Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / May 2, 1907, edition 1 / Page 3
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| Why Vinol Is Better Than Any Other Remedy to Restore ( I Health and Strength I I Because Vinol is a y real Cod Liver Preparation and does not ' a°secT "t f Slngl f disa S reeable or harmful ingredient and is not Because Vinol contains all the medicinal elements the W s o°thing, healing, strengthening and flesh creative properties Liver Oil but without oil or grease. |§3L Because everything in Vinol, —except the tonic iron and a I ft ■ and th me .'|~ is actuall y extracted from fresh cods' livers ' I M Vinol h palatable "and agreeable under I ccause Vinol tones up the system, strengthens every organ, g nerve, muscle and fibre of the whole body and thus overcomes I ' weakness b y thoro «g hl y eradicating the cause of disease. That's Why Vinol is altogether different and better than any I A ? ther re medy for Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, and all Throat, | I rn ■ Lung and Wasting Diseases.' Ift ghat's Why Vinol Restores'Health'and "Strength - to' 0 &m, m, Delicate Children, Feeble Old People, Weak and Sickly M V Persons, Nursing Mothers, and Convalescents, f WE RETURN MONEY IF IT FAILS TO GlifE SATISFACTION B. MLNZIES, Druggist* Boat on Catawba Capsized. Tw Swept Over Shoals Tragic Death of Two Young Ladies on Ca iavcba River Yesterday Afternoon Near Cataw ba Station. Men in Boat Saved Them selves. Party Had Been to Religious Service at Piney Grove . A lull Story. Stav.-vi'.lo. X. C., April 29. —News of tl: death of two young ladies of Sh': I: !i.wu.-hii>. this county, reach i i !).: • this morning. .. i;.;. iitii'MKiuu between 3 and ! -c\ :i boat on the Catawba riv ( :i;, :;;;nr Sallie Fulbright, U:za G >!c c,n d a younger sister of ;slir and Messrs. Dan Moore ami Hojce Johnson were swept over i.'. u :>!nals a few miles above Ca l .vV staticn. 'IT. ■ ii• vned are: WS.S SALLIE FULBRIGHT. jllSi? GO3LE. Tile ?..• n managed to save them nnl Messrs. Ed. Lipsard and Human, who were on the bank v f'-i and saved the younger Ful who had managed to get t' M of the beat. occupants of l'ie boat were i':ora Piny Grove church, Ca tnv. i.,! county, where they attended ser vice. ,}\ V( i:or'.ed that the men were " I,. 1 . 1 lost control of the boat. 1 !.• ii i: >s () f the ladies had not 1) cn recovered early this morning. _ Note From Crew of Bark Found To-day in Bottle V;:., April 29. —A dispatch ! :;oys the members of ' ", c ' v> ''' Nags Head life saving \ ; " . -.naming found a bottle'con i r from the crew of the •" '• '.lark Oricnte, stranded two of Poyner's Hill life sav . xs..v:ng that the crew of numbering 16, left the ! small boats and proceeded aoi;e gave no date. ATTACKED MAN AND WIFC. Five r. en, Alleged Members of the ■jiioko Street Gano," Now Under Arrest, ' 111., April 29. —Three men 'I ,lo ' m Morris and his wife ii i-nives, leaving the former dead, - v severely wounded, live men, said to be members of Sholio Street Gang," have been v Exhi!* ! ts Thaw Trial. • -v > ork, April 29. —Justice Fitz r.': •« 'o sign the order giving t0( ly of Lawyer Peabody the introduced by the defence in trial. 1,1 ■ ■■ i" » /i \mmm i——a— i 111 WE is tnc same good, o:d-lash:oned 1 that has saved the ,:ttle children for the iw. '? It is a nedicine j ■ it- t» cure, it has uever ; -.vii to fan. If your * ,! 'l yet a bottle of TttEY'C WEBBBOFUGE 4 T2S:o FOB CHILDREN ill: 9 >1 substitute. If " r '••"- : f r: >'>st does not keep tv/eijfy.)ive cents in M-iii'V:- to 33. SaJUmore, MC. •"'l a bottle will be mail -d yo«. FEW STRIKES EXPECTED H is Thought There will be Few Strikes in New England on May Ist. Boston, April 29. —According to the union officers and business agents cf workingmen's organizations, the industrial situation in New England on May 1 will be marked by fewer contentnons between capital and labor than for many years. In the building trades several small strikes are tveatened in a number of cities, but in Boston there promises to be little suspension of work in any branch of industry. The building laborers' unions, the members of which are unskilled, have registered new wage rates in Boston and vicinity. It is understood that prospects for settlement without a I sirike are favorable. The painters of eastern Massachusetts are endeavor ing to establish a uniform wage of i ?3 a day minimum in Metropolitan Boston, but there will be no strike in May, as the wage question will not be adjusted until later. The most serious condition existing i in Boston is due to the strike a. month ago of teamsters. In New Eng ljnd at large there are several causes ; for unrest in cotton mills and it is re- ' rorted that an attempt will be made 1 to advance wages at Fall River seme 1 time next month. , I FOOLED THE MOURNERS. Man Twice Pronounced Dead Came to j Life—Startled Sorrowful Family, i' East St. Louis, 111., April 29. —After being twice pronounced dead, George J Militis startled his mourning family , by sitting up in bed. The undertaker's wagon, which had been called, was us- ; ed as an ambulance to convey Mulitis j to a hospital fell downstairs, and when picked up was aparently lifeless. He recovered after a short time, but an hour later fell to the floor unconscious. A doctor who was called said he was dead, efforts to revive him failing. An hour late.? he suddenly became con- i scious. Mrs. Militis fainted when her husband spoke to her. CONTROL OF TAMMANY. I End of Contest Over Control of Tam many Has Been Reached. New York, April 29. —The end to the contest for the control of Tam many Hal! between Mayor McClelland and Charles F. Murphy is announced. The mayor will be left free, accord ing to a statement given out, to ap point to the highest closs of men for the city offices. The mayor will recognize the right of it's leaders to control Democratic organizations. FOUND HER SUITOR DEAD. Fiance Drowned While Girl Was on Way to Wedding. Raleigh, N. C., April 29.—Miss Thelma Lindgren, 19 years old, of St. Paul, Minn., who was to have been I married here to Capt. Hans Thorson, one of the four victims of last Tues- 1 day's drowning accident at Buckhorn Falls, N. C., arried in Raleigh last j Friday. When told of the accident Miss Lindgren collapsed. Telegrams sent her had failed to delivery. The bodies of the men 1 drowned have not been found. Woman Burned to Death. Earnings of Family Los i i Philadelphia, Pa., April 29. —Mrs. ; Kate Kearner. aged 60, was burned to I death at her home here and $7OO in j notes which she carried in her pock-1 1 et were destroyed. The money carried represented the i savings of the family for five years, j When your back aches it is almost invariably an indication that something lis wrong with your kidneys. Weak, diseased kidneys frequently cause a break dewn of the entire system. De- Witt's Kidney and Bladder Pills afford prompt relief for weak kidneys, back ache, inflammation of the bladder and all urinary troubles. Sold by C. M Shuford, W. S. Martin. Big Teacher Assembly Magnificent Program is Completed. Big Atten dance Expected. Medi cal Society Convened. Other Live News. Durham, April 26. —The North Caro lina Teachers Assembly which will hold their annual session in Durham, June 11th to 14tn, will eventually be the largest attended meeting during the past few years. Preparations are being made to accommodate several hundred teachers and the attendance it expected to ue some 500. An im portant feature o? the annual assem bly will be the trip to the Jamestown Exposition. A special train will be conducted from Durham expressly L-r the teachers. The annual meeting this year will prove an epoch in the history clthe asembly. The arrangements of the program, which has recently b??n completed, mv>sf>nts a splendid array of the South • 1 est speakers and edu cators. T he membe; sol the 1-iorth Carolina Medical society .f the si::th district coiyened in Jmrbam this morning for an annual session. The above district compjifes ten counties surrounding Durham and will be quite an import ant session With some u0 or more pres ent. President Booth of the Norfii Carolina Medical society, will preside over the assemblage. There will be several i ctures and papers iciJ >•- ti>.« medical men and the session will adjourn ;it night. Tent services were recentlv adopte-! the mtetins of the ministers asso ciation of this city. This is a new prase of worship in Durham and is an arrangement for the purpose of get ting certain classes of people to church The tent will bp located in different parts of the city during the summer and the pastors will hold revivals by turns. At all times tent meetings in Durham have been largely attended by all classes of the people and the idea adopted by the ministers will likely be a success. South Carolinians Leave For Jamestown Columbia, S. C., April 25 —The South Carolina'party for the opening of the Jamestown Exposition left here this evening at seven o'clock over the Sea board Air Line for Norfolk, arriving there early tomorrow morning. The party consists of Governor and Mrs. Ansel, Gen. William Jones, Mrs. Jones and Miss Reau Jones; Colonels D. O. Herbert, of Orangeburg; F. S. Evans, of Greenwood; J. G. Wardlaw, of Ycrkville; R. P. Hamer, Jr., of Ha uler; George Y. Coleman, of Charles ton; W. W. Moore, of BarnwelL and Mrs. Moore; Col. \V. T. Brock, assis tant adjustant general, besides Adju tant General Boyd, representing the governor's staff. Cols S. T. McCra vey, of Spartanburg; D. W. Daniel, of Clemson College and T. B. Butler, of Gaffney, will go by the Southern and join the party at Norfolk. Governor Ansel has reappointed Mr. Earle Sloan, of Charleston, as State I geologist for the term of two years. Mr. Sloan was appointed to this posi tion by Governor Heyward two years ago when the act creating the office was first passed and he has demon strated his fitness for the position. MOTOR COMPANY ORGANIZED. The Union Motor Company Organized at Union, S. C. Union, April 27. —The Union Motor ! Car Company, which has been organ ized here with a capital stock of $15,- 000 for the purpose of doing a general; passenger and freight business by motor cars, and will also be em lowered to make and deal in these j machines. Mr. H. T. Yates and L. . M. Jordan are the corporators, and it l is said that they will put in two I large motor cars to begin business , with as soon as the organization has been completed. They will probably have schedules for various parts of the city, and particularly between 1 Union and Monarch. "Here's to your health and happi ness" —DeWitt's Little Early Risers — famous little pills. Nasty, sick head ache or biliousness may come on any time: the cure is an Early Riser. Sold by C. MTShuford, W. S. Martin. Packing y Many Companies Were In The Toils! To ' day Granted Charters St. Paul, Minn., April 29.—Judge Sanborn filed an opinion in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, affirm ing the judgments of the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri, against the packers, for accepting concessions of 12 cents per hundred pounds from a Dortion of the established rate for the transportation of provisions on through bills of lading from Kansas City to Christiana and cttter points in foreign countries. Companies Involved. The defendants involved in the deci sion are: The Armour Packing Com pany, Swift and Company, Morris and Company, and the Cudahy Packing ColHpany. These cases are the, first of the so called rebate cases brought by the United States against the packers to be determined by the Appellate court and will form a basis for the future action until the Supreme Court re views the deceision. Purport of Opinion. The opinion recited in conclusion is as follows: "The only criminal intent requisite to the conviction of the offense creat ed by the statute which is not malum in se is the purpose to do an act in violation cf the statute. No moral turpitude or wicked intent is essential to the conviction of such a crime. U. S. Supreme Court Sustains Decision of N. C. Washington, April 29 —The Supreme Court of the United States decided in effect that the Railroad Commission ers cf North Carolina can compel the railroad companies operating in that State to so adjust their schedules as to accommodate the passengers on other lines from any particular part of the State. The opinion was delivered in the ease of the Atlantic Coast Line vs the Corporation Commission of North Car olina. The case arose om of an order issr. Ed by the commissioners directing the railroad companies to make connec tions at Selma with trains on another line running from the eastern part of the State, with the object of accommo dating passengers whose destination was Raleigh. The railroad company resisted the order on the ground that it could not be complied with without involving extra expense, and contended that it amounted to taking property without the djie process of the law. The commission justified its course oif the ground that a compliance with the order was necessary to accommo date a large part of the public. The Supreme Court of North Caro lina held against the railroad com pany, and its decision was affirmed by the action of the Supreme Court of the United States on the ground that the order of the commission does not afreet the rates but is proper of state regulation. FUNERAL'WTYRT'OUT 'BODY:' ' i • i Casket Goes Astray by Mistake, but Services are Held. Cincinnati, 0., April 29. —Funeral services for the late Henry Hochstet ter. of Mount Auburn, were held at the Hochstetter residence last Thursday afternoon, although at the time the body was in Chicago. It was shipped from Mexico, where he died, several days ago, but owing to some mistake was sent to Chicago instead of this city 1 no mistake was not discovered un til u late to change the plans for the services. The many floral tributes sent by friends were placed on a table and were later sent to various hospit als. GIRL OF FOURTEEN ELOPES. She Comes to Washington With a Motorman From Petersburg. i Petrsburg. Va., April 29. —Miss Mag-' gie B. Deadman, aged 14 years, a daughter of W. H. Deadman, a mer chant of this city, eloped to Wash ton, D. C., and was married to Lin wood S. Motley, aged 26 years, motor-! man, employed by the street electric 1 lailway here. The girl at the time of the elope- j menc was a pupil at the Anderson public school in this city. NEGROES RUN AMUCK. As Result of Murderous Tour One Per son is Dead and Oth»-es Injured Norfolk, Va., April 29. —As a result of a murderous tour in Berkeley ward of Norfolk early Sunday morning by two negroe highwaymen, Charles W. Parks is dead, Edward Cooper, aged CO, and Miles -Newson-{colored), are lying unconscious with fractured skulls and wnh little chance of recov ery, and Willi im Watkins. mar.i«"V if less seriovm/ hurt and will it cover. Snow, Sleet and Rain. Kansas City, April 29. —A combina tion of snow, sieeLand rain is reported this morning in this part of the South west, with freezing weather prevailing from the Nebraska line to Texas. TYNER'S DYSPEPSIA REMEDY. Many Have Dyspepsia and Don't Know It. Do not belcn up wind? Taste your food after eating? See specks before the eyes? Are you pale and haggard? Do you have pains vbgkqjbgkqjbgkqj Does your heart flutter? .Are you diz zy? Do you have pains in side or back? Risings or pimples on the skin? Are you low spirited? Is there a sour taste? Breath bad? Weak kidneys? Bilious? Constipated? Are your ner [ vous" If so, you have Dyspepsia, and iit is a dangerous condition. To cure, j take Tyner's. Dyspepsia Remedy. It |is made for just such troubles and | smyptoms. Tyner's Dyspepsia Reme dy removes acids from the stomach, strengthens weak stomachs, and cures the -vorst Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Druggists or by express 50 cents a bottle. Money refunded if It fails to Raleigh, April 29.—Governor Glenn 1 left this afternoon for Engleside to de liver an address at the aducational ral ly and school closing there. The Whiteville Company, of Golds boro, filed an amendment to its char ter increasing its capital to Nathan O'Brien is president. Charters were issued to the Hender son Athletic Association at a capital of £lO,OOO, by C. D. Raggan and oth ers. \v . The Riverside Telephone * Company cf Ramseur, N. C., at a capital of $20,- ' 000, by E. C. Watkins and others. ■ The Paola Cotton Mills, Inc., of Statesville, at a capital of $150,000 by N. B. Mills, C. L. Preston and oth ers, and the Waynesville Skating Rink Company of Murphy, Cherokee Coun ty at a capital of $lO,OOO by S. W. Loving and others. i ' i Death of Noted Actress. New York, April 29.- Maud Harri son, the actress, while in her room at the Hotel Willard yesterday, wa3 trick en with paralysis and died a few hours later without having regained con sciousness. She was 51 years of age, a sister of Louis Harrison, the actor, and when five years ago she retired from the stage to devote her time to the care of an aged mother, she had earned recognition as a woman of tal ent. Since her mother's recent death Miss J Harrison has been preparing to re turn to the stage. I - Friends said that the actress had been sick for several days, but had I not sought medical attention. ' Miss Harrison was for some years a member of the Daly forces and al so appeared for several seasons un der the management of A. M. Palmer. She had a part in a Belasco production at one time. Her last appearance was in "Naughty Anthony." PRESERVE MEATS WITH GAS. Pure-food Law Being Openly Violated Asserts Official in Kansas. Topeka, Kans., April 20. —Dr. S. J. Crumbine, secretary of the State Board of Health, announced that he had discovered in use here a preserv ative for meats, the manufacture of which, he asserts, are openly defying State and Federal Pure Food laws. ! The preservative is made in the j East, and chemical tests show that it contains charcoal and pure sulphur, which, when burned, form a sulphur dioxide gas that is absorbed by the meat and has the same effect as borax. The manufacturers in their statement | say that the preservative makes it pos sible for butchers to evade' the law, contending that the powder itself j does not touch the meat. I Secretary Crumbine says he will j | submit the matter to Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, chief of the Bureau of Chemis try, of Washington. CZAR'S COUSIN TO WED. Divorced Montegran Princess Will be Bride cf Grand Duke Nicholas. , St. Petersburg, April 29. —It is an nounced that the wedding of the Grand Duke Nicholaievitch, second cousin of j Emperor Nicholas and commander in I [ chief of the St. Petersburg military | I district, and Princess Anastasia of, | Montegran, divorced wife of Grand I Duke George of Leuchtenberg, will take place in Crimea. May 12. AUSTIN GET SEVEN YEARS. Man Who Killed George Gaddy With Club is Giveh Seven Years. Ashei'ille, N. C., April 29.—Zeke Aus tin, who killed George Gaddy, by hit ting him on the head with a club, frac turing the skull, near the Weaver Power Plant on the French Broad riv er, about a month ago, was today sen tenced by Judge Cook to seven years in tie penitentiary. Austin pleaded in justification of the killing that Waddy had made im-J proper proposals to his wife and had . attempted an assault on her. The I state accepted the suggestion of the ; court, to ask for no greater punish ment than murder in the second de gree. In passing sentence. Judge Cook stated that he had personally talked \ with Mrs. Austin, wife of the defen dant, and lie was satisfied that she had told the truth wlion she inform*** I nusband of the attempted accault by. Gaddy, which it was alleged led to the ■ homicide. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. * All the b'.ood in your body passes '.hrough /our kidneys once every three minutes. fThe kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter, out the waste or impurities in the blood. If tney are sick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, aches and rheu- ; matism come from ex- • ce.>s of uric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working in pumping thick, kidney poisoned blood through veins and arteries. it used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves ihat nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning in kidney trouble. If you are sick yvu can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp»Root, the great kidney remedy is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits IP^T*] by all druggists in fifty- drifwEajrag cent and one-dollar siz- y d 5. You may have a sample bottle by mail Homt> of Swamp-Root tree, also pamphlet telling y.-u how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer It Co., Binghamton, N. Y. iJon't make any mistaKe, but ber the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kil mer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Bingbaraton, N. Y., or every bottle. llfldlUKlA CASTiRII Ph 0 Kind You Hav& IjSMBBBjI Always' Bought AVfcgetablePreperalionforAs- Jl # M similatmgllieFoodandßegula- jfjf _ a ling the Stomachs andßowels of ,i« JjGcirS til 6 m \ I gjg na^ure /yCS» Promotes Digeslion.Cheerfur- fl M li^ ness and Rest.Contains neither m ■ g Jf * p Opium.Morpliine nor Mineral, ffl 01 /j\*\ if H Jkti*afOUI)rSAKUEIPITCHKR || « VAp' f\myJun S*t&- , 1 I Jlx.Sauui. * 1 J|H IIU . IlctiiMf Sails - j slf Jjffij 1 M - \ b A ic\% in j I i\ ift v iII I f& I 1 KJ B ) 1 Mk, U IV AW / I JM J 17 A Q Aperfecl Remedy for Constipa- I I ll fy* 1# Ov) Fion,SourStou\ach,Diarrhoca || I 1 Worms .Convulsions .Fcverislv | I C#%l# AKA» ness and Loss OF SLEEP. 1 fQ | (IV U I Facsimile Signature of 3ig|jj Thirty Years - —.) CASTORIA THE CCNTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITV. SUED FOR A LOST DIMPLE. Victim of Facial Doctor Awarded $l,- 200 Damages. Now York World. Lost beyond recall is a saucy dimpla in which Mrs. Euphcnia Belle Roller, poetaster, who lives at Trowmart Inn, Abingdon square and Twelfth street, formerly took excusable pride. She says there is sorau balm for its loss, however, in the news that Justice O'Garman, in the Supreme Court, has confirmed in her favor a judgment for $1,200 against a facial improvement concern. When Mrs. Roller came from her home in Missouri to this city a friend observed on her brow the wrin kles left by study and a mole on her upper lip. The friend suggested that Mrs, Roler submit to treatment by a facial artist. Mrs. Roller says she submitted to hypodermic injections of hot paraffine and strong-arm massage until her face ached. Her face began to swell, and, fearing blood poisoning, she consulted a physician. He ordered her to discon- [ ainue the facial treatment, and under] his ministration her face resumed its normal contour. But when she looked in the mirror she discovered the dim ple was gone, although the mole and mcst of the wrinkles remained. Mrs. Roller at once brought suit for dam ages. W. C. T. Club Enetrtains. High Point, April 23—The W. C. T. Club was delightfully entertained at the heme of Mrs. Mary Alexander on English street between the hours of [ four and six. The next meeting of the club will be held at the home of Mrs. Aubrey Hoover, when she will receive with Mrs. A. S. Caldwell. A stag dinner was given Mr. T. J. Gold by his bachelor friends Tuesday evening at the Ehvood Hotel to mark his departure the next day from bachlerhood. Mr. E. H. Harris acted as toastmastcr and there Were quite | a number of friends presort. Baltimore, Md., April 27. —The Standard Oil tug Radiant sank in Chesapeake Bay below Baltimore to day. No lives were lost. LjDIES I) ( « U^QM : PQIJ^D-1 Safe, Quick, Reliable twgulato? Superior t > other remedies sold at hifjli prl2i«. Cur* rn»jnnteed. Buceepsfulty used by over 2(90,000 Women. Price, 45 Centn, druc- Kittsor by mall. Testimonials & booklet frcj Dr. LaFranco, Philadelphia,!?» PAINLESS XFFIFSISS III ■ ■ caine or whiskey, i '■ 11 mm large book cf pai Wr 111 ■■■ ticularsofi homeo fll ■U■ VI sanatorium treat ■ ■ « * ■ ment. Address, D\ ■|JB AND B. M. WOOLLEY Whiskey Cure Atlanta, (ieorglf Wedding Gifts one of your friends to be n. Ties eonn? If 80, you will want a nic* FCREFC ent tor them. Pterling silver and cul glass make exquisite glftd that are si way* useful. Write us for auythiij you may need in this Una. A tree bottle ot Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup will be sent to any reader of this paper who v.-ill write to the Tuacher Medici lie Co.. .hattanooga, Tenn. The family medicine in thousands of homes for 52 years—Dr. Thacher's Li"er nnd Rlood Svruo Vv ouieu lind qiuc.- iciiciin . x iiaclier'F Liver Blood Svrup. J. W. MANGUM DISMISSED. - Mayor Dismissed Raleigh Fire Chief ion Serious Charges. Raleigh, N. C., April 27 —Mayor John son this afternoon pre-empt oiiily dis -1 missed John W. Mangum chief of ' the Haleigh Fire Department o nthe ! ground that he padded the pay rolls, 1 sold the old apparatus without turning J the proceeds into the city treasury, ! and is using the city wagon for his own personal interests. | Mangum had been previously asked ;by the mayor to resign and declined i; to do so. The dismissal is effective at . six o'clock tonight. Mangum proba bly will appeal to the incoming board • of aldermen, as he denies the charges. I I Dayton, Ohio, April 25. —Eight men working in a tunnel at the National Cash Resistor plant are reported se riously hurt by a gas explosion. Southern RAILV" The Standard RaiU.,, ot the Soutii. The Direct Line to aii p Jinta TEXAS, CALIFORNA, FLORIDA, CUBA AND PORTO RICO Strictly First-Class Equipment tor fcv Appiy to Ticket Agents for Time T» blee, Rates and Genera In*vaa*- tion, or address. ' / R. L. Y'TiNON, T. F Charlotte, H. C. 1. H. WCOil, D. P. A., Ashcville. N. (X 8. H HL-KLTO'iCK. ii. P. A., W **' T> -*» HELPISOFFERED TO WORTHY YOUNG PEOPLE We earnestly request all young persons, no matte* bow limited their means or education, who wish to obtain a thorough business training and good posi« tion, to write by first mail for our great half-rat« offer. Success. Independence and probable fortune are guaranteed. Don't delay. Write today. The G«.*Al«u Basinets College, Macon^Giu f!OLL!STIR'C Sccky Mountain Tea ftugge!* / Easy Lledioino for 3aay Foop'e. Brings Ooldin Health aid Kotowed Vigor. A s-tecifle fi>r Constipation, Indigestion, Live tnd Kidney Troubles, Pimples, Eczemi, linpur 31ood, Bad Breath, Slr.trcrisli Bowels, Headache ani Backaehe It's Rocky Tea in tab let form, 35 cents a bo*. Genuine Tn.tda by llolmsikk Dnrs Company, Madison, Wis. GOLDEN NuGuITo FOR ZkV>W PEOPir NOTICE! We want every man and women 1» the Onifced States Interested In the cure ot Dpium, Whiskey or other drug habits,' ■dther for themselves or friends, to hav' sne of Dr. Wooiley's books on these die aases. Write Dr. B. M. W oolley Atlanta 3a», Bos 287, and una will be sent you fre" H PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair.' Promotes a luxuriant growth. t Never Failo to Bestore Gray) Hair to its Youthful Color, i Cures scalp diteajes tc hair falling, I JOc, and l.OO f.r Druggists J I KILLTHE COUCH i WE CURE THE LUMCSJ WIT " Or. King's j New .Olsoovery | ! rtin /Consumption Price § r[f H I OUGHSand 50c & $l.OO f I"" Free Trial. ;( Surest and THROAT and LUNG TBOUB- g U2S, or MONEY BACK. J
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
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May 2, 1907, edition 1
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