Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / Oct. 3, 1907, edition 1 / Page 3
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I le Operation-! Mrs. Malinda Akers, of Basham, Va„ writes: I " l il: ; what doctors call 'Prolapse,' and couldn't stand straight. I had pain in my back and shoulders, and was very irregular and profuse i),».-tors said an operation was needed, but i 5 eouiuii t bear the thought of the knife. After tak ing three bottles of Wine of Cardui, I could walk I :ir V !!ni }i j health anc * am in Cirdui is a pure, vegetable, medicinal essence, esvcially adapted to cure women's diseases It relievos excessive periodical pains, regulates insularities, and is a . " SB site, pleasant and re- FREE ADVICE 1 hio remedy for all Wrl,e us • '«««• describing a u . , J • your symptoms, and we will send you oj-; women. !n Slic- Advi f e - In plain sealed envelope. / • t Addre ss .- Ladies' Advisory Department. J use for over /0 The Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chatta "J'Y j£ nooga. Tenn. At Every Drug Store In SI.OO Bottles. 1 EABDm*^ Dr. Thomas L. Rowland And Wife Now on Trial For Alleged Murder Effort is to Be Made to Prove Rowland Was "Dr. Jekvll And Mr. Hvdc" in Real Life. Great Interest in Famous Trial -Progress Made To-day—Full Story OJ Alleged Black Murder of Engineer Strange. Raleigh. X. C.. Sept. CO.—The mur der trial of widespread interest is scheduled to begin 'acre today when Dr. Thomas L. Rowland and his sec ond wife, the widow of Charles K.. Strange, a locomotive engineer, are to foe the charge of having murder ed Strange by poison so that they might wed. An (»;!'■>rt will he made to prove that Dr. Rowland was "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" in real life, and that to all appearances he led an exemplar existence, while secretly making a study of deadly poisons and plot in? murder. He was even arrested on the charge of having poisoned his own child to .get some insurance money, but lie was lot go because the chemists could find no trace of poi jon. A special venire has been drawn for the jury. Empaneling Jury Begun. The trial of Dr. David S. Roland and wife.. Liiiian Rowland, for poisoning Mr*. R .v.!:;:id's former husband, Engi neer C. R. Strange, of the Seaboard Air Lin. began this morning before Jni!?.' Long, the greater part of the (lav l;ejtjg taken up with the selection of the jury. The judge declined to defer the trial tv'n a f x hours because of the ab sence of witnesses, and forced the •'fa" l counsel to proceed at once. i prison- .-re looked well, showing prar-tif ally no bad effects from their Jr,n s imprisonment. The empaneling of the jury was * • All the regular jurors and more U:n > of the special venire of one a nd fifty men had been stood •> l ie. Only one juror was accepted uy 'he state and even he is standing •j '-iianco (if being stood aside when the ■ !v '!" ns " s to pass on the jury in j 1 1' lialf. Many were rejected be-1 '■"!.■(• 'ley had expressed their opinion ] as to the prisoners guilt. Five Jurors Chosen, oiiri took a recess at 1:15 o'clock' !" '' 1!uu '' w 'iiii five juorors accepted; J 'he state and defense and only 50 ' 1,10 • pecial venire remain to be Passed on. venires may be necessary t„ ! - ' UI - V w " hardly be completed a r' ,!l ; : ; lio " s made up that the prisoners e giiuty was the principal cause for 6ta n(linsjiu. jurors aside. 10 ORGANIZE STATE LEAGUE. Prominent Baseball Men To Meet For r 3anization of State League. a ni! •' ' 1; Sc,,t - 30 -—There will be "f r . r ' on October 10 ('III •'?" llf:,tive s from different cities lii-i'V : i" ~rs an"ize the North Caro •■iseliail League to be composed Sali '• lisi " ,m - Raleigh, Charlotte,- Hi ; i, / inston 'Salem, Durham and | iiiini , " lt ' :l . n '' ' s Probable that a '"ill ia South Carolina, p').;"'' :sl to join the organization, j Oil', '"' in, 'sraft, who has secured the cti], fli| nchise, has already be-1 !' Sl " n players for next season • .i:'i MH> material so far secure 1 'bo .' i! "' can be had in srin,,. 11 .!" l,,,f "'bo°d which has produced J'ai fi,st I'layers in the last few v 0 • " ' of.. ' n;( ' ls so jdeasant, regardless as v i ,:(,,nfoi 'ts that money will buy, f'ot " " !''° ''"tire family is in per tiv( i.v. :i ' ! *'" ~o,i le of Orine Laxa "V(| " t:osts cents. It will cure Iratii, li "." l! "' r ° r 'lie family of consti bi, s ' (1 ' headache or stomach trou u - S. Martin & Co. President Diaz To Welcome Sec. Root City of Mexico. Sept. 30. —A wel come such as no foreign visitor to Mexico ever received before has been prepared for Secretary Root and his party upon their arrival in this city this evening. Under official escort the secretary of state and his family are on their way from the border line in a special train. Arriving in the capital they will be officially re ceived by President Diaz and the members of his cabinet, high officers of the army, civic dignitaries and the governor and other representatives of the federal district. They will be escorted to Chapultepec Castle, which will be their residence while here. According to present plans, Secre tary Root will spend the remainder of this week wholly in the capital city. A round of entertainments and receptions will be given in honors of the visitors, and there will be a series of conferences between the American secretary of state and Pres ident Diaz and his official advisers. ROADS LOSE BY 2-CENT RATE. St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 27. —According to compiled statements made by offi cials of Missouri railroads the 2-cent passenger rate law has cost roads $1,500,000 in three months. The law became effective in Mis souri on June 17, and by agreement { with Attorney-General Hadley the railroads compiled with it as a test, the test to end Oct. 1. It announced that the Atchison, To peka and Santa Fe, the Wabash, the > Missouri Pacific, the Burlington, the Chicago and Alton and other trunk lines have joined the fight further en forcement of the law and will submit statements showing its effect to Fed eral Judge McPherson about Oct. 15. As to Project to Connect Siberia With Alaska New York, Sept. 27.-J. Hamilton Lewis, of Chicago, who went to Russia to investigate a project to tunnel the Behring Strait and build a railroad connecting Siberia with Alaska, re ports that he found that the Russian government has not granted a con cession for the Siberian end of the tunnell. He said that the Russian government would not make such a concession and that it is regarded by the Russians as undesirable for mili tary reasons. CRIMINAL LIBEL CHARGE Prominent Newspaper Man Arrested and on Trial. San Francisco, Sept. 2S. —Fremont ■ Older, the magazine editor of the Bul letin. and prominently connected with the graft prosecution, was arrested here today on warrants issued in Los Angeles and sworn to by Luther Brown who charges Older with criminal libel. Older was arrested and taken to Red wood City, where he was placed in charge of officer from Los Angeles. DAVIDSON BOYS HILARIOUS., Foot Ball Team to be Given Reception j in Appreciation of Good Game. I Davidson, Sept. SC.—'The wildest eu thusiasm prevails on the Davidson j ! campus as the result of Davidson s {football team and the University ofj Virginia in the football game at Char-, , lottesville, Va. Friday. j I The game was received in detail here and when it became known that | the score was 5 and s—and5 —and that Dav , idson, with a green team had held the strong Virginia eleven, one of the fin est in the south and outweighing Dav idson many pounds, everything went wild. The team returned Saturday morning. Alice—Pimples and other blotches are supposed to be caused by an acid stomach. A simple remedy and one that gives you a fresh blooming com plexion is Flollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. E. B. Menzies. . PORTS OF SPAIN DEVASTATED B¥ CBEAI FLOODS Madrid, Sept. 27.—The government announced that the wine crop in the valleys of Andalusia has been ruined by the floods. Vineyards are covered i deep with mud and great quantities of wine have been destroyed in the cellars. ' The official figures place the num bers of flood victims at 72 drowned, 68 injured. Bread Famine Feared. Malaga, Spam, Sept. 27. —A renewal of the rain is causing fresh inunda tions. Several wharves here have been swept away. Picturesque valleys are now cov ered with water and desolation reigns on all sides. This city is almost isolated and without gas or electricity. A bread famine is feared. The bodies of about 100 drowned persons have been recovered. City Inundated. Grenada, Spain, Sept. 27. —The low er quarters of the city are flooded. The water is flve feet deep in the streets. There has been much de struction of property in the surround ing country. Many houses were wrecked, a large amount of stock drowned and fields ruined. Three Men Badly Hurt In Auto. Sm New York, Sept. 28. —In the automo bile race at the Morris Park race track, L. W. Smelzer, a driver of one of the automobiles, and John Clarke, a Spectator, were badly and, perhaps, fatally injured when the car went off the track and through a fence. Number Were Injured. The car was driven by Harry Smel zer. While going over GO miles an hour crashed through a fence at the turn of the track. Smelzer was struck by a timber and his skull fractured. He was taken to the hospital in a dying condition. John Clark, one of the spectators hurt, was injured in ternally, and a boy named Fred Tape suffered a fracture of the leg. The tire on SmelzerJs machine burst and the machine swerved toward the fence where 200 people were leaning over the rail watching the race. The accident was so sudden they were un able to get away and fully 20 were knocked down and painfully hurt. Inquiry Into Books of N. Y. City Ry. to Be Resumed New York, Sept. 28. —Inquiry into the finances and business methods of the transit systems in this city, based on a thorough study of the books of the New York City Railway Com pany, the Metropolitan Securities Company and the Interboro Metre-' politan will be resumed before the public service commission on Tues day. In the course of the next few sessions it is declared, will be dis- j closed as startling as any which Chas. I E. Hughes brought out by the insur ance investigation. Wm. M. Ivens, special counsel to ,the commission has completed his scrutiny of the books of the Inter borough-Metrepolitan Securities Com pany, but he declines emphatically to discuss his discoveries and will not outline his plans for subsequent in vestigation, or talk at all about the reports of misuse of funds and sen sational discoveries which have been rife in the financial. Eight Kil In Big Wreck Bakersfield, Cal., Sept 27—In the wreck of the Southern Pacific work train, which collided with a freight near Tehachipi, last night, eight Greeks were killed and 20 injured. The crews of the trains are fugi tives, hiding in hills to save them selves from the enraged comrades of the victims who attacked the train men after the accident and threaten ed the destruction of much railroad property. A special with armed men has been dispatched to the rescue of the be leaguered trainmen and the relief of the wounded. Prevent Spread of Disease In Dairy Products Washington, D. C., Sept. 27.—-Secre tary Wilson has determined to ask congress for authority to inquire into the interstate commerce of dairy pro ducts and provide for regulation to prevent the spread of tuberculosis and typhoid germs. The department of agriculture has had no difficulty in locating the root of the disease germs on dairy farms, but the federal authorities have been powerless to handle the situation there and their only hope of remedying the growing danger is by dealing with interstate commerce in dairy products of farms. Bid For School Bonds. iiropusboro, Sept. 30. —At a regular sessio.\ the board of aldermen last Satir day night, C. H. Royster, repre senting the endowment bank of the Kn'ghts of Pythias, came before the bo'ii-d tor the purpose of making an of er for $30,000 worth of school bonds. F.is offer was 101. The board decided tot do any thing about the selling of -he bonds at present on account of the j condition of the money market. In picking winners be sure you don't ck them before they are ripe. WEDDING BELLS _IT STATESVILLE i Statesville, N. C., Sept. 27. —A wed ding party numbering nine couples, from the Chambersburg township, came to town Wednesday afternoon in buggies and according to previous arrangements drove to the homo of Rev. R. S. Howie, corner of Bell and ; Mulberry streets, where, in the pres : ence of the party and others who had been invited to the parsonage to. witness the affair, four members of l the party were made happy brides and grooms. I The two couples that were the principals of the occasion would not take the stand together and allow one ceremony to tie the two "knots" | at once. They preferred having them tied separately so there would be no possible chance of a slip anywhere, and the officiating minister, Rev. Mr. Howie, acceded to their wishes. The first couple to advance to the altar was Mr. Geo. B. Fox and Miss Lizzie Carter, and immediately after, the words had been read that made them one Mr. Henry p. Carter and Miss Beulah A. Lowtharpe, advanced, from the crowd and took the solemn: vows. Immediately after the cere-! mony and congratulations the young people returned to their buggies and, drove down town, where they made t a number of purchases before return-! ing home. All of the young people live in the Salem Church neighborhood about six miles east of town. JOKES COME HIGH. One Rich Man Wants $25,000 From His Old Chum Who Called Him a Thief in Fun. Pittsburg, Pa., Sept. 27. —Henry Floersheim, a wealthy Pittsburger, entered suit today in common pleas court No. 4 against his old friend. John McCaffrey for slander, demand ing $25,000 damages. Mr. McCaffrey, like Mr. Floersheim, has retired from active business after having acquired a large fortune. Each afternoon It has been the habit of Floersheim, McCaffrey and other boon companions to assemble in a cafe, where they spent several pleasant hours together. On Satur day afternoon last, Mr. Floersheim alleges, he found all his friends seat ed at a table. Instantly, he declares in his suit, McCaffrey ran toward him, shook his fist and said: "You'e a thief; you stole my pock etbook and all my money!" The charge, which Floersheim de clares is false, so completely upset him that he is now confined to his bed. Mr. McCaffrey admits making the statement, but declares it was all a joke arranged by himself and their mutual friends. He says he tried to explain that it was all a joke, but Mr. Floersheim could not see the point. DOING BUSINESS AGAIN. "When my friends thought I was about to take leave of this world, on account of indigestion, nervousness and general debility," writes A. A. Chisholm, Treadwell, N. Y. t "and when it looked as if there was no hope left, I was persuaded to try Electric Bit ters, and I rejoice to say that they are curing me. I am ow doing busi ness again as old old, and am still gain ing daily." Best tonic medicine on earth. Guaranteed by C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin. Mississippi Confederate Veterans. Meridan, Miss., Sept .27. —Confed- erate veterans and their sons are, here from every nook and corner of Mississippi for the annual meeting of the grand camp. Meridian has given a hearty welcome to the visit ors and nearly every building in the business section of the city is decor ated in their honor. From all ap pearances the encampment, which will be in session two days, will be one of the most enthusiastic gather ings the Mississippi veterans haMe held in recent years. THE PRICE OF HEALTH "The price of health in a malarious district is just 25 cents; the cost of a box of Dr. King's New Life Pills," writes Ella Slayton, of Noland, Ark. New Life Pills cleanse gently and im part new life and vigor to the system. 25c. Satisfaction guaranteed at C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin & Co.. drug gists. New Companies Chartered Raleigh, N. C., Sept. 27.—The Byrd Manufacturing Company, of Durham, with $125,000 capita] stock is charter ed, to do wood and iron work, B. E. Byrd and others are the stockhold ers. The Merchants' & Farmers' Bank of Mooresville, gets a charter with $125-, 000 capital stock, to do a general banking business. Other charters are to the Powell Hardware Company of Raleigh, the Martin & Clark Clothing Company of Hickory and the Beaufort County Drug Co. of Washington, the latter having SIOO,OOO capital stock. Raleigh, N. C., Sept. 27.—The tem perature went as low as 49 degrees here yesterday morning and in the western part of the state there was light frost. No damage was done anywhere in the cotton belt, the weather officials stating. DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve is good for little burns and big burns, small scratches and bruises and big ones. It is healing and soothing. Good lor piles. Sold by C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin. — I Mrs. Blootlgood—"J thought her quo tation was apropos, didn't you?" i Mrs. Newrich —"Dear me, I always supposed his name was Edgar Allen." —Harper's Bazaar. RESCUER REWARDED. | Man Who Saved Woman's Life is Given Check for SIO,OOO. Kendall, Wis., Sept. 27.—John : Franklyn, a North Western engineer running between here and Sparta, has i received a check for SIO,OOO with a promise of another for saving the life of a woman at Devil's Lake, a few weeks ago. Franklyn, with his wife, was spend ing a few days at the Lake. At the same time William Peterson, a weal thy Chicago man, with his wife, daughter and Miss Jenkins, a sister in-law, was also encamped at the lake. I One morning, while out in a boat, the girl and Miss- Jenkins rowed i over to a spring to get a drink. As Miss Jenkins attempted to get back into the boat she slipped, falling into the water. The impact drove the craft from shore and although she managed to seize hold of the boat, she could not draw herself from the water. For an hour she held grimly to the boat, | while her niece, cried for help. To Joosen her grip meant death, for The water was more than fifty feet deep at that place. Franklyn discovered the plight of the woman and rescued her from her perilous position just as her strength was about failing her. Miss | Jenkins was one of the few who es caped from the Iroquois Theatre hol ocaust in Chicago, and says she fears she is to die a violent death. I Although one cf the oars had been I lost, one remained in the boat, and ' had either woman or child retained her presence of mind the boat could i have been paddled to shore. As to Apples. I From the Philadelphia Record. I A group of men clustered around a bar were swapping yarns and notes, when the subject turned to apples. "Apples," said a fat man, reflective ly; "I thank heavens that whatever this wet weather has done it does not seem to affect the crop. There's nothing, to my mind, to compare with a juicy apple and I've eaten them ever since I first had any teeth. 1 start right in now with the green apples and go right through from Astrakhans to russets. When I eat an apple I can say truly, with the street urchin, 'There ain't goin' to be no core,' and I go even further and eat the seeds. Personally, I be lieve that the apple tree is still the tree of knowledge. I know that the fruit is wholesome, and just think of all you get from the apple! Here's a list for you: Baked apple, apple pie, apple dumpling, sweet cider, ap plejack, hard cider, vinegar and number of other desirable things which escape my mind at present." "You've left out "one thing," said the friend, who had listened to tnis rhapsody with a bored expression. "What's that?" inquired the fat; man. "Somach ache," was the curtj reply; and the fat man paid for the next round. Didn't Mind the Ladder. New York World. A ladder leaned against a store front in Nassau street, near Spruce,! j the other afternoon. Its foot was so far out that it was easier far for one to go under it than to pass outside of it. Everyone knows it is considered bad luck to walk under a ladder. Din many of the crowd hurrying toward the bridge pay deference to that super-1 stition? A man in a hurry paused a half minute to see. I Out of 30 who passed only seven ] avoided the supposed hoodo. These j seven must have done it out of super stition. because it would have been easier for them to go under the lad der as the other 23 did. The man who paused to see had, himself, not passed under. Older on Trial. Santa Barbara, Cal., Sept. 2S. —When the train arrived here Older was taken from it by the sheriff and conducted to the superior court under writ of habe as corpus and the hearing is now iu progress. There are quite as many imitations among people a3 among manufactured goods. Obstinate cases cf constipation and nasty, mean headaches promtly dis appear when you take DeWitt's Little I Early Riser Pills. Sold by C. M. Shu ford and W. S. Martin. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. KtieaHhy Kidneys Malic Impure Blood. All the b.ood in your body passes '.hrough oar kidneys cnce every minutes. P The kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they 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 k'dney 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 that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning in kidn«*y trouble. If you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the ex.traord.nary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney rerredy is soon realized. It stands the highest tor its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits by ail druggists in fifty- 15538 cent and one-dollar siz-E%yg| t*. You may have a jample bottle by mail Homo of swamp-Boot, 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./ r®wfs pfloiumft J For Infants and Children. f»ASTORU § ThO Kind You Have V 44**®# Always Bought AVfegetablePreparalionforAs- jfl # - simulating thcFoodandßeguia- $j a liiiglhe Stomachs and Bowels of .9 BCStXS til 6 M 1 Sipata* A/ | Promotes Digeslion.Cheerfur i| M«/ lip nessandßest.Containsneilher 9 wL 9 * Opium, Morphine nor >liueral. $i Ul /(\*\ IT NARCOTIC. 1 ft.U\r JSk^KafOUiJOrSAKUELPITCHER 9 a Pumpkui Seed' . fl llj ytlxStrtno. * 1 |H liv m RochtlU SellS- J #1 «£JI _ teu. j li\ ift ► iii hSrrp Srvrl - I ;Wj 11 ■ j |j if Q P I A perfect Remedy for Conslipa- fl [ V ft* VO Bi Ron, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea jif I Worms .Convulsions .Feverish '& I gf ll tan ft* ness and Loss OF SLEEP. J| \jF fII | |J V 0 I Facsimile Signalur? of Sj Thirty Years L- J C ASTORIA ▼HC CtNTAUH COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY, Bad Fire Shelby, Home Occupied By N. J. Miller Burned Last Night—Fire Thought to Be of Incendiary Origin Heavy Loss. Shelby, N. C., Sept. 27. —The house occupied by Mr. Nash J. Miller, known as the Hall property, was completely destroyed by lire, which broke out oabut 12 o'clock last night. ' The occupants barely escaped with their lives. None of the household ef fects were saved. It is thought the fire was started by incendiaries, though as yet there lias been no clue discovered. Several attempts have been made recently to burglarize the house. Mr. Miller, who formerly lived in Charlotte, was just recovering from sickness. A rough estimate places the loss at between $4,000 and ?r>,ooo. The property belonged to Mrs. A. C. Ray, of Charlotte. It was a complete loss, the insurance having expired on the 15th. Shelby, N. C.. Sept. 27. —Mr. J. Tom Dover, prominent here in business and social circles, was badly injured yes terday at a saw mill near King's Creek. His leg was broken between the thigh and the knee. He was brought here this morning and is suff ering very intensely from his injury. Charged With Smuggling Pearls Into This Country- New York, Sept. 27. —The importa tion of three packages of pearls valu ed at SIO,OOO wholesale, and alleged by the government to have been sumggled into this country several weeks ago, is being investigated by the customs authorities. Manuel Cornejo, a California dealer in pearls, owns the gems which were shipped to Paris byway of New York and subsequently brought back again 'through this city. The customs offi cials at San Francisco, besides making a charge of smuggling against Cornejo, have begun a civil suit for the forfeit ure of Ihe pearls, on the ground that the 10 per cent duty to which they are subject on importation was not paid. Receipts of the New York customs house show that Cornejo shipped some pearls to Paris and reshipped them back here, and he contends that these are the pearls found in his possession. The customs officials say that, even if there was a reshipmenl, the pearls are of Oriental origin and the defendant must show that duty was paid on their first entry into this country. The owner declares that while the pearls pass in trade for Oriental gems, they are really of American origin. Comptroller Chesbrough Testified In Hearing New York, Sept. 27.—George Ches brough, comptroller of the many sub sidiary pipe lines of Standard Oil, tes tifying in the government suit against the Standard, said the gross earnings of the Southern Pipe Line Company in 1899 were $4,376,618; operating ex penses, $310,522, and net plant invest ment, 2,125,666. He said the cost of the Buckeye Pipe Line plant in 2906 was carried at $9,995,967 and net earnings $7,028,- 508. He said the Standard owns the pipe line running under New York city. Foley's Kidney Cure will cure any case of kidney trouble that is not be yond medical aid. Big Increase In The Price Of Beef In N. Y. New York. Sept. 27. —Housekeepers throughout this city are complaining over the increase In the price of beef and beef products. There has been an increase in the cost to the retailer of 1 cent a pound. llt is understood among the retailers that the price wm go up within the next month half a cent, if not a cent more. The wholesalers give many reasons for the increase in price. One of the principal ones is that uie farmers have had to fatten their cattle on grain in stead of grass, as usual at this time of the year owing to the long draught la*;t summer. On the other hand, it is contended in some quarters that the price of beef has been raised by the big western packeds because of the renewed agitation of tne question of government, prosecution of big corpo ral ions. The prices for larn'i " r n! and mutton are practically staUu ; • . and nrr> no higher than usual :i. i lis season of the year. A Disastrous Gas Exp Coshocton, Ohio. Sept. 27. —Ceorge still was fatally and Mrs. Herbert Kn.ode seriously burned in the explo sion of gasoline in the dr; cleaning department of (he Eureka laundry. Fifty girls were at work at :he time. A panic ensued and many of the girls were slightly injured. The building was completely de stroyed by the five which followed. The loss is 859,000. The blooming rose is beautiful, But the blushing bride more dutiful, All the crimson tints you like to see are her'°- By talcing ltocky Mountain Tea. E. 11. Monzies. The best laid plans of mice and ar chitects are not always to be depended upon. NOTICE; ' "We want every man and women la United States interested in the cure o; Opium, "Whiskey or other drug habltQ •ilthe r for themselves or friends, to bat! >ne of Dr. Woolley's books on these dl* sases. Write Dr. B. M. Woolley Atlanta 3t&., Box 887. and on® will be sent you £»© I KILL™ COUCHA |aNO CURE THE LUJMCS ■ j """Or, King's " /VO'JSUBPTKHI * Price [ 3 rim A OJJGKS A . ; I R.OC FCSI.OT I I Free Tri.il. | BBPHT—Ma'AI IMI —m—WWT.t "«/■ ia*nMWMtU B Surest and ttaicxopt Cx'ro for all V S THIiOAT and lAJKG T3OUB- I 3 LES, or LIOJi'EY BACK. _ J PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM f?C~ iM Cletruei and beautifies the bali. Promote. a luxu.-iant growth. ■JS'Sv' JH Never Fail* to Eeatore Grayi BZwK " - - -MM Hair to its Youthful Color. ' A iree uotxieot Or. Thiacher's Liver and Blood Syrup will be sent to any reader of this paper who will write to the Thaclie*" Medicine Co.. jhattanooga, Tenn. The family medicine in thousands ol homes for 52 years—Dr. Thacher's Livei and Blood Syrup. Women find quicHrciicizz Dt .lhacher'a Liver c.ud Blood Syrup.
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 3, 1907, edition 1
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