Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / June 11, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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p0 you Use Printed Stationery? 2 t. vou do. ;t wiU Pay you t,get JnJ and 1?" frm mC befoe S feV' H-d Bin I - I e"c pnveloiws. Circulars. Cards, S ".'"Jew. Pamphlets, and Any Kind of Promptness. Accuracy, Neatness and rood Stock Guaranteed. f Tcarrv a larKe stock of paper, cards, r S .hns etc., and do printing for S - tnmc Vhe larKest concerns in West- ""5. ."ornlina. Give me a trial. 5 trn w T. G. COBB, S 5 Morganton, N. C. S S , , ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 " 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 111 I Ull 1 11 1 1 1 III OS TO lllflltllll . .lr.,1, II II, l. SIMMONSN rGUAT0R7 VOL. XII. NO. 13. NEIGHBORHOOD NEwT" 1 Items of Interest from the Counties Around Us. MORGANTON. N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE n. 1896. countant and a model business man Last Wednesday even ing aoout 10 o clock the fire alarm was given at the electric light nouse, ana in a tew minutes the The bridal party entered the room to the strains of Mendelssohn's "Wedding March," played by Miss Aldine Ulitt. They were attended by Misses Lizzie Campbell and TOLD BY THE PRESS. SCHOOL BOOKS ADOPTED. THE BEST SPRING MEDICINE Is SIMEONS LIVER REGULATOR. Don't foreet to take it Now is the time you need it most to wake up your Liver. A 'iuzeish Liver brings on Malaria, Fever and Ague, Rheumatism, and many other ills which shatter the constitution and "I k health. Don't forget the word REGULATOR. It is SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR vou want. The word REG riATOR distinguishes it from all other remedies. - And, besides this, SIMMONS LIVER KtUtLftiun is a rvcguiaiui 01 urc Liver keeps it properly at work, that your cvstem may be kept in good condition. FOR THE BLOOD take SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR. It is the best blood nuriiier and corrector. Try it and note the difference. Look for the RED Z on everv package. You wont find it on jnv other medicine, and there is no other l iver remedy like SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR the Kingof Liver Remedies. Be sure you get it. J. H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Very Slight Change la Cleveland An Un occupied Dwelling Burned Other News. Cleveland Star, June 4th. The county commissioners were whole town almost was on hand. Katie Abernethv two nf NVwtnn's The roof had caught near the I sweet young ladies, both relatives amuKc siacK, uui was extinguished lot the bride m a tew moments Mr. J. F. Click returned Friday from Davie county. We are sorry to learn from him that his brother is no better, and that he is not expected to live. . . . Paul Glenn, the little The impressive cere mony was performed by Rev. D. Monroe, and the happy young couple left on the evening- train for Lookout mountain and other points of interest. CORN CRACKER : ON TEMPERANCE. Oar Readers Given the Benefit of i Very Touching Homily. . PULPIT AND PRESS SILENT. wrestling with the school book son of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Seagle, 1 question Monday, l he representa-1 ulca it inursaay morning ot lives oi me several companies were I bUUlcra miautum, at me age ot THE OLD LIST RE-APFONTEO IN McUOWELU present to answer all questions and to present the merits of their books. The commissioners made out the list by dark Monday. The old list was retained, with the ex ception that Holmes Fifth Reader was displaced and "Our Country" substituted in its place. -Some other books ot Ginn & Co. were made supplementary to the "old list, among them being Frye's Geography; it was supplemented to Maury's. The copy books of Maynard, Merrill St Co. were adopted. .The change made is very slight and practically will not amount to anything. The action of the commissioners in retaining the old list gives general satisfac . . . . Mr. W. J. Hoeue and eleven months and one day. HO CHANGE IN CALDWELL'S SCHOOL BOOKS. Mr. J. Frank Wllaon Re-Appointed Tab- The Reader or the Original Kasays at School Have Ala Neglected Bona Grand Opportanl ties Consist sasy Among- the Mini iter. Sweet Olrl Oreo, aaio and Loaders la Cnarea. and State. Special Correspondence of The Herald. ' As this writer bas spent much e as s a a a lie School Kzamlner-Mr. W. F. Craig 01 n" ie mating IOOIS UUgQ St ft Appointed a Delegate to the National I fool, be DOW proposes to glTO YOQr CorrecUooe- readers tha benefit of a vert toneh. Board of Charities and Other McDowell News. Mr. Thomas Craig Dead Death of Several ' Children A Marriage Other Caldwell New. ' . - D Lenoir Topic, June 3rd. Clerk of the Court, McCall, has appointed Rev. I. W. Thomas county examiner for the coming year. ....A little child of Mr. Jones Haas died in Little River township Sunday ' morning, and was buried Monday at Union church The neighborhood of Creek. Emanuel was visited last weef by rented the lower store room in Mr. a severe hailstorm, which did con- D. N. Lonon's new building and siderable damage to wheat and will put in a general stock of goods oats. ....Married in Loveladv ahnnt the -jnth inct nr earlier party, of Patterson Springs, went I township on the ist ult.. bv Rev. The farmrv it- ihnnfnrm! seining in Buffalo last Saturday M. A. Holler, Mr. Columbus Hayes erly mentioned west of the South- uiKui auu taugm 104 nsn ao 1 10 auss ciw oumgarner, an ot ern depot and the public road, bas nnAnni.rl ... .Mini. f T I I "" .t J M - 1 . . i I ... . . . u...Urvu k wu mi. juun viuwcn. ....uicu, ai nis uumc i positively oeen decided upon. II T- r . 1 : . . - near vramcweii, on rnaay 01 last Marion Messenger, June S th. Mr. J. Frank Wilson wai re appointed Monday by Mr. Price, Superior Court clerk, as countv examiner of public school teachers tor another year from June ist. ;...lhe commissioners court at tended to the usual routine of business Monday. The first thing they did was to adopt the old book list for use in the public schools. ..Mr. E. L. Gaston, of Hominy LJuncombe county, has tion. ladies, yooDg and old, (tossippiog about a man who "is kltllQ bisself a drtDkioy a-btle they dip anaff eooagh tocload the intellect and shatter the nervoas system of an Amazou. The man ootler discassioa does not perhaps drink two gallons per year, and while be certainly is tampering with a dangeroas prac tice, toe proor is aoondant, that as many physics! evils arise from snnff indulgence as drinking alcohol. As to the blighting moral effects ot strong drink, tber are perhaps greater than the tobacco habit. What I want is to raise my voice in no uncertain sousd against the demon drink, till the dove shall return with the olive sign that the waters are abattog. 1 want it kept before the people that wine is a mocker, com whiskey, like the heathen, is raging, and whoso is deceived thereby is Lot wise, as an original obeervation let me say. that the blind-tiger puts an enemy into a man's mouth to steal away hia brains- Very often, the enemy storms the heights on a brain boot, and fails to find any. Could 1 but call around me all the monaxite dig gers, professors of saw mills, men who want to save the state by holding office, in my most per PRI.CE FIVE CENTS. ROBIN M THE rain. Listen to tVas snarls stratal II Is refcta U. t rain. sssun there skrfv akrfV Cail ire is htt tmr rwT. Fonrtaa; fro his tareoUag yeas anon await i aesa. Kaptare ta the swift rwrsla KeUa la the ratal Basra, to the sang he stags. TTtar shormiM wu wtagel "ATW nU the grtef sad gloom BrlgsWw Use toe skies wUl Aiwr all the ctesrdT wee Earth wtta gladder gold wUl glow JjT win trlaarph oees pain" BoUa la the ratal -Olatoa BeoUard U T r TMissiTl-n run memmmnnnuinnranummtxir 5 TILE MOKGANTO.V HERALD 1 M 5 It Ik km stmtiMf aeln H M H U T- ( lo W MtUx.J S g eaf tWg. rl eft. Woes ear- tt tSMs. or tt IWt. ..nkor ohat. S S rf.l4 ska M ! i4 ll S 5 Irettoo n4 a Wet tT 4 KetSr. S Zt CsMevH. klclowa IWitteal ee4 2 S ""' roeaiM te t-r trSaoe Svr- H tZ tiiUdwutiotiimu. Laraer. C tarae ttoe e I miu. litnio. SS !$ toaarMf dmunoa, Tiii.iiiiii S S Ina Ti llittl tJtmNMi mi. S C ra ln.i m eprauoeu s S a - sun inmiimmimmmmrmruumi nnl w ONE SPORTShtAN-S AMBfTIOH. It Is to Baal In th Ci SCivti Qd Trade-Marks obtained and ail Pat-J ient business conaucieoior MOorRATC FEES. 4 lijid we canst-, are patent ux less time tbsa those J i imtM V .1 s h i n i to n J Scod rnoael, drawing pnoto., wia oesenp-e (liuiire. tur fee not due till patent is second. i A P-FHttT. " How to Obtain Patents," witlij cost ot samp in tne U. S. sad toreign coantnes (sent free. . Address, C.A.SNOW&CO. 0.. sstcnt OrricE. Wasminqtom. D. C. K. Wells farm, on Hickory creek, was destroyed by fire Friday after noon. ....Miss Alice Grigg,.of Lincolnton, will be married on Wednesday afternoon, June 10th, to Mr. A. B. Donovavri, of Georgia. DEATH OF MR. J. A.' HeFALLS. E V E It Y YOU SPEND WITH WllK & CO, Ibrinofs its full return. Every purchase made of us is ap- preciated. Revival Meetings Closetr Shelby Con tinues to Grow and Improve Death of a Little GlrL Shelby Aurora, June th. We regret to chronicle the death of J. A. McFalls, which occurred in this place on the 27th of May. Mr. McFalls has for many years filled the position of deputy United States marshal. He was a good citizen' and made a good officer. His death was the result of a third stroke of paralysis. . . . .The O. R. & C. Railroad put on the summer train between Shelby and Cimden on Monday, ist inst. Th-: train leaves Shelby at 7:40 in the morn ing and runs through to Camden, and returns to Shelby at 6 o'clock in the evening. This makes a nice, convenient schedule for parties who want to visit the springs. Capt. John Baxtell will pull the bell-cord, while Engineers Marion and Shiver will take it day about handling the throttle. ....The week, Mr. Thomas Craig, aged 78 years.. His remains were buried Sunday at the family L burying I ground on Lower Creek. ....Prof.1 J. A. Holmes, State Geologist, will, during the summer, make a sur vey of the Catawba and Yadkin rivers to ascertain the amount of water power in each Our people are well pleased with the telephone exchange. Fourteen 'phones are now in operation, and the hands are at work putting up other lines as fast as they can. Misses Callie Kirby and Florence Stine have charge of the central office The old school books were re-adopted by the board of county commissioners last Mon day. AXOTHEB BIO COTTON MILL. New Depot Being Built Railroad Cases Continued Another E1e-trlc Bond The Old Book List Re-Adopted In Ruther ford. Kntherfordton Democrat, Jane th. Mr. R. R. Haynes has bought the Stedman shoal on Broad river, a short distance above Big Island, and will build a big cotton mill there. The Stedman shoal ts one of the finest water powers in the county. It is reported that the Ground will be broken for the plant as soon as the rain ceases. . . . .The twenty-third annual meet ing of the National Board of Char ities and Corrections convenes at Grand Rapids, Mich., on June 4th. Mr. W.F. Craig has been appointed by Gov. Carr as one of the 1 1 dele gates to attend from NorthCarolina. ....Mr. W. F. Craig, real estate agent, has sold for Mr. L. H. Has kins, of Morganton, the Sledge house and lot to Mr. R. A. Miller, whose family Will arrive soon from Washington, D. C-, to occupy this as a home. Mr. Miller is having a new coat of paint put on the house and otherwise repairing and brushing things up. ... Mrs. Lizzie Neal has just had her beautiful new house painted a rich cream color, trimmed in green. The style of the house is a good one, the abundant piazza room is the idea, especially, for a Southern home The quarterly conference of the Marion charge will begin la the Snow Hill church on Saturday, the 13th inst., at 11 a. m., and to include the second Sabbath. Rev. Robt. M. Hoyle, presiding elder, will preside at the conference. SHALL BOYS GO TO COLLEGE? ing homily. II is subject shall be a new theme, one on which the pulpit and the press have remained strangely silent. While it presents grand possibilities for flights of oratory, the stump speaker, like the silent sphynx, has alike main tained a harrowing silence. Every person familiar with the religious and secular press, knows I mean temperance. The readers of the oiigiual essays at schools, have also neglected some grand oppor tunities to shake the bloody shirt of social ostracism at every young man who drinks, or puis the bottle to his neighbor's lips. Such being the case, society is spared the in- a a. a consign -pectacie oi a yonng strangely silent on the subject, and tzfbm Indiang wujruruiuiuea.s u.a.oiiBe a lho temperance acitator bas wbeia down tha way thai boy bocAibo sweet girl graduate, who iuyokes Dever flourished, something must o kill dacrwitia aad poor Ooqp-a-, the shades of departed greatness, done l0 6i thl Elating tudn only a dram ct powdw far a uv . i. u 1. -"uu vt iuu TKXXI that Tils lulls rtAnitantlariea I vgw. u uuu vbss spwi iuww futnre, calling on all present, in- JrXrr rtf. wxd4aV. g Til toll roa what X would lika to I dA aI4 a maa wboa lila Is nwtit ror- ln4T ahoat froea city to 1 amber camp and tram park to forest. "Iwoeld Li to own a arbocoar fit to wsal&cr acy irals) on Um mm mad travel ia it p nod down th Axoarlcaa coast from Labra dor to Cap Uora sad north hia to Bering- strait. Tbcra's nwnola lot of odd place- od eoald rUlt a&Idcam or nerar heard ot Tak It aboot Gap Halter. Now. what do yon know about U mtlnlaad alorirahora there? What cms yon tU of tha peopla in tha gwtuaps tbera gad of the) g-am thena pmtmlm find ta the woods r It's go liUU, yon cat to roean at it Than there U a wbola lot of tha Abaolutoly Puro. A err am of UrUr lakLcx puw drr. Tlijcrvst rf nil la Uwrretcx rUvoria. Lttint CmJtnt Slat Gsrvraavrl Wl lUjalllAklnc Towder Co., ew , roll of VOxicrt's shcra lin'a. mm. SQAaive eloquence, I'd say stand tion thsialaiaivlUndjaoctbof thcra. irom nnaer. The Uible beme I wcr. ooJr tha other dar I beard of a ... . . 1 .t i j a v. . - e rr r i He ao not assume tnat you t"cc-j U.UK... ya w. ,00,ooo capital, which it was pro- - . ' I Iirtcnn fnrmprlv rT this nlar I buy elsewhere, but we :r"WJl c v " c:..rJ-' Posea 10 ,nvcst In a 10,000-spindie rhim that vnn ran wvp u u v?m ' -fT ?iU1MT mill at Forest City, will be in Claim tnat you can save the 30th of May. The remains were ;n tum miu nrnnnA t Icannot do money by. buying PRY GOOPS, SHOES AND GROCERIES FROM US. M. B. KIBLER & CO., The Cheap Store. FOR . m i5D fAII GROCERIES. Flour, Meal, Bacon, Hams, Lard, Sugar, Coffee, Rice, Molasses, Kerosene Oil, Canned Goods, Cheese and Crackers, Cakes and Candies, Fruits, etc., and COUNTRY - PRODUCE brought to Shelby for interment on Sunday, the 31st The se ries of revival meetings in the Methodist church closed last Wednesday. There wasva large number of conversions and twelve accessions to the church Sh'elby is not on any perceptible boom, but the town continues to grow and 'improve. ''New buildings are going up and the mechanics are all busy Grain is ripening in this section and'harvesting has begun. ....There is being large quantities of dry pinewood shipped from Cleveland county to points in South Carolina. ....Large quantities of lumber. continue to eo south over the O. R. & C. Rail road. It goes mostly from upper Cleveland and Rutherford counties. MANY DEATHS IN GASTON. Mrs. -GO TO- T. L HEMPHILL, (One Door Below Postoffice.) -:o: I have also recently added a line of SHOE S For both Ladies and Gen tlemen, and am selling them as low as an v one. P Will aOnrPpiatl. o C-Unrm. ( -m,, y Patronage, and promise full value 'Or vnnr .v, r Respectfully, T. L. HEMPHILL S-UE OF JOHN McGALLIARD'S house and lot. ItM Barbara Shram Passes AwaySeven Small Children Called to Best. Gastonia Gazette, June th. Mrs. Barbara Shrum, 70 or 80 years of age, and very well known in all the Rhynesville section, died last week at the house of her son-in-law, Jacob Huffstetler, and was buried Friday at the Cloninger graveyard. She was the mother of Mrs. J. W.Long, of Gastonia. Mrs. Shrum spent all her life in the immediate neighborhood where she died. She was a member of the Philadelphia Lutheran church, was esteemed as a mother in Israel, and died without an enemy. .... Little Grace, the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Clinton, died at their home on Mill street last Thursday afternoon, after a brief illness of a nature that affected he brain. She was just eleven months old. ....The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Will Lineberger died last Thursday. ....Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Faires, of Olney, were called last Thursday -to give up their son Ralph nearly two years old The little orphan in fant of Mr. Frank Morrow, only a few weeks old, died last Friday. The babe's mother, -who was a daughter of Mr. Boyce Weir, died the week before. ...;The ten- month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J proposed locate on Mr. Haynes' purchase, and that the plan to build at For est City will be abaodoned The authorities of the Seaboard Air Line began work on the new depot here last week. The build ing now being erected is to take the place of the one burned about four years ago. Since the depot was burned, the railroad has used a box car as a freight depot, with a section house as a passenger sta tion. ....The cases for $15,000 each, for damages against the Ohio River and Charleston Railroad for the killing at Henrietta Station, some months ago,' of Mrs. and Miss Kanipe, which were set for trial in the Superior Court at Marion this week, have been continued Prominent citizens of Polk county are interesting themselves in a pro posed narrow guage electric rail road from Tryon via Columbus and Milts Springs to RUtherford too. There is every reason why such a road should be built, and with such men as Capt. Pearson and W. M. Justice at work for it in Polk "county, the prospects of its being built are gojd. ....Lydia, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Koone, of Cuba, died Wednesday morning, aged two years and three months The board of county commissioners, at their regular session Monday, adopted the old list of school books, except the dropping of "Johnson's History of the Negro Race," and the addition of "Manley's Southern Literature" and "Curry's South," two excel lent books. Some are Fitted for Life, and Others are Unfitted bv College Training. Rev. Charles II. Tarkhurat, D. D., in his paper to young men, in May Ladies1 Home Journal, tliscus ses "Shall We Send Our Boy to College 1" answering the query with the assertion, "That depends a great deal on the boy." He an nounces himself to be a thorough believer in the college, but holds that "it might not be best for him our boy 1 to go to college ; it might eluding the town cow, to bear wit ness; that, "finally, girls, allow no young man, even a moderate drinker, to ever keep your com pany' liesolre, that : "The llpe that touch liqnor ShaU never touch nine." As a sequel, we are also spared tie sight of this same young lady going home from the exercises with a young man whose breath smells like a distillery struck by lightning. We snow if any little marbled back books are ever written, their authors will be sober, consistent men instead of disreputable bums who are not likely to draw a sober breath this Bide of kingdom come. Another. phase of the subject, will be consistency among the ministers. When temperance shall be Agitated, the poor- and obscure church member who denies bis family to give the widow's mite for gospel support, shall be treated with the same consideration as the bloated bondholder. ' No time since Jesus of Naze re th preached the gospel of peace, speaking pardon to the weak ana erring and burling denunciation at the sell -righteous, but powerful Pharisee, has there been an ex ception. So when the bine ribbon brigade marches from conquest to victory, no poor ignorant man shall be denied church fellowship because in a moment of weakness be yields to a depraved appetite, while a man worth fifty tbsusand dollars sits in the uppermost seats of the synagogue, gets drunk early and often as the Pied Piper of llame lin, aud after being too drunk on Saturday night to brush a horse not be best for the comniuuity that he should. College can fit a man for life, and, also, it cau unfit him. I fly off the end of his nose sings on There are styles of education that Sunday, "Just as I am," disqualify the student for doing Another feature calculated to what be is competent to do, with- cause the isles of the South to out qualifying him to do that awake because their redemption which he might like to do, but for draweth nigh, will be calling a which be lacks, and always will I spade a spade, and in all things lack, the pre requisites. As a gen eral principle, the more a man knows the better, but bo long as the present order of things contin ues a great amount of veryordina- being consistent. We know all advocates of temperance will take the Bible as their criterion, which, when Noah got np a jag, pro nounced him drunk, although a ry work will require to be done ; I just man and a shining model of and ordinary people will do ordi nary work better than extraordi nary people will, and be a great deal more comfottable while doing it. Hordes of both sexes are en tering college for the reason that they do not enjoy commonplace things. The result is that common place things are left undone and uncommonplace things fare still and tender ties of social life ; de populates earth and peoples bell. As this language has never been used before, I bope some forlorn and shipwrecked brother, seeing, may take hope again. Let tha church and Bute arise In their might to crush this monster evit Let no young lady look at a young man who drinks. If a snake bites yon turn the other cheek, but don't drink whiskey. How often baa tt been my melancholy experience to see a man die with jimjams who first tasted strong drink to cure a snake bite. To ministers I would say, tem perance agitation is the palladium of our liberties. Don't allow a poor man, especially if yon don't like him, to even keep camphor. Boast him, turn him out of the church, and then keep him down. If you hare a, man of wealth, a social or political influence, let him make, buy and sell all be pleases. No matter if he gets so full he can't brush a horse fly off the end of hia nose during the week, bold to him, and don't ad monish him or you might lose part or your salary. If a school closes with an exhibition and a gang of hoodlums get drunk and disturb the exercises, be governed by cir cumsances. If the teacher is a pet of the church, and the offenders are men without friends who have to run away to bear down on inffianism. If the teacher is moral, but independent and asks no favors of canting hypocrisy, and the offenders are grandsons of their grandfather's, it is then your duty to denounce the school exercises as an unlaw ful assembly. Be sure then to roast the teacher, and say the young men are sons of Christian parents that never shirk when the hat comes round. Then as to aiding and abetting the distiller. If a poor man baa a surplus of corn and sells a few bushels to a distiller, cast him into outer darkness as an unprofitable servant. Don't fool any time trying to admonish him, but crush him be tween the tablea of the law. By so doing you shall save a soul from multitude of themU they'd let him. Wbat U they pay far what they boy with para fold, and If rrrr a whit man rtsited them he) did not ooxne) back to tell aboot it, nor will tha Indlins amy wbera thry got thrur sraS. "When yon com to think aboct tt, tha sportsman noatn about In tbes oat of tha way places oonld gt mora ram and enrloattleg than ba coold rt oct of XUae. UoaoiAln park or from any other of tha big prtsmrraa. "1 bop to mala jost goeh abripaaoe time. IH tax a a 10 rn a SO gnngw and a targtt pistol, with slacks of fishing tackle U all kinds and do end of amrnnnltl.isv The specimens I will gather will pay for the trip, as I shall go alone pEpaxed to akin and dry any thing trqm a tapir to a erooodile, from a oondor to a beetle, not to mention anakce and other thing. "--New York Sun. Tree Clint Wag seat as. The London Field baa an Item that it like-ly to call oat a cliacnamlon among Engllea eomstpondanU of that paper. A manwritM that when shooting with a friend in Banffshire last December ray friend called omt, "There'g a rabbit sp a treel" Bora eooojrh one was there at least ten feet from the ground. The tree wag an nprfght fir, and the man had seen the rabbit ran vp the smooth bark as easily as a squlrr!. The rabbit stop ped on the first branch to look down. What is more, "there ia a lot of blown timber In the wood, and X sup pose the rabbi U hare got accustomed to climbing on it, for I hare often awn them faxQD on to a root and ran no the keep out ef jaiL I slanting trunk till they were aometimat 18 feet from the ground, which mast hare been a dixjry height for an animal of roca ground habit. Corroborative letters will probably come in. and rabbit will hare an es tablished reputation as climbers. It is aid that In Australia the Imported rab bit have begun to develop boused claws, with the aid of which they are able to climb tne rabbit proof fences. A large number of with hab its acquired becanse of environment have been noted from time to time foxes thai climb trees, rate that are beasts of prey, birds that build necta adapted to certain oooditiona, and so on indefinitely. TXIE ASQEVIUE WOODWORKING CO. UUJflCTCUJ 1U I!KJ CF BUILDING MATERIAL, DOORS, SASH, BUJiOS, MOULD ING, STAIR WORK, MW-TELS.ETC. : o : Public Buildings, Banks, School HousesJStores A SPESIALTY. -:o:- WE DO THE HIGHEST GRADE OtWORK AND ALSO LOWER GRADES TO SUIT CUSTOMERS. si:xi - rem - iisti3iatim. worse. Agriculture is the material Must what he was drunk. faith. The same authority, when dealing with Nabal, a synonym of I death and cover churlishness passed the same sen-1 aIQ8 tence he was also urnnk. In the Bible I read Noah is not commended for bis depravity, nor does it say be was "tight," funny,w "billions," "somewhat inebriated," or anything else calculated to whitewash him, but sizes htm np A BRILLIANT WEDDING. Three Deaths The Newton Manufacturer' Plant Sold Other Catawba News. Newton Enterprise, Jane Sth. : At the sale last Monday Mr. Jno. P. Yount bought the Newton man ufacturing company's; plant for $700. ....The infant of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Yoder of : this place died Sunday and was buried Mon day, r. ..Mr. Ed Clark, of this place, left this week for Atlanta, Ga., where he goes to assist Messrs. Elliott fit nlliott, ot Hickory, do a auantitv of railroad work, V. .. t .l' at the home of her nephew. I. VV. M - inv i I r t is n ra nar mc . I II I II II I IV . aaan W'SSiVi . w w basis of a nation's strength and prosperity. We could dispense with ''either lawyers, doctors or ministers better than we could with farmers. Probably we should not quarrel no much if there were fewer students of the law ; should not be sick so moch if there were fewer students of medicine, and should not be so wicked if there were fewer students of theology. All of these could contribute liberally to the ranks of the agriculturists with advantage to the professions and to the grain and vegetable mar kets. Iam not disparaging auy- body, neither am I saying that it would not be a good thing, in it-1 judicial ermine self considered, ir every one, bow-1 honored. ever material or menial hia occu pation, could receive all that the finest school or college training could confer; but that is not prac ticable at present, and never will be till people get over thinking that there is a disgrace attaching We know when the people hap peu to bear a few speeches, read Should a man. however, who la wealthy and under no necessity of selling corn let a distiller have a thousand bushels, make him a Sunday school superintendent aud h-nor him lo all church councils. T .eae suggestions are at variance with Bible teachings, but it Is not always expedient to stick to the Bible. bat we want ia the sno- They met at the linen counter, and the girl in blae looked so aadly perplex ! ed that the girl In brown said rympav- theUoallT: "Why, May. what Is the matter? Ton look ao miserable. "I'm bothered. eckaowledged It "Ton gee,. Rudolph and I quarreled bit terly last night. And to save my life I t't make ap my mind whether to go on buying household linens is expecta tion of a reconciliation or to buy me an organdie to begin a new campnlga, "It 1 bothering. agreed toe girl la Ani we women nave so many ssHBiiii ummm to, BQX 296,ASHEVIUE, N. C. W. J. ItlCH. Superintendent, nxa 2S-3i FIRE " INSURANCE I o We write policiee 00 all claneee ef desirable risks in the following stand ard com paas : N.C HOME of HaJeich; OONT1 N LNTA L of New York : PENNSYLVANIA of Philedelfhat DELAWARE - VA. 11 RE AND MARINE of Rich mond; MECtlAXICS AND TRADERS' of New Orleans. . AVEltY & KItVIN, IlraaLD Baildieg. Morganton, it. C PEr?imbTAL"pTLLs -Cv . ' a HAHtSH-8 C1HCIB TOWIO ! hi N., 4W, sag taaei. j e V aaar hard probWs to solver New York HINDERCORNS tw . o-w Janmal I "aea sa. Ag iaaw.avneB few homilies on this subject, and ceM 0f temperance. So matter see a man giving wnai oe cans au object lesson for temperance" with disreputable pokeberry pictures; that a poor man who bas taken a few drinks won't be stigmstixed, "drunk again, as usual;" while a son of rich, influential parents, who is on a three-story and basement drunk, is laughed at as being 'so peculiar." Then the ministers who are called to preach will hew to the line. A big distiller will fare just like a poor blockader. While the minister is so ionexibie, the ill not be dis- A man who has got rich and powerful by defrauding the gov ernment as a government distiller can't tilt the scales of justice with gold. No judge will ever think of giving an eloquent charge to grandjuriea against the curses of bow much sacred teachings are perverted, we must never stop to listen at reason is consistency. A poor man who sells lumber which Is made into a whiskey bar rel should be turned out of the church and socially ostracised. On the other hand, If a man bas been a bloated drunkard, bar-keeper, and distiller; if be bas made money, let bim bold a prominent place in the church. Common people may object, but who cares for common people! Who ever beard of a poor boy rising to respectability, let alone eminence f We rich peo ple, especially tboee who inherited what we have, are the oeea to dictate for church and 8tate. Corn Crackes. TKAMrLKU TO SKATO. for "This X ray Is doiag wonders mankind, he remarked. Yea, "hat wife replied. "It has daoe lots for msrtklnA Maybe it'll be devel oped ta the course of time to where tt will enable womankind to see whether her has is on etralght or not without locking In the glass. Washington Star. HIRES Rootfcxcr . con tains the best herbs, berries and rood ruture rnxkes for rootbeer cuHs?. Tike r.o other. DOH'T STOP TOBACCO. Probably the oldset timber ta the world U found la the anrient tempi of Egypt In eonneetlon with stone week which is known to be at least 4.000 years old. This, the only wood msnd ta the ccsrtractlon of the templee, is In the form of ties, nolding the end cf to seven-month-old child of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Smith, died yesterday. NEWTON'S NEW BANK. .v'rtue of a power of sale contained ?,by I m Vf'?, ,"ortaKedeed executed to 'allianl o' , Jc(;al',ard and wife, M. E. Mc rrit.., '.'V thc 5th day of lulv. 1 R9S HnH the register's office of Burke I7.J- I will .. 2. on pages 48 and I ne court h,.,,o , iMic auction, for cash, at V!". N.c " .e.'loo.r n the town of Morean- .1- -", mc xoia aav oi inne. g described lot of I A Small Fire Mr. Click's Brother Not Expected to Lire A Death, Hlckorv Press, Jnne th. Shuford's Bank opens for busi ness in Newton Monday, the Sth inst. Under Mr. Shuford's presi dencythe First National of Hick ory has been a brilliant. success, Killian.Miss Harriett Killian. She was buried at Salem church. .... Mr. E. E. Post, wife and one daughter went up to Blowing Rock, Monday to take j charge of the Green Park hotel for the sea ton We received a card from Dr. P. F. Laugenour, of Statesville, to the doing of ordinary things." an illicit whiskey traffic, aud then go to a bllud tiger to quench bis Electric Bitters. Electric Bitters is a medicine salted for any season, bat perhaps more gen erally needed when the languid ex hausted feeling prevails, when the liver I is torpid and sluggish and the need of a tonic and alterative is leit. A prompt use or tnig medicine bas orten averted ,A- K 'lvjnt?d.?y'the 15th day of Jnne "uSsrty of nA and the people of Newton are- to ";haif of'f'ina, known as the east-1 be congratulated upon having so lh! JMor,a,.'-,'8Sar'6,of the plat of u :5, .ctaKi;ch a stating that his little- 15-month old lJif." daughter VVaneta died to-day at eotemcting and freeing,the system 3 o ciock weancsaay,; 01 tiiuicra 1 from the malarial poison. Headache, infantum We clip the follow-1 indigeetiou.oonstipation, dizziness yield ino- from the Chattanooga. Tenn to fclectric Kilters. 00c. and II -r?.r- nn. f th. mnst hMiitiful bottle at John Tull s drugstore. ft avet-w Vv v aaw se r w ------ weddings ever solemnized in Sod per thirst during court intermissions. The solicitor who is now to de fend the state, will certainly no iuvoke the tables of the law, to gether with the woes of Revelation against the whlakey dealer, and then smile with the judge around the blind-tiger. Neither will we bear a minister denounce wine as mocker nor strong drink aa raging. while he commits as great' a ain against -decency, godliness, and Tne CraUa Csrem sales Cease Man, Weeaea aa4 CU4ra t BeTmesnlea te . aloacow Dispatch. Via? SOta. The popular fete of the eeremc nies, at which between 400,000 and 500,000 people were fel and In dulged in all sorts of metrymskiog, wss held on liodrorsky plain op posite the Peterofsky palace. The crowds became ao dense and ao esger to obtain access to the free food aod beer and free amusements that it could not be controlled. Men, women and children were thrown uown and tram plea npon "The dogwatch, a term used by sailors, wee onee the dodge watch, a abort waaoh being la trod scad between those longer in aart in order that too great as. amount of work should not be put upon the seme men ta the eousne of the day. The biggest and beat marked morktng birds are found wlthta a belt of S3 miles north and 0 miles south of Baa Ansonia From a lUr writ tea by Rev. J. Gan der man, of Pi mood Is. Mtch-, we are permitted to make that attract: I here ao healtauoo In recoct mending Dr. Klog a New Discovery, ae the re sults were aleaost marvelous la Use et my wife. While I wag ceetor ef the Baptist chorch at Biree J e actios she wag brought down with pneumonia development Company's . . - a :i nr. I 5a rt 1. . "K ail lmnrnv.m,l. .1. " Pa th. ..'""a sold hv " "1"- I Ot tint. maa an. !it JS.r,. i.:rr0n irom the Kth H ti lh'theu;hXf HX October 1st, 1895 14th day ol May, A. D., 1896. V. COFFEV. Morteaeee. Attorneys. thnrouo-h a financier establish a banking house in their town. Mr. A. H. Crowell, the cashier, has heretofore been assistant cashier of the First National of Hickory, In cases where dandruff, scaln dis ci y was that of Mr. J. T. Green and I eases, falling and graynesa of the hair I under his tongue, or else smoking Miss Rosa Campbell, of Hickory, appear, ao not ; neglect tnem, out apply a pipe the Tumes of which would N.C The bride has been the d t0 nio hke s kill a civilized man further than a much admired euest of Rev. Mrs. tlair newlL good Winchester rifle. D. Monroe. The marriage took CThi Herald office for Job Another harbinger of the mlllcn chew of tobacco as a sweet morsel an' ,eI,hr Dad,f or kUH -lc U grirr. Terrible par- wuiiooioers osu tueir uvea cruioeu out by the fearful pressure of the vast crowd. About 3,000 were killed. and is recognized as a skilled ac-1 place In the parlor of .he manse. I Work. niom would be tha( we'd nor ecfl Work. IIckald office for Job ezyams of coughing would last Lour with liiue mterruptioa sad it teraal ae if she could not survive them. A friend recommended Dr. King's New Discovery; tt wag qsick la Its work and highly ssOkfacCiry ia results. Trial bottle free at John Telle drarstore. Refulag sige &0o. and U How to Cr Yourself While I'slna? It. TV wme aatet twa m etae M Sn mas ") tm mrrtnmTf aM(ts Smtwjmig arfttf a W an a iw a wt-auaa. a iaw- h lMuaati- rjvanai:iC) cn er- "aro W s mrrWjt ev M uar aab-t. la aviu aoeaKa, cafwr,- .-a. in urn n arw u MM c4 aa mt n'a kf- a MUk a taa tla" fx' MjS e tt-M-w. 11 m riMy .-t-a lianWoM aarSra- f Uan t at ia WMk f t.3 La4-..g t- era.' M W u!fr it w wk. U wrf-U-a ftwtiiiw t wr trv. lUf - f ran en ium r entauS a i I aw taat. tatarvML 'Uhmvh s na.t. a vn.irft nm, 141 i vxiM at s M t e It 7v3 aa i n I aS Pm Ouat M0 ta a Ktm a jot vaua r" Cetel 9f SUi m Cara eal tistaaS Thang r4a. Trvm . 4 nricasi 1W ruJS ef a-e a aa S aa4 t Urfv-"3-. taw Tag tr aaa ( &a rv. aa Mn.Ar.Jaa,S. . Kra. Va'aurai S U 'g . la iMat, a Umuhh r Sc1( rt I mS lira -ira ta aJK Mm. Wm t4, yar ml ts In I a gi4 awSoe fa yir-U If aa4 Ivan wr I ,ar I UMl t aa eaa a i .uvw -, n f 0rt - V-" Star "7lSi r aa-aoaa. ImSm t UMI. 4 4aS." aac , W., en sum U M a axaaa St put Rau;. . I f-"1 a s a( war 'laMUt' efe ta aX SM cS ta atn la aa r a r.raia. aaS I a ta mw I tai r--. ta 14 a4 aaa r- 1 mm aJ ta wnn a wa aa4 t r tntf aa aua4. I mrr. a a t4 V eva avf cajucS ail iua. liMtt rmarwi. r. M. S ! r. rsn Sa re aJ srarfaft at l f" e . inn a, r l l a irwat, a a ra tn aat. rv gwaaw. af aat .jw -jm fm aa tt fVva- ia rw aur aaa a aaS taa. hfrttlMim a B"t,tie, U traa.
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 11, 1896, edition 1
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