Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / Jan. 31, 1907, edition 1 / Page 3
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I Why Vinol Is Better Than Any Other Remedy to Restore | I Health and Strength I elements—the i * £ cS LiwrOil^^rt^h? creative properties and°the7r , oiT~ iS actUally ext ' acted £° m fresh wds"ifvers I eondftimis 01 Ev^bod^rk pa ? atable and a & re eable under I aUSe V ! no1 *"*» up the system, strengthens every organ, nerve, muscle and fibre of the whole body and thus overcomes ' I weakness by thoroughly eradicating the cause of disease. f T i at S Wh , y y lll ® l is different and better than any I P. AJK m~ * 1 re T& fo . r C ° Ughs > Cold 8» Bronchitis, and all Throat, J ■ Lung and Wasting Diseases. ' | if I|| I J. h . at Why Vinol Restores Health and "Strength to | W Children, Feeble Old People, Weak and Sickly I e v Persons, Nursing Mothers, and Convalescents. 1 RETURN MONEY IF IT FAILS TO GIVE SATISFACTION MENZIES, Druggist, ■■■rilP* NoteTTrial Post-poned Case of Alleged Anson County Lynchers, Post poned To-day. The Rea sons for Putting off the Trial. Monroe. X. C., Jan. 28. —The Supe rior Court convened here this morning. By far the most important case on the criminal docket is that against the Anson county alleged lynchers. Great interest has been taken in this case but there was nc surprise here this morning when it was anounced by the solicitor that the case would not be called at this term of court. Among the reasons for postponing the case is that it is a one-week term cf court only, and there are a number of jail cases and it would probably require all the week to dispose of them. Also the inability of some of the lawyers connected with the case to be present. Mr. R. B. Redwine, of this place, who appears with Solicitor Robinson, in tli'. 1 prosecution, is a member of the stste Senate from this county and is .Mr. A. M. Stack, also cf Monroe, and one oi the attorneys for the defense, of course in Raleigh at this time, is in Europe. It is stated that the case will be tried at a special term of court, which wil' probably be called for July. There was some suggestion here that ,the spe cial term might be called in March, but it is not thought probable that this will be done. Tneie are very few people in town. Quite a contrast trom the condition which prevailed when the case * was f:rs: called here several months ago., This is accounted for, not from any !aek cf interest in the case, but it was generally understood that the trial would not take pl?,cc this time. ELOPED WITH -lANITOR. Nc-w York, Jan. 28. —Johanna Pjoiitlc, 17, of No. 49 Bank street, Newark. X. j. t eloped yesterday with Harry Z- igler. who boarded with a i&niiiy in the same house that the Ptoudts live in. Proudt, the mother of the girl, is nearly crazed over the affair, ana her friends are watching her closely for fr ar she may attempt to cc herself injury. .-in aei..' of wheat absorbs in its grov.-th 48 • tons of water; an acre of J' "34 tons; an acre of cats, 570 ri •Her-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Wealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. 1 ia ycur body passes through Jr y~ every three minutes, k The kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil- M/ui »i ter out 'he waste or impurities in the blood. j»" If they aresick or out liV- v '• fa cf order, they fail to do i I their work. \ \ Pains, aches and rheu- U 1 ksr matism come from ex- " ce.js cf uric acid in the ki'>"77- ; e blood, due to neglected k'r- u: -' s C£use s quick or unsteady fci-'-V makes one feel as though C\"*-C'*'.y,? SJr ' ! roubie - tecause the heart ia p C^:;-;-^. in P ur ?P* n £ thick, kidney* ■ !• •• '" ca through veins and arteries, tr ■'T". L ° cor 'Cidered that only urinary bu-'ri-w " tr / f -° traced to the kidneys, science proves that nearly ni-X':'" :"i "-eases have their begin !?,!" trouble. I byi:C-, ar - £l . cic -'- u can make no mistake '* v. . lorinjr your kidneys. The mild Sv; 3 ;^r'o ra °I d,r l ai 'y eff ° ct of Dr - Kilmer's tzzr r-- ' K ° I hs great kidney remedy is s - ar >ds the highest for its j.V ' *^ Cur ® s of the most distressfftg eftaes mail Homo of Bwamp-Rooi. Pamphlet telling how to find jT kidney or bladder trouble, ■•-.i ; cn this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer V?" Bin ghamton, N. Y„ t make any nilsiaxe, but remetn mer's'e !! amo, Swam P-Root, Dr. Kil n; * ? and the address, Sainton, N. Y., or every bottle. t Capitalist and Former Evangelist Stricken' in St. Louis Hotel Lobby. i Notable Career as an Evangelist, Charlotte News, 2Sth. Former Evangelist W. P. Fife died suddenly in the St. J-ames Hotel in St. Louis yesterday morning at 11 o'clock. Mr. Fife was making his headquarters temporarily in St. Louis as he prose cuted his work of placing stock in gold mines and oil wells at various places in the West. He was standing in the lobby of the hotel chatting with sever al friends when he suddenly became very ill and in a few moments lost con sciousness. A physician was quickly summoned from across the street but could do nothing and Mr. Fife died shortly after his arrival. The doctor thought the cause of death was probab ly du? to heart failure but the coro ner is .o hold an inquest today which will decide the question. M \ W. P. Fife, Jr., son of the de ceased, who was in Denver, Colorado, at the time was at once notified and the body sent to the morgue until he , should arrive. The remains, uri-! derstood will bee brought to this state j for interment. Mr. Fife was a man of unusual force cf character. He was the son of Mr. W. W. Fife of New bern, where he was born, and where he married, his wife being Miss Whitford, daughter of Col. John D. Whitford, of Ncwbern. To ward the latter part o£ the war Mr. Fife's father refugeed at Thomasville. and after the war resided there until his death. Mr. Fife became a travelling sales man for a tobacco house in his early life and was most successful in his work. He often referred during h'.s evangen istic career to his godless life and his ; habit of drinking at that time. About 20 years ago Fivangelist R. G. Pearson was going up and down the J I state like a flame of fire and souls f were being swept into the Kingdom' under the power of his preaching. Mr. j Fife heard him and was converted. Hf ■ finally gave up his position on the road ' 2nd entered heart and soul into evan- [ gelistic work himself. His work was j barely second to that of the Gamaliel at whose feet he sat. From Maryland j to Texas, all through the length and j breadth of the Southern States, he went, uplifting the cross and preaching the old time religion. His converts , reached up into thousands, and, it can not be denied that he did great good. Mr. Fife was the soul of congenial ity and sociability, and his pleasant manners find magnetic personality were great levers in enabling him to! reach men. He was at the same time! a courageous man in the utterance of j his convictions, and suffered some for i righteousness' sake becouse of his I courage. It is possible that his im- j petnosity may have occasionally over- j ridden hi 3 tact, but upon the whole he j was a well rounded and well balanced! man in the pulpit. It was a matter of intense regret to him that his voice finally gave way. A permanent and serious throat trouble j closed the dcor to his further preach- j ing. In casting about for something ; to do, he turned to the exploiting of gold and oil stocks. He advertised on a tremendous scale, and widely. He was severely criticised at times for endorsing these stocks, many of which were bought by people of small means, who had implicit confidence in Mr. Fife, but he always declared his own conviction that they were a good thing and that they would enable the pur chaser to lay up against a rainy day and that sometimes the stocks would pay handsome dividends. Several weeks ago Mr. Fife was in The News office on his way to Thom asville, and at this time he declares he hoped to be able ere long to return permanently to North Carolina. |. On this occasion Mr. Fife referred ' to his regret over the fact that his delicate throat forbade his preaching. "If I had my old voice back today 1 would go to preaching again to morrow," he said, earnestly. It may not perhaps be amiss to Ltate now that he is dead that he } maintained a number of missionaries in different parts of the world and that ho gave with great liberality to • orphans' homes and other charitable i i institutions. ''The incidents from Mr. Fife's ex perience as a eveangelist would fill a book, and make good reading. One may be mentioned as showing a stream of good influence which he yet going. When he was holding a meeting at Cumberland, Md. wealthy Philadelphia- insurance Taan nimed Coleman was in that vicinity on business. Having finished his day's work he went out at night to l ear Mr. Fife. In the course r his Fermon Mr. Fife paid a tribute to ihe work done in China by the late Hudson Taylor, of the China Inland Mission, and said: "If Hudson Tay lor or his son and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. Howard Taylor, ever come with in a hundred miles of you, it will pay you to go and hear them." The busi ness man went away, and a year or fo later picked up a paper and read i hat the latter party were to speak in New York. He went to hear Ihem, was fascinated by the account of their work and before he left wrote a check for a large amount, perhaps $25,000, for the work, and afterwards became a liberal contributor to that mission. LEPROSY CURE FOUND. Havana, Jan. 28. —A commission ap pointed by the Government has turned in a report to the effect that Dr. Ma tias Duque, who is in charge of the Hospital for Contagious Diseases, prob fSTdy has discovered a cure for lepro j sy. Two lepers were turned over to the doctor several years ago for experi mental purposes, and to-day these per sons have no exterior cases of the disease, and are gaining notably in weight Several other cases treated i by Dr. Dunue are in various stages j of improvement. Dr. Duque's exneriments have been along the line of what he terms the "red mangrove treo" treatment. He claims to have discovered thi3 treat ment a sa result of his study to find a cure for his sister, who suffered from leprosy, and whom he has succeeded j in curing. Washington, Jan. 28. —The diplo i matic and consular appropriation bill, | carrying $3,085,478, was reported to t ?ie Senate. LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS With Tags About the Same Color and Design As The quality of the genuine sun cured tobacco used in REYNOLDS' Sun Cured and grown on soil where the best sun cured tobacco grows, has caused imitation brands to be brought out and offered as the genuine Reynolds' Sun Cured to unsuspecting dealers and chcwers who do not look closely at the printing on the box and on the tag. These brands only imitate the outward appearance and do not possess the genuine inside quality that has been found in Reynold's Sun Cured ever since Reynolds' Sun Cured was introduced and which has so increased the chewing of sun cured tobaccos and proven so popular, that the word "Sun Cured " is now printed on tags or in the advertising of many brands claimed to be genuine sun cured tobacco. Did you ever see the word "Sun Cured" used in any chewing tobacco advertisement, oi on any chewing tobacco tag or label, or in any other way, before it was introduced and used to identify the genuine Reynolds' Sun Cured? You see it frequently now, because many imitation brands are being made to appear as nearly like Reynolds' Sun Cured as they dare—with tag, shape of plug and style of package so similar that experienced buyers sometimes accept these imitations as the genuine Reynolds' Sun Cured. Dorit be deceived into taking imitation brands for the genuine. Be sure the letters on the tag spell " R-e-y-n-o-l-d-s' Sun Cured," and you get the best value in sun cured chewing tobacco that can be produced for cfeewers. Sold at 50c. per . pound in sc. cuts; strictly 10c. and 15c. plugs, with chewing qualities like that which was sold from COc. to ,$l.OO per pound before Reynolds' Sun Cured was offered to the trade. BE SUSHIS YOtJ GET TEE GENUINE Tdasiufactured by B. J. EEYNGLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. I ! The Eighth Juror was Chosen This Morning I In Famous Thaw Case After Large Number of Talesmen Were Exam ined One More Juror was Chosen. Another 100 Talesmen to Pick. Demeanor of Thaw when a Talesman was Be ing Questioned. Thaw Family Greet Prison er With Smiles and Bows. New York City, January 2b.—' The trial cf Harry K., Thaw will be re sumed this morning. Justice Fitzgerald has decided that spectators, particularly women who ap pear at the trials with particularly sensational features, shall be barred from the court room, j Apparently the desire of the defense iis to hasten the trial or at least to I complete the jury. This is thought to ibe a sign that some move, "not yet hinted at, will be made. After a conference with Thaw's law j yers yesterday Lawyer Delwar said: "It would hardly be professional'to ' disclose our case. You may say, how * ever, that it will come strictly within 5 the statutes of the state of Ney York I There is no higher law in the state and all this talk about 'unwritten law' ' is bosh. Nor can I see the efficiency * of a plea of emotional insanity. There 3 Is really no such thing." > Denies the Report. 3 The trial was resumed this morn > I ing. Mrs. Evelyn Nesbitt Thaw came i i into the court room early, accompan- II ied by May McKenzie who remains -1 her constant companion. 1 ! Miss McKenzie declared it em -, phatically untrue that any dissen r iion had arisen over her presence. -! Young Mrs. Thaw wore again a f i dark blue dress and white veil. I 1 One More Juror. ' ! Within the first hour of the morn r' .ng session 15 talesmen were exam t: ined and not one had gone through J i the questions propounded by the dis i trict attorney further that the one J ! oealing with the matter of what II opinion they might have formed. Samuel J. Newman, one of the 15 liowever, said he had known Stan ford White for 20 years. When New man first took the stand Thaw gazed ■ at him intently. At the mention of [ White's name the prisoner quickly - glanced away and for ?. long time ; looked out of one of the windows - of the court room. The rapid manner in which-the re maining talesmen were disposed of ! caused the district attorney's office - to summon an additional panel of 100- - men. s Charles D. Newton, a retired busi l ness man, about 65 years old, was I j selected as juror No. 8. >| At 12:05 court ordered a recess ; till 2 p. m., on account of the break t in the heating apparatus which made ! the court room too cold for comfort, s Greeted With Smiles Mrs. Evelyn Thaw was followed I closely by the other members of the i family, Countess of Yarmouth ha 3 re l covered from her cold. Sho wore a long dark gray English travelling coat and a small greene turban. It being chiily in the court room , none of the ladies of the Thaw party i removed their v/raps for a moment. Mrs. William and daughters greeted the prisoner's wife with the usual bows. As Thaw passed the fa^m * ily group he was greeted with smiles by every member of it. DOWIE REPORTED DYING. It Is Said He Realizes His Condition And Has Made Confession. Waukegan, 111., January 28. —It is re ported here that Dr. Dowie is just alive and that is all; that his condition is much worse than it has ever been' | since he became ill. The report is ! further that Dowie's condition has | become so bad that he realizes it ful ! ly and that yesterday he made confes j sion cf all the wrongs he had done j those with whom he had dealings and also that he expressed a desire to see his wife and son soon, as he feared he would live only a fsw days longer. Dowie's ittndants have tried to ? keep up their courage and also to . prevent the knowledge becoming pub lic that he is so near death. On Sun i day last, January 21, he was brought in | to a room where several of the faith " | ful had assembled to hear him preach, ' but fchey were forced to kneel before the doctor entered the room. The con clusion of the public is that by their 3 kneeling it was planned that they could see Dowie's real condition. t ' i Funds for Fortifications. Washington, Jan. 28. —In the fortifi } cations appropriation bill reported to the Senate, the principal items of " increase include $*12,800 for Fort . Moultrie, S. C., $453,550 at Fort Pick j ens and Mcßee, Fla., $54,678 for Pen * sacola harbor, Florida, $544,750 for r • Mobile, Ala., and $139,800 at St. Phil -3 ips, Louisiana. These are to restore j lortifications injured by the storm of j September last. j! To Address Nearces. - j Washington, D. C., January 28. — 3! It is probable the president will stop ; at Columbus, Ohio, on his return from .! the West early in June and address .! the colored people of Ohio under the j auspices of the Colored Agricultural & L : Educational Institute. TYNER'S DYSPEPSIA REMEDY. A Guaranteed Cure. t If you suffer from Dyspepsia of Indi gestion in any form, gas. belching, bit j 1 ter taste, offensive breath, dizzy speels, sour stomach, heart flutter, nausea, gastritis, loathing of food, pains or . swelling in the stomach, back or side, * deep-seated kidney or liver trouble, then they will disappear in a short " time after taking Tyner's Dyspepsia 1 Remedy, made especially to cure Dys- I pepsia, Indigestion and all Stomach r ; Troubles, even of the worst cases. 5 Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy 1 expels 5 the gasses and sweetens the breath. It cures Sick Headache, Colic and Con ' stlpation at once. Druggists or by " express 50 cents a bottle. Money re * • funded if it fails to cure. Martin & Druggists, Hickory, N. C. Ireland's Great Fair * i j Dublin, January 25. —With less than i four months to elapse before the date : of the opening, the great international > fair to be held here this summer is . rapidly nearing completion so far as that within two months at leastted I outward appearances go. It is expect > ed that within two months at least ! the construction work shall have been L finished and everything ready for the installation of exhibits. Originally in tended solely to promote the indus , tries of Ireland, the scope of the enter prise has broadened as the work pro gressed and it is now manifest that i the exhibition will take rank among the great international fairs of late years. The exposition occupies 52 acres of ground in Pembroke,wwhini + hin a mile and a half of the centre of this city. The buildings now nearing completion are large and ornate, and strictly in keep ing with the natural beauty of the park and the surrounding country. The principal buildings will house comprehensive exhibits illustrating all the Irish trades and handicrafts. Cottage industries will be given a prominent place and the native arts and crafts will have a great display. Incidentally it is expected that hun dreds of thousands of visitors will be' drawn to Ireland for the first time by this exhibition. It is expected too that the fair will form a magnet which will draw thousands cf Irish-Americans back to their old home 3 during the coming year. THE GEORGIA CHILD LABOR LAW. ( Washington, D. C., January 28. — ] Senator Beveridge made the statement that the recently enacted child labor law of Georgia, was a "dead letter." Senator Bacon took issue with him. Mr. Beveriuge asserted that there had been filed 3.000 applications for i permit of child labor under the law. i "How many of them have granted?" asked Mr. Bacon. "All," replied Senator Beveridge. Bacon explained that the law pro hibited children under 12 years old j from working after January 1, 190 S. Possesses wonderful medicinal pow- j er over the human body, removing all' disorders from your system, is what j Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will , do. Makes you well, keeps you well., • 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. E. B. Men j zies. Alex Reea will fight Jack Graham, a five round bout at Beaver Falls, Pa. "Kid" Goodman is line up against Dave Deshler for a lb round a "air, at Thornton, R. I. There are many touching incidents in the career of a chronic borrower. A tree uoctie ot Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup will be sent to any reader of ' his paper who v.-tll wiite to the Thacher . Medicine Co.. Jiattsuooga, Tenn, WASTING STRENGTH • * Women who suffer from unnecessary, disagreeable, painful, weakening, female complaints, will find that Wine of Cardui is a safe and pleasant remedy for all their ills. It acts directly upon all the delicate, inflamed tissues, purifying the blood, throwing off the clogging matter and relieving female disorders such as irregular, scanty, profuse, painfu! catamenia, prolapse, etc. Also relieves headache, backache, dizziness, cramps, dragging pains, nervousness, irritability, etc. If you need advice, write us a letter, telling us ell your symptoms. We will send free advice (in plain sealed envelope). Address: Ladies' Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT IN $l.OO BOTTLES {^ U '\i WINE jjj^|| | i ' 1 Dreadnought to Cross Atlantic. Gibraltar, January 25. —Under or ders of the admiralty the mammoth battleship Dreadnought is to sail tomor row on her trip across the Atlantic. The objective point will be Trinidad, which it is expected to reach in about eight days after the departure from Gibraltar. _ r The Dreadnought will stay about two months in the West Indian waters, devoting most of the time to gun prac tice. The seaworthiness of the battle ship will be given a thorough test, as the Atlantic season is usually at its worst at this time of the year. As the arrival in the West Indian waters will take place before the American fleet has concluded its win ter maneuvers in the same vicinity the American officers will be given an op portunity to see for the first time the iatest marvel in naval architecture and the most talked of battleship nov afloat Railway Engineers. Montreal, Que., January 24. —Chiefs of the engineering departments of many of the leading railroads of the United States and Canada gathered in this city today to attend a meeting of the board of directors of the Ameri can Railway Engineering and Mainte nance of Way Association. The prin cipal business of the meeting was in the arrangement of a programme for the annual meeting of the association which will be held in Chicago in March. It is a grander thing to be nobly remembered than to be nobly born. LONG LIVE THE KING! is the popular cry throughout the Eu ropean countries; while in America, the cry of the present day is "Long live Dr. King's New Discovery, King of Throat and Lung Remedies!" of which Mrs. Julia Ryder, of Truro Mass., says: "It never fails to give im mediate relief and to quickly cure a cough or cold." Mrs. Paine's opinion is shared by a majority of the inhab tants of this country. New Discovery cures weak lungs and sore throats af ter all other remedies have failed ; and for coughs and colds its the only sure cure. Guaranteed by C. M. Shuford, W. S. Martin & Co., Druggists. 50c and $l.OO. Trial bottle free. j The door between us and heaven cannot be open while that between us . and our fellowmen is shut. OASTORIA. Bom the /) The Kind You Hava Always Bought 557 j • " f Today's social event was Mrs.! Charles Green's party for Mrs. C. j M. Bearden, of Asheville, given at the Buford Hotel annex. ! A MEMORIAL DAY One of the days wo remember with pleasure, as well as with profit to our health, is the one on which we became acquainted with Dr. King's New Life ' Pills, the painless purifiers that cure I headache and biliousness, and keep the bowels right. 25c at C. M. Shu ford, W. S. Martin & Co'.s drug stores. The greatest blessing that ever comes to a human being is the deter-I t mination to realize that for which the I * heart longs. Plumbing, R^oofing —AND— Guttering ONE by expert workmen. Ail kinds of Tin Work on short none® A full linn of Bath Tubs, Bowls and Sinks, with hot and cold tXm fixtures. We will do your work right. Hickory Roofing and Tinning Co McCOMB BROTHERS DEALERS IN Groceries Frfcsh Meats, Butter, Corn, Hav, Cotton, Seed ' ■> i Hulls, Meal and Country Produce. HIGKO RY, N C i * Ontario Legislature Meets. Toronto, Ontario, January 24.—The third session of the 11th Legislature ol Ontario was opened today with the customary ceremonies. From present indications the session will be a short one, shorter than ordinary. While the Government has some important meas ures in contemplation they are not so numerous as usual. Among the bills that will attract attention is one rela tive to a revenue from mines. Mr. Webb Will Send; Vegetable Seed. Any of the constituents in this ctfun ty of Hon. E. Y. Webb who desire vet etable seed can obtain the same by writing to him at Washington, Woolley's SiKftS&S ■mj jb»s ■ ■H 111 ■ ■ calne or whiskey. I lip: LI 111 i" large book of ptt mWP 111 IWI tlcolarion homed I U ITI sanatorium treat r|" ■-TKv" merit. Addreee,D{ ■LM AND B. M. WOOLLKI AtlauU. B &Wfif Wedding Gifts A »■* one of your friends to he * "rfcrt sonn? if so, you will want a nJee pr» ent tor diem. Sterling silvsr and onrt glass make exquisite gifts that ar» al ways useful. Write as for anythll) you may need in thia lina. NOTICE! ' "W & want ©very man pttl '.vomen 1b the flnited States inters, i.c»i m the core of Dpium, "Whiskey or other drag habits, ■dther for themselves or Mends, to havf jne of Dr. Woolley's books on these dli aases. Write Dr. B. M. W oolley, Atlanta) 3a., Box 281, and on* will be sent yoa £reo« BHAIR R BALBAM ClunKi and beaatlfiw th« halt. Promote* a luxuriant growth. Never Tails to Rertore Ormy Hair to its Ton'.Uful Color. Southern RAILWAY, The Standard Railway of the Soutu The Direct Line to alt Points TEXAS, CALIFORNA, FLORIDA, COBA AND POTOR BISO Strictly First-Class Equipment for at AppJy to Ticket Agents for Time Ta ble«. Rates and Genera InfornM tion, or addreea a L. VERNON, T. r V. Charlotte. N. C. J. H. WCTOU D. P. A., Ashoville, N. t » H F A. P. A., ■ r> Tf
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
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Jan. 31, 1907, edition 1
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