Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / Sept. 19, 1907, edition 1 / Page 3
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WASTING STRENGTH I Women who suffer from unnecessary, disagreeable, painful, weakening, female complaints, will find that Wine oi Cardui is a safe and pleasant rei~*dy for all their ills. It acts directly upon all the delicate, inflamed t;>" puiifying the blood, throwing off the clogging r Ii: ,; and relieving female disorders such as irregular, scanty, profuse, painfu! catamenia, prolapse, etc. Al-'O relieves headache, backache, dizziness, cr:irop s » dragging pains, nervousness, irritability, etc. If you need advice, write us a letter, telling us dl your symptoms. We will send free advice (in plain sealcvi envelope). Address: Ladies' Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT IN $l.OO BOTTLES '•I WROTE YOU ... jnJ !-y Mllo.vinK i' and ; , a . is'eai.ile Troubles .Virs. I'. S. Wall ice. Jl2 NEW INDUSTRIES 11ZED AT UIAJ.C. Gastonia. X. C., Sept. 14. —In Gas tonia. a? in all of Gaston county, it seems that cotton mills, like mush room?, spring up in a night. Last night in an office of the Citizens' Na tional Bank the Dunn Manufacturing Company was organized, capital stock to bo Jl'trt.ooo. Messrs. C. B. Arm strong and W. T. Rankin are the principal stockhodlers. A charter has been applied for and as soon as it is gr:inT'»l officers of this new industry will bo elected. Death of Mr. Baker. Mr. P. S. Baker, a prominent mill man ot Baker's Mill, and King's Moun tain. died at his home at King's Mountain and was buried with Mason ic honors yesterday. Operatives Walk Out. Operatives of the Loray Mill walk ed out this morning on a strike. The demand is for GO hours a week in stead of the GC as heretofore. Part of the machinery are running as usual, although over 400 operatives are idle. New Cotton Company. TV North State Cotton Company of Gastonia, has applied for a char ter to organize a $lOO,OOO business here. Mr. C. K. Marshall will have thf business in charge. The two passenger trains run by the C. & X. W. Railroad, which were put on to accommodate the summer travelers, will be taken off Sunday. They will be groatlv missed by the traveling public, as this leave us only two passenger trains a day, one northbound and the other south. Charged With Bigamy. J. E. Narrowood was tried on the charge of bigamy and sent to jail. A few weeks ago Xarrowood married -Miss Abide Griggs. It was learned a few days ago that he had a wife' living .-it Moor* sville, N. C. Mr. 1.. L. Hardin, cashier of the Fanners' Bank at Rocky Mount, has accepted a position here as book-; keeper for the Arlington Mill. Bank' Examiner Aycock of Greenville, N. t'.. will sucee:l him in the bank. An unusually i>ig crowd was in' attendance at court at Dallas this, j Engagement Announced. Yesterday afternoon at her home on Marietta ,-treet Mrs. D. A. Page, an nounced at a beautifully appointed luncheon the engagement of Miss Kninia Page and Mr. Joseph Lee Uhoiles. The marriage is to take place m thi First Presbyterian church in •November. Miss Page is the oldest '"inghler or Mr. and Mrs J. E. Page nud i ono () f the most charming and :iceo!ii|disli«-ii of Gastonia's native •lauyl:!.-,s. M r . Rhodes is a prominent iiisiuess man of birmingham, Ala., and to he congratulated. At n called meeting of the Gastonia n:a;,'er of l*. D. C., Mesdames L. L. •Hikvnr., and I?. L. Swann were elected M lK'.it, to the convention at Greens- Po' i"' 1 rs * Spark and Mrs. ■ I'alls as alternates. New Companies Chartered Hair X. c., Sept. 14.—TheLeisel |"r '■«»., of Charlotte, files with the srr :et;n yof Ktute an amendment for is charter, changing the place of ~ from Charlotte to Greensboro. ' Ui '"' I-' isel is president of the cor onation. A charter is issued for the Huck ' /ry Springs Co., of Durham, at a S 100,000 by W. C. Bradsher j' " ot li | S j or development of and mineral lands and of min ■ Ming:;. Also the operation of ~"V"'l !lf ' r 'barter to the DeSota Land ' i.iiiiiber Co., of Red Springs, at '>f s:uin.ooo by J. C. Wil - P. Williams and others. WORKFO LIKE A CHARM. sr,"' 1 '* Walker, editor of that y'j'- "irnal, the Enterprise, Louisa, la t : 1 ran a nall Jn my foot lei • V K :iru ' a t once applied Buck fr.ii ' An,ica Salve. No inflammation MN) * 4 i i . i i - ' salve simply healed the j.,! 1 "" 1 ' Heals every sore, burn and 1,1 disease. Guaranteed at C. M. ' i'l and W. S. Martin & Co's, ru L'gl.sts. 7 CARDUI WILL VOTE RAIL ROAD BONDS Asheville, N. C., Sept. 14.—There is now every assurance that the coun ties in western North Carolina,through which the projected South Atlantic & Trans-Continental railroad will pass, will vote public aid bonds for the con struction of the new road. Following the action of Henderson and Transylvania last Monday, and that of Buncombe on Tuesday, the county on Wednesday approved the plans of the South Atlantic and Trans continental Railroad company, endors ed the proposition to vote public aid at the rate of $3,000 per mile, and di rected the formal call for a popular election on October 17th. This means that there is a practical certainty that western North Carolina is to have a through competing line of railroad, which will tap the Tennes see coal fields in Tennessee, connect ing in that state with the Louisville & Nashville railroad and in the east with the Seaboard Air Line. It is expected that construction work wil begin im mediately npon completion of the bond issues, and pushed with vigor. A large number of state convicts will be used in the construction, in pay ment for which the state will take bonds in the road. The charter of the new railroad contains a stipulation that it cannot be sold to, or absorbed by a competing road. Asheville thus secures another rail road outlet, which will materially as sist the industrial projects which the board of trade and Merchants' Associa tion of this city have been actively pushing for some time. Kaiser Wilhelm Gave King Of Siam Fourteen Dogs New York, Sept. 14. —The Kaiser Wilhelm, says a Berlin dispatch to . the Sun, has an amusing and expen sive experience in remembering the i King of Siam's birthday. The king, I while the Kaiser's guest, expressed admiration for the Kaiser's two in telligent little dachschunds, that fol low tneir master everywhere. When » the king //ent to Hamburg he ex ■ pressed a wish t.o # possess a similar j pair to take with him to Siam. The remark was communicated to I the Kaiser, together with the fact I that the king's birthday would occur in a few days and he gave orders to procure a number of the best speci mens of the breed and sent seven pairs for the king to choose from. The ruler of Siam was so overcome with the kindness of the Kaiser that he accepted all 14 dogs, which he will take home with him. It was only when a palace official who had been entrusted with the delivery of the dogs returned that the Kaiser learn ed the cost of the gift. He took the situation good humoredly as a joke on himself. PLAN CONVICT-BUILT ROAD. New North Carolina Link Depends Upon Public Aid. Asheville, N. C., Sept. 14.—Contin gent upon the voting of public aid bonds by Buncombe, Henderson, Hay wood, Polk and Transylvania counties, all arrangements have been perfected for building a competing* line of rail road from Rutlierfordton, in this state, where connection will be made with the Seaboard Air Line, to Knoxville, where the proposed road will con nect with the Louisville & Nashville. The identy of the bondholders is not known here, but the work of con struction will be done by the Appala-1 chian Construction Company, recently chartered here, and the builders con-1 template an expenditure of $7,000,000.' State convicts will be used in the work of construction, and the state, under an act of the legislature passed last session, will accept stock in the new company for this convict labor. Gourdain Placed in Asylum. Washington, D. C., Sept. 13.—Louis : A. Gourdain, the eccentric millionaire • convict of Chicago, who attracted much attention some time ago by the method he employed to be ad -1 mitted to the federal penitentiary at ! Joliet, 111., was delivered today to ! the Atlanta authorities to be taken to the government hospital • for In • sane here. R.OME.Y STOKY-*- The Death Of RomyStory Chapel Hill, N. C., Sept. IC.—Foot ball practice is under way with a vim. Coach Lamson has the forty candidates hard at work. Only four or five of the old men are back, but the new material looks good. Several of the old foot ball players are here in the profession al department but are ineligible on oc count of the four year rule. These ! men are assisting in coaching. A great gloom has been cast over the entire college by the death of "Warborse" Romy Story. He died with typhoid fever at his home at Blowing Rock. He was captain of both the baseball and football teams. He was an athlete of the first rank with hardly a peer in the south and few in the country. He was one of the stars in the game when Carolina beat Vir ginia 17 to 0 two years ago. He form ed a considerable part of the Tar Heel wall that in the Carolina-Penn. game last year heid the great Pennsylvania eleven down to the score of 11 to 0. The "New York Journal" dubbed him "the übiquitous Story" and such he was. In baseball he was the same— in the game all the time, without losses. He was a good fielder and a great "pinch hitter." He won five games last spring by opportune hit ting. In the Carolina-Guilford game last spring he knocekd the ball over the left field fence, —a feat accomplish ed only about once in a decade. He was as rugged and immovable as the mountains among which he was born and raised. He loomed large both on the diamond and the gridiron, but withal he was as meek and gentle as a child. In his great, stalwart breast beat a heart as kind as a wo man's. Romy Story will be missed long and deeply here at Chapel Hill. Southern athletics has lost one of its bright particular stars and the University has lost a good student and ' its best all round athlete of recent r years. I I n Memory Of Mass achusetts Soldiers Winchester, Va„ Sept. 16. —With in teresting ceremonies a monument commemorative of Massachusetts sol diers who fell in the Shenandoah Val ley during the civil war was dedicated here today. ' The Massachusetts party included Governor Guild. The party was conveyed to the na tional cemetery where the exerooises were held. Rev. Dr. J. P. Hyde and Chaplain-General Turner Ashby, of the camp of confederate veterans deliver ed the address of welcsome. Governor Guild was the prinmipal or ator. He paid a tribute to the fallen heroes of both north and south. Following the unveiling ceremonies the entire party proceeded to Stone wall cemetery, where flowers were strewn on the graves of the south's heroes. The party will leave tonight for An tietam and Gettysburg battlefields. 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 ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous sur faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circu lars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation. Yucson, Ariz., Sept. 1(5. —Sheriff Pacheco and Captain Wheeler, of the Arizona rangers, left Tucson yester day at the head of a posse of 12 rang ers and deputy sheriffs to effect the capture of John Johns, a Papage In dian at Cubo Rancheria, an Indian village, 150 miles southeast of Tucson, rhe Indian killed a Mexican. Wife Guilty of Manslaughter i Jury Recommends Mercy —Mrs. Ethel W. Blair Must Go to Penitenti ary—Faints When She Hears Verdict. Columbia, S. C., Sept. 16. —Mrs. Eth el W. Blair, charged with the murder of her husband, C. W. Blair, a conduc tor on the Columbia, Newberry & Laur ens Railroad, in January last, was yes terday convicted of manslaughter with a recommendation of mercy. Inasmuch as the verdict was not reached until noon yesterday, sentence was postponed until today. The crime for which Mrs. Blair had been con victed is punishable by from two to thirty years in the penitentiary. Mrs. Blair, who is about 30 years of age, and the mother of two chil dren, is an unusually handsome wo man and stood well in this commun ity. When she was brought into the court room there were no visible signs of the ordeal that she has just passed through, but on hearing the verdict Mrs. Blair fainted and had to be carri ed from the court room. Within an hour after the verdict Mrs. Blair had recovered sufficiently to be taken to the county jail. She had been out on bond since the killing. Special to The News. Salisbury, N. C., Sept. 16. —Salisbur- ians have been watching with interest the trial of the handsome and beauti ful Mrs. Ethel W. Blair in Columbia, S. C., charged with killing her hus band, Capt. Cullen W. Blair some six months or more ago. Mrs. Blair is a former resident of this city, her fath er moving here when she was a mere child. Her father was a Lutheran min ister. She and Captain Blair were mar ried in this city. Captain Blair has a sister residing here now, Mrs. R. Lee Mahaley. Rev. Guery Consecrated Bishop Coadjutor Columbia, S. C., Sept. 16. —Rev. W. A. Guerry was yesterday consecrated bishop coadjutor of the South Carolina Episcopal diocese, the services taking place in Trinity church, this city, in the presence ot a distinguished gath ering, representing all sections of the state. The commission of bishops tak ing part in the ceremony were as follows: The Rt. Rev. Daniel S. Tuttle, D. D., presiding bishop; the Rt. Rev. Ed win G. Weed, D. D. bishop of Flor ida; the Rt. Rev. Joseph B. Ches hire, D. D., bishop of North Caro lina. The presenters: The Rt. Rev. Theodore D. Bratton, D. D., bishop of Mississippi; the Rt. Rev. Robert Strange, D. D., bishop of eastern North Carolina. The preacher: the Rt. Rev. Thomas F. Gal lor, D. D., bishop of Ten nessee. Priests attending: The Rev. John Kershaw, D. D., the Rev. A. R. Mich ell, the Rev. W. B. Gordon, the Rey. H. P. Covington, the Rev. H. J. Mikell. Master of ceremonies: The Rev. A. H. Noll, treasurer of the University of the South; registrar, the Rev. A. S. Thomas, of Florence. Bishop Ellison Capers, of the diocese of South Carolina was unable to at tend the service because of a recent se vere illness. Bishop Guerry, formerly chaplain of the University of the South, is a native of South Carolina. His father has for many years been a clergyman in this diocese, and he ws born in Clarendon county, this state, in 1861. He was prepared for College at Por ter Military Academy in Charleston, and in 1881 entered the University of the South, graduating in 1884 with the degree of M. A. For one year he serv ed as tutor in the Porter school, re turning then to Sewanee to enter the theological department, receiving the degree of B. D. As a clergyman, he served in St. John's church, Florence, S. C., and while there was married to Miss Annie Mcßee, of Lincolnton, N. C. In 1593 he was elected chaplain of the University of the South and professor of the theological department in which double capacity he has since remained, making himself felt as a power in the institution and endearing himself to all those interested in Se wanee. Cassie Chadwick Striken Blind In Penitentiary Columbus, Ohio, Sept. 16. —Mrs. Cas sie Chadwick, the noted witch of fin ance, who, posing as Andrew Carneg ie's natural daughter, swindled Ohio and eastern banks and capitalists out of millions in loans on bogus securi ties, was stricken with nervous col lapse at the penitentiary which has left her blind. Her condition is serious and it is the opinion of the prison physicians that she will never live to serve out her sentence. 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 notiped 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 cough and cold cure by C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin & Co, druggists. 50c and $l.OO. Trial bottle free. Frosted cakes —ice. Had 18 Tilts With R New York, Sept. 16. —Wolf Fish, who keeps a saloon on a street in the East Side, when informed by detectives that his place had been broken into by safeblowers, expressed no surprise whatever. In fact, he told the police later that he would have been surpris ed had no attempt not been made to rob his saloon this year. In the last eleven years he has had no less than 18 encounters with burglars. He had been chloroformed, drugged, choked, shot at, stabbed and beaten, and now he is congratulating himself that he was not in the saloon when the latest attempt was made to loot it. The burglars got only $39 this time for they were scared adal by a police man just as they were preparing to get to work upon the safe. They were pro vided with the mot elaborate set of cracksman's appliances that the police ever sow. Indeed, they were so heavy that the robbers had to abandon them. The police say the tools are worth fully $5OO. The cafe contained a considera ble amount of jewelry and cash. All that they did get was from the till. The police have arrested four sus pects. __________________ t Constantive on Trial For Murder of Mrs. Gentry Chicago, Sept. 1C. —Frank J. Con stantine was arraigned in the criminal court on the charge of murdering Mrs. Louise Gentry. It is claimed by the state that Con stantine cut the throat of the woman for some reason which has never yet been discovered. He was the subject of a strenuous chase which embraced the greater part of the civilized globe and was finally arrested in New York just as he was about to take a steamer for Europe. His arrest was not made until a year after Mrs. Gentry was killed. The length to which the state has gone in working up the case against Constantine was shown by the pres ence in court of Mr. David J. Doherty, the only person who saw Mrs. Gentry between the time of receiving her in jury and her death, i Doherty is in the government ser vice and is stationed in the Philippines. He was brought from there to give his testimony in the trial. He occupied the apartment below that which Mrs. Gentry lived, and it was to his door that she staggered, with her throat cut. She died while he was attempting ; to save her life. Cured Hay Fever ar.d 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 my business. I had many of the sym toms of hay fever, and a doctor's prescription did not reach the case, and I took several medicines which seemed to only aggravate my case. Fortunately I insisted upon having • Foley's. Honey and Tar in the yellow package, and it quickly cured me. My wife has since used Foley's Honey and Tar with the same success." W. S. Martin & Co. First tar Run Through New Belmont Tunnel 1 New York, Sept. 16.—The first car will be run through the north tube of the New Belmont tunnel, under East River, today. The car will be taken from the barns at Woodside, L. 1., to the tunnel entrance at the extreme end of Fourth street, Long Island City, and then shifted from the railway tracks to the tunnel by means of an especially constructed pontoon tracks. The New Pure Food and Drug Law. We are pleased to announce that Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs, colds and lung troubles is not affect ed by the National Pure Food and Drug law as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we re commend it as a safe remedy for children and adults. W. S. Martin & Co. Raleigh, N. C., Sept. 16.—0n next Tuesday at noon there will be cele brated the marriage of Miss Katrine McGee Smith and Mr. Edgar W. Bar bee at the residence of the bride's parents, on Hillsboro street. Over-Work Weakens Vour Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the blood 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 cess 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 ia 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 lhat nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning in kidney trouble. If you are sick yvu can make no mistake by first dc 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 Us wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits jy ail druggists in fifty cent and one-dollar siz 4*. You may have a lam pie bottle by mail Hon.b of Swamp-Roo». tree, also pamphlet telling y~u how to find cut if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer It Co., Bingham ton, N. Y. I fetrnmSy I til AVfegetable Preparationfor As similating the Food andßegula- $$ ling the Stomachs andßowels of JJ| Promotes Digeslion.Cheerful- i ness and Rest.Contains neither j Opium, Morphine nor>lineral. j KOTNAHCOTIC. of Old LrSAMUEL PITCHKR Pumpkin. Seat' « 4lx. Senna. * 1 RvMUSJit- 1 Jtaige Seal *■ I /ifpennutt - ) BiCurbonaicSt&t* 1 \ tiatfitd Sugar I Mfhtuynen. Flavor. / Aperfect Remedy forCqpstipa- ill Ron, Sour Stoinach.Diarrhoea |H Worms .Convulsions .Feverish - ft ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature or NEW YORK. II gg EXACT COPY OF WRAPPL'R. y Crowds Take Look At Steamer Lusitania New York, Sept. 16. —The big Cunar der, the Lusitania, continues to he an object of great interest. Though the j public is not admitted on board her,' an enormous and constantly changing | crowd keeps the open space about i Pier 54, where she lies, thronged from early morning until dusk. Only a taw people who were fortunate enough to have passes were permitted to go upon the giant steampship. A hundred po licemen were required at the pier, but • they had little to do for the sightseers j were most orderly. Fruit and lemon- j ade hawkers made the occasion a prof table, but the most rushing business was the sale of souvenir flags of the ship. Every object on her was sub jected to such scrutiny as the police lines would permit and comment and guesses as to dimensions were varied and often amnsing. Vernon H. Brown, general manager, and agent of the Cunard Steamship Company in this country, issued a statement in reply to cable dispatches from Hamburg quoting shipping men there that the result of the Lusitania's passage was disappointing. Mr. Brown said that the Cunard line considered that the Lusiatnia had developed all the speed she was called upon to do. He added: "The hasty adverse criti cisms of our German friends might cause a suspicion that the wish was father to the truth." Killed By An Automobile. New York, Sept. 16. —Daniel Bacon, manager of the Marine Magnetic Con-j trol Company, cf this city, was struck by a sight-seeing automobile at the. corner of Tirty-first street and Park av enue as he was about to cross the street and was knocked senseless. He died subsequently at a hospital. Mr. Bacon was 54 years old and un married. He had been manager of the Marine Magnetic Control Company for some years. He was also an inventor. He leaves a brother, H. E. Bacon, of Spokane, Wash., a lumber merchant. His father died recently in Portland, Mo. Young married people and old ones, too, That have no children to laugh and coo, Find their troubles will "little ones" be If they take Rocky Mountain Tea. E. B. Menzies. Two Persons Killed; Two Fatally Wounded Pittsburg, Kan., Sept. 16. —At Crowe berg, a mining camp in the northern part of this county, last night, two per sons were killed and two fatally wound ed, as the result of a grudge held by Italian miners of the district against the mine boss. Charles Gardner, the mine boss, and his sister, Mrs. George Rexford, were waylaid on a lonely road while return ing home, by a number of Italians and shot and fatally wountled. Gardner re turned the fire and shot and killed two Italians whose names are unknown. 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 Pills*" Guaran teed satisfactory. 25c at C. M. Shu ford and W. S. Martin & Co., drug gist. Victim of Black Hand. Denver, Col., Sept. 16.—Geordardo Carnivala, an Italian, was shot and killed while returning to his home in the outskirts of the city from the Ital ian quarter, where he had spent Sun day. * He is believed to be a victim of the Blanck Hand of the Sicilian ven detta. CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the g » Signature / /IJi t\ yr' &$> Use U" For Over Thirty Years CASIORIA THC CENTAUR COMMNT, NEWVOHK OITV. Annual Convocation of Raleigh To Convene Raleigh, N. C., Sept. IG.—The an nual convocation of Ualeigli will con vene Tuesday evening with Christ Church, the convocation comprising the Episcopal congregations contigu ous to Raleigh and Wake and adja cent counties. The attendance of both clergy and laity is expected to be large. Rt. Rev. James Blount Cheshire, bishop of North Carolina, will preside and a number of distinguished clergy will attend. On Thursday morning the convoca tion will, participate in the opening of St. Mary's Schooi for the fall term, this being the parochial college for North and South Carolina. FINE HORSE STOLEN Simple Honor Missing From Stables — Probably Stolen. New York, Sept. 1T —-When the sta bleman in charge cf iii • >.°lssa at Belmont Jark v.'o;:: to Hie stable in which Simple Honours, an imported four-year-old cold was kept, they found him missing. It is feared that the colt has been stolen. The police of Lens Island City were notified byt have not obtained a clue to the whereabouts of the horse. Simple Honours is a bay colt by Ra conteur-E Affluence. He won two races last year. His first was at Saratoga, where he defeated Hclseher. Later he won the Brighton cup. His second vic tory was in the Hotel Caswell cup at Baltimore in a race for gentlemen rid ers. Child Bitten by Dog. Raleigh, N. C„ Sept. IG. Little Gor don Howell, the six year-old son of A. A. Howell, was terribly bitten last night on HilLboro street by a bull dog. The little fellow was playfully strik ing I he dog with a stick when it sprang upon him, tearing a piece of flesh from the side of the little fellow.'s nose. There will doubtless be? an ugly scar left when the wound heals. NOTICE? ' "We want every man and women in CTnited States interested in the cure of Dpium, Whiskey or other drug sither for themselves or friends, to ha'Vt sneof Dr. Woolley's books on these dl« aases. Write Dr. B. M. Woolley Atlanta 3a., Box 281, and una will be sent you £*t) KILLTHE COUCH*] AHO CURE THE LUMCS! ~~ wT ™ Br. New Discovery ? /fO'iSUMFTiON Price k SFfIR S OI!GH3a:.J S9cftsl.oLS | U OLUS Free Trial - I t«i .—ill i MH»mi»innu | Surest and Cure lor all ■ | THROAT and LUIJG THOUB- I J LES, cr LIONEY BAUK. f WBtM HAIR R 3ALSAM &nd beautities the hah'. «£ promotes a laxu.iant growth. |Hr : - Never Fails to Beetoro Oray{ EgKwJL* Hair to its Youthful Color. ' ■vSffife , fll Curte scalp diseases ft hair falliug. ( JOe.md Pruggirt. I Alree uonieot Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup will be sent to any reader of this paper who will write to the Thache*" Medicine Co.. .hattanooga, Tenn. The family medicine in thousands oi homes for 52 years—Dr. Thacher's and Blood Syrup. '.Vouien find quicV rciicirz. L>f .ihacher'a Liver :_i.d Ulood Syrup.
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1907, edition 1
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