Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / April 2, 1896, edition 1 / Page 4
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.aa-a. i, - irrHPfTtviO) Athletic Goods Are of the same high standard as Victor Bicycles. . We manufacture a full line of Baseball, Football. and Ten nis Goods, of highest grade; also all kinds of Athletic Cloth ing in stock and made to order. TUB VICTOR TRADE MARK IS GUARANTEE OF FINEST QUALITY. OVERTAN WHEEL CO., MAKERS OP VICTOR BICYCLES AND ATHLETIC OOODS. - Boston, New York, Detroit, Denver, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland," Ore. " m w w a GETTYSBURG'S FIELD- Secession Went Down oa Its Bloody Slopes. IF LEE HAD BEES' VI0T0EI0TJ3. The Confederate Debf Would Be of Mothlag Kagl Isl Banrdcd .M Cemetery Bids Was la View of XJttle Aaand Top. Copyright, 1800, iy John Clark Bidpaih. V. The blood flecked foam of -the great rebellion broke surflike over Cemetery Bidge. One of our poets has character ized it as "a high tide' and the figure is not unfit. When Armistead, with his hat on his sword, went down among the Union grins, it marked the supreme touch of those forces which, beginning with the plantations of the cavaliers, rose in the domes tio estate of the sooth. linked itself with the Jeffersonian theory of government and became volcanic if not glorious in the southern Confed eracy. What if Pickett's column bad gone headlong over? In the retrospect we see that it was not an impossible thing. Jjongstreer, who was about, the only cool headed man in that tremendous melee, thought it impossible to win with Lee's method, and the event vindicated his judgment. Strangely enough, on that day the north did not imagine it possible for Lee to be victorious. Neither did '-the north suppose that the loss of the battle would entail irreparable disaster in the field or change the final results of the war. The leaders of the southern Confeder acy made their greatest . mistake in not understanding this latent and Irrevoca ble determination of the northern people to win the fight' It might ' take 4 years or 14, but the settled purpose of the average Union man was to re-estab lish the nation without the loss of a foot of soil er single prerogative of the "government. There never was a well T i . 1 i. . l " 1 - I aeveiopea ootids in . us uurmern Bi&bea Large asssortment and attractively beau- that the flag would ultimately be re- r t f i r ii i "i r -"i J T 1 Cl I planted in unequivocal mumpn tnrougn- titul display ot all kinds ot inina and Ueltt out the union, tws sentiment, wide- itt I epreaa ana juut luuuuai, uijgu itb Ware. . I rallied and doubtless would have ral- - I a w . . 3M a a) j r-i r i i , , i j j i I ilea ana prevailed even u ine v-omeaer- Chairs ot the latest style, design and beau- ateshad triumphed at Gettysburg, but peril of that hour and repeat the ques tion, What if Lee had won? If Lee had won, he himself would have become titanic. He would have their determination to see the battle through. While they .were fighting it out victoriously an enemy took posses sion of the house, whose expulsion has not yet been effected and who now open ly advanoes bis pretensions to be the original owner of the premises, fie says that the American people, being - bound to bim in a contract which he has al ready changed three or four times in his own interest, must now either discharge their mortgage with a dollar worth 170 thing instead of Xothina Enciiaa Gold I cents, cr else be will rightfully fore- r. . a -rMj d.j ' circa cm thn farm and maV lhm all tenants at will forever. It is a bad busi- ART DISPLAY. FIRST FLOOR, Showing such assortments, such varieties of rare and finest art pieces as will surprise the )the most critical connoisseur. Choicest pieces in Italian and J apanese" ware, antique shaped U rns and ritchers, Hand-painted Gups and Saucers. , v ty of finish. UP STAIRS. A splendid display of all grades of Fur niture, suitable to humble homes or princely palaces. Undertaking Department complete -in all its lines. CUAYWEUU BROS, -o- GREAT REDUCTION HARDWARE Come to oar store and see how cheap joa can now bay Stoves ageom pared witb what you have paid heretofore. -Although iron and labor has advanced, we can save yon 25 per cent, if yoaTcall on us before you bay a Stove. .We are agents for the . . ,.- - CHATTANOOGA -.- STOVES. WE ALSO HAVE A LOT OF v New Patron Stoves, which we will sell cheaper than yoa can boy tbem elsewhere. : we are exclusive agents Tor tbe celebrated and popular Chatanooga Plojtvs and Cane Mills, - Hud carry a full line of repairs for these plows, notwithstand -'o " vuiuii.iiiuio 11 tuo uuuvrarv. alio -UUatra- nooga Plow Co. does not belonsr to the ulow Vrnst pArm., . hi8 is why agents for plows made by the trust fight the CbatI i h nooga. Ti A "DIES, we Uave HOmetUine to Show TOD the finest ami 1np I J ' , . . " ui uouseuouiu rurnisiiings ever seen In Barke Come aud see us. - Eespect fully, I- I county. THE RE1P HARDWARE: CO. SOUTHERN: RAILWAY. (PIEDMONT AIR UNEJ THIRD DIVISION " Schedule effective Feb. 9. 1895. " i Thl Condenaed Schedule U published aa informattofi only and ia .object to change without - . notice to the nnhlii- SALI8BUBT, A8UEV1LI.E, HOT SPRINGS AND ' . " No. 11.. n- ' . . - No. 12. .. 1 Daily.. (Central Time.) DaUy. I ?l . . , -.. - .- r 9.25 a.m. Lv....SaUBbnry.Ar. 6.45 p.m. ............ 10.13 a.m. ....StaterriIle..LT. 5.58 p.m. - : I" " 11.12a.m. "....Hickory...." 65pm ." 11.80 am " Morgan ton. .17p " .' " 12.29 a.m. "....Marion....." 3.a7 p.m Z"'"" 2.02 p.m. ....Biltmore... " 2.M? W A. 21Sp.ni. Ar....AheTille.... " 1.50 p.m. , : ;; 1 ' ' Fonrth Division. .:T " 4.13 p.m. Ar.. Hot Spring.. Lt. 12.10 p.m ' i ' ...'........ 1 6.1 p.m. " ..Mom.town..Ar. 11.13 a.m. i- ' .... ....... , ,. 6.00 p.m. Ar Chattanooga Lt. 10.25 a.m. ; f .r'."'. I . . . . L i cinnatl via Harriman. Trains Nos. 37 and 38 Cin- r i JISn' "i0": ?I and 38 d"7' connect at SaUsbnry with Washington and Southwestern Limited and at Morristown with Washington and Chattanooga Limited C TIS A:heWTUl! MW Car. between Chattanooga. KnoxTiUe, Hiring?, BKTWEKN . ASHETIIXK No Er. 17. SunT 7.00 a.m. 9 65 a.m ll.lOa.m. S.25 p.m. AND MURPHY. (Central Time.) No. 18. Ex. Snn. LT....AsheTille....Ar. 1 16 p.m. ....uilisboro ... " j 9.55 a.jn. ..Bryson Citx.. 8.55 a.m. ....Murphy t..4 " .30-a.m. Through tickets on sate at principal stations to all points apply toany acentof theComoanv. - - E. BERKELEY, Su ,W. n I.KBBN. .General 8ni.erintendent. Washington. D C." For rates or information 3Y. Superintendent. Columbia. 6. C. J. M. CULP, . W. A. TURK. 1 ? gasmen ger Agent, - aaninKton, I. C. Traffic Manager ; -J; lfbtjji T oir mQRQanton; n. o.' ' IIR - --- Q. P. KB WIN. Zt,4 . ' " ' T President. . it . ,'ur. i u U J S.T.PXABSON ' - . Cashter. BUEGLAE PEOOw Vattlt. PatkhtW ViT - ' vjittUJHJt E5TEEL HAPBFOB CASJtf t 1 Y ALUABLSS. JSICHANGB OK Vbw ajmj OTHEB TRASS CEHTBES fiuuuul AA1I BOL.D. - , ? Banking hours 9 a. m. to 3 p. u. risen to another plane in military his tory. No future reverse or final failnre could then have dimmed his luster. Moscow and Leipsic and Waterloo beat in rain on the martial glory of Napo leon. There were great elements in the character of Robert E. Lee. His personal grandeur cannot be doubted. His career as a commander has been applauded by all military critics. In the "Memoirs of Grant" one may perceive that the man of Galena, not given to weak jeal ousies, was touched on several instances by the magnificent bearing and possibly superior fame of his rival. If Lee had succeeded in crushing Hancock, in cutting Meade s army in two, in adding Gettysburg to the list of his victories, his glory as a general must have shone through the centuries. - If Lee had won, the Confederate debt would probably have become something instead of nothing. Shy lock Britannious, who had given his money with the dou ble hope of; disrupting the Union and gaining for himself a future monopoly of the American cotton crop, had every thing staked on Pickett scnarge. Vicks- burg also Just then struck bim in the hollow side, and be resounded like a vacuum, but his great hazard was on Cemetery Bidge. The British govern' ment was with him in hope, and so was France, and so was all the west of Eu rope. 11 the (Jonlederacy could onoe Rain recognition, then his bonds, payable six months afterward, would have a value. but if the Confederacy should break and recoil from that village graveyard then the hazarded gold of- Britannious must be dissipated forever with the smoke. About the only unmixed blessedness In the memories of the civil war is the happy recollection that the British bloat who tried, on false information and with false hopes; to purchase the dis memberment of the American Union lost his money forever at Gettysburg. He paid the bill The two hours' vol cano of Alexander's batteries, roarins and exploding over Hunt and Hanoock. was an expensive sport which was liqui dated in full by Old Moneybags of ng land. We rejoice in the retrospect at his irreparable loss and mortification, just as he would have smiled from one of his mutton chops to the other at our discomfiture and ruin, if Lee bad won the battle. ' -. ' . On the other hand, Shylock Ameri can us was confirmed and- made secure by the breaking of Pickett's column. Of a certainty, much of the money which was hazarded on our cause at home and some that was given abroad was given with the patriotic design of up holding the Union cause and building ramparts about republican institutions. but much more of it was given eimnlv and solely as a speculation. There were men who dickered in our sorrows, re joiced in our disasters, bought our debt in the dark days at a nominal figure, got toe bonds at every advantage to themselves, and - who, with their de scendants, for more than 30 years have fattened themselves to perfebt fatness at the expense of tbe American peonle. iney nave without compuncticn eaten the toil and drank the tears of the hum ble mlLuons, but for whose energy and lurDearanoe- cue nigntmare stiu as heavy as ever would long since, by some means, nave been swept away. The world knows bow money behaves itself in the presence - of danger. The world knows how specie in particular dodges and hides at the first alarm and how a people in'every warlike crisis are driven by necessity to help themselves With some other form of currency. Gold and silver areflthe supreme . cowards of the world.- If we were imperiled today in another 'like crisis, they would flv and leave us to our fate. My friend Iron- quill of Kansas bas happily summarized tne wnoie thing in a few lines : -' The merit of the country marched ' and filled the Union ranks..' The money of the country marcBed and filled no jmgiian rtinsg ... At jast the war was over, and Johnny eeased w nam. ....... . - C5ae Dugle playing; thtf apeda One day, when a lyiDg grapevine tel egram ot a Union' disaster had enabled uiuaors Hi nan BUeet W SWOOD Jmim. 11 ' ... . uunu uu tue uanonai credit and buy memseives nob In a few hours, ' the gaunt Lincoln went over to the war de partment, hoisted himself with a swing on 10 a long oak table, and bringing down his clinched fist like a maul said : Dsanron, ao you know what v I think? I think that the men who are speculat ing in the life blood of' this nation, as those fellows in New York' ar doing, ought to be hanged. Don't you?" . -? At all events; the national debt was confirmed and made valid by the recoil at Gettysburg." The people did not then know that the debt was to become the great fundamental fact in our subse quent history. Tbe people were intent Uus battle. They were fiJoriona in ness. Gettysburg made the flag supreme. Our constellation of stars bas spread to cluster of 46, but Gettysburg also brought to loyal Shylock such an oppor tunity to spoliate the world aa he had pot enjoyed since the Napoleonic wars. The recoil of tbe Confederacy on the 8d of July determined the general lim its of the conflict The war lasted far SI months and 6 days, but never after ward was the impact of tbe southern armies what it bad been before. The Confederates - fought on, but it was a sullen, heavy, defensive, despairing fight There was no abatement of courage or of the declared purpose to win or die, but'the fury and arrogance of tbe Confederacy were gone, never to return. Lee and Johnston, knew it. Da- vg and his cabinet knew it, and it was not long until tbe whole world knew it also. - " After Gettysburg the descent ot "the secession cause down into darxnesa and tne oblivion 01 tne underworld was constant and irrevocable. No power could shore up the tottering f ortniAs of that brave, ill starred, reckless thing called the southern Confederacy. 1 In a prize fight there is always a critical blow. Sooner or later one of the com batants receives a shock that reaches to the nerve centers aud weakens him from bead to foot. He staggers to the ground. but rises on time and smiles. He throws himself into posture, and his backers shout and bet more money and lose it. Their favorite baa had a blow from which be cannot recover, and ere long be goes to bis corner in the unconscious ness Tjf semideath and despair. The strong and defiant south stood thus in tbe arena on the 8d of July, 1863. About 4 o'clock in tbe afternoon a blow was delivered by tbe Union army which, falling over tbe heart of the enemy, laid him low on the bloody slopes. That blow made all his future risings and fencings and bravado to be no more than the expiring rounds and dragging afterplay of a contest that was already decided. The political structure of half tbe world was affected by the shock of Get tysburg. A poet, musing on Little Round Top in the twilight of that awful day, might see Sedan as well as Appo mattox in the distance. . The French army occupied the City of Mexico on the 10th of June, 1863. Lee had already crossed the Potomac The foreign regen cy was established while : he was at Chamberaburg. Seven days 'after the great battle the hereditary Mexican monarchy under a Catholic emperor was proclaimed. . Napoleon HL that son of Hortense aqd Somebody, hybrid of- sphinx and Mephistophelea, bad oai fully planned to profit by our wreck, His idea was to enrich the .Latin race with the flotsam and jetsam of .the American catastrophe. And things went well with him until the recoil of Lee. That event showed that the Confed eracy was for the pseudo-Bonaparte delusion and a snare. If Lee had won. Napoleon could have supported his usurpation in America. His farreaohing intrigue might have been successful, for who was there to impede his purpose? We may still see the political complex' ion of France changing s Eugenie's countenance changed at the news of Gettysburg. The break of Pickett's col umn was also a break in the dikes of tbe second empire. Napoleon's abandon ment of Maximilian and his shrinking back under the menace to Grant was the emperor's first retreat After that. retreating became his mood and habit until be found himself at last begirt with bellnre in the crater of Sedan. Tbe poet of Bound Top, still rapt in vision at the tremendous sundown of that day, might see Jefferson Davis. with a few remaining comrades, flying before the Union cavalry from Charlotte into the somber woods of Georgia. He might also see the tall figure of Maxi milian standing in tbe mornintr light before the leveled muskets of the aven gers outside the gates of Queretaro. He might also see at tbe back door of the Louvre at midnight on the 8d of Sep tember, 1870, the- Count de Lesseps, with tie fallen empress of the French, flying to the English coast, and might hear as the carriage rolled away the gamin cry, "There goes Mrs. Bona parte !' . John Class Bidpatk. mr A L 1 QOITETIMES the most J c careful women are the moat careless. Many a -woman bundles herself up, puts on beary clothing; and wrap and furs to keep oat tbe cold to keep oat sickness .when she is net" lectins; the - very worst sickness) that can come to wo man. She is allow- 'ing a slight disorder to stow, to become worse, to slowly and surely sap her vital ity. Tbe little pain and tbe other slight A I I'l Indications or v" l iJi trouble seem to her ,kWfr unimportant. - She they grow a lhll worse, bat . she is eed to them thei and takes then as Blatter of coarse. By and by. they bay grown into dragging pains that occasion ally keep her in the house that occasionally put her to bed. Then she knows what is the matter, bnt she won't go to a doctor be cause she knows be will insist on " exam inations." snd "local treatment." She roes osl witb increasing; suffering, until life itself becomes a drag. Nervousness, " sinking spells." dire tire disturbances. and fifty other complications may arise from the same cause. - Frequently such symptoms are treated as digestive dis eases when the root of the whole matter ia tbe derangement of the organs distinctly feminine. Over thirty years ago, the need for a reliable remedy for so-called female complaints," was recognized by Dr. K. V. Pierce, then, as now, chief consulting phy sician to the World's Dispensary and Inva lids Hotel, at Bunalo, N. Y. He prepared Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, the most wonderfully effective remedy that has ever been used (or such maladies. Its. sale now exceeds the combined sales of all other medicines for women. Its effect is percep tible almost immediately. It relieves pain, allays inflammation, checks debilitating drains, and quickly subdues other distres ing Symptoms. It makes tbe organs and their - surrounding tissues strong . and healthy, thereby correcting displacements and invigorating the whole body. Cm" EphraJua's N lacs. De mo' ccmplaiain yo dote da md yo" kin. an de lus ye coos ao uss y u hsb ter da. - To' ksin't Jed go de lite cb er xssn s hea'i by de crmount 'e gibs erway, but yo' ksin't go fa wrong ef yo' watches how 'e gibs it Do man ct rucks de fvwes' unjostisea deman's '11 git de mos' faro's, but de man ut leabs bit fo' uddahs ter gib im be rights '11 wsil er pow'fnl long w'i fo 'e gits 'em. Some o yo' folk el yo' efcban ry mistek gits ter bebben'll be eftsb try in fus t'ing ter dig up de goln pay in stuns, an cf yo fin's yo' crowns ain't set wiv rhinestuns yo'll be er-lockin fo all yo' kin lay ban's on an er bole In de flnoe ter git erway. Ef hit on'y wssn fo ufldan roixs w'at cr lot o saints we ens would be I ?'st cr piterful lot o trouble hit era ter lib an w'at er piterful leet la bit o' libin some o' we tuos gits fo' all on ah trouble Yaas. hit teks all aarsrta o people ter mek er worb' but I uebbah Uks ter say so, f o lean 't I's one o' de sll sawta. Some people goes f rough life er man- erfistin ticb er cotimp fo de woxr ut hit cud rain up dey noses. I wondab ef deb ebbah stops ter kerjecshah w'at de worl' t'inks o' dem. In yo Uuo Ephrum, chile, yo' sees er man w'at neb bah done Jos' his tern- pah. Hs alius knows wbah tr fin bit w'en be wants hit" Chicago Beoord. Sale of Land for Assets. B Y virtue of aa order ta the Soocrior conn or nurse coantT. naae ia (h. special proceeding ofl.J.Shou p. Administra tor, vs. Elisabeth Lail et. al.. I will aril a Monday. April 6. 1898. at -the mrt aoor in Morgan ton. tbe following described tracts 01 1 ana la Burke coanty for assets to pay aeon: First tract sold sabject to the dower of aars. Aaroa Talent and boanded as follow: Beginning on a blackjack and mas N 33 W is poles to a chestnut, thence 8 0 W 3 notes to a white oak. thence N 84 W a? poles to a post oak. thence N 77 B 4-4 poles to a persimmon, thence 8 48 E 13 poles to a atake. thra V -17. o oa. . -1. thence 8 4 B S8 poles to a stake, thence 0 W SO poles to the beginning, containing (second tract. Decinninr on a nost oak anil runs N 84 W 71 imlM n - thence SHQ B 46 poles to a pine, thence N40 B 37 poles to a black oak. thence 8 60s B poles to a white oak. thence 8 40 W S3 poles i.nc,inniR9ll' VY 24 poles SO I stake, thence N 45 W IS nolr ta a ivin raon. thence 8 77 W 44 polea to the bcgia- ufnjc. cviiiininn . 3 aciea. I Dim tract, beginning on a black snn and I on1 IS B V6 poles to a pine, thence 8 " poien 10 a cnesiaut .oak. thence N 18" W 3 Doles to a white oak. t K.. m -x B 70 poles to the berianina. roalmin. acres. .on tbe following terms, to-wit: SO per cent cash balance in six months. I I ninrp dm inistrator of Aaroa Talent, deceased. aiaixa ISVB, Mortgage Sale. I V Tirtae of a oowrr of sale contained la mm a certain traat deed eaccated bv Ida K Oarrlson and John W. Garrison to W. C. Br- via ontneieth day of Seotember. 1 Has ano registered in the omce of the Kegister oi ueeos lor norae coanty, K. t.. In Book B No. 2. page 823 et. sen . 1 will sell at nhlir Dciiun in iron i oi inc otirx 11 ooae door la iae town oi Morgan ton. N. c, oa Monday April 27ta. between the legal boars of sale, the following deacribed tract or parcel of ana lying In toe towa of Moras a ton. Barke coanty. n. ., aesenbed as follows, to-wit Beginning at tbe iBtersection of Ervla and eurling streets and runs south BO east 206 icet to a stake, thence north SO west 30 leea xo a stake ia brwia street, thence north 40 east 13 fret to tht berinnina. beina wi uun, di wu i iano lioaancoavered by T. B. Mosyck t M attic Perrec now Mattie newita Said sale made by reason of defanlt ia tbe payment of the orinciDal and lilrml Hired to be oaid bv the termn n uiH r deed. Terms of sale esah. Dated thla tha w oay oi Msrcn, W. C. BHV1H. Traatee Avssr & BiLvna. Attorneys. . WANTED Naiiutrv Mtsr k I rvwss. rvaav t ftinlnt.a Wood py. artr tun wperlaUljr (4 lonia " ' 'ivw sawn m mwuq. v ( tl mm viae uww rimii ssvoti irmuiry a m-m m . g,a a a a a. m mar n m aar a HB IS Ha) Paaaas HasisiPak. sVI I l.a ffB flttarr 1 sV-l . " asiaa itr-a, fSF For Sale. A four-room tot tage on Fair Ground street.. Three fourths of an acre lot. Prettv li j caiiun. tluus nearly nrsv. Wil oe sold at a bargain. Apply early 10 I Is Coeb. AcrnL Poisons engendered bv food ferment. ing in a djipeptio stomach are the di rect cause or rheumatism, gout, bron chitis, liver and kidnev comnlaint. asthma, pneumonia and many nervous aiimeuts. Tbese results are -prevented bv the use of tbe Shaker Digestive Cordial. remedy discovered and -nreoared bv the Shakers of Mount Lebanon. N. Y. It is in itself a food and has do war to die-ret other food taken with it. Thus it rests the diaeased stomach and finally mas ters the worst canes ot dyspepsia. It acts promptly and fresh strength and increase of weight soon follows. Tha first dose, taken immediately after eat- iDK. aoaies tne pain and distress ao dreaded by dyspeptics. Trial bottles I enough to prove its merit 10 cents. JjAAUIi is the best medicina far children. Doctors recommend It in piace oi castor oil. . C2OO.00 la 4Kld Given - - For seliing a book of great interest and popularity. "8torv of Turkev and Armenia" with a full and eranhio ars vuuui ui tne roassacres. K. 11 Woodward Company, balti- moie, Md..are offering $200.00 to any. one selling- 200 conies of their haw book, "Story of Turkey and Armenia." This is a work of great interest and popularity. Many agenta sell 15 copies ".) a Krnp'c ana uniting . ac count is given of tbe massacres of the Armenians which have . aroused tha civilized word. Aeents are offered tha most noeral terms and . premiums. rreigntpaid and -credit given . Write mem iiumeoiately. UutQt 85 cents. . Bucklen's" Arnica Salve. The Dest aalre in tbe .worbl for Cats, Braises. Sores Ulcers. Salt Eheum, Fever Sore. Tetter, Chap ut-u xiauas, uuuoiain. Corns, and all Skin Eruption", aud positively cures Files, Qr no pay. , required. it. ia guaranteed to eive . neiiect satisfaction, or money refunded. t-nce 30 cents er dox. For sale by John Tall, Druggist. Do yoa i t y to b in ut The bicycle baslnaas is growing as 4 ft . V Do yoa want to ba in ut The bicycle boalnaas Is growing enormously why not try It Too cava bay one wheal, or as many yoa like, and sail your friends DICYCLES AT COST An order sent now entitles yon to m big dlaooont. Apply Quick for tha agency for your place. Our wheals are the highest grade, most reliable bicycles made to-day. . Particular and handsale sly Illus trated printed matter by malL . CASX11 A ITLT05, BalUavers, X. AN ASTONISHING TOKIC FOR WOMEN. I" IV OF, P A P Mill bfiliiiUilui It Strenfithens the Week, Quiets the Nerves, Relieves Monthly Suffering and Cures w FEMALE DISEASED. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT. - Si:oo PCR BOTTLC. -CrUnAHOOCIt fFD. CO, OurtsMors, Tsaa. HO MUllt titUUlSSES, We Ofae Ym CPTIfiOV Waks ta MsCa- EXPEGTAIIT ilOTIIERS, "MOTHERS1 FRIEND" Boct Cantata it if IU Pila, Karrw ta. EUL sfy aire oaed rmrajr nigg ba-, I fora birth of Wee Vrsl elilkLsha did nos affer frota tBiarHar ril.. asquiralr ( I reiwraa aa taa eruioai aoue sunerlog aaa , Utua ahe had ao palaa aissrward and aer 1 aeovary was rapid. K. C JoaasTOST, Karenta, aka. Seat by Mail or Ctpreaa. an reeetpt of eVa, Sl.ee fr MUk liook " Ta Mola rs" Ballad free. SUhn I La KttiCUTOl CO., AUaaia, U. SOU IT AU SEVSSXTS. COPYRIGHTS. ms. CA f OBTAISJ a rATTTTr For a ar and an booaat evinkoa, wm. ta reowrs ansv ain-ia tu4 wao tart haa aaanr In; raars rpartaae la La. aalant - rVaaaraaw- ttoaa atrteUy anaSOaoUal. A Haaasaah ot I joraauoo) aoanarataa rilma aaa sow to aa. anuaa hoaa ant fn Palaata takaa tkroaa. Man A r. aaaaVva mobI aoUoa la taa KrUatl a. A arira a. aa taas ars sroosM a-KWIy sarnra tb. anMiaaita. eoat to th. hreavtor. This rpfeodta saaar. " daiaiUf llraatraf ad. haa bT faTlSa i ejnauauoai of aar aetantis. wta-k ta I World. Jsyaa. Saaip). anptaa sea fraa. Bdlti Batldl tlfmi na i raar. maate tiral aawaa, la aoaora, ana aaoaorrmaaa at aaw wtth trfnaa. ah4iaa Vwtttara to itu iaa lataat daawaa aa4 aaaar. MUvu Aaraaa rnaam uuw roaa. ax aoawav. f EtIIIYROYAL PILLS at a.. Maw. ii.ii, i (mart a 'fin ii.ua . swa jk , Smmmim I la hVs al barf ailw I alia kM. ra.ia. Tak. AT aa-'. . -a. MnVCnik-r Mlralaaiiraaa. a, -aiia7.TT ' BREA K F AST S U I P E R. EP.P.S'S CRATEFUL-COMFOrrnNa. GOO O A BOILING WATER OR MILK. Free laforsaatioa. . Messrs. C A. Snow & Co., of Wash ington, u. u., lawyers and agents for procuring patents, will send free to any auumcna iwuiimieH wim tniormation aoout noma: ana foreign patents. caveats, copyrights, trade marks, in fringements, design patents, abstracts oi oecisions. etc., as well a the coat of patents in Uuited States and foreign wuuuin. . . ' - BackinghamB Dye for the Whisasrs is a popular preparation in one bottle, and colors evenly a brown or black. Any person can easily apply it at home. Kore IlIITCHIliLV3 V EYE-SAIiVE - A CerUIa tttt sad FJsctfre Ksasasy foe SORE, WEAK and IT.FUr.IED EYES, Cures Tear 'Props, Orau-latloa, Stye Tumors, lied Eye, Hatted Eye Lashet. AND PRODUCT! a QCTCK RVXIKl' ANO PKBJtAJJaJIT COABL r"aw-S-a aT.'r vjir - m-mm wa. v m Bar mm Sdvaaian. . tOU BT ALL DtU661It AT 53 COT. VJhai io (5r(Q)i5ii CastorU Is Dr. Saraael Pitcher's prescrlptloa for InXnu Avnd Cniidren. It contain neither Opiora. Morphine nor other Narcotic substAnc?. It Is a hArmlesa ftabstltai for Paregoric, Drops, Soothinj; Symps and Castor OH, It Is Iea&ant. IU niArav&t is thirty yean ue bullions of Mothers. Castorla deatroys "Worms and allays Feverlshneea, 4 Castorla prevents vomiting fcoer Curd, enrea Diarrhoea and TTlnd Colic. Castorla rvlirt tt Teething; troablea. rare Constipation and FlatoJmcy. Castorla asaimllatea the Food. retralAtes the Stornaci. and Bowels, firing- healthy and natural sleep. CastorU Is the Children's PanaceaWhe Mother's Friend. Castorla. I . Castoria. "Caatarta la aa esorUeat aaediciae far child rea. Mathers ha rrpeetediy tokl ase of ks good eflert apoa I heir cnadrea." , Dr. O, C Oaoooo, Lewen, Maaa. "The aae of Castorla Is ao aararraaj and ks ' Bcrtts so wen kaown that U aveaia a worm of aapereiugaOoa uaeadoraa H. Few arc tha latcQigeal tsaiRias who do sot keen CaakarU wsOla easy reach." Cajuos hUsrvw, D.D, Kew Tor dry. " I prescribe Caatoria rarry day for chQdrra wno are saScrtag fcoaa rwaaelt,(IJai. better escct than I reorias Craaa say ether angflbination of drags." DV. Z. O. hf oajoaar. Soath Aaaboy, n. J. - Caaaarla m as we3 adapted ta tVi&a, that I ransasaaead M as aanerlor ta ... ' ' irm H. A. Aacatam, M. D. StnaaOya. y " 'or several years I hare recoarafa Caavoria. and ahaO always coauaae la ao as It haa laaaratWy nradaian W-t. . 1 P. ranea. M. D Kt awaaaaaaan hart Uree chDdrea Sa4 thry Cry Ut ! ethers cry for aaa ana. I ahaS a) take ylsssais ta am ram as tiix t ChUd s saarlkjaa.- W. A. Csorva, lafwyart. Kg. Children Cry for PItcher'o Castorla. THtC MORGANTON HERALD AND ' Atlanta Weekly Constitution - BOTH ONE YEAR FOR 91.50. THEMORGAKTON HERALD . . AND Thrice-a-Week N. Y. World BOTII ONE TEAR FOR 11.50. The Woman's Health Journal FREE one yar to all new subscribers to The IIekald who pay $1.00 cash, and to all old subscribers who pay to "a year in advance. Come or write efirly, for these offers will not last long. aAi 1 . a . r m - . . 1 'Si Superior To All Sarsaparillas. "l. mTJmPt CrtT a insrvvJous medicine was discovwvd. It was wl wifftSe yVlra.P- L'" h and iu fame and repuUtJoolas be its Wonderful inflnenr. v tT'tT tV k m T?nderfal V0 n1 -engtbener. Weak women Should always take E P P' It.bnildj e B?- It has the universal ecnmenlAticc2edjirin Tth w! thecountry. because we pubSab the formula onrryanT oJ wJiCT. most skepucal that it U a genuirt heallh restorer COOTUC Read The Truth 'And .Be Convinced.- A Wonderful Cure. nartvr tA aua.U. -' m r . . years: tried all madtcinra and ooctors with a Mr. maaeat reuet. I waa adviaea to take P. P. T sad brtore I bad Salsaed two bottles nrr pala aabaJd aal was sole to work. I feel better than 1 anvefor years, and asa coa6deat of s complete recorrry. J. S DCraiaa, HewaaarUle. Pla, inam I - . Testimony from tha Mayor. Isaffcred wnh fthsamatlaai for Sftcen years, tried aa the so-called speeiScs. bat to ao aaiWe? Wy .jraboiUeol P.p.p, and 1 irei tike a . W. IV WTLDEJ, Mayor of A&aay. r'rorn -Tsvo Wetl-known Physician. we areacribe ilia e graaUnaay case, aad Sad U aa ea- eaDenC thiag. We hat ara. J. U. A M. T. BJCHAkDaOJC, rWasaalAC. "'""'aaaaaaaaBaaaa, - Met Springe Surpsssad. ' AWlla a P. P. r, haa ooae ra aaara goad thai tarea natkr'tnalBeai at lb. Mot SanaK irk. JAhiea M. MWTON. AbariarVasiw. ZO. flmpl, eoraa wind "Cruptione Cured. l?L'ZrX?'mT U to tha rAcirat ' 1 Cap. j. d. jorrxsTox, ar.aaak.Ca. as loha-to. A Oa. a V ' " " ' ' The-above letters are taken from many rrxeivedb-y wa t t y , . -. . tofmre tlooj. which cm aad will be cured by p p p ' Jo"t Iran- tO -S&m& FSla -LI?faa!13 ElwXw rJSxMx Usr-nan Block SAVAttflAH ci . e 4V'- " ' . ' FOR SALE BY - - . "- x W. A: LESLIE & CO.. Drugkists, MORCANTOfl, N. a
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 2, 1896, edition 1
4
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