Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Oct. 1, 1914, edition 1 / Page 1
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N E WS - H ERALDo IT G. COBB, Editor and Owner. THE BURKE COVNTY NEWS I Consolidate Nov 29 1901. THEMOR.GANTON HEKALD 1 CofX8oUdte Nov.Z9.WOI. SubscriptionTrice $1 Per Year in Advance VOL. XXX. MORGANTON, N. C, OCTOBER, It 1914. No. 21 BAD BREATH Is caused by Indigestion, and that disorder brings on headaches, slowness, languor, dizziness and a general discouraged feeling. SIMMONS RED Z LIVER REGULATOR (THE POWDER FORM) Corrects All Disorders la the Stomach and Bowels ttspowen'ul,reviving and regulating influence in the liver and digestive organs brings an immediate im vement You feel better. The Ls-eis move freely so that the iT-vjrities that have clogged up the i-estive tract find an outlet When he" system has been thus purified jis bilious half -sick feeling disap pears: the complexion improves, the breath becomes sweet, the mind throws off gloomy forebodings, and there is a fine feeling of energy and exhilaration all through the body. Sold by Dealers Price, Large Package, SI. 00 fcfc for ike crauine with the Red Z on the Isxl If yu cannot get it. remit to ui, we wll send it br mail, postpaid. Simmons Lircr Regulator Is put up also in liquid form to: these who prefer it. Price, 1 00 per beak. L fr tne Red Z label, j, ,2. ZEILIN & CO.. Proprietors St. Louis. Missouri - FRICK CO. Edipse Engines and Threshers have several of the latest rpe machines in stock for -is season. etme name you prices and fcrms. C. H. TURNER, Machinery and Supplies, Statesville, N. C. Phone 1 . Iredell Phone 74 iarpns in Real Estate in Virginia and Maryland, fear Washington City. ftnte rie wnac you want Virginia or Maryland. in ITEMS OF LOCAL INTEREST. .Mrs. Caleb Kincaid, of Bridge water, was taken to Dr. Long's Sanatorium about a week ago and underwent a successful op eration for appendicitis. The small child of Mr. Will Shuping, of Drexel, died of men ingitis last Wednesday and was buried Thursday at Zion church, Rev. A. C. SwafFord conducting the burial services. A large number of the schools of the county which began work in July took two weeks in Sep tember, for the most part the last two weeks, for "fodder pull ing." The majority of the schools will open early in No year to run each for a full six months term. A most successful revival meeting has been in progress at Zion Methodist church near Drexel since Sunday, the 20th of September. Rev. A. C. Swaf ford, the circuit pastor, is a preacher of earnestness and force, and the meeting has re sulted in many conversions and additions to the church. A clipping from the Newton Enterprise elsewhere in this is sue tells of the bountiful crop of apples in Catawba county. The same is true in Burke, and the problem to our country friends now as well as has been during the summer is how to take care of the great abun dance of fruit with which this section has been blessed this season, and preserve it for win ter use. A special from Rutherford College to the Charlotte Obser ver of the 25th says : "Ruther ford College authorities have taken up with Lenoir College a plan to make the athletics of the colleges of this section of the State help the social side of the schools. The advocates of the movement hope to have a meeting soon at which time to take definite steps in the matter." Pickpocket at Show in Lenoir. Lenoir Correspondence Charlotte Ob server, Sept. 28th. John Love, a negro, who gives his home as Savannah, Ga., was arrested here yesterday on the charge of attempting to pick the pocket of a farmer from the country, who was on the circus grounds attending Sparks' cir cus. He had been following the show for the last four or five days and was under sur veillance of the management. Yesterday afternoon just about the time the office opened for the sale of tickets, the negro was spotted by Manager Sparks who saw him run his hand into the pocket of a farmer, who was standing in the thickly crowded line awaiting his turn to get his ticket. Mr. Sparks slipped in behind the negro, seized him and pinned his arms behind him and called for an officer. He was taken charge of at once and landed in jail. Later in the afternoon, the negro was given a hearing be fore Mayor B. F. Williams and was bound over to the next term of the Superior Court. In de fault of bail he was sent to jail. He is said to have had at least one accomplice along with him, but he made his escape when his partner was arrested. Items of Interest Miss 100 acres Loudon County, Va., ,000. Sixty acres in cultiva m, balance in timber. Two iles to station, schools and lurches. Farm all fenced and ad streams on same. One acre orchard eight or ten years old, ::ced varieties, plenty of grapes i berries. Six room house and ball barn. 400 acres Fairfax county, Va., 114,000. One ten-room, house, ire three-room house, one f our- oom house, one six-room house, i.e seven-room house. One i:ore 20x36, one blacksmith shop, cenrill house, four barns and serous out buildings. Three streams on property, One 'sired and fifty cleared, of ton t ihty are bottom land, :d wh.ch are not subject to j2cvt. Balance of farm is in -berand cord-wood, Timber riated to be worth $4,000. fcs farm fronts on electric rail and station is on property. fnere has been cn this property "'A! trees, the majority of which -"enow dead. This would make a ideal dairy farm. Will make to suit rieht Darty. For further particulars write to E.P. BENNETT, ilC. St. S. E Washington, D. C. Major' Graham to Wed Sallie Clark. Charlotte Observer, Sept. 24th. An engagement announcement of State-wide social interest is that of Miss Sallie Clark and Major William A. Graham. The wedding will take place early in November. Miss Clark is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. David Clark of Littleton, and a sister of Chief Justice Walter Clark, of Raleigh, with whom she makes her home. She is a woman of rare culture and charm. Major Graham is one of the State's best known men. He is prominent socially and politi cally. For the past six years Major Graham has held the of fice of State Commissioner of Agriculture, a position he fills most acceptably. He is a man of wide information .The Sum mer residence, Forest Home, of Major Graham and family, in Lincoln county, is one of the most hospitable in this section of the State. (Miss Clark is an aunt of Mrs. J. Ernest Erwin, of Mor-ganton.) My Method k selling Glasses is not to catch a new victim and the price but to see how I can fix the As Expressed by a Japanese. Charity and Children. Mrs. C. T. Willineham of Kokura, Japan, encloses a post card from a young Japanese who attends Mr. Willingham's Shurch. The card" is well writ ten and is so unique in expres sion we are sure our readers will enjoy it: Dear Master and Madam: It is reported by the news which I have received to-day that Mrs. Wilson, the wife of Mr. Wilson, who is the Presi dent of your country, has died awav into the unseen world by a heavy disease on the 15th mst. According to the news, Mrs. Wilson seem very strict on who was most womanlike among the modern women. I regret, and sympathize with you both and all other American peoples, for this " unfortunate event. Very truly yours, KATSUSABURO ABE. Read, Listen, Learn. Youth's Companion. As the terrible picture of war unrolls itself, we still discuss the immediate causes of the horror, and who was to blame; whether anybody meant to have a war ; whether Austria brought it about; whether the Czar de ceived the Kaiser of Austria; whether the three countries of the Entente had a secret under standing with Belgium, and va rious other such questions. The answers to them may, and must, be left to historians of the future. The great fact is that Europe was a loaded bomb, waiting to be touched off. Who touched it off does not so much matter, but to know how it came to be in a state awaiting explosion is better worth while. Europe was armed to the teeth, because every nation in it was afraid. Not one of them believed that any motive except self-interest would guide the conduct of any other one. Fear begot alliances against allian ces. Fear gave military train ing to millions of men, and pro vided, at tremendous cost, for th instant organization of im mense armies. Fear added dreadnought to dreadnought on the sea, and eorps to corps on land. Not a nation was ig norant of the dreadful cost of war; not a nation could afford to pay the price; but not one dared hold back. It looked like ruin if they went in, and dis honor, or a loss of mdepen dence, or even annihilation, if they stayed out. The chief occupation of Amer icans at this writing is reading newspapers. The papers as yet only scratch their subject, but they are conveying to this gen eration the greatest lesson of history that the world has had for a hundred years. It be hooves us all to give every mo ment we can to learning it: to learn how the compulsion of fear keeps nations armed and drives them into wars that al most all their constituent peo ple abhor; to learn what war is like when it comes, and what are the consequences of it to the participants. Let us not grudge time and attention to that lesson, the great lesson of our lifetime in politics and human nature. Ac cording to the thoroughness with which it is understood will the course of nations be determ ined for a century to come. Wilmington has 407 automo biles in actual operation. Mrs. George W. Vanderbilt and daughter returned to Bilt more last week from Paris and will spend the winter there. Col, Roosevelt has been in vited by the management of the State Fair to visit Raleigh on Thursday of State Fair week (October 19th-24th.) Congressman E. Y. Webb re cently, joined the buy-a-bale of cotton movement. He purchas ed a bale from Mr. Dixon Smith, of Shelby. Shelby Star. The Master Printers' Associa tion was reorganized in Raleigh last week by the election of J. J. Stone of Greensboro presi dent and Geo. B, Justice of Ral eigh secretary. The North Carolina apple crop this year is placed at 7,600,000 bushels. This is hagainst 3,000,000 bushels last year. The production for the United States is figured at 220, 200,000 bushels, against a crop of 145,400,000 in 1913. It is said that of the 945 stu dents of the University that nearly half are "self help," which is one of the proudest boasts of the institution, and what is more, the working young men are held in higher esteem here than at any univer sity in this country j Chapel Hill News. eyes. W. H. PATTON OPTOMETRIST REAL ESTATE! am handling Real Estate and 'e on my list several desir- houses and lots and vacant fcfc s in the growing town of Glen ii . ited. N. C, and farming Correspondence solic- J. G. Parker, YOUR FALL COUGH NEEDS AT TENTION. No use to fuss an try to wear it out. It will wear you out msteaa. Take Dr. King's New Discovery, re lief follow quickly. It checks your Cold and Soothes your Cough away. Pleasant, Antiseptic, Healing. Chil dren like it. Get a 5oc. bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery and keep it in the house. "Our family Cough and Mr. Bryan Speaks at Asheville. Asheville Dispatch, Sept; 26th. In a political address, deliver ed here to-night in the interests of Congressman James M. Gud- crer. Jr., the Democratic con gressional candidate in this dis trict, Secretary of State W. J. Bryan declared that the elec tion of a Democratic majority in the House is vitally necessary to the successful accomplish ment of President Wilson's plans for remedial legislation Secretary Bryan paid glowing tribute to President Wilson while touching upon National and international affairs. 'I have been in politics for 34 years," said Mr. Bryan, "and in that time I have met no brav er man than Woodrow Wilson. He was the bravest man in the Catawba has the best crop of fall apples ever grown in the county. They are free from the usual tendency to decay on the trees and fall off before matur ity. If they continue to stick on the trees another month, hundreds of harrels of apples can be put away for winter use. Newton Enterprise. The Sisters of Mercy, a Cath olic institution, announce that work begins at an early date on an addition to St. Joseph's Hos pital, at Asheville, which will be erected at a cost of $100,000. A feature of the new institution will be an immense charity ward for the accommodation of patients who are unable to pay hospital expenses. Fighting in magistrates' courts in Asheville is becoming popular. Recently the sheriff of Buncombe and a magistrate fought. Saturday two deputy sheriffs fought and the negroes on trial for failure to pay taxes made a getaway while the fight was in progress. A bystander who tried to interfere got a bloody nose and a black eye for his pains. Plans to issue postage stamps bearing the American and Brit ish flags to commemorate the one hundredth anniversary of peace between tne two coun tries have been deferred indefi nitely. Postmaster General Burleson has so notified Repre sentative Bartholdt of Missouri, who had said that it would be injudicious to issue such a se ries during the war. The Amer ican Per.cc Society has approved the postponment. In accordance with the agree ment previously agreed on, known as the plan of Gauda lupe, Gen. Carranza has notified all the Governors of the btate in Mexico and all military chief tains to meet in a convention to be held in Mexico Cit "for the purpose of discussing the re form measure to which our cause is pledged; to erect the structure of a provisional gov ernment, to name the date on which the general elections will be held and to treat of such other matters as are of national import. The convention will be hejd October 1. of the southern people to help themselves in time of emergen cy, rather than depend on help from outside or from the gov ernment; Federal or State. If this movement results in mar keting 500,000 bales at 10 cents a pound, as is believed to be pos sible, it will have a profound ef fect in encouraging the small farmers and " those who give them credit to hold for a stable price. "All of us derive our liveli hood and that of our families in some measure from cotton, and so, apart from any interest of the Company, every one of us has a personal interest in the cotton market. "I have myself bought a bale of cotton in each of the cotton producing States. If you feel that you can afford it, I recom mend that you buy at least one bale for personal account and in duce as many as possible of your friends to do likewise. It will be a safe investment of the money and a patriotic act in a vital emergency." ' Speaking of the cotton situ ation to-day, PresidentHarrison said : lhere are, in my opimon, good reasons for believing thai the market for cotton will im prove. While there has been a temporary letting up in man ufacturing I think that, so far as this has affected mills in the United States and England and possibly France, it has been due, in large measure, to the disturb ed financial situation and to some extent to the difficulty in getting dye stuffs. I am en couraged to believe that, as soon as the financial difficulties have been straightened out, there will be an increased de mand not only from the mills in the United States, but, also, from those in all parts in Eu rope in which the war has not shut off the access to the sea. Already there are reports of in creasing shipments of cotton both to England and to the Con tinent and it should be borne in mind that the war itself will give rise to an increasing de mand for certain lines of cofton goods. There has been evidence of this already in orders for cot ton duck for army uses and en quiries for large supplies of cot ton underwear for the armies. "The 'Buy a Bale of Cotton' movement will help materially to bring about better condi tions. It will encourage farm ers to hold for better prices and will tend to take off the market cotton that must be sold. Every one who participates in this movement is performing a pa triotic act in a vital emergency which will be of great value to the entire South." IMPORTANCE OF THE VITAL STATISTICS LAW. Letter From State Board of Health to Mr. T. W. Drury. Mr. Thos. W. Drury, Local Registrar of Vital Statistics, Morganton, N. C. Dear Sir: We note from your monthly report the failure of certain doc tors, undertakers andmidwives to report to you promptly all births and deaths occuring in your district. It is t6 point out the value, need and importance of this new law that we are sending you under separate cov er explanatory posters which we trust you will post in conspic uous places. No less than six indictments and convictions have been se cured within the last two weeks under the new law requiring the registration of births and deaths. All these prosecutions were made against doctors who for one cause or another had failed to register births. In most cases, the doGtors acknow ledged that it was a matte of negligence on their pari, pure and simple, and expressed an appreciation of the value and importance of the law and prom ised not to be delinquent in such matters hereafter. The State Board of Health is charged with the enforcement of this law and if unenforced the results obtained would be misleading and worse than use less and the money appropriated for this work would be wasted. Thus far the State Board of Health has tried to deal lenient ly with physicians, undertakers and midwives and others hav ing to do with the enforcement of the new law, but it is be lieved that ample time has bean allowed for everyone to become acquainted with its provisions and that hereafter vigorous ac tion should be taken with offen ders, particularly malicious of fenders. In other words, there is a limit at which "Patience ceases to be a virtue." In the oqinion of this department this limit has been reached and if a number of persons do not com ply with this law, prosecution will follow. It is desired that you give this communication publicity in your section, so that there will be no excuse for negligence on the part of those concerned, and with best wishes, we are, Yours very truly, BUREAU OF VITAL STATISTICS. Hickory's Street Fair. Times Mercury, 23rd. This fair will be held here Oct. 14th, 15th and 16th under the auspices of the Catawba Fair Association. The officers are: . J. W. Robinson, Presi dent; Geo. E. Bisenar, Vice- President ; A. C. Henderson, Secretary; A. K. Joy, Treasu rer. The first day will be known as Everybody's Day; the second as Educational Day ; the third as Live Stock Day. Also on the last day will be live stock pa rade and prize winners announc ed. Everything will be free and the railroads will give re duced fares. There will be near 300 prem iums given in cash and deplo mas. The exhibits will be class ified into twelve departments as follows: (a) Field and Garden crops, (b) Women's department of Farm and Dairy Work, (c) Horses and mules, (d) Cattle, classified. (e) Horticulture, (g) Poultry Supplies. (h) Needle and.Fansy Work, (i) Children's Department. (j) Educational, (k) Poultry. (1) Manufacturer's Display. In ad dition ,there will be a baby show, with first and second prizes. The premiums offered will ag gregate $1,200 or $1,500. There will be competent judges. Each department will be presided over by judicious directors. Anniversary Exercises at A. & M. College Oct. 1-3. Correspondence of The News-Herald. One of the most interesting features of the Twenty-fifth A. & M. College, October 1-3, will be the "General Reunion" at 8 p. m. on Friday, October 2nd. At this meeting there will be a reunion- of former profes sors and trustees, who will meet their, younger brethren and suc cessors. Among those who will speak at this meeting are Prof. J. R. Chamberlain and Ex-President George T. Winston. It is interesting to note that the presiding officer at this re union will be W. J. Peele, Esq., of of Raleigh, author of a stan ard textbook on civics, encour ager of literary and historical work in North Carolina, and friend of every movement for education and improvement in the State. Mr. Peel's name is held in special honor at the A. & M. College because he was a member of the historic Wat auga Club, which suggested and popularized the movement which resulted in the establish ment of the college". Secretary Daniels Among the Speak- The Morganton Baptists. Rev. E. N. Johnson, formerly pastor of the Firot Baptist church here, now pastor at Reidsville, writing to the Bibl lical Recorder in the issue of Sept. 23rd, says: I left Morganton the first of September to become pastor at Reidsville. I want to say a word regarding the Morganton Baptists. They are a loyal set. They love the Lord and delight to serve Him. They love their pastor; and in a thousand ways manifest it. Their loyalty makes the pastorate one of most delightful in the State. They are united. There is evidence of harmony on every hand. Not one discordant note is neard. There are all sorts of good Baptists in Morganton. Rob ert Logan Patton is one of the Baptists in Morganton Rob ert Logan Patton is one of the ripe kind. This pious man of God has been a real pastor to me. There is something of the Elijah about him. Like Elijah, he has done a pioneer's work Heaven's fire has burned no less fervently in his than in that an cient prophet's heart. With his face turned homeward he is waiting for the chariots of God. The Morganton Baptists unit ed and loyal are ready for a great work. It may be safely predicted that this people, with a wise leader, will equip them selves for, and enter into a lar ger service. ELBERT N. JOHNSON, Reidsville, N. C, Sept. 4th, 1914. ers. Cold Doctor," writes Lewis Chamber lain, Manchester, Ohio. Money back Nation when we were" passing throughout the South The Southern Railway and the "Buy a Bale of Cotton" Move ment. Washington Dispatcli, Sept. 24thJ The management of Southern Railwav Company is actively encouraging the "Buy a Bale of Cotton movement throughout the South. President Harrison has bought a bale in each cotton producing state traversed by the Southern Railway lines and has addressed the following let ter to the principal officers of the Southern Railway and allied lines, suggesting that they join the movement. "I comend to your personal consideration the Buy a Bale of Cotton movement now active While The Line Between North Caro lina and Tennessee. Washington Dispatch. A trail of blazed hemlocks, hickories and oaks, declared to have been made nearly a cen- ; tury ago, is cited by the State oi JNortn uaroiina to prove to the Supreme Court its claim to a large- section of disputed tim ber and along the Tennessee line. The State's claim was set forth in a brief filed by Attor ney General Thomas W. Bick- ett. The case will be argued orally in October. When North Carolina ceded the territory now embraced in Tennessee to the United States in 1790, a commission was au- horized to mark the boundary me. This it did m l&zi, but a disagreement recently arose as to the line in the so-called "Slick Rock basin" and the "Tellico basin." Attorney General Bickett, in his brief, asserts that S. S. Gannott, of the United States geological survey, and A. D. Burns of Knoxville, Tenn., re cently traced the old boundary aid by the surveyors by three hacks over a blaze on each fore and aft tree- and with three hacks each side line tree." The line thus established, he says, substantiates North Car olina's claim- to the disputed timber land. Among the speakers at the A. & M. College on October 3rd, the I closing day of the Twenty-fifth Anniversary exercises, will be the "People's Navy Secretary." Hon. Josephus Daniels As teacher of the A. & M. Sunday school at one of the Raleigh churches, and as a personal and editorial friend of the stu dents, Mr. Daniels was always a loyal and useful friend of the college. He will be a most wel- if not satisfied, but it nearly always helps, Notice of Application for Par don. Notice is hereby given that appli- ration will he made to His Excel lency, the Governor of North Caro lina, for a pardon for Charlie Blue, convicted at March term, 1913, of Rnrk Snnerior Court upon the charge of burning a barn, the prop erty of Jno. M. Clark. All persons who oppose the granting of said par don are invited to forward their pro tests to the Governor at once. This Sept. 15th, 1914. W. J. BLUE. through the recent Mexican crisis. The President knew the situation better than anybody else knew it, and to-night every mother in the country is thak ing God because Woodrow Wil son did not send her son to war in Mexico. Had the President listened to the clamor for war with Mexico which came from certain quarters he would not now be in a position where the warring nations of Europe ask the United States to look after their dilomatic interests." this is a movement of senti, ment, it is wholesome sentiment as exDressing a determination RHEUMATISM ARRESTED Manv oeoole suffer the tortures of lame muscles and stiffened joints because of impurities in the blood, and each suc ceedine attack seems more acute until rheumatism has mvaaea tne wnoie sysicm, i n arrest rneumausm u is uuiic u uu' portant to improve your general health as tn nnritV vonr blood, and the cod liver oil inScott'sEmulsionisnature'sgreatblood malcer, while its medicinal nourishment strengthens the organs to expel the jmnnritiiui nnrl unbuild vour strength. - . - . . 1 A 1 -7. Scott s ismnision is neiping uwuaauus every day who could not and otnerreiiei. Refuse tne alcouonc suosucuiea. Badin. Charlotte Observer. The engineers on the works at the alumnum plant at Badin went to France at the outbreak of the trouble. The Albemarle Enterprise reports the return of one of ' them and gives en couraging statements as to the future prosecution of the work of construction. If work has been suspended there, no men tion has been made of it, but what we are to infer, probably, is that full time has been re- j i rri 4- T7 fcLuiea. xiidb me nuiuynxu war t f th would in some degree interfere fe with the operations of this com pany, whicji is composed of French people with French cap ital, was to have been expected, but that the plant is. to be car ried to completion without de tion. The old -Whitney Com pany was caught by the panic of 1907, after having expended $6,000,000 on the plant, all of which will be covered under backwater from the new dam. The French company will put $12,000,000 in its project. That the war is not going to stop that is a fact of much conse quence to this part of the South. Test Applied to Determine the Ownership of a Dog. Magistrate Ray, of Salisbury, had a puzzling case in his court last week, involving the owner ship of a dog. Two men claim ed the dog and each had half a dozen witnesses, according to the Post, to swear to the owner ship of the dog. One side swore the dog was a 'possum dog, the others swore he was not. The puzzled magistrate seized on this and rendered a judgment that would do credit to Solomon. Here it is as recorded by the Post: "The plaintiff shall name a friend and the defendant a friend and they are to hunt this dog until Saturday and then they are to make a report to the trial magistrate, and then relying on this test the owner ship of the dog will be established." HEARD IN MORGANTON. Will There Be Another Great War? Regarding the question that has often been asked since the titantic struggle which is going on in Europe began, "Will this be the last great war?" ex-Pres ident Taft has the following to say in a late issue of the Inde pendent: One thing I think we can reasonably count on is that with the prostration of indus try, with the blows to prosper ity, with the state of flux that is likely to follow the titantic Should Go One Step Further. Gastonia Gazette. Editor-G. E. Morton, ofHhe Tryon Bee, a live weekly pub-I struggle, there will be every op- lished at Tryon, announced last week that, beginning January 1st, the subscription price of his paper will be $1.50 instead of $1, as heretofore. In mak ing this move Brother Morton is merely keeping in line with all the more progressive news papers publishers of the State. If he will go a step further and say the subscription price will be $1.50, cash in advance, he will have gone a long bow shot ahead in the race for journalis tic existence. The Gazette ex tends congratulations and would advise every editor in the $1 class to follow his example. WANTED To buy six well broke quail dogs, pointers or setters. Not over four years old. Must be meat getters. FRANK CLARKSON, Jacksonville, Fla. An Ad in The News-Herald pays. portunity for common sense to resume its sway; and after the horrible expenditure of the blood of the best and the sav ings of the rich and the poor, the opportunity and the motive for a reduction of armament and the taking away of a temp tation to further the war will be greatly enhanced. It is an awful remedy, but in the end it may be worth what it costs, if it makes this the last great war. The influence of America can be thrown most effectively for peace when peace is possible and for minimum armaments when disaster and exhaustion shall make the contending peo ple and the rulers see things as they are." AGENTS WANTED With farmer acquaintance. Here is a x:lean, wholesome, money making opportunity. Writhe for particulars. P. Q. Box 363, Savannah, Ga, "What Hemisphere is Ruther ford College In?" Arthur T. Abernethy in Greensboro News. Your Hendersonville corres pondent says that the Carnegie library has been opened there and adds: "This is the only Carnegie library in Western North Carolina." How come, Pauline? In the beautiful year 1907, I wrote a letter to my friend, James Bert man, private secretary to An drew Carnegie, and raised the money for the people of the town of Rutherford College, and during that year they built of native Burke county brick, and cement, one of the prettiest and most ornate little buildings in the section, and it is the first Carnegie library west of Salis bury that has been construc ted in what, up to the time your Hendersonville correspondent wrote, I thought was Western North Carolina. Mr. Bertram aiso promised me to ouiid a Carnegie library for Morganton, but the people of that town were not ready to boost Mr. Scotch Andy's monument idea and declined. Now, if Ruther ford College isn't in Western North Carolina, is it on the North Pole or where in the Sam Hill is it? FOR APPLY SLOAN'S FREELY LUMBAGO, Your attacks of Lumbago are not nearly so hopeless as they seem. You can relieve them almost instantly by simple application of Sloan's Lini ment on the back and loins. Lum bago is a form of rheumatism, and yields perfectly to Sloan's, which penetrates quickly all in through the sore, tender muscles, limbers up the back and makes it feel fine. Get a bottle of Sloan's Liniment for 25c. of any druggist and have it in the house against colds, sore and swol len joints, rheumatism, neuralgia, scatica and like ailments. Your mon ey back if not satisfied, but it does give almost instant relier. All kinds of Legal Blanks at The News-Herald office, How Bad Backs Have Been Made Strong Kidney Ills Corrected. AH over Morganton you hear it." Doan's Kidney Pills are keeping up the good work. Mor ganton people are telling about it telling of bad backs made sound again. You can believe the testimony of your own townspeople. They tell it for the benefit of you who are suf fering. If your back aches, if you feel lame, sore or miserable, if the kidneys act too frequently and passages are painful, scanty and off color, use Doan's Kid ney Pills, the remedy that has helped so many of your friends and neighbors. Follow this Mor ganton citizen's advice and give Doan's a chance to do the same for you. J. M. McGalliard, Green St., Mor ganton, N. C, says: "My kidneys were weak and the kidney secretions were irregular in passage. I suf fered from backache and when I stooped, I had trouble in straighten ing. Doan's Kidney Pills, procured at the Burke Drug Co., relieved me of the trouble." Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. McGalliaid had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buf falo, N. Y. Farm For Sale. I will sell 70 acres of land in Mc Dowell county, N. C.,near Southern R. R., I1 miles east of Nebo, N. C. A five-roomhouse, barn and other out buildings, a good garden, well, and orchard of over 100 fruit trees, peach, apple, pears. One and one- fourth miles from NeboHigh School and churches, a good road. Terms eleven hundred dollars one half down, balance on twelve months time. W. A. GIBBS, Nebo, N. C. Sealed Bids For New School Houses. The County Board of Education will receive sealed bids until the first Monday in . October, (when awards will be made,) for the building of school houses as follows: One in Quaker Meadows township, district No. 3; one in Lower Creek township, north of Chesterfield. Dimensions and specifications with contract to be v signed, can be found at the office of the Board of Education after Sept. 15th. The Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. J. H. GILES, Chairman. T. L. SIGMON, Superintendent. Glen Alpine, N. .C
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 1, 1914, edition 1
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