Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / Sept. 12, 1907, edition 1 / Page 3
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-Growing Girls—* Growing girls need care, advice and medicine, especially on reaching the age of puberty. A niothet s tender care and words of caution will often accomplish wonders. As for medicine, a gentle, safe and reliable strengthening tonic is * Wine of Cardui, 4 It will prevent and relieve pain, regulate the functions, clear the complexion and strengthen * | the constitution. It is a valuable medicine for growing girls. It : tided thousands over a critical period, and 1 saved them from years of suffering. It can never jo harm and is sure to do good. A relief or cure for all female disorders in girls and women. \ At every druggist's in SI.OO bottles. Try it. *7 CARDWM Worst Rioting In The History Of Western Canada Is Reported Seattle. Wash.. Sept. 9. —A dis pjteh to the Post-Intelligencer from Vancouver. B. C., says: -Following the riot Saturday night in Vancouver, in which Chinatown anj tne Japanese quarters were raid ed and damage done approximating {15.111H1, a further demonstration oc curred later in which Kicki Yiro Ishii. chief of the bureau for foreign commerce, and head of the Japanese tonsillar service, and Consul Saburo Hisamidzu. of Seattle, were the cen tral figures and in which riot a num ber of pjople were bruised and in jured by broken bottles and flying brick bats in the hands of the fren zied mob. Baron Ishi and Consul Hisamidzu finally made their escape and the affair was cabled to Tokio. Coincident with the riot was the arrival of the steamship having on board about 500 Japanese. With common impulse the mob surged to the water front and as soon as the Japanese came down the gang-plank, they were met by the rioters. Seven or eight of the Japanese were unceremoniously picked up and thrown into Buzzard Inlet. Stili further riot in? occurred when a crowd oi about 4.000 laborers start ed on the war path, but were Anally quelled by the police after about 20 arrests had been made. Last night Chinatown was roped off and the quarters of the orientals guarded by the police. Baron Ishii, in an interview, stated that he had cabled to Ambassador Kaneko at London apprising him of the stirring events here. Indemnity from the city to the 1 amount of ?2.",000 will be claimed. Mayor Bethune declares the in demnity will not be paid, and the affair v.ill be taken up with the Do minion government. Saturday night's rioting was the i worst in the history of Western Canada. International complications are looked for. Came to Study Conditions. By Associated Press. )"' j rk, Sept. 9. —While Aikujiro "■ director of the commercial bu re;i:i if the Japanese foreign office, Cjni '- tu this country to investigate an 'l rp Port on the recent anti-Japan demonstration in San Francisco, i is generally understood his mission *as to makf. a thoroughly study of '• whole Japanese question and to the cause and extent of 'atever prejudice may exist against to Japanese. I he went to British Columbia, . fcr - conditions arising from the "'•'H inflow of Japanese and Hindus d use»i a serious disturbance of labor conditions. Report on Damage Done Montreal, Sei)t 9 —Consul-General , ar Ottawa, has received tele a. r, '!»orts on the demonstration 1. y""" lv, i '. Director Ishii reports d o.i"irday night 50 rowdies march - iii.O the Japanese and Chinese quar »j»nd si oned the buildings, erf 1 '.'V su, 5' w iMent attack the mob in *eri' l a " (i sevf ' ral store-fronts broken and one Japanese wound ti!j.vol ' says hit, r ' s '• " lu t there was "hardly from that direction." in ri, ' a wa telegraphed report (iiV . /'ttack made by the row qujni".'"'''night on the Japanese mV' I ,' 1 again the mob attack ' •'•'panose stores." dawn '•" ili,v was fi n a"y restored by '■ oni 'iay. The damage to the iitoros follows: :I '' stores, 13; hotels, 9; candy t? ' '"nary shops, 7; bath hous ' - l ai r shops, 5; shoemakers, WORKFD LIKE A CHARM. SDifv Va l ker . editor of that \a 1 'he Enterprise, Louisa, las! f nin a nail in my foot ki,\ " 1% . }lt on ee applied Buck lol!,;■ A '" I '" 1 No inflammation * r 'iiT >' ■ ' 1,0 salve simply healed the skin i H° a ls every sore, burn and Shiif f ' ase - Guaranteed at C. M. °"i and W. S. Martin & Co's, Qru ggists. 25c. 2; banking office, 1; newspaper offlce, 1; employment oflices, 4; restaurant, 1; rice mill, 1; hatters shop, 1; tailors, 2; watchmaker, 1. Of these 50 stores all the windows and door glass were smashed. Two Japanese were wounded. Consul-Gen eral Nosz will lay the facts before Premier Laurier. White Men Stabbed. Montreal, Sept. 9. —A special from Vancouver to the Star says: Saturday night the Asiatic ExcluslQn League paraded and later held a meet ing where Lieutenant-Governor Amuir, who vetoed the bill to enforce the na tal act in British Columbia, was burn ed in effigy, and a resolution passed to ask the Dominion government to allow the bill to become law. It was after that the mob stormed Chinatown. A dozen Japanese were thrown into the water but were rescued. Three white men were stabbed by Japanese and two others cut with broken bottles. Two Men To End Winston-Salem, Sept. 7. —Drinking laudanum as the means of shaking off the troubles and cares of life seems to be an epidemic here. The other day a young white fellow named Luco Sat terfleld tried this method of suicide and was only saved after the hardest kind of work on the part of the physi cians. Yesterday Chief of Police Thomas had a warrant for a white man named Henry Messick, charged with shooting a pistol in the city. The officers spied the man, who ran into a tobacco ware house., The officer found him, however, and started to the police with him. He smelled laudanum on the prisoner and immediately suspected that the fellow had taken some of the stuff. At first the prisoner denied it, but finally ad mitted that he had purchased an ounce vial showing that he drank that much. By the time he could be gotten to the station house he had gone to sleep, but a physician was at hand and ad ministered to him. Two big negroes were called in and he was brought around after several hours' work. Messick and Satterfleld are both in jail and will be given a hearing sometime today. Col. F. H. Fries and family returned yesterday from a trip abroad, having spent the past year in Europe, Asia and Africa. The trip was taken in the interest of Col. Fries' health and his many friends throughout the state will | be pleased to learn that it is greatly improved. •. Opposed Skyscrapers New York, Sept. 7 Opposition to the building of sky scrapers was voiced vigorously at a special hearing before the commission on limitation of the height and area of buildings yesterday. George W. Dadd, president of the New York board of fire underwriters said his board was expecting a fire of uprecedented size at any time in the high, buildings. He said it was the be lief of the fire underwriters that if a fire started on the upper floor of some of the highest buildings, it could not be checked, as the water pressure is insufficient and he feared it would spread to many other high buildings, entailing an enormous loss. , His board, he said, advocated limit ing buildings entirely for office purpos es to 125 feet. Calvin Thomkins, president of the | Municipal Art society, was also in . favor of limitations. He said he be ' lieved the time was coming when sky scrapers will be demolished to make room for buildings built by the block. 4 His Fear. Philadelphia Press. "She asked me to meet her by the garden wall." "Yet you seem apprehensive?" "Yes, I'm afraid she intends to throw me over." \ The charity that begins at home Is generally too weak to travel. McAnally I It All Winston-Salem, Sept. 7.—The crimi nal libel suit instituted by State Sena tor J. C. Buxton against R. P. Mc- Anally, of Stokes couniy, was yester day amicably adjusted by the defen dant signing a retraction acceptable to the plaintiff. McAnally, who is the au thor of the libellous article against Mr. Buxton, which appeared in the Dan bury Reporter two weeks ago, was ar rested a week or more ago. He gave bond for his appearance before Col. J. C. Bessent, justice of the peace, yester day afternoon at two o'clock. When the case was called the defendant, through his counsel, C. O. McMichael, of Madison, presented a signed state ment, retracting every charge made against the defendant and voluntarily offered to pay all costs of the prosecu tion. This was acceptable to Mr. Bux ton and the warrant against McAnally was dismissed by the court. McAn nally, who is a well-known Stokes coun ty farmer, was accompanied here by his brother. Dr. McAnnally, of High Point, and his lawyer. They returned to their respective homes yesterday af ternoon. The statement signed by R. P. McAnally reads as follows: STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA Forsyth County, To the Public. —I wrote an article signed "David" which was published in the Danbury Reporter on August 22, 1907, in which I reflected upon the course of J. C. Buxton, Senator from Forsyth county, in the Legislature of 1907. I now desire of my own accord to publicly apologize to Senator Buxton for the language used by me in that communication and to retract every word of said article which in any way reflected upon him. I had reason at the time I wrote the article to make the staten -3nt which I did, and I now admit that the charge was made with out any foundation and that I had no reason to believe the charge to be true at the time I worte the article. R. P. M'ANALLY. September 6, 1907. Five Hurt In Train Wreck Helena, Ga., Sept. 7. —By the derail ment of an east bound Seaboard Air Line passenger train at Wilcox Creek, one mile from here, last night, five per sons were seriously injured, and many others slightly cut and bruised. The seriously injured are: Baggage Master Sliger; two colored mail clerks and a colored passenger, name un known. The entire train with the exception of the engine and rear coach left the track and plunged into the creek. All the cars, except the first-class coach, which was left standing on the brink of the trestle, were demolished. The cause of the accident has not yet been ascertained. HIS DREAM OF ROBBERS TRUE. Merchant Wakes up to Discover That the Fantasy of His Sleep is a Grim Reality. Chester, Pa.. Sept. 7.—Having dream ed that his place was being burglariz ed and that the intruder was trying to kill his wife, his child and himself, S. D. Wolf, who conducts a large gen tlemen's furnishing, clothing and shoe store on Baltimore avenue, in Clifton Heights woke up to find out that his dream had come true as far as the bur glary was concerned. The dar«ng burglary was committed between 3 and 4 o'clock a. m., about the time Mr. Wolf woke up from his fitful dream, the thieves effecting an entrance into the store by jimmying open the front door. The burglars secured six silver watches, one gold watch, a quantity of women's trinkets, such as rings, breast pins and bracelets; several fine suits taken from the men's clothing depart ment, a number of hats, aoout 20 pairs of shoes, a large quantity of collars, cuffs, neckties and underwear and $lO in small change from the money draw er. Miss Helen Gould Inter ested In Religious Work i New York, Sept. 7.—Miss Helen Gould accompanied by several friends, two of whom were clergymen, last night, visited in an automobile one of two gospel tent meetings near Five Points, the heart of the East Side. At one of the meetings Miss Gould and her party listened to an illustrated lecture on "Bunyan's Pilgrim's Pro gress." The tent meetings are support ed by voluntary contributions. Miss Gould is said to have given tnose in charge of the meetings a check for SIO,OOO to help them in the work. —r DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deaf ness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When .this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deaf ness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal con dition, hearing will be destroyed for -1 ever; nine cases out of ten are caused I by Catarrh, which is nothing but an 1 inflamed condition of the mucous sur- J faces. We will give One Hundred JDollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circu ]ars free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation. Norfolk, Va., Sept. 7.-Th e delegate to the Grand Aerie of Eagles, drowned at Willoughby Beach yesterday was T. D. Bell, of New York state, residing temporarily at Columbia, S. C. Earle Defe■ His New York, Sept. 6. —Ferdinand Pen ny Earle, the Orange county artist and Socialist, who has set his fellow towns- 1 men at Monroe, and other persons a gog by shipping his young wife and ;l their' little son, Harold, off at Europe, 1 so that he may obtain the freedom he 1 needs to marry another woman, has ' written tn the World a lengthy de fense of his action. He says: ! 1 "There is nothing brutal or immoral, 1 in our whole affair, except the attitude' 1 of the papers, wh:ch a: e the helplessly, 1 and hopelessly senseless and harm ful servants of exploited millions." I Tarles says he received a letter' from Mrs. Earle, mailed when the steamer Ryndam, upon which she and her child are traveling, was off Sondy. Hook. She wrote, Earle said, that she was content and would be happy when all publicity attending the affair was over. Earle's Wife-to-Be Tries To Explain Her Position New York, Sept. 7. —Miss Julia Kut tner, the young woman whom Ferdi nand Pinney Earle,. the artist-socialist, desires to marry after a divorce shall have been granted his wife, who is now on her way back to France with their little son, is quoted in a published interview today aa saying: "I am not an interloper. I have not come between this man and his wife. 1 Mrs. Earle is not a martyr. This day I would gladly give him up, for duty's sake, although he is the only man I have ever loved, if the wife would consent. But she will not. It was she ( who urged me to try to fill the need • in his life which she admits she has been unable to meet." Miss Kuttner said further that she came over from Europe and went to the Earle's home solely to effect a rec onciliation between Mr. and Mrs. Earle. Earle, Miss Kuttner added, had told her they were not happily mar ried. Miss Kuttner is now in retirement in the Orange, N. J., mountains with a i brother. Meanwhile Earle who manifests a strong desire to set himself right in , the eyes of the public and to be allow- j ed to return unmolested to resume his work at his home in Monroe, N. Y., has visited one of the newspapers and explained his position. He says that the prime cause of his trouble is the French system of arranging engagements under which the engaged couple are mutually ignorant of each other's real habits. Black Murder In Chicago, 111., Sept. 7.—Mrs. Fred' M. Fish, the wife of a wealthy re-' tired broker, was found murdered in" her home at Evanst/m today. ••• Her husband, with his throat cut, was found unconscious on the floor of the bed-room in which her body was lying. The opinion of the police is that Fish murdered his wife and then at-j tempted suicide. Mr. and Mrs. Fish were heard by neighbors in a violent altercation latei last night, and it is believed Fish} arose early, and after discharging al shot gun into his wife's head, hacked' her in a horrible fashion with a butcher's clever. j The servant girl In the house de clared she heard the report of a shot gun and the cleaver, with which Mrs. Fish was mangled, was found lying beside the bed. IN DIRE DISTRESS Alexander Fraser Faces Want, Though he Was Once Rich. New York, Sept. C. —Dr. Alexander Fraser who had a lucrative practice in Providence, R. 1., only two years ago, has been found seriously ill and in want in a shanty on the Brooklyn water front. The physician, who is 30 years of age, was graduated with honors from the University of Pennsylvania, and soon built up a fine practice in Provi dence and Riverside, R. I. Two years ago his wife became ill and had to be taken to a private sanitarium. After that the health of the physician also began to fail and he was gradually forced to givo up his practice. Recently he came to Brooklyn and secured employment with a fuel com pany as clerk, but his poor health was a handicap that could not be overcome. DEATH -F MRS. CHANN. Was a Member of One of the State's Most Prominent Families. Salisbury, N. C., Sept. 7.—Mrs. Caro line Chann died early ( this morning at the home of her daughter, Miss Sallie, of this city. Mrs. Chann was 90 years of age and was a member of one of the most dis tinguished and oldest families of the state. She was recognized as one of the loading women of Rowan county, j SAVED HER SON'S LIFE. The happiest mother in the little town of Ava, Mo., is Mrs. S. Ruppee. She writes: "One year ago my son was down with such serious lung trouble that our physician was unable to help him; when, by our druggist's advice, I began giving him Dr. King's New Discovery, and I soon noticed improvement. I kept this treatment up for a few weeks when he was perfectly well. He has worked steadily since at carpenter work. Dr. King's New Discovery saved his life." Guaranteed best cpugh and cold cure by C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin & Co, druggists. 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottle free. No, Maude dear, when a woman wears a train it isn't necessary that she should wear a switch. Two Large Companies In Receivers Hands j Chicago, Sept. 6. —A dispatch to the Tribune from Mottoon, 111., says: The Mattoon City railway and the Central Illinois Traction company were put in the hands of a receiver yester day. The application was made by the Colonial Trust and Savings bank of Chicago, and judge Craig of the circuit court named VV. T. Avey, cashier of the Mattoon Savings bank, receiver. | While the receivership was granted | on a judgment for $5,150 confessed by the companies in Charleston, the coun ' ty seat, and held by the Colonial Trust company, the motion will act as a ' protection to the Central Illinois Rrac | lion company, the interburban line ' between here and Charleston, against damage suits which are expected to be filed against that company on ac count of the wreck last Friday, in which 17 passengers were killed and 45 injured. In case of a property in the hands of a receiver suits cannot be brought without the permission of the court, and while this is generally granted, the receivership prevents trouble by making attachment suits and other vexatious actions impossible. The interburban line runs from Mattoon to Charleston, a distance of 1G miles. It connects with the Mattoon City railway and owns it. The companies are bonded to the amount of $500,000 under two mortgag es, one for $350,000 and one for $l5O, 000. Judge Montgomery 111-Hearing Delayed Washington, D. C., Sept. 6. —Owing ( to an attack of acute Indigestion Judge Montgomery, master in chan cery before whom the hearing in the North Carolina rate case, to de ! termine the constitutionality of Nortfi ■ Carolina rate legislation is being held, this mornin's session of inquiry was postponed. Judge Montgomery was taken with ■ an attack of acute indigestion while in North Carolina last week, but he , came here yesterday and, against j the advice of his physician, cori- J ducted the hearing. He was feeling so unwell when the hour set lor , this morning arrived that he was [ compelled to postpone the inquiry. , 3„pa lanDetaoin shrdlu hrdlurscscc Cured Hay Fever and Summer Cold. A. J. Nusbaum, Batesville. Indiana, writes: "Last year I suffered for three months with a summer cold so distressing that it interfered with myj business. I had many of the sym-j toms of hay fever, and a doctor's j prescription did not reach the case, and I took several medicines which. seemed to only aggravate my case. I Fortunately I insisted upon having Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellow: package, and it quickly cured me. M-y I. wife has since used Foley's Honey ■'and Tar with the same success." i W. S. Martin & Co. Charters Issued Today. f Raleigh, N. C., Sept. 6—Charters ' were issued today for the General Tex- j tile Co., of Charlotte, with a capital of; S $125,000 authorized, for the handling | "iof machinery and mill supplies. In-j ' corporators, C. J. Brown, A. C. Hutch-' 7 ison and others, of one share each. j 5 1 Stanley Cotton Oil Co., of Norwaad,' ' with a capital of $25,000. I | j The Fairfield Shooting Club, of High 5 Point, with a capital of SIO,OOO, by Jno. l , Armstrong, and others. I The North State Cotton Co., of Gas tonia, with a capital of SIOO,OOO, by C. ■' H. Marshall, W. P. Strange and oth • crs. » The New Pure Food and Drug Law. We are pleased to announce that Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs, j , colds and lung troubles is not affect ed by the National Pure Food and Drug law as it contains no opiates r or other harmful drugs, and we re -1 commend it as a safe remedy for > children and adults. W. S. Martin & » Co. r There is scarcely anything that will f get a woman talked about more than ' for her neighbors not to be able to i discover what it is. 3 Often a man imposes on himself i when he taxes his memory. r ) Many a family tree is fiyiitless. f - j Over-il/ork Weakens Your Kidneys. 3 . Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood, Ml the b'ood in your body passes '.nrough /our kidneys once every three minutes. b The kidneys are your {to blood purifiers, they fil j) ter out the waste or >- •$5' impurities in the blood, t M tney are sick or out ■> V* °' orc * cr ' they fail to do \r \ l^eir WOf k* 3 It 1 Pains, aches and rheu i- I f Jjl matism come from ex —Kf7** cess of uric acid in the „ blood, due to neglected kidney trouijje. Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is e over-working in pumping thick, kidney ;. poisoned blood through veins and arteries, n j It used to be considered that only urinary g. troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, e j but now modern science proves ;hat nearly g ; all constitutional diseases have their begin s ning in kidney trouble. rt If you are sick ;-vu can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraord.nary effect of Dr. Kilmer's s • Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is d soon realized. It stands the highest fo; its r - j wonderful cures of the most distressing cases "! and is sold on its merits e by all druggists in fifty- and one-dollar siz il You may have a j jample bottle by mail Homo of swamp-Root. • tree, also pamphlet telling y-u how to find n out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. ,t Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer k Co., Binghamton, N. Y. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which 1 has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of - and has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy* Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and * 4 Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children —Experience against Experiment* What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. It relieves WGetlxing Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep* The Children's/Panacea —The Mother's Friend* CENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS /J Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. ' THC CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET. NEW VORR OITV. The "Silent Treatment" Causes Open Trouble New York, Sept. 0. —"Silent treat meut" of a plebo at West Point, it is stated in dispatches received here, has ( resulted in a clash between the plebe. class and the commandant at the mili tary academy, Col. Robert Lee Howe, J! which threatens to deplete the suply of United States army officers four years hence, for Col. Howe issued an order two days ago to the effect that unless the cadet was relieved entirely of the • "treatment" he would dishororably di - cliarge the entire class. j A cadet, the son of a wealthy Chica go man, is the young man around ,whom the troubl centers. He is a plebe and, it is stated, received the "silent treatment" not only from his own class, but from the cadets in the other classes, because of a complaint' he is alleged to have made when he was mildly hazed by a fellow class- j man. The treatment accorded the ca det reached the commandant by some means and caused him to threaten the dismissal unless it was stopped. The cadets, it is understood, have determined to remain firm in their at titude so that interesting developments are likely. Washington, D. C., Sept. G. —If Colo nel Howze commandant of the cadets of West Point, threatened to dismiss the whole class of cadets because some members had sent one of the number to ."Coventry," he over rated his au thority, according to officials of the war department, for the power of dis missal in such cases is not confined to any official of lower rank than the president himself. The war department does not believe that Colonel Howze went to this length. Young married people and old ones, too, That have no children to laugh and i coo, Find their troubles will "little ones" be |> If they take Rocky Mountain Tea. E. B. Menzics. News of Death Was Received By Cable Concord, N. C., Sept. C. —Mr. John G. Scherf, of this city, received a cable gram of 20 words from his father in Germany, telling of the tragic death of his sister and brother-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Brown and Miss Gertrude Brown, all of whom were killed in an automobile wreck in Switzerland. They were on their honeymoon through southern Germany and Switzerland, i The young couple had been maried on ly four weeks. Dr. Brown was driving the car, ov er which lie lost control while round ing a curve down a mountain and the car struck a wall about four feet high and went down a 100-foot embankment all being killed instantly. Dr. Brown was a surgeon in the Germany army. Mental Anguish Suit. Winscton-Salem, N. C., Sept. C. — The Western Union will have one suit at least to defend because of the re cent strike. Mr. J. W. Shepherd, through his attorney, Mr. F. T. Bald win, has instituted a mental anguish suit against the company for $2,000. The plaintiff alleges in his complaint that he recently filed telegrams to rela tives at Statesville and Elmwood, no tifying them of the death of his wife According to the complaint the mes sages were mailed to the parties and that they did not receive the messages until after the burial of Mrs. Shepherd. FOUND AT LAST. J. A. Harmon, of Lizemore, West Va., says: "At last I have found the perfect pill that never disappoints me; and for the benefit of others afflicted with torpid liver and chronic constipation, will say: take Dr. King's New Life Guaran teed satisfactory. 25c at C. M. Shu ford and W. S. Martin & Co., drug gist. Husband Dead: Wife Brazil, Ind., Sept. 6—Dr. Edward Glasgo is dead from bullet holes through his head and his wife is slightly wounded, as a result of mys terious shooting last night. Glasgo and his wife had separated, Glasgo applying for a divorce. Mr. Glasgo, acompanied by Attorney Charles Whitlock, drove to the brick plant where Glasgo was to try to ar range a settlement of alimony. Whitlock got out of the buggy and Glasgo got in and started to drive back to the city whe nthe shooting occurred. The woman was placed under arrest, charged with the murder of her hus band. Attorney Whitlock is also held. Mrs. Glasgo says her husband tried to shoot her and then shot himself^ Glasgow's wounds are such that the physicians say he could not have in llicted them himself. Sent Colt 1' ~ ~lar.d. New York, Sept. C,- i .iu $15,000 bay colt Medlar —Won by Waiting retained by Clarence 11. Mackay, head of the Postal Telegraph company at the sale of Mr. Mackay's Kingston stud year lings at Sheepshead Day, will be sent to England, to be entered in the great English races. The Derby, the 2,000 guineas and the St. Leger. The colt will be trained by the noted English horsemen. Sam Darling and will run in I Mr. Mackay's name. This step will mark Mr. Mackay's active reputation ■of racing from which lie retired at the death of his father a few years ago. NEW FARMERS UNION « Chicago, Sept. G. —Chicago i 3 to be the future home of the International Union of Farmers orzaizations. The Producers and Consumers International Equity Union and Cooperative Ex change in the title of the new central body. It is proposed to make the constitu tion so broad that all present organi zations among the farmers can affiliate with the new central bqdy. NOTICE? ' We want every man and women in % United States Interested in the cure oi i)pium. Whiskey or other drug habit*} jit her for themselves or friends, to ha> sne of Dr. Woolley's books on these di» 1 aases. Write Dr. B. M. Woolley Atlant® 3a., Box 2.87, and one will besent you Ifef) K ILL THE clou CH r> l AND CURE THE LUNCS King's ! Ntw Wm l „ /¥(KSU3IPT!ON 'Pricfl 1 S FOR 8 OUGHSaftd 50c & SI.OO 1 1 ISOLDS Free Trial. \ If Surest - and Q.uickuat Cure for all i I THROAT and LUNO TltOtfß- J or MONEY BACK. f HAIR R BALSAM ftnd tcxatifie# the huf. Promote* m luxuriant growth. ■HNn- . W Never Fail# to Kestoro Orayf HlKllf -jMM Hair to its Youthful Color. 1 ~ Xtree uotueor Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup will be sent to any reader of this paper who will write to the Thachf Medicine Co.. Chattanooga, Tenn. The family medicine in thousands of homes for 52 years—Dr. Thacher's and Blood Syrup. Women find quicV rcliciin "Ztr . ihaclier's Liver und lilood Syrup.
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 12, 1907, edition 1
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