Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / April 11, 1907, edition 1 / Page 4
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1 \ LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS , With Tags About the Sans» Coior 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 chqwers wh' *> not look closely . at the printing on the box and on the tr i I These brands only imitate the outuu. imc ancido 1 not possess th q genuine inside quality that' has been found in Reynold's Sun Cured ever since Reynold"' Sun Cured was j introduced and which has so increased the chewing of sun j cured tobaccos and proven so popular, that the word " Sun j Cured "is now printed on tags or i:i the advertising of many ( brands claimed to be genuine sun cured tobacco., Did you ever ,ce the word "Sun Cured" used in any 2 ! chewing tobacco advertisement, oi on ar.y chewing tobacco or lal>el, or in any other way, before it was introduced and Ito identify the genuine Reynold.;' Sun. Cured? You sec i oquently now, because many imitation brand:;' arc being j. to appear as nearly like Reynolds' Sun Cured as they • | —-.vi>h tag, shape oi" plug and style of package so similar ' ■ - vxpcrienccd buyers sometimes accept these imitations as j ..-.mine Reynolds' Sua Cured! !; J'o.'i be deceived into taking imitation braids for the jj frrzxina. Be sure the letters on the tag spell •" R-e-y-n-u-l-d-s' a Sun Cured," and you get the best-value in sun cured chewing j tobacco th'it ixii 'Oj produced for chcwcrs. Sold at 60c. per v pound in .*>:. cuts; strictly 10c. and 15c. plugs, with chewing 3 * -.id •, like that which was sold from COc. fo SI.OO per pound | l:ei Key adds' Sun Cured was offered to the trade. TDIXJS, TCU orIT IT2EE GC?!*JINE | . Mcuivizzturcd by , /.--ID3 TQBACCO CO., Wms£ca-Saleza, N. C. j Coal Barge Been Collier Caesar Succeeded in Finding Naval CQal Barge Lost April Ist. Is Being Towed Into Mayport. Washington, April B.—The Navy Department has received a telegram from the commander of the collier Cfiesar, dated Fernanda, Fla., stating the naval coal barge number one, which has been lost at sea since April 1, has been picked up and is being towed into Mayport, at the mouth of St. Johns. Story of Search. The United States Naval collier Caesar which is searching for the mis sing coal barge, manned by ten men, that was torn away from its tow line in a gaie off St. Augustine, Florida, April Ist, put into Charleston, S. C.,; Saturday night. j She had been unsuccessful in herj searcli and almost immediately left? port to renew it. The arrival of the Caesar at Charles ton was gratifying pn account of ru mor that she had been badly injured by an explosion. The fact she carried no explosives enabled the navy department to doubt the story that the collier had been injured, but the officials were glad to remove all doubt by getting a report from Charleston. The cruiser St. Louis left Guantan amo April 4th, for Norfolk with in structions to search for the missing barge. She is expected to arrive at Norfolk tomorrow or Wednesday. CURED RHEUMATISM. Mr. Wm. Henry, oi Chattanooga, Tenn., had rheumatism in his left arm. "The strength seemed to have gone out of the muscles so that it was useless for work," he says. "I applied Cham berlain's Pain aim and wrapped the. arm in flannel at night, and to my re lief I found that the pain gradually left me and the strength returned. In three weeks the rheumatism had dis appeared and has not since returned." If troubled with rheumatism try a few applications of Pain Balm. You are certain to be pleased with the relief which it. affords. For sale by Shuford Drug. Co. Indian Cure For Neuralgia. East Indian Review. Here is a simple method of curing facial neuralgia. If the neuralgia is in the right side of the face the left hand should be placed in a basin of water as hot as can be borne. Or if neuralgia is In the left side of the face then the right hand should me placed in the hot water. It is asserted that in this way relief may be obtained in less than five minutes. The explanation is that the two nerves which have the greatest number of tactile nerve end ings are the fifth and the median nerves. As the fibres of these two nerves cross any impulse conveyed to the left hand will,affect the right side of the face, or if applied to the right hand will affect the left side of the face. This is on account cf the cross ing of the cords. Kansas City, April B.—T. C. Web-] ster, who enroute to Gainesville Ga., was taken from the train here j unconscious, recovered sufficiently to' say his home was in Horse Shoe Bend,' Idaho, where he has a family. WHOOPING COUGH. T have used - Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in my family in cases of whooping cough, and want to tell you that it is the best medicine I have ever used. W. F. Gaston, Posco, Ga. This remedy is safe and sure. For sale by Shuford Drug Co. •IrtSsSlfc s L Young Thief Is Bov who Stole $1,460 [ From Express Co. at Salisbury has Been Ar rested and Jailed. Makes a Full Confession. Salisbury, N. C., April 8. —R. W. Gray, the 17-year-old boy who, on the 11th of last November, stole $1,460 from the Southern Express Company here, was caught in Buffalo, N. Y., last Saturday. The arrest was made by E. M. McCall, general agent of the Thiel eDtective Agency. He was brought to Salisbury this morning and is in jail here. Mr. M. B. Custer, of the -Guarantee Company of North America, in which Gray was bonded for $3,000, accompanied the detective and his prisoner here. ; Mr. John M. Julian, editor of the {Post, visited Gray in his cell this j morning and to him he made a full ;confession and stated that when the case comes up for trial he would throw himself on the mercy of the court. Parents of the boy live in Greensboro. In telling of his wanderings since the robbery young Gray stated that on the night he took the money he went to High Point on the first train out. He got off the train there and waited until the next train came along when he took a Pullman to Lynchburg From Lynchburg he went to Roanoke and from there to Columbus. Ohio. From there he went to New York City and stayed therfe a few days. Finally shipping out of that city as an ordi nary seaman for a South American port. He went to Venezuela, then to Trinidad and then back to this coun try, reaching Philadelphia on March 15. At Philadelphia he learned that de tectives were close after him and de serted his ship. From Philadelphia he went to New York City and from there to Buffalo, going under the name of Royster Craig. He entered Lhe bus iness college there and was taking a commercial course. A few days ago he went to Hamilton, Canada, and while there met one of the seamen who shipped with him to South Amer ica. When he returned to Buffalo he was a-rrested when he stepped from the train. When taken into custody he had less than S2OO of tJie amount stolen. 4ft SUFFERED FOR FIVE YfeARS WITH KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLE. "I suffered for five years With kid-' ney and livor trouble, which caused se vere pains across the back and a blind ing headache. I had dyspepsia and was so. constipated that I could not move my bowels without a cathartic. I was cured by Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets and have been well now for six months," says Mr. Arthur Strickland, of Chattanooga, Tenn. For sale by Shufcrd Drug Co. Steamer Ashore Norfolk, Va., April 8. —A report re ceived here from Nags Head on the North Carolina coast says the three i masted schooner Louis Bossert. of Brooklyn, is ashore-there and is rest ing easy on the beach with a heavy list to the starboard. She is taking no water. ' \ ■ CASTOR IA For Infants and Children.. Tiis Kind You Han Always Bought Palmist Stirs j Suspicion A Palmist Strikes Union, S. C., who Bears Strik ing Resemblance to One Who Worked Greens boro. Has Many Names Union, S. C., April B.—A man giving half a dozen different names at as many different places in this city, has been in this, community since Wednes day. He claims to be a palmist and is thought to be the swindler who scoop ed in so much money and jewelry from the superstitious and unsuspecting at Greensboro last week. His personal apearance tallies in many resnects with that of the Greensboro man, though the color of his hair and moustache is different. It is also suspected that he may be a convict from Elmira, New York, for whose capture a reward of SSOO is of fered. This man reached Union last Wed nesday. Saturday morning he went in to a Ideal newspaer offlvemfwypeao to a local newspaper office, stating his business as that of a palmist and giv ing the name of L. Briggs. The news paper rian asked him if he had ever been to North Carolina. He said that he had not. When asked if he had ev er been in Charlotte, he claimed that he had never even heard of the place. He left here Sunday morning, driv ing into the country. He had a team of his own and while here tried to trade it and displayed a roll of bills amounting to SSOO while talking about the trade. Among other names he gave that of Anchovy at one place, while at the express office he got a package of liquor from Salisbury, N. C., address ed to S. A. Ward. At the postiffice he received mail in the name of A. F. Floyd. AS TO TARIFF ON IMPORTS. American Goods Imported Into Ger many To Have Minimum Tariff Rates. Washington, April 8. —Baron Stern berg the German Ambassador and Secretary Root have reached a basis of modus vivendi which will continue to American goods imported into Ger many the privilege of minimum tariff rates. This arrangement is temporary in character, being intended to prevent a break in the present tariff rates on American goods until such time as Congress may have had opportunity to pass upon a permanent treaty regu lating the commerce between the two countries. Noted Murder Case of Mrs. Aggie Myets Kansas City, April 8. —Final action in the cases of Mrs. Aggie Myers and Frank Hottman, under . sentence of death for the unusually cold-blooded murder of the woman's husband, will be taken today before the governor at Jefferson City. , The brutality of the murder, the calm demeanor of Mrs. Myers from the time of her arrest nearly three years ago and the strenuous efforts through petitions and appeals to save the 'woman from the gallows, have made the case one of the most noted in Missouri's criminal history. WORTH KNOWING ABOUT If you need a first-class laxative, there is nothing better nor safer than that old family remedy, Brandreth's Pills. Each pill contains one grain of solid extract of sarsaparilla, which, with other valuable vegetable pro ducts, make it a blood purifier of ex cellent character. If ycu are troubled with constipation one pill at night will afford great relief. brandreth's Pills are the same fine I laxative tonic pill your grandparents used. They have been in use for over a century and are sold in every drug and medicine store, either plain or sugar-coated. Death from Wall Paper. Evansville, Ind., April 8. —Mrs. Zachariah Watson, wife of a farmer in Posey county, Indiana, died and it was discovered death was due to the wall paper in her parlor she cleaned two days before she was taken ill. The paper was found to be impregnated with virulent poison. Watson's first two wives died in the same way. Death of Robert Schoize. Chattanooga, Tenn., April 8. —Rob- ert Schoize, one of the ieading busi ness men, died as a result of injuries receixed in a runaway. isle of Pines Not American Territory. Washington, April 8. —That the Isle of Pines is not American territory w*s officially and judicially declared by the Supreme Court of the United States. HIS DEAR OLD MOTHER. "My dear. old mother, who is now eighty three years old, thrives on Elec tric Bitters," writes W. B. Brunson, of Dublin, Go. "She has taken them for about two years and enjoys an excel lent appetite, feels strong and sleeps well." That's the way Electric Bitters affect the aged, and the same happy results follow in all cases of female weakness and general debility. Weak, puny children too, are greatly strength ened by them. Guaranteed also for stomach, liver and kidney troubles, by C. M. Shuford, W. S. Martin & Co., Druggists. 50. Cannon-Roosevelt Tete Tete. Washington, April 8. —Speaker Can non had a long talk with the President today. "I have not the slightest uneasi ness as to the successful completion of the waterway in reasonable time." said the speaker. CHILDREN CRY FLETCHER'S CASTORIA' \ may HOTELS MAY BE CLOSED Asheville, April 6.—lt is now stated on good authority tnat tne Toxaway Hotel Company, will not operate the hotels in the Saphire country this season, as it has done for the past two summers, for the reason that it has lost its rights under the ten-year lease from the Toxaway Company, owners of the hotels, which includes the Toxaway Hotel at Lake Toxaway, the Lodge, on Mount Toxaway, the Fairfield Inn, the saphire Inn, and the Franklin, at Brevard. The hotel company it is understood, will have to meet the claims of the Toxaway Company for rent due, which is secured by a bond of s(io,- 000, and is now engaged in litigation with certain creditors who are urging that the hotel company be placed in bankruptcy because of failure to pay them $15,000 or more alleged to be due for goods furnished last sea son, the hearing in which proceedings will be resumed in Atlanta on the tenth of this month, when the com pany will seek to show that while it is not disputed that the company owes the debts, it is not a trading company under the law, and, there fore, not liable to bankruptcy. Tho original Toxaway Company, owners of the hotels and a vast tract cf valuable land in the beautiful Sa phirc country, will itself operate the hotels this season. This statement/ has occasioned sonic surprises here, as it was the expectation that the hotel company would be able to raise money suffi cient to meet the claims of creditors rnd would continue to operate the hotels, especially in view of the fact that their lease had yet eight years to run, at an annual rentaL of $30,000. This was considered a valuable asset and was secured by a bond of $60,- 000 held by the Toxaway Company. Bluenthal & Bickert, of Atlanta, were on this bond. Puerto Cortez Fa lien; Ceiba is Also Taken Mobile, Ala., April 8. —A steamer just arrived brings the news that Puer to Cortez has fallen. Ceiba Also Taken. Mobile, Ala., April 8. —Advices just received say that Ceiba, Honduras, is also in the hands of the Nicaragu ans. Further advices from Commander Fullam of the United States gunboat Marietta via the steamer Columbia, just arrived, say that Ceiba was taken on the April 3 by the Nicaraguan arm ies, ?.nd is now in command of Com mander-in-chief Estrada and General Manuel Letta. It is reported that Ceiba was taken without a shot being fired. It has been agreed between Com mander Estrada and Commander Ful lam that Puerto Cortez should not be bombarded. Rest is the great restorer. We tire our muscles by exercise and then rest to restore them; yer a great many of us do not stop to mink how little vest we give our stomachs. As a usual thing no part of our bodies is so gen erally overworked as our digestive organs. A tired and overworked tom ach will give signs of distress to which we pay no heed until at last Dyspep sia takes hold. Indigestion is just a warning, and if we heed the warning we can easily avoid further conse quences. KODOL is a most thorough stomach relief. It digests what you eat and gives the stomach a needed rest and greatly assists in restoring it to its normal activity and usefulness. KODOL is sold on a guarantee relief ' plan. It is sold here by C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin. CASE OF COTTON BROKERS Decision in the Case of Clarence P. Hunt. Washington. April 8. —In the opinion by Justice McKanna, the Supreme court of the United States affirmed the decision of the U. S". Circuit court for the Western District, of Tenn essee in the case of Clarence P. Hunt cotton broker of Memphis, vs. the New Yory Cotton Exchange. The suit was brought in the_circuit court by the exchange to secure an injunction against Hunt prohibiting him from receiving or using its quo tations contrary to the regulations of the exchange and the injunction was granted by that court as prayed for. Eight Indictments Will be Returned San Francisco, April 8. —It is ex pected that at least eight indictments will be returned by the Grand Jury against officials of the Pacific States and Home Telephone Companies. It is said that it will take two more days before a complete inquiry can be made into the details of the telephone deals. A WOMAN TELLS HOW. TO RE LIEVE RHEUMATIC PAINS. I have been a very great sufferer from the dreadful disease, rheumatism, for a number of years. I have tried many medicines but never got much relief from any of them until two years ago, when I bought a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. I found velief before I had used all of one bot tle, but kept on applying it and soon felt like a different woman. Through my advice many of my friends have tried it and jean tell you how won derfully it has worked. —Mrs. Sarah A. Cole, 140 S. New St., Dover, Del. Chamberlain's Pain Balm is a liniment. The relief from pain which it offords is alone worth many times its cost. It mokes rest and sleep possible. For sale by Shuford Drug Co. Jp i'This man bought a supply of tobacco with out acquainting himself with the distinctive taste of SCHNAPPS Tobacco, which has the cheering qualities that gratify his desire to chew, and at less expense than cheap tobacco. SCHNAPPS has been advertised in this Some day they'll get a taste of the real paper so that every chewer has had an Schnapps —they'll realize what enjoyment opportunity to get acquainted with the they've missed by not getting SCHNAPPS facts and know that drugs are not used ago-then they'll feel lite kicking to produce the cheering quality found in « , the famous Piedmont country flue-cured themselves. tobaccos, and that SCHNAPPS is what he SCHNAPPS is sold everywhere in 5 ought to chew. Still there are chewers * who accept other and cheaper tobaccos P ent cuts, and 10 and 15 cent plugs. Be that do not give the same pleasure. sure you get the genuine. / COCOA COFFEE AND TEA ASJPORTS Cocoa importations into the United States are now averaging more than a million dollars a month, against an average of a quarter of a million dol lars per month a decade ago. Mean time importations of both coffee and tea show a decline, especially during the last two years. Whether the taste of the people of the United States in the use of this class of the require ments of the table is actually chang ing can perhaps scarcely be determin ed by the record of a single year or brief term of years; but it is at least (an interesting fact that the value of cacao imported into the United States has more than quadrupled in the last decade, while that of coffee has ac tually decreased during that time, and that of tea increased but about 10 per cent. In quantity, however, the change has been less strongly marked. The figures of the Bureau of Sta tistics of the Departmert cf Commerce and Labor show that the quantity of cacao imported in the eight months ending with February 1907, is about three times as much as thnt of the corresponding months of 1597, a de cade ago; that the quantity of coffee imported in the eight months of 190Y is more than one-third greater than that for the corresponding months of 1897, and that the quantity of tea im ported in the eight months of 1907 is about 11 per cent, less than in the cor responding months of 1897. Thus ca cao importations have increased prac tically 200 per cent, those of coffee 39 per cent., while those of tea have decreased 14 per cent, during the de cade. The total quantity of cocoa import ed in the crude state in the eight months ending with February, 1907, is G1,299,427 pounds, valued $8,344,426, against 20,730,059 pounds, valued at $1,930,831 in the corresponding months of 1897. The total quantity of coffee imported in the eight months of the fiscal year 1907 is 647,206,151 pounds, valued at $51,869,152, against 466,202,- 372 pounds, valued at $53,332,608 in the eight month's of 1897; and the quantity of tea imported in the eight months of 1907 is $72,475,440, valued at $11,606,055, against 81,220,822 pounds, valued at $10,247,506 in the corresponding months of 1897. Tak ing the value alone, there has been an increase of about 6 1-2 million dol lars in the importations of cacao, a decline of 1 1-2 millions in the im portations of coffee and an increase of 1 1-3 millions in tea importations. The average valuation of the cocoa imported in the eight months ending with February, 1907, is 13.6 cents per pound, against 9.3 cents in the corres ponding period of 1897; that of tea, 16 cents, against 12.6 cents a decade ago: while cpffee shows a fall, averaging 8 cents per pound in the eight months of 1907, against 11.4 cents in the cor responding months of 1897. It is only during the last decade that cocoa has formed any consider able part in the importation of arti cles of this character for the table. The value of cocoa imported in the perous Kansas of today; although a crude state in 1887 was about 1 1-2 million dollars. By 1897, a decade later, it amounted to a little less than 3 million dollars. In 1907 the total will probably ex ceed 12 million dollars for the full fis cal year, since the averaging for the) eight months, for which a record is already made, is above 1 million dol lars per month, and in the single month of February the total importa-j tlon was 1 1-2 million dollars. These figures do not include prepared or manufactured cocoa, of which the im portations are comparatively small, amounting to less than one-half billion i dollars annually. A very large proportion of the cacao i imported is drawn from American \ countries. Of the 61 million pounds j' •'imported in the eight months ending 11 with February, 1907, over 15 million I pounds was from Brazil, over 13 mil lions from the British West Indies, more than 10 millions from other West Indian Islands, about 9 mil lions from South American countries I I other than Brazil, while the remain- Jder came chiefly frfcm Europe, but was presumably shipped first from the *j South American countries to Euro- I! pean ports and dealers and thence to ;! the United States. Brazil seems to be j j gaining in its contributions to both the !' cacao and coffee consumption of the J United States. -j A decade ago Brazil supplied l?ut BAD BLOOD ) THE SOURCE OF ALL DISEASE r Every part of the body is dependent on the blood for nourishment and 2 strength. When this life stream is flowing through the system in a state o! purity and richness we are assured of perfect and uninterrupted health; because pure blood is nature's safe-guard against disease. When, however, j, the body is fed on weak, impure or polluted blood, the system is deprived of , its strength, disease germs collect, and the trouble is manifested in various t ways. Pustular eruptions, pimples, rashes and the different skin affections , show that the blood is in a feverish and diseased condition as a result of too 1 much acid or the presence of some irritating humor. Sores and Ulcers are 2 the result of morbid, unhealthy matter in the blood, and Rheumatism, Ca i tarrh, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison, etc., are all deep-seated blood i disorders that will continue to grow worse as long as the poison remains, f These impurities and poisons find their way into the blood in various ways. - Often a sluggish, inactive condition of the system, and torpid state of the 5 of bodily waste, leaves the refuse and waste matters to sour and form uric and other acids, which are taken up by the blood and distributed throughout the circulation. Coming in contact with contagious diseases is another cause for the poisoning of the blood ; we also breathe the germs and 3 microbes of Malaria into our lungs, and when these get into the blood in sufficient quantity it becomes a carrier of disease Instead of health. Some are so unfortunate as to inherit bad blood, perhaps the dregs of some old constitutional disease of ancestors is handed down to them and they are t constantly annoyed and troubled with it. Bad blood is the source of all dis -3 case, and until this vital fluid is cleansed and purified the body is sure to , suffer in some way. For blood troubles of any character S. S. S. is the best I remedy ever discovered. It goes down into the circulation and removes any 5 and all poisons, supplies the healthful properties it needs, and completely 3 _ _ siid permanently cures blood diseases of * every kind. The action of S. S. S. is so ' nfofcx thorough that hereditary taints are removed and weak, diseased blood made strong and 9 9 healthy sp that disease cannot remain. It L nun-, %# _ cures Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula, Sores [ PURELY VEGETABLE Ulcers, Skin Diseases, Contagious „ Blood Poison, etc., and does not leave the ; Slightest trace of the trouble for future outbreaks. The whole volume of ; blood is renewed and cleansed after a course of S. S. S. It is also nature's i F reat fst tonic, made entirely of roots, herbs and barks, and is absolutely harmless to any part of the system. S. S. S. is for sale at all first class t Bras stores. Book on the blood and any medical advice free to all who write. SWiFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. i * ijr- Plumbing, jßLoofing : —AND-. ) Guttering ONE by export workmen. All kinds of Tin Work on short aoticd ; A full lino of Bath Tubs, Bowls and Sinks, with hot and cold fixtures. We will do your work right. » Hickory Roofing and Tinning Co McCOMBBROTHERS DEALERS IN Groceries Fresh Meats, Butter, Corn, Hay, Cotton, Seed Hulls, Meal and Country Produce. H I CXORY.N.C. 17 per cent, of the cacao imported in to the United States, while in 1907 she supplied about 25 per cent.. Of the coffee imported in 1897, Brazil sup plied 76 per cent, and in 1907, 83 per cent., these figures being in all eases for the eight months ending with Feb ruary. In tea importations the decade also shows a marked change in the source of supply. In 1897 Cnina supplied 55 1907 but 33 per cent. Japan, which in 1897 supplied 37 per cent, of the total, supplied in 1907 practically 50 per cent. His Satanic majesty doesn't worry about the church that has a quarrel some choir. To begin a college course is usu ally a hazy undertaking.
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
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April 11, 1907, edition 1
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