Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / June 10, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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.mrrmEirmmiiniutmtnxni ,H limn"" a; I Do You Use Printed Stationery? pin nmrrnnmn ssnsurrn nn rm n:rj H TUP Mmr:iVTnvnroiir L 1o. it will pay you to get f " WUitUtUliU.I v H Ihcbcit tdTtrtitisf adiam ( 111 tl S Ilrdmat tia of Notlk Ctrobai. tZ S ff7,n,. t aYthiar. kN aav- 5 S thinir. or ir there ta aanbtar. Ka U err to whichroa ari.a toeall the at- a CaMarcll. McDoarclf. CWvclaad aad 5 ether rocattn in the I mtmoat c-rr- B S Soa f Nort CaroUaa. adrertMC ia B Thi Uoaoiaroa IUiil. Lanrer. tarn Iroa a araall oeUay. Kautioar E folln mtvili TnunoiUii E ..,w ami V'.'"' . a 1 -- . ..a tmm inr iiciuic - i 3 11 lacmn -'"A" 1ST. Note Heads, BUI Htl.. ranipWet and Any Kind of g .1 . ;f'inn ATI. v uriiB. . ''VmpincssccnW.NeatneMana--1 rV".r,i, fiimranteed. C.joj . -toot 0f naper, cards, I carry a 1 I Vmoe". etc., ana ao pnn - !",ne of "the largest concern, i '"' vorth Carolina. Give me 5 Morganton ana ao pnniian iui in west- : me a trial. COBB, Morganton, N- C. VOL. XIII. NO. 13. MORGANTON, N. C. THURSDAY. JUNE io, 1S97. PRICE FIVE CENTS. roaararnuked oa appUcatiea. 3 1 . v -' 1 - a 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 ii in 1 1 1 1 ii i n i m in 1 1 1 ii i n irnd WARNING. T ;flh to caution all users of Simmons t Zr Regulator on a 'subject of the deepest Hlt wd importance to their heal- J.rhrs tneir jivco. fiT"" H?,Lt and importance to their heatih lE.tre Ihtbb The sole trOrrietors makers of Simmons Liver Regulator torn tnai cuswm. -. . ' .',, nd taking some medicine of a ISri'ar appearance or taste, believuig it to L Simmons Liver Regulator. We warn mo that unless the word Regulator is on JhVrackaee or bottle, that it is not Simmons i Tver Regulator. No one else makes, or k t has made Simmons Liver Regulator, or -"lthiwr called Simmons Liver Regulator, f't j jf Zeilin & Co., and no medicine made hv anvone else is the same. . We alone can it up and we cannot be 'responsible, if nther medicines represented as the same do NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS. Items of Interest from the Counties V Around Us. 1 TOLD BY THE PRESS. CALDWELL CTJLLINGS. Excursion from Maiden to Lenoir Im portant Land Salt Shot at Mr. N. A. Powell A Fine Open Air Concert. Lenoir Topic, June 1st. vwi ,1 Mr. J. A. Stuart, of Augusta, Ga., will have charge of the Green J only a small quantity, was hidden lv- .v mo?th ad 5 days. She ing Company's plants died in- i"cir urst ana oniy child ana stantly to day at noon Mr. Self their man, . friends sincerely sor- was quite unwell last night, but rpwwitu loem in their distressing this, morning he felt sufficiently Dereavement. Little Pauline, recovered to resume his duties at IS months old daughter of Mr. and the mill. At 12 o'clock to day, k T- ' fW80-! draQk some however, just as he was leaving carbolic, acid from a bottle last the mill, he fell and expired in per- Ihursday and for several days it haps a minute's time. Mr. Self did.npt appear probable that her was an excellent citizen and had aved- :Bat little many friends. He was a member child tsow safe and doing well, of the Knights oMIonor. A wife ine dangerous drug was in use In and four children have the syrapa- iuo .iiuiiijuj me aoccor's airec- tny or ourpeoDle On Wrdnpo. tions and the vial, which contained day afternoon at the PwhvtPrmn uiause, anas Katharine Shuford, iMiuuwi ai umwiuS tuis r fcuo inuuei u worn oasKe. xne i aauguter of Hon A A Shuford 8ason. ....A child of Mr. Gran- j little one m a childish ramble and rr. nh9g. ' .' ait help you as you are led to expect they ville McRary, of Little Eiver town- found the vial and drank part of joined together in holv matrimonv ii Caarlhm fact Well Ul mind, if VOn have I ul.in AaA lf Hnnil!lil mnmini o I tho mnfunfa Qk. CC j I 1 -r . . . V uuy uiniuuiUUjr, win- -.: . j;-- . beenin the, habit of using a medicine which tor because the name was somewhat like it and the package did not have the word Regulator on it, you have been imposed' upon and have not been taking Simmons Liver Regulator at alL The Regulator has been favorably known for many years, and ill who use it know how liecesaary it is for Yever and Ague, Bilious Fever, OoMtipa tion, Headache, Dyspepsia, and all disorders ri;'ng from a Diseased Liver. We ask you to look for yourselves, and gee that Simmons Liver Regulator, which : Tou can readily distinguish by the Red Z on wrapper, and by our name, is the only medicine called Simmons Liver Regulator. J. H. ZEILXN CO. . ' Simmons Liver Regulator ship, died last Sunday morning a I the contents. She suffered in- Kev. J. Alston Eamsav officiating week ago and was buried at Union church on Monday following. Kev. J. C Clapp, of Newton, spent last Friday night in Lenoir on his way to Blowing Bock where he went to, deliver the commence ment sermon before the Skyland Aeademj. .,, .Aft excursion party of over one hundred came op from Maiden, Catawba county, last Thursday over the Carolina! & MARSHALL C LOWER DROWNED. luiib nub Cure All Liver Ills. ARE YOU BANKRUPTinhealth, constitution un3erminedby ex travagance in eating, by disre garding the laws of nature, or physical capital all gone, if so, NEVER DESPAIR Horth-Western. About 30 of them J doubt of her permanent recovery. stoppea at ine uuns" on ine ua tawba river and the others came to Lenoir, and for a couple of hours the streets of the town were filled with the belless and beaux of old Catawba. They were an orderly company of young people and re flected great credit upon the community,-: from' whech they came. Mr. E. F. Reid went to Mor ganton Saturday evening. His mother-in-law and little girl re turned with him from their visit to Burke and he is again "keeping house" at his residence on South Main street, next the postoffice ....Capt. W. 0. Rowland and Mr. E. A. Poe made a trip to Lin ville last week, Mr. Newland went over there to represent some par-! ties who are interested in a suit which has been brought to try to tensely. ' Several physicians were The bride 18 On Pi flf thn mnit o f uickly summoned. Antidotes tractive lartipn rr thn .if and emetics were administered sesses those qualities which charm, promptly.- It appeared for a day and traits of Dind And rharnlr or two that the poison had accom- that make her worthy or admira- plished its deadly work, but . the tion. Dr. Menzies is a younjr man child's system withstood well the of ability and worth, and is already effects of the drug and she is now making arreTrrraoTe reputation in ou uiuuu uener as io oe auie to ins protession case iiquia nourishment, and there seems now to be no ground for HOTEL MEN DEAD. Cyclone at; Grorer Death of Mr. W. W. Green Other Deaths in Clereland Dance at Cleveland Springs. Cleveland Star, June 2nd. There was a dance at Cleveland Springs last Thursday night which was much enjoyed by a number of the young people. Refreshments were served at 10:30 p. w. . . . After spending . four score years and three on earth's desert plain, Mr. W. W. Green, of this place, died on last Saturday morning at 2 o'clock, and bis spirit returned from whence it came. He was one of Shelby's oldest citizens and has lived here almost ever since this was a town. He had been a mem ber of the Baptist church militant numummimnnauuiimimtnTKun2 Mr. Gathrte, of Rutherford too, and MaJ Mathewa, of Dallas Other Deaths. Lincoln Journal, June tH. Mr. V. 8. Guthrie, the well- known hotel man, died at bis home at Rutherford ton Tuesday morn ing. He was taken sick Thursday of last week .with tnflamation of the bowels. This was followed by a: r a. I . a - - congestion 01 cue Kiuneys, wuicu caused urinary poisoning. Mr. Guthrie was a mau of unflagging energy and his death will prove a distinct loss to his town. He was about 70 years of age Maj. U. Mathews, the noted hotel man of Dallas, died at Midway, Tenn , Saturday, aged 8G. His remains were brought to Dallas and in terred Monday. He was greatly esteemed by all who knew him. ....Mr. John W. Carpenter ("Go ley,"' as he was generally known,) died at his home near the Labora tory Mills last Saturday mornine He was about 75 yearsof age. Mr. Albert vv. Detter, one of voluntarily give himself up and abide by the law. - A preliminary trial was hed before Magistrate Ratliff on Thursday, and he was bound over to court on the charge of assault, ....Mr. Isaac Bledsoe, so far as we know and believe, Mc Dowell s oldest citizen, xrode into town - on1 Friday, on a rather sprightly mule. But the unusual part is that he rode twenty miles that day to return home, and be carries the weight of about 96 years, tleactsas if about 50 years otage. ... ..The Marion and Ashe ville turnpike is yet on paper, but we trust pending efforts will trans fer it to the ground, if possible. We recall the special bill passed by the last Legislature, stating that the State had given 50 con victs, etc., for the construction of the road. Although this was a specific grantMhe penitentiary au thorities would not let the convicts go, on the ground that the gen- jtral law passed previous to the Jast specific law forbids letting them go without pay. Mr. John Yancy, chairman of the road commissioners, went to Ral eigh for the 50 'convicts, tools, etc., but the aforesaid authorities would not release them. Hence, the chairman of the board and the other two members. Mr. Z. T. Phillips, of Mitchell, and Mr W. N. Tipton, of Yancy, have peti tioned for a mandamus aeainst John R. Smith, superintendent of the penitentiary, for the convicts. BOMB TARNS ABOUT KAH4AB. OHIO HIVES CHARLESTON RAILWAT People of the Sanflower Stata Say Sanaa i of Them Are EufKe rated. Kansas City JoarnaL - j Kansas is more sinned against than sinning; likewise more lied agaiflKt than lying. F.D.Cobnrn, secretary of her department of agriculture, has for years been making a collection of 'Kansas jokes; as samples of the truly ar tistic in lie making be rates the following among the highest: . A farmer had a large crib filled with ear corn, and there was a? knothole in the end of the crib. It was struck by a tornado and it is claimed tbat the suction was so great that cob after cob was drawn through the bole and the farmer was left with a crib of shelled corn. A man was riding along on horseback with a jug. of whiskey tied with a strap to the saddle horn when a cyclone struck him. Alter the blow had ceased the jog ban die was found inside the Jog and Bright ProevtWta for tha Erty Coaaale tloa of ThU Baaxt It M 111 Uaqelre miuvM tm rihl.a it, Marion Meaarngrr. Jane th. We have seen several paragraphs going the rounds in our. contem poraries regarding the early com pletion 01 this great work of inter state commerce, and we have just secured the following correct ac count of the status of the O. R. & C. Ry. from Col. P. J. Sinclair, at torney 01 the road here: This railroad has now com Dieted in the State of Kentucky, 00 the tJig bandy river from a point called "Richardson," the termini of the old Chattaroy railroad, now owned by the C. & O, nine and a half miles op the river in the direction of the Brakes of the Cumberland Mountains, where it is designed to I cross that belt. This branch was built in 1890 to reach the can nel coal of tbat section. It has thirty two miles built in Tennessee, from the North Carolina State fine to - v m m - ADeoiutery Pure CtrJ'''rmlfJ 'ot .u t-rrat learraiax atrrecla and healiAfaior.. Anarrs the food aaiat alant aad aU form. f adalrerattoa coccmoa to the cheap !raadst OVAL.B.KINO rOWDEK CO.,.'iw Vosas. the strap was sticking out the noz- J Allisoo's Milis in south-west Vir- zle, the jug having been blown iu side out without spilling a drop of liquor. Another caper which this tor nado cut was to blow the. side whiskers off a traveling man and plant them on the side of a wo mau's face, where they continue to grow. A Kan san abroad recently found ginia, and one hundred and sev enty-one miles in North and South Carolina, from Marion, N. C, to umden, 5. C It is now constructing a branch road from Blacksburg, S. C, to Oaaney Uity, S. C, and will, likely this season, build from Camden to Sumpter, S. C, and ultimately to tide-water at or near Charleston, a crowd that did not seem to an I S. C - . I T a a precinte his conversation concern-1 1 ncrc are now ongnt prospects ing the conspiracy of the foreign f an early resumption of work A C T T .! 1 T T " represenl the road com mis- t"""""0, vwuhi ku I ITl.T i "V .L .. . lis) jL. Bird sioners, -the case to be heard be fore hiv- Honor Judge Hoke at Le noir on the nth inst. If the plaint iffs should win" the penitentiary authorities might have some dam age to pay in delaying the work. But at any rate' the result of the judge's decision will be awaited with much interest. farmers of Kansas to pay their early completion of the road to the honest debts, so he polled out his I v "ginia and Kentucky coal fields stock of tornado stones, hoping to a to tne unio river. for over Ififtv years and we trust recover a large body of land nnder and are persuaded tbat he is now an old grant that has recently been a member of the church trium nneartbed by, some one. It is phaut.- He leaves a wife and one claimed that it covers a large son. Mat. S. J. Green, a leading , T ' x-M1 -11 I . 1 i 1. 1 I . . i T ' . I ' " " ucBlt VUt3 01 Tutt s Liver Pills Will cure you. amount of land in the neighbor- citizen of the town, to mourn his Liucoln county's best men, dropped For sick headache, dvsoeosia. ho? J vinp0?W-U,c? aeatA . ru"f r erv'ceswe.r.e ead at his home, three miles south . . pie nave uvea iorjears.. .1 conaucrea oy cs.ev. m. m. weoo sour stomach, malaria, torpid meeting'last week Messrs. W. C. and the body was laid to rest by lov- llvpr rnnc.tinat;nn biliniKinfxsQ Newland, Jake Bowman and W. ing hands in the Shelby cemetery liver, constipation, DUlOUSness j$ Council were employed to rep- Sunday jafternoon. . ..Marshall resent, the settlers against the the I Clower, son of Mr. T. Warren THE EARTHQUAKE AT OLD FORT. and all kindred diseases. Tutt s Liver Pills an absolute cure. claims, set up under this graut. I Clower, of Atlanta, Ga., met his I of Lincolntoo, at G o'clock Tuesday morning, lora long time be had been a sufferer from heart disease and his life had hung bj a thread. His death, therefore, was not a surprise. Mr. Better was born reoruary i5tn, lie was au houest, upright, God-fearing . . .Some drunken young men as death last Thursday at Tempesta they were driviug out of town one Falls. He went out to Tallulah day last wees came up wiin wr. fans wun a party 01 excursionists man, a consistent member of the lfcX IJvarr. 1 1 t f h A aTWai V AaA al tVt11fTCa I fmm A llatlfll flnrl Cm tk A w t a Itlnllr HU IllUnr h IP-lil flSSrS. across Zack's Fork on the Taylors- ing' over a high cliff, the wind So Weak More W MITCHELL'S A Certain Safe and Ellective Remedy lor SORE, WEAK and INFLAMED EYES. Producing Zsong-Sifjhtedn&sa, and Restoring tlin&lyMoftHe old. Cures Tear Drops, Granulation, Stye Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes AND PRODUCING- QUICK RELIEF AND PERMANENT CURB. ... Also, HjnaIly effi cartons wben ned ta ether maladies, anoli as' Ulcers, Fever Korev, Tnmors, Halt Ittienm, Barns. Plies, or wherever inflaininailoa exists. MITCHELL'S SALVE may be nseat ta advantage. . I SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AT 25 CENTS. AN ASTONISHING TONIC FOR WOMEN. McET.RF.I7fl ? ville road. They were driving at a very. rapid rate, and just as they went into the. bridge shouted to Mr; Powell to get out of their way or they would shoot him. Almost at the same time they fired off a oistol. Mr. Powell cannot hear very well, but he heard the pistol and seeing them coming dashing right at him he stepped to one side. They tired right io the di rection of Mr. Powell and shot a hole in one ear of their horse. .... The Eoot-Tea-Na Concert Co. gave a tine entertainment on the courthouse square last nignt which was enjoyed by everybody from Judge Hoke and Solicitor Spainhour down to the humblest denizen of the Blue Bidge or Brushy Mountains, who happened to be here as a witness against some one for stealing ,a bog. The singing was very fine, and that sermon was not to be grinned at by any means. . ! ME- cm DRANK CARBOLIC ACID. It Strengthens the Weak, Quiet&the NervM RpliA Monthlv-' ! Suffering and Cures FEMALE DISEASES. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT. $1.00 PER BOTTLE. - CHATTANOOGA MED. CO., Chattanooga, Tenn. blew his bat off, and- in reaching to catch it, he lost his balance aDd fell thirty feet into the stream and was caught op in the current and carried with the mad rushing wa ters over Tempest a Falls and on down to a watery grave. His body has nevir been recovered. Mr. Clower was only 21 years of age and was' a prominent commission merchant and broker of Atlanta. His sad death, was a great sbock to his parents. Young Mr. Clower was welt known and had many relatives and friends here. His father was once one of the leading grocery merchantsof Shelby, apd Marshall J although only a boy, was very popular here. Mr. and Mrs. Clower's mauy friends here sympa thize deeply with them in their great sorrow. ....Miss Dovie Hull, the 20 year-old daughter (of W. H. Hull, Esq., of Casar, died Saturday1 of dysentery, afterj a week's illness. She was a bright young lady a pure good woman, just entering life's arena and ad mirably qualified to battle with the foes of right. She was a de voted and faithful member of the Methodist church and- her body was laid to rest Sunday at Clover Hill church. .... Mrs. Landrnm Phillips died Sunday at her home in No. 8 township of paralysis. Sh had been paralyzed for oyer four months and her death was not nnexpected. Deceased was about Methodist church and was ready when the summons came. He was married March 8, 1850, to Miss Nancy Emma Cannon, by whom he had five children. They are Messrs. George and Charles Detter, who aie prominent railroad men, Mrs. Mark Armstrong, Mrs. Henry Kistler and Miss Baunie Detter. He was a brother to our towns man, Mr. John R. Detter. His remains were interred in the Meth odist church yard here Wednes day, Kev.AV. F. Womble conduct ing the services Somebody is engaged in counterfeiting iu a small way hereabouts. Quite a number of counterfeit nickels have beeti passed on our business men. Encouraged by their success with the small coin, the law-breakers are striking, higher. Capt. F. A. Tobey bad a counterfeit dollar passed on him Saturday night. The coin is a good imitation of the genuine and will easily deceive oue who does not examine it carefully. Mcdowell county news. entltlo American VvCCAWAT, flAX U- trade marks HXS0 OlSIOM PATENTS, CAVtlTI. TRADE MASKS. DESIGN PATENTS, ' mrormatlon and free Handbook write to MLNN A CO., 861 Broadway, Nbw Yoke. ' Ji'lcst bureau for aecuring patents in America. -i'J Pnt taken out by ua la brought before tne public by a notioe given fre of charge In to. ffieirftfic Jmttifao, If T," eultton of any dentine paper In the m.ni. sP!enltr Illustrated. No Intelligent v. 5,2!ibe w'Sit it. Weekly, 83,00 a Ubusbkss, 361 Broadway. Sew York City. Narrow Escape of a Little Girt Death. In Gae ton Wilson-Morria Marriage Jeu klns for Po.tma.ter at Oastonisi Other "New. Gaatonia Gazette, Inne 3rd. Our neighbor, King's Mountain, is showing enterprise for sport this summer, parties interested in bi cycling are building a $500 race track, and the ; ball-players are negotiating for a series or niteen games with Gastonia. ....Many of our readers will hear with re eret of the death of Mrs. Mar garet Cobb, of Lmcolnton, which resulted Friday night from a sec ond stroke of paralysis. She was the relict of the late Joseph Cobb and mother of Messrs. John and Beverly- C6bb. .... Mr. and - Mrs. J. M. Blackwood lost their only son by death last Thursday night. He was a bright little boy,' about two years old, named for his grand father, Mr. S. E. Foy. The funeral was preached Saturday by Dr. E. E. Boyce and ! the burial -took place at Pisgah. ... .Prof. F. P. Hall's commencement at Belmont, which was. to have taken place on the 11th, ha8, we learn, been abandoned on account of the sor- I rowing affliction which befell Prof. I sodden Death or Mr. j. r. sejr Dr. cb Vr . TT11 t A C", . J 1 . l I I.. ) .1 mf- .1. .. Ct.fj.l and Mrs. riau lasi oukuruajr iu tut? i r ana i Death of a Venerable dtlsen flnfer Mashed in a -Cos; Wheel McDowell'. Oldest Citizen Still Very Active E. R. Ttricht Surrender, to the Aathorlea Marlon and AsUerlUe Tnrnplke. Marion Meauengcr. Jnne 4th. Summer .visitors are coming among us. ....We are told that the marriage bells will soon again toll cupid news to the world Mr. Wash Dobson, a venerable N Damace Dona Poisoned With Moan tain Irey Old Fort. New Physician, Correspondence of The Morganton Herald. Dr. W. W. Clark, of Candler, N. C, arrived on Friday last with the intention of making Old Fort his home; his family will come on Saturday next and occupy the Wilson house near the Baptist church. A resident physician has been needed in our town for some time, and we all hope that the doc tor and family may find life pleas ant with us, and take pleasure in extending in advance a hearty welcome and. a hope that their locating here ma.v prove mutually beneficial. With Dr. Geo. P. Reid, within five miles of town, and Dr. Clark, our own people and our visitors can rest confident that skilled medical aid is, if needed, within easv reach. Mr. Charlie Young is suffering from a severe attack of poisoning tron mountain ivy, his condition being -such that it was necessary on Wednesday to call in Dr. Clark. TheAathquake was quite no ticeable here, the shock occurring at 2:02 p. m. and lasting about five seconds, accompanied by a njise liicedistant thunder, only it seemed that one as well as heard the lattsr. Mr. H. A. Westermann, who was in Charleston at the time of the terrible shaking of 1886, lett his store hastily, calling upon his good wife to follow! "Henry hai nerve in plenty, but one who ha; felt the solid earth reel and seen brick and stone buildings falHng on all sides is not to be bUmed for extra caution. On Crtoked Creek parts of ,a chimney f el, but with us no damage was doie. attract attention "I saw a cyclone once," said be. "tbat picked up a straw stack and moved it a mile and put it back, straw ou straw, as it was." Two or three of the auditors yawned and the Kansas man tried it again. "Another time," said he, "I saw a twister suck sixty gallons of mo lasses out of a barrel in front of a grocery store and distribute it to every family in town who bad a It Is too early to Dredict that immediate operations will be re sumed for the completion of the line north of here. It requires an outlay of millions to finish the road, and the forthcoming of these millions depend on contingencies which may or may not happen. It! is, however, understood that if the i road can be completed for a given sum, within a certain limit, the money will be forthcoming. 10 estimate the approximate W.L Douglas S3 Shoe. Sih. OjraMe. rrffact fctSur. tjyimri fry onf i vm aaarw. w-.LDoolu &150,U0 tad iSM Shoes arc tb prodoctioes cf tkilld workman, from the best materitl txw nbk at thrttf prtca. Alio 52-50 uvi J2 Sboea for Mca, $2 tad J Ji Bay W acm tk. ba Cm. aaM CY Tf a r-rt A.C. rrcaK I an 1. a n Kid. vtc TWMiMaK4wninaaUtHa. UaVaitcanaot aria yoe. W. t DOUG LAS, Bnacttsa, Kaaa, si J. M. HUFFMAN & CO., Morganton, N. C. bucket out on the back step for the j cost of the final finishing of this milkman." , I great work, experts have passed He cleared bis throat and began I over a portion of the incompleted again : "Back in the seventies we line north of Johnson City. Tenn., had a terrible cyclone in western in company with Mr. Samuel Kansas: It blew the cracks out of Hunt, of Cincinnati, president of the fencespulled a cistern out of the Cincinnati, Portsmouth & Vir tbe ground, moved a township line ginia Railroad, and president and k, dav Hire m citizen of about 80 years, died near 70 years of age .and a member j of I Nebo on last Saturday at 3 p. m. the Baptist church. Her husband ....To-day about 10 o'clock, Mr. died about six weeks ago with the A. E. Crawford had the end of the same disease, -being paralyzed in little finger of his right hand the same side.- .Mr. Ivester mashed in a cocr wheel at the Ma- Isaac, of No. 8 townsliip,died Sat- rlon Furniture Company's factory,! nrday of typhoid dysentery, ue-i ;...The Seigle buildings will soon ceased was 72 years, of age, and leaves a wife and three sons, two of whom lire iu this county and1 the other in Arkansas. He was a highly respected citizen and en joyed the confidence or his neigh bors. He expressed bis willingness to die and meet his God. Sunday the funeral services were conducted by Kev. Bobt. Ledford and the re mains interred at Clover Hill church. DROPPED DEAD. Sale of Valuable Town Property. IRTUE of a power of sale contained t J 1 ,n a. mrtgage dated September l.t, and dn'y registered in Book Z, page ?,'dr, ,the Records of the Register's office '"!"' county, made by John H. Pearson aJ tne Eastern Building and Loan Association, of Syracuse. New York, the nn ""siKned will offer for sale at the Court ,i.use, door in Morganton, N. C. on Mon "ay. July 5th, 1897, the below described ri, ?Crty to 8atify a balance due on the im. i sccured by said mortgage, default hav tw . cen made ,n the payment of the same at tt,me liecified m the bond. Terms of sale a aJ . Tnis property is easily rented to Fa?'id class of tenants and is situated on Cn street in a growing part of the , lJKSCRIPTION (iV PunpIITV Tri S Tlatr?.?tl.0r'' beinK No- 7 Sn Block -B," of the '"i of the Moreanton Land and Imnnrn. death of little Davidson, their, two-year-old son and only child. .... It appears that the contest in re publican ranks over the Gastonia Dostmastersbip has been finally settled and that Mr. L. L. Jenkins is the choice of the patronage dis- pensers. . ...AC tne nome .oi ino bride's parents ioiear Dallas, Mr. Samuel T; Wilsonad Miss Ethel Morris were united in marriege at eleven o'clock yesterday morning by Dr.E. E. Boyce. The bride is the accomplished and' pretty daughter and youngest child of Col. and Mrs. W. G. ; Morris, and the groom is one of Gaston's well- fixed and most prosperous youDg Married-r-Marrlase at Granite ' Elecant German. - Hickory Time., Jnne th. j The first watermelons of the sea son were brought to Hickory Tues day. .Tourists are daily pass ing through Hickory on their way begin to assume tangible shape the brick, sand and lurxiDer are be ing laid down, and the soil has been removed for the laying of the foundation. ....Evangelist W. R. Gales will begin a union protracted meeting here on the second Sabbath of July next. He was here three summers ago, -and we are glad to have him again. ....The pure, sweet little three months old girl infant of Mr. C. II. Burgi-n, of Biltmore, N. C, died there on Friday last. She was a granddaughter of our county sur veyor, "Mr. J. B. Bnrgin, of Old Fort. The pastor of the Presby terian church here was summoned by telegraph to conduct -the funeral at Stloam church last Sat urday, where a number of rela tives and fiends laid the precious remains to rest amid tne sue to Blowing Bock. ....A party of gestive and delicious quiet of na young people from Caldwell pic-I tu re about the dear old church nicked at the Catawba Biver Lum ber Co.'s mill last Thursday As cension day. . . . .David Bynum, ten-year-ojd son of Mr. and airs. Josiah Hefuer, died May 26th,and was buried the day following at 8t. Stephen's church, Bev. A. L. Cronse conducting the burial ser vice. . j. . . A meeting of the direc- yard. ....Mr. J. G. Hall, agent for the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, is in town, and to-day paid a polity on the life of one of our best citizens, lately deceased, for $5,000. .... As Mr. Clarence McCall came from a visit home on Wednesday, and when near the mouth of North A aToke a. the Jbkera. "I hare a friend over at my horns town, in Wisoonoin," told a drummer wh regularly 00m ea to Detroit, "that wu elected to congress before he ever knew he was a candidate. "You know what a complete political whirl thintrs took In 1890. In our dis trict the fellows of my faith bad jnst been going through the form of nom inating and voting for rears. Not one of tar candidates ever got a torn at the pnilio crib. It was a standing Joke, trot we were too proud to abandon our or g mi cation. I'll not give his real name, but call him Jim HuS. He was as big hearted a fellow as ever lived, cheery as I If ay morning and a born joker. That summer he had gone to South Amnrica to do some prospecting, and we fieard from him only about onoe In two months. "ffhen we held our convention, some of os thought it would be a good one on Jim to name him for congress while) be was not there to protect himself. We did so, and just to keep the sport going we got out posters and filled the papers wfch opinions of Jim tbat lauded him to the skies. We committed bim to all kiids of reforms, attributed to bim all thk qualities desirable in a statesman, boasted of- hi irresistible eloquence and lamented the fact that temporary ill ness kept him away from borne. The fact was that he was aa hearty as a lo comotive. "When the returns came In and show ed that Jim was elected, we were the worst fooled lot of fellows you ever saw and were as rattled as a brood of chick ens with a hawk fluttering over it We organised an exploring committee of three to rind Jim and notify him. When we did find him, way down in Peru, be Just gave us the laugh, and the district bad to holdaspeoUl election." De troit Free Press. N ' - Jt T. I mmm-mm r "I. - .a -SAT- . I . .1 A . !?t co., fronting "Si "So" f.rmAra a nn of Mr. Thomas WH- tors : or tne uarouna s jNonn- iove, at tne crossing ot tne norm crtetnn,i- . . . . . - . .. I . ,r ti.:i v. . : V. U I c i. u t, adjoining on an a iccujD 0fj the Old 0I0CK." w esteru uauwaj is yeiug uoiu i tuin., inis lot there is a new three room cot- l,,et,?n.d,runninK back 190 feet. (,.,,' ." Michanx and Horace ConneUy. . " lot then. a ,.r h. - KtS t ?eond.,Iot Jn. tne onth "de of Union ' nToP naSd.Jy,n? at. the. intersection of Karv i- ,,K sireeis, wnere waiter Mc ' "on aw,1,ve- This lot fronts 50 feet on a fleJS r,rr desc"Ption, reference is made to , ..Ironl the Morganton Develoomcnt Co. '"tEASTERN Bi!iiJmr. AND LOAN ASSOCIATION. I'y W 'tL. . Of Syracuse, N. Y. y v . S. Pbabson, Attorney, ' - son and a "chip At the home of the groom's par ents in Gastonia the happy couple were tendered a sumptuous wedT ding dinner, which was enjoyed by a large and mirthful marriage party. .... Little Bachel Fulton, infant daugbrer of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Whitesides, died lastTburs- r. ahnnr, midniffht after ciating.! ....Mr. J. B. Self,: the manv davs or Daueni snneriuKt i ju'ttu tuo a.uWu. auMav.- rrcs rilla. Send your address to H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and get a free sample box of Dr. King's New Life Pills. A trial will convince you of their merits. These pills are easy in action and are nartio.nlarlT effective in the care of e espied a number of minks constipation and sick headache.. For here today. ...x.Miss LulaBus- about a dozen romping on the 1 malaria and liver troubles they nave Air ii.nt m. rt w Pnoaoll honV in hmaH Hoviinht tiaman. been proved invaluable. They are and Mr. Jas. S. -Hickman, both, aged to kill two, when the others prominent in the social circles of I escaped in the water. Several Granite Falls, were united in mar- j were in the party at the mink kfaing. ....Mr. H.. K. Bright came a few days ago ' from Pilot Point, Texas. He it was who last January struck Mr. A. L. Bright a blow on the head. He came to riage yesterday in the Methodist church at that place, Bev. John W; Boberts, of Bessemer City, om- guaranteed to be perfectly free from every deleterious substance and to be purely vegetable. They do cot weaken by their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the system. Regular size 25c per box. Sold by John Tull, Druggist. and changed the day of the week." Another man with an unblush ing face told this story and ex pected people to believe it : "I was out in Kansas last sum mer, and the fltst cyclone of course I! went down in the cellar like other folks. The house was soon blown away. The next thing I knew the cellar went, too, rolling over and over like a silk bat. I was soon spilled out. With mSnite labor I crawled back in the teeth of the wind, intending to take refage in the bole the cellar came out of. To my consternation I found that that had been blown away also.' A prominent Kansan is credited with telling this: "Tell you what's a fact. 1 have known it to blow twelve days and nights on a stretch and hold a sheep np against the side of the barn nntil be starved to death." Probably the story which better illustrates the position of the Pop ulist farmer in Kansas than any told in recent years is this Kansas roan (visiting in the East) "Yes, sir, Kansas is the country for the farmers. Look at her vast prairies covered with crops so heavy that they make whole counties sink down in the middle. Look at her corn crop, so vast . tbat it crowded township lines into the river." ! Same Kansas man (at the Popu list meeting in his own neighbor hood) "Fellow sufferers: Dry weather, Hesstin flies, and gold bugs prey like vampires on our State. Our once fair state is plas tered over with mortgages so heavy tbat we have to bore a hole through them with an acgur in order to plant corn. : Bouse ye slaves." There has been a premium of fered for the capture of the man who started this clever lie: UA Kansas farmer planted his farm iu popcorn and gathered it into his bam. -.The barn took fire, the corn popped and filled a ten acre field. His old more, thinking it .a snow storm, lay down and froze to death." In discussing the question in western Kausas not long ago, a citizen from the short graBs coun try aid: "1 think tbat Kansas is in need of a good deal of irriga tion. There are times when it is so dry io the western part of the State that you have to soak a bog over night before be will hold swill. There ate places where water is wet only on one side. I know a place where the owner of a ferry boat hauls water a eleven months in the year to keep his ferry run ning." i Here is another drought story told by a traveling man: MI was driving across the country to a lit tle town in western Kansas the other day, when I met a farmer bauling-a wagon load of water. 'Where do you get water!' said I. u,TJp the road about seven miles,' he replied. i ulAnd you haul water seven miles for your family and stock I MYep. 4Vby in the name of sense don't you dig a well T u 'Because it is just as far one way as another, stranger.'" general manager of the O. R. & C. Ry, and the chief engineer of the latter- road, Mr. A. Moles worth, who has occupied that po sition from the earlies' operatioo and construction of the road north ot Rutherfordton, in 1890. These gentlemen, with a railroad expert, will arrive in Marion within the next few davs and reverse their inspection of the line, from Marion northward, and if the report of this inspection is favorable, the prospects of an early completion of the road will be very bright. This will mean much for this section, and especially for Marion, which, from its location as a dis tributing point, with so much ma terial for manufacturing, made so easy of access, by the building of this railroad, will open up for Mawon very bright prospects as a manufacturing town of impor tance. The beginning of work on this road now would speedily dispel the prevailing depression and scarcity of money in our commu nity and add greatly to our wealth and population. Let every one strive to encour age such enterprises that serve so much to create as well as increase prosperity. The Orewtai m rtovaa. , It has been noted that a large number of species of plants hare their flowers bending to the soothrast when opening. The well known compass plant, Eilpbi urn laciniatum, is one of this clsaa. Some 80 years ago a paper was present ed to tne Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, showing tbat all tbe growth made in tbe flowers of the com pass plant was made within two or three hours after sunriM. All growth after this was at a standstill until tbe next day. It has since been noted that tbe flower, which torn toward tbe sou tbeaM in opening, as already referred to, are those which choose this particular part of tbe day as their growing time. It Is just possible that tbe tbe beat and light after tbe risintf of tbe sun has an influ ence on growth at tbat time, and this may be tbe reason for tbe turning in this particular direction. All plants have a peoifia time cf ip-owth. some in the morning, some at midday and some at evening or night. Growth Q not contin uous in any plant. Meehaa's Monthly. Vi day Hires V Rootbeer t stands be- it tween you it and the dis- 11 tressing ef- 'J feets of tie hrsL IffliniiBFSi K U U U -k VJsUaaai I ( cool- the blood, I) V r tones the atom- f v - r tones the stom ach, invigorates the body, fully A delicious rSpark- 1) ling, temperance T irickofthehigh- est medicinal value. ateaaf,T TW CWa an 0. VaSa. A MMwadal Wtaaa, . II n rrj . HINDERCORUB C Vspa r Vtag SJT h eaf HAIR BALSAM m aaa a i r sm kat. ila rfa V9 kaskn 0ay I So TaaitaXal C . lt W aOs aa .as. fcv . . .4 ... a fcwrw CONSUMPTIVE imi eivoca toju mm r Orpats.ani 1 nde-Mark. obtuar. aad a3 Vtr eaBMaaaac.acta4 tor Hoai.lTt rets. . nraaota trooa Waiiiurtiak Scad aaodct, .rs or tioau a eJiac, u (atftuM or r4M. l)n Im a Ul ntltal i ml c aaata ia ik V. S. aad iaraf faaMia, rat Irca. r . ta at C.A.SNOVcCO. aVa -i "i ill'.'a-S ( S-S DT BBTMSrr . ) Sale of Land. A Cilia ea mi Tama Max Muller, in his reminiarenccs of Tennyson, says tbe poet wanted thawing out bad to be "smoking a pipe, sipping whisky and water" before be was geniaL Once be summoned all bis will and pitched bis pipes and tobacco out of tbe window. "For a day be was most charming, though somewhat self right eous. Tbe second day he became very moody and captious; the third no one knew what to do with bim. But after a disturbed night I was told tbat be got out of bed in tbe morning, went quick ly into tbe garden, picked up one of his broken pipes, stuffed it with tbe mains of the tobacco .cattered about and then, having had a few puffs, came to breakfast all right again. Nothing more was said about giving up tobacco. The Tree Kerned v. W. 11. Bepine. editor Tiakilwa. Ill Chief, says: "We went keep bouse without Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, cougna and Colds. Ex perimented with many others, but never got the true remedy until we used Dr. King's New Discovery. No other remedy can take its place in our home, as in it we have a certain cure for coughs, colds, whoopinz cough etc" It is idle to experiment with other remedies, even if thev are urred L'If you have any old books I on you aa just is rood as Dr. King's with the backs torn off whicn You I w.u.icpyery. They are not a good I rwaMnaa tnta raniaa Itaa sat vi wisn to nreserve. fend them tn I r. HV irtae ' aa orltr of the ftaprricr Coafl of Mvrke eneatr te ne dtmtrd. Ljrill. at the C ert lluaar Jo ta Uorcir too. N. C. "a Mnadat.UKlitadATofiar, 1 "V7. nffrr i r aalr. Urr cah. a rrrtam trar-t tt land attaatr bctatw tlaek's l i l aad r.isrrrCatt .!!. boanaWd as tollomi ftcawDinaT m a Krrtrl aranla- on tar eaas. Uia brt.na Hawk's lill aad Otnrrr Cake nl ran rortn i tK,tra to a bc.Last itear ir.-rr Cakr rurk : tnra cast lr poles to a tbrftaal nak: then aoatH 1 ftO rors: Ikra arrat 1ih puka. to the brataniasT. roattaiaiaal 11 arm. icraatcd to XlKldacUa bui wc U, iKiolvl Slat, lt-V. Htdd.naT tu cuaanseacc at S30.0O. Walter Forney's tnd. Terras of saic eaak. TftM Miy II, 197. P. P. TATK, Cecnesaaaaoarr. tSubscribe for The Moboan ION HKSAXD. preserve. I Thi Herald office and have them rebound. It won't cost you much of cures and besides is guaranteed. It never fails to satisfy. Trial bottles free at John Toll s Drugstore. Jno. M. Mull.; W.T.MimaA!i. MULL & MORCAN, Attorneys - at - Law, MOKO ANTON, N. CV Ci7Office, Tate Corner. GARDUKAl KORTHWESTERH RAILWAY COMPANY. RAILWAY i SCHEDULE For the Conresicscf: cf Ptssf nsers to Dncobloa, Charlotte, Rilelii, Chester ud Icterxediale Foists. GOING EAST. j EASTCKX TIME STANDARD. Lv. Morganton (So. Ry.) 4:56 p.m. Lv. Hickory (C. & N. W.) 5:34 r.m. Lv. Lincolnton 7:00 p.rr. Ar. Charlotte (S. A L.) 8:10 p.m. Ar. Raleigh " :n a.m. Ar. Gastonia (C& N. W.) 7:57 p.m. Ar. Yorkville 9:06 p.m. Ar. Chester M 10:37 p.ro, .
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 10, 1897, edition 1
1
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