'll never let you go to a party again! Osier's Cure far Gout. Since his proposition that man should be chloroformed at sixty, Dr. William Os.er has been regarded more or less as a grim monster by many people, vajd "One Who Knows Him." In reality Doctor Osier is a mild-mannered man, with a fund of genuine humor, as witness the following cure for gout which, he once recommended to a friend: "First, pick a handkerchief: from the pocket of a spinster who never wished to wed; second, wash the handkerchief in an honest miller's pond; third, dry it on the hedge of a person who has never been covetous; fourth, send It to the shop of a phy sician who never killed a patient; fifth, mark it with a lawyer's Ink who never cheated a client; and, sixth, apply it, hot, to the gout-tormented part. A speedy cure must follow." GRANULATED EYE LIDS Do not need to be cauterized or scari fied by a physician. Sutherland's Eagle Eye Salve, is guaranteed to cure them without pain. It is harmless and a sure cure for granulated lids. 25c tubes at all dealers. Wonderful Experience. "When I was out in the country las summer." said the beautiful chorui girl," I milked a cow." "Oh. you haven't anything o& me,' replied the artist's model. "I visited an aunt of mine in. the country iat fall, and one evening I helped hei wash the dishes." GLORIOUS NEWS comes from Dr. J. T.CurtisS. Dwight, Kan. He writes: "I not only have cured bad cases of ecaema in my patients with Electric Bitters, but also cured myself by ihem of the sam. disease. I feel sure they will benefit any case of eczema." This shows what thousands have proved, that Electric Bitters is a most effective blood ourifier. It's an ex cellent remedy for eczema, tetter, sal rh am, ulcers, boils and running sores It stimulates liver, kidneys and bowels, expels poisons, helps digestion, builds up the strength. Price 50 cts. Satisfac tion guaranteed by W. A. Leslie. Rheumatic pains are relieved by Dr. Miles' Anti-Fain Pills. HAPPY THO' MARRIED ? There are unhappy married lives, but a large peicentafle of these unhapny homes are due to the illness of the wife, mother or daughter. The feelings of nervousness, the befogged mind, the ill-temper, the pale and wrinkled face, hollow and circled eyes, result most often from those disorders peculiar to women. For the woman to be happy and good-looking she must naturally have good health. Dragging-down feelings, hysteria, hot-flashes or constantly returning pains and - aches are too great a drain upon a woman's vitality and strength. Dr. Pierce's- Favorite Prescription restores weak and sick women to sound health by regu lating and correcting the local disorders which are generally responsible for the above distressing symptoms. I Buffered greatly for a number of years and for the past three years was so bad that life was a misery to me," writes Mrs. B. F. Dick ovek, of Utica. Ohio, Route 4. "The doctors told me I would have to go to.a hospital before I would ever be better. A year ago this winter and spring I was worse than ever before. At each period I suffered like one in torment, I am the mother of six children. I was so bad for five months that I knew something must be done, so I wrote to Dr. B. V Pierce, telling him as nearly as I could how I suffered. He outlined course of treatment which I followed to the letter. I took two bottle of ' Favorite Prescription ' and one of ' Golden Medical Discovery ' and a fifty-cent bottle of Smart-Weed,' and have never Buffered much since. I wish I could tell every suffering woman the world over what a boon Dr. Pierce's medicines are. There is no use wasting time and mooey doctoring with anything else or any one else." The Medical Adviser by R.V. Pierce, M. D., BuffaV, N. Y., answers hosts of delicate questions about which every woman, single or married ought to know. Sent fret on receipt of 31 stamps to pay for wrapping and mailing only Mbs. Dickoves. Saw Mills. Threshing Machines in Eggs now are at their highest. The best breed is one that suits one's purpose best. A little salt and pepper mixed with the mash is good for the hens. Hens must be fed, and fed a long time, before the eggs will come. Breeding turkeys can be profitably kept up to the fifth and sixth year. The cost of feed for geese is small, compared with that for other market fowls. When at all indisposed, a turkey should be separated from the rest of the flock. Ducks and gese require deep drink ing vessels, especially if reared and kept on land. A hen, like a human being, needs to be made comfortable in order to do the best work. As soon as the breeding season Is over the male birds should be sep arated from the hens. The business of oar domestic hen Is to produce plenty of eggs, and we must feed her for them. Begin to select your breeders for next year and cull out and sell those Geraldine O-o-oh, mother! There's paste all over the front of me! It's all sticky! Mrs. Gunnle Stand still! Of all the children, when I told you John, go bring me a wet cloth and I paid $25 for that dress and your pink slip shows below it and the taxi will be here in ten minutes. Stand still! John, you know perfectly well you're to wear your good clothes take those off! Put down that perfume, Gerald ine! John, put oa your pumps! John They're full of water! I had 'em in the bath room! Kin I wear my football shoes? Aw, please, mother Mrs. Gunnle There, Geraldine, you've stepped on my skirt for the sixth time and now you've torn it! A.nd the taxi will be here John, get on your muffler and coat! Put on your wrap, Geraldine! And put down that stupid doll! What on earth uunnie (at tne door) Arent you people ready yet? I don't se why it should take so long to fix those kids- it isn i as tnougn they were grown ups! The machine's here! Mrs. Gunnle I'd like to crawl off md die comfortably! Chicago Daily News. WE HAVE CONTRACTED WITH THE GEISER MANUFACTURING COMPANY FOR THE SALE OF THEIR LINES OF Engines. Saw Mills. Threshing Machines. AND ARE PREPARED TO OFFER SOME ATTRAC TIVE PRICES. This machinery is too well known in Burke coun ty to neei any recommen dation from us. Ask those who have (ready pur chased. ter. families, -fortheinfluencesof home ; that you have not room for this wia life travel further than we c?n ever conceive, and there are qual ities which are inherited, both ood and bad. There's to.ne ching in them of time more than we want or claim, Tor there is a truthful adage that "there is a rotten limb on everybody's family tree." And is it not funny that we always think .of the other fellow maybe a remote cousin as the "rotten Jimb." Someone has wisely an: b ie.ly summed up men aristocr its in cludedthus: The poor man, the self-made man, the rich man and the fool The Reason. "Our new passenger was the only one who was not worried by being In the teeth of a gate." "How do you account for that?" "He was a dentist" f ) REPELS ATTACK OF DEATH. "Five years ago two doctors told me Ihadonl- two years to live." This Ktartling statement ws made by Still man Green, Malachit. Col. "They told me I would die with consumption. It was up to me then to try the best lung medicine and I 1 egan to use Dr. King's New Pisco ery. It was well I did, for to-day I am working and believe I owe my life to this greatthroat and lungcure that has cheated the grave of another victim." It's folly to suffer with cousrhs. colds or other throat and hrog troubles now. Take the cure that's safest. Price 50 cents and $1.00. Trial bottle free at W. A. Leslie's. $100 REWARD, $10P. See us for all kinds of Hardware and Furniture. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn hat there is at least one dreaded disease that icience has been able to cure in all its stages, and hat is Catarrh. Hall s Cattarrh Cure is the onl Kjsitive cure now known to the medical fraternity. jatarrh being a constitutional disease, requires t onstitutional treatment. Hall s Catarrh cure if aken internally, acting directly upon the blood .nd mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de- -troyini; the foundation of the disease, and givinc he patient strength by building up the constitu tor! and assisting nature is doing its work. The ""oprietors have so much faith in its curative pow- trs that they offer One Hundied Dollars for any ase that it fails to cure, bend for list of t ;sti-nonials. Vddress: F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio Sold by Druggists. 75c Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Dr. Miles Laxative Tablets nave candy flavor. Children Ilka thsm. Kirkiej Hardware & Furniture Co.
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
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March 14, 1912, edition 1
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