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06-June-»>• > M* a* e x c u r s io n ^ ,D.C. », 1925. Y SYSTEM in Washitigt0n C .^ ,,.0 0 »9. „ , 5 • Mnv 30th. ' °n a" reSl1'nr trains kLL GAMES fny 30th. Two Hois May 3 1st Rarnes >]or league teams js m " « « ' 30.1, 0 . 5 “ g* and many other neterv May i> coaches. ay Agent or; # r w'll cover (hide) re surface per gallon, ! ms 20% to40% more j iere is not even a sus- erant in it Let us ■ little it takes to paint A t I Ji ^9I*4?f prepared :r before blic with 3 ^ing sup- t cannot g |rders are nd satis- id. Con­ ing- THE MEftcMANf§ WM6 IN THe Record WILL AppfttClATE Y6Uft ftUftlNESs: “HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN." VOLUMX XXVI. s < P . R u m „ ^ sent0raddita (I- GRAHAM, D. p. A Charlotte, N. C. 1 1 & Sons . C. e iniI u y BEST FLOUR.” k without ffJggl) .5 OUARAjigpiBS » BASEI RfJfft1'1? rCtterorftnyretteroro®'”^ Tt our ris*- rawford Drug Store. OurTax Listing Farce. Chairtotvii Nett s. Ciiizeits °f Thomasville you are asleep a! Utv switch. It is high .jjnie tli-'1 >'°" awake and take ac_ liuii HRinsl an abuse tllal llaS been eutltirvtl ior years, an abuse that .-on yourselves have played a grea part in- 5t is our tax listinS farce I that is now going on, like It has Ievcryyear about this time. The I valuation of property in Thomas- IviIIe for the year 1924. as given in hy the tax pays was $5,313,936. while the vear before it was $5,400, - 142, !which shows- a decrease in !valuation of 586.206, in the face of I jhe great building program that took place in that year; the increase In valuation caused by paved streets and the large number of putonio- biles and other property acquired. Upon invenstivation of the tax hooks by this paper it has been found that there is property in Thoniasville, given iu by, its iead- in y citizens at 10 percent of its real value. There are well over a mil­ lion dollars on deposit in our two b,.nks today, yet the cash money listed Is neglectable. Automobiles that costs $5,000 00 are being listed for 5i 000 00 and less. Merchants are failing to list accounts owiug them, people are not listing notes and mortgages, iu mauy cases, and in some instances where it is known that a concern has a large number of accounts owiug it, they list a 1 largesolvent credit to offset the charge. ' j Our own citizens are cheating Iheircitygovernmentout of whatj is,justly its own... ,-How ..can. we have a lower tax rate as long as this continues? How' can a man afford to grumble at a $2.20 tax. rate when lie walks up and lists his property at less than ten thousand dollargs, when it is really worth sixty or seventy-five thousands. There is one instance wheie a lead­ ing citizen of Thomasville listed his property this week for a little over SS.ooo.oo, which includes a good business, 14 lots, his owu house, which is worth almost the total a- iuomit, his automobiles, his house furnishings and other personal pro­ perty. Vet when he gave it in he claimed his property was listed higher than some others he pointed out. How cati we -expect the little fellow to list iiis property at full value, if our leading citizens fail in their obligation to the city. How can we expect a man with a $500.- OD hank account to give it in, if the uiau with a $5000 00 account swears he doesn’t have a cent of cash money. How can we expect the little fellow with a Ford car to list the real value of it, when the uiau with a $5000 000 car, list at 20 percent and less? But you s'y, a man signs his name to a statement which says, 4T do sol­ emnly swear (or affirm) that the above and foregoing listed -proper­ ty is a full, true and complete lists °f all and each kind of property owned by me or under my control etc.” We say there are a buncli °f people in Thoniasville who do not realize what they are sitigning, for they are guilty of prejury, and fie indicted and" tried. MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 3,t.925 Starved. We have examined pretty cjosely weekly press of the state, the' a- Mount of advertising they carry and foe Patronage they receive, and most of them are doing a work of iove, Theyare boosting and pulling for. I1airseatIon and givihg brain and awIt tilat does not-receive the fin Ii,.'Yu /hoouragemtnt from thdoub- u Ji L l,; silouId- k Itowii-would ;boi TOgmy poor one without'fcf'newi? til if ’ 0Vt tileIl seldom dind- out un- ihJiu Jlave starved, aft editor to London County. RecorcL I Gold is scarce .but StT1Ied auiountV give Vm 1 ecord office and let us tell how- to get-a-eoldiaieceifrdei we have away. Call Observation of A Man Who Ob­ serves. The following recently appeared in Mrs. J P. Caldwell’s One Min­ ute page in the Charlotte Observer. It is from the pen of M. F. Trot ter, Sr., and entirely too good not to pass on down the line: The finest think I ever heard said was by a very young student of divinity He grew up from baby hood to mau hood next door to me. He said while filling the place of a pastor, who was on Itis vacation that.he-got more pleasure out of visiting the old, the sick, the poor and distressed than airy part of his Work. He is the braniest young man I think, who has been reared here in my day, and I was born here nearly, 71 pears ago. The finest thing I ever heard s iid about money was by a very successful merchant.- He was W. M. Davis, who run a racket store here 35 years ago. I asked him to contribute some money to tlie edu­ cation of the mill children here who would not attend the city scl.ool and he gave all I asked for and was willing to give more. He .said he would rather spend his money edu­ cating that class of children than any other way The worst thing I ever heard a man say a word on the subject of money was by a prominent doctor. He-said it didn’t matter who was on the side wald or who vvas in the gutter, all be cared for was his pocket book. We were discussing prohibition. Poor fellow, he has gone to his reward. He left a well- filled purse-, -but ,in. a- few last, years he had a great leanness of soul. The happiest and most content­ ed man I ever met was a poor, old mountaineer. He was a Christian and a philosopher. The most despicable thing I ever witnessed was the expresson on the face of a young mother looking into the face of her infant daughter whom she had laid on her lap. She did not known she was beiug ob served. The lady was Mrs. John W. Stagg, wife of the Rev. Dr Stagg, formerly pastor of the Se cjnd Presbyterian church here. ' The uglist tin Hg I ever saw was an old woman, who had spent her life iu dis.iparion. The finest woman <0 iversational- ist I ever met . was .a 16 year-old girl. The best talker I ever heard in private was a reported of The Charleston News and- Courier in 1878. The greatest bores I have ever listened to was Dr. Moses D. Hod ges, of Richmond, Va. His text was:“ All things work together for good to fhose who love G od,. who are called according to His pur­ pose ” I wish space permitted me to tell you some of the things he said. H ew as selected to preach the sermon when the emperor and empress were present at the World Conference of Religionists in Ber­ lin, thirty or more years ago, be­ cause he had the reputation of be­ iug the finest pulpiteer iu the world. Tlie most generous and best'all round women I ever knew was Mrs. Annie Lardeuer. She refused to accept a very large bequest, and only took a~ moderate sum, about ouedenth of the am ount. offered her, and spent most of the income from that on others. T bem ost honest man I -ever knew was R. B. Caldwell, and lie said he didn't think there was an honest tuan in the world. sThe"oiily bachelor I ,know, who is spending any money to mabe the f e t b tflore beautiful is my neigh bbt Mf-- Bascom Health. He has twq beautiful.; -flowjak. gardens at his 'residence on the corner of EU zabetli Vnd^ Travis^avenues. He has also given tlie qse of a lot to the Central high. School children NUMBER 48 and contributed money for seeds, plants, etc., to help, them; grow flowers. Donations of this kind are far reaching in results in mauy beueficial ways; Solomon is my favorite, author, students of human nature. To my mind the two must compreheusive verses in his writings were these: "The day of a man's death is -bet­ ter that the day of his birth, for the end of a thing is better than the beginning thereof,” and the other is: "H ere the conclusion of the whole matter, fear God and keep His commandments for this is the whole duty of man.” He was also the highest paid-author of all time, the greatest architect and the greatest lover, He had 700 wives and 300 lady friends. When you' hear anybody say they have too much sence to marry refer them to Solomon. The greatest menace to this couuty are not Jap airplains, (not­ withstanding Brisbane to the con­ trary), nor is bolshevism, but they are birth control and lack of par­ ental control and lack of parental control of the few children, who are born in onr modern families. Wake Up Davie County. Does Davie county boast a good broncho rider, steer wrestler or calf ropei? O rafellow adept at tract and fancy riding? He may not be covering a policeman’s beat, employ­ ed as delivery man for a moving con cern, clerking in a store or bolding down an office job, but if he still, has the spirit of-the plains and ranges, in him and thinkshe’s no back nurn be.-, ha is wanted.. .The Ghicago As- s iciation of Commerce is; putting on a ’"Roundup” August 15 to 23 .and has asked the help of this newspaper in finding persona.formerly having a part of. the life of the great West. Thirty thousands dollars in cash purses,.in addition to world’s cham pionship titles, bells-and traphies will go to the victorsef the "Chicago Roundup” which is to be held in the Grand Park J t idium under the di­ rection of T« x Austin, famons.rodeo man, and it is thought that there may be some one in Davie county who is still good enough Io try and run away with a part of this money. The "Roundup” marks Chicago’s debut as the'rodeo capital of A- merica. Cheyenne and Pendleton have been the two great riideo cent ers of the countri; hereafter there will be three with plans laid, to make Chicagothegreatest of all. Chica go, the greatest cowboy town. and business center, is out to outdo it self in the scale of its "Roundup,” and the cream of rodeo talent will be there . AU the traditional events of the Western epic will be staged, with entries from all over the coun­ try, Canada, Mexico, Argenlineand Australia. There will be none of the "circus” atmosphere at this rodeo; it is an nounced.- No paid performers. It is a free for all and open to the world and those who think that they still have some of the blood of the West in them will never have a better chance to prove it. Arrangements are going, forth for the entertain ment of "'Roundupv visitors from this and other localities on a scale unheard of .in the annuals of A- merican business. Thntown wili.be in festive humor and all comers from the least known to the roost prominent are awaited by a. tremen­ dous welcome. Any person or persons here who think they might be intei-ested in entering the "Roundup” lists may secure a complete prize listand yules by writing the .Cbfcago Association of Commerce, - ■ ... Vt bile the evangelist was: telling "Why Men Go to Hell,” a thief within the sound of .his voice stole a motor meter, • Burlington: reports They are committing Lomicide3 and the thieves ate a little more ,active at Winston-Salem, jast asj if Billy Sunday wasn’t laboring, to ; convict and convert 'em - They, can’c say they weren’t .warned; and (exhorted. —Statesville Daily. . Circus Band Once Played F Hanging. Greensboro News. Comuieuting on the fight now 011 to, prevent the. aitaudauce of rela-, tives of a murderer’s victim at pub-, electrocutions in this state and the widespread comment of newspapers lately, Dr. George W. Lay, form­ erly of Raleigh and now ~of Beau­ fort, while- passing through the city recently, recalled days of long ago and the attitude then in vogue towards pubiic lnndgings. "In those days,” the former rector of St. Mary’s school, said ” a hanging was a jmblic affair, iudul ged in by everybody, a holiday, so to speak, when everyone dropped- their vocations and trades, and come to the county seat and wit­ nessed the hanging. The victim’s relatives came along also and had privileges over others. My f alher told a story, which will .illlustrate this point.” Dr Lay’s father was_ Bishop Henry C. Lay, of the diocese of Arkansas during civil war. “ My father's story concerns Tom Thumb and P. F. Barnum founder of the famous Birnum circus. My father-, was asked to conduct the funeral of the hanged man but did not attend the hang­ ing, however. Another minister was present at the funeral, read the exhortation and visitation at the gallows atid ministered to the doomed men, who took the whole affair calmly enough. The hang­ ing was in Huntersville, Alabama, I.believe. . My faither said that the ministerE iged the prisoner not (0 tnake any statement, as I remem­ ber the story. "A t any rater everybody in Huntsville turned out to the hang­ ing, including the parents of the doomed man’s victim and it appear ed that the banging was going to interfere with the Barnum circus parade rolled on the scene of the hanging. The doomed negro ioie on his own coffin, “ Following the hanging, my father rode in the same buggy with Tom Thumb, who. told of the trials and tribulations of the cir­ cus game, while en route to the cemetery. He said that they had a terrible time with the elephants, death ocruring often. “ And after the- hanging, Ihe band kept right on to. the circus grounds aud the wife and family of the negre's victim had referved seats at the performance.” He pointed out that what was commonplace and not considered poor taste or our .of the way in those days was becoming a public scandal. Dr. Lay felt that such “spite work” and “ vengeance” of today's public electrocution out to be eliminated atid not'to be allowed to sit by or stand Ly when the convicted criminal went his way from life. Dr. Lay also felt that -the argu .meffts that were being put out for tijie'ambition of capital punishment were, in some instances, untrue and without basis. FIe said that the particular argument, that a criminal should not be put to death because of lack of preparation''for the hereafter, was no argument at all. “ The couvicted man lias more time to think of life than any of the rest of us in ordinary life, and, ''fiither, the criminal's victim,-rJt must be remembered, has -no time at all to contemplate death. He has ho say as to when be should go and practically no warning that he was going. The killer except in the case of a lynching, has every opportunity to consider deatn an.d life to come.” It is now asserted that human in­ telligence reaches its maximum at. ;i6 years. After.that there is noth­ ing left to do but learn how to use jt.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. ' W The Call for Comfort —is answered in these light two-pieee Suits They are in light weight fabrics to minimize the burden of heft and to ease the freedom of action—less resistance to the preservation of vi­ tality. They are splendidly styled so that the well-dressed man can wear them without violating his pen­ chant for good grooming. And they are beautifully tailored to maintain their shapliness. !Strikingly new weaves and patterns. PALM BEACH CLOTHS TROFICAL WORSTEDS GABARDINES FLANNELS MOHAIRS $7.00 to $15.00 $20.00 to. $30.00 $10.00 to $18 00 $22.50 to $30 00 $15.00 to $20.00 Forester - Prevette Co., ; J. R. PREVETTE; Manager “Statesville’s Leading Clothiers” “ON THE SQUARE” IMl ■Ifl II III 4995^90179585868153^^8 ^9999999999999999 Ii7 m RECCftb. MOCKS Y t t l S , » . a . J t N E 3 1925 m . THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD • - E t o - i TELEPHONE__________ *• Entered at the Postofflce In Mocks- 7ille, N. C.. as Second-class Mail matter. March S. 1903. _______ SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ I OO SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - / S 50 THREE MONTHS. IN ADVANCE $ 25 Only three weeks until the black­ berry crop will be ripe and ready to pluck, provided the snow and frost will hold off that long. When will the town and county commissioners- . get together and make some arrangements about building the missing link on the square? . ______ County Agent George Evans is the busiest man in Davig county. He is doing as much or perhaps more for the entire county than any other two men. His work is among the farmers—the, men who feed us all. Davie county is for­ tunate in being able to keep such a m a n .__________' The cold, disagreeable weather haslet the crops back very much and cotton, corn and tobacco is not looking goad. But the farmer will come out on -top if you give liiiii time. The sun is going to ^ shins, the crops are j;oing to prc - d ice a good harvest and the world will uiove along as it bus for the past six ihous-iud year?. The Record i.-soriy to chronicle t’ledeuthol Col. I Hart, of Wi.istou-SiHein, which occurred a I is home in that city sonic .endavs ago. For many years Col. Hart repi evented the Union Kepublican and visited M cksvilleseveral times a year. He had many friends in Davie wliowere saddened by Ilis news of his death. He was a genial gentleman of the. old school and eujoy^d life to the fullest. In his death we have lost a good friend. Peace to bis ashes.______ Mocksville tieeds a better co-op etative spirit. It takes pulling to­ gether to get anything thesse- day.-tf The towns all-around us are getting new mills and factoiies while we ssem to be standing Jt 11. Our towu needs and must have a bigger pay roll if we are to keep our merchants busy, our houses occupied and our people happy It is mighty nice to live in a quiet town, but when a town gets too quiet" it reminds most people of a cemetery, and no live person wants to spend his days in a.city of the dead. Au tllort should be ma.ie to _ resurrect our Chamber'of Coimnerce Such an Organization R badly needed here. The Billy Sunday meetings came to a close in Winston-Saleui Sun­ day. During the six weeks meet­ ing hundreds of- people were con­ verted and made sacred vows to live a better and cleaner life. Tberi is no way to measure the good that this evangelist did for the people of this section. Hundreds of thous­ ands heard him during the meet­ ing aud the good work he did will live on and 011 after Billy Sunday has been forgotten. Many people went to hear Billy Sunday out of idle curiosity, but lots of them re- tnaiued to pray instead of laugh, Sunday is a great man—a great preacher. His equal has not lived in this generation. Up' to this.' good hour ' we have not heard a word in regard to what lias-happened to the hard surface rpad that commissioner Haues' was to give us from Mocksville to Fnl ton. The highway f:oiu Mocks ville to Statesville is one of the inost important links that we have. This JJiece of road should be .built /tliis year ' With this link finished the traveling public would have a continuous liard-surface road for m ote. than two hundred tiiiles. Davie county has received less than fifteen miles of conctete roads while our neighboring counties have been busy and lauded two or-three times this amount. There is no reason why Davie shouldn't get at least a . few miles, out of the five million dollars that the state is going-to spend tliis year ou road building. , Flanders fields, where poppies grow, is soon forgotten in the mad rush for the almighty dollar. Sat­ urday was Memorial Day but even t'le banks in .Mocksville failed to close their doors. No exercises of any kind were held here. Most < f the postoffice 'force and rural letter carriers went to Salisbury wbe:e the postal workers enjoyed~~a fine picnic aud had a good time and a dinner that will long linger in the memory of those present. Commencement Begins With Play. The Mocksville high school com­ mencement opened on Friday even­ ing with a three act comedy given by the Juniors. A large crowd was present andenjoyed the play, “ The Masonic Ring." Tiie baccalaureate sermon was preached Sunday evening in the high school auditorium by Rev. J. W. Moore, of Winston Salem. A large audience was present to Iiearu Dr. Moore. •• * The Tecitation nieda! was won by Miis 'Gilma Baity and the deelama tion medal by Samuel Rich. The scholarship medal was awarded to Miss Hazel Kurfees. -The athletic medal given by Supt. E C Sui-on to the athlete who . had made tl:e highest grades for the p:ist 4 years, was woii by Frank Stroud,' Jr. Certificates were also awarded to a class of about 40 young girls and boys who were promoted from the grammar school to the high school. The graduating exercises bv the smiior class an.l the annual address bv Editor Dwire, of The Winston Sentinel will lake place this, Tnes cay evening, at 8:1.5 o’clock. The diplomas will be awarded by Prof. F. R./Richardsou. 01 Be.-simer City, formerly supc rinteiident of the Mocksville schools. There areiiitie in the graduating class this year: Misses Hazel Kurfees, Bonnie D /iggins, Atmise Cheshire, Josie Foster, and Billie Howard, Hubert Cirtner, Luther Crotts, Lonnie Lanier, aud Frank Stroud, Jr. No More “Greasy Corner.” One of the biggest crowds that ever assembled in Davie county for an auction sale, met at Davie X Roads Saturday afternoon where i - •bout 200 lots ,were to be sold at auction. The crowd has been esti­ mated at between two and three thousand people. Just before the sate started Mr. Henry Hobson got up aud made a short speech sug­ gesting that the name of the village be changed from "Greasy Corner,” or Davie X Roads, to Pearson, in memory of a prominent familv who lived in that section a century ago. A vote was taken and the new name was unanimously selected. The lots that were put up for sale did uot bring anything like the owner thought they should and we understand tnat the lots were re- taiued by Mr. Walker. The luck­ iest man on the grounds was R. F. Hamilton, of Jerusalem township. The cold drink stands did a rush­ ing business while the baud played and the-large crowd was in good, humor from start to finish. Pet pie were'present-from five or coun­ ties. Remember boys tha 'he name is Pearscto iu the future. Davie Man Accidently Killed. Newswasreceived in MockaviNe Monday telliug of the death of Mr Albert Walker, a former citizen of the Redland section of Davie county, which occurred'at Fort Pierce, Fla., Saturday night or early- Sunday morning. From a message received by Richard Walker, a brother of the deceased, it seems that Mr. Walker accidently shot himself in some man ner, death resulting. Mr. Walktr went to Florida about three" years airo. and was doing construction w'Trk The bedv wil>be shipped here and iaid to rest, at Bethlehem church Wednesday or Thursday Mr Wall * er was 31 years of age. and is sur­ vived by his wife, his mother, seven sisters, and eight brothers. M r' Walker had maiiy friends in Davie county who will-be saddened bv the news of Iiis death Former Vice - President Marshall Dies Sflddenly. Washington, June I —Vice President Thomas R. Marshall died early this inoro ing it was aunuunusd by officials of the New WiUacd hotel, where he had been confloeij for several, days. He passed^away at> the New . Willard hotel, Iiere where be had been ill for sev­ eral days with a cold and 4ieart affection The end canm peacefully. The fonner vice president bad shown improvement in the wrek he had been confined W his hotel room aiid plaits had been tnade fur 'his return to his Iiouie in Iudi=) impolis some thus this week. Dr. A. Z. Taylor Dead.' Dr. A. Z. Taylor, one of Mocks- ville’s oldest and best known citi­ zens, died at his home on North Main street about two o'clock last Tuesday afternoon, following an illness of several months. Dr. Taylor was about 76 yeaTS of age. He came to Mocksville from Vir­ ginia, when a young man abd mar­ ried Miss Charity Woodruff. 'They lived for a number of years on their farm r.ear Cooleem-.e Junc­ tion. After spending a number of years here Dr. Taylor opened a deutal office. He later moved from here to Warrenton-, N. C., where he spent several years prac ticing his profession. About 25 years ago he returned to Mocksville and practiced dentistry until his last illness. His wife died died a bout 10 years, ago, and several years later he was married to Mrs. Nannie Tate, who survives. Dr. Tavlor was one of the charter members of the Mocksville Baptist church, the only one living here at the time of his dea h. He is sur vrved by his wife and two children, one son, William, of Virginia, and a daughter, Mrs. Walter Dodd, of Eastern Carolina. Both were at his bedside when tlie end came. The funeral and burial services were conducted by his pastor, Rev. W. B. Waff, Wednestlay atteruoou and the body laid to rest in Rose cemetery. The towu has lost a good citizen. Norman Deadmon Returned To State Pen. Raleigh, May 26—Sheriff Cape Haynes, of Surry countv, last night brought to slate prisou from Buffa-' lo, Nortnau Deadmon, of Davie county, who has been away four years from prison after serviug six months for stealing an automobile. Deadmoti was found in Buffalo by Sheriff Havues weeks ago aud the Surry officer was commissioned by the state to go after him. Dead­ mon gave 110 trouble and returned willingly. He had discussed this course with his wife aud had weari ed of dodging and working under an assumed name. Court Proceedings. The May term of Davie Superior court for the trial of civil cases ad jourued late Wednesday afternoon. Judge Harding, of Charlotte, was the presiding officer. The follow­ ing cases were disposed of:- Ida Orrell vs .D. H. Hendricks. Money demand. Selling Bailey Bros, stock. Guilty. Judgment for $300 agaiust Hendricks aud in-, terest from March, 1922. Defend­ ant takes appeal to supreme court Sam Brewbaker vs J. H Shore. Money demand. Judgement a- gainst Shore foi $100. J. L. Hall vs F. A. Jenkins. Money demand. Jenkins not guil­ ty. Court found J. L. Hall owes Jeukins $46 C. W. Griffith vs Ima Griffith. Divorce. Divorce granted. Mamie Bowles vs William Bow­ les. Divorce. - Judgment, non­ suit. Roy Williams vs W. H. Davis. Money demand: Williams given $5<\ The Orrell aud Hcudricki case took up nearly two days of court. Attorneys Jacob Stewart, E. L. Gaither and McNeill appeared for Hendricks, while Judge Walter Brock, A T. Grant, Jr , aud For­ est G. Miles appeared for Mrs. Orrell. This case was hard fought aud attracted a good dtal of atten­ tion. Hendricks. W oodlief. Mr. and Mrs. M, J. Hendricks announce the marriage of tlieir daughter, Melvariue. to Mr. John. L. Woodlief; ou M ay'28, 1925. Having received a message of the extreme iiliiess ofv the groom’s father, the marriage took place hastily at the Baptist parsonage at Mocksville. just prior to-leaving for his bedside. The bride-is the at tractive daughter of Mr and Mr;=. M. J. Hendrieks of Cana? She lias.been engaged in ^teaching for the past few years ,.and lias... won many frieuds •. wherever * she has gone. Tliegfooui holds a respou- sible position with the Caroliua Mfltor Co., of Statesvill?. FarmiDgton News. Mrs. B. .C. Brockr and Burr Jr. and little Margaret Josephine left Saturday for au extended visit with Mrs. Brock’s parents Rev. and Mr.=. Tabor of Burnsville, N. C. ; Mrs. M. M. Brock and daughter Cornelia returned Friday from Statesville, after spending several days with her brother, Mrs. Alex Cooper and family. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Long ard little daughter Marv Lucile ai riv -d Sunday from Durham 10 make an extended visit with Mr. Long s parents Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Long. Miss Vada Johnsou retiimsd home from Wins 011 Thursday where she has been visiting friends and attending the Billy Sunday meetings for the past two weeks. . Mr. Ralph Greene, of Boone is visiting his sister, Mrs. J. F.-John­ son. Mrs. J. E. Broek has moved the post office and her line of goods in into their handsome ne.v store room. Mrs. Brock is also install­ ing a wiener stand and Mr. Hugh ^rock will occupy ti e rear room with his Barber work. We are all Dround of our new post office. Residences of M rs. R C. Bi ovvn and Mts. Cordelia Smith are much improved with a new coat of paint. Charlie Bah-ison left Mondau in company with his sister Mrs Lest­ er Martin and Mr. A. A. HoIlenian of Mucksvilleto attend tlie graduat­ ing ex:rcises of h s sister MKs Jaue Amanda Bahnson'at Greeiievillel N. C. ; Several folks from Farmington attended the hi thday dim), r of Mrs. Lizzie Doutliit ,Snndav at her home ea-t of Farmington, j Mt.daiiies Tom CasV1 Sinimoi s Fi>ke, and Miss Ella Hinsbaw. of Winston-Saleni addressed the ladies 6f Farmington at a meeting at Mrs. T. A. Redmon’s home last Tues­ day afternoon ou the subject of Missionary work. The Fariniiig- tou ladies organized with the fol­ lowing officers Pres. -Mrs. Mc­ Kinney, Vice Pres. B. C. Brock, Corresponding aud Recording Sec! Mrs J. F. Johnson, Pianoist Mrs. Leo Brock. .Supt. of Young peo­ ple’s work, Mrs. T. H. Redmou. If you w ant some gold you had better get som e/that The Record is giving a. wayT The supply is limited. W rite Us for particulars. 1 t h e s o u t h e r n s e r v e s t h e SO U T H Whose interest in the Southern is greatest? We who are devoting our lives in the service of this railroad like to call it ours. The investors who have put’their faith and money into it to make it an , efficient transportation machine— they speak of it as theirs< And you who travel on it, whose goods it carries, and whose business depends on its regular service day in anH day out—are you not entitled to call it yours? We all have a feeling of pride and proprietorship in the Southern, and it is through the cooperative efforts of all of us that it has come to be the great railway system that it is. This spirit will build a greater.South­ ern to serve a greater South. SR S O U T H E R N R A I L W A Y S Y S T E M I S i d e w a l l V r o t e c t i o n 1 i S i d m a l l lP r o te c t io n j We are pleased to announce that^we have been appointed Distrib­ utors for the CORDUROY CORD SIDEWALL PROTECTION Tire*. We invite our friends and customers to come in and look this line of tires over. .We have in stock- the most complete stock of pres to be found in Statesville. Balloon Tires, Truck Tires and High Pressure Tires in all popular sizes. When you conie to Statesville call on us and we wi-1 save you money on your Automobile Tires. Davie county folks are given a special invitation .to visit us. ^ A C . C R O U C H 121 E. Broad St. - Statesville, N. C. mocksville LOD K^lSi " n at 8 o'clock. R & HOLTHOUSER. t N. ANDERSON, S a l a n ^ S n a l IMew Y o r k spot cotton 23.1 I', p b. Shwtt, of AdvancJ I J- Ii^re Fridalbusiness Tf a cool May means a big ,op Davie shouldJiave the 1 her history. Miss M a r y Campbell is sp :s week with friends in Cij lid Mt. Holly. work of putting dots*T te ■ete idewalks in MocksB ogressiiig rapidly. If von want a pretty iece you can get it free for j lours work. Call at The ce and lei us explain. JIiss W illie Robinson r j ltiday m orning from a slio .friends in Charlotte. Miss Ethel Brothers, of Cl C., is the guests of M i| eely, 011 North Main stre Mr and Mrs. W alter ilson. N. C , spent the wl town guests of Mrs. I all, Sr. We will pay $2. »5 )er btj ood wlicftt.RICE & RA TLEl Woodlcal j. H. Henley, of Grej as in toA ti Saturday 011 .,pend the week-end witl ; 011 Route one. Mrs. J. W. Cannon, ity, Va., spent several nvn last week the guestl ister, Mrs. C. B. Mooney. I Miss’Rose Miller How: rl ouie last week from Asbil ge, Wilmore, Ky., ivheril en in School for the past| FOR SA L E — H arvest crops a year. EverlayJ til Black Leghorns. Egcs I B. G. W ILLl Advatil W. D. Hunter who hasl lie hospital at Statesvillef iast three weeks is gettij icely and will be able uuie soon. If you don’t believe ieces are scarce go to in this section and try to I Itey are worth from $3 I he Record has a few tl way. Do you want oue?| Miss Leila M. Beaver, yille, a nurse at Davtsl Statesville, was among tl passed a recent state exl ;d received North Carolil J. S. Daniel has sold hi jiu the Daniel & Cartnej potitli Mocksville to Johij pier, who will continue tq !business. It is not kj business Mr. Daniel will I Wintry weather visiteij ^on last week. On. |morning the [.liennouieK around 40 mid frost \\| |td in various sections of I |aiid couuty. H IG H SC H O O L G ld I-W e invite you to visi Itiow have the largest au| iKresMve business colIq IPiedmont section. A v| !college will /prove it. j J 011 our latest catalog ujl I>raughon’s- BusinesH Winston-Sa Ih e well that is be) I near the graded sclio I has reached a depth of I k‘et- Wlieu this well lj «>>e town will have a sn 1 Pb' of water for sever) [ come GOLD G IV EN a | Kecord has a few $2.50 i . 'Ve are anxious to subscribers. Auyboy.' I ^ollIan who will set I "s.nve new veariv sut J^ eive °ne of these gol I !, ''“f'y free. Thefirs [ * JtllS subscribers will J V™ pi.eces- . Thesiipp I; w,ll have to act q I aQt to be one oi the I r«&iTf I •ArI r O U had better B T d AVIE RECORD. w OAfii mmm, Mocamtm n. c.I u n ^ 3.. 192! H E S O U T H SYSTEM I ls iR iOr-**. L <s k ” :C *£? ms Distrib ACTION licULATION Ot AIiK- PAPER g diibi.IS H E D IN DAVIE'COUNTY. MOCKSVtLLE LODGE NO 134 A. F. & A. M.. meets every 1st and 3rd Friday W fAti „ight. Visiting Brethren at. IM w ways welcome. Meetings Angn at 8 0 clock* p. M HOLTHOUSER. W. M. iR ANDERSON. See. Ical Miss Parmelee Crotts, of Thom- asville, spent the week-end with her __ cousin Miss Pansy Walker. : != rT I 11 / “1 . ' I »1 . 1 § !,.O fOOOtO io „ 0» Bo ^ ,e ,,1! *<> AU Customers and Friends ■ estate at once. E. H. MORRIS. The Crawford Drug Store. hoine forthe summer. j s _________ Bed” is coming = AND personal new s . ew York spot cotton 23.25. I E B. Shutt, of Advance, was sjliess visitor here Friday. I a cool Mav means a big wheat \ Darie should IiaVe tlie kgeSt Ser history. ^ I iss Mary Campbell is spending week with friends in Cnarlotte )[t. Holly. I e w o r k of putting down con- , sidewalks in Mocksville is g r e s s in g rapidly. I vou WiUit a pretty $10 gold ;e you can get it free for a few rs w o r k . Call at 'The Record [ce and uS exPlain* " . Iiss Willie Robinson returned [day morning froma short visit Irieiids in Charlotte. J 1Ijcs KlIiel Brothers, of Oriental, C js !lie quests of Miss May Jv1 on North Main street. Ir. ami Mrs. Walter Call, of Ilsoii. N. C , spent the week end !town guests of Mrs. S. M. I, Sr. H e will pay 15 ?er bushel for id wheat. KICE & RATLEDGE, Woodleai, N. C. H. Henley, of Greensboro, in tn.vn Saturday 011 his way ,paid the week-end with relativ- [011 Koute one. gilrs. ]. W. Cannon, of Chase J-, Va., spent several days in iilast week" the guest of her Iter, Jl rs. C. B. Mooney. SMfes Rose Miller Hows rd arrived line last week from Asbury Qol ;e, Wilmore, Ky., where she has n in School for the past year. Ifor SALE—Harvest Potatoes, jrops a year. Everlay—Beauii I Black Leghorns. Eges $1.00 per B. G. W ILLIAMS, Advance. N. C. jjfw. I). IImiter who has been in !hospital at Statesville for the I three weeks is getting along fcdy ami will, be able to return pie soim. |lf you don’t believe $2.50 gold :ces are scarce go to any bank Itiiis section and try to get' one.. |iey are worth from $3 to $5 each. Bie Record has a few to give- a ay. Do you waul one? IMiss Leila 31. Beaver, of Mocks lie, a nurse at Davis hospital,, |alesville, was auioug those who lssed a recent state examination |d received North Carolina license. |J. S. Dauiel has sold his iuteresi I the Daniel & Cartner store in J1Ulli Mocksville to John W. Cart­ er, who will continue to run the Sisiiiess. It is not kuow what piuess Mr. Daniel will enter. I W intry weather visited this sec- P1' last week. On, Wednesday oftiiiig the thermometer register around 40 and frost was report- ‘ in various sections of the town N comity. I HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES _ p\e invite you to visit us We 7 gth birthday, a Ion?*table was bui*t pw have (lie largest aud most pio-joii the lawn where the sumptt>us iressive business college iri' the L jnlier was spread After dinner P mIioiit.section..' A visit to this; - I llege will prove it. We will mail I011 our latest catalog upon request. ‘‘The Golden __ __ June 10 and 11. is= We greet you and announce that we have sue-' Miss Mary Stockton who has • =g ' ceeded the business and with your co-operation been teaching at Hope Mills, is at S= .- ' '■ home for the summer. < S W,J‘ Slve youup-todate service and merchandise. Erven Boles has arrived home s§ from Dtike University where he has‘ 3 ' ^ . be.en a student the past year. < S3S ( Mrs. Knox Singleton, of Red H f Springs arrived here Sunday where j p - she will spend two weeks her father. Mr. G. F. Winecoff. Mr. and Mrs. MarvinBrownwlio have been living in Mocksville for the past year, moved last week to Taylorsville. Mr. and Mrs Moody Haneline 'liave moved into the house vacated by Mr. Brown on Wilksboro street. • FOR SALE—MyvJiouse and lot on North Main street, opposite new high school building. 8 rooms with niodren conveniences. Lot 123x375 feet. E. P. CRAWFORD, James L. Tolbert Jias been ap­ pointed postmaster at Advance to succeed Thomas Mock. - Mr Tol­ bert will take chaige of the office on July 1st. -Jim is a fine Iellovy and the patrons, of the Advance of­ fice are fortunate in having him for their postmaster. W ithin.the nest ten davs a. car of Kentucky Blue Gem Block Coal at $7 50 per ton delivered—Now is the time to lay in your coal wnile prices are low.. E. H. MORRIS. W. S. Stouestreet who has heeu desperately ill at t.ie Baptist hospi­ tal in Winston-Salem for the past two weeks,:shows a little improve­ ment and his friends are hoping that his life will be spared. His condition is still ,serious-. "N orth of 36” better.lli-iii the Covered Wagou at the Priucess Thursday only 20 and 40. Children ioceuts at 3:30 Thursday. Mr. aud Mrs. John-Tatum , of Cooleemee, have moved "to Mocks- ville aud ar^ occupying the T I. Caudell house on North Main street. The Record is glad to wel­ come Mr. and Mr*. Tatum to our town and feel that Cocfleemee’s loss is our gain. NOTICE—We, the undersigned physicians, wish to call attention to the following clause of the medioal society rules: That after 9 o’clock at night we will charge $1.00 extra for night calls. J. W. RODWELL, W. C. MARTIN, L. P. MARTIN. Mr. and Mrs. .Hoyt Blackwood and children lef.t Monday for Moor- esville where they will make their future home. Mr. Blackwood has been promoted to section foreman 011 the Southei a. He has been working for the railroad for many years and his many friends will be glad to learn of his promotion al though they are sorry to and family. lose him Big Birthday Party. Oii Sunday, May 21. about one hundred, and fifty friends assembled at the home of Mrs Lizzie Douthit. PHSt of Farmirigton in honor of her - . ■ . -.I 1 — I...... Ulrt Minn lim lf Electric Range | I for $25.00. I B Three holes, and oven. Just the. §j SS V m— ■ thing for summer cooking, preserv- j I in g and canning. Y Electric Fixtures W affle Irons Pancake Griddles Percolators Toasters 'Griils . ; r : ■ Mocksville Hardware Go. Beautiful Big Dolls. Every little girl in Mocksville should have one of these fine, large $3.00 dolls. Bring 30 M other’s Bread w rappers and 99c. to your ,local grocer and he will be glad to present you with one of these fine dolls which are on display in the, local stores. Call and dxamine the dolls at any time. It you haven’t tried Mother’s Bread, buy a loaf today. There is no better bread on the m ark et § I- L I !lull Ilf IV I f i i If o r e v e !r y f l o o r ev er y w h er e jj woven The season’s new patterns in KimIark W oven Rugs are here. iEveryone who sees these charm ing new designs will w ant one or m ore—for the living room or bsdroora, the sunroom or porch, the hall or the summer cottage. They are individual in pattern, delightful in coloring. Yet, with all their beauty, they are sturdy, durable, long wearing rugs.K S . Priced from $2.50 to $20. ;C. C. Sanffd Sons Co., Mocbsville, N. C. reatmmnremmitfflnmtnmnmmraKmmsaaanatanmtmnnumMamHgmt. I Whait Does Fire Iiisuraiice Mean? I ' ■ " 8 It makes a new home rise magic- Sj like from the smoking embers of | the old. / I “SMILE WITH SAFETY” g “EVERY KIND of INSURANCE” D a v ie R e a l E s t a t e , L o a n & i n s u r a n c e C o . R: B. SANFORD, Pres.E. C. MORRIS, Sec. tsttimauuiumiauujatsiimniKtttnuutt branghon’s Business College, Winston-Salem, N. C. j Ihe well that is being-xdrilled Jtar 1^le graded school buildiug J is re:,chcd a depth of about 400 Ijet- When tiiis well is completed I le loivu will have 3 sufficient sup fly of Some "'■iter for several years to KcpPV? g iv EN AW AY-The ihl I. s a few ^2'5o goid. pieces .•e are anxious to give to o u r Pt I nbers- Any boy. or Virlr man W L c Han will se'nd or bring Icrp-e ”ew veariv subscribers, wifl r«elv°free°f f°'f-Piece-3 ^let tli' L . ^I,e first ones who L0Ij J s,,bscribers will receive the Vou Inn*' The suPP1Vis liinjted- Rat 1 I ave t0 act quick it ,you j 0 e °ue ot the lucky ones, Rev » J r ^Murry of Winston, pastor of the Baptist church <f Yadkin V a l l e y , conducted an iinpressive set- vice the porch—the songs sunir were Mrs*'DJUtIiits favorite?. Fo;l >wiiig IhescriM tureand prayer Rev. Mr. Muriy talked on I he good influence of Mr Douthitslife Of Mrs Douth- its seven shildren, five were present. Madamas Ada Atkinson and . Bell Teaaue of Winston. Luke Furehfs -f Parininglon and Messrs. Jake-and Will Douthit wTm-m id e - new their mother, H e r daughter Mra Powell pf Mr# Po^ell of Mt. Airy was kept aw»y oti account of the illness of MrfPoweII and another son. Mr. Prank D’juthit resides in Nebraska. Two aisters'Mrs. Mary Beauchatnp . • and. Mrs L C.: Bowden aijd two brothers Mr. Johnuie and Mr. Lev Sheelt were present All joined Wisjiing Mrs. Douthit many more happy birthdays. ' P M M C S S S T H E A T R E I THURSDAY an^ FRIDAY. “North of 36.” Same author, s a m e producer and'fea me star# that made the “Covtered Wagon” made “36.fl Don!t/miss it. Ad­ mission only 20 ami 40c. at night; 10 and 40c. Thurs­ day, afternoon at 3:30. " SATURDAY. A Harry Wtbb production with | Jack Perrin m “Ridm* West * Abo HaI Roach prfe- | seats Arthiir Stonis in a two retl. comedy, ‘Should | Landlords Live.” . I• __;___^___ V; - :__^—1— ------: * ; ' - - . . * MONDAY and TUESDAY. A big Famous 40, A great romantic corae'dy drarfiia, “Little Miss Blue­ beard,” with Bebe Daniels starring.. W here A re You Headed For? Where you see a thoroughly content­ ed person you will see a useless one. Don’t be satisfied wiih your present position. Staitasaviogsaccount and realize your ambitions. -I . Southern B ank & Trust Co., Mockaville, N. C. PROGRESSIVE SERVICE Anvil Brand Overalls Are good’--neverhave been beaten. Prices right Also work shirts and pants. H A P P Y FEEDS ' Are still in the lead—none belter. I FAN£Y SHIRTS \ - • * *•Good stock and prices to suit ail. Also ties, bows, etc., in red and all colors. m # ■« -i- ¥ m m§ y i i y m m ¥ uSr y u ¥ u ¥ -¥¥A ¥¥ ¥¥ u KURFEES & WARD. 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That’s why it iter, covers (Hides) and nore surface and lasts the weather. Come in s show you how little it iaint your house right. 'urpose— We Have TAein ■#{ ‘ 'r 'I TTtTttTtnitIttTntTtTtT prepared er before blic w ith ‘ding sup- it cannot Orders are Und satis- =d. Con­ ing. & Sons i . e . BEST TOP BH PRESIDEH1 CONSIDERS GRADUAL REDUCTION I l 0F BlDGET; NOW MAKING SURVEY. V Jback without ooest*®? frs cjuarantb &d sT -DISEASE REMH©1BS/T J tffiI- I f S a l v e a o d S o B p I§ 4tm entofItch,Bcsetn«. /uc 4Jrm Tetter or ofbcritcn M n dis»**e?«- Try twe k- in i at our »i*k. ^Itrawford l>rug Stor* b e Purest $ [ir, Buy -I-=1Iin^ton.—President Coolidge’s , ‘ 'Jor' economy in federal expedl- tV ', .v;ls manifest in two additional tU.,v< Kith official disclosure that ^he ,'Jiiiivt! had sought advice from var- ?“ L departments as to the practica­ lity Hf a progressive budget reduc- Him over a period of years and an­ nouncement tluit the budget • bureau “ working out plans for a consoli­ date,', federal buying agency. The Ottestion of applying a policy of v=sive cuts in departmental Miuls over a period of years will not he IleciIieii immediately, but Mr. Cool- ,imposes to determine from a sur- = 0I- tlie chief spending agencies whether reasonable efficiency can be maintained by them under such a pro­ gram- u t0 the concentration of federal nureliasing in one agency, Director Lord of the budget believes an im­ portant saving can be accomplished annuallv through such a plan. At this time, however, the idea of consolidat­ ed liiiying will be applied only to gaso­ line ami eoal, but preliminary tests of the arrangement in one or two of the centers of federal Activity warrants the belief, it was asserted, that it can he employed successfully in the pur­ chase of all federal supplies, the total cost of which approaches $200,000,000 a year. New legislation will be required if ,he entire purchasing power of the government is concentrated in one bu­ reau, and budget officials are confi­ dent they will know before congress reconvenes just what is needed in the way of legislation. Meanwhile, the chief coordinator's office in the bud­ get is going ahead with an expansion of the schem e as far as possible. Federal Grand Jury Indicts 269. Chicago/—Indictment of 269 leading furniture and refrigerator manufactur ers in all parts of the country in Unit­ ed States district court, charging vio­ lation of the Sherman anti-trust act, including price fixing, elmination oi competition and other evasions of the law. Firms in the large manufacturing centers, such as Grand Rapids, Chica­ go, Gardner, Mass., Rockford, Ills., and Jamestown, N. Y- together with mem­ bers of the three large national asso­ ciations, the National Refrigerator Manufacturers, the National Alliance Of Furniture Manufacturers and the Xational Association of Chair Manu­ facturers, are named. Indictments also were classified, naming firms in the refrigerator busi; ness, the chair goods industry and the case goods manufacturing, the latter consisting of bedroom, diningroom, radio cabinets, and cloak cases. In the refrigerator group, 18 manu­ facturers and two individuals are nam­ ed. AU the firms are prominent and do a yearly business of about $15,000,- 000, according to the government’s al­ legations. In the chair cases, 55 firms and two I individuals were named. These firms also do about $15,000,000 yearly, the indictments charge. In the case goods indictments 190 I Inns and two individuals were named. Among those indicted the govern­ ment names corporations, business trusts, partnerships, unincorporated concerns and four individuals, one of the latter being named three times, once In each of the divisions. ♦? ♦> Manufacturers Show Growth. Washington.—Manufacturing estab­ lishments in Virginia in 1923 had an output valued at $548,159.00, a 20.7 Per cent increase over the figures for tie preceding census year of 1921. The Census Bureau’s figures made Public, showed the average number of wage earners employed during the year in the establishments to be I llr 578, a 26 per cent increase over 1921, the previous census year. Wage pay­ ments to these earners totalled $104,- 686,000 during the year, a 23.1 per cent increase over 1921. The lumber and timber products in­ dustry was siiown to be the State’s “tie? industry. f9 i: COMPANY I * FLO U R.” I N. C. 4 * Make Allowances to Receivers. Newark, N. J/—Allowances of $230,- ™o to receivers and attorneys in the receivership affairs of the Southern Cotton Oil Company, subsidary oTthe. ' irIinia-Carolina Chemical Company, ave been allowed under an order filed j ! Federal Judge Runyon. “ I ^rt*>ur T. Vanderbilt, one of the re- p'ers, was allowed $100,000 and his !joint reicever, Charles G. Wilson, pres- Paeat of both companies, $50,000. I „ Declares Business Good, with" Yorlt~Returning trom Europe Iths a IlronOttnced bullish attitude on Itoh St°Ck market- George A. Whelan, Ito “ C“ maSnate, said he expected it It I a Inuch rigller- In lie said, continue to rise until money ®P and stayed up.' ; . ' fflien stocl£ 11Ilarllet is a market' of fg. .anii not of stocks,” -he added. Iteln K e*SS has got t0 be sood. It can’t Ito o « be ,S°°d- Indications ,all point Ito wi16 5 ear for business. All tobac? Jpsar. ®SM»ies should have a bettet I an they did a year ago.” FIRES FOLLOW- AFTER SHOCKS. Osaka.—Eyewitnesses’ accounts from Toyo-Oka and Kinosaki, which are beginning- to come in, agree that scenes of horror similar to those witnessed in Tokyo and Yoko-: hama during ' the ‘'earthquake of September, 1923, were enacted there Saturday morning. TIie earthquake came very sud­ denly. The residents, panic strick­ en, tried to escape to the open, but many were pinned down by the falling debris and died in the flames, which quickly followed the shock. In Toyo-Oka a number of per­ sons are reported to have been kill­ ed by boulders falling from the hill­ side.- Fire, however, caused the worst suffering and casualties, the inflam­ mable Japanese houses burning like tender. In addition the water mains broke and the firemen were unable to halt the flames. Drinking water is still scarce. I NEED OF MINERS FAMILIES AT COAL GLEN NOW VERY GREAT. 10 ENTER SEt COMMEfICE IDLE SHIPS TO TAKE FORDS TO SOUTH AMERICA AND BRING BACK FRUIT. Detroit, Mich.—The Detroit Free Press in a copyrighted story in its editions, says that Henry Ford may enter coast-wise commerce on a large scale shortly, with a fleet of ships equipped to ; bring ""fruits from South American and the South Atlantic sea­ board to the United States and north­ ern markets. The story also say3 that William B. Mayo of the Ford Motor company, expects to visit the eAst to inspect seven of the 14 refrigerator boats fit­ ted Xor such trade, which are a part of the idle fleet of the United States shipping board. These boats are laid up at Hog Island, Jones .Point, on the Hudson river, and Caldwell, New York. If ex­ amination of the vessels shows they can be refitted at a nominal cost, Ford proposes to buy them, the article s.iys. Specifications for the entire lot reached the Ford offices from Chair­ man L. V. O’Conner of the shipping board and this is believed to be the first move to sell to Ford a portion of the idle government fleet. Ford proposes, according to the article, to use the refrigerator ships to carry freight for the Ford Motor company to South America and south Atlantic branches and to bring back cargoes of fruit. The article quotes Mayo as saying that if “we can figure how we can break even at least we will probably tackle some of them.” Regarding the 400 other ships which it has been reported Ford might pur­ chase, Mayo is quoted as saying that they are “of cheap material and poor design,” and that the company feels that it would not be worth the money to keep them afloat. Mayo pointed out that a large part of the fruit crop now goes to waste because high freight charges make it unprofitable to ship. He is quoted as suggesting much of this fruit might be transported to northern ports and the public notified that it could be purchased at the pier when the boat arrived. In this way, it is believed, high transportation charges could be overcome and the company paid for the cost of running the vessels back to northern ports after taking a cargo of motor cars to South America and the south Atlantic. Coal Glen (near Sanford).—State­ wide appeal for relief of the destitute families of the miners who were vic­ tims in Wednesday’s explosion at the Carolina Mining company’s mines here was issued in a joint proclamation signed by Mayor W. H. Fitts, Sanford, and J. U. Gunter, chairman of the Lee county chapter of the Red Cross. The Red Cross set up field head­ quarters in a vacant house to dispense immediate and permanent ,relief to the stricken families, many of whom, it is said, are utterly destitute without Ifunds to even buy their next meal. " Mr. Gunter, who was away from Sanford at the time of the explosion, hurried back, conferred with the may­ or and together they issued the pro­ clamation. Both the mayor and Mr. Gunter stress the fact that money is needed immediately and in large quantities. There is but a small'balance In the treasury of the Lee county chapter and this is being dispensed to the last cent for immediate necessities. If the work is to continue, he says, money will have to be forthcoming. Major Smith, of the American Red Cross, in charge of the work at Fort Bragg, is here to assist Mr. Gunter and the Lee chapter in the relief work. The Red Cross will not attempt to render any kind of refreshment aid at the mine. That duty already having been effeiciently performed by the Women’s Auxiliary of the Sanford post, American Legion. These women were at the scene of the disaster an hour after the last explosion and have maintained 24-hour service ever since. They have won the undying gratitude of the spent miners coming from the mine where they had been on rescue work. Italian Power Shot. Chicago.—Angela Genna, who with his brother Michael Genna, had been a power in the Italian colony, was shot down at the wheel of his automobile by assassins and died in a hospital. U. S. Policy. Defended. , Paris.—Foreign Ministers Briand in the French senate defended the policy of the United States government in re­ gard to the unratified treaty of guar­ anty and upheld the work of the Ver­ sailles peace makers as a ; whole against the criticism voiced by Senator Courgu. Would Lease R&ad. Philadelphia.—The directors of the Norfolk and Western Railway author­ ized President Needles to file with the Interstate Commerce commission an application for the leasing of the Vir­ ginia railway by the Norfolk and, Western.' 1 Former Actor Wanted. / W ashington.—The motion picture section of the departm ent of agricul­ ture has sought in vain among the 5 000 employes of the department in W ashington for a man who !mows how to act the part of an ordianry fanner. Hiah Point to Erect buildings, h Point.—High Point voters de- ih a special election here to is- Is in the sum. of $750,000 for the tion of a new high school building expansion of the school program. \e for the bonds was 2,025 and 1,164, ,giving the bonds a ma- of 861 votes. • voters also decided to author- • city council to fix a tax rate cents for maintenance of the and'to create a new-school „ made necessary ,by extension corporate lim its.___ High cided I sue bonds erection and The against jority The ize the of 50- schools, district ,of the B. N. Duke Makes Gift. Henderson.—A gift of $200,000 by Benjamin N. Duke,, tobacco magnate of Durham, to the Kittrell college for negroes, located at Kittrell, was an­ nounced at the commencement exer­ cises of that institution, according to J. M. Avery, secretary of the school. Half of the amount was given In a check for $100,000, all of which will be used in furthering the building program of the school and the other half was in stock in the .Southern Power company and .^ill go into an endowment fund for the college. Kittrell college is owned by the African Methodist Episcopal church in North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland' and the District of Columbia. Government Wins Case. Los Angeles.—Federal Judge Paul J. McCormick decided in favor of the United States government in its suit to cancel contracts and leases held by the Pan-American Petroleum and Transport company and the Pan-Amer- ican Petroleum company in the Elk Hills naval reserve, California. The trial of this suit in equity against the Doheny oil interests open­ ed in Los Angeles, October 24, last, and continued several weeks. It was the first of the cases grow­ ing out of the United . States. senate investigation into naval oil reserves to be brought to trail. The govern­ ment asked that the court cancel two contracts and. leases entered into be­ tween the government and the defend­ ing companies, providing for the oper­ ation of wells in the Elk Hills reserve No. I, and the building by the com­ panies of tanks, pipe lines and pump­ ing facilities for the storage of 1,500,- 000 barrels of fuel oil at the Pearl Har­ bor naval base, Hawaii. The contract also provided for the deepening of Pearl Harbor and the construction of docks. jyr Mail Service Carries Photos. Fayettevllle--lCarryIng official air service photographs of the mine dis­ aster at Coal Glen and views taken by a representative of ,the Interna­ tional News service, Lieut. John B. Patrick and Lieut. Don W. Mayhue, left Pope field in an army plane for Washington, D. C. The news pictures were carried by authority of the chief of the air ser­ vice, as there was no commercial plaie available In this vicinity that was capable of making such a flight. The authority was telephoned to the Fort Bragg air station by the air ser­ vice chief himself, who at the same time authorized the making of the of­ ficial photographs. The work of developing the plates arid making the prints was hurried to completion in the photogrphic labora­ tory. The news pictures were finish­ ed in Sanford and rushed to Fort Bragg by automobile, and immediate­ ly on their arrival the waiting plane left the ground at 3:25. Father Kills Crying Baby, Nanaimo, B. C.—Declaring that Les­ lie Dickie had smothered his two- year-old grandson in a-fit of religious frenzy, a jury In Assiz court acquitted him of changes of murder but recom­ mended that he be held for committal to a hospital for the insane. Dickie was accused of holding his hand over the child’s face for 15 minu­ tes when it whimpered during a 36- hour religious ceremony in his'-homn. V ABDUCTORS ASK REWARD $5,000 FOR'MISSING GIRL, Asheville—George Lindsey, father of 14-year-old Pansy Lindsey, who was abducted. here several days ago, received a letter, signed by “the black hand'1 asking $5,000 ran­ som for his daughter’s safe return. Authorities here are of the opinion that the letter is a hoax since the Lindsey’s are possessed of little wealth. However, police are search­ ing for the girl here, as are those of nearby towns. She disappeared from ja local department store after going there wit ha younger brother to await relatives.. IIO HOPE IfH FOR RESCUE OF HIKERS SIX KNOWN DEAD OF 59 TO 71 COAL MINERS ENTRAP­ PED. COLD SWAY REMOVES HAZARDS FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD’S ADVISORY COUNCIL MAKE STATEMENT. Washington.—The federal reserve board’s advisory council believer that the return of Great Britain and do­ minions to a’ gold standard marks once more the undisputed sway of gold over the world’s leading financial sys­ tems and removes from international trade and finance one of the great hazards—fluctuating exchange—which has confronted business since the out­ break of the World War. In one of the few formal statements ever issued by the council, which met here Friday, it declared tHat when England established a free gold mar­ ket and anchored herself “unreser­ vedly to the gold standard,” the time came to an end “when the world seem­ ed to waver between monetary sys­ tems frankly bottomed upon gold on the one hand and fluctuating ex­ changes and socalled ‘managed1 cur­ rencies’ on the other.” This was the second statement of­ ficial sources in two days dealing with America’s part in the re-estab- lishment of the gold basis in England. The first came from Dr. A. C. Miller, federal reserve board member and widely known economist, and was giv­ en the approval of Secretary Mellon. r The council viewed the decision of England to lift the ban on gold ex­ ports as "an epoch in the financial history of the post-war period.” "For the United States,” the state­ ment said, “this development is of vastest importance. “First, because we own approximate Iy one-half of the world’s monetary gold. “Second, because in order to pre­ serve for ourselves conditions of a well balanced prosperity, • foreign markets absorbing our surplus production are an imperative necessity and it is idle to expect that without exchange -stability, the purchasing power of foreign countries may regain its full capacity. “Third, in present world conditions the sale of our vast excess production to foreign buyers can only be main­ tained on anything like the present scale as long as we continue freely to absorb foreign securities. Our ability to- do so, however, will depend upon the degree of credit these foreign countries will command here. We have, therefore, a vital interest In seeing the credit of our' customers placed, on the strongest possible basis. I Evolution Trial Set For July 10. Dayton, Tenn.—Another revolution of the Tennessee legal wheel threw the question of evolution fairly into the courts of the state. John Thomas Scopes was indicted by a grand jury on a charge of violat­ ing the Tennessee law against teach­ ing in the public schools certain theor­ ies that deny the story of the divine creation of man as taught in the Bible. A special term of the circuit court was ordered to convene July 10 for trial of the school teacher. Judge John T. Raulston, presiding, directed an order calling the court in a special session for the "transaction of any and all business that could be transacted at a regular term of court.” Members of the special prosecution council announced receipt of a tele­ gram from William Jennings Bryan, who is to appear, in the ranks of the prosecuting attorneys. A last minute change was made in the line up of the prosecution by the substitute of Walter White, superin­ tendent of schools, for George W. Rap- pleyea as prosecutor. French Withdraw. Fez, French Morocco—The French troops opposing Aba-El-Krim’s invad­ ing Riffian tribesmen have been .withdrawn from their positions north of the Quergha river. Signs Death Warrant. Sofia.—King Boris of Bulgaria, an enemy of capital punishment, confirm­ ed the death sentences of three men who took part in the Sveti Kral cath­ edral bombing in which 160 people were killed. Japanese Prince Breaks Precedent. Tokyo.—Prince Chichibu, second son of the emperor of Japan, left for Eng­ land aboard the warship Isumo for two years’ study abroad. He will leave the warship at Hong Kong, whence he will travel by liner. The visit of the prince to Europe is the first case of a son of the Japanese emperor’s being educated in the Occi­ dent. i The prince will spend. most of hi's two years in England, where he will live incognito as Marquis Chichibu. He also will travel on the continent. Coal Glen (Near Sanford.)—Some­ where in the bowels of Chatham coun­ ty upwards of three score of men, white, some black, wait mayhap with hearts stilled forever, but mine offi­ cials think they wait with hearts beat­ ing with that eternal hope that their fellows will bring them back again, alive and whole, InTo God’s sunlight and to the arms of their families. Six of their fellows, however, have already been brought to the surface, their lives snuffed out by the. deadly gas generated by explosions from un­ determined causes in the mine of the Marolina Mining eompany. The explosions, three in number, be­ gan shortly after they had gone down into the mine for the day’s shift. To be exact, the initial detonation was heard at 9:40. Three minutes later a second occurred and 30 minutes more elapsed when the third sent another thrill of terror through the little com­ munity at the mouth of the shaft. - The exact number of men entombed is not known. Careful checking of names in the mine office reavels 59, of whom 39 are white men and 20 col­ ored, who went into the shaft. In ad­ dition, there are 12 miners’ lamps that are missing from the timekeeper’s office. These lamps may be in the possession of night shift men who took them to their homes after coming out of the mines. On the other hand, these men may never have come from the mine at all. Sometimes, the mine officials say, the men are lateln com­ ing to the top through some delay In finishing the task for the shift. And, too, A. V. D. Smith, bookkeeper for the company, points out, the contrac­ tors may have had the men in the mines whose names they had failed to turn In to the timekeeper. However, the minimum number is placed at 59 and the maximum at 71. Following is the official list of the men known to have gone into -the mine: White—George Anderson, A. P. Martin, C. B. Johnson, Jue Hutson, Claude Woods, Zeff Riners, J; E. Lob- isher, A. L. Stokes, A. L. Holland, A. Williams, Sam Jeter, W-. H. Sullivan, N. R. Johnson, C. L. Woods, S. Holmes, W. E. Howard, SId Clegg, Albert Hol­ land, Sam Napier, Elmer Hayes, Dan Hutson, C. B. Davis, T. S. Anderson. W. E. Bailey, Reuben Chambless, Tom Cotton, Gus Boyles, John Henley, H. Cv Hall, B. McDonald, N. E. Dilling­ ham, W. D. Dillingham, Wilson Chas- ner, Dave Wilso®, ------ Hill , John Cufd, Hollis Richardson, Joe Hutson and Robert Williams. Total, 39. Negroes-—J. J. Wilson, Lee Bucking­ ham, John Burgess, John Shaw, Char­ les Watson, David Barr, June Cotton James Small, John Austin, Julius Cot­ ton, Henry Austin, Wade Wilson, Will Moore, Page Munn1 Will Austin, Ar­ thur Poe, Charlie Wright. T. D. Wright, Will Irick, Manly Lamberts. Total, 20. Grand total 59. When the first blast was heard; Howard Butler, superintendent of the mine, accompanied by Joe RichaTdson, a mechanic, descended to the 1,500- foot level, where, in the second right lateral, they found six miners who had been stunned by the force of the ex­ plosion. Leading these men from this lateral into the main slope, they sat down on some timbers to rest, all thinking the danger was past. Butler and Richardson started for the sur­ face and had gone but a few yards when the second explosion was heard. This and the gas created through it, in­ stantly snuffed out the lives of the sis men who had seated themselves in the slope. Butler, while somewhat dazed from this second explosion, turned and dashed back into what seemed certain death to render aid to his helpless men. The hero of the day, however was overcome and had to be taken to the surface by Richardson, who had not been quite so precipitate. Butler subsequently was taken to a hospital at Sanford, where he is said to be in no danger. Richardson con­ tinued to direct the rescue work throughout the day. The hope held out that the remain­ ing men may be alive is based on the statement of Richardson and Butler and others who went into the mine to remove the bodies of the six, that the air beyond the 1,500-foot level is fair­ ly pure and that the farther in one goes the better It seems. While only cursory investigation has been made so far, it is believed the men are trap­ ped 3,000 feet from the opening, by boulders which have blocked the shaft and that they are getting fresh ,air elsewhere. Search is being made in the sur­ rounding country to see if a crevass In the earth was (caused by either of the blasts which could let air to the en­ tombed men. Airplane Carrier Proves Its Worth. U. S. S. Seattle, Off the Hawaiian Islands.—Official discussions by obser­ vers of the recent inter-fleet maneu­ vers of the Island of Maul, revealed that the aircraft carrier, U. S.-S. Lang­ ley proved the high, value of aircraft carriers as important elements; of the fleet offense and defense. The maneuvers, however, showed that the Ictw speed capacity of the Langley1 would reduce its effectiveness in actual battle, the obersers said; "Hello Daddy^dortt Slip a package yonr pocfeer yvnen yaafco home to* night- O lvethe y o tm g sle ra I h i i w h o le so m e Ionfr Iadini sweet- for pleasure and benefit. t&e U yourself after Aitokind or Ytrhen Vfork dra^s. Rsa 'afterefety m e a t i Po A .decided blond Is a fair-haired tvoman who always insists upon hav­ ing her own way. It’S Almost Impossible to Wear Them Out! USKIDE S O L E S The W onder Sole for W ear— Wean Iwfce am long aa teui leaOtart —and for a BeMer Hael "U. S ." SPRfJVG-STtP Horlm L United States Rubber Company RUNNIMQ , W A T E R GOULDS P U M P S MOWATER SYSTEMS' Write for booklet D giving details of our complete line of elec* trie and eoginedriven ptunpa and water syo* terns for every need. The Goulds M anufacturing Co. Seneca Falls. N.Y. AiITOWATEB He Owes His 40 Years of Constant Good Health to Beecham’s Pills **t am 57 years old and commenced to be troubled with constipation when I was I started taking Beecham's Pills, other remedies having (ailed. Ihavenothad a side day In all the 40 vears."F. Louis Loeffler, Rochester, N. T. ForFREB SAMPLE—write BtF.AUea Co^417 Canal StteetfNewTork bay from your druggist in %3 and SM boxes Fer constipation, biliousness, sfefc headaches and other digertive ailments take B e e c h a m ’8 P i lls t S irDonO''J A tM Dmtfgisis looT^rauoi uanDBfitm'm reouest.1 A.O.LEONARD.1NC.70-SSAVE, NCW YORK HEALS RUNNING SORES ttI feel it m y d u ty to w rite you % e tte r of th a n k s fc r y o u r vnonderful P eterson's O intm ent. I h ad a ru n n in g io re on m y le ft le g fo r on* year. I began to use P eterson s O intm ent th re e w eeks ago an d now it is healed-"—A. C. G librath, 703. R eed St., E rie, P a.F o r y ea rs I have been sellin g th ro u g h d ru g g ists a la rg e box of PETERSO N 'S OINTM ENT fo r 35 cents. The healin g pow er In th is ointm ent is m arvelous. Eczemp. goes in a few days. O ld sores heal up lik e m agic; piles th a t o th e r rem edies do n o t seem to even relieve are speedily conquered. P im ples and n asty blackheads disappear in a w eek and th e d istre ss of chafing goes In a few m inutes. M ail o rders filled. P e­terson O intm ent Co., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. i t CeO B rand Insect Pow der w on’t etaln—o t harm «ny*&stfexeept Insects.- Household sires, 10c and 25c—other sizes, 50c and $1.00, a t your druggist o r grocer. Pree BooUeU McCORMlCKdk C O -BaBimore, M d, “ V 1E' M t •-its ^47985891592378636 ■ T H E D A V IE B E C O K iy M Q C E S V IL L E , N , C. Cf he Free Ti'ctders I i s I® B y V I C T O R R O U S S E M (Copyright by W. O. Chapman.)WNU Service. CHAPTER XXI ^ —16— Saved by Estelle As the wall of the hut burst into flames Lee struggled with all bis might to free himself of his bonds. But in spite of all his efforts he could not loosen them an inch. He writhed until the cords. drew blood from his wrists, and the thought of Joyce, lost to him at the last through Estelle’s trick, inspired him to still more frenzied efforts, but equally In vain. Suddenly a figure darted through the doorway. In his condition of semi-consciousness he was dimly aware that Estelle was crouching at his side, trying to unknot the ropes. It was impossible to see anything through the thick smoke that filled the interior of_ the hut, and Estelle’s fingers, groping for the knots, were not strong enough to loosen them. Still. she fought in a frenzy, mad- dened^by Rathway’s desertion of hep, his blow, and Shorty’s murder, hardly knowing why she 'was bent upon sav­ ing Lee when her whole life had gone down In ruin. Two walls of the hut were now in flames, and the whole roof was smouldering. Estelle screamed wildly into the empty air. Lee tried to push her away. "Go— never mind me!” he tried to mumble- through his gag. And he wondered why she, who had lured him there, was now trying to, save him. She bit at the ropes with her teeth, and even while she did so those screams continued to pour from her lips. At last, with a final, despairing, cry, she collapsed at Lee’s side. Another figure staggered over the sill. It was Leboeuf. He came on, a moving pillar of mud. The old In­ dian, attracted by the fire, and hear­ ing Estelle's cries, had at last suc­ ceeded In fighting his way out of the muskeg. Seeing the two forms dimly through the smoke, he bent down, felt the cords about Lee’s limbs and body and, with his knJfe, quickly slashed them asunder. He pulled the gag from Lee’s month and carried him outside. Estelle staggered out after him. In a few moments the fresh air revived them. But hardly were they outside the hut when the roof collapsed with a great crash, sending up a spout of sparks and brands. A huge banner of fire waved where the hut had been. The glowing brands, descending, set fire to the de&d reeds. Lines of lire ran swiftly out Into the swamp. The sound of whinneying and plunging came from the stables, which were now discernible against the brightening sky. "Monsieur!” cried Leboeuf, pointing. Estelle clung to Lee. “W ait! W alt!” she cried. But even in Lee’s misery the Instinct to save the animals came first. Leboeuf and he set off toward the building, staggering through. the swamp, whUe the flery fingers of the conflagration reached out toward them. "No! This way!” cried Estelle, running toward them. She guided them along the little trail. In a few moments Lee and Leboeuf had unhaltered the animals, and led them to safety, the Indian carrying the saddle^ and bridles over his arm. / At the neck of the promontory Es­ telle grasped at Lee again. ‘‘He is gone!” she cried. "He has taken her' to Lake Misquash in his motor boat. Oh, don’t you care,- that you stand there like, that?” Lee looked at her, despair heavy in his eyes. “So much,” he answered, "that I jShall follow him to the Arctic ice if necessary. That is why there is no instant hurry, Estelle.” Estelle could not understand his Calmness-^He made me deceive yon,” she cried. “He swore to me that he would take me away with him, leav­ ing herein the hut with you. He said he would place a knife near you, so that you could see it when it grew light, and would be able to free"your­ self and her. He only wanted a few minutes’ respite. I—I believed him, the perjured Uar. He tricked me, and now he’s gone forever:!” She broke down In stormy sobs. Lee said nothing,- At that moment, when everything seemed Yost, ~ and it was impossible to save Joyce from the worst, he could only build up endless schemes for future retribution. He woulB- pursue Bathway, if necessary, not only to the Arctic ice, but to the ends of the earth. But—it was' too late! That stunning realization kept him as still and silent as if nothing mat­ tered at all. All the while these thoughts passed 1 through his mind he was walking with • the others across the promontory. It was. growing light now, but they could see no signs of movement in the huts opposite them. Lee quickened his footsteps, oppressed by a vague fear. Ontslde the huts he stopped, uttered a cry. Father McGrath lay In a huddled heap. There was a bloody wound in his head- Lee threw himself upon his knees beside the old priest, sure that be was, dead. He took one.wrist. FatBer McGrath was very far from being dead. He sat up with electri­ fying suddenness,' and dealt Lee $ buffet that knocked him backward. And the flow of ladguage that.streamed fivm his tips was; If not actually ob- jnrgatlve, decidedly picturesque. ■ Tfcen of 8 sudden he seemed to realize where he was. He stared at Lee in dismay, looked wildly around him. "Whaur are they? Ah1 the-1-!” Leboeuf, coming up at this junc­ ture with the two horses, uttered a melancholy grunt at the sight of the old priest, with his bloody head, and the prisoners gone. McGrath was in a raging fury. It was not difficult to piece the story together. When Lee disappeared into the muskeg, Leboeuf, knowing that It was impenetrable, unless one possessed knowledge of the trails, hastened after him, leaving McGrath In charge of the prisoners. Though McGrath remem­ bered nothing from that moment'. It could be gathered that one of them had drawn a concealed pistol and fired, felling McGrath and stunning him. Whereupon, thinking him dead, the whole crew had rushed for the motor boat, but, frightened back by Estelle’s screams and the sight of the two men there, whom they believed to be more of Lee’s raiding party, they had swarmed down the landing place into the York boats, and made good their escape. The whole night’s work had gone for nothing. Lee insisted on ’ examining Mc­ Grath’s wound, and discovered that It was a mere graze along the temple. JThe bone had turned the glancing bullet. “Aye, ’tis the thick head o’ the Mc­ Graths saved me, and ’tis\ the thick head o’ the McGraths saved them!” Lee Tried to Push Her Away. “Go— Never Mind Mel" He Tried to Mumble Through His Gag. the old man lamented bitterly. "’Twas an evil moment when ye consented to brring me wi’ ye, Anderson!” Lee tried to console him, but. Mc­ Grath^ appeared utterly despondent over his failure. It was in vain Lee told him that he did not need the members of the gang; that It was a good thing, on the whole, that they had got away. Father,” said Lee, “we’ve got to look the facts in the face. First, -there’s my duty as a policeman, to arrest Bathway for Pelly’s murder, however far I have to follow him. .He’s, broken for Lake Misquash, and I’m going to follow -him there. “Then there’s Joyce. It’s true she’s his wife,” here Estelle tried to Inter­ rupt him, but he ignored her.- His voice choked for a moment. “I must eliminate that fact from consideration. Tm going to start as soon as possible, and I propose to ride one of Bathway’s horses. If Leboeuf is willing to ac­ company me, I’U_ take him as a deputy,” ‘Ah, Monsieur, I come with you, never fear!” answered Leboeuf, mak­ ing a clucking sound with his tongue against the roof of his mouth. And then Lee remembered that Le­ boeuf had a score of his own to settle with the fugitive, apart from the mat­ ter of Joyce. 'See, Monsieur!” said the Indian, pointing to two pairs of snow shoes strapped against the saddles. “I have only to make up two packs from what those men have left behind them In these huts, and we are ready to start together to the. top of the world. We ride the horses till they can go no longer. Then we take to the raquettes. And at last we catch him. He cannot escape us. "Monsieur, /there is no place in the world so small that he can tide In, nor no place so silent that we. cannot hear him. My master came to me In a dream and told me so. He told me all that has happened here, but I would not let you know. We catch him by telling water. And she—she shall come to no harm. An this my master told me.” The wizened, mournful face of the old man lit up with a Sombre fire. Lee clapped him on. the back. “Good, Leboeuf,” he safd. ‘"We’ll start, then.” He turned to the priest. “You will be able to make your way home. Father?” • "TrrUst me for that, lad.!” answered Father McGrath. “I dlnna doot but they’ll be Anxious' for’ me, and it’s Uttls more I can do for you, having bungled the game—” He would not IiBten to Lee’s en­ couragements. - “Na’, na\ 'tis a, sair end to the nlcht’s worrk,” fie said, “but let us thank God we’ve cleaned oot this nest o' snakes, anyhow, e’en If the ser­ pent’s gone. Aye,' but ye'll catch him, lad, and save that pulr lassie fra’ him,” he continued. He spoke with­ out much conviction. “Before I go, Anderson,” he continued, “’tis niy purpose to clean oot this nest o' snakes completely.. I’ll e’en empty their bar­ rels o’ the feelthy stuff that they’ve been meexin’ wi’ the guid eorrn, and burn down these habitations.” Lee looked across the neck, where a dense cloud of smoke from the burning reeds hung over everything. “Good !'• he answered. “Make a clean swe^p of it, Father, so that there'll be ho chance of their coming back here al any future time. I guess you’ll find oil In the storehouse. Now, Leboeuf, If you're ready—•” Estelle, who had been standing by, vainly attempting two or three times to intervene, came forward, placing her hand timidly upon Lee’s arm* “You—you won’t hurt him? You’ll promise me to do him no harm, what­ ever—whatever he may have done?” she pleaded. ‘‘If it is possible, I promise you that I shall take him unharmed back to Manistree,” Lee answered. - "That is my duty; and it will also be my duty to require you as a witness." She burst into tears. “Oh, he isn’t altogether bad!” she sobbed. “He's good in his way. Nobody knows the good that is in him.” Perhaps Ihat was the best tribute that c<!uld have been paid Estelle. Lee, struck by a sudden thought, turned to the priest. “Father, you must take her back to the mission with you,” he said. ‘Aye,” said McGrath. “’Twas what I was tljeenkin’ mysel’.” TYou must go with him,” said Lee, and put his foot in the stirrup. Estelle clutched at him, and now the look In her eyes was one of reso­ lution. “Lee—wait! There’s some­ thing I must say to you! You remem­ ber what I was saying to you two nights ago, about it’s not being neces­ sary to—to kill him, to get that girl from him?” Lee only looked at her. “Lee, I may never see you again. I want you to forgive me for ail the wretched, miserable wrongs I did you In the past. Lee, If it’s any consola­ tion—I know it can be none—but I did love you once. I knew I was un­ worthy of you, but It wasn’t all fake and sham.” “Never mind, Estelle,” said Lee. "AU that’s long past.” I should have told you about— about the man, Kean, but I didn’t dare to. You—you idealized me. You thought me something that I wasn’t and could never have been.” 'Estelle!—” ‘If you hadn't put me upon a ped­ estal I should have found courage to tell you that Kean had been my lover, that I cared; more for you­ then. I should have kneeled at your feet and begged you to forgive me. I ran away with him . because I was afraid of you, and I have hated you —and hate you still—because of the wrong I had done you.” “Please don’t say any more, Es- teller-” Lee tried to interpose. 'You think that I’m a woman with a score of lovers, and there’s only been one man In all my life, Lee. Because— IUl tell' you now. Jim Bathway Is Kean. And his wife’s still alive—at any' rate, she was alive- when he went through that marriage ceremony with Joyce. Alive and not divorced’from him. That makes Joyce yours!” CHAPTER XXII Retribution The cold rage In Lee’s- heart was like an inexorable demon- driving him. Mile after mile they covered, urging their foam-flecked horses along the trail as remorselessly as the resolve In their own hearts drove them. It was when they topped a bare ele-. vation among the pines that Leboeuf touched his companion's arm and pointed.. ^ In the distance Lee saw the motor boat drawn up on the shore. And with that, some instinct told him that Kathway could not escape them, that he would never reach Lake Misquash. Lee burned now with the same faith tfkat animated Leboeuf. They drove their horses on, and saw the motor boat depart, heard the chug of Its engine die away in the distance. It was about the middle of the after­ noon that Leboeuf touched Lee's arm and pointed a second time. Again. Lee saw the motor boat Again tlrey heard the rattle of the engine swell up and die away. But now, by the same faith, Lee knew that Joyce’s deliverance was very Hear, although their horses were, wearied almost to death. A^ain they rode on through the afternoon. The Indian, who-had not spoken a word since their departure, 'touched Lee’s arm . a third time. And now Lee saw the motor boat again, but it was drifting, apparently aimlessly, in the river, and moving slowly toward the rapids. Joyce sat in the middle of it, and Bathway was at the engine. Lee and Leboeuf rode cruelly, drawing out their horses’ last reserve of strength. What was the man doing! They saw him rise and hurl something into the water. He stood up in the boat, be shook his fist at them, and bis yells of defiance, reached their ears above the roar of the stream. Then, seizing an oar, Bathway b» gan paddling frantically; In the en­ deavor to get the boat bow on prepara­ tory to guiding her down the narrow course among the rocks. Lee and Leboeuf were, nearly I abreast of the boat now—and Qt • sudden Lee knew that Joyce was his. His, In life and death, for evermore! She saw, she .knew him, and their spirits seemed to rush together across the waters. 1 Without hesitation Lee and the In­ dian put their horses into the river. They- drove the frightened, beasts through the ice-cold water, making a course immediately toward the boat, which was now being swirled by the torrent. toward that black chain _of projecting rocks. The horses yielded to the force of the stream. They were being carried away. Lee felt the swift rush of the water past him as he rode, submerged to the waist. He saw Leboeuf a little In front of him. And a wild exhila­ ration filled his heart, and his whole personality sekned to rush out before him, anticipating his vengeance and his love. The frightened, snorting beasts were now helpless in the rush of the river, which gathered force momen­ tarily as it drove them towajrd the rocks. They were hardly- a' "boat’s length from where Rathway was striving desperately to right the motor craft. He was too late. He had not cal­ culated on the force of the current, which slewed the heavy boat around, in spite of Bathway’s strongest ef­ forts. One moment of suspend and terror—and the motor boat wedged itself fairly between two upstanding rocks beside the channel’s mouch. Such was the velocity of the stream that it drove into its place with a force that feed it as firmly as If it were a part of the rocks themselves, and clung there, with a swirl of white water around it, reaching almost to the gunwales, In those last moments Lee saw Rathway, standing In the boat, drag Joyce to her feet and clutch her to him, as If resolved to be united with her at the last. His free hand he' extended menacingly toward Lee as he approached, himself spinning upon his whirling mount like a straw 'in the torrent Then Leboeuf liad struggled from his horse’s back, poised himself upon the gunwale of the motor boat, and. with a bellow of rage, seized Bath­ way by the throat. To and fro they rocked, the boat despite' their struggles, remaining firm as a wedge. And now the great shoulders of the old Indian were drag­ ging his enemy from his place. What Leboeuf said to Bathway in those last moments no one ever knew, for the roar of the rapids drowned all other sound. But of a sudden Bath­ way’s resistance seemed to cease. Per­ haps in Leboeuf he 'recognized the ad­ vent of that Nemesis he hsjd defied; he collapsed, and Leboeuf, holding him in his arms, poised himself one instant ,on the gunwale. The next both men had disappeared Jorever In the surge of the rnpids that swept them through th£> falls, grind­ ing I them into unrecognizable pulp among the rocks. Lee grasped at the boat as his horse swept by to its destruction. He clung there, clambered In. His arms were about Joyce. She lay there, and they forgot everything In the peace thaf had descended under the veil of the smoking spray. It was long before they awakened to realities. They looked about them, smiling at t(ielr position. Deatb seemed so small a thing to them, now. And yet, the boon of life . . . how much it meant! Lee crept to the bow. The boat, wedged firmly between the rocks, was nevertheless being constantly swept sidewise by the swirl of the current. He came back to Joyce. “If I could dislodge her, I' believe she’d go through that channel in the rapids, Joyce. I—I’ll have to try.” Joyce sighed. They would have liked to prolong that happiness of theirs for all eternity. They were un­ conscious of all but each other. But they must put their love to the last test of life. Lee’s clothes were freezing on him; In the boat were packs, supplies—life, lifeforboth of them, if she could take the rapids. "I'll try, Joyce.” They held each 'other, for a moment longer. Then, taking the oar, Lee drove the handle into the gap between the rocks,, and levered with all hia .strength. J The boat began to give. One instant It hung giddily on the abyss; the next It was back Jn position. “Lie down, Joyce!” And he flung all Jiis strength into that attempt, conscious that life and death trembled in the balance. The boat gave, clung to the rock, was swept sidewise, righted herself and plunged down the channel to safety In the calm waters below. “Lee, dearest, it’s from Father Mc­ Grath. He wants ub to come up to the settlement this summer. He’s got five new Indian babies and he’s as proud as Punch over them. NAnd Es­ telle—” She hesitated and looked at Lee. "Go on!” ' ' “Estelle’s simply devoted to the children and she’s taken up my work with so much pleasure. He says she seems quite happy and he believes In time that she’ll forget—him.” ‘‘I might get leave of absence” Lea mused. “But with that promise of my commission and our transfer*—I think perhaps our visit will have to wait.” “Some day—” Joyce suggested. They wondered if that day would ever come. At times a longing for the range came otfer them for those scenes where they had met and W ed mingled with it were t W & S that they had put-out of their lives because that shadow must nevw darken their happiness. • “Some day,-said Lee1 -Perhan*-* IXHE KNDJ \ Husband Spurns Help Until III Wife Is Saved New Y ork--Trapped "by flames In their fifth-floor apart­ ment, E d w a rd Koffenberg spurned rescue until; firemen had taken’ his Invalid wife to safety. The couple are each sixty-five years old. Koffenberg, with escape cut 'off by. way of the stairs, was crouched on the fire escape when the firemen arrived, under com­ mand Oifr-Captain Relgh. An aerfaT"ladder was run up, and Firemen Hawkins, Bayard, Hig­ gins aad Cook mounted to the level of the fire escape, where Koffenberg stood silhouetted against the glare of the flames within. ^ It took Hawkins and Bayard- but a moment to leap from the ladder to the friffl, steel balcony and then-Tstep into the smoke- filled room, - where Koffenberg pointed out his bed-ridden wife. They lifted the woman put and passed her to the two firemen on the ladder, who carried her down to the street. Then Hawkins and Bayard -helped the husband down, while the crowd In the street cheered.' ’ CARRIES DEAD BABY IN TRUNK Needy Mother Is Freed by Baltimore Coroner. Baltimore, Md.—Having no money » bury her baby when it died in 1919, and not knowing that the city would bury the child for her, Mrs. Mary Orban told Coroner Hennessey that Bhe had placed the body in a trunk and had carried the trunk around with her for nearly five years. Mrs. Urban was arrested in Philadelphia following the finding of the body In the trunk at a boarding house here, where she had left it for a board bill. Coroner Hennessey, on hearing her story, assured that the child died of natural causes,. ordered her released. Her husband, Adolph, who now Isln Germany, put the body in the satchel and looked it In the trunks she said. That was in 1919. Since then, dur­ ing their’, frequent movings from place to place, she carried it with her, she said. Last May, however, she was forced to leave it because she could not pay a board bill. The trunk was abandoned by Mrs. Urban, who is a ship stewardess, at a rooming house in the 700 block of Park avenue, eleven months ago. Mrs. Mary Haas, who recently took over the management of the place, called police to open the trunk Thursday. In Jt they found some c-lofhes and a handbag. In the handbag -was the baby. Chcarges Husband Wed Six and Gave Vow to Seventh New York.—Six times wed and ready for a' seventh bride—such is the status of Louis Klee, if one accepts the word of his wife. Rose, who has informed the polled her husband is wanted in Cleveland for bigamy. Mrs. Klee No. I says she married Louis In 1911 at Bloomington, Del., and that after a rather hectic mar­ ried life he left her, she says, to wed Margaret McKay at Stamford, Conn., in September, 1913.. The following year, she states, he married a girl named Helen In Chicago, and In June, 1921, he married a Helen Smith, at Elkton, Md., under the name of Louis Klatz. Wife No. 5, she claims, was p. Rose Ohlbaum of Cleveland, and there was a sixth whose name she couldn’t recall. After all these marital experiences, Mrs. Rose JEIee charges her husband met a pretty New York girl whom he "has promised to marry. Klee is In the Tombs in default of ?3,060 ball. Kansas Vigilantes to Kill Off Bank Bandits Kansas City, K ac.-“No work for the jury I” is the slogan of a vigilante committee organized to protect ideal banks against robbers. Distribution of arms to members of the committee, which is composed of bank employees and business men Jn the neighborhood of banks. Is under way. .Two hun­ dred and fifty rifles, sawed-off shot­ guns and .45-callber revolvers will be placed In the hands of persons who are being trained to use them in an emer­gency. / % Each bank is being equipped with an alarm that may be set off at a number of places in the building. When Oie alarm Is sounded, under the plan, each vigilance will take his station and open flre on the bandits. Grows New Scalp kHO?n*’ ^ l8r7-Mra- George Freeman Kendall who suffered the loss of her fn®!? her halr became entangled JrleJSSit .** fann machinery In Au­gust, 1923, lias completely recovered, even to the growth of a new head of hair, according to reports from S t Mary s hospital, where she has been a patient since the accident < ConoietM Win Prize San Francisco.-A prize-wlnnlng en- Ef1J n Ihe aiP1Ual exhibition of the California Spring Blossom and WHd- flower association, which opened here rec«,tly were aowers g ro ^ by co£ Vtcts in Quentin prison. TheW ooma-K rssr ■ ALL WORN Olm Are you lamp and stiff; feed „ 1 and depressed; mieerabirSl1> ache? Have you suspected ,-? *•* neys? Good health denenH? } 0r Iai elimination. But sluggT sfe^ 2 impunties to accumulate and S8 whole system. Backache 2 .3*?% low; stabbing paras, depress aches, dizziness and othS ,8 V"*+:— 1 aOQoji- stimuimt diuretic.*™™^8?.1 over. Aek your neighbor! A North Carolina r.J. W . Alford,m S r '- a Se prop, o f grocery a i l sto re. E ig h th S t . , iFtar* l6tjfcJ* Sm ithfield, N. C.,» say's: “I had te r­rib le backaches a n d i f I stooped I h ad a catch In m y hack. My k idneys w ere v e ry free, m ak­ in g m e g e t up, d u rin g th e night.Headaches and aizzy common and specks before Jf blurred my .sight. DoaKs p,?,* «rei relieved meTif this trouble " so°» D O A N ’S ^ STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE RmaL Poster-Mgbuin Co., Mfg. Chem. S g g WHITE DIARR ■' CAUSED" Bags Color Rouge StickT ^ Coloring matter f,-,,,,, tll, bug dyes are used In Kivill. f * ; lip rouge the desired color. Cocllin'; I dyes for years were the principal T ® used in world cor «■«>, |,„t fw ., ries-they were superseded i,v dyes and the. cochineal dies tod.|vl' only a very limited use, com nai^ t* i I ! CHILD’S BEST LAXATlVEj ; IS CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP ■ I ---------* I HUBST MOTHER! A teaspoons of "California Fig Syrup” bob- thoroughly clean the little bowels ant in a few hours you have a well, play* ful child again. Even if cross, feu ish, bilious, constipated or full of cold, children love its pleasant taste. Tell your druggist you want onh the genuine “California Fig S'mp'1 which has directions for babies ad children of all ages printed on bottle Mother, you must say "Califoraia.* Befuse any imitations. i a k e H e a lin g S u lp h u rb a th s r /ltn r n t For rheumatism, gout, eczema01 hives, nothing is more beneficial In­ frequent sulphur baths. You can enjoy the benefits of hal­ ing sulphur baths right in your °n home, and at small cost by using H a n c o c k S u l p h u r C o m p o u n d nature’s own- blood purifying 3r^ skin healing r e m e d y —Suiphur-so- entifically prepared to mftta Itt most efficacious. Use it in the W Also use it internally and as a lot on affected parts. 60c and $1.20 the bottle at ?««' druggist’s. If he cannot supply J > send his name and the price m and we will send you a Iwttle dirw H ancock Liquid Sulphur Cohpasi Baltimore, Marj-Ianlj Haneoet SuIpAur Cimvxt^d OftdAIe-/oritMWtlft Jot- Twin Cities Floor Crop The flour mills of MinneapollL 5 I St. Paul have a total producingMF ^ of 90,000 barrels a day.-*®* Herald-Tribui^. _____ Sure ReJJjjfFOR INWGESTIOI 6 BEIA-AJj5 H ot wajfi SuwRe11I White diarrhea in chi Infectious disease which Bitted from chick to chi is caused by a germ wh rapidly In the body of tl jug a severe diarrhea t' tal In a lacge mnjority o flocks. It has been de that hens which appear carry In their organs o the germ which causes an d which manifests young chicks within two after hatching. Healthy same incubators or bro come infected by contac food or drinking from have become contamin droppings of these sick White diarrhea usu quickly, causing a heavy that are a few days to a of age. The chicks hu appear sleepy or stupid, appetite. Tlia dropping color and this causes called "pasted up behind die within a few hours the disease is noticed. AU sick chicks should along with all litter, re that is found in the burned. All utensils about the brooder house itself, should be tlioro scalded with boiling wa fected. Only healthy ch put in the disinfected It is’ best If possible to entirely new quarters. No satisfactory medi for infected chicks Iia The disease may be hatching eggs from dise Certain drugs used i~ water aid in preventing disease in chicks. Bich cnry in the proportion every gallon of water is Sour milk or buttermilk good part of the ratio flock when the infee started requires constani tiring efforts. Back Anti-Chinese Law The, Philippine bookkeeping law re­ quiring that accounts of mert-liiws shall be kept In English, Spanish or I native dialect has been declared con­ stitutional by the Philippine Suiirme court. It was aimed at Chinese mer­ chants. An appeal will be taten to | the Cnlted States Supreme court. . Freshen a Heavy Skin With the antiseptic, fascinating Cotl-1 Cura Talcum Powder, an exquisi scented, economical face, skin, Mr I and dusting powder and perfume Benders other perfumes superfluous. One of the Cutlcura Toilet Trio (Soap, | Ointment, Talcum).—Advertisement Soldiers Fight “Reds” Retired soldiers of Jsipsin will fifM I radicalism in Japan. Their organto | tlon has about 3,000,000 members. D ire c t S u n s h in e K • F o o d f o r Y o i Feed your chicks su: want them to grow rapii Scientists say that Ie; chicks Mared indoors ! by the wrong feed, but direct sunshine which et use their food In buij strong skeleton. And shine they mean sunshiij lost most of its effect tj through-glass or cloth. Is at the seat of many preventing sufficient exe ing it difficult for the Cl their feed. It is therefore Impoi chicks be allowed out sunny days as early as little while • each day not at all. A small ya . vided so as to slmpiifj back Into the house whi because of cold weath cannot be outdoors, should be opened at thi to allow the entrance rays without lnterferen Green stuff such as cl have been grown In the of egg laid by bens tha: range, and crude co£ 11 about I to 2 per cent will help to make up sunshine, but most p< 1VIIi prefer to use suns possible.—Cora Cake, E try Specialist, Univers sota. i S e e d P o u ltr y Y a n 8 P r e v e n tio n < Success with chicks Iy upon the condition The most effective prev< ♦rol of diseases and pi ■nitted through the soil! a heavy growth of ve{ Will clean up the soil. Particularly to coccidi worms, and tuberculosis Alsike, blue grass, a vetch and rye are vei seed mixtures for bro poultry yards. A gener of Ime will aid In the i tation and cleansing th« we yards In this way eomes the disease coi soil, but provides green feed in the yai essential for the chicks The brooder houses si w ® Kround occupied p e a r can be seeded now Placed on new groui the following yeailp *eand.° ^ 6r0undI F r e e J t a n g e f o l rottlts Should not b J ^»ge until they are a f after which timl Qger from ordinary r f c d ^ Ume they rh!! a P6n ab^ tttaJL * need special £>ms and should not J ilr0ugh th^ grass wi &J3 * hens and frequently r you lame and stiff; * I lepressed; nueemlfc"*?-,Hetv0tl ^paXe, y°o suspected^ W Good health depend?,'r°Ur kid ation. But sluggish tfa Po» SM hties to a<^umul?te andn?ys 45 system. Backache != PEet n* stabbing pains, deprls?1 to iol dizziness, and OtW ne W irregularities. AVhv eL aniloIiOt s; Iant, diuretic. tTsed ?k atloVi Ask your neighbor; w°rl4 North Carolina C=tv. A iford„-»,ce ! S r t - a s ec-f g ro cery ***■ Tv-*- Eighth St., field. N. C., I had te r- back ach es I stooped I a catch back. My e y s w ere tree, mak- ne g e t up th e n ig h t..'■hes and dizzy on and specks CefiFo1I0 w«e ^m y .sight Doan's PiTiJ eVes ' -Pf this trouble sooJW d , io o f th is^ tro u b le "'5 s°°° ,O A N tS PI^I AkP!* ntim rv... v|jC Cfh m ibl * & iLD’S BEST LAXATIVE.! CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUp j tRY M OTH ER ! A teaspoonftf iiifornia F ig Syrup-’ now w]]i :hl.v clean the little bowels ano iv hours you have a well, play- Id again. Even if cross, fever­ ous, constipated or full of cold, n love its pleasant taste, your druggist you warn onlt nuine "C alifornia Fis Syrup’’ aas directions for babies aud -n of all ages printed on bottle t ou m ust say “California.” 1 7 ant im itations. cck A nti-C hinese Law ^ I hilippine bookkeeping law re that accounts of merehauts e kept in English. Spanish or um lect has been declared Con­ ’S*! id by the Philippine Snpreme It w as aim ed at Chinese mer- Au appeal wilt be taken to A- ted S tates Suprem e court.,fJ O Freshen a Heavy Skin the antiseptic, fascinating Cnti- Talcum Powder, an exquisitely d, economical face, skin, baby lusting powder and perfume a rs other perfumes superfluous, f the Cutlcura Toilet Trio (Soap, ent, Talcum).—Advertisement. S H a k e K e a I i n t f a f e f e ^ S u I p h u r b a th s h o m e A l ■J S •0 r roldiers F ight ttRedsif rerl soldiers of Japan will Iism m Japan. Their oi^nuizs- about 3.000.000 members. :©r rheumatism, gout, eczema or fes. nothing is more beneficial tnan ;quent sulphur baths, ou can enjoy the benefits of he* r sulphur baths right in your o me, and at small cost by using H a n c o c k I p h u r C o m p o u n d ■e s own blood purify!ng snhealing rem edy—Sulphur cally prepared to makf ’ .re,, efficacious. Use it in tT l tion use it internally and as a Fected parts, and $1.20 the bottle at I list’s. If he cannot suPpI^ nps iis name and the pnce1 V nct ■e will send you a bottle cock Liquid Sulphur CourV-V Baltimore, Maryland ^ IS T W G S -'-* Cities Flour Crop ^ mills of MinneuPO^icitf a total producing york :S lOc rels d-Tribui@. O R I N D i e E S T l O S Ltiyiii H o t v /a '^ r SSreR eM T H E D A V IE R E C O R D , M O G K S V IL L E , N . G JLANT DIURETIC TO THE Kmil M.lcum Co.. Mlg- Chem,. BiiJ d1^s =»- •-'Itcfijng matter from the N arc used in giviir- fUe /I - the .b,ire,l color. * “ J , "-W the principal ()«! i ' Id commerce, but f„r fl,.S w .re RUpcrsedcd I1Vdu,,,? -he .-ochmealdyes Iodilj-w .united use, eo;iip;irmivoir W H IT E D IA R R H E A IS . * C A U S E D E Y A G E R M White diarrhea In chickens, a very Infectious disease which may be trans­ mitted from chick to chick by contact, ls caused by a germ which multiplies rapidly in the body of the chick, caus- iD„ a ‘severe diarrhea that proves fa­ ta' In a large majority of the infected flocks- It has been definitely proved that hens which appear healthy may carry in their organs of reproduction the germ which causes this disease 10d which manifests itself In the voting chicks within two or three days after huteliing. Healthy chicks in the Wiue incubators or brooders may be­ come infected by contact, or by eating food or drinking from vessels that Inve Iiecome contaminated with the dr’l'fings of these sick chicks. While diarrhea usually develops quid-h' causing a heavy loss In chicks tint ire a few days to a week or more of nge The chicks huddle together, "ppe-ir cIeepy or stupid, and have no .T„etite Tha droppings are white in colnr and this causes ’ a condition cilled "Iiasted up behind.” The chicks die within a few hours or days after the disease is noticed. All sick chicks should be killed and, ■ileiiir with all litter, refuse, and feed that is found in the brooder house, burned AU utensils used in and -bent the brooder house and the house itcelf should 'oe thoroughly cleaned, s.-ulded with boiling water, and disin­ fected Only healthy chicks should be put in the disinfected brooder house. It i» best if possible to move them to entirely new- quarters. ^ No satisfactory medical treatment far infected chicks has been found. The disease may be prevented by !latching eggs from disease-free flocks. C ertain drugs used In the drinking water aid In preventing the spread of disease in chicks. Bichloride of mer­ cury in the proportion of 20 grams to every gallon of water is recommended. Sour uitlk or buttermilk should form a good p art of the ration. To save a Cock when the Infection has once started requires constant care and un­ tiring efforts. Tlxe KitcKen Cabinet Direct S u n sh in e I s F in e F ood fo r Y o u n g C h ic k s Feed vour chicks sunshine if you want them to grow rapidly ntrd strong. Scientists say that leg-weakness in chicks reared indoors is caused, not bv the wrong feed, but by the lack of direct sunshine which enables them to use their food in building a good, strong skeleton. And by direct sun­ shine they mean sunshine that has not lost most of its effect by being sifted through-glass or cloth. Leg-weakness Is at the seat of many chick troubles, preventing sufficient exercise and mak­ ing it difficult for the chicks to secure their feed. It is therefore important that the chicks be allowed outdoors on the sunnv davs as early as possible. A time while each day Is better than sot at ail. A small yard can be pro­ vided so as to simplify getting them back into the house when desired. If, because of cold weather, the chicks cannot be outdoors, the windows should be opened at the bottom so as to auow the entrance of the sun’s rays without Interference. Green stuff such as clover sods that have been grown In the sunshine, yolks "f egg laid by hens that have been on range, and crude co£ liver oil, fed at u do tit I to 2 per cent of the ration, "in neip to make up for the lack of sunshine, but most poultry keepers win prefer to use sunshine whenever POSsiuie.—Cora Cake, Extension Poul- .r.v Specialist, University of Minne­sota. V s t f i ' Seed P o u ltry Y a rd s f o r P re v e n tio n o f D ise a se s Success with chicks depends large- h upon the condition of their runs. The most effective prevention and con­ trol of diseases and parasites trans- , mitted through the soil, Is to providfc : a heavy growth of vegetation which will clean up the soil. This applies Particularly to coccidiosis, intestinal worms, and tuberculosis. Alsilte, blue grass, and timothy or Totch and rye are very satisfactory I £eod mixtures for brooder runs and ; poultry yards. A generous application of lime .will aid In the growth of vege- I tation and cleansing the soil. Seeding me yards In this way not only over­ comes the disease contamination of bo soil, but provides an'abundance of green feed in the yards which Is so essential for the chicks In the spring.” The brooder houses should be moved the ground occupied by chicks this Tear can be seeded now. They should aJP'aoed on new ground each spring the following year they may be oturned to the ground on which they 110Wstand. Free R a n g e f o r P o u lts . oults should not be allowed free Se until they are about six weeks dan86’ afrer wlllcI1 Ome there is little Itir8e^vfrom or^lnarJ disease. Be- clf* j tlme they should be In Th!! hI a pen about W lnehes EtnrI neOd special care dur nns and should not be allowed J0 through Uie grass while the dew be.?' Both hens aBd PouIts should «amlned frequently for lice, and If t« are found they should be dusted ‘"too a week. L high., during (©. 1926, Western NeWBpaper Union.) . tu fu rn ish in g ,. no t all expensive th in g s a re good, n o r cheap ones all bad. H ow m any th in g s, both Ju st and u n ju st, a re sanctioned by custom . COLD DESSERTS During the summer, the desserts which appeal to the housewife are those which are refresh­ ing and easy to prepare. _ Banana Whip.' — Take S gBgv] six- ripe bananas, two Wafi tablespoonfuls of lemon IQ fl juice, two tablespoonfuls Bjfll of sugar, one-half cupful B H of walnut meats and one B H cupful of whipped cream. P r e s s th e b a n a n a s through a ricer, add the lemon juice, sugar and walnut meats chopped fine. Chill thoroughly and serve in sherbet glasses with a spoonful of cream. A teaspoon­ ful of finely-minced mint added to the fruit before mixing adds a nice flavor. Lemon Snow.—Soak two tablespoon­ fuls of gelatin in one-half cupful of cold water and after ten minutes add two cupfuls of boiling water, one cup­ ful of sugar, the juice of three lemons and the grated rind of one. Stir until dissolved and chill. When cold and beginning to set, beat with a whisk until frothy, then fold in three well- beaten egg whites. ‘ Heap by spoon­ fuls on a glass-disli and sprinkle thick­ ly with coconut. Chill and serve with a custard sauce. Marshmallow Custard.—Beat two eggs slightly and.add two tablespoon­ fuls of sugar, two cupfuls of thin cream and flavoring to taste. Place a marshmallow at the bottom of each custard cup and pour the mixture over them. Bgke in a pan of hot water until the custards are set. Place in the ice box to chill. Pineapple Compote.—Take one pine­ apple to five bananas. 'Slice the pine­ apple and cook In a heavy sirup until tender. Cool and arrange in a glass dish. Cover with sliced bananas, sprinkle with grated nutmeg and re­ peat. Serve with whipped cream and cake. Cream Prune Pie.—Put through a sieve a cupful pf stewed prunes; add a cupful of milk, one teaspoonful' of cornstarch, one-third of a cupful of sugar, the yolks of two eggs, well beaten, pour into a pastry-lined plate and bake until firm. Cover the top with a meringue, made from the two whites, adding a little sugar and fla­ voring. Bake until brown in a slow oven. Fruit Ice.—Take two cupfuls of fruit juice, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice, one and one-half to two cupfuls of sugar, depending/upon the fruit juice used, and one quart of wa­ ter. Freeze in a reezfer until smooth and velvety. , Summery Good Things. Coaling drinks are much appreciat­ ed during the warm summer days. Try to have a variety of different juices, so that there may be something on hand at any time. Whey has a delicious flavor when combined with fruit juices, and is especially wholesome. Whey Punch. — Take one cupful of whey, one and one-quarter cupfuls of sugar and boll togeth­ er for five minutes. Cool and add a quart of whey, the juice of two lemons and one cupful of shredded pineapple. Whey Sponge.—Take two cupfuls of whey, two tablespoonfuls of gelatin, one-third of s. cupful. of water, two- thirds of a cupful of sugar, one egg white, one cupful of grated raw car­ rot, the grated rind of a lemon, the juice of half a lemon. Soak the gela­ tin In cold water, dissolve in hot water. Mix with the whey,’add sugar and'set the mixture In a pan of lce- water. When it begins to thicken around the edges, beat well with an egg beater, add the lemon rind and the juice and carrot,. Fold In the well-beaten egg'w hite. and turn into a mold. Serve as a salad. Tomato and Pear Salad.—Cut toma­ toes into quarters and alternate them with quarters of ripe pears. Arrange on lettnce and serve with a highly sea­ soned salad dressing. Canned pears -will be good, if the fresh are not ob­ tainable. Grape and Ginger Ale Jelly.—Heat a pint of grape juice with two table­ spoonfuls of sugar; when hot pour over two- tablespoonfuls of gelatin which has been softened In a table­ spoonful of cold water. Add a pint of ginger alei' Mold and cool on ice until readstfto serve.- Pqas and Peppers.—Take the tops from six green peppers, remove the seeds and soak over night In stropg brine FiH the shells after draining w ith’one-half cupful each of minced meat and bread crumbs and one cup­ ful of cooked peas. Season-with onion tuice. a bit of peanut butter, salt, pepper, thick cream to make moist enough to serve well. Bake, until the peppers are tender. Serve hot. , The bolting of food with drinks of Iianld is the cause of many bodily ills. Food, not properly masticated gives the’ digestive tract extra work to do to break it up and soften it for assimila­ tion. If • we could be presuaded to chew, chew, chew our food, and eat plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables, we would need UtUe medicine and few , surgeons. ^ t Adorning the Knitted Frock; Lovely Gowns for Matrons O BOSS the palm of the itinerant fortune-teller with a. piece of sil­ ver, and Ic I our past; present and fu­ ture will be revealed. Knitted outer­ wear fashions are like that this sea­ son—responsive to the magic touch of silver. The stylist trims our sweaters and knitted two-piece suits with sil­ ver buttons and gilded trappings and behold! a revelation of entrancing modes. To the woman of smart fashion, . / . V bats, wraps and gowns they--present, created to suit matrons' (both young and older) seem to Indicate a prefer* ence that way*, But. of course, one must consider that the main demands on them come from matrons and It is most Important to v please them. Whatever the reasons, the modes of the French reach their climax in ap- pare! for women who have left girl­ hood behind them. , One reason is that ~ a* ’ H f fe Exquisite Sports Frock. ■silver and gold trimmings, as applied to things knitted, present a most in­ teresting innovation. AU sorts of intriguing ideas are ex­ pressed with gilded leather as a me­ dium for motifs, bandings, collars, cuffs and belts on the latest knitwear modes. Illustrative of this new style trend is the exquisite sports frock here pic­ tured. It is knitted of mist-blue rayon, its drop-stitch contributing a note of interest. There , is a bordering of sil­ ver with bright gilded buttons. Surely a sports costume which w41i make ap­ peal -to every; queen of fashion! Added to its comfort-giving quali­ ties, is the beauty of the coloring ex­ pressed in knitted rayon or fiber silk as you may choose to call it. The new knitted rayon suits, which are the last word in fashion, abound in lovely flower shadeB, such as rose, cyclamen, flax. Then too, the prediction that lacy stitch will feature throughout summer knitted outerwear fashions becomes I m a ? c i Fine Example of the French Art. realization In the latest rayon-knit jumper suits. It also adds to' the pr&- tige of the newer knitted frocks, that they are two-piece, for without a doubt the skirt With overblouse leads In 'point of' style Importance- The blouse may be long-sleeved and high- necked, or a matching scarf, for all these points of fashion are emphasized 'In the newer knitted modes. It is said Paris couturiers have a penchant for designing apparel for matrons, at any rate the numbers of ./ i i a r e n M O T H E R :- Fletcher’s Castoria is a pleasant, harm­ less Substitute for Castor Oifc Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, espe­ cially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the. signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend It Cynical' Farmers The $65,000,OOOr gifts of James B. Duke and George Eastman to the American people led George Jay Gould to say on disembarking from the France: “Gifts like these clear the mind of cynicism. I have just come from France, where even the farmers- are cynics^ Tlie French farmer, if (here was a Duke or an Eastman over there, ''wouldn’t say cynically of friendship: 11 ‘Friends stick to you like yonr shadow, but only when the sqn shines.’ ” j nothing is too subtle, too sophisticated or. too splendid to help in contributing to the charm of women Who have at­ tained poise. A fine example of French art In matrons’ gowns appears in the sketch shown above. It has been created with special reference to June wed­ dings, as suitable for the matron of honor, among the bride’s attendants, or to the mother of the bride or groom. It is of lace and georgette and very adaptable—suited to young and to older matrons. It has several marks of the present season to dis­ tinguish if* and is a beautiful expo­ nent of current modes, notably in the uneven hemline, the combination of lace and georgette, the jabot-paneis at each side ,of the skirt joined to the georgette with a beading of small beads. A deep yoke in the bodice has a “V” shaped neck opening and the sleeves are very short Laces dyed to match are used with geor­ gette In frocks of this kind, and blond Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It Applicants for Insurance OftpnRejected Judging from reports from druggists .who are constantly* in direct touch with the public, there is one • preparation that has been very successful in overcoming theee conditions. The mild and healing influence of Dr. KilmertS Swamp-Root is soon realized,^ It stands the highest for its remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of the prominent Life Insurance Companies, in an interview of the subject, made the as- tonisjiing statement that one reason why so many applicants for insurance are re­ jected is because kidney trouble is so common to the American people, and the large majority of those whose applica­ tions are declined do not even suspect that they have the disease^ Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However; if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample’ bottle. ' When writing be sure and mention this paper. - C ham pion M overs Moving companies would be rich if everybody was like John Tufts of Bos­ ton. . He and his wife have moved four times in the 15 mqnths they have been married. His wife is now suiqg for separate maintenance. Good- health depends upon good digestion. Safeguard your digestion with W right's In­dian Vegetable Pills and you safeguard your health. 372 Pearl 8t.. N. T. Adv. Pepless D ays Spring quickens the sap in the trees and slows up the sap in the office.— Louisville Times. Saw MilUWind Milb Radiolu, Re. “DOMESTIC”—I H. P. Enginesad IHrect Coanected Pomp Jack A durable and powerful Bacblne for ap- plyinr power to Deep well Pomps. We also supply “Red Jaeisett* and Donlng Pomp*. Write os yonr needs. ------ Sydnor Pnmp - & WeQ Co. RidBoaJlVo.' RESINOL Soothinq Aind Healinq F o r S k i n D i s o r d e r s MEND THOSE BROKEN CI1AIRS. Holden** fastens rungs tight. Send quarter. Full box. Guarant’d. Covel I, Parkwood Av.,Buff a lo,N.Y. a tiseV AUTOMOBILEK ON THE INSTALMENT PLANettbente ofaiO Dontbtr or BOfo if roe wish. All arm axe or*riunled And repolnted. Inclose 20c for special Bomlft BaDotInaAd exDiMtmtion.EUREKA AUTO COMPANY BEAVERTOWN, PA. POTATO PLANTS Two million Porto-Rlco and Southern Queen, 1.000 $2.60 ‘delivered. 10.000 up $2 f. o. b. Rebecca. H. T. WILSON. REBECCA. GA. P Y l T Q Dr. Setter's ^ 3 \ J I S . IL f I Il*%3 EyeLotion reUeves and cnres sore and inflamed eyes In 2ft to 48 rORTO-RICO ANO BIO STEM JERSEY SWEET POTATO PLANTS 32.25. 1,000; 32 in 10,000 lots. Special prices to agents. DR. LAMBERT, DENTON. GA. WORK FOR YOURSELF—75c profit, every dollar sale. Deliver on spot. License unnec­essary, No competition. Southern Import Co., 1400 Howard Street, Niew Orleans. La* HINGES—NEW ADJUSTABLE self equaU Izlng hinge; suitable for home or store; pat­ented. Price 3L75 prepaid. Agents wanted* Add. Shurcloz, 3234 LotHrop, Detroit, Mich* MAMMOUTH YELLOW SOY BEVNS FOB SALE. 32.76 per bushel, any quantity J. M. CREDLE. SCRANTON. N. C. PA RKER’S H A IR BALSAMres DandreffStops Balr Falling I RestoresColorandBeautytoGrayand Faded Hah*I dteandtLCOetDraggffta.I Htecox Chon. Win.. PateoogpetNtY. H IN D E R C O hN S Removes Corns. Cal­louses, eto., stops all pain, ensures comfort to tha feet, makes walking easy. ISc by mall or at Drug­gists. Hlsooz Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. Y. CARBUNCLES Carboil draws out the <$re and gives quick relief.CARBOIL, . W GBtepous SOiBOX MlU DnjflgteU — MmqAatk Ouarant** W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 23--1925. " B e a g a in a s youused Iobei / WWM lace is used with contrasting colors. The hat is depended upon to suit these soft and-elegantr afternoon gowns to the years of the wearer. Yonnget women wear the wide-brimmed models, often With flower trimming, but the older matrons select smart, small shapes. The hat pictured is of hair braid with handsome monture of os­ trich feathers at one side which adds greatly to its beauty. ' JtTLIA BOTTOMLEY. (&. 1926. W esters Newsoaner Union.) ,The, health and vigor you had in your youth can be yours again. Rheumatism, lumbago, Bright’s disease, and kindred ailfnents, are the result of weak, sluggish, impure blood, and the reason your blood becomes like this is because it lacks the iron which is essential to enable it to throw the poisons out of your system. It keeps on circulating these impurities through your body and these ailments steadily grow worse. They; finally become dangerous. The most amazing tonic, ever discovered, to gite your blood the iron it needs, is Acid Iron Mineral, bottled just.as Nature herself produced it. Physicians and scientists have never been able to duplicate A. I. M. It is the only mineral iron which can be taken up directly by the blood corpuscles. This is why it puri­ nes and strengthens your blood and so quickly gives you back that energy, appetite and vigorous health Nature intended you should have. ■ ' For more than thirty years, thi* remarkable, natural blood tonic, has been bringing suffer­ ing men and women back to strength . and health. It will do this for you. Go to yonr druggist today and get a bottle of Acid bon MineraL Also get<a box of A. I. M.piUs. Ad-M Percelatiag Corp. I SALEM, VIRGINIA is # ; 'IIfS Iipi Ktl ' Mt DOINGS IN THE TAR HEEL STATE NEWS OF NORTH CAROLINA TOLD IN SHORT PARA­ GRAPHS FOR BUSY PEOPLE Gastonia.—A summer school for re- Ieigious training wil Ibe conducted at Yalle Crucis1 July 4 to 16, by the Pro­ testant Episcopal church of the Caro- linas. acoerding to an 'announcement by the Rev. J. W. C. Johnson, member of the committee in charge. High Point.—H. D. Herrin, former rea lestate man of High Point, who was arrested In Baltimore this weelt on a charge of embezzlement, has been released under 510,000 bond. He prob­ ably will be arraigned in police court here. Chapel' Hill—There are 260 alumni of the University of North Carolina in the ministry, according to statistics prepared, which appear In the current number of the Alumni Review. Four Oaks.—The store of J. W. San­ ders and Company was robbed of about one thousand dollars worth of men’s and women's ready-made clothes. The entrance was made by sawing an iron bar and breaking the glass of a rear window. Salisbury.—Rev. Edgar Woods, new pastor of the First Presbyterian church this city, is to have an assistant dur­ ing the summer—W. P. Brown, son of Rev. E. D. Brown, pastor of Thyatira chiireh. iVFr. Davidson and a first year student at Union Theological Semi­ nary. Rocky Mount.—Triple sales will pre­ vail on the Rocky Mount tobacco mar­ ket next season, according to official announcement made by E. G. John­ ston, secretary df the local tobacco Oregonians Get jrEm Fresh From the Streams Neartv 400 persons, seated at one table 400 feet-long, enjoying a flsh fry breakfast atEagle creek, near Portland, Ore., for which game wardens caught tnore than a thousand mountain trout earlier the same mornin». Stn T> 'i': sM :.- r Industries Unite to Save Forests A ________ J________________________________ Board Is Named to Avert. Lumber Wastel Washington.—A nation wide move­ ment to conserve the lumber resources of the United States was started by the appointment of a conservation committee, of which Secretary Hoover has agreed to act as chairman. Thej , j nun ug tccu iv av.i us vuauiim u. j.u « board of trade, and as a result block* committee is to tnakb a thorough study of the wood-usin,; industries and report at a conference to be held next fall. One of the big objects sought is to obtain closer co-operation In insur­ ing full use of all timber cut. The committee comprises represent­ atives of the railways, the paper and pulp industry, purchasing agents of the country, wood-using industries, lumber manufacturers and- retailers, architects and contractors, the Ajperl- ed sales are expected to be a thing of the past here. Durham.—. A. Adams, aged 60 years, passed away at his home here, follow­ ing an illness of- over two years brought on by a complication of dis­ eases. He was well known in the city, especially among the older residents and leaves a large Cjycle of friends. Winston-Salem.—Nine cars stolen ______________ , _____, _ from this city last Saturday have j can Engineering council and the na- been recovered. Six were found tional farmer organizations, and recovered here, three in other A preliminary conference, called by places. The coupe of Miss Delpine j Secretary Hoover, has been In session Brown stolen on Tuesday, was located i here for some time and it was voted in Winwiddie, Virginia, and Henry that definite action Io bring about con- Johnson is being held there on th e' seryation was essential to the best in- charge of the larceny of the car. I.terests.of the nation. -At the ciose of _ the conference the situation was. Ru heHordtom-The . Rutherfordton' umme(1 b John y w Reynders County Club held one of the most val- of New Tork wh represente(i the uable meetings m its history at Gilkie. James G. K. McClure was the principal speaker. He urged for closer co-opera­ tion between the farmer and the busi­ ness man. He declared that the coun­ ties in Western North Carolina should' produce $3,030,000 worth of poultry annually. Charlotte.—Several hundred mem­ bers of the Potomac States Bakers’ Association arrived in Charlotte on a special train to attend the opening session in the evening of the four-day tenth annual convention of that body. This association has a, membership of about 600, and probably more than 400 members will be in Charlotte it was ex­ plained at the Hotel Charlotte where convention headquarters were estab­ lished by President Glenn O. Garber, of Frederick, Md. Winston Salem.—Bill Davis, of Salis­ bury; is unconscious, with the extent of his injuries unknown. Miss Doro­ thy Jones, of Bluefield, W. Va., is suf­ fering from a wrenched back, lacerat­ ed leg and minor cuts and bruises; Miss Elizabeth Gray, of Bluefield, W. ’ Va., is suffering from injuries in the chest and minor cuts anj IiniiseSv and J. M. Tiitterow, of Salisbury, is being held pending investigation as the re­ sult of an automobile accident that occurred a few yards from the home of W. M. Hanes on Ahe road to Hanes. Goldsboro.—The present year will be a banner one for building in Goldsboro. Since the first of the year $142,000 has been expended for the erection of dwellings and $25,000 for store build­ ings. When completed the new hotel will cost approximately $750,000, the new Community Building just com­ pleted cost $100,000 and additions have recently been finished in nearly all of the manufacturing plants in the city which aggregate an expenditure of some $50,000. . Charlotte.—“Bill!’ Ford, brother of “Uncle Henry,” .blew into Charlotte Monday morning bn a’ awing around the Southern States and held the cen­ ter of the “stage” at a room in the Mecklenburg Hotel whil; devoted an hour to telling interesting stories re­ garding his brother and himself. Goldsboro.—Claiming that with one execption the gas rates In Goldsboro are higher than in any city in the state, the chamber bf commerce and the city have jointly filed a complaint with the North; Carolina, interstate commerce'commission. Dunn.—C; C., Butler, of Dunn, was adY15e(I Wire.that his son, Odie P. Butler, aged about'22 years, met deatH by electrocution ill Washington, D. C., when hejcame In contact with a live wire. The victim of; the;accident 1Lad, been in Washington only a few weeki. Here he was employed in el6ctriba] work. • . ____________ American Engineering counciL “The United States," he said, “has been living in a fool’s paradise. For­ eign governments are studying eco­ nomics, and unless we take the same step economy measures will be forced upon us. Industry must look at such problems from a national standpoint..’’ Voluntary Action. Secretary Hoover explained what the Department of Commerce had been developing during the last three years with industry to eliminate waste. It has been found possible, he said, to obtain practical results by voluntary action, the function of the government being to bring together the industries that they might unite for such action as would serve the common interest. Secretary Hoover said the fact that timber was being cut at a rate' four times faster than It was being re­ placed, called for ,immediate and con­ structive action. Tlio problem for the committee, he added, dealt with the problems faced in making for economy of use after the forest had become a commercial product. Announcement was made by Mr. Hoover that an anonymous gift of $25,- 000 a year for two years had been re­ ceived, to serve as the' nucleus for financing the investigations which the committee will undertake. He recom­ mended that the program of the com­ mittee take the form of day-to-day op­ erations, with studies being made of specific industries to ascertain the full facts, and then to be considered from the Standpoint of their relation with other Industries, to the end that the by-products of one industry might be utilized wherever possible by another. One of the faulty functions of the present-day commercial and industrial fabric, Secretary Hoover contended, was that industries had not been brought together to co-operate In the national interest. Such co-operation, he said, would not only bring economy of operation of industry, but would result in a more efficient use of raw materials. Paper Industry. . A report on behalf of the American Paper and Pulp association was made by Norman W. Wilson, president of that o.rganiation. He said the paper and pulp Industry was tackling the problem from two ends. More and more mills were employing foresters to secure expert treatment of the tim­ ber and to reproduce their wood sup­ plies, he said. At the finishing end of the industry increasing attention was being given to research for new uses for by-products. Hugh i. Baker of New York, secre­ tary of the same organization, said that while the paper and pulp industry consumed 6,000,000 cords of wood an­ nually, this was but 4 per cent of the timber cut In the United States. The value of paper products' and paper goods Is about $24,000,000,000. • The industry, he said, has two prob­ lems, one technical and the other com-, merelal. In the technical field decay of wood and utilization of decayed woods has been combated by the forest products laboratory. Hardwoods were being used with success where ,they were not formerly usable and where a decade ago foresters regarded the hardwood trees as a nuisance: Howard Andrews of Nashville, rep­ resenting the National Association of Railroad Tie Producers, said, that through the use of wood preservative the industry already had reduced the replacement of ties from a rate of 325 per mile In 1920 to 90 per mile In 1924. Col. W. B. Greely of the federal for­ est service, who will act-as vice chair­ man of the new conservation commit­ tee, argued for the • establishment of some sort of clearing house and guid­ ing agency to aid In the conservation desired. Heligoland Fort Razed by Blasts Arsenal Destroyed in Keeping With Peace Terms. Heligoland. — Inhabitants of this little wind-swept Island which has been converted from the status of. a fortress and submarine base to that of a peaceful district of fisher folk who follow entertainment of summer visitors as a side line, have been won­ dering of late how the great change which has taken place here is going to affect their business. The outer entrance to the harbor has been' completely blocked, as part of the scheme of-dismantlement, and rendered useless for all but fishing smacks and small pleasure boats bring­ ing summer tourists from the conti­ nent. The work- of demolition, carried out Birds of Omaha Are in Luck * k Yoon--lads in the-shops of manual training classes in' the Omaha public .schools have beCome experts In the building of bird houses, and already they ore setting up these homes in the parks for the feathered occupants. under the peace terms by the Inter­ allied commission of control, Is said to be the largest task of this kind ever" attempted, and with the blocking of the harbor entrance against war­ ships of ail kinds the job has been brought to a conclusion. While this work was in progress great numbers of visitors arrived from spring until fall to witness the differ­ ent phases of transmission, but with the blasting away of the fortifications at an end, the' great guns taken down and melted into peace-time Imple­ ments, the Inhabitants feel the public generally will lose Interest In this one­ time island arsenal which the Ger­ mans took 24 years to equip at a cost of approximately $85,000,000. Nearly 200,000 cubic yards of con­ crete and brick work was demolished In the harbor works, 60,000 feet of drilling’ was carried out and about 300,000 pounds of explosives used In the operations. Demolition of the for­ tifications was accompanied by cut­ ting up the numerous guns by means of oxy-acetylene and oxy-hydrogen flame, by the burning of holes In the gun turrets as a preliminary to break­ ing them up by explosives, by drill­ ing and blasting and removal of the concrete gun emplacements, and the destruction of extensive underground chambers which served as an enor­ mous storehouse and where the Ger­ man gunners lived. The terms of peace stipulated that the work should be done at the cost of the German government by the aid of German labor. Now that this has all. been.done the inhabitants say they feel much more happy and contented. Canada Holds $14,000,000 Seized German Property Ottawa.—Cash. and Victory bonds totaling $14,000,000 are in the hands of Secretary of State Copp1 as the pro­ ceeds of property and securities seized from German subjects in Canada dur- tag,the war. Additional property of an apnroxi- mate value of , $14,000,000 remains to be obtamed. Of the sum already rJ i ized ,$5,000,000 was-from sale to £ £ ,York brokers of 37,500 shares of Wii H u m o I OH, MAMIE! He was a somewhat poetic young fellow and she was “beautiful but dumb.” They met at a party and he was prompted to express his admi­ ration. "Do you know,” he told her, “you look like .. bit of rare old tapestry?" “Indeed! Well, you’re not so snap­ py looking yourself I"' she angrily re­ torted.--Boston Transcript. Home, Siveet Home “I am satisfied on one thing at last. I found where my husband spends his evenings,” remarked Mrs. Gadabout. “You don’t say so, dear; how did you find out?" qnestioned the excited Mrs. Gossip. “I stayed at home one evening last week and found him there,” answered the satisfied lady.—Arkansas Utility News. True Eloquence “Have you prepared your sermdh for tomorrow?” asked our southern friend of his man-of-all-work, who was also preacher at the African Method­ ist churCh. “No. suh,” said he; “I doan’ have to. Sometimes I preaches from a text. Then I got to study. Tomorrow, I jest preaches from the extempore- neura.”—Public Opinion. EXPECTED, AS USUAL “Yesterday Smith pointed a revolver supposed not to be loaded at Jones and pulled the trigger." “Such things are terrible! What was the result?” “Nothing—it wasn't loaded.” Disposition of the proceeila will hw determined by parliament. Thev i n * L f L be USed 111 ^ e n t V c a . 'nadian indemnity claims. ■ iem for a The Wandering Waist M ary had a little w aist* M ost puzzling to h er beau* F o r everyw here the. fash io n w ent H er w aist w as su re to g o J Glad to See Him “Hello, old man I" exclaimed Dub- Iey at the Literary' circle reception. “It’s a pleasant surprise to meet you here.” , . "Good of you to say so, old chap,” replied Brown. “Yes, I was afraid I wouldn’t finidi anybody here but brainy and cultured people.” HeDid Policeman (to speeder)—How would you like to go riding In a patrol wagon I Autoist—It might do In a pinch. Cause of Quietness ' Edward—I always say, what I think; Evangeline (sweetly)—Is that' why you’ve been so quiet all the evening? GOING HIM ONE BETTER T H Has No Backache, No Bai FesL; Because Lydia E.Piakham’s eiable Gampound Drove Pm Illness Away Milwaukee, Wisconsin.-“I,-. . badly run-down condition and I 4.®.* --------------------------get weak spells Tl tejnble headacS I felt so badly S ^ ar that I could S doanvhouseoC is if? n15Rute I would lift or srM it seemed as r ? Wasgomgt ofall.1 P'.e??s. Itolda neigabor how I TnC 3^e said that — Lydia E. Pinkham', i TT— ,VegetableCompomjwas surely the right thine for ? I took four bottles then and fa the 'fii of the year I took three. I had fa]! treated by a doctor but he gave iron tonic and that did not help me. it seemed that the tonic did not have In § what the Vegetable Compound did. gave me the strength and ambler needed and I have gained fa weirie This year before I started to clean hnn« I got fourbottlesof the VegetableCom pound and am taking it right alone, i tell all my fnends about it and how mn-i, good it does me. Theycannoticeffi cause I have gamed in weight I »a ,i 118 now and do all my work mvafl again.’’-M rs. Emil O. W u aS 651 37th Street, Milwaukee, W h£2j Use Guticura Soap And Ointment ToHealSoreHands B SICK BABIES Respond instandy to a short treatment of Dr. Thornton's EASY TEETHER A sk Yoar Druggist Oysters Eaten for Scurvy Mine. Randoin, chief of the Freacli Institute of Hygiene, maintains that oysters are a rapid and sure cure fur scurvy. She bases her daiiu on ei- periments conducted first with guinea pigs. She also says that oysters and lemon juice are an ideal cure for dyspepsia or debility and that Ihls combination is richer than mast any other food combination, in vitamines. “Son, ra ju knock off six strokes from my score and I’ll slip you 75 cents. Get me?" “Sure!. I’ll make it an even dozen for a dollar.” . * Social Discrimination Even m isfortune d raw s th e line cJ ste Is s till adm ired, h ig h an d m ig h ty ‘ m ay “resle n .” T he sm a ll fry ju s t "g g t flred." The Pace “Isn’t It terrible how much' It costs to live nowadays!" * “ft isn’t the mere living In my case* the expense arises from the dread jny wife has that We yviu be eclipsed W Olir foolish neighbors." • Hen-Pecked1 Blinks—How come , !that he has such a homely Iooidag lot of girls working in his office? r ‘ Ws'hripT318 taS‘StS 0n hWnS all Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh should be in every home. Unexcelled fur Cuts, Burns, Wounds and Sores. Heab quickly. Three sizes; all stores.—Aik- Ireland Has New Plight t The Royal Zoological society of Ire land has been Oaelicizing the names of, some of the animals in the Diihlin » and has named the catfish Lasc OiH and the golden carp from China tfe Lusc-pir, but could find no Irish word: tor the alligator. New String Instrument Prof. Vladmir Ivarapetoff of CorDf1I university has invented a flve-strinP" instrument that has the combine range of violin and Celio-Srieaa Service. You never can know how SUPerlorJ15Ii Feery-a “Dead Shot" for W o r m s i J have tried it. 372 Pearl St., N. :■ The wise man doesn’t wait for #>• tune to knock.at his door; lie goes® to meet it. AU things come with the waiter "I10 serves an order of hash. CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! $P lit*!* _ —i't hurt on« "Freezofie” on an aching Iy that com stops hurtin Iy you lift it right off «" Your druggist sells a corn, 1 then5"1"’ " finger-4 bottle ; ifficiri"1; Rh tinyiy u i- u ru g g isi BeiIO “ ■— „ ,-jjl" “Freezone’.’ for a few cents, ston remove every hard corn, soft ^ com between the toes. iindZ ltJti«» -calluses, without soreness or i VOLUMN X XV I. Troth Plainly Editor Bryan , of t Daiiy.' in, discw sing ,everal newspat ers it lina, among other thi The average tmsini some unexplainable r able to fathom I he ne ness. He may be manufacturer, rtierchi or a successful proft but when it comes to new paper so many p successful in other I lose sight entirely of a newspaper nr.ist h business to justify its it is to last. It ca boosting—on wind, to buy clothes and fi row motley from ban do not hive to stibscri paper or advertise if I without that expense prisingly large uum Therefore, the newsp lers a field already oe where support is not creation of Ihe occasi not last by legitimate newspaper that exists way is not desirable a the end. The newspayer fail the Times mentions v no doubt due to the J-Chenies ol ultra-boos with a self-interest U demanding service free service—oi a ne the old days it was I that a newspaper exis apolitical party; th was called into exisle tiuued to.exist to boo| party with which it a ure to do that was ,r ever else the paper d ental to the maiu newspapers, ied by Il North Carolina edito I’. Caldwell, got aw with the beginning o ceutury. Now the c publish a real newsp; acseDt on news—the being incidental, acc publisher may feel in "ith the eliininatio U that it was the busi] J duty of the uewspap party on all occasi come another idea th business' atid the dut P'4per to boost the p casion, there has cou of the same variety, the newspaper exists taiuedu.to ‘‘boost’' town!” Every ne course loyal to its ho and does, in one . wa wore to serve that c hy day and week b other agency; and wan who-knows his real newspaper uia tjaged in the work ; a profession, knows service lie can rende Ihe best uewspaper •he idea of the ultra the paper should d week after week, de Us sPace to - felling town it represents; jaud what we are I whether we ever h hacts are not expect, Wnst be the whole ail j'tcation to boost, eve Is.nothing to boost, Efn that boosting ,is jtiwi o£..indUstries^ t, Individuals and ente Ils nothing more or pVertising of the K t for an thos£ aIFi "",l Miiy offai, P0UTibmio iu o the ljrCriptioii1 which I I110XTlje paid Pr°w ptl\ LtSlwtake aI* aalloP- The 'btisii pW iminity wants bt -rested iu the -ta p I es her wom Backaclief N oB adFpflI- rje Lydia L P i n k W s V pie Compound Drove He*/' Illness Away ukee, V> isconsin. iiTtp in-down condition anrir3 atS --------------get weak SDelU0“ld !Jeailbte headaeSf S f d>4 would lift Olsten1 It seemed as jf°? was going to fav ,J Pieces. I toia neighbor how°i‘i* , and. she Said tW rear I took three. I had C j by a doctor but he gavfJi6'11 ic and that did not help me u that the tonic did not K b ,s Vegetable Compound dii Th 6 a r ItrenSth .and ambition. and I have gained in WeiI 1 T11 befeIe 1 startedto dean hoi ur bottlesof the Vegetable S nd am taking it right along j J iy friends about it and how Snth I oes me.. They can notice it £ ' have gained m weight I Weirt T and do all my work n J - Mrs. Emil 0. BRANDENBme Street, Milwaukee, WisconsS I ■ti :k b a b i e s Respond instantly to a short treatment of v. Thomton’s SY TEETHER Isk Yoar Druggist (Cntaira Soap l&nd Ointment !ideal SoreHands iters E a te n fo r Scuroy lium loin, chief of the French p of H ygiene, maintains that are a rapid and sure cure for Slie bases her claim on ei- 11 s conducted Jirst witli guinea die also says that oysters and juice are an ideal cure for ia or debility and that this it ion is richer than most any >ml com bination, in vitamines. 34® rin g Instrum ent ir K arapetoff of Cotnel invented a flve-sfrin"e ,at has the combined ,Iin and cello.-Sclence n know how superior b a Shot" tor W omo unm J 372 Pearl St., N. T. AU' ian doesn’t wait for f°r' at ids door; he goes oW ,me w itli the waiter "I'0 pr of hash. t Off-No Pain1 mP ti Drop a ■ P Ito “5 c0Ihen11S ' ' 'w i t h f i< e0( -•••• • ■ • >: -.-Vf I ■ . . ... T H E M E R C H A N T S W H O A D V E R T I S E IN T H E f t E C O R D WlLL A P P R E C I A T E Y O U R B U S I N E S S : W - "HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BYiGAIN." I \ OI UMN XXVI.MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA1.;WEDNESDAY. JUNE io. 1925 nford’s Balsam of Myrrh ie in every home. Unexcelled for urns. Wounds and Sores. Heals Tliree sizes; all stores.—Adv. la n d H a s N e w Plight t loyal Zoological society of Irfr 1 Iieen C aelicizing the names of, the anim als in the D u b l i n zoo ; nam ed the catfish Lasc Ca ! golden carp from Chinn tne \ Imt could find no Irish words alligator. I Truth Plainly Told. I Fditor Bryant, of the Statesville S Dailv in discussing the death of I eveml newspaj ers in North Caro- S Iina among other things, says: I The average business man. from I some unexplainable reason, is un I able to fathom the newspaper busi- I ,,e--- He may be a Successful I n i|nll ’ctuier- lnercB antorbanker, f or 1 successful professional man; % hu' when it comes to publishing a i „ew paper so many people who are | Mic esstul in other lines seem to I lose sight entirely of the fact that I a ncwsoaper must have sufficient business to justify its existence if 3 Ir js to last. It cannot live on s boosting—011 wind. People have if to btiv clothes and food and bor- * I iiv money from banks, but they J jo nol h ive to subscribe for a news- i paper or advertise if they can go on I without that expeuse—and a sur- jirisnielv large number of them do. Therefore, the newspaper that eu- i iers a Iicld already occupied, a field | where support is not in sight, is a f creation of the occasion which can I not hist Iiy legitimate means; and a >| newspaper that exists in any other wav is not desirable and will fail in 4 tl i in I as I he newspayer failures such as the I imes mentions were in parts 110 Ioui due to the over-auibitious jciiemesol ultra-boosters, combined J witii a self-interest that is always ::| demanding service —yaud usually aj Iree service—01 a newspaper. In I the old days it was thelgeneral idea that a uewspaper existed to serve apolitical party; that the paper was called iuto existence and con­ tinued to.exist to boost the political party with which it affiliated;. Fail-: tire to do that was i reason. . W hat­ ever else the paper did was iucid • cHtal to the main purpose. The newspapers, led by the greatest ol I North Carolina editors, the late J. I I'. Caldwell, got awav from that :Sj with the begiuuing bf the present century. Now the chief idea is. to publish a real uewspapei—with the acient 011 news—the political part being mcideutal, according as tie publisher may feel interested. But with the elimination of the idea that it was the business and the duty of the newspaper to boost the parly ou all occasion, there has come another idea that it was the business and the duty of the news- ■1 Piper to boost the party on all oc I cjoton, there has come another idea ol the same variety, namely; That Hit iitwspaper exists and is main tamed to “bodst"—"boost -the town! ’ Every newspaper is" of couise loyal to its home community and does, m one .way or another, more to serve that community, day by day und week by week, than- other agency; and the uewspaper man who-kuows his business, the ‘-al newspaper man who is en- 1Jngcd in ihe work as a business or a profession, knows that the be-t ttuucc lie can render is to publish 'be best newspaper possible. But tbc idea of the ultra booster is that tbe paper should day after day, week alter week, devote near ajl-af its space 10 felling what a good town it represents;; what we have ■md what we are going to have whether we ever have it io r'not. I acts are not expected to count. It 'luisI bt the whole aim of the ptib- .lcaIion to boost, even wheu there lsOothingto boost, and iucluded 111 that boosting Js frequent men 1011 of industries, the business- of ddnicluals and enterprises, .which s Iiothiiig more or less than free ^ 'ort lsiiig of the most valuable I vl' ^0r tbose affected _ That is e(,ml W!"’v of tIten'. whether their ^mifribuiion to the paper is a Single 1 Criptionl which may’ or may "ot be paid promptly. • s ilK take a careful look' at the coiii„10"-' ^ be business tuau in a Jn cmuiultV wants business. He islerCSted iu lUe growlll of £Ue NUMBER 49; community and; in various enter­ prises not solely as a philanthropist. He may not always have a selfish purpose in. helping to promote, or boost, but at bottom lie expects to benefit; and it is a fact that fre quently Those who talk much a bout advancinjf public interests are moved solely;by enhancing value of real estate, helping- an- enterprise in which they .are interested, or in some other way. But we have all that in any community growth vvithout thought of direct or special benefits, nobody expects a -business man to turnover his entire business and use that business and his time and his money solely fot the gener­ al good. That is expected only of one class of ousiness—the news­ paper. Isn’t that peculiar, when when you reflect on it? A real newspaper man established a paper as a business. He is engaged iu the public business — publishing news and 'adverting—same as an­ other is in the mercantile or bank business,, etc. He has publicity vehicle in which he rents space and and he sells the manufacted pro­ duct—the printed copy. Now jus< why should a btisines of that son devote its resources entirely, or practially that, to building up the community and helping others folks to make money? It takes a bunch of money—more than the average man thinks—to meet the payroll ol a very modest publication The paper has to'm eet expenses or il can’t goon: and surely the editor and publisher is entitled to a mod­ est profit- that he tuay lake care ol himself and his folks, same as' any other busiuess man. That will be admitted on reflection; but you wouldu’t know it, judging by the ideas that the ultra boosters often put out with reference to news­ papers. . A word iu conclusion: Any legit iinate newspaper enterprise, desires the advancement of its community as a matter of pride and selfish im terest; and the legitimate newspaper does its best to make itself worthy of the community. But its output IniiJjt be regulated bv the leg timste patronage it can secure from its field. Making expenditure beyond its income means ruin J and thal soon; and receiving gifts or contri­ butions to establish obligations means the same thing in the end, and discredit along with it. No newspaper man worthy of th'e name will figure in an enterprise that does uot mean legitimated and s’raigbt business. He will uot be a parly to putting over selfish schemes for anybody in the name of patriotism, whether it is political or business schemes. The . news­ paper man who doesn’t control his owu busitiess. uuaived bv influence and unbribed by gain, is unworthy of trust. No bojjorable newspaper expect to jilease everybody all the time; that is impossible and sensible folks know it. Of course there a; e always people who can’t under­ stand why the paper doesn't do such things as appeal to them They run their own business as the amount of business they do justifies, but they can’t understand why,a uewspaper should do that way. ______ Os Wasbingloa Trip. Thirty-five members o f the senior class of the Lexington public school* are in Washington this week taking in the sights of the capital city. They, will.be given an HU'dienee by Ffesr d’ent Coolidee The trip is a parr of the graduating program The class this vear numbers 50 hut 15 of th^tii did; not make the trip —Union Re­ publican ______ ... T here is 110 record of any spring e.utgs of the cavem an period, proba­ bly. b°cause he cauebt. and clubbed >he first spring poet.that chirped. A' Iantd Constitution. y M r V Hindeubufg has been presi­ dent for several days now and France aiid Germany haven’t gone to war yet. Fork News. - Miss Sallie Hendrix is real" sick this week. • • ^ Mr. and Mrs G. F. Koontz, Cletus Foster, Miss Ethel Foster, Misses Page and Opal VanEaton, all at ended the "Billy Sunday” meetings on Tuesday of this week. ,-'Mrs C. L. Aaron returnedIiome Sunday from Winston-Salem. Wliere she spent a week with, re­ latives. ; The B. Y. . P. U., held a social at the home of G. E. Merrell 011 last Saturday evening, and served ice­ cream in abundance to all present. ’ Paul Foster returned .home Fri-; day from Arden, where he lias been iu school for the past term. L. A. Hendrix who does car­ penter work in Winston-Salem, spent this week here with bis fam­ ily. . T.iere will be a Fiddlers Conven­ tion given at the Episcopal Hall on next Saturday evening June 6th proceeds to be used for baseball equipment. Everybody iuvited to attend. Admission fess reasonable Master Fred Trivette of W ins­ ton-Salem, is spending a few weeks here with his grandmother, Mrs. P. L. Foster. Brevity Aod Wit. Skillfully drawn is the pen pic­ ture of President’ Coolidge in the- Juneissueof McClure's Magazine- by Myron M.'"Stearns, who was, given "the run” of ,the Whit£ House-recently to get a "close up”', of the man in the President’s chair? Like many others who have esk- tablished close contact with Mn; Coolidge tjie writer concludes that; tne President is. human, after all,1 like most people. There are times when he talks incessantly. Mr., Stearns tells of a conversation of four hours’ duration in which time Mr. Stearns had little opportunity opportunity to edge 111 a word. That will do much to blast to re­ putation which has attached itself to Mr. Coolidge as "The Silent Cal.” The author finds Iibundant evid: enee, though, to sustain the ac^ cepted idea of Mr. C0olidg.e’s taci­ turnity. He recounts a dinuer at which two of the guests made a wager as to the number of words Mrs. Coolidge would speak during the eveniug. Oue of tiie men who iiad laid the wager $10 that Mr, Coolidge would speak three words during the d:nuer became restless as the diuner "wore on” and the President had not yet spoken. One of the men was occupying a chair adjourning that of Mr. Coolidge. -ind - reminded the President of the Wager. "H e bet gro . you wouldn’t say three words, but T bet you would,” he told tile Pye.. sident. The President tieard the story in silence. A moment later >1 r. Cqplidge>,_tur.ue.d..-lo,.,his. cotbs- paniou and merely said: "Yon ,ose.” —Charlotte Observer. Four Months For Lying. Judge Thomas J Shaw gave a defeudant in Iredell court who ivas charged with transporting liquor four months for lying. The man had appealed Irom a lower court sentence of six months, but Judge Shaiv allowed that also to stand. Three men were iu the car with the defendant ivhe'n the officers Ciiue upon him. but the escaped into the darkness-of night. - The ■ra isporter tol'd Judge-Shaiv be didn’t know who these men were and also that be didn’t know who he got the liquor from. It seems to be ',considered good form among those who are convjct; ed of violating liquor laws to' lie in order to protect others. Should all of the judges on" the bench handle these perjurers iu a manner like this it would not beloug/uutilthe.r practice would become very un­ popular and the work of the boot­ legger would likewise be made more perilous to himself. It. used to be exceedingly rare that anyone con victed of liquor transgressiou would tell on the man who made a profit out of helping him get iuto trouble but if the right judge is on the bench nowadays much valuable evidence can be secured.--The Dis­ patch. Cow Chews Up $120 of Farmer's IVtoney. • Because he Iiuug his coat on a fence post and left $120 in green­ backs in the inside pocket Vvliile ,le Derforiiied some carpenter works Ugesday afternoon, John W. Ship ing. of Franklin township.'Rowan county, is out that amount;. While be Worked a cow catne along, ate .tlrd:Uiiing?Rut ofjiis coat and with it the'money. also a bank deposi ttook The aiiWal was killed'and cut open but she had -chewed. her novel -food so fine it was-iiuposible even to secure tbe nutnbrs of the bills, Be- cau«e she ate a costly 'm eal yester- , . . . , day. Salisbury people will make food I Plr an anti-monkeyism platform, of her as she was sold ou the; local market today, all dressed and ready for beef.f , Uncle Rumblings Heard Against Hammer. ' The Davidsoii’ Dispatch is dis­ tressed for fear some one will be trotted out in opposition to the re- hominatiou of Representative W il­ liam G. Hammer of the seventh district in the Democratic primaries next year. Hammer voted for the obnoxious child labor bill that con- ^ress attempted: tor. saddle on the people of . the' country forbidding the working of children in indus­ tries. and later on the farms, be­ fore they were eighteen years old and there is a gbod deal ol dissatis faction throughout the district over this action of the -"Sig Noise” from Randolph. There is another thing to Le stacked up against Hammer. He voted against the public buildings bills that would have given ,Greens­ boro, and other cities iu the State a public building of which they are in great need. In this vote he also slapped the cities and toivns of his own district iu the face in re­ gard to buildings and improve­ ments ou those already erected-. The Thoniasville appropriation was made IieforeiIlie war and of course the building in that city will be erected over the vote of Hammer. VVe never could see anything to this man. For matiy years, prac­ tically all of his life, he has been feeding at the public crib and is a- bout time he ivas being retired and a man of real ability sent to con­ gress from the seventh. The thing for the voters of the seventh dis­ trict to do would be to elect a Re­ publican to congress, a man who would ' have .some influence, who would vote right and who would look out for the best interest of the district, a thing that Hahimer hasn’t done. Eut we fei/r, unless there is a laud slide, that the way the seventh district is gerrvmanded iu order to ensure the election, of a Democrat thal there is uot much hope for a Republican.to cross under the wire. However there is nothing like a triai and with the dissatisfaction and resentment toward Hammer, and with a free ballot and a fair count the seventh might be able to send a strong, virile Republican to represent them in congress after 1926.—Union Republican Maybe W. J Bryan is ,getting ready to run for President in 192S -f-Every day 111 evpry yiyay Sam seems to begetting debtor.and; debtor. - 1 Bites-stings ■Apply wet baking soda or household ammoma,followedby V i f i K S -■ O m 17 Million Jast U n i Ytarly Grist Upholds Aileged Boozer. Some weeks apo Frank D Crist, State commissioner of labor and printing overlooked the hundreds of good honest men in Nii/th Carolina who were capable, and would like to have the job of IaborJagent and sent n 'rth and brought one R O Pickard down here arid gave him the job Pickard was supposed to be an agent of Grist’s department to place men to work in the trucking belt around Wilmington and - other points in eastern Carolina He had a car, strange he did not use one Everett’s Packards, and ac- c rding to press reports, it is a leged 'hat he “ ta.nked up” in Wilmington Friday and ran afoul of tbe police When arrested ir. Ts chtrged that ’he was in an intoxicated condition and a small amount of liq-iof was found in his car. At a hearing before the Wilming­ ton ^recorder his . car was ordered confiscated and he was convicted of operating a car while under the in­ fluence of liquor, fined $50 and or­ dered to j.til for 48 hours. The fine howewr was suspended on condi­ tion that he not drive a car in New Hanover county in 12 months, Pick­ ard appealed to the Superior court and a bond of $750 was ri qoired “Now here ii where the wnndej fill Mr. Giisi comes in. He and Pick ard are 1<uih bigger than the State or Feder d g-Veriunent and a-dis­ patch from Rileigh of Saturdayeays that the department of labor and printing has taken no action regand- ing the arrest at Wilmington of R 0 Pickard, field agent of the joint Federal and State E npioyment Ser vice, on charges of violating prohi- biii n laws and probably will "not take:any” ’ Cotiiinissioner Crist said - \V|iiIe pressdtsoatcheB-from - Wil- mington indicates tint the depart­ ment agent had been released ou haif in the sum of $750 . following cot.fi .eatiim of his automobile, the department had no iiifnim itiotr re­ garding the details of the arrest or charges against Pickard Newspaper reports said lie had been held for driving an automobile while intoxi cated and for transporting. ^ "Mr Pickard is a valuable man and he is doing an important work in the trucking belt,” was the com iiieut of Commissioner Grist, who added that he saw “no reason to call for the Pickard’s resignation.” Of course getting drutik and driv­ ing a car in that condition is 110 rea­ son, in. the estimation of Mr. Grist for firing a man. . Grist is the same bird that fired an ex-service tnap from his office and named a hosiery salesman instead and also made a j ib for a hrother of Frank Hainp ton, secretery to Senator Simmons. Shipman, as commissioner was a- bout. the limit but Gust is ten times worse tham Shipman ever dared to be. It does look like people of North Carolina could get a compet­ ent man to fill this important posi­ tion. N In commenting oii the act of the Honorable Mr. Pickard, late of the ' Narth” now a satellite of Crist’s, the Statesville Landmark says that "the motorist who got in trouble at Wilmiiigtan was a State employe, it will be noticed. A f°w days ago the newspapers recorded that a State employe, or one formerly in the em ploye, or one formerly in the em­ ploy of a State bureau, had been sued for a gmibling debt, and the CHii ta held with him because gam bling debts are not collecticle by 1 iw. But the evidence seeing to lie conclusive that the State employe had been shi.ffling the cards. Of course it is to be expected that the Slate will have, among its numerous employes, sqtne who are immoral, some who fracture the statures. In the public service the requirement for straight walking should be more stringent because a public employer and a group of associates, bill lie brings shame on the whole people.— Union Republican 'Some of the Iiltra-Uatioiialists in Berlin are peeved because Hiuden- burg has adopted so jieaceful a policy- If these fellows want to fight so badly they might go over aud join the riffs. The Hunt For Place. Revenue Commissioner R A. Doughton had 17 clerical positions and 407 applications formerly made for 1 hem. Thus does a paragraph explain the lure of public office Ir. does not seem that lhcre is any openinng which furnishes the applicant with any great promise of advancemert The beginners get $90 to be sure, but no matter how High-Ihey go they will hardly exceec as a clerk in those departments $150 a month. And the labors often are seasohal. The work Ff the office fluctuates with the collection of automobiles taxes and the levying of income and in­ heritances. The opportunity for decapitation is as great as that for promotion. State position is a gam­ ble A change in adininistration every four years almost always fixes the status of a large number of workers. What, therefore is the lure of public offic. ? What makes men and women really scramble for clerkship in .department where hours, terms of work and scare of wages are all fixed by the employei? Why will a man, who can easily earn on half the labor twice Ihe salary paid in a state position, seek the work and feel hirnself badly treated if he does not land Ihe small 1 flic ? ’ , In the old days when $100 a month was a Iordiy salary and poli­ tics wa3 a pay/tig business there w: s was no secret ab< Ut this thing of public office. Jaos were few, indui- try was simple, money was tight. People went into politics and oft< 11 charged their faith to get- into one of these offices. But there is- no such things appeal no.v. Early en­ trance into government clerkship Tneatig getierai permuient "fixation of tbe one's place in life. Except in rare instances it means long and hard work at poor remuneration.. Pphilosop-iy jails us in furnishing the eqplairation and when the ra­ tio of p ace hunters is as 407 hunt­ ers are to 17 places, the tiling is all the more astonishing Can it be Ihe final proof that lhe world is just a human machine and the inhabitants thereof the cogs and* wheel in il; that the rare will be the owners and the clerks iu Ibis immense establish, menl?—Greensboro News. New County Officials Needed. Marlin county needs a new sheriff and from the report of the evidence of the poor mutilated Needleman it also needs a new clerk of tbe Super­ ior court, The mail now holding^, that office is not fit to be a Jsnitnr of a henhouse much less sit hack in his easy chair at VVillianl-it n, the chief official of the county. The.Greensboro News in Bpeaking of these two officers says:, ‘This remains: to the people of Martin county and of the surround­ ing territy where this jungle spirit was born the must solemn question must be asked of how came this thing to happen? VVhat manner of sheriff guards tlie prisoners of the county? What manner of county official goes iuto a jail to. iiusp<ak- ably filthy terms a prisoner? What spirit pervates the people (hat they could conceive this crime and per­ petrate it? To these questions the answers cannot come from the law. The questions must be carried deep into the hearts of th« hundreds and thousands of good citizens and from ■them, if any where.."the answer must cotn“. North Carolina cannot afford to-go.through 111 any snch,ex- perieucey. She must learn from the hitterifes3 of this shame all tint she can in order that hereafter slie may forever hold her head high —Ex Word from Paris is to the effect that some slatesmeii feel that be­ cause of her debis to England and America there i% danger of the "TurcificaHon" of France. We dou’t want to “ Turcify” then. AU we want tlieui' to do is to talk turkev. Considering the lilies of the field which toild not neither do they' spin now regarded as red propaganda Labor unrest must be checked at all hazard.—Ex. I \ ■ -i £•••' ■> iJH . I ■ ,v I f rA J- -■' U-:.- :? a i I THE D A tli RECORD, M O d K S tltlJ, f t 6. jtJtfE 101923 . \i*T ■ . - : . •• •■; ■■:• THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUP Editor. - TELEPHONE -I. • Entered at the Postoffice in Moeks- ville, N. C., as Second-class Mail matter. March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. JN ADVANCE - $ I 00 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - $ 50 THREE MONTHS. IN ADVANCE $ 25 No use to worry over the hot weather—let the coal dealer do the worryiug. ___________ .People were dyiug from lieat ill New York last week while our -western friends were wading through eight inches of snow. This is a great country in which we live Two more weeks of weather like last week and the blackberry crop will either be ripe or burned up. We trust our friends will send enough cash to secure the flour and sugai with which to make the pies If it is wrong to go to a vaude­ ville show in a moving picture theatre, se_etus that it would be just a* wrong to go to a vaudeville in school house or court house? Will some of our people please explain the difference. The folks who spent the month of May predicting that we would have no warm weather this sum mer have already headed for the mountains to escape the Serce heat There are many false prophets run uing loose in this section. . Mocksville has been suffering from a water femine. The one well that is in operation will not sup]-Iy the private homes, mill- factories and filling stations. AU persons who have water connections shon'd do all in their power to conserve the supply until the new v ell is completed. It is a bless’ng that the town dads did not pass a la k forcing the people to close their , wells. Miss Sara Chaffin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Chaffin, { ninth grade student at the Mocks ville liight school, holds a record that anyone should be proud of. Miss Chaffin hasn’t missed a day at school or hasn’t been tardy f day for the past six years. *If any body deserves a gold medal Ilii> young Iadv . surely stands in thf front ranks. A certificate was a- warded Miss Chaffin for her fine record. -______________- A business man remarked to u the other day that he might some time buy an automobile but that there were three things lie meant to_do before bnvitig. viz: Purchase an automobile horn, a 5c cigar a nr’ theti hunt up the tax collector anc get.his tax receipts The gentle mail -also called the automobile.* topper heads. Maybe thev are but,‘the autos kill more people in one ,week tlian all- the copper heads ' in tiie United States have killed in a generation. Wind Does Damage. A- hes<v? wind and rain visited thisseetion Monday night, breaking a two weeks drought. A small ban- on the Peezor farm just south of town . was blown do*n and three calves, kiiled. . Neilice To Farmers of Davie. The next county meeting of tbeTobaccc and Cotton Association will be held at thi court house at Mochsville Sa'urday June 13, 2 p. m. The meeting will be open t< everybody and. I hope we will have r large ^attendance. There will be some goad speakers here and will outline to the members tbe plans for handling tbe 1925 We will also have one of the Live StocV me 1 here to talk on Co-operative Market log of poultry eggs and other Livestock, I hope everybody will take advantage 0! this meeting so that we can see what can be done to get a fair price for our produce. I hope the members will take advantage of (bis meeting and offer some instruction ada.bt-some resolutions---favoring some thing you all wish 10 be done in order to help the officials of > our association make 1925 the best and most proQtable year yet. Tbe new Directois for this district will be here, J Luther Woods of Mt. Arey Kemeicber these are tbe fanners organ! zatibns and they should help manage, them;; GEO. EVANS. • County Secy. L. G. Horn, Jr., a student at Wake Forest College, arrived home Wednesday for the summer holidays. C. 3 - Mooney has been'appoint­ ed a* one of the town commission­ ers to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of J. B. Johnstone Mr.- Moonev will make a good commis­ sioner aud the town is fortuuate in I11.Viug him ou tbe board. Tbe Bridge To Davie. It is evident ^how that the high hopes of those of us who want a bridge built Between Davidson and Dkvie counties have been some w hit let down by recent events. There has been a tardiness in get­ ting action on the matter that has not been reassuring. The Davie county board ^has certainly taken no step looking toward participa­ tion in the proposed loan to the State Highway Commission, as authorized in the bill passed at the' last Legislature. True, there is time vet; blit valuable time has al­ ready passed. If the bridge is as important as all who have looked into the situation believe it. is then the time that has gone might well have been utilized in getting down to a basis for action. The Davidson board recently passed a resolution looking to a join meeting with the Davie.board, but the reported attitude of the latter board does not give hope for much encouragement from that side of the river. In the beginning Mocksville interests snowed splen ed activity in the organized effort to get action on the proposed bridge Uut mouths have passed since there has beer, auv word from that com- munitv. They may still be an­ xious to have the bridge built but 1 heir anxiety is not being convert­ ed into action. Their stir in State circles over accepting loans from counties for • .uildinjr'' roads and biidges may prove a serious onstacle to putting through, the Yadkin Bridge propo­ sal.- However in this case there seems to have been a well defined understanding with members of the State Highway Commission that such a loan would be accepted. We are of the opinion that if the matter of- securing the loan and providing for the interest can be arranged that such a loan and pro­ viding for the interest can be ar­ ranged that the State- Highway Commission will stand ieady to carry b t its former proposal. The matter of building this bridge was brought to head when Commission' er Hfll raised his objection to .the entire practice of accepting loans with the agreement to .repay. It was the proposal of several coun­ ties that they would put up mil- li.ons that brought the Commission face to face with this problem, and such special proposals of unusual merits as the Yadkin bridge, which in fact should stand in a position of priority. The Dispatch hopes that (he or­ ganization formerly working for this bridge will be revived aud that it will take steps to straighten out !the Mtuation. There can be 110 j argument over the wisdom of build I ing this bridge.- Unlessthe inter- I ested citizens get busy though ; there is serious doubt as to it be­ ing built for a good while yet. The Dispatch. — Holton-Sonntag Announcement. Mr. aud Mrs. B. P. Holton an­ nounce the marriage of their daughter Audry to Dr. A. E. Sotinfag. of Tulsa, Okla., 011 Maj 23rd. The marriage took place at tbe home of the bride’s sister, Mrs. George Adams, at Tulsa. Sheriff’s Sale of Land For ..Taxes. (Continued from page 8) MOCKSVILIiE TOWKSHXP Mrs E R Pass, 3tl0 I 4 acres ' 40,72 FABMIlfG-TON- TOWNSHIP Mra Jetsle Bowles, 25 acres • 9 28 K. L COPE, Sheriff. Letter From Virginia. bacco. Fanners are busy plowing , , ~ eom and getting ready for harvestMr. T. A. Temple , , - ^ j ieat iQOks good this year Hon lotte, Va. , in renewing Wssubscnp- ^ blackber-rfcs wi„ soon be I * tion to The Record writes us as I wg can haV(i some ie. w P * follows: We are having dry weath - ^ J n al- er, in this section now. We are all 1 ways glad when The Record came.,. hoping for rain so we can plant to I New York spot cotton 23 55 !IIfUI I The Only Shade Made Mfh AVentilator Ventilator B ft SELF-HANGING VENTILATING PORCH SHADES KEEP COOL And Comfortable Every Porch can’t be surrounded by trees, but every porch can be as comfortable and shady as though it were set in a growth cf shade trees.. Voodor Shades Give You Outdoor Comfort and Indoor Privacy Because of the ventilator woven into the top of Vudor shades, your porch gives you all the comfort of the out-of-doors-yet.because of their peculiar con­ struction they also give you the same privacy from prying eyes that an indoor room does. \ . - • . * Various Widths from 3 to 12 feet at prices from $3.90T:b $13.75 HuntIey-Hill Stockton Co. •Trade and West Fifth Winston-Salem, N. C. IT’S HERE WJien j cu I ave headache you wonder WHAT will cure it. If ycvr fcot hurls ycu wonder KOW >0 stop the pain, if jrou have corns cal’ouses or foot troub’e of any kind bring lhe feet to us and get the WIiAT and we will show you How to re- tr eve the pa;n. A JONES & GENTRY “T HE SHOE MEN/ 447 Trade Street W i-is-ton-Salem , N . C. S i d e w a l l T r o t e c t i o n * We are pleased to announce that we have been appointed Distrib­ utors for the CORDUROY CORD SIDEWALL PROTECTION Tires. We invite our friends and customers to come in and look this line of tires over. We have in stock the most complete stock of tires to be found in Statesville. Balloon Tires, Truck Tires and High Pressure Tires in all popular sizes. When you come to Statesville'call on us and we wii save you money on your Automobile Tires. Davie county folks are given a special invitation to visit us. A . c . c r o u c h : 121 E. Broad St. - Statesville, N. G. ess ; is® i t 7 0 0 SWEEPING DEM/ ’ ARMAMENT At r' ALLIED n 4 London.—Germany out the disarmament the Versailles treatyj detail in the note have presented to eminent, the text of| public hare. The note was haf tor Luther in Berlin non, the British an «uting the council os Germany must coij tensive list of recti mands before the dis tions ot th§ peace •ered .fulfilled, Justifl ment of evacuation -Cologne, zone of occij ance with the Versa -withdrawal of the al| mission. „ The chief of tbesl mands includes rad of the reichswebr's duction of the countr to 100,000 men and short term enlistmen character o£ the seci| be ablished and the ed from 180,000 to sale destruction of in| the Krupps and a doz cerns which in their , held adaptable for war materials is tier After referring to I munications and the : trol commission whicl_ many’s shortcomings,! the allied government capital importance foreground of their an defaults unless prd would in the aggregij German government constitute an army principles of a nation! "This would Se dir the treaty at peace,! note," under which to be used exclusivelE tenance of internal of control of the German this circumstance wh| monstrates the impor,- dividual default, rend I these defaults so Se rid peace.” Heat Wave Kills Chicago.—From the tains to the Atlantic country sweltered in record-breaking heat weather reports held of immediate relief and prostrations incre Tabulations revealei weather and violent s eompanied Old. Sol’s taken a toll of upward «, ing the past few days.1 casts indicated that t | peratures would contin In many cities the climbed to new altitud ing additional deaths a starting fires, causing some schools and interl ness. Upward of 30 deaths In the “furance belt.”:, fires were attributed' t< on combustable niater schools were dismissed cury climbed to 96.4, record for June 5. Indiana Town Swe Mount Airy, Iisd.—Fo in twenty years this inhabitants was swept lire. Eleven buildings with an estimated lost The flames consumed town, including one of and principal business Firemen sent from Fi City, Kensington and forced by lack of wat carry water from tank more & Ohio Railroad. I perature for the vicini] 102 during the afternoo| veloped during the AreS Explosion of several t | ridges in a hardware tioa of two gasoline s spectacular and harzarj K =Jwo KilM in Au Raeford.—a seven-pa route from Badin t womend by ttree colcXS!? a“d two babiesdnn turtle over a ! RaetorH 6 highway foUr ■ El^ S towar^s FaySdfraiiand aM I Jam i P tantly' and M I Caw6Z 0rd died befOrJ W w ntecJid For The« 1WeeDynf Lem-^ chal Arnly anH 8 ®ibIe from th malici the Oestrn ?,Perty- the ai fendant rh °,n of the Bi tim ing S ev,P! laskl eiveu - I,? ^°rk as I a«3 wa« ng ln tte m 0I> the L ? n£enced t0 sej Si3t month nty roads in I case and f Was entered I proPertv a tlle de3trnJiaiPosec settIence °t : 27804603556^6396431^^^9656259456^24590^4242694984398568^16494596579691 1999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999 rs are busy plowing ig ready for harvest* ood this year Ho,* will soon be Hpeso rnie pie. W e are al- " Th<LRe^ord canies_ pot cotton 23 35 it. I bring w to re- 1, N. C. V--. D istrib - ECTlON nd look te stock ires and ave you given a , N. C. TO OBEY PftDT SWEEPING DEMANDS EOR DIS­ ARMAMENT ARE MADE BY ALLIED NATIONS. London.—Germany’s failure to carry out ttie disarmament requirements of the Versailles treaty, were outlined In detail in the note the allied powers have presented to the German gov­ ernment. the text of which was made public here. The note was handed to Chancel­ lor Luther in Berlin by Baron D’Aber-; non, the British ambassador, repres­ enting the council of ambassadors. Germany must comply with an ex­ tensive li3t of rectifications and de­ mands before the disarmament obliga­ tions of the peace treaty are consid­ ered fulfilled, justifying commence­ ment of evacuation with the first, or Cologne, zone of occupation in accord­ ance with the Versailles pact and the withdrawal of the allied control com­ mission. The chief of these sweeping de­ mands includes radical modification of the reichswehr’s general staff, re­ duction of the country’s military forces to 100.000 men and suppression of short term enlistments. The military character of the security police must be ablished and the force itself reduc­ ed from 180,000 to 150,000. Whole­ sale destruction of industrial plants of the Krupps and a dozen other big con­ cerns which in their present state are lield adaptable for the production of war materials is demanded. After referring to .. previous com­ munications and the report of the con­ trol commission which established Ger­ many's shortcomings, the note states the allied governments “consider it of capital importance to place in the foreground of their argument that the defaults unless promptly rectified would in the aggregate enable the German government eventually to re­ constitute an army modelled on the principles of a nation in arms. “This would be directly counter to the treaty of peace," continues the note.” under which German army was to be used exclusively for the main- tenance of internal order and for the control of the German frontier. It Is this circumstance which, while it de­ monstrates the importance of each in­ dividual default, renders the total of these defaults so serious a menace to peace.” THiU D A V IE R E C O R D , M O C K SV TL L E. N . C. SIXTEEN CHINESE STUDENTS KILLED IN RIOTING. Shanghi.—New outbreaks in the Japanese spinning mills strike agi­ tation continued resulting in the killing of four more Chinese stu­ dents, bringing the total dead to'16 since rioting started in the streets Saturday. The last outbreak at Peking and Chekiang Roads, Sikh police fired ■into a crowd of demonstrators, mor­ tally wounding one Chinese stu­ dent. The afternoon outbreak came after sporadic disturbances were reported from many sections, througout a morning during which police patrols, armed with. sabres and rifles, marched through the streets of Shanghai. GDPS AWARDED BEST PAGES VICTIMS WERE FIVE CHILDREN, HIS BROTHER, MOTHER AND . SISTER-IN-LAW. EDITORS AT RICHMOND CLOSE AND GO ON TWO WEEKS’ TOUR. Hsat Wave Kills 175 In Week. Chicago.—From the Rocky Moun­ tains to the Atlantic seaboard, the country sweltered in the' grip of a record-breaking heat wave. • while weather reports held out little hope of immediate relief and death tolls and prostrations increased. Tabulations revealed that the hot weather and violent storms which ac­ companied Old Sol’s heat jag, have taken a toll of upward of 175 lives dur­ ing the past few days. Weather fore­ casts indicated that the sizzling tem­ peratures would continue. In many cities the boiling mercury climbed to new altitude records, caus­ ing additional deaths and proctrations, starting fires, causing the closing of some schools and interfering with busi­ ness. upward of 30 deaths were reported in the turance belL” Jin Chicago two fi-ea were attributed to the sun’s rays on roiuhustable material and several --bool= were dismissed when the mer- -uty climbed to 96.4, a new high record lor June 5. Richmond,. Va.—The “president's cup” in the National Editorial Asso­ ciation's better newspaper contest for the "best community service” in 1925 was awarded to The Free Press of Quakertown, Pa. The Times of Houl- ton, Maine, received the “American Printer Cup” for the best “front page” and the “past president’s cup” for the best editorial page” went to The Ga­ zette, Rhinebeckj N. Y. The awards were announced near the close of the se,cond session of the association’s an­ nual convention here. Second place for the “best com­ munity service” was given The Signal of Geneva, Nebraska, while The Chro- notype, Rice Lake, Wis., was third. The Times, Houlton, Maine, was sec­ ond in the “best editorial page” com­ petition, The Mercury, Carlisles, Ne­ braska, third. For the “best front page,” second place went to The NeWs, Northfield, Minn., and third. The Dem­ ocrat, Rogers 1vArk. The speaking program was devoted chiefly to ’ a discussion of technical phases of the American weekly news paper business together with legisla­ tive aims toward adjustment of postal rates. Ole Buck, Harvard, Nebraska, representing the attitude of the coun­ try newspaper toward the recent in­ crease in second class pastage rates, advocated a vigorous campaign for lower rates, saying the increases were a blow to the weekly paper. The association’s legislative com­ mittee has made rapid strides in its campaign for adjustment of postal ■Jaws, elimination of government com petitio nin printed and stamped envel­ opes and in support of several tariff measures, W-allace Odell, Tarrytown, N. Y., said in rendering the commit- See’s report., A telegraphic message from Edward Brodie, United States minister to Siam, congratulated the association for its programs of work and contained a promise to attend the next convention and tell how he conducted his daily newspaper, though 10,000 miles away in Bangkok, Siam. Following the close of, the conven­ tion, more than a hundred and fifty delegates boarded a special train for a two weeks’ tour of historical Virginia. The trip will end In Washington on June 18. when the party will be re­ ceived atthe white house by President Coolidge.'J 1 Hamilton, Ohio.—Becoming violent­ ly insane, Floyd Russel sW and kill­ ed eight members'of. his family, ac­ cording to- the police, who arrested him after he had' shot and slightly wounded himself.' His victims ’ were the five children of his brother, his mother, brother and sister-in-law. . Russel is' in a padded cell in the county jail. The dead: Mrs. Rose Russel, 60, mother; John Lowell Russel, brother; Emma Russel, 36, wife of John.Lowell Russel; Julia, 12, Robert, eiglit;. George Francis, eight; Paul Lewis, three, Itnd Richard, four months,’all children of Mr. and Mrs. John-Russel. Dorothy, ten years old, saved her­ self by hiding In bed.when she heard shots. Russel then turned the weapon on himself, shooting himself in the left lung. After the shooting he riddled the bodies of several of the children with bullets. Police said he talked incoherently about a mprtgage on the house and said he would shoot the pictures off the wall. Russel is r43 years old. Most of the victims were sleeping. Marshall Buried With Simplest Rite. Indianapolis, Ind.—The body , of Thomas Riley Marshall, 'whose gentle appeals for more kindness and tolera­ tion endeared him to the nation, lies in the same cemetery wherein rests the body' of Janies Whitcomb - Riley, another Hoosier, who touched Ameri­ can hearts through his poems of home­ ly strain. • y / ; - Both men, gifted in .the art of weav­ ing words Into expressions of whole! some sentiments, lie not far apart on the rolling slopes of Crown Hill. Indiana, with simple but reverent cermeonies, laid Mr. Marshall at rest. The obsequies were, fitting for a man whose spirit remained humble despite his elevation to thp1' vice presidency of a great nation and to the govern, ship of his native state. .May Rescue With Navy Dirigibles. Washington.—A detailed plan for operation of the Shenandoah in the event the navy department should de­ cide' to send it in search . of. - the Amundsen polar expedition, has' been submitted to Secretary Wilbur by Commander Lansdowhe of the diri­ gible. The plan was submitted with­ out recommendation and-merely as a supplement to a report which had been requested embodying a typica'l plan of operation for either the Shen­ andoah or the Los Angeles if either should be needed for relief in an emergency of the MacMillan arctic expedition this summer. INDIANA TOWN IS HARD HIT BY FIRE. Hammond, Ind.—-Fire swept over ,two blocks'in the -industrial section -here: causing a. loss estimated at '$/! JiOOjOOO. Chicago and other cities sent aid in fighting ,the fire. -The fire swept through ,the plants of; the Paxton Lumber Company, NortherhTndiana Gas and Electric Company, Hammond Brass Works, Bentz Automobile Company, ; See Supjply Company and Stiger Motor­ cycle Shops. • JS DEATH FORMER VICE-PRESIDENT DIES SUDDENLY IN HOTEL AT WASHINGTON. ' Indiana Town Swept Ety Fire. •Mount Airy, Ihd.—For the third time ■n ,.went,/ years this village of 1,000 inhabitants was swept by a disastrous s.e. Lieven buildings were destroyed ■■lib an estimated loss of $200 ,000. The flames consumed a fourth of the wwu, including one of its two banks, and principal business enterprises. Firemen sent from Frederick, Elliott Oty, Kensington and Rockville were forced by lack of water pressure to carry water from tanks of the Balti­ more & Ohio Railroad. With the tem- S ature for the vicinity= reported at “ during the afternoon, the heat de­ veloped during the flre' was terrific. “ Plosion of several thousands cart- idges in a hardware store and igni- ion of two gasoline stations added Poctacular and harzardous effects. Two Killed in Auto Wreck. etord.—A seven-passenger Nash, route from Badin to Fayetteville, l5V three colored men five h,,‘eu and two babies, all ft Badin, do® ,.turVe over a 90 f00t length Raef1 j tlighwaF f°ur miles out from ElJ oru towards Fayetteville, and kiliBi Lendail and Alex McLean were Jam= S tantly, and it is reported that carri S ,ord d ie d before he could be the „ ■, the hosPital shortly after“■e accident. Wi?e,nteced For Theft of Bible.W o ! on'Salem-~‘Charged with the Army ° , Vihie from the Salvation Person 1 with maIicious injury to theI ‘i Property’ the arrest following teOdanr pfa0,n of the Bible by the de- cIoiainn X- -puiaSkii a young man |Eiven J ew Y°rk as his home, wai Iau5 Wao eannS in-the municipal court Ion He seatenced to serve 18 months IsIJimnnnIinty roads in the two cases. Jcasemouths was entered in the larcenyj Oj1.! - *AA LAAO AOiA L C U J IPropertv Jor the destruction of the ioaed senienee °£ 12 months was Balks on July 4 as Defense Day. Washington.—Along with the mes­ sages of a number of governors ex­ pressing approval of the July 4 de­ fense test plans, Governor Trumbull, of Connecticut, told the war depart­ ment the choice of the national holi­ day as the date was not appropriate. • Connecticut, he said, was in com­ plete sympathy with the national de­ fense policy, but with excursionists leaving towns and cities over the fourth, which falls on Saturday, the demonstration would be one of weak­ ness rather than of strength. “To call out the Connecticut mili­ tary organizations on tha;t date,” he said, "would be to ask *the members to give up their holidays and deprive many soldiers of the opportunity to spend the week end with their families at the seashore, or in the country, and without their usual pay.” Among governors who approved the plan were those of South Carolina, Oklahoma, New Mexico, ahd New Hampshire, while Governor Ritchie, of Maryland, declared that he would con­ fer with his adjutant general about it. . Three Children “bie IiT DrIre. Benton, Md. — Three children of Freeborn Ellwanger, a farmer, perish­ ed in a fire which destroyed their par­ ents’ house near Whitleysburg,: Caro­ line County. -They ranged In age from one to five years. The father and mother were at work on different parts of the farm when the fire start­ ed and were unable to reach the child­ ren in time to saire them. French Soldiers Take 250 Lives. Fez, French Morocco.—Au official commmunique announced that the Riffian losses from French aerail bom: bardments May 21 and .22 were 250 killed and 300 wounded. The communique stated that there had been sharp skirmishes in the cen­ tral sector with attacking Riffiahs re­ pulsed. AbdrEl-Krim was reported to be urging various tribesmen who ’have not heretofore been fighting, to organ­ ize against the French. Whiskey Trial June 17. Baltimore.—Trial of the 12 men in­ dicted for conspiracy to illegally with­ draw alcohol from the plant of the Maryland Dfug and Chemical Manu­ facturing company here has been set for June 17, district attorney Wood­ cock announced. Plane Kills Two Flyers. Athens, Ga-.—Hollis Camp, Winder, Ga.,, was killed, and Ben Epps, of Ath­ ens,’ seriously hurt when the airplane Epps was piloting went info a nose dive and crashed into a bridge at the edge , of a commercial delation field on the outskirts of the city. Uncover Plot to Blow Up Train. New York.—A plan-to blow up ele­ vated trains apparently was frustrated with the finding of two boxes, believed to contain bombs, projecting over the tracks at two stations. Pplice threw the boxes into the East River. One box was found by a ticket agent, at the 89th Street Station of the Third Avenue line. Of . reddish Wood, eight inches by five by four, it had heen placed on the edge of the platform in such a manner that, a tram entering the station would strike it. Transfer Mine Bureau. - Washington.—The bureau of mines and the division of mineral resources of the geological survey were ordered transferred from the interior depart­ ment to the commerce department. Secretary Hoover announced he would begin consultations at once with mining representatives- on ... the bureau’s course. * ' , Norse Send Airships. 1 Oslo, Norway.—The Norwegian gov­ ernment at the request of-the Aero club, which promoted Amundsen’s flight, is despatching two. naval scout seaplanes by the 4,700-ton steamer, Ingertre, placed at the government’s disposal by the Great Norwegian Goal company, of Spitzbergen... ■ . X _j_9 . Three Are Held For Staying Girl. New York--With three negroes held in jail in connection, with the murder of Florence -Kane, sister of a detective, police are. still !Uncertain as to the identity of the slayer, i One of the. negroes, a ' long armed giant, Williaiu Brassfleld, apartment house janitor, who is known often to wear cotton gloves te accused of homi­ cide. ’ Miss King , was strangled.' Two young Brooklyn women, who recently were attacked by a negro agreed that he had unusually long arms. Washington.—Thomas Riley Marsh­ all, vice president of the United States for eight momentous years of its history,, has followed his chief, Wooddrow Wilson, into death. Recurrence of a heart attack, which sent him to his bed immediately after a trip from Indiana, brought on the end unexpectedly, after reports had come from the sick room throughout the week that despite his 71 years, he steadily was recovering from nervous exhaustion and a cold. Death came on him quietly in his room on the fourth floor of the New Willard hotel, where he lived during his two terms as - vice president Propped up in bed with pollows after eating his breakfast with an enjoy­ ment that strengthened the impres­ sion of those about him that he was regaining his health, he was smoking a cigar and reading a favorite pas­ sage- of the Bible. Suddenly, but without haste, while Mrs. Marshall w as'in an adjoining room, he laid the Bible face down­ ward, Open where- the fourth chapter of the Gospel of St. Marks end and the fifth begins. His cigar dropped, and he fell gently back, without speaking and apparently without pain. The nurse, who had been at his side, quick­ ly summoned.aid. -But he was dead. Telegrams of condolence and more personal messages to. his widow bore witness to the esteem in which the former vice president was held by those who knew him, regardless party differences. President Coolidge, who followed Mr. Marshall in the vice president’s chair, wrote/a letter ex­ pressing his sorrow to Mrs. Marshall as soon as he learned of the death, and later, with Mrs. Coolidge, called at the hotel and sent. up. their cards. Mrs. Marshall bore the shock brave­ ly and "Senator'J s wafison, democrat, Virginia, one of the former vice presi­ dent’s 'closest friends at the capitol, immediately came to render any as­ sistance he could; others, many of them high in the Wilson administra­ tion! called or sent messages to offer their services. Senator ' Watson of Indiana, al­ though of different political faith, wired his sorrow; and Senator Reed, democrat Missouri; in telegraphing his sympathy, asserted that Mr. Marshall “represented in the highest degree the best type of American citizen and American statesman.” . HEflT IflLLS 3 9 ; Ir E ELECTRICAL STORMS AND TORNA DOES IN MIDWEST DO. . DAMAGE. New York.—Eastern states swelter­ ed again under a heat ware which In three days has -caused 39 deaths in the country and more than 100 prostra­ tions. In the eastern- states 12 have died and more than. 60 have been over­ come. . ' - ' Eleven persons were overcome here, one of them so seriously that he at­ tempted to slash himself -to death on board the. liner Maureania as she was about to put to sea. I DOINGS IN THE IiiTAR HEEL STATE I! frftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftfrfrftftftftftft1 NEWS OF NORTH CAROLINA TOLD IN SHORT PARA­ GRAPHS FOR BUSY PEOPLE i fr.frfr M ftftftfrfrfrftfrftftfrfr ftfrfrftftftftfrfr Six Miners Die at Piper, Ala. Birmingham, Ala.—Six white miners were killed in a mine accident at Piper/Ala., reports to the Little Caha- ba.Coal Company, owners of the mine here, said. Death is belived to have been caused by an accumulation of black damp in an unused heading of the mine, which the six men were ex­ ploring. There was no explosion. The dead are: Fred Bashman, John Wright, L. H. Horton, Steve Scott, Jeff Warren and Eli Lucas, all residents of Piper. The heading where the men met death had been sealed for two months following.' a fire in March. It was opened Sunday and six men went in to see if the fire was out. Attempts had been made to. ventilate the shaft and when the men went In, officials believed the heading was sate. About an hour after the exploring party entered, other miners foilowe.d. The bodies of the kix men were found lying 700 yards from the entrance to the heading., When the second party entered and found the body of one of the miners, rescue parties were formed and work­ ed-in relays withqut further dangers untiP-all the bodieS had been recover­ ed. ' ' Two Are Victims. Des Moines, Iowa--Two men were killed and another , injured during an electric' storm, here. Peter Brown, a farmer, was instant­ ly killed when struck by lightning' While plowing. Several farm hands working nearby escaped. George' Stephenson, 42 years old, dropped dead when lightning struck several blocks from his home. Oregon’s School Law- Held Invalid. Washington.—Oregon lost in the Supreme Court its fight to compel children to attend public schools. The court held that the States in enforcing compulsory education laws cannot require the attendance of- children in public schools to the exclu­ sion of private or parochial schools. The Oregon: eompulhory law, re­ quiring children between the ages of eight and-, sixteen -,attend public schols - therefore wa3 declared invalid. Y .. , Chicago.—Freakish weather—from Los Angeles, where Nobles of the Mys; tic Shrine were compelled to forego their parade because of a “most un­ usual” June rain, to the Atlantic sea­ board, which still swelerted beneath a heat wave that has forced the ther­ mometer to unseasonable, heights. Electrical storms and tornadoes have accompanied the heat Wave in portions of the middlewest, resulting in numerous casualties and large prop­ erty damage. , At Omaha, Neb., a large crowd at the Ak-Sar-Ben race track rushed mad­ ly to an open field and threw them­ selves face downward in the mud whep funnel clouds appeared on the horizon. • Torrential rains followed on the heels of the heat wave In a number of localities, damage of $750,000 be­ ing reported from a six-inch fall at St. Joseph, Mo. The death toll from, the severe wind and rain storm that struck the region arohnd' Minneapolis, Minn., re­ mained at fire, with communications being gradually reestablished. The storm dead total for Iowa mounted to eight since Monday when reports were received .of the deaths of three, persons in a tornado that struck Adair, Iowa. In Nebraska four persons met death as the result of small tornadoes ahd a general electrical storm Tues­ day night. The rains that followed broke the heat and provided badly needed moisture for crops. Deaths from heat prostration con­ tinued to be reported throughout por­ tions of the country east of the Mis­ sissippi. In Chicago, Charles F. Hylander, traffic manager of the William Wrig- ley, Jr., company, collapsed in his of­ fice and died a' few minutes later, while R. M. Brower, 65, Rochester, N. Y., died of heart failure induced bythe heat. -1 - President Warns Navy Class. Annapolis, Md. — Peace “through reason rather than through force,” faith in the desire of all peoples “to do right” and sufficient military pre­ paredness to protect national liberty, with the problem of defense “borne bjr all our people,” were urged by Presi­ dent Coolidge in addressing -the gradu­ ating class of the United States Naval academy. The PresidenL who handed .the graduates the diplomas which made them officers of the navy, told them they were ambassadors of “citizen­ ship and righteousness” and remind­ ed them “as one responsible for the national defense,” that the occasion seldom wil larise when officers are jus­ tified “in asserting that other speci­ fied' powers are arming against us, and by arousing hatred and suspicion, at­ tempting to cause us to arm against them.” The line of 438 graduates receiv­ ing the diplomas from the President was headed by Harry E. Hubbard, of Baltimore, Md., honor man. Rear Ad­ miral Louis McNulton, superintendent of the academy, presided, and Secre­ tary Wilbur also spoke, .while Gover­ nor Ritchie, of Maryland, and ranking officers of the navy were present. At the conclusion of the exercises the President inspected the grounds and his party then had luncheon with Admiral Nulton, leaving immediately afterward by automobile for Wash­ ington. • Killed Bjr Shell. Minneapolis, Minn.—Arthur Frazier, Sioux Indian soldier, died In France, the victim of a German shell, a federal court jury heid here in finding in fa­ vor of the government which, as de­ fendant in the war compensation case brought by Arthur Lopez-Frazier con- tended that Frazier was killed in ac-. tion and that the plaintiff is a Mexican imposter. Confesses to Murder. Augusta, Me.—Harry A. Kirby con­ fessed to County Attorney Frank A. Southkard to murdering Miss Aida Hayward, shooting her aunt, Mrs- Em­ ma Towns, and firing the Hayward c-ottage on the night of May 19 at Lake Maranacoojc,' Winthrop. Mexico May Abolish Death Penalty. Mexico City.—A movement to abol­ ish the death penalty for' murderers has been begun by the intercession of Iovernor Zuna, of Jalisco, in the case of Rafael1Recerra, convicted of homi­ cide by the Supreme Court. In a petition to the penal authori­ ties in this city he asks that the sen­ tence be commuted and points out that during the last month of his ten* lire of office, President Obregon com­ muted the sentences of all prisoners, held on such charges. Charlotte.—The Scottish Rite Cath- redral Association bought a lot on North Graham street for $13,000 a cathedral, it is said to he erected on the lot. ' Winston-Salem.—A report was re­ ceived here from Rural Hall stating that a small son of Clarence Helsa- beck, a well known citizen of IEat community, went into the seed barn and accidentally started a fire by Striking a match. The building and the contents, including the boy and several head- of stock(were destroyed by the flames. j Charlotte.—The appointment of com­ mittees to help stage a national test day program In Charlotte July '4, and an address by Major A. L. Bulwlnkle, of Gastonia, congressman of the Ninth North Carolina DistricL were the principal features of the monthly meeting of the local reserve officers’ association. Dunm-Norman Ross, young Dunn white man, was sentenced in Harnett' Superior Court by Judge W. M. Bond to serve five years in the State Prison on the charge of setting fire to a build­ ing in Dunn on the night of AprU 13. ■ Raleigh.—R. G. Pulley, local carpen­ ter, died at Rex Hospital as a result of injuries received over a week ago when .he was struck by a News and Observer truclj on Hillsboro street Just beyond the State Fair Grounds. , Oxford'—H. B. Cheatham, superin­ tendent of the colored Oxford Orph­ anage, received a check for $20,000 Srum B. N. -Duke, of New York, this amount to be' used towards building at the institution a school building to be called the Angier B. Duke building In honor of his son who left the insti­ tution $31,000 in his will. LouisbuTg.—Announcement of a gift of $50,000 by R. H. Wright, .of Durham, to Louisburg College was made here by President Arthur W. Mohn. The money is given by Mr. Wright to pro­ vide for the erection of a dormitory, to be known as the Pattle Julia Wright domlntory, in memory of Mrs. WrighL Dunn.—The funeral of Odie P. But* 1er,“ unn young man who met death when he came in contact with' a Uve wire while working as a lineman la Rockville, Md., waa conducted lrom the Christian church here. ' Wilmington.—Edith Savage, six-year- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Savqge, of. Charity Cross Roads, Du­ plin county, who was killed by an au­ tomobile alleged to have been operat­ ed by an Indiana medicine man nam­ ed Chavis, formerly of Wilmington, was buried at ,the family burial grounds near -Rose Hill. t Tarboro.—-W. Bruce Mabee, exten­ sion entomologist, is. visiting different sections of the East getting farmers to sign contracts for airplane dusting to control the boll weevil. The demon­ stration recently on the Kitchin farm in Halifax proved so - successful that farmers are becoming interested in that method of destroying the destruc­ tive pests. Gastonia.—Lee Costner, age 22, deaf resident of the Bessemer City section, was instantly killed on the Southern Railway tracks between this citg and his home, while walking the tracks, being hit by the engine of a southbound train. The -body was hurled about forty feet ■ from the tracks. The head was crushed and many bones broken. Hickory. — Roscoe Rowe, negro youth, aged about 14, was drowned at the Baptising place, about one mile northwest of Brookford. Rowe In com­ pany with several other youths had gone in for a swim and ventured out into a swift current. He cried for help and the boys went to his res­ cue but too late. Rutherfordton.—Traffic Officer Clyde Morrow died at the Rutherford Hos­ pital as a result of injuries received at the Harris Oil Station midway be­ tween here and Forest City. MorroW was going toward Forest City at a rapid rate when he saw a truck In front of him and tried to stop sud­ denly by applying his brakes at full force. His body h itr'the pavement. His back was broken in three places and all'of his ribs were broken, also his right arm. Kinston.—James Rouse, one-time chief bt polide of this town, and Hen­ ry Barrow will be tried in Superior court on charges of . shooting each other some weeks ago. The men were under bonds to appear in the higher court following preilnmary hearings in the county court here.' Barrow suffered a pistil bullet wound In. a thigh while’Rouse was sprinkled ■s^ith bird shot In the duel, which oc­ curred in a rural community where both reside. Both' are being held in nominal bail. ., Greenville.—The Eastern Carolina Tobacco Warehousemen Association in annual session here, definitely de­ cided upon Tuesday, September I, as the opening date for the sale of to­ bacco at auction, throughout'Eastern Carolina for the 1925 season.. Hendersonville—Otto Walker was in­ stantly killed and Clanny Laughter seriously injured when a truck they were driving overturned on Fifth avenue. The men are aged 18, and 21 respectively, and employed by- a contracting concern. Walker is from Fletcher, N. C., and Laughter from Bdneyville, N. C- _____ I I Iii I * > ^2424524974^995751 4965 99999999999999999999^ 55555555555555U55555555555`T555 ■ Qfim - 11ll w S BV flMi ,M ns i M If: .......M }■/- -y- i l l Ig H S rfffr Gl m g h s a S S 'V i'2 *** * jl‘ ' “ '’ 'S *fv di« S M 8 w a ^ 1 flwafel crafts »t Mk <* V ■? '■ •.,* K iiM**■» S^ **£ ”•» Vgff^ i ^ W H M X i M M IllR sB i hH H M ?/. ' ' \£ , Mm|n S S » 9 ■ T ' $ > I *1 -T"T "j; '-ai- ' ' - / V*. ^ w fis* ' F.fl *■» -?*■ V Ifc B i T ,<■ IBB . I v - m M MesSircSSffiiEH . - , M . | U *3i « p a 1> I i i < 5 ? ' I ? "K ss $ if; Ki- BnSSW-'-SBSWi^ f T H E D A V IE RECO RD , M O C K SV ILLE, N. C. Hoover Likes Chicago’s Schoolboy Patrol r W The "schoolboy patrol” In vogue in Chicago. tlie«ipera tion of whiteh is shown in the photografih, Is so successful in savin? the lives of children in traffic-crowded streets that Secretary Hoover urges its adoption by public school super­ intendents ail over the country. Demand More National Holidays Would MsJce America Lead in Days of Rest. Washington.-—From several quarters come an increasing .number of sug­ gestions that new public holidays be added to the already fairly long list. Wilson followers, Hamilton admirers, friends of Boosevelt and many others, actuated by motives of hero-worship, have advocated that one day of each year be set aside to commemorate the memory of three American leaders. If ail these intended subjects were thus honored America would lead as a nation of holidays. Considering Its age it already leads. For such coun­ tries as. England^ France, Italy and Germany .,are mrich older and have many more heroes to honor, many more excuses for a day of rest. Yet England has. but eight, France but twelve and Italy ten. In France no holidays are officially dedicated to honor heroes. In a strict seDse of the word, the United States has no national legal holidays. Thanksgiving might be counted one exception to this rule, as the President’s* proclamation virtually makes it so. In a legal sense, how­ ever, only the District of Columbia is duty-bound to observe it. . By Common Consent. The same, procedure holds in regard to all of the so-called national holi­ days. By common consent, certain of . them are set aside by all of the state legislatures and observed. If the leg­ islatures care to stray from the flock, that is their .privilege. Since legal and public holidays are to all’practical purposes inseparable, no endeavor is made in the tabulation of holidays by states which follows, to distinguish among them: Alabama, 14; Arizona, 33; Arkansas, 14; Cali­ fornia, 14; Colorado, 13; District of Columbia, 7; Connecticut, 11; Dela­ ware, 11; Florida, 14; Georgia, 10; Idaho, 11; Illinois, 11; Indiana, 11; Iowa, 9; Kansas, 11; Kentucky, 11; Massachusetts, 13; Louisiana^ 11; Maine, 12; Maryland, 13; Michigan, 10; Minnesota, 11; Mississippi, 10; Missouri, 13; Montana, 13; Nebraska, 13; Nevada, 12; New Hampshire, 11; New Jersey, 13; Nctv Mexico, 9; New Tork, 12 (inclusive of Spring and Fair primary, aot legal); North Carolina. 13; North Dakota, 13; Ohio, 11; Okla­ homa, 10; Oregon, 12; Pennsylvania, 12; South Carolina, : 11; South Da­ kota, 11; Texas, 13; Utah, 12; Ver­ mont, 12; Virginia, 11; Washington, 11; West Virginia, 10; Wisconsin, 10; Wyoming, 11; From this total; one may draw an average of twelve national holidays for the country at large. What the !northern, eastern and western states consider a national holiday is not al­ ways considered so byi the South. OOCXXX)CXXKXXXXX30CXX)OCXXOOO Blame on Gourmands for Torture of Birds NewYorfc—Thousands of song birds are tortured every year In southern France, Italy and Beb gium to satisfy the appetites of gourmands, according to T. Gil­ bert Pearson, who returned from an international convention for the protection pi birds at Lux­ embourg. He is head of the Na­ tional Association of Andubon Societies. "The wealthy gourmands In these countries,” he said, "cap­ ture various types of song birds and utilize red-hot irons to blind them. The suffering song birds' are then put In cages. “The theory ot the gourmands Is that the cries ot the tortured Mrds are poignant melodies which attract scores of other birds, which are captured and later are served in pies or broiled to satisfy the appetites of these cruel people. AU of Ihe delegates agreed to attempt to .frustrate these practices.” Washington’s birthday is everywhere observed, but by many Southern states the birthday of Lincoln is ab­ sent from the holiday calendar. In­ stead, Lee’s birthday on January 19 Is honored, and that of Jefferson Davis on June 3. Shrove Tuesday is more generally designated as a holi­ day by the legislatures of the South than the North. Jefferson’s birthday on April 13 Is already on many of the Southern calendars, though as yet on none of those In Northern states. No Disagreement • Independence day, Washington’s birthday, Labor day, Columbus day. Decoration day, the Armistice, Thanks-' giving, Christmas, New Year1S-On these there seems to be no disagree­ ment among the states. In the request for more days on which to honor our national heroes, other countries read an . interesting phase of American character. We do so much rushing about over here, are Invariably geared at such a high speed that foreigners may well conclude we need m ore, holidays than they do. England Is easy-going throughout, the year, so only needs eight Italy can worry along with ten official holidays, though of course, the realm is honey­ combed with local fete-days, mostly of a religious nature, and overnight political . celebrations. France and Germany, with -many more events In history to commemorate, have many more excuses for resting than has the United States, which finds 12 In the year sufficient - Out of 365 days, the average Ameri­ can citizen now has a total of 101 /or recreation. Fifty-two of these days are his Sundays, 26 of them ltt» Saturday afternoons, The remaining number includes 12 holidays and an allowance of 11 days for his annual ,vacation, this figure excluding his two usual Sundays and Saturday after­ noons off. Cop Thinks Dog Is Cat; Shoots It Nine Times Pittsburgh.—Policeman John J. Joyce is in difficulties. Humane society officials declare' be Is disgracefully cruel. They are up In arms. Authorities on firearms denounce him as a “rotten marksman” , and city effi­ ciency experts declare hlia guilty *f shameful waste of the municipality’s powder and lead. Joyce was called to the home ot Fanse Sirella, 217 Renova street Hazel­ wood, to kill Sirella’s pet poodle. The dog had !suffered a broken leg, Joyce took a stance six feet away and fired five shots into the animal. It squirmed and yelped. Four more shots ended its life. Joyce’s comrades In the police de­ partment explained that Joyce neVer had seen any small fancy poodles and supposed the animal was a oat "He1' gave it a bullet for each of Its nine lives," they explained. But that doesn’t satisfy the Humane society folk. They have supplied the police with a book on how to kill pain­ lessly. Suit Over Idol Lasts Seven Years <•>- British Tribunal Sends Back to Indian Court It London.—A seven-year lawsuit over the guardianship of a Hindu Idol was among the curious suits brought be­ fore the judicial committee of the privy council (the final Supreme Court of Appeal of the British em­ pire) and the committee, after weigh­ ing the evidence with due regard to Indian susceptibilities and the innate love of the Oriental for lengthy and Involved judgments, succeeded In “passing the buck” rather neatly. In a word, the tribunal ordered that the suit be re-tried In India and that the Idol be legally represented by “a disinterested next friend, • appointed by the Indian court," who should en­ deavor to set forth the viewpoint of the Idol itself. Large Sums Spent Large sums of money have already been expended In the legal Sght for the idol, which arose from the pro­ visions of the will of a wealthy Cal­ cutta merchant. Mutty Lall BfulUck, who died 80 years ago. Mutty had created three family gods: a male god —SrI Sri.Budha Shamsunderji; a fe­ male god (or consort)—Sri Srl Rad- barant, and a “Salgram Slla” (or holy stone)—Srt Srl Raj Rajiswar. These he bequeathed to his adopted son, who later placed them in a shrine.. When the legatee died the family gods Were placed in the charge of his three sons,, each of whom was .to be “Shebalt,” or trustee, for one ye'ar, In succession. The arrangement worked smoothly until the death of the eldest son, whose trusteeship became vested In his heir. Then the second son, Pra- matha Nath Mulllck, built himself a magnificent new mansion and shrine and, during his', term' of trusteeship, he. insisted on removing the male god to a shrine In his own garden. . This action was bitterly resented by his brother and' nephew, 'who con­ tended that it was contrary to . his grandfather’s deed of dedication, The -first Indian court to which' the case was taken decided after a . lengthy hearing that Pramatha MulUck was entitled to remove the god to his own sbrlne during the term of trusteeship, so long as be treated It with propet reverence and duly returned it to Its original shrine at the completion of his ‘‘term of office.” The court Dt appeal, however, reversed this Judg- ment and laid down that the male and female gods might not be parted. They must be maintained In their original shrine. Not satisfied, Pramatha Muiltck brought the suit through various stages to London, where ,the final judg­ ment of “The BriUsh Raj” was sought. A great dossier of evidence, text books and authorities on the tangled. ro­ mance of Indian mythology and Idol worship was-placed before the judi­ cial committee of the privy council which has just handed down its de­ cision, in language'flowery enough and sufficiently involved to delight the lawsuit-loving Hindu. British Wisdom. Lord Shaw, of'Dunfermline, famous Scottish Juiist delivering judgment on behalf of the privy council, said that it would be'better In the Inter­ ests of all concerned that the members of the family should be Joined <and a scheme: formulated to regulate the worship of the idols. He accordingly ordered that the two previous deci­ sions be set fjside and' the suit re­ ferred back to the High court at .Fort William, Bengal, for a new. thal Ir which “the idol should appear by a disinterested next friend appointed by the Indian court.” Each party to pay its own costs In the two actions In the Indian courts and the. costs In­ curred before the privy council. The decision will doubtless be hailed as incontestable proof of the wisdom and justice of the privy council by millions of Hindus, who have been following the progress of the sult-wlth the utmost anxiety, as affecting their rights In the matter of idol worship. ' Snake-Bite Toll Heavy New York—In the last three years more than 400 people have died In the United States from the effects of spake bites, according to estimates compiled from a survey by Raymond L. Dltmarg1 curator of reptUea at tha New York Zoological' park In tha Bronx. Ot t h y the greater numbei hav« been bitten In, our Soathen A ' ■. ' *' . ' Pilot of White Sox and His Aid Bere are shown Eddie Collins, manager of the Chicago'White Sox, with his old college coach Lauder, who taught Eddie Ijow to play t^eg ran d 0Id same When Collins was named manager of the White Sox the first thing he did >vas to sign up Lauder as his assistant Between them they hope to make the Chicago team a real contender. * ^ H a r d H ittin g F ie ld e r .11 ■ Al Simmons, center fielder of the PhiitiBelphia Americans, who is more than doing his share in the phenom­ enal playing of his club. Connie .Mack has one of the- hargest-hitting outfield­ ers in. Al, who makes it a practice of hitting every time be comes to bat,\if possible In a recent game with the Yankees he got four hits in five times at- bat, driving In four runs during .the game. VDIAMDNDVAPIEK-UPBA Chief Xoungblood seems to be the only promising pitcher for Knoxville.,, Manager Jack Hendricks of the Reds has 'announced the signing of Jack Coffey as scout for the team. :• * * Curtis Fullerton, Boston Red Sox pitcher, has been released to the S t Paul club of the American association. * * * Outfielder Shields of the Kansas City Blues is beWg given a trial by In­ dependence.* * * Najo of Okmulgee is showing a clean pair of heels to the base stealers of the circuit.• * * Mooa Ducote, the veteran Southern league catcher,, has been signed by Charlotte.» *- • Umpires Byer1S and -McBride have ,been released by the. International league. ' - * « * Ralph Miller, substitute infielder of, the Washington Senators, who figured in the 1924 world series, has.joined New Haven of tWe Eastern, league. • * * Manager Zinn Beck of the Greenville Spinners has loaned the Spartans a shortstop.- He is Shorty Seremba, a mighty clever little infielder. * * * President L. J. Wylie of the Three-I league hopes to find all of the teams in the league wearing .identification numbers before long. Vernon has .signed Beale Becker, vet­ eran outfielder, who was with Seattle late in Oie 1924 season. He was a free agent • *y •, Dee Walsh, former San Francisco utility man, has rounded into shafce with Portland and Is filling In both as outfielder and infielder. Bcaumonf has sold .Wesley Brad­ shaw, utility infielder. an<l Hodge Kin- faeat to Monroe of the Cotton States league., * * * Shreveport has obtained Rabbit Ben­ ton, shortstop and utiiifcy man, from Portland of the Paclsic Coast leagueop purchase. •. * * * i Walter Johnson may be nearing the end of his pitching career, but he still Is making A. L. batsmen take the lone walk.to the shade «f the bench.- Frank. Kebla,' star right-hand pitcher nlne^f P 1nit6M Stat®8 Ar“ y School Ia^e' bas slglIed a ex­tract with the Baltimore InJernation- P e n n a n tf o rM a c k - Hitting is the predominant feature of the American league [ i pennant race this year. With the record for home runs In a season having'the appearance of having been broken, thie record for team hitting also appears* likely to fall. If hitting can win a pennant; then fans may as well concede tlie American league pennant to Philadelphia. Every man on the team is a hitter, and at least five are home-run hitters. It Is hitting that-has put Philadelphia In the lead of the league, and Lt is hitting, if anything, that will keep her there. O rig in o f B a s e b a ll I s T r a c e d B a c k to E n g la n d The origin of the game of baseball is somewhat obscure, although authori­ ties are strongly of the opinion that it is a development of the old Eng­ lish game of rounders. The first ap­ pearance of any game similar to base­ ball In this country was in thie early Nineteenth century. A game known as “One Old Cat” was popular with schoolboys In the North Atlantic states. It was played by three boys, each fielding and batting In turn, runs being scored by batsman running to the single base and back’ again with­ out being cried “out.” There were also modifications of this game wdtb four, six and eifrfit players. As Ine game developed It became known as townball, and in 1833 the Olympic Town Ball club was organized in-Phil­ adelphia. The first actual matches be­ tween organized baseball, dubs took place about 1840 and in the neighbor­ hood of New York. It, was In 1843 that the Washington baseball club was organized, but not until two years later were the first regular rules d raw np by the Knickerbocker Baseball club. The first National association was or­ ganized In 1858, and the first entirely professional baseball club, the Cincin­ nati Red Stockings, was organized ten years later. G ra n d P r ix d e P a r is W o r th M o re T h a n $ 8 0 ,0 0 0 The .Grand Prix de Paris, richest racing stake in the world, will be run this year at the Longchamp course 'in Paris on June 28. While there .is yet no official statement relative to the value of the stake this year, ex­ perts are convinced that It will be worth more than the $80,000 of last year, although there Is very small like­ lihood of its reaching, within the next few years,-Its 1923 value of $b.06,000. The classic Is one of the best In all Europe, and«while It is by far the old­ est stake In the world, having beei Inaugurated in 1863, It is one of the most popular and interesting. S k ip p e r a t W illia m s - ESiCBlCIti Alex - Clement, caj>tain - and Trtar of the Williams college „« t^am. Clement,- twice struck oat Ruth In an exhibition game IaBt mer In which aa all-collegian beat the former world’s champion tees. 3 to 2. pitching baseball B aberf sum- team Yan- - E v e re tt S c o tt O ut f ' : The run of consecutive I ,played by Everett Scott, veteran I shortstop of the Yankees, was o broken on May 5, when he fUiiej § to appear in the place he hart S filled for 1,307 ^ straight chain I pionship games. He Iteran Ilts 6 great record-breaking run j,me J 20, 1916, when a member tl)e 5 ,Boston Red Sox. The Iimcage. I ment announced to tlie Jlreffl 5 that Scott’s legs were Minin- S him, and for that reason i,e dij § not take his place in (he Iiteup § However, this was branded' as # official hokum when Scott. him. o self, said he was In L-IlaJle t0 | play and declared that he had S just begun- to hit. “I didn’t Inin4 g the breaking of my streak if |t § was for the good of the toam B but I felt as though I v.-as just 5 beginning to be as Sr„,(] as 5 ever,” Scott said. 'TH ilCver sit S on the bench.” In sonio circles P it was intimated that s»rae 0f S tbe veteran pitchers liad kicked * about the ground Scott was cov- ? ering. 5 C A D D Y S IG N IS BIG H E L P T C GOLFDOM S m a ll S lip o f P ap er Has D o n e M u c h to B etter Con­ d itio n s o f G am e. A slip of paper 4 by C inches, rticii has been placed about various golf cliibs of St. Louis, is said to hare done more for the betterment of the clubs' and of the sport itself than an; other one thing, declared Paul G. Palmer, president of Forest Park Golf club. All the little sign says is: “Treat Your Caddy As You Would Your Own Boy.” Last summer Paul H. Miller, exec­ utive secretary of Big Brothers' aj. sociation, co-operating with the heads of the various St. Louis golf clubs, had the cards printed and put about In the locker rooms and at otto places In the clubhouses. The matter rested there until Palmer, of the For­ est Park club',' and others, asked for new signs for this season. When asked the reason for the re­ quest, ‘Palmer said that be felt that lie posters, which reminded golfers of their influence on their own caddies had done as much for the betterment of conditions In general at the Forest Park links as any other one Ogencj. “There is no better way to influ­ ence a boy directly than in some sort of sport,” Palmer said, ‘‘and the sigh simply serves as a reminder to the men that fellows who caddy for them are watching them all the "hlle, Ii many cases secretly imitating them, not only In the way in which they pin; the game, but In their attitude towd other things. “It seems to me that the caddj- master himself determines in a large way the kind of golf club one has. It Is hard' to see that unless you are very familiar with the operation of the dub, but it Is true, nevertheless.' Palmer said that he felt that a de­ crease In the amount of “old-fashioarf blue profanity” was In a large mens- use due to the reminders that the Bi? Brpthers had put up in the dubhoiisss m IBLEgs iJil All seats in Connie Mack’s w structed ball park are covered. * * . * Quincy, 111., wants to hold the C tral state rowing regatta this year.* * * Chicago may employ an official si* j teur athletic sports director. * * * I Atlanta Athletic club has Plals ® j a new $1,000,000 clubhouse. --^University of Chicago —- , „ > will seat 8,000 fans at bastei _ games. It will include areas for> ball and baseball as well as a W running- track. • * * * jtel'Robert L. Cannefax retained *; world’s three-cushion chawP • I when heNdefeated Charles EHis i I first two games of their series at New York.* » * It costs University of i; I dents less than 35 cents a see their athletic teams in Tickets for all home contests * eluded in the annual tuition * * * ,£■ In the New Tork there are something like devotees, only twenty-six Sfe q i5 for the National Amateur ship. -.J. 0 p m F IN D W E E D IE O F “ G R J Presence of the com| as shepherd’s purse pastoris) in' pasture responsible for a pec the eggs known to td “gras? egg,” “alfalfa,’! investigations by Prcf of the Kansas State lege poultry departmoij fessor Pa.vne’s accouo gations is contained ini “Grass eggs" were I alent on the market fessor Payne observe! -nation could be offer! flock owners. In less than a weel| were given free rang In the spring, eggs fri by Professor Payne atj oped dark yolks so that they could not bl fessor Payne discover^ were eating freel.v of which grew in profiisiJ Several flocks of cliiclj a large percentage off sale had dark or o!i| were located tliroiig shipper. These flocks, and. it-was found tlinf Ing the same weed. Experiments then nt the college poultry I of hens that had not! feed in any .form months was placed oi| and another pen on • Ing shepherd’s purse. "The eggs from thd had shepherd’s pursel gan to show dark yol| while yolks from the hens developed a darf not, within two weel olive color,” Professol “Subsequent experimi ducted in which threl that had not receivetf any form for five moq the test were used, and three were ghen daily of fresh alfalfj (Thlapsi arvense), purse respectively, the poultry farm sprouted oats daily, the alfalfa and sproute tinued normal, but olij were found in both and shepherd’s purse I Professor Payne suj ventive methods—eithe confined until there green feed available, with wheat or rye pastl oats throughout the will have no desire to "fill particular weeds. U s e f o r T ra J A trap nest so arranged that af ters it she is confil leS !d the attenIWhen possible it I to trap-test flie la| following reasons: 1. To tame the b| tending toward InI production. f 2. To furnish del edge concerning tr its of individuals. , 3. To furnish tha factory basis for ntl breeding. ■ 4. To eliminate tlJ tive hen. 5. To add mecn cision to judgment] ence In developing taining the utility I p or further infoi Plans showing the f 01 a trap nest, sem Partment of Agr Washington, for Fj letln 682, “A SImpl,1 The city of Detroit was sented a gift of $43,000 CToracS B-I golf course by Mr. and Mrs. tj | Rackham, and It Is expected -will be made for the I public links Champifiri-^P' * * • The United States »U1 * * « ^ 1 three entries to . of speedboat races In , Harmsworth trophy, emb tW PtI world’s championship, « & mile course on the Detroit^ • * * Second call on the I -Sonde, premier Amer ^aiM tag the 1925 racing ^ 1 chased by William Ze’B 1^cr. turfman and real est_r„ price waa &ven as Jlv w P o u l t r y , ] * lDS in the laying yards need a lot ot » • *1 Brooders permit thJ molt br«ilers- whlcfI] ost Profitable phases Slo^ t! chickB are haij 0w ln maturing, s easy p ^ to dlse * roost In many wd r* * * ; f nun?! th,e brootjM- In < wen 8 in the OhickB i and start it sonI be* Jhicks enter It- % I fresh8n? aDd dry’ anH [ sh' c,ean location. [ [. J t 0sailds off* theT “start” duri ] m brooding season. I ^ h i rVhe chi*cks'lI CIasrffi hed- T hisfisel I s C ficatio**- »0 a J K b S * and teeH I ^1IV asZ 0ullg chlclII fore omt, eet theirI Tfc /''V < t - *1 e t t S c o t t O u t of consecutive games K verett Scott, veteran of tlie Tankees, was May 5, w hen he failed in the place he had 1.307's tra ig h t cham- am es. H e began his n l breaking run .Iune & alien a m em ber of ihe Cd Sox. The mauage- iouiiced to the press :t’s legs w ere paining for th a t reason lie did Iiis place in the lineup, this w as branded as turn w hen Scott, him- .til he w as in shape to declared that he had to hit. "I didn't mind a n ; of my streak if it the good of the team S t as though I was just S : to he as good as v ott said. “I'll never sit S encli.” In some circles § nfim ated th a t some of S an pitchers had kicked I ground Scott was Co ■ 2 0 k r f I, F S I G N I S B IG ;l p t o g o l f d o m S lip o f P a p e r H as ilu c h t o B e tte r C o n -. tio n s o f G a m e . paper 4 by 6 inches, which placed about various golt St. Louis, is said to have > for th e betterm ent of the I of the sport itself than any thing, declared Paul G. I resident of Forest Park Golf I the little sign says is: our Caddy As You Would 3 Boy.” ; [turner P aul H . Miller, dec­ retory of Big Brothers' as- co-operating w ith the heads arious St. Louis golf clubs, f /ird s printed and put about A[ >cker room s and at other the clubhouses. The matter ere until Palm er, of the For- clulv and others, asked for I for this season. a«ked the reason for tne re- tim er said that he felt .hut I -s which rem inded golfers ot ‘ luence on their own caddies, , as m uch for the betterment ions in general at the Foiest i--« as any other one agency. is no b etter way to influ- ov directly than in some sort " P alm er said, “and the sigh -erves as a rem inder to the t fellow s who caddy for them clung them all the while, In uses secretly Imitating them, in the w ay in which they play e but in th eir attitude toward eems to m e that the caddy- him self determ ines in a large kind of golf club one has. to see th a t unless you are S iim ilinr w ith the operation «f • b but it is true, nevertheless. er said th a t he felt that a de- ir the am ount of “old-fashione ! V an ity " w as In a Urge meat* to the rem inders that the Bk had p u t up in the clubhouses. * 0Ilpr': W ■ ^ jgfc lie Mack's reco* tre covered. * t o h o l d t h e Cea- ; a t t a t h i s y e a r- oy an official alM' d i r e c t o r . - m b h a s p l u s {ot b h o u s e . Ihicago fleWWJJ s at baSfo f«»‘-ode areas for 3 well as a modem ushion, F e Us & 116 !rslty 0ft f a ’gameSti» 35 cents a S ^ die teams m ^ „. home conte nnual tultio * * * whcrs Y ork ^istI 001OOO f®1' thing Hhe ' ualified -etroU was re c e n t!^ >£ $43’? ^ r= HoUce U Mr. and Mr- 8 gW it is eipecJnog natl0 for the I0- iampioBSbp' rf sV " . ’ Ihe*£&rSs a® Otfbef' . as S ^ 500, FARM DOLt k t FIN D W E E D I S C A U S E *\ O F “ G R A S S E G G S ” T-miince of the common weed know n - iiir-iilierd's purse ..(Capsella bursa- r «) in’ pasture of laying hens fa , hie for a peculiar condition in ,e ergs known to the egg buyer as -I-T--S egg.” “alfalfa,” or “green rot,” it ions by Prof. L. F. Payne r the Kansas State A gricultural col- ! Iiry departm ent indicate. 'P ro- ir. ope Payne's account Sbf the investi- . Iis is contained in Poultry Science, '[inss eggs” were especially prev- I ! on the m arket last spring, Pro- Oiii- Payne observed, but no expla- Iiii1 could be offered by buyers or owners. . ' • ' n less than a week after the hens I., given free ra n g e 'In the garden iiie spring, eggs from th e ’flock kept Pinfessor Payne at his home (level-- I dark yolks so strong in flavor they could not be relished. Pro- r Payne discovered th at the birds ning freely of shepherd's purse, I i new in profusion in the garden. Severn! flocks of chickens from which 0 in i ce percentage of eggs oifered for e I I dark or olive-colored yolks were located through a M anhattan 1 I r These flocks w ere exam ined, i,n,] it was found that they w ere eat- iTii- the same weed. Experiments then w ere instituted, -it the college poultry farm . One pen of hens that had not received green feed In any form the previous five months was placed on w heat pasture and another pen on pasture contain­ ing shepherd’s purse. ‘‘The eggs from the hens th at had had shepherd’s purse ad libitum be­ gan to show dark yolks In four days, while yolks from the w heat pasture hens developed a dark ecicr, but did not, within two weeks, develop the olive color,” Professor Payne w rote ‘‘Subsequent experim ents w ere con­ ducted In which three pens of hens that had not received green feed' in any form for five m onths previous to the test were used. Pens one, two, and three were given a liberal supply daily of fresh alfalfa, penny cress, ITlilnnsi arvense), and shepherd’s purse respectively. O tlier hens on tne poultry farm w ere fed green snrouteu oats daily. The yolks from tne aitaifa and sprouted oats pens con­ tinued normal, but olive-colored yolks were found in both the penny cress ano snepherd’s p u rse . pens.” Frotessor Payne suggests tw o pre­ ventive methods—either keep the hens confined until there is a variety of green feed available! or supply them with wheat or rye pasture or sprouted oats throughout the w inter so they will have no desire to “fill up” on these particular weeds. U se fo r T r a p N e s ts A trap nest Is a laying nest so arranged that after a hen en­ ters It she is confined until re­ leased by the attendant. When possible it is advisable to trap-test the layers for the following reasons: 1. To tam e the birds, thereby tending toward increased egg production. 2. To fum ish definite knowl­ edge concerning traits and hab­ its of individuals. 3. To furnish the only satis­ factory basis for utility .or other breeding. 4. To eliminate the nonproduc­ tive hen. 5. To add m echanical pre­ cision to judgment and experi­ ence in developing and m ain­ taining the utility of a flock. For further inform ation and plans showing the construction °f a trap nest, send to the De- partment of A griculture at Washington, fo? Farm ers’ Bul­ letin 682, “A Simple T rap Nest.” P o u l t r y / H i n t s Hens in the laying bouses and bare yards need a lot of green feed. * • * '* Brooders permit the production of C!>rly broilers, which is one of tha most profitable phases of the industry. * * • Late chicks are hard Jp raise and “ ow In maturing. Such chicks are ns*v IlreJ' to diseases, and robbers of le 100St In many ways! • e 4 Het the brooder In condition before Puttmg in the chicks. D isinfect it and start it somb • tim e before 6 chicks enter it. The bouse m ust and dry, and preferably on itesh, clean location. • * • - J ^ ^ n d s of worthless producers >?e!r “start” during the hatching “no brooding season. * * .• »r»^f"mart tlle chiefeS soon a fter they (,|... .^tctled- This fixes their age and Sha rr, ° ° a neat Job w ith a fo°t bones'*1 ^ keep aw ay from Lhe * * * Orv 'V n - young chicks a chance to fore I Snd get their ‘,Eea ie8s” be­ ans h them int0 the brooder, tnakiv!, c^reful »ot to chill them w hile 111S ihe transfer. THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. KtTCH < © . 1 9 2 6 , W e s t e r n N e w s p a p e r U n i o n . ) I s n ' t i t f i n e w h e n t h e d a y i s d o n a , A n d t h e p e t t y b a t t l e s a r e l o s t o r w o n , W h e n t h e g o l d i s m a d e a n d t h e I n k i s d r i o d . / T o q u i t t h e s t r u g g l e a n d t u r n a s i d e Io s p e n d a n h o u r w i t h y o u r b o y I n p l a y A n d l e t h i m , r a c e a l l o f y o u r c a r e s a w a y ? — E d g a r G u e s t FOOD FOR TWO Almost all housekeepers commence their housekeeping just for two, As m ost standard recipes are given for fam ilies of five or six, it is convenient to have'a few reliable small recipes which will serve for two. Tlie following are som e: Popovers.—This recipe m akes half a dozen and there will never be any leftovers, if tli/y are well- baked. Popover cups are necessary—deep granite cups are best. B eat one egg until light,-add one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, then bent in one cupful of milk, then one cupful of flour; beat well. Pour info well-but­ tered popover cups and place in a hot oven for the first fifteen m inutes; then after the popovers have popped well reduce and finish baking three-quarters of .an hour. Baking pow der Biscuit.—Take one cupful of flour, two teaipoonfuls of baking powder, one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, one tablespoonful of fat, and one-third of a cupful of milk. Sift the dry ingredients, cut in the fat, and add the milk. D rop by rounding tenspoon- fuis in a baking pan. Bake in a hot oven. This recipe m akes eight biscuits. Potato Sour.—Scald a cupful of milk w ith a slice of onion; remove the onion and add one-fourth of' a cupful of m ashed potato, salt, pepper and minced •parlsey. Let come to the boiling point, add a teaspoonful of butter and sprin­ kle the parsley over the soup as it is served. Chopped chives m ake a nice garnish and flavor, if desired. Norwegian Pudding.— Soak one cup­ ful of sago-or use the m inute tapioca. Boil tw o cupfuls of gooseberries In two cupfuls of w ater, add sugar to taste. W hen the fruit is soft, rub through a sieve and return to the saucepan w ith the Sago. Cook until th e sago Is clear. Mold, and when set, serve w ith plain or w hipped cream: Tapioca baked w ith apples, pine­ apples, pears or peaches and served when cold w ith cream and sugar makes a m ost dainty dessert. F ruity D essert Dishes. F ru it com binations are alw ays de­ lightful and it is a good way tb use a sm all quantity of fruit. A few slices of pineapple, a ba­ nana or two and an apple w ith a bit of chopped celery m akes a m ost tasty salad, served with a good salad dressing, or w ith, a sweet dress­ ing, m akes a nice dessert. . A pricot W hip.—Take two cupfuls of apricots, one-half cupful of sugar, one teaspoonful of lemon juice, the' w hites of tw o eggs. If the fruit is fresh, rub through a sieve; if dried, cook and put through a sftve, adding the sugar and letting them stand to season. Fold in the egg w hites, beaten stiff. B ake in a buttered dish In a slow oven for 20 m inutes. Serve with cream or a soft custard, garnished with cubes of bright Jelly. Delmonico Special.— Select six or­ anges of medium size. Cut a slice from the end of each and carefully remove the pulp. M ix the pulp w ith one-half cupful each of dates and walnut meats coarsely chopped and one-half cupful of coconut. BefilI the shells. B eat an egg w hite-until stiff, add one-fourth of a cupful of sugar and place a m arsh­ mallow on top of each. Brown In the oven until a golden brown; serve at once. , a A pricot Ice.— Soak four cupfuls of dried apricots in four cupfuls of w ater until soft ; cook until tender. Press through a potato ricer to remove the skins, add one-half cupful of sugar to the pulp and the w ater in which they w ere soaked, and cook ten min­ utes. Bem ove from the fire, cool, add the juice of Jhree lemons and freeze. W hen partly frozen add the stiffly beaten w hites of three eggs and finish freezing. F ruit Ice Cream.—T ake a quart of crashed, strained berries, adding a ta­ blespoonful of lemon juice, sweeten to taste and add a quart of thin cream. Freeze as. usual. L ater in the season w hen peaches are ripe (or canned peaches m ay be used) this m akes a de­ licious dessert.- B ananas, w ith the Juice of oranges and lemon, the 'ba­ nanas put through a sieve, is another .well-liked combination. Pim ento Cream.—M easure and com­ bine tw o cupfuls each of hot milk and veal o r chicken stock. Place In a dou­ ble boiler and'heat. Cream four table­ spoonfuls of bu tter and add three of flour m ix well w ith two tablespoonfuls of cold m ilk and add to the m ixture In the double boiler. T ake one-half a can of pim entoes, press through a sieve, or notato ricer, add one teaspoonful of 'g rated onion, a speck of cayenne, one- half teaspoonful of salt, pepper and tobasco sauce t'o taste. Mix well and serve w ith a bit of w hipped cream on top of each serving. Accompany with toast strips on which grated cheese has been melted. ' l l t U i u . T i ' W i x t f i . r'ettV" I hi: a t a r e m a d e 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O o o o o o o o o o o o b o o o o eo o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Q o o o o o o o o o o o S ' '-1L F & OW th at Interior decorators are sending people into the byways of all the older parts of the country In quest of early A m erican home furnish­ ings, a num ber of the old arts are be­ ing revived. The pieced quilt,-hooked rugs, colonial carpets and fine needle- craft, in personal belongings are nq£ only revived, but they are fashionable. The possessor of a patchwork quilt, w ith Intricate quilting, points with pride to this exam ple of early Ameri­ can art. ..Club women “come and bring their knitting” 'a n d industriously ply their needles while discussing many subjects, serious and otherwise. They find knitting conducive to thought and soothing to the nerves. D ecorators are exhibiting rooms charm ingly furnished, as in the early days of our country, w ith homemade furnishings. The old a rt of hooking prom ises to outstrip the handsom e efforts of our grandm others’ day. A heavy yam Is used for the new hooked rugs and a special needle has been Invented to m ake the w ork rapid and easy. Bur­ lap makes the foundation of the rug and may be secured ready-stam ped In are alw ays “among those present” In any afternoon g athering. of fashion­ ables and this sum m er they are going to. be even more conspicuous and beau­ tiful than they have been. Already style creators are prom oting the use of sheer fabrics for m idsummer ensem­ bles. Chiffon, georgette, voile and silk that is light as a feather, contribute beauty and prom ise comfort for even sultry afternoons, and the chiffon coat, in black, Is worn over dresses of print­ ed silk as well as over those of crepe, georgette or chiffon. In the ensemble pictured the coat has a wide double border of fur a t the bottom and on the sleeves. In this particular it is not representative of chiffon coats In gen­ e ra l They are usually finished w ith a ruching of ribbon, a fringe ot, monkey fur, wide tucks or with fanciful bor­ ders m ade of the chiffon, as petal trim ­ mings or ruchlngs. In other particu­ lars the coat is an ideal interpretation ot the mode. The most popular version of the en­ semble suit for mid-summer consists of a frpck of printed silk, w ith black ghiffon introduced In bands, borders or other trimmings, w orn under a long, .full coat of black chiffon. Or the frock 'ls of printed chiffon, showing a large I 52!«!.W.„6SSa EN SEM BLE FO R M IDSUM M ER designs Cf several kinds, including those shown In the photograph. B ut re ­ sourceful women often m ake their Own designs or copy some of the fam ous old ones. The burlap is stretched tight- Iy on R fram e and the outline of the design hooked In. As each rqw of hook­ ing is finished the loops are'cut. W hen tbe.*entlre design has' been hooked the background Is put In. Whmi finished the back of the rug Is shellacked and lined. Color combinations can be ar­ ranged, to suit any color schem e and very handsom e rugs provided for the home a t a sm all,.outlay. - W ith' all their excuraionlng Into busi­ ness and professions, the instinct of home-making rem ains unchanged In m ost women. The great m ajority of them are m ore interested In. beautify­ ing their homes than anything else— except .their children and themselves. T he com fortable and sm art ensem­ ble suits, introduced for spring, are things of beauty and m ight prove a joy all summer, If it w ere Iioti that their coats w ill be too w arm when hot w eather comes. B ut ensembles w ill M d he banished on th a t account—they floral pattern on a black ground, or a' plain chiffon adorned w ith rich em­ broidery in high colors. In the-costum e pictured the large boutonniere and long strand of pearls reflect the latest fan­ cies In accessories. As a rule larger hats are worn with these form al cos tum es. ‘ Coats of natural cashmere, very -light and cool, are also shown over.brightly colored silk crepe frocks and coats of blond taffeta like those of. cashm ere will serve for w ear with m any'frocks. W hen good sense and economy sug­ gest th at an ensemble coat shall serve for use w ith m ore than one frock, it is best to choose it In a color that will harm onize w ith all other colors BlaCk is a perennial favorite, but beau­ tiful shades o f'ta n , beige, gray or. brown w ill serve as well and are more fascinatingK’an d 'th e w arm sand shades are ifine w ith nearly all colors. Tucks play an im portant p art In sheer en­ semble- suits and-are used in conjuno- tion - w ith . open-work. em broideries In self-color - or drawn work and hem­ stitching. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. 1 9 2 6 . W e s t e r n N e w i D a p a r C T p l Q n k U se o f O il E n o rm tia s In 1924 the w orld production of oil am ounted to more than 1,000,000,000 barrels, the nearest exact figure be­ ing 1,013,139,000 barrels. In five years the w orld output has nearly doubled. U nited States produced 714,000,000 of the total num ber of barrels .and Mexi­ co w as second w ith 139,000,000 barrels, R ussia being third with 45,162,000 bar­ rels. Persia, Dutch E ast .Indies and Rum ania follow in order with Vene­ zuela showing great strides in produc­ tion also. The C uticura Toilet Trio. H aving cleared your skin keep it clear by m aking C nticura your everyday toilet preparations. T he Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointm ent to soothe and heal, the Talcum to pow der and per­ fume. No toilet table is complete w ithout them.—A dvertisem ent. „ Im p o r ta n t P o in t “The w ater is fine,” said lie. “Let’s go in.” N othing loath, she arose, and they drew ifear the water! “By tlie way,” said lie, pausing, “how far-can you swim?” The fair maiden looked shyly downward and blushed faintly. \“How far,” she inquired softly, “do you like to have girls swim before you rescue them ?” - WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousands of women have kidney and Jbladder trouble and-'never suspect it. Women’s complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other or­ gans to become diseased. Fain in the back, headache, loss of am­ bition, nervousness^ are often times symp­ toms of kidney trouble. Don’t delay starting treatment. . Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a physician’s pre­ scription, obtained a t any drug Storer may be just the remedy needed to over­ come such conditions. Get a medium . or large size bottle immediately from any drug store. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a Bample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. R o c k y M o u n ta in P e a k M ount Massive, which is 14,424 feet high, is the loftiest peak of the Bocky m ountains in the lim its of the United States. M ount Brown, thought a t one tim e to be higher, has proved to be lower. CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! «111 NI*. FREEZONiI 5 Doesn’t h urt one bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching com , instant­ ly th a t com stops hurting, then short­ ly you lift it right off w ith fingers. Tour druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone” fo r a few cents, sufficient to rem ove every hard com , soft com , or corn betw een the toes, and the foot cblluses, w ithout soreness o r irritation. S ta n d in g A lo n e ' “My boy stood alone at one year.” “Mine can’t do it at twenty."— Louisville C ourier-Joum al. For 78 Y ears people have used Hanford’s Balsam , of Myrrh for Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Sores, Mos­ quito Bites, Bee Stings, etc. 3 sizes.—Adv. If a m an speaks and acts as his conscience dictates he is called a crank. A s i n g l e d o s e * o f D r . P e e r y ' a “ D e a d S h o t ” w i l l e x p e l W o r m s o r T a p e w o r m . N o s e c o n d d o s e r e q u i r e d . . 3 7 2 P e a r l S t . , N . T . A d v . / :—Up-to-date hairdressers have the new est kinks a t their fingers’ ends. SUFFERED . TWD YEARS Finally Relieved by Taking . Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege­ table Compound, Says Mrs. Anderson | Rangeley, Maine. — “ Lydia R Pink­ ham’s Vegetable Compound helped me greatly for bearing- idown pains in the sides and back, head­ aches and tired feel­ ings. I suffered for tw o years and it seemed as though I could not get my work done from one daytothenext. Af­ ter reading letters fiom others who had taken the Vegetable Compound Idecided to try it and now I can do all kinds of work, sewing, washing, ironing and sweeping. I live on a farm and have five m the family so am busy most of the time. I recommend the Vegetable Compound ‘to my friends and hope my letter will help some one to take your' medicine.”—Mrs. Walter E. Ander ­ son , Box 270, Rangeley, Marne. Over 200,000 women have so far replied to our question, “ Have you received benefit from taking Lydia R Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound?” 98 out of every 100 of the replies say, “ yes,” and because the Vegetable Compound has been helping other wo­ men it ‘shquld help yon. For sale by druggists everywhere. C H E S E B R O U O H M F G . C O , C O N 3 ‘D . 2 7 S a w S i . N e w Y m kV aselin e B f G U X - P A X O F r - PETROLEUM JEaY N othing is really beautiful but truth, and truth alone is lovely.—Bol- leau. Sure ReliefFOR INDIGESTION BtVV-KHS INDIGESTION B e ll- a n s Hot water X ® I SureReIief B ell-a n s 25* AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Kill All Flies!THEY SPBEAD_ _ _ _____DISEASE P l i c e d e n y w b e r e , D A I S Y F L Y K I L L E R a t t r a c t s n o d U I s a l l m e t . ^ N e a t . C l e a n t o r n a m e n t a l , c o n v e n i e n t s n d--------------- .cheap. Lsstsallses-' s o n . I f t a d e o f m e t a l , r c a n ' t s p i l l o r t i p o v e r ; w i l l n o t s o i l o r i n j u r e m y t h l n g . G a a r s n t e e i L D A I S Y F L Y K I L L E B s t y o o r d e a l e r o r 6 b y E X P R E S S , n r e p s i d . J 1 - 2 S .HABOLD SOMEBS. IGO De Kelb Ave.. Brooklyn, N-1» P O R T O - W C O A N D B I G B T B M J E R S E Y B W E B T P O T A T O P L A N T S $ 2 - 2 5 , 1 , 0 0 0 ; $ 2 I n 1 0 , 0 0 0 l o t s . S p e c i a l p r i c e s t o a g e n t s . D R . L A M B E R T , D E N T O N , G A . L a d l e s , G e t 44 J I f f y B a k e r 44- B a k e e d e l i c i o u scorn bread sticks, lady fingers, finger rolls. B r o w n s a l l a r o u n d , n e v e r s t i c k s . H e a v y c a s t i r o n , l a s t s f o r e v e T . • S e n t p r e p a i d l o r $ 1 . 4 0 * A P P L E G A T E , 1 3 1 S . 9 t h S t . , N e w c a s t l e , I n d . ROILS There’s quick, positive, relief inCARBOILoeneitous s o t box . M e S D r u g j l x t e - T - M o n w b x c k C a x r a n U e W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 24-1925. M any a m an who has thought him ­ self' wise has been declared otherwise by a jury. iiaren M O T H E R :- Fletcher's Castoria Is especially pre­ pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children' all ages o f Constipation, Flatulency, W ind C d ic ‘and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stom adi and Bowels, aids the assimilation o f Food; giving natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always lode for the signature of iwarvx Abtolutciy fjbrmless-No Ojnate^ Rqrnciaiis everywhere recommend tU 19 m ;ii n: ■.'V-■ .I/ T H E D A V lE R E PO R T ). M O C K S V IL L E , N . G. m I' I t • I Saving Qat Crop From Rust Enemy' M u c h P r o g r e s s H a s B e e n M a d e in D e v e lo p m e n t o f R e s is ta n t V a r ie tie s . (Prepared by the United Statea D epartm ent of' Agriculture. I The fight to save the oat crop from one of its most formidable enemies, black stem rust, is being waged from all possible augies known to science. Not only is’ the disease being elim inat­ ed by the campaign to destroy its al­ ternate host plant, the common bar­ berry, but It is also being rendered less destructive by the "arm oring” of the defendants through creating a natural resistance In varieties. The United States D epartm ent of Agriculture is allied with the various state experi­ m ent stations of the oat-producing areas In an effort to develop varieties of oats that are naturally immune from or highly resistant to the attacks of the disease. Two years’ efforts to single out varieties that are highly re­ sistant and to breed from them other varieties that will retain this quality along with other desirable characters have shown rem arkable progress In the development of resistant varieties. Resistant Varieties. th is spring the United States De­ partm ent of A griculture sent to 51 co­ operating stations 10 varieties of oats for testing for resistance under local conditions and environm ent of these stations. Included in these 10 vari­ eties were two selections, Minnesota 686 and 687, developed by the Minne­ sota Agricultural experiment station from crosses between the W hite T ar­ tar (W hite Russian) and a Swedish importation, the Victory,, and Minota X W hite T artar, respectively, which have shown exceptional promise In their resisting power for the past few years at stations in that state. The Ricliland (Iowa 105) and the W hite T artar (W hite Bussian) varieties which during the tests at 24 stations during 1923 showed only a trace of infection, and less than I per cent in­ fection last year, are also included. A new variety, the H eigira Rustproof, introduced from South Africa a few years ago, showed equally good resist­ ance and will be further tried a t these 51 stations tills year. Fortify Against R ust The expansion from 24 stations co­ operating last year to a total of 51 stations In this country and several in Canada, m arks a renewed and deter­ mined effort to fortify the oat crop against the losses from blaek-stem rust by the development of resistant vari­ eties. A specialist will visit each sta­ tion during the growing season to cheek up on the results of the test. The susceptibility to Infection of the different varieties will be m easured by. comparing them with the infection on control varieties, those which are known to be defenseless against the disease and which will be sown In the testing plats along with the ones on trial. Better Poultry Is H e l p i n g A l l S t o c k E g g -L a y in g I s . a S e v e r e S tr a in o n Y o u n g P u lle t Pullets from the chick stage nearly up to the laying stage should not be fed too much com. The prim e pur­ pose in feeding should be to provide the constituents that build up bone and muscle. ,The pullet lacking these will not prove a good producer during the w inter months, and even though she does begin to lay well she will not be able to keep up the pace because the strain is too great for her unde­ veloped constitution. Egg-laying is a severe strain on the pullet, and unless a .good bodily foundation has been, built up and there is vigor and vitality, the fowl will not be able to stand the grind. It is when the pullet has reached a full, strong, m ature growth that the laying ration should be fed, and this should contain corn—plenty of It. The. corn will keep her In good flesh while she is laying and it is Im portant that she go to her roost at night w ith a stuffed crop. Growing mashes and scratch feeds with little com in them will build up a good fram.e, and a good range will induce vigor and vitality. Then the egg machine is ready to go Into action. No machine of any .kind can be . effi­ cient unless It is built to w ithstand a strain.. The egg machine Is 'no ex­ ception to this rule. -. S u d a n G ra ss E x c e lle n t a s ,S u b s titu te H a y C rop Sudan grass is a fine stemmed, leafy sorghum suitable as a substitute hay crop. Recent trials by several agricul­ tural stations dem onstrate that it is also suited to pasture purposes to be alternated with the .regular rotation pastures./ The crop recovers rapidly when eaten off and roots sufficiently well so that the plants are not pulled up when pastured. vCattle. relish it as a green feed and seem, to m aintain their milk, flow as well upon It as they, do when pasturing the regular , pas­ tures. ' ' ‘ . S e e d P o u lt iy Y a r d s One of the best ways of destroying the bacteria that bother poultry is to put the yards under cultivation. . In addition, the seeding Ofl the yards is very im portant from the standpoint of furnishing green stuff for the fowls. W here a considerable num ber of fowls is kept on a relatively small run it is well to arrange the lots so that they can be alternated. O ats is prob­ ably the most common, plant used forI-Kta P r o g r e ss o f “ B e tte r S ir e s - B e tte r S to c k ” C a m p a ig n . (Prepared by the United States D epartm ent of Agriculture.) ‘A total of 1,164,657 fowls—all breed* Ing stock—are listed in a recent re­ port Just Issued by the United States D epartm ent of Agriculture as under­ going improvement by the use of pure­ bred m ale birds. The fowls consist principally of chickens, but Include fcl- so turkeys, geese, ducks, guinea fowls and pigeons. The report deals w ith the progress of the “B etter Sires—B etter Stock" campaign conducted by various states and the departm ent for the im­ provement of domestic animals. It is noticeable, however, that fowls outnum ber other stock by more than two to one. Tbe num ber of cattle, horses, asses, swine, sheep and goat9 totals slightly more than half a mil­ lion as compared with considerably over a million fowls. ' D epartm ent live stock specialists point out the educational effect which improved poultry has on the breeding of larger anim als and cite exam ples In which a well-bred poultryvflock was the means of causing the betterm ent of other anim als on the sam e farms. Being prolific, poultry, respond very quickly to good breeding practices, In­ cluding fie use of high-quality pure­ bred males. The report shows also that the use of pure-bred sires in poul­ try breeding stock results in the own­ ership of more than ten times as many pure-bred fem ale blfds. The small investm ent necessary to establish breeding pens of well-bred fowls m akes'poulfry a popular class of live stock on which to begin a pro­ gram for improvement. HOUSE IS STILL ‘TO LET’ By ALICE TURNEfi CURTIS S e ttin g H ig h S ta n d a r d fo r D a ir y P r o d u c tio n Requirem ents for cows to be record­ ed In the Advanced Registry of the Hoistein-FrIesian breed are as follow s: F or yearly production: ' T w o y e a r s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3 1 8 . 0 p o u n d s o f f a t T h r e e y e a r s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 7 2 . 0 p o u n d s o f f a t F o u r y e a r s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 2 6 . 0 p o u n d s o f f a t P l v e y e a r s . . . . . . . . . 4 8 0 . 0 p o u n d s o f f a t In the 305-day division they are re­ quired to m ake 80 per cent of the re­ quirem ents for all-year test, w ith a calving requirem ent m aking It neces­ sary for them to drop a live calf w ith­ in 14 m onths after their previous calf was delivered. Judge your grades as well as your pure breds by this standard. If they are making these requirem ents they are the kind that will never m ake their ow ner Sorryf that he Is in the dairy business. If, they are not, then strive to improve by using good pure­ bred sires. Judicious, weeding with constructive breeding helps mightily tow ard suc­ ceeding.—H. B. Lascelles, Fieidm an for Colorado State D airy Commis­ sioner. R h u b a r b V e r y Im p o r ta n t a s P e r e n n ia l V e g e ta b le Rhubarb, or pieplant, is an Impor­ tant perennial vegetable. Like aspara­ gus, it produces a supply'early in the spring when fresh vegetables are In groat demand. New' leaves appear from early spring to midsummer, but the leafstalks produced early In .the season are most In demand and the harvest does not usually last more than eight weeks. A fter pulling has stopped, the leaves . are allowed to grow and supply the roots with food m aterial for the n e st year’s crop.. Rhubarb roots are hardy and require no w inter protection. The plant is capable of surviving both the extrem e heat of sum m er and the cold of w inter Jn the central, latitude. S w e e t C lo v e r V a lu a b le Sweet clover,, like most of the com­ mon .legumes, contains a large am ount of protein, thus m aking It a valuable feed for-grow ing stock and milk pro­ duction. Analyses m ade at Idaho ex­ perim ent station indicate th at, syveet clover Is about equal to alfalfa as a feed for live stock. It carries about the sam e am ount of protein, is 'only slightly low er In carbohydrates, and Is very little higher In crude fiber. The biennial yellow sw eet clover is high­ er In crude' fiber than , the biennial white. F A R C I E S W eeds are killed easiest before they are sown. * * * Soy beans, swfeet clover, vetch and Mammoth clover are frequently used to improve sandy lands. Cod Uyer oil In the m ash fot baby chicks kept In dose confinement dur­ ing early spring will help to prevent leg weakness. *■ * •» C ats and dogs are useful In keeping rats under control. However, they need the co-operation o f'th e owner If they are to make a real cleanup of the trouble. ; - * '* ». ■ Time, is necessary to make real and lasting Improvements In agriculture. This applies to the individual and to national problems of,agriculture as an industry. • ’ " * * * Success In business ventures de­ pends largely on purchasing raw ,ma­ terials a t favorable prices. A nother point for the dairym an is 'th eir e Al^viiK iica hv Hia IVktir by Short Story Pub. Co.) O N ONE of the streets leading’ from the park In the. center of a town near ’Boston .is1, a very attractive modern liouse wltli a history. It was built for the. occu­ pancy of a Mr. and Mrs. Leslie, whose uij-sterious deaths m ark “ the begtu- ning of this story. .1 The facts' here, recorded are Just as I beard them. Indeed. I w as a resi­ dent of the town (luritjg the period In which these strange occurrences took place, and had a personal acquaint­ ance with the peftple mentioned. 1 T he Leslies had been m arried a y e a r,' were apparently happy, and were well and favorably known 'In the town. One morning a neighbor'^ no­ ticed that lights were burning In the. Leslie house. He ran up the steps arid rang the bell. T here was no re­ sponse, and after- a few hours the neighbors decided that something was wrong inside, and that an entrance must be made at once.. The front door, was accordingly forced open, and as the men went in they could see into the rootn beyond the hall, the-slt- ting room. Mr. Leslie was sitting with a paper across bis -knee, apparently asleep, and on a coucli near by lay his wife. It took hut a few moments to ascer­ tain that both Iiad been dead for some hours. Their faces were peaceful and composed; there were po signs of dis­ turbance In the house. Every possible Inquiry w as' made. No trace of poison or of tonT pipy; could he found. Num berless theories were qdvanced. and the wonder and excitement over the tragic death of the young couple grew dally. A fter some m onths their relatives removed the furnishings, and “To L et" appeared in the cottage win­ dows. . The house \yas Immediately taken by a man from Boston, w hose, fam ily consisted; besides himself, of his wife and two little, girls. - None of this fam ily had heard the story" of the Leslies, nor did they hear it until they had been in the cottage for' some weeks; One night, after they had occupied the dwelling for over a week, the man of the family was awakened by a sudden scream. His wife awoke at the same moment, and exclaim ed; “One of the children must have the nightm are." but just then the two little girls rushed into the room, exclaiming, “W hat’s the m atter, m other? W hat are you scream ing about?” Almost before they had finished speaking two more scream s In quick succession rang through the house. The place was carefully searched; but no cause for the disturbance could be found., The next night at about the same hour like sounds, vvere heard. After, that Mr. W eston made inquiries of the neighbors. None Qf them had been disturbed. One suggested th a t1 pos­ sibly a cat w as shut up som ew here1 In the house and liad made the noised heard, but a careful searolfcof the-en­ tire prem ises failed to discover'any sueb commonplace solution of tlie mysterious sounds. A week passed without any recur­ rence, of the midnight sounds, when one night Sirs. W gston awoke from a most terrible dream . She dream ed that she w as lying upon the couch In the sitting room. In front of her stood a young m an who held a pillow In his hands. “I shall stifle- you;’’ he said ,clearly.; “It’s no use to struggle,” Mrs. W eston dream ed th at she tried to -scream ; that once, twice, three tim es she endeavored to rise from the couch to-’push aw ay the pillow, but could not. From this dream she awoke sud­ denly, and, as she lay endeavoring- to. overcome Its ' impression, a gasping shriek, quickly followed by two more, aw akened her husband, and again sent the little girls flying In terror to their m other's room, This tim e Mrs. W eston held 'herself- responsible, for the terrible - screams. "I’ve h a d .a dreadful dream ,, and I suppose I scream ed w ithout knowing It.’’ she said. She had hardly finished this explanation when again catrie the scream s, the last dying aw ay ,In a stifled moan. • . ’ . The family w as hy this tim e thor­ oughly. terrified. They had heard the story of the Leslies, and w ithout wait- ting for ,further experiences In 1 the house they moved at once. Tbelr story got about ’the" town, ,with the result that the house w as va­ cant for a year. - Then a family, con­ sisting'of an elderly couple, Mr. . and Mrs. W alters, arid their, son. a young man about , twenty-five, moved in. Thfe rem ainder of the story was told me by this, son, and I will give- it In his own. words as nearly as.possible. “I w asn't • afraid. of any haunted house. My father w as deaf; so it. would take a reasonably loud screoiii to wake him, and my m other was a sensible woman. The house just suit­ ed us, W e-got nicely settled In .a few weeks, and my elder brottjer and iiif wife c<ime out from Boston to'm ake, us a v isit . The 6rst night they were there I stayed In town for the theater. The train I cam e -out In left ’ ii' few minutes after eleven, and I .'reached' the house at about , a quarter before twelve. I was nearly ready for bed when - a shriek like; that .’of - a person, struggling for his life.sonnde'd'.thrdugh' the_ house. I liurrled Into Oie ’hail, ^nd as I did so my brother opened his a secondhand a third scream followed, By th is.tim e even .father’s deaf ears bad* been penetrated, and we aJl sat up talking- the m atter over fa r into the night before w e.felt-like sleep. *In the end we decided not to men­ tion tlie occurrence. -t. W e thought of several possible explanations of the noise. The next m orning we made a careful exam ination of tlie house ami surroundings. We- m ade Inquiries as to- late trains, thinking we m ight have m istaken the shriek of an engine for a hum an voice; but all our con­ jecture led to nothing. We could find no satisfactory re a so n .fo r the dis­ turbance. ' V “I made Inquiries, about the Leslies, and found that many people believed ‘that Leslie had stifled his wife, and then taken some subtle poison which left no .trace; but there w as no evi­ dence to support this theory; no sigh of poison had been found, no cause could be given for such on act, and nothing could explain the m idnight scream s. A week passed quietly, when one night my brother aw akened our mother, telling her th at his w ife w as ill.' She had awakened from a bad dream alm ost suffocated, and my m other worked over her for some tim e before she w as restored. She refused to 'tell her dream , but we w ere weft assured that it w as a repetition of Mrs. W estoh’s. The next m orning my brother and h is-w ife went to their home. V , “I Iiad one more experience In that house which I shall never‘forget. My father w as to be out one night until midnight at the m eeting of a society of which he w as a member, and my m other and I decided to w ait up for him. “About eleven o’clock m other lay down OD the couch and w ent to sleep. The room was brightly lighted, and I sat near -the couch reading. : “Just as I heard my father come In I was startled by a sudden moan from .my mother. I turned quickly tow ard the coach, and as I did so I saw plainly that the sofa pillow lay upon . her face. I snatched it away, and aw akened, her w ith some little difficulty. “M eantime my father had come Into the room, and as he entered, a scream, terrible in. its nearness and intensity, ,rang out, thrilling us all w ith a sick­ ening shock. W e left the next day." Tliis finished his story. No explana­ tion of these happenings has ever been given. The Leslies' death re­ m ains a niystery, and to explain the Presence that occupied this cottage after their death would be to account for a side of life which we barely touch and cannot comprehend. The house is still to let. Secret of Chemistry Hidden in the Brain “Know th y self’ was the advice given nearly twenty-five centuries ago by a Greek philosopher. N earer, our own tim e A lexander Pope expressed the sam e notion when he said "the proper study of m ankind Is man.” , TrobabIy this idea is as old as thought itself. Tet, though we have learned a vast am ount about the stars, the earth, the anim als, insects and plants, and the hum an body, we have found out very Uttle about the thing Inside of us th at m akes use of the body. Collier’s says. W e neither know ourselves, nor can we run ourselves half so well as we do our automobiles. W e do not know w hat it Is th at makes us think. We cannot tell where our emotions originate, and why it is that we, as individuals s>rid crowds, do many things of w hich. we are afterw ard asham ed, W e . cannot say w hat causes epimes, riots and w ars any m ore than w hat makes m en play the hero In :sinking , ships. To borrow the words of Dr. Alexis C arrel: “No one suspects the m anner In which mem­ ory, intelligence, courage, judgm ent and Im agination are connected with the brain cells.” - Yet the more we gain and apply Inform ation about other tilings the. more necessary does Inform ation about our inner selves' become. Chem istry and spiritual progress seem far apart, yet the-secret of both may be In the, sam e bubble In the brain. Somfe of the saints of past ages retired into the woods and des­ erts., W ho knows but those of the futiire will be found in laboratories? And our sins, like.our bodily diseases, may be cured by a more perfect knowl­ edge. / A a stria n s H e a v y S m o k e r s The u s e -ot tobacco-- is increasing enormously in A ustria. Although the population today is 6,750,000, the state factories now turn out more cigars than they did before the w ar when the country had a population of 32,000,- 000. One cause of the Increase is found in the fact th at woihaji are smoking, not only after meals, but at all tim es ot the day and .everywhere. Also, there is no age restriction on the sale of tobacco to juveniles. A recent local exhibition arranged by the Anti- Nicotine union, designed to portray the alleged harm ful effects of tobacco failed to interest the pubtic.. ■ O ld N e w s p a p e r , ' Albert Almon of Glace Bay, n . g Canada, reading In G rlt an item which referred- to a Holland publication dat­ ed,: January; 8, J656, and said to be the . world’s oldest He1Wspaper, w rites , that he has. in- his possession a. cony of -'X1!8 . English M ercure” dated loS8. The paper contains an account of the Spanish arm ada. The English paper, however, is'no longer published under^the same nnrne. while the Hol- Haarlem sche Courante has at>--rienrAit w aalflti * N O B O D Y C A R E D , L E A V E S E S T A T E F O R T O M B S T O N E E x e c u to r H a s N e a r ly $ 1 4 ,• 0 0 0 to S p e n d fo r H e r M o n u m e n t. Jersey City —O ver the grave of a friendless w idow ' In th e railroad- flanked Jersey City cem etery a monu­ m ent costing betw een $12,000 and $14,- 000 Is to be erected. I t Js to carry out h er w ill th a t because she bad no relatives o r friends whom sh e cared anything about, o r who csred a w hit for her, h er earthly all go Into stone above h er body. The woman w as M rs. A nna M. Pang- horn, who died here recently.- She left her entire e sta te to form er Police Judge Frank J. H iggins, a stranger to her, to hold In tru st as executor, w ith Instructions to sell her property and w ith . the proceeds erect “a suitable m onum ent, tom bstone or other m e­ m orial" over her. N early $20,000 w as realized, out of which cam e th e cost of litigation and taxes. M rs. ^anghorn w as th e third w ife of John W . Panghorn, who w as pres­ ident of the Jersey City board of ed­ ucation. They moved to the Prospect P ark neighborhood, B rooklyn, to the '80s. H e died In 1907 and his widow returned to Jersey City, living In se ­ clusion. Three Contested W ills. One day she m entioned to a neigh­ bor th at she w anted to m ake a Will and she w as referred to Judge Hlg- glns. T he will w as draw n according to her wishes, In July, 1918. B ank deposits, bonds, m ortgages and jew elry w ere listed In the probate of The W ill W as D eclared Legal. the will a fte r h er death, seven m onths later. Three persons appeared, seeking to upset the will. T hey w ere John Da­ vies, ai nephew , and G ertrude and Frances Fitzsim m ons, nieces., T he w ill w as declared IegaK T he proceeding cost the estate $2,300. Charw om an Got $400. As Item s w ere sold th e m oney'w as deposited In th e Com m ercial T ro st company, Jersey City. T axes took some and $400 w as paid to a w om an who said she w orked for M rs. Pang* horn by the day fo r years w ithout pay, being content w ith a prom ise of being rem em bered In h er will. T he last legal obstacle having been removed, M r. H lgglns has decided he has no alternative but to carry out the w idow 's direction and erect the m onum ent. / I t w ill have Inscribed on it the nam e D avies, In m em ory of her fa th e rla n d th e nam e Panghorn. A single sm all tom bstone Inscribe^ “Jan e D avies, w ife of John D avies,” now is on th e 14 by 14-foot cem etery plot. From railroad yards on either side of the cem etery sm oke has begrim ed the tom bstones. Superintendent Brad- h urst of the cem etery says a handsom e m onum ent such a s is to be erected w ilt be ruined In a short tim e, unless pro­ vision is m ade to care for It. Mr. Hig­ gins says he Is authorized, a s execu­ tor, to devote th e en tire'fu n d s to the m onum ent S a v e s C r ip p le d H u s b a r id f W i fe L o s e s H e r, O w n L i f e Endicott, N. Y.-t-Mrs. Leila M. T eet- sal of this city w as burned to death wjjen she returned to h er burning apartm ent to save h er valuables a fte r she had carried her crippled husband, R ichard M. T eetsal, to safety. M r. Teetsal was seriously burned. T he couple w ere trapped by the fire In a bedroom off tbe; kitchen of their second-floor apartm ent. T eetsal, w ith both legs severed above the- knees, w as pow erless to save him self. H is w ife took him in her arm s and, .fighting her w ay through th e flames carried him dow nstaira. to safety. Then she re tu rn e d ' before any one could restrain hereto obtain valuables left In the apartm ent. She did not re ­ appear, and when th e fire w as extin- p is h e d 30 m inutes later her charred body w as found on the kitchen floor. B a n ttC h in M a sit? 9 Jersey City, K. j;~ F or one entire yea*, according to Mrs. Hedwlg Ter- nan, neither She nor her husband spoke a. word on their Isolated farm in Mon­ mouth county. New Jersey, com­ municating with each, other by meansAT -TlAnnll nnd _ n ’ . . ’ _ F o r CatarrhaJ C onditions of the Head, Nose, Throat, StomacIi Bowels andothgr Organs, °*er Fifty Yetn In tho Serriet«{ the Pcoplo A sk your nearest dealer Tablet* or Uquy E DAVIE RECQ CIRCULATION OF-.ANY ,jg PUBLISHED IN DAVlE COOl MOCKSVILLE LOD 134. A. F. & A M.. every 1st and 3rd night. Visiting Breth ways welcome. M open at 8 o'clock. R. M. HOLTHOUSER, [.ANDERSON, Sec. ^ A N D PE R S O N A L Iilliam Rodw ell is at flj the N orth Carolina S ta t| West Raleigh. orn. FOROVER 2 0 0 T E A R S haarlem oil has been a world­ w ide rem edy for kidney, Iiver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lum bago and uric add conditions! v .HAARLEM OIL correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. AU druggists. Insist ;on the original genuine Gold Medal It’s i n v a l u a b l e fo r R a s h e s B u r n s C h a f i n g S t in t s S u n b u r n C u ts T h a t ’s w h y y o u n eed R esin o lj to Mr. and Mrs. of Cana, R. I , on Tliuij pound soil, J. R Jr luring Binder Tvvine at M ocksville H ardware < lnnie J. Turner, a pronj K M n itiiIl man from Stony B business visitor here Fif SC. Ilow a-d arrived home I j v from W ake .Forest C l H tfe lie has been a studetijj iyear. and Mrs. H . N. Jessup Hce the arrival of a 9-j SStttt lbe'r Ilom e on T*11 I l r md' PfMbert M ooney arrived Itfiify from Raleiffh where h<| |a student at the N . C. I l rSftfes Lticile Martin whd studeut at D uke Univefi )j mi. has arrived hom e to ; miner. Let Cuticura Soap Keep Your Skin FresnandYouthful SannJe Seep, Ointment, Tataim free. Adiror C«SiCTtt» Laboratories, Dept. M. MaMea, Hm P essim istic F irst Fresliie—Wliat do you expect to be w hen you get out ot college? Second Freshie—An old w.'in. A n o i n t , t h e e y e l i d s w i t h R o m a n E r e B a l ­ s a , i n a t n i g h t a n d s e o b o w r e f r e s h e d a n d s t r e n s t h e n e d y o u r e y e a a r a I n t h e m o r a l e ? . S e n d n o w t o 3 7 2 P e a r l S t , N . T . A d v . A lm ost always, one’s personal haV i* m ight be im proved; and we oiifM not to resent being told which ones. j CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUPIS j I CHILD'S BEST LAXATIVEj £»••• *•« !•* I H tTR Eir M O TH EB! Even a NWJ constipated, feverish child lovc3 pleasant taste of “California ( Syrup” and It never fails to oPc“ I bowels. A teaspoonful today raw re n t a sick child tomorrow. ^ A sk yonr druggist for genuine fom la Fig Syrup’’ which l,as .I tiona for babies and childre11 ^ ages printed on bottle, llother. ' m ust say “California” or you B > | an im itation Ag syrup. Know What C o m f o r t M Wear SprIn M. J. Holthotiser I ers Jfiss Daisy, NeIlB iifiji!spein til? week-end in gne; ts of 3Irs Iloyt jR 8A LIi—ioo acre far| SsMiii it sold at once W'. L G A ITH l Calahaln, jfSBii. 'lie Iitlle son of Mr. fri|fj. S. Hairt-, who has for the past Ien day imSvin<> slowly. | ® a,uI Mrs. W. T. St i |y|iiildien, of Charlotte, i^Week end here with rel; toB^iends. ft Kathryn Minor ar ISjff Wednesday from Men Ijffe, Raleigli, where sin KgJn school. SALE—Improved lIaW plants, all varieties T Hfw • .S00O lots 75c per fomfil shipments. DO RRIS P L A N T d VaIdostaJ 'Prfflnbitioti officers capturefj I ® 1(1 a Wiootisliitie still of ‘i f f '1 [“nil in Kuitoti towi| f e f eek- N0 j0y w a(erl m || I I jB W ftlie Stroud and . I i F rv R iggins, of Statesl 1,16 ?rac,uali,ig exef jjf eksville High schoolj —Bet ween M<»ck.svi I leg ' a sei lee cushion. P f st reHirn to Record ■ ^ S e,ve reward. I S k lerican which I i l l K y - ler & C°Pe llafSH g business after ab o u t| I [°I;eration. T hreecafl pre was a losing proposl J »’itb. oil and sa »e in i Sw Perfection OrI cook s | MocksWlIe H ardwarl isliva Call, Mary H orlJ slHdents at the I r '-olleRe for Woi arrived home ThnJ llle summer, ,StOMestreet who is a Lm tjaP1Jst hospital in V KviifLllllmies verv in H n,et 1 e Sjad tO learn I Piw out ^or his recoveJ C’ tlle uiltJersif lS > w iHa 1S I tocal) a«em if fe® „i R clJfuse °f Ihe me! T « * S: J bal after 9 0^ It ^ 111 cbarSe $i.co{ J- W. RODWEL1 C. m a r t i ] P. M A RTlj f e f - 5 Soltho^se R ubber ^eeis^ Maae of purest, toughest 3^ n uniform rubber Ibulttrthebestahoe Bototaae U S K I ? £ » »• —th e wonder sola tor tk tZOr are -« U m d tn g m W iltnir the at»tth«. Q. 8 u ,e a J s ta r ^ te c h W Ilocai C h ^ T arerepreI id Iicrf-C w h jCh\ Tt 0£ne w eeks ag<j |v h e ^ ° ° L G R A D W Ie ulei Pu (0 vi^it us J b» sin e« eSt a,!ld most It sec|joi, C, 'ese »* i'll Ul-r., • A V,sit to Iate^ M f- W ew ill hou‘s® Busmess CoIle^ Wiustoa Salem, I -» - I , -a>:;R $s F o r Catarrhal Conditiona of the Head, Nose, Throat, Stomach Bowels and other Organs. Over Fifty Yeatt In the Service of the People Ask your nearest dealer Tablet* or Uquij OVER © YEARS a oil has been a world, m edy for kidney, liver and : disorders, rheumatism, ;o and uric acid conditions. LEM OILHAARLEM internal troubles, stimulate vital Three sizes. All druggists. Insist anginal genuine G o ld M edal invaluable for Ja s h e s Burns 'hafirtg Stings Junburn C uts iafs why you need t Ciiticura Soap eep YoiiF Skin is h and Youthful L a i o i n t m e n t T U e n m f r e e . A d t e n : Pessimistic F re s liie — W lia t d o y on espect ^ ivhpn y o u s e t o u t o f college? jjj iu l T r e s l i l e - A n o ld m an. * i t Ihe eyelids w ith Roman Ere Bil- p : night and ses how refreshed mu fcS hened your eyes are In the f ow to 372 Pearl St.. t,- »• Aoy- n st a lw a y s , o n e 's p erso n al Imb- O it b e im p r o v e d ; a n d w e ongnt r e s e n t b e in g to ld w h ich ones. AUFORNIA FIG SYRUP IS ilL D ’S BEST LAXATIVE] •! ,O* • *•' •** '•* IR EY i tlpated, . iai C P" els. RjAVlE RECORD fe^ U U T IO N OF—ANY PAPER r £ R P U B L I S H E D IN DAVIE COPOTY, m o c k sv ille lo d g e NO ,74 A F. & a M.. m eets every 1st and 3rd Friday night. Visiting BrethrenI al* ways welcome. ATian at 8 o clock.R M. HOLTHOUSER, W. I a NDERSON, Sec.__________ Meetings M. •M O T H E R ! E venabllW d, feverish child Io Flj tant taste of ''Cnllc open ft* and It never falls » w i. A teaspoonful today a sick child tomorrow. ^ r your druggist for ge j. a Fig Syrup” W U chhns of dl 3 for babies and ch‘‘ r! Ioi I printed on bottle. mW gel t say “California or yo i; citation fig syrup. Kl AND personal news. Illiam Rodwel1 is at h° m,e Slhe N orth C arolina State Col- I West Raleigh. Jrll to Mr. and Mrs. J F. I „f Cana. R. I. on Thursday, Iq'/) pound son, J. F .-Jr. L ills, Hinder Twine at ‘ Mocksville H a rd w are Co. Llie J. T urner, a prominent n mill man from Stony Point, I business visitor here^ Friday. Howa d arrived home Wed- Jv from Wake Forest College lie has been a student the f**ear. and Mrs. H. N. Jessup an- H e the arrival of a 9-pound It their home on Tuesday, J ll2nd' T§|,ert Mooney arrived home Ilv from Raleigh where he has I student at the N. C. State Lucile Martin who has [student at Duke University; jm. Iiasarrived home to spend piiufr. M. J. Holthouser and Iiers Miss Daisy, Nell 'and Ispent 111 ■ week-end in Moor I, gue.-ts of Mrs Hoyt Black- SALit —100 acre farm—a In it sold at once W. L GAITHER, . Calahaln, R. 1. , die little son of Mr. and S. llaire. who has been ||l for lhe past ten days, is |itij> slowly. |aud Mis W. T. .Starretle lilcheii, of Charlotte, spent Iek end here with relatives lends. Katluyn Minor arrived !Wednesday from Meredith Raleigh, where she has 1 school. SALE—Improved sweet I plants, all varieties $t.oo Po, jooo lots 75c per 1000. I shipments. DORRIS PLANT CO . Valdosta, Ga. jibitioti officers captured and 'ul a moonshine still on the in farm in Fulton township ieck. No joy water was Maltie Stroud and little Iary Riggins, of Statesville, fd lhe graduating exercises |Iocksville High school last I-Betweeu Mocksville and pile, a settee cushion. Find- return to Record office jeive reward. American Cafe which was I bv Miller & Cope has sus- I business after about four !operation. Three cafes on ire was a losing proposition. I'vith oil and save money. Jf Perfection Oil cook stoves Mocksville Hardware Co. I Eva Call, Mary Horn aud |Sain, studeiils at the North College for Women, |fo, arrived home Thursday I the summer. T a a i l 1 i&sM IO W jfflt R®®* !com fort I**- W ® a r . R u b b e r W e o f S p r o y e d ^ n d mot* purest, *°"jrhhef UnottO unifom fOOtt eVef^ lndterthebeetaboo^> -USKlDfL0*-She wonder oole 11 I■ I Sloiiestreet who is. a pati- J e Rupiist hospital in W itis- ®t| continues very ill but his jNl be glad to learn that | el‘l out for his recovery. a^R^M e, the undersigned I us; wisIi to call attention to SMiHg clause of the medmal jitles: That after 9 o’clock J we will charge $1.00extra§1 calls. J. W. RODW ELL, W. C. M A R T IN , E. P. M A R T IN . r aiid was —She Hronoc rnftinW; United States RuWer ,jp Ilhes R- M. Holthouser Sftzor are in W ilm ington Lr ,JttcudEig the annual Sg 'be Stale Chapter of tlje He , ^lley are represent- I i - Chapter which ;lere soiDe weeks ago, !sc h o o l g r a d u a t e s L } 50,11° visit us W e 11,le 'arSeSt aud most pro- jb'Kuiess C0lIege fn the Iill . °“' A visIt to ,llisI 1 prove it. W ewilLm ail Ilrn- cataloR1Mpefrfetjuest. I llon S Busiuess College; Winston Salem, N . C. m S B C Q g p , M o c R g m t e , s . . c . jtiN E -16. t m Born, to Mr. and Mrs, J. H aire, on Saturday, a fine son j : Editor J. F. Click, o f H ickory, 1 i spending a few days in town the guest of his daughter, Mrs. C F ' Stroud.C- F. “ T h e G olden Bed’t at the Prin­ cess W ednesday and Thursday; the best, picture ever screened at 10 and 25 cent admission. Rev. R. M. H oyle a former past­ or of the M ethodist church here, but now of Cleveland county, spent the week-end nere w ith friends and preached at the m orning service. Mr. H oyle has. m any friends here w ho were glad to see h im -again , ^M aster Billy Blackwood, former­ ly of M ocksville but now of W ins- Jou-Salem, was awarded the' prize •in the N orth graded school for be­ ing the best boy in his grade. This speaks well for Billy. H e Is a son, of Mr. and Mrs. W . H . Blackwood. Rev. J. L. Kirk and fam ily, of Salisbury, m oved to M ocksville T hursday and are occupying the Baptist parsonage on Church street. Mr. Kirk is the pastor of the Tur- renlitie, Cornatzer and Sthiili G rove Baptist churches. T he Re­ cord is glad to welcom e Mr. Kirk and family- to our town. A num ber of bur people attend­ ed the Advance consolidated school com m encem ent W ednesday. D e­ spite the hot weather- about 500 people were present for the gradu­ ating exercises and the annual ad­ dress. F ive young ladies and- one .o u n g man graduated in that school this year. . - J F . Moore returned Thursday from W iltnore, K y., where lie spent a week taking in the com ­ m encem ent exercises at Asbury College. Mr. Moore was accom panied liom e by his son- Paul who was a student -there... Jam es who is also a student there will remain for the sum m er school before re­ lu m in g home. A m ong the old Confederate sol­ diers who attended the annual re- uuion of Confederate Veterans at W ilson last week were Prof. J. D. H odges, Messrs. J. L. Clement and S. C GowatiS. T he boys who wore the grev som e sixty-five years ago are I fast passing aw ay and these annual events w ill soon be no more. Swing-Turner. Mr and Mrs. John Henderson Swing rrquisl the honor of your presence a t the marriage of their daughter Julia Hester Mr. Lonnie Gaither Turner on Wednesday evening, the seventeenth of June Nineteen liunnr-d and twenty-live a t seven o’clock , Maple Shades - Mocksville. North Carolina A t Home Statesville. North Carolina. Farmington News. Miss Leona Graham assisted by Mrs. Queen Bess Keiiiien entertained Saturday afternoon Ironi 3 to 6 o'clock, hnooce Miss Hester Swing, a Jut e brideelect wi h miscellaneous shower, Tl e spaciin Graham lawn «ia< arii.uka'ly set with tables.vChairs and potted plants and beautiful cut flowers Upon arrival, the guests nere received by Miss Graham 1 nd directed to the punch bowl where Miises Lhzabeth Graham aud Zeltna Brock ser­ ved delightful iced punch. The guests were then presented by the hostess with varied colored thread aud toweling which they hemmed in fancy stitches and pre­ sented to the bride, after which all were given a uuique cross word puzzle to solve The puzzle had been arranged by Masti r Roy Graham for the occasio 1 and con­ tained the nam es of Ibe bride and groom and date of the'w edding and tbe blank spaces very cleverly formed the initials nf the contracting parties. A I a idsotm col • lection of gifts were presentee in a Iaige box Gtamped and n arked Parcel Post,- Special Delivery, and b'ou ht to the bride by special me senger from the nea - bv post office. .Delicioua ice cream ano cake were served. Miss Swing is the charming daughter of Mr and Mrs. John S w ingofP inoand her marriage to Mt Lonnte.Gaither Turner of Statesville will take place on June_i7th. Miss Jane Amanda Bahnson is home from East Canilina-College from which she graduated this year, Mrs. W. E. Kennen and Miss Dorotha Norringtbn rnntered to .Kannapolis lust Thursday to visit relatives. W isa Notring- ton continued her visit until Sunday. Miss Mary Nell H artm an is home from Winston Salem where she spent the wint­ er teaching . • ,, _ „A Ford sedan belonging to .Mr Dolly Marlowe "Corned ..last Wednesday night it was left standing in the front yard and burned about 11 o’clock. ■ Mrs. Rachel Johnson who lias beets con­ fined to her bed for the past week is im­ proving. We carry a full line of Remedies and Drugs to assist the chicken raiser in protecting the chicken against mites, lice, cholera, diarrhoea, etc. We also have disenfectants for cleaning up the chick­ en premises. Call in and inquire about these remedies. Harris-LeGrand Pharmacy SuccessorsTo CRAWFORD’S DRUG STORE. ngnm m m m m niiim tiinm iiiiiiiiim H iitm im tim tiiiiiiiiiiiinttm m iiiiiiiim !FOR EVERY FLOOR EVERYWHERE I KIMLARK woven RUGS * • Binder Twine A big stock of genuine Deering- Bind­ er Twine oir hand. We can supply you promptly. Cultivator Points For riding and walking cultivators, sweeps, shovels, bull tongues, etc. Stewart Clipping Machines Clip your cows and get an increased milk yield. Clip all the animals for the hot, summer months. I Mocksville Hardware Co. The season’s new patterns in K im iark W oven Rugs are Jherei Everyone who sees these charm ing new designs will w ant one or m ore—for - the living room or bedroom ,' the sunroom or porch, the hall or the summer cottage.« a» ■ • 9 I They are individual in pattern, I delightful in coloring. Yet, with' all their beauty, they are sturdy, durable, long-wearing rugs. Priced from $2 . 5 0 to $2 0 . Ii C. C. Sanford Sons Co. Mocksville, N. C. I What Does Fire Insurance Mean? It makes a new home rise magic- hke from the smoking embers of the old. “SMILE W ITH SAFETY” 41EVERY KIND pf INSURANCE” Davie Real Estate, Loan & Insurance Co. R. B. SANFORD, Pres. E. C. MORRIS, Sec. W W A W W W J W .V .W bb. , Sheffield N ew s. Calahaln consolidated school must have died tt-borning. ,Lonnie Richardson has boutfht the BiH Troutman farm. - .W ade Smith is laid up a few days for r^flre8Rachrl Parish Hied last Tuesday, aced 68 years,and was laid to m f e a t New Uoion, W ednesday at 11 o clock. ;Slie is survived by three .daughters, four sons and one brother. ' Burgesa Stroud, one of this sec lion's oldest and best known citizens died Saturday morning, following a long I illness, aged about 88 years. Ttfi Mt was laid to rpst Sunday morning at CIarkB -bury church. Mr. Stroud is the I a r t J ue of a large fam ilrpf boys and girU. child­ ren of the Iatb Andrew Stroud who sett rd near County Line more than a hundred ^-HML^Hodsnn shot a groundhog one day . tast.w eefe-W e-ddn't know whether this HsTfiIsM me Sne the groundhog com m itue I held a conference with last Febru r /. If 1 sb. ni. more committees will he needed to beg:hlni to spare us on jc b . ana., .... . C HlCKEN FE EP We carry a complete line of Purina and Quisenberry chicken feed. You' cannot find" any better feed on ilie market. Call to see us. MARTIN BROTHERS ^ “We Carry Feed For Everything.” V . V « V . V . W . V BV - V . B. V s B. V . B, g R i M C E S S T H E A T R E WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. Probably the best Photoplay ever screeaed forlO and 25 cents ad­ mission is “The Golden Bed.” A Cecil B.. DeMilIe • nine-reel picture with an al!-star cast. FRIDAY and SATURDAY. Buddy Roosevelt in I; ‘‘Battling Baddy.” Its Western action picture. Al o two-r^el EducationaI comedy “Kid Speed.” rf-- MONDAY and TUESDAY. Pola Negri in “East of J • • Suez.” A Paramount Famous)40. , . W HEN YOU W ANT - Banking service and courteous treat­ ment coupled with consistent and sound business give us a trial. We try to treat all alike and do our best to please you, and at the same time protect bur depositors and our­ selves. Southern Bank & Trust Co., . Mocksville, N. C. PROGRESSIVE -SERVICE I I m$ # S t» y M U y 4 » NJ ¥ 4J mi Let Experts Overhaul Your Car. IF YOU don’t know V our car and its complicated workings, you’ll have a hopeless job on your hands trying to “fix” it. Come to this garage where only the best mechanics-are employed and on­ ly the finest m aterials are used. Mocksville Motor Co. u ¥ 4J ¥ ¥ m m U I! ¥ ¥¥ ¥ ¥¥ u ¥ ¥ H tJ ¥ I 48232353489023535348232353539023534848482323535353534823235353484848482323535353484823235353534848 23232353535348482323535348482323235353534848232323535348482323535348482323234848232323534848235391 48482323535348482323235353014823232323535348482323534853484823904823235353534823235353482323235348 8888888888388999999264444 ^94^499529984429^4429912912919199502482353482353532353232332532348010153234848235323482323532348232348235348232353234823534823534823532348235323234823232353482353532353482348 230123482323532348535323482348234848484823532323235353232353482353534848235348534848232348534853235353482353534823234890532348234801534823004823235353234823 -IiiL Ii * Ir ill , ? . * ; ! 'E Sf- I «- *K * * '4*41 j Iw T 'P M h I 'f k i U # 7 WM I M M liil S " * 1 e;^ S — 'V 13 $ M I i i i B m MKL— ^ , $ | ' * " A ■ ■ i l i i i i7» ^ ? i‘ 15 t<$ t P ' 1 « » < «*» " ¥ > B r £Sb >r * 1 fclsiSSfPff jm $iiiis , **«!Mpagfe] MSapjffi ‘ t \z&'\ _-C C# » ^t' V ' l;;|i;:||| ■ B ill tC £S.* .V - * • \ i #***{ t y J' Sr~ ? rsft V, j . v ft t Si ' r ** 1*•* '■> ^.d' THE DAVlE RECORD, MOCKSYILLE, N. C. JUNE io, '925_ SberifFs Sale of Land ForTaxes. The following persons In Davle county havlSg failed to pay their county taxes for the year 1924.1 will offer for sale at the court house door in Mocksville, N. C., on Monday, the 6ih day of July. 1925. the following tracts or parcels of land to satis­ fy said taxes. In addition to the amount of taxes due by you. the costs for adver­ tising and selling this land will be added, which amounts to $1 40 on each pigce of land advertised. Please bring this extra amount when you come to settle. Follow­ ing is the list of those owing taxes, the number of acres of land and the amount of t»xes due. less the $1.40 on each tract or parcel of land: C LA R K SV H iLB T O W N S H IP I). N. Baity, *173% acres $78.04 J. W: Baity, 1081A acres 7;18 J. W alter Boger, 43 % acres 24.09 V. Tj. Boger, 50 acres 29.89 M. T. Chamberlain, 58 acres 15.19 W alter Critz estate, 153% acres 37.24 W. J. Billon, 55 acTes 18.23 Bixon-Harp M illing Co., I lot 41.85 ,I. C. Draughan, 56 acres ” 11.70 C. W. Bull, 44% acres 14.40 N. C. Eaton estate, 84% acres 32.00 Elkin Box Co., 209 acres 95*23 C. B. Graves, 39 acres 9.11 H. C. H unter, 197 acres 78.34 S. K . H unter, 6 6 %. acres ' 41.60 Mrs. Eliza Kenyotl estate, 76% ac. 26.48 Mrs. M. E. Mason, 46 acres 20.29 A. S. Batledge, 19 acres 4.62 M rs. I. P. Richardson, 7 acres 5.33 K. C. Smith, 4 acres __ L65 Sutton heirs, 9% acres B63 Mrs. Elm a Todd, 21 acres 4.66 J. B. Cain, 10 acres . 2.43 Farali Hendricks, 2 aores 1.22. G rant Patterson, 7% acres 5.62 TJcnrv Patterson, 12% acres 9.93 Elovd "Mitchell, 42 acres ____ 15.3.1 * CALAHALN TOW NSHIP W. S Boyd. 37 acres 21.55 Campbell lieirs, 28 acres 11.16 B. P. Gaither, 13% acres 14.89 G. E. Horn, 3 acres 5.99 JT. A. Jones, 89 acres 46.78 Ji. T. M cdaniel, 52% acres. 8.35 J. B. Sherman, 53% avjres 20.00 B. G. Tutterow , 42 acres , 18.23 W. C. W hite, 100 acres 44.16 (I. L. W hite, 93% acres 36.45 Jane Peebles, 4 acres 2.43 S. P. Willson, 13 acres 7.14 ^,.JIrs. S. M yers, 7% acres 2.7-1 JERUSALEM TOW NSHIP W. HvtAauni, 48 acres $25.99 Trow n & M organ, S9 acres 69.75 Oisey & Clodfelteri one lot 27.90 W. K. Clement, 265 acres 187.52 1». C. Beadman,4 lots 31.84 It. L. Elliott, 2 lots 11*16 S. B. Crump, 600 acres 74.4? Mrs. T;. C, Deadman7 167 acres 161.98 Misw M ary Foard. Admr., 206 ac. 85.66 -J, XT. Gaybard, 63 acres • 13.00 J ie r r Graves, 57% acres 11.85 / B S Holieman. 63 acres 45 26 W. A. Langston, 170 acres 62.85 B. C. Link, 5 acres 12.46 Thomas Mcfck, 77 acres . 5S.27 J. P. M otley, 45 acres 6.93 ^JLee Mcdaniel, 103 acres 71.43 W. T. Sechrest, 40 acres 31.09 Annie Stew art, 110 acres 66.26 A. C. W alker, one lot 25.56 H. M. W eir, 42 acres 25.67 Jt. K. W illiams, 198 acres 97.65 A. E. W illson, 104'acres 58.03 M rs. F. P. Young, 161 acres 80.00 Sue Anderson, 9 acres 3.79 Sail Beard, one lot 3.03 A rthur Fowler, 4wo lots 6.62 A nthony Fowler estate, 5% acres 6.9S Jim Fowler, one lot 6.34 Jolm H airston, 7 9*10 acres 15.19 J ill Hobson, one lot 1W(i Coldwell Mason, 4. acres 5.58 Lomax Oakly, three lots 10.29 Lou Payne, one lot 5.43 Frank Payne, one lot 5.43 Josephine Steele, 7% aeres 6.98 Gaston Woodruff, one lot 6.40 Alce Young, 7% acres 7.58 W. S. Crews, one lot 7.75 John R. Stew art, timbeT right 56.11 M OCKSVILLE TOW NSHIP F. M. Carter, 3 lots 35.7.1 T. W, Carter, 3 lots 2.19 Mrs.' W. K. Clement, eight lots 10.13 Philip A. Clement, six lots 4.66 J. N..Clfok, seven lots ^ 5.78 J. W. "13101118011, 105 acres land 97.71 O. L. Erbanks, one lot 4.86 W. A. Foster,, one lot 27.72 H . C. Foster, 54 acres 17.36 J. B. Frost, 243 acres' . 148.37 J. C. Godby, two lots 7.5S Mrs. M. L. Griffin^ one lot 12.13 Mrs. Si E. Holman, 8 8 acres . 15.77 - H. W.' Hoots, one lot 9.29 G. E. Horne, eight lots 170.19 Henkel Craitf Live S Co, 7 lots 27 00 Hannah & K luttz7 206 acres 116.64 B. C. Howard, one lot 30.92 Eugene Howard 7% acres 2.43 W. M. Howard,- 61 acres 7.84 U. L. Howard, one lot 8.30 Ei E. H unt, one lot 67.84 W. F. Keller, otie lot 23.00 C. W. .Kurfees, 48 acres 23.33 J. W. M artin, .one lot 14.58 . W. R. M croncy,- two lots 44.88 R. A. Nealy, one lot 409.12 Tom Poplin, one lot 10.24 B . P. Rutledge, one lot 9.95 E. L; Shields, 36 acres 12.03 W. K. Stonestreet,. 109 acres 59.67 G. G. W alker, 10 lots 511.10 T. M. Young, one lot $49.28 Ernest Brown, two lots 9i78 Gid Brown, one lot 10.60 John Clement estate, two lots 9.72 Giles Clement, oue lot 8.20 R obert: Foster, omj lot ' 17.50 Till Foster, 4 acres .«» 4.25 Trueloye Furehcs, one lot 7.29 M olUesFurvhes, one lot 7.29 Rufus Furchea; 28 acres ' , 15-63 Eli,Jah,Gaither 7% acres -v 6.10 J. Ij. Gaither, one lot 3.76 Spencer Hanes,' two lots \ 16.41 KacheliHairston estate, one lot 2.43 John Holman, 10 acres 8.10 FrankiH oustoiif ppe lpfc 30.75 s-Luna'H unt, f 17;24 Jam es Long, o l i e H & t \ W. A; Pettigrew ;'.Oiie7Iot 9172 Franc.es Scott, bne lbt 18.-23 G. Ii. Scott, 42% .acres . 20.66 M ary Scott, 7% acres 3.63H. B. Scott, 7% acres 3.(£j F. N. Scott, 69 acrea. \K' 3 1 .35 Flake Studevcnt, 10 acres g.10. Simon VanEatoU, one lot 3.39 Chns. W illiams estate, one lot 24.84 Annie Wiseiiian. 3 acres 6.08 PULTON TOW NSHIP - C. L. Aron, 4 acres „$17.2o B. W. Alien, 45 acres 19.76 Rowland Baity, 2*6 acres / 7.05 J ’etcr W. JJlimie, 81 acres ^ 64.01 B eatrice Brcwbaker7 8 acres J;i ^ C arter, 222 aw es 29.05 94.M J. L. B w ire,'83 acres 33.85 M rs. Jno. W. Foster, 23 acres 7.43 G. V. Green, 5% ;acres* 35.13 Baniel J. Hobbs, 50 acres 5.14 IL vB. Ireland, 69 acres _ 47.75 Geo. W. M inor, 104 acres 34.40 P. B. & W. G. Peebles, 108 acres 52.49 Jane Potts heirs, I acre .49 T. A. Rice, 55 acres 26.72 Curt- Wood, 8 acres 4.62 Keely Wood estate, 35 acres 2.4b John A. Wood, 101 acres 47.29 N. F. Young, 23 acres / 21.89 Paschall H ajrston, 6 acres 12.19 Charlie Mason, 6 aeres 2.55 Sam Mason, 5% acres s 2.79 FARMINGTON TOW NSHIP W. W. Allen, 11 aeres $69.91 Mrs. M artha Allen, 3 acres 4.46 D. R. Beck, 26 acres ' 6.27 M. B. Brock, DO acres 51.70 B. C. Brock, I acre 12.98 Ora BroGk, 21% acres 12.48 Mrs. Bessie Cornatzer, 34 acres 17.08 O. W. Bull, 139 acres 49.15 W. A, Bunn, 6 % acres 3.32 Mrs. L. L. Furehes, 7 acres 11.88' C. S. Furehes, 75 acres ‘ 35.7S M rs. Sam Furehes, 32 acres 50.05 Conard Furehes, 06 acres ( 29.70 T. W. Hauser, 23 aeres 12.75 B. T. Helper, 18% acres 2.2t: C. L. H endrix, 28 acres 13.73 Mrs. N ettie Hill, 10 aeres 4.74 Mrs. W. B. Hodge, 44 acres 43.34 P. H. Howard, 28 ayjres 1.70 Mrs. Ada Howard, 20 aeres 19,07 E. C. Howell, 2 acres 8.3t- TI. C. H unter, 29% acres 20.59 E. G. James, 112 acres 136.24 E. B. Jam es7 14% acres 9.5S C. Ij. Kimbrough, 72 acres 6.05 M nry E, Jjeonard, 120 acres 39.62 J. M. M arkland, 53 acres. 35.9’ C. M. M iller, 52 acres 82.40 Lillian M iller, 28 acres '17.80 N. S- M ullican, 40 aeres . *13.20 Ged.;M yers, 15 acres 7,4? E. L. MeClnmroek, 160 acres' 83.0*' J. W. M cKnight, 8 a«cres 20.2i' J. E. Potts, 121 acres . 109.07 Mrs. R. L. Sain, I acre 7.43 Mrs. Sarah H. Smith, 13 f6cres 10.3? P. T. Seats, 40 acres 20.7*' Mrs. Sarah H. Smith, 15 acres 10.3? Mrs. Lucy Smith, 3 acres 2.27 G. W. Smith^of Levi, 102 acres 44.8( J. IT. Smith, 15 acres 4.24 J, E. Smith, 23% a eves 22.0* Weslev J. Smith, 112% acres 76.7?' .Jed Smith, .214 30.45 J. N. Snow, 21 acres 18. Mrs. C. R. Summers, 25 acres. 14.8? A. L. Boger, 150 acres 81,68 J. Monroe Williams, one lot 1.41? Virginia-Carolina Land Co., 09 ac. 43.6' Patsy Allen, 4% acres 2.02 .Take Bohannon, 4 acres S.8J S. L. Cain, 8 'acres 5.65 Cephas Douthet, 12 acres V 6.55 Will IL Eaton, 31 acres ' 14.21 M, G. Fudges estate, 43 acres 17.79 Ida Hairston, 12% acres 9.54 Toiil Holderley, I acre 3.82 S. B. Howell estate, 28 acres 10.87 Jim Layman, 10 aeres 4.67 Andrew Longworth, 17 acres 10.26 L aura Setzer7 29 aeres . 3.52 Luke Tatum , 11 acres S.S4 B. W. Tatum , 26 acres 10.14 Precilla W atkins, 2 acres 1.03 Lonnie W illiams, 40 acres 17.16 B ettie W illiams, 5 acres . 6.20 Sary W isem an, 2 acres 1 .15 Tom W isem an, 15 acres ' 10.9J Jam es W iseman, 6 acres ; 1.0? Crawford Young, 1% acres ,• 2.56 SHADY GROVE TOW NSHIP Mrs.>Roetta- B aity, 3% aGres $ 1.45 W. A. B arnejfCastle7 51 acres 23.53 T, M. Barneycastlc, 18 acres 8.83 J. S. Beauchamp, 29 acres 17.30 B. L. Carter, 69 acres 18.54 J. S. Cornatzer, 20% acres 31.34 Mrs. Z. C. Cornatzer? 46% acres 49.10 Coleman Foster, 125 acres 85.44 H. G. Fry, 94 acres 54.88 A. P. Hendrix, 54% acres 40.91 J. F, Hendricks, 46 acres 30.16 E. C. Howard, 30 acres 15.48 J. H. Jarvis, 2 acres ' 7.76 M artin M iller, 2 lots 2J58 Boss Newsom, one lot .40 Mrs. Minnie* Shermer, 107 acres 98.99 Mts Sarah Spry, 62 acres 27.58 Southern Pub. U ti.. 12 acres ■ 8.64 W. C. W hite, 2% acres 19.10 O. B. Zimmerman, 20% acres 11.60 Rebecca W orth, one lot „ .87 vs. W. T. Eagle, one Ipt 11.52 This May 21, 1925. KELLEY L. COPE, \ Sheriff Davie County. Michigan Revives Whipping Post. Following the example o f Dela- wara, Ihe state senate has passed a a bill j rovidine a whipping pWt at th e th re e state prisons. All slayers, some classes of assault­ ers, and those'convicted of rohberj while armed, would, on order of the court, be subjuct to the ten lashes a year for ,five consecutive vears Michigan has no capital punishment,' The dove of peace seems" to be about as popi lar in the Balliaus as a safety razor in a barbershop. C . C . Y O U N G & S O N S FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMD EMBALMERS ' Mocksville - . Phnne 133 Cooleemee - Phone 5720 PROMPr AND EFFICIENT SERVICE DAVIE CAFE f FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN- MEALS AND LUNCHES ICE CREAM AND COLD DRINKS P . K . M A N O S , P R O P . ON THE SQUARE MOCKSVILLE, N. C. fll DL ROBT. ANDERSON, DENTIST, P h o n e * O f P - - I N o . 5 0 , R e u d e i n c e N o 3 7 . O f f i c e o v e r D r a g S t o r e . MOCKSVILLE, N. C. . Sb WeaJi Couldn’t Stand “My w ife's health broke down and for years she was just, a physical wreck,” says Mr. Thom as Glynn, of Gib­ son, L a “We did everything we knew, yet. she seemed to get w orse and worse. She was so w eak till she couldn’t stand, and had to be carried like a baby. It looked like nothing would save h er th a t had been done. For' ’ Troubles “I began, looking around. I knew th at Cardui w as for wo­ men. I decided to try it for her as all else had failed. She couldn’t eat, she couldn’t sleep, and I w as desperate. “A fter 'taking a few doses of Cardui, we were so glad to note th at she w anted some­ thing to eat, and w ith each b it of nourishm ent, and each day’s doses of Cardui, she grew stronger and got up out of bed. She is now able to cook, and stronger than in a long tim e.” Cardui has been in success­ ful use for nearly 60 years in the treatm ent of m any com­ m on fem ale troubles. AU D ruggists’ p.J0Q B S IiiiiiiiiM iTiriiiiiiIiIiii Failing In Dutv To Oar Commu- iti»y. A fter witmssine' the activity nl various vocational callings of the human race (and most of these per) iles are able to work, to i) our opin inn of a growing condition is mater­ ially enlightened bv learning that a- round four • thousand dollars was dished out to the mail order houses from people residing in this section, in addition to many dollars spent through channels of which we have no acurate knowledge as to the a mount, but certainly adding to the total several hundreds of dollars more. This was the figure for the amount of April. This is alarming, and altogether unheycessay, and if the practice is continued, is destined to sweep from our midst many business which might otherwise continue to help us pay taxes, improve our streets build better schools and answer the call of charity. Men and women if 'scratching your head will make you think out the fact's, then scratch as you have never scratched before. You may argue that you save money by patronizing the mail order bouse and the peddler, but do you? Con­ sider carefully the quality, the fact you buy before you see and you wail frequently indefinitely for. the arrival of your purchase. Then if it is not satisfactory, you have- little recourse in the m atter of return ot exchange, or gu ess-w ork a s -to whether or not you will Better con­ ditions next lime. N ot only should these facts make you consider before you buy away from home, but tbiuk where your money goes—and stays (While this article was being written,- we were interrupted bv a clothing, peddler. If he was told by every one upon whom he calls just what we told him, there would be no peddlers travel­ ing our way. But we-hasten to fi; ish this before another I W. W (I won’t work) man hits us. Stop, think, and you will realize that you are Uaring away the stones in our very foundation of commu­ nity success. A merchant’s w ife who goes to the city for her apparel is setting an example that will be fol­ lowed. . If she buys at home it will also be followed. Taik and discuss this situation among yourselves, and try. if you can, to realize the de­ struction futture that we are bring­ ing upon this community by disloy­ alty to home enterprise. , A rural carrier from a nearby route stated that he handled sixteen hundred dollars’ worth of mail or­ ders in one week, recently. Sixty four hundred dollars a month! Let us conclude by asking you to think this m atter over s riously.— Eik.n Jribone. Gold is scarce bill we have a limited amount to give away Call StvThe Record office and let us tell you how to get a gold j iece free. SO U R S T O M A C H c a u s e s b a d b r e a t b , g a s s y p a I n 8 . . . . c o a t e d t o n g u e a n d b e J c b m g . Always find relief m C H A M B E R L A IN ’S r T A B L E T S Swcdeg your itomedi end breath—only 25« B.C. B R O C K '• - Attorney-At-Law mocksville ; n . c. OFFICES—Second Floor Mocksville Hardware Co., Building. J Practice in State and Federal courts, jj *tiiii 11111111M11 'iiiir n i1 in rn tf r*n****” Miim iiiiiITIi i iiniiinHTrrtrr’ir""*” * LiESTER P. MARTIN | PH YSICI AN A ND SURGEON Office Phone 71, Night Phone 120. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. -Tl................ 1111IIII HttIHtTI IlItnmxxx BeautifuiBigDolk For Little Mocksville Girls. GRIFF’S CAFE: HOME OF GOOD EATS” Next toJCurfees & Ward MOCKSVILLE - - N.C. NOTICE Raving ouaiified as administrator of J. L Chaffin deceas-d, this is no tiee to all persons indebted to his es late to make immediate payment. I and all persons holding claims a- gainst said estate are herebv notified to present them to me on or before Mav 18'h 1926. or this notice will be blead in bar of their recovery This Klay 13th 1925. E O MORRIS, Admr. of J L Chaffin, deed. — - -I NOTICE! * Notice is hereby given that "Crawford’s Drug S tre ^ o w n e d bv E P. Craw­ ford and John P. LeGrand has this day by uutual consent been dissolved and the business will be continued by the new copartnership, owned by IVr H H arrisand John P LrGrand—under the firm name J 4Hartis & LeGrand Pharmacy.” AH debts owiQg up to and intruding May 4il>. 1925, will be paid by E- P. Grawford and John P. LeGrand, and all bills receivable snail he paid to the new firm—Hariis l>Gr8nd Pharmacy and all debtscontract ed s*nce May 4th. 1925 will he paid by the tiew firm. This May 4th, 1925.. E. P. CRA-WF0R1\ JOHN P. LLGB v NO. W H HARRIS. NOTICE. I Having qualified as administrator of Gideon Brown dec’ll this is notice j i.o all persons having claims against ! Said estate to present them tom e for ; pavment’on or before May the 5th, .; 1926 ^«r this notice will be plead in ( bar of their recovery and ail persons,: owing said pstate will nlease make immediate oavment. of same. This; Mav 2nd, 1925 E. C; MORRH, i Aduir. Cideon Brown, deed t NOTICE—SALE OF LAND UNDER MORTGAGr. By virtue of the p iwers contained in aVnurtgage-DeeiTex' Ciited to me by Gus, Wiseman and w ife Annie Wiseman, and default having been! made in payment of same, I will tei) J to the highe-t bidder for cash, at! public outcry at the court house j door in MocksviiIf, N. C.. on Mon [ •fay July 6th. 1925 at 12 o’clock tn , I the property described below to! satisfy said debt, secured by said) mortgage; Bounded and descriheii j as follows: Beginning.at an old pine j stump corner of W C. Denny and • Lige Gaither, thence East 225 feet to j a stone Lige Gaithers corner, thence N. 177 feet to a stone Gaithers cor­ ner, thence S 69 degrs. E 363 feet to a stone, thence N. 24 degrs W. 367 feet to a stone Dennvs corner, thence S 87 degrs and 15 minutes beginning, containing 4 acres more or less—see. Deed from A J Lsgle to Gus Wiseman registered in Book —page— Register of Deeds office of Davie county. N . C . for full descrip tiota This May 25th 1925 A J LAGLE. M ortgagee. By B H MORRIS. Atty. Every little girl in Mocksville I should have one of these fine, large j $3.00 dolls. Bring 30 Mother’s Bread w rappers and 99c. to your local grocer and he will be glad to present you with one of these fine dolls which are on display in the local stores. Gall and examine the dolls a t any tim e. If you haven’t tried M others B read,' buy a loaf today. T here is no better bread on the m arket. t iitimn W e a re b e tte r prepared this year than ever before to furnish the public with all kinds of building sup* plies a t prices th at cannot be duplicated. Orders are filled prom ptly and satis­ faction guaranteed. Con­ sult us before; buying., D. H, Hendricks & Sons Mocksville, N. C. North CHrolina I" ___ Davie County I IN SUPERIOR COURT. E. C Morris. Admr. of Gideon Brown, dec'd vs George Thomas and wife L nlaThom­ as. Ollie Davis and husband — Da­ vis. and Beasie Browr, heirs at law. NOTItE-SXLE OF LANDS TO PAY DEBTS AND FOR PARTITION. By virtu ■. of an'nrder of the Clerk of the S ip.mior Court, made in a- bove c»<e. I as admr ot G ileon Brown j ecc will expose for Sale at. public i U!.-r.v at the court house door in !-IocksvilIe, N C , on Mon­ day Julj 6 o 1925 at 12 o’clock m.. tl e lann-i or the deed, described and biunded follows: on the North west by ALy Dillard, on the- South west b> t iss Sadie Kelly; o i t ie :South ea <t by A T. Grant, Sr, on ttie Nor h v. est by the old Salisbury road, co. taming one acre more or less Siod land will be fi Si Te Sr d as a w h-'e, subject to tne widows dower. i Hllotted and then in three I Vs as shown by the plot of M.- f , jljames .MirVey r—ree pmt-and re-' port of Tommifssioner in'dower alto - ment for n ore perfect descWp-i m, Terms • ’ Sal-; six n 'o -'h sw ith ,bond n _-u-_ o ed securi y, ,or all cash at ..wiloi, ...r pxrchasei This is vPJuabIe property, located on: tie old Salisbury road n ear the R,- R C<i - ovei IiaV bridge This cune 1st J.92-5. E C MORRIS, Admr ofjjideori Brown deed. I If You W ant The Purest % And Best Flour, Buy I MOCKSVILLE BEST I AND I CWER THE TOP HORN-JOHNSTONE COMPANY MANUFACTURERS ■‘THAT QOQD KIND Ofi FLOUR.” , M O C K S V IL L E . . . N.C- 1DR. EX . CHOATE DENTIST In MockiviUe-Monday. Tuesday and Wed­ nesday; over Southern Bank &. Trust Co. Phone 110. In Cooleemee Thursday. Friday and Satur­ day, over Cooleemee Drug Store; Phones* Office„33v Residence 8 6. Xi^ay Diagnosis*. IsSWKSS* Crawford Drug -Y- ' ' ' fH E IV O LU M N X X V I. An A ssault Repti If anybody had a lo ti L ad v for shedding Caswell T raining S e ll have enough appropriatif lire of tne feeble mindc lliere, and would like! Iu it taking anym ore. t | ,,Id up a little before re hod. Dr. M cN airy had eh a | Jiill furiously and it die Ihe governor m ight fine L ade in the fort of econl least a serious dent. Bi Is keeping a right good i bow, and the books havJ nth the executive. T li Statement show s that itf isting more per inm ate! Ihan it has at the insai| t M organton, R aleigh oro. It m ay require a | jiapita cost for ihe care o | ninded, m ostly childre Sjoes for the treatm ent a | pf the adultr insane; bt eople w ill require son tood reasons before" the] I’inced. So it is regarded to I :ampaign that is being igainst the enforceni ,vliu benefit m ost from t aous of econom y are in spending. .Consequentlf :rnor w ill'uot be alarnie s no reason w hy any ft ature should be stam f There is another anjj situation that m ay throv Bight on the origin of tf gainst the governor’s pperation.-: It will be re i considerable' slit was j ^ause of the long lists purchased at various retl Raliegh for em ployees ol Prison. It was ex p lf ome of these were diarged and that others I y within the law. BuJ icle were bought at [overnor insists that ious that the institutioi! arge quantities of fo md other m aterials shalll ale. It is patent it wo! Laving to the taxpayer;? plso evident it m ight me ome retailers. H en cel fcious of another source! aiice — T he Dispatch. soil A Dog Law, The L exington Dispi Bug atteutiou to a dog I V ily of State wide appl Bs m entioned as a m att Illation. H ere is the sta and provided; Section N o. 1680. firtgs to run at large at phy; liability for datna "N o person shall all Jiver six m onths old to 1» the night tim e un py the owner or by pf the ow ner’s Jather person by jiuission. A ny person i| knowingly, and w ilful [this section shall be gu; Jrtetiieauor, and upo [shall be fined not ex dollars or im prisoned Iji'g thirty days, and s I 'able in dam age to an; Ijured or sufferiug loss iPe.-ty or chattels." Im ^jleJaw's nieutiont I 16 'd.ea that any- partic llrtent. But owners of I fOam after ■canine w ay fa m ill the of n ig h tfa ll. >. - - “x, m ay fiudg I a*ed to court for the ; P nuoyed neighbor; andi I -0 e, they- can’t sa y | l«eard of that law — trt |ls" Som etim es eveu fa jt-he papers never see 31] | d°n ’t want tp see, m Ied to m y attention ID ailyt 15 99999999999999999999999999999 9408559^516527946 ,* ''JBf * * •* * ■ Dolls i l l e Girls, Se-ZsLrirHiiaV J- fe--*- _»- * jarfc- * -SSP i Vii ijp; t? b&p in Mocksvilla Iiese fine, large 30 Mothers I 99c. to your will be glad to e of these fine display in the id exam ine the If yon haven’t d, buy a loaf i better bread J. I L r prepared ever before public with jilding sup* that cannot O rders are and satis- iteed. Con- iuying% > * :ks & Sons , N. C. Tl I! V Purest Buy b e s t ip >NE COM PANY URERS U O P FL O U K .*: I N. ^ r f » S 5 wthe treat”? TgtterOr Kf W ,’ IBingWO-W^ 9ca I iog eWn a‘» r [isi. treatment C r a w fo r d U r » « St“ J f H E M EBCHAM f-S W H O ttf THE R E C 6B D W i l l a p p r e c i a t e y o u r b u s i n e s s . H H tE SHALL TH E PRESS. TH E PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” i VOLUMN X X V I.MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA,-WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 . >925- An Assault Repulsed. If anybody had a lot ofTears all freadv for shedding because the IcasweIl Training School didn’t ||iaVe enough appropriation to-tak e Iciie ol me feeble minded would likely children have to!there, and Iqnit taking anymore, they should Ii .Id up a little before releasing the Jfl xk I. Pr. MeNairv had charged up the lliill furiously and it did look like ithe governor m ight find a breach Jiniule in the fort of ecouom y, or at llea.-t a serious dent. But the State Iis keeping a right good set of books incur, and the books have taken side Iivith the executive. T he auditor’s [statement shows that it has been ,sting more per inmate at K inston Ithaii it baa at the insane asylum s Iat Morganton, Raleigh and Golds- fboro. It may require a larger per apita cost for ih ecareof the feeble- ninded, mostly children, than it 'does for the treatment and keeping !of the adult, insane; but a lot of ieople will require som e m ighty Iood reasons before* they are 'icon- Svinced. • - - So it is regarded to the entire !campaign that is being conducted Igainsi the enforcem ent. They la benefit most front these provi­ sions of economy are more liberal spending. Consequently the gov­ ernor will not be alarmed,'and there i no reason why any future legis­ lature should be stam peded. 7 There is another angle to this liniatioii that may throw additional light 011 the origin of this war a tainst the governor’s program in Operation. It will be recalled that 1 considerable" stif- was -.rnade “bS- ause of the Ioug lists of articles Iimrchased at various retail stores in Raliegh for em ployees of the S tale Prison. It was explained that ome of these were improperly fcharged and that others were strict­ ly ivithin the law. But these ar­ ticle were bought at retail. T he governor insists that the institu­ tions that the institutions that lJuy large quantities of food, clothing and other materials shall ouy whole gale. It is patent it would mean a ■aving to the taxpayers but it is ^lso evident it m ight mean a loss to ome retailers. H ence the suspi- pious of another source of annov * Slice —The Dispatch. A Oog Law. The Lexington Dispatch is call­ ing attention to a dog law, presum­ ably of State wide application, that uiieiiiionedasa matter of infor- Jnatton. Heie is the statute as made pud provided: Section No. 1680. . Perm itting [fogs to run at large at night; peu- phy; liability for damage. "No person shall allow bis dog jpver six months old to run at large In the night time unaccompanied PV the owner or by some member pf the owner’s family, or some Fher person by the owner’s per' Mission. Auy person intentionally I’nowingly, and wilfully violating fhis section shall be guilty of a mis- jpMeatior, and upon conviction I’hall be fiued not exceeding fiftv Ttollars or imprisoned not exceed- | ng thirty days, and shall also be jhnble in damage to any person in ptired or sulferiug loss to bis pro- *'ly or chattels. The law is mentioned riot with Jhe idea that any particular euforce- P'eut. But owners of cauines-that Iloain Mter nightfall, as is the Kcauine Ivayj nlay gU(j themselves 1 1Med to court.for the same by an llUojed neighbor; and if the same °be, thgy catl>t say they never leaid of that law—truthfully^ that Ils- Soineti Ithe nr lines even folks who read papers never see auylhiug they I 111 IvUHt tp spe, unless jpjs “ call- IJ1 t0 ll|y aUeutiop.' gtatpsvjlle ■Daily. •* Lillie Stingers. From T h e Y ellow Jacket. D on’t eat your n ext egg. O pportunity blows but one horn. Good tunes get som e folks in bad. Dishwater never soiled a w ed­ ding ring. Tobacco growers’ profits are pipe dreams. N ot-w hat you appear but what you are counts. It you haven't m oney to burn, then frerze on to it. . If you will nqt when you can, you can not when you will. A flapper is a girl who prefers to be modern to moderate.. H enry Ford’s play toy as a b ale m ust have been a ratile. Tim e for the dear old girls to take off their heavy com plexions. T he farmer raises the wheat and W all Street raises the price. . If we were as sorry as som e folks we know w e'd be sorry for our­ selves • Death bed repentance after a life of sin is a hack-handed slap at the Lord. r W e don’t blam e the wind for w histliug when it sees the weather strip. - There’s a lot goiug around w ith­ out gettiug anyw here these days, of joy-rides. The m idnight oil our modern youngsiers are biirniug is m ostly gasoline and fusel oil. - Our private idea, of liberty is to enjoy our own rights, not to de­ stroy the right of others. O f course the Bible is against bigam y,' D on‘L it say iio m a n c a n serve fw o' masters?^ ' ' '" ' **'* H enry Ford' m ay reduce the price of aeroplanes, . but they will alway be higher than autos. W e know a man not a million m iles I'r.om here w ho is so lazy that he collect even collect his thoughts. T he autom obile has made it pos­ sible for us to live again in the days when men died with their boots ou .. Evqr alteud the . present day GraiTd Opera? W e did, and it re minded us of a hardware store tak­ ing au inventory. O f course, when Bill Shakrspearfe said, "w ho steals my purse steals traah’’ he lived before the days of powder puffs. T he advance tip oti ladies styles for the sum m er says they will wear chiffon. W e’re glad they’ll have som ething on _ Senator W heeler has been found not guiltry, on the ground that they didn’t prove that lie did what everybody know s he did. T he less pity a church has the more oyster suppers and ice creaui festivals it takes to run it. The Lord don’t prosper on belly wash •W hen you hear a fellow brag giug that he has never married, you can put it down that the com­ m unity w ishes his father hadn't either. T hey say H eury Ford had a talk with Burbank about the possibili­ ties of aviation. G oiug tp cross a Tin Lizzie w ith a June-bug per­ haps. If w e had to wear a petticoat like a Roman Catholic priest blast our slats if w e’d say any anything a- bout com pelling the K lansm eu to disrobfe. W e used to find it hard to be lieve that chapter in the Bible .a- liout the”devils entering the hogs, but after m eeting a few road hogs we arfe"convinced T he world is.pretty well evened up at that. Frinchance, som e ar lists get big sunis'-to put features 'oiTa lady’s face aud som e surgeons are highly paid-to cut ’em off. < *Suti and clim ate hjghly praised by scientists" says a nearby daily, VYe. kno w J.h e. I4Qrd will, be g lad to hear: that IJis work lias thus been approved by the high broWs. ' N U M B ER so Kansas Excited. K ansas doesn’t intend to Li crowded out of the lim elight while evolutiou and anti evolution anties are being filmed. T he A. P. re­ ports that patrons of school district No. i'8 , Jewell county, in the Sun­ flower State, voted in m eeting 14 to 5 , to-fiurn “ T he Book of K now­ ledge.” The books aforesaid had been purchased by the school board for use in the schools and. were said to contain a (borough discus­ sion of the theory of evolution.- Evideutly the book burners don’t want "kuow ledge” from any hook that runs contrary to their view s It is explained that the iefeienduni was lim ited because those who favored drastic action kept their plans concealed, aud those who favored the use of th e . books or were indifferent, unadvised as to the purpose, stayed at home, N a­ turally the book burning aroused feeling and resentment and the la§t state may be worse tliairthe first. But there is som ething here to ponder. If the evolution excite­ m ent continues the school patrons will resort to drastic m easutes to rem ove objectionable books; and the fact stands out that in the last analysis the people, or a m ajority of the people, have the power to decide what shall be touglit their children. It would be the part of wisdom , however, if all on both sides of the question -that is being, stressed beyond reason both pro. and con would exercise the saving grace of common sense aiid use dis­ cretion, as Jeff is all the tim e stiy.- tqM uttw heu.the-latter.rcsorts-.tg; Vjbieffce^v' "Thva1iA hfngsvhhafiT\T’i .would be a good motttrat this time. —Statesville Daily. Praise For Judge Meekins. L astyear when Judge Isaac M Meekins wap making his memorable campaign for governor • of North Carolina against corruption, incom­ petence, extravagance and wasteful ness at Raleigh under Democratic rules, there was nothing mean en oughpapers like the Charlotte Ob­ server, Wilmington Star and others could say about the genial Colouel from. Elizabeth City who told the truth in all his speeches and since his defeat and the election of that great sai.n’t of economy. Governor McLean, it has come to light that every word Judge Meekins said was the truth and he never painted it half as bad as it has been proven to be since the fiercs light of publicity has been turned 01F the Raleigh grafters. But since Col . Meekins has been elevated to the federal bench and is giving such eminent satisfaction as everybody knew that he would, these fawning papers have changed tbejr tune. Listen what the Charlotte Ob­ server a few days ago had to say in praise of Judge Mepkins: —. Judgelsaac Meekins h asju st con­ cluded a term o f Federal Court in Wilmington and an opportunity has come to The W ilmington Star that would have been welcomed by The Observer—to give a word in ap; praisement of the North Carolina jurist in his new capacity. The Star gives him due credit for ability as a judge and -for knowleged of the law, and spacifies; ‘Dignified, courteous and impartial, Judge Meekins’ con ducted of the Federal Court during the week has been such as to inspire respect for the court and its rulings He has displayed that even judicial temperament so essential to success on the bench, and his judgm ents have carried - the proper - a pporUbn- riient of the jysjtice and mercy ’ Judge Meekins is a Republican, and these are Denn cratic papers talking about him ’’—Union Republican Probably-the idea for Mr. Coo-' lidge’s mecbahical horse was suggest­ ed by the stationary doiikey so long ridden by Mr. Bryan.—Brooklyn Ea- gle. . : - , European nations seem to he ap- j proachirig the debt settlem ent ne j gotiations about the w ay that, the ! average uiaff. go.es to the dentist. I Pessimism Unreasonable. Thecalam ity howlersstill pollute the atmosphere with their doleful wails "Business is rotten I don't see any future for mv business The next, y-ar doesn’t promise much -prosperity for m e.” they say. And so the sit supinely back and wait for business to come to them. - They don’t advertise—thev don’t disseminate the atmosphere of op­ timism which is necessary to pros, pferjty. And then they kich and cry because business condTions do not W it them. In spite of the fact that business statisticians who have studied cOn ditions throughout the country de­ clare that we are on the upgrade in practically every industry, they con­ tinue to mourn over the business their own indolence drives away from their doors. ' Executives of the American Rail way association held a m eeting in Chicago about a week ago. Basmg their statem ents on careful' obser­ vation of conditions throughout the country, they declared that 1925 is going to be an excellent business year They are accordingly planning to spent $750,000,000 on class I rail, roads alone for new equipment, iiii • proveinents on right of way,- and ad ditions to -rolling stock. And thev are going to moke this huge expen­ diture because tney feel sure that, business for the balance of the year will warrant it. These eqecutives are very close to the v.erv heart of the business life of America. They have a ca'reful ana­ lysis of conditions, ana they say that business this summer is going to show marked ’'mprovement. - If they did not believe what they say, they would, not plan to spend Inal business: T lf they- did" hot know that prosperity" was' on the way and for .most business already here, they would not have arisen in m eetingand said in effect: ’Businesk of all kinds is showing marked im­ provement. There is going to be a great dval more freight to haul this coming year than there has been in the past years.' So we've got 11 Fpend to prepare to handle this business ” Of course this may -mean nothing to the calamity howlers They think they know it all. B uttheaction of these railway executives is decided significance to men of common sense and vision. Prosperity is here in fact—or at least it is' in our way and due to ar­ rive within the next few weeks. But the calamity howlers and pessimists will know nothing about it. Qnly the live wire business men who are abreast of the times. 011 their toes in search of new business, ready to hustle for themselves and their communities, will reap the reward. - E x . Gave The Preacher a Whipping. Last Thursday afternoon on the street near her home, in Statesville, Hattie Harris, a colored woman- us­ ed a buggy wliiy with great severity on the person of the Rev. Z A. Dock­ ery, pastor of the Board street Pres­ byterian church, colored, Statesville Part ofth ep u b iic has heard for some time that the was som e tim e there was some friction in the.en congregation of the church as re­ garded the pastorate. It was also understood by some that H attie had provided herself with a buggy whip to use on the pastor in the event they collided When she saw the preacher was passing IIattie took advantage of the opportunity, strik­ ing the minister three or four times, it is understood, before Bomeone in- interfered. ■ A .warrant has been issued the fbr:’H atiie and she will have to tell the court why she gave the preacher such a fl 'gging —Ex Ifa ll the used cars .were placed end to end they would reached three times around the iff iat.or. and that seems to be a very good thing to do with them,— Watcham. - H eadcolds . MeIt in spoon; inhale vapors; apply1 freely up nostrils. V I S I T S ~Q w 37MiIbon Jan UMjjYearty »> <*♦>*»>» »1« »1« **** ■? Fabric weavers and pat­ tern designers have gone farther than ever in inject­ ing real style class into the mid-summer suits. YxOuVe never seen Palm beaches, flannels, gabardines, mohairs tropicaLworsteds and novelty weaves with so much style individuality as shown bythe thin weight, two-piece suits o t this summer. t o Forester - Prevette Clothing Co., J R. PREVETTE, Manager “Statesville’s Leading Clothiers” “ON THE SQUARE” - m% i l l : mi®j i , S-I-if* k'rffli Ipfiib H'Uri P f t 1■ IifIir I i i m a--® fiV.m Sifr - m',ADZv 'M- l i f e - B A V ife ,feg cO D D rM O C K S V iL tS , S . 0 . j u ^ E 17 1925 THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - - Editor. TELEPHONE Entered at the Postoffice in Mocks--here early tonight Ville, N. C.. as Second-class matter. March 3,1903. Mail SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - * I ®# SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - S 50 THREE MONTHS. IN ADVANCE J No use to go to Florida to keep from freezing—come to Mocksville. It is hard to pay your grocery- man, your doctor and your preach­ er and have to keep two or three second-hand autos in running ,order. ____________ We rejoice that the United States government has started to sending womeu . diplomats abroad. If there is anything that will put an end to secret diplomacy the womeu will There’re a great discussion on ,in the university circles about the ef­ fect an earthquake would have on New York. '.Te don’t See1 how it- would make things much worse up that way, especially since they sur- vived the Democratic National Con­ vention. Money seetns to be a little scarce in this section when you go out trying to collect vvliat is due you but when an auto salesman 'gets out among the f. Iks he geuerallv finds that they have enough cash to buy a car' or enough nerve to mortgage everything they have to bitv one. Electricity is worth nothing to a tow n'that will not use it Our town pnt in a white way around tne square but for s. me le.son three ot the lights are always dark. Tlie light on the corner of N. Main and Avon streets burned out several weeks ago. The Reco d asked the city manager and also one of the aldermen to have a light put on this corner that wotild-burn, as it is one of the most dangerous corners in the town for autos and pedestraos. For three weeks we have waited -patiently to' see just how long it would take, to replace this itnporiaui light. VVe are still waiting. Much is raid about onr people patronizing mail order houses and the home merchants always yell ’’sic ’em" when the editor of the country neuspaj er takes a potshot at tlie mail order houses. The' reasoii the mail order houses get so much of the Iiusiness is because they advtrrlise. They use the cata­ log method and keep continually at it. The local newspaper is the medium for tire local merchant o use in combatting the mail order house.and when a merchant ceases to tell the folks about bis goods the mail os deriiouse gets the business. If the local merchant fails to ger • the business and the newspaper ceases to function and they cauno- lielp the merchant to lambast tlie mail order business’ Successful merchants advertise their business and tell the folks what they have. P. H. Hanes Suddenly Stricken Al Winston, . Winston-Salem, June 9.—P. H. Hanes, 80. pioneer, tobacco manu­ facturer and knitting mill owner of this city, died suddenly at his home Jo h n sp n -L eG raad W edding, One of the prettiest .weddings of the. sea­son was that of Miss Elizabeih Johnson,, neice and adopted daughter of Mr. and Mrs.-L. W. Boogel r‘f Allendale. S' C-, and Mr. John.Phillips LeBrand. of Mocksville, N. C., which was solemnized at the Gopge name on the alternoon of June 9th, at live o’clock. .It was a rose wedding, the motif being significant .in long deta.-l. The house was an exquisite bower in pink aiirl white, the coiur scheme. There were siivervases and.baskets of pink and white, the white rus-s, feathering ferns and white lulie, tows of white burning candles artistically arranged against a background or South­ ern Smilax that draped windows, door­ ways and arches Au improv sed alti.r in the ei-d of the long living room rir>pi-:d in white decuraled with silvt-r eandleldbra and baskets uT snow white roses, terns and graceful bows of white tulle arranged on pedestals was a work cf art. Two snow white' doves invisibly suspended, rh'it seem to float ahove the heads of the young couple during the ceremony, gave an additional touch of beautv and sereni­ ty to this already perfect picture. There was a large shower boquet of pink and white roses suspended from doorway arty pasied line- were SiervedunderGeueralKitzhughLeeiMrs L. W Go-go auiit of the bride, Mrs.- liutil the surrender of Ilie Coufed- T.J1 Johnson, mother of the bride and,............ ... Mrs. Ehzabeth tiair. her grandmother.eracy„,at Appomattox, Va. , prjor lu me ci-remony.-uss Mary Sutli- After the war Mr. Hanes re-' eria!,d sang beautifully. -Eor1Yoii Alone’' turned to Davie countv and enter- and ‘S anctuaryAs the.strums of ilie etl business at Mocksville where he "Wedding Maroh fnmi L-dieiigrin.’’ ploy , c 1 - I r ed 011 itie vtuiiti hy M*ss Vrtliaciri Decitner-remained .for about one year He Hgtt a(.culnplinje(1 by Miss Vivia PwpI,.*. then removed to Wiii-Ston-Salem p e a l e d forth, the Rev, M. M. iiensun, uf- Where he resided until.the lime of Iicmting minister mul uncle uf the bride, his death - Biuered from a dour in the rear, of the Hie L-nitlino- mills in this (.Jtvfruoiuanritook his Dusilil"1 °» r-o'strcill.His knitting mills in tins city The groorn f„||owe(i will, his liest man, employ several thousand men and Mr.'Cecil Mortis. Through a ribbon aisle women and he established h town­ ship known as Haue.Mowii in which several thousand of his employes reside. He is survived by six child- red and Several grand children. j Death was ascribed to the infir­ mities of old age. Mi, Hanes was founder of the P. H. Hanes To­ bacco company which was sold in 1900 10 the R. J. Reynolds Tobac Co company. After releasing his tobacco interest Mr. Hanes estab­ lished the P. H. Hanes Knitting mills, mauufaturing of underwear and continued active iu the man­ agement of his industry until a year ago when declined health forced him to retire. He leaves an estate valued at several million dollars, Mr.-Hanes,was boru at Fulton Davie county, October' 16, 1S45 With the'approach of the civil, „ wWeh UlB Wld;li|lg pil between tbe north and south lie; t0 che altar, in ihe receiving ■Bui !![IillliliiiliIIiliIiIiIiliiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii m m - la I - I S «m w m entered Uie lovely caiuiio bearers, MihS Elizabeth Otis, of Aututfh, and MissRiHii Best.of AUendalc, wn« hi the enwlles on tne altar. *luey wore jireuy liochs ul white lace.The brides maiils, were Miss Dorothy Gaither. of^Mueks*vill<\ N *‘nd Miss !IiQ T I i M r n A H F iI U A ^ L jlX JJTk l J JU. Frank R. Richardson Named Head ^ ^ a S l ^ o « , CufH S" 1 * of Spencer Schools. Spencer, June 9—Prof. Frank R. ei" Wure a lovely gr**eii poiv.is ft..it lhuus> tilrttenal and curried pink ro-*es Siie Isiood with Mr. Fay C^udtlt of M»icksvillu, W Miss Rdinisou sro.«i "dth Mi Hir j, \ 1' 1 1 , man Oswald, nf Alteiidrtif!. aad . vfasRichaidson has beeu elected by the ^ 1w11edlll , cliov. . Her bouq.u-t was ot ijpfciicei' school board as supenut- pju^ r^sea and terns. Mis-s May Jolui-on, sister uf tlm was the HtLr1^ctivo maul.wf honor. Slie V nre ;i die.--*- '>f p vd- riiiui? «im hi'H d a idu- j'iciii 0 Imi nrd uanie I an arm houii »ei uf-pn.-K rnsos. Li U-y eiuieiit of the school here and has accepted, tlie pla- e, effective at once Making a choice from a s.o'ie. or more ot applicants, many of whom wouiil have been acceptable, Prof. , Kicliardsou was considered by the school'board 10 be well titled lor Iiie head of tbe work Ii-.re. He is Vl tisou, J f , b PrJr-G UiW K JV D -D SO JJ, n f l i l bcujn.T i*ii!HG iii-xl Tlii-V w*.n; sU‘iinii {> suits id waiui Siilifi Wec D.i-r-y f'vr man the drtilHV flower Hit!, w.is f**v. Iv in ;i drt’S** ut piiiH HiM iiiil**. us shu a gtadnaie of Trinity college and1 'soHiurucl ruses in ih« Liadv’s }.a!!rv«y. for five vears was the successlul Tim I"id.', apb trounu.l v b n.d-m.m ■ ' j , ,tf ,...Iw./nI ■ p« r yomiu WuitMU <d biuiieue iyuc, was utv< r; upeniileiideiit, the schools- at _ sbr w,g,v,„ m row p.-mi Mocksville. Juater lie went to • ja:c aIl(^ cn jfi.n ovuf nntl ik»t Hesseiner City where; be was for’cr»-pe. Ho. veil w.js lonpfd in Trrin the past vear superintendent of a a c >r..nei wiiii onnge Hussomtf and v«l- j 1' » Jii ley lmioh ami bung in tr.iiu. H.-r l ounmt28 teaclwr i-choo,. He comes to whiw ^ b„rK ,h.-,W(.r,d wilh val- Spencer with a fine recorfl back ot iey i,n,es him and is regaided.as one of the foremost educators of the-state, be­ ing a member of a ; well known family. Alter attending summer school at Duke u-iiversitv Prof. Rickardson will move to Spen:er Io make his home. Farmingion News. Mrs. Clnrles Blake of Salisbury^ spent last week with Mr. henry Bialie ui.d family Miss Varia Johnson left Friday for A-JicviIIe to attend the. Teacher's Slim­ mer Normal. Mr Hogii Brook suffered the loss, Letter From-New Mexico. • Mrs. J-. J. Hoskins, of Anthony, New Mexico, has arrived at her oln home for a visit for a few months. She says tell her old friends through your paper that she don’t want to miss seeing a single one of them. It has been 13 years since her Ia9t visit. If it happens to be a little too -wet and rainy in old Davie for any of you old friends you might pack up and drift out here, as it has not rained inch since I can remember. But we should worry. We irrigate our crops when they need it and roads also Quite a few go over to Juarez. Mex., wheh they get too dry Huw wou d some of you old boys (ike to see inside if-.^o big distillery and-the fat bogs and cowB once more. Itm akesafellow think of old limes don't it. We live 20 miles from El Pas3 out in the country but we-havb-ai large high on the corner of our farm and the elcc- tric light company are raising Ihe last pole in Jront nf our house today and install and install an electin range and power puinp tomorrow I am afraid I have written more now than you care to publish. J . J , H O SK IN S. Ssi« eiil^reti • vwiiii Iirr usitil*' by wiiGfn s)ie Wdi:;.SiVtni Li m .iriiage / n linjnvsMve Iitin^wviJje-Was u ■ Daiiiiy rcfro hiutHiis cotrisini nf h’u crtjiitU In l. rni ul a pi:iK rnso aiLj i’otrti CH'-i*.' Drhiihltui truit...pufn:lt was NKrvtd on Hiu if-rr ice t* 'Margarfii Juhns'Mi aud Viriju i 1 V lire I. Mrs. i Jimns (IiMIlbIHid-Ihtt.; .I ,Vu TavTii5;. -KiULI 11»KK and d.jinty u]j to b X;’.s Ibr leu* rs J. anti L t iijiravfil m siivcr^ifiidtind wnh wl.iit! S-Min nIjHijii Th« prQ.vrrs wtuoii iverr varied IjomuIi fu-and Iirtinis'Miu- r<- «Dvi «i i t an cs 1 • j iainj: rotiai t.title U;l. 1»ud- Uiviir Tjriiiitis in 1 Iio biidit’s Ikh/Ii, jNb s. L. W. Gocig.(*‘, iho biiiius Himi1 \vdn» a sirutiny, c rtiuim;. tit a lovely ^hade ul' ureui; vtt-h oursngo uf \ ink ruses. Hur inn-hi-i JMrs T D. Ji TiiiSDi!, wa>. hi CDiniii’iiy gDw ii . 11 ed in In ck lacu and urc]K- do cm mu. will* * j cnrsorte i.f |iii»K ros-tfft. 'Hto Lindts gmnu a fire, of Ms now chicken house Htid-brooiler; Wuy g.jWi, was a hamis.Him' ousemhUr and about 20U Uxirouah Ured chiuks 'I’l.c ( >uu‘in uuan with ' Umn-i-HUi uuu fire occured abmu 11:30 Ust Thursday I accessories. - . . 4 . , . . . } IniaitriitrttGiy »fu*r H-Ir^fthiiimds wenmsbt. Mnrun8 from ihe brondvr. J S(,rV(.d lhe jllr Miss Frances Jnhnsonot Winston Sifiern ; iuu£i:.fc tour. I hey wiu vinit VvaMiinniui*. is visiting her aunt Mrs. Jessie Sni.iih* • New Yurx and many otner poims in tie. this week and will.assLt in the Swing-. ^tat* s Froin Niagma Iialls will mako an* ... ‘ - * ILX emlcd Lrip ttrrough CanminTurnerweridm8. j Th(J bn|)(.| uni, ”of Aii, m|K, , „ „ )s, Dr. and Mrs h P. Crawford and child- charming ami popular ymnia iodio-, was ren <»f. Mocksville wrre gueMS at Ktnneni KrHduatnO from Due NVc sCv UuiU go fn-nt Krest Sunday afternoon. which Ah« boro r-ii lnji«»rs. Sm* is c.s*... ,, ^ ^ *1'.I- e tjr- . ‘ ppciJiJIy fiifu-iJ in mtiftu:. Lioih hur uraod-8 M ar«a ret U ,,ll,an 8 of W in sto r- ,^er, ^ lsilllgllishuu ,.Ill SatemUinakingan extended visit v»uh ; \yar Brttweeinlic ^Dites h^r grandmo^hnrMrs Rachei Johnson. Mr LeUrumi i* a (iromineut and popu- Mf.and Mr8.VV»riB Furches and little >« XbJu* !>«»'»•••«> "'»» of Mucksvilta. N.C . and « Tepresentativc oi a Jine .ui ciis-daughter Nancy of VVinsion-SaIein spent,tingu'shed ancuairy.the week-end with relatives here. Mifs Nell® Teague nf. Winsion Salem To-Ike GtizeoS of was a week end visitor of Miss Nelle Johu Ir avis County I Although Cuvcrnor iVU-Lcau has sin. Miss Sohnson affompanied her liotue: refusocl to pardon me. I wish t-t for a visit.' j thank yiiu all for your, vuiuabb ------------- ’ I signatures, and kind letters to th-. M issFionie French left Mon- Hov. I am glad to know that T have day afternoon for Greensboro where' S0hmanJrh1Vend8 in,Davie c,i,T'Ly .end1 Ihoperhatsom e time in the nearshe goes to spend six weeks attend-, future I will have the pleasure of ing summer school at the'N. C. C. I'thankftig you in person.' W.Yours verv respect, LESTER CORN Al ZER. We are offering some-of .the biggest bargains in Shoes that has ever'been heard cf in Winston-Salem. One big broken lot of ladies and children’s strap pumps and oxfords that sold as high as $8 SG are go­ ing this week for $1.00, $1.85 and $230 per pair. We can rave you money on your shoes if you will visit us this week. Sale closes Saturday, so you must hurry if you want some of these bargains. LASHMiT’S SHOE STORE. 417 North Liberty Street. ^ Winston-Salem, N 1 G. \ - IilllS ia iiiB i j s s e Kx. B o w e i 5 2 6 N .X iserty S t r -W m ston-Salcm , N. C. m • ® E S S ^ I P sP li T % % \ f f i f r ^ £ % V r Lk . J. ~~'ik M. M bsSJL Mere damage is done to; a house Iefi iinpainted during one of these hot months than can happen'to a properly protected home in years. Painting is an investment that pays large reiarns. It saves repair bills,'increases the value of the property and adds greatly to its Appearance. You can save your property whether you have tfye money to pay for the painting or not., Why not investigate-our easy paym'ent plan? Drop In and talk this over with us and let’s arrange Jto give your property, a good coat of LUCAS TINTED GLOSS PAINT and we .v/ill be glad to expiam our convenient, monthly payment plan. Mr. Prope- ty- Qwner, you can’t do a better thing than to paint your • property and you can’t use a better paint than Lucas Tinted Gloss. T m d e S t r e e t i a r d w a r e C o ., W in ston-Salem, N. C- Predeci New Xort pollceme Charles Bruima, as a wd Peterson, as a member^ the first policeman, 18® N a t i v e Ol Help Discourag Custom in B| Washington.—In db savage ■ custom of hi Borneo, the Dutch and of the country now haj co-operation of natli “medicine men,” accoil report, which states th| bly of thousands of Dyaks, a terrible c! nounced by the head revive tribal quarrels.! “The curious custod ing has. been In existtj the Islands of the ages,” says a bulletin | lngton headquarters Geographic society, fined to any one peoj tlced by the Dyaks ‘ Malays In the smalled the Negroid Melanl Guineal Human heal highly prized possess hunters, and the woij help to perpetuate voring the young me most grim trophies, heads of enemies ot warfare, but the you village will often at village merely for ta talnlng heads. Thd - served and dried an owner’s, fireplace, t| Ing handed down fr Head-Hunters Be “Under British many'of the Dyaks come peaceable far peclally true along t| :the navigable rive to time tbe more saf Interior revert to they have found thl ricultural natives aT It Is 'to protect tlj and- to extend- civil] Iy through the Isla . the 'medicine men’ I “The Dyaks Ilvj each of which she| and is In effect Some of the horb these structures, In- the air, extent dred feet. From f thatched roof swe angle to within ground. .This is houses being con form supported by roof is an open ve extension of the I der the roof on oij is an enclosed ve fun length of the I . the other side of [ ; Is divided by par the various famill Eclipse Discover Middletown,^ gas has scientists as servations ma' cent total eclil cording to Pf Slocum, head] observatory verslty, Professor the only Hmel study the Is when thj eclipse. In observations there is a ence they before. ,Professor tists are not | -name the probable pro! 170999999999999999 ^18219 010202020102010123000101010100010007061001020100110001000001000201020002000809050201010201010000010001020001000100010704070000010002010002110906100300000230000001010001010200020100020100000200020100000102000102892323530201 THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. Predecessors of “the Finest” Shown in Parade yexr l’ork policemen as they appeared In th e annual Safety day parade on F ifth avenue. L eft to right— C lia r le s Brunnat as a w atchm an under P eter Stuyvessant, 1046; Louis I . Proehaska, as a bellm an <51603; Patrlcfe I. P e te r s o n , as a member of the constabulary of 1750; F rederick Tlneo, As a constable of 1830, and Jam es B abbitt, as tlie first policeman, 1865. N a t i v e P r i e s t s W a r o n H e a d - H u n t i n g Help Discourage Savage Custom in Borneo. Washington—In discouraging the sarage custom of head-hunting In Borneo, the D utch and B ritish rulers of the country now have the pow erful co-operation of native priests or i llOiediuine men,” according to a late I report, which states th a t a t an assem - : blj? of thousands of th e . natives, or ! Dyaks, a terrible curse w as pro­ nounced by the head priest on all who revive tribal quarrels. 'The curious custom of head-hunt­ ing has been in existence In m any of the islands of th e E ast Indies for ages," says a bulletin from the W ash­ ington headquarters of the N ational Geographic society. “It Is not con­ fined to any one people, but Is prac­ ticed by the Dynks In Borneo, other Malays In the sm aller Islands, and by the Segroid M elaneSlans in New Guinea. H um an heads are the m ost highly prized possessions of the head­ hunters, and the women of the tribes help to perpetuate the custom by fa­ voring the young m en who collect the most grim trophies. N ot only are the heads of enemies obtained in m ajor warfare, but the young braves of one village will often attack a neighboring village merely for the purpose of ob­ taining heads. The heads are pre­ served and dried and hung over the owner’s fireplace, the collections be­ ing handed down .from father to son. Head-Hunters Become Farm ers. "Under British and D utch rule many of the Dyaks of Borneo have be­ come peaceable farm ers. This is es­ pecially true along the coasts and near the navigable rivers. B ut from tim e to time the more savage natives of ,the interior revert to head-hunting, and they have found the seml-clvlllzed ag­ ricultural natives a source for heads. It is to protect this farm ing pe,ople and to extend civilization m ore w ide­ ly through the island th a t th e aid of the ‘medicine men’ has been enlisted. “The Dyaks live In ‘long houses' each of which shelters m any fam ilies and Is in effect a village In Itse lt Some of the horizontal ridge-poles of these structures, raised 30 o r 40 feet IQ the air, extend for several hun­ dred feet. From th e rldge-polfiS the thatched roof sweeps down a t a steep angle to within six or eight feet of-the ground. This is th e floor level, ,the houses being constructed on a plat­ form supported by piles. O utside the roof is an open veranda, an uncovered ei-ension of the floor platform .' Un­ der the roof on one side of th e center is an enclosed veranda extending the full length of the communal house. On the other side of the center the space Is divided by partitions Into room s for the various fam ilies. In th e enclosed Eclipse Led to Discovery of New Gas Middletown, Qonn.—A new ?as has been discovered by scientists as a result of the ob­ servations m ade during th e re­ cent total eclipse of the. sun, ac~ I cording to Professor Frederick Slocum, head of th e V an Ylecb observatory a t W esleyan uni­ versity, Professor Slocum says th at the only tim e the scientists can study the gases about the sun is when the sun Is In total eclipse. In January th eir brief observations determ ined that $ there is a gas there who'se pres­ ence they had n o t' recognized hefore. . ,' Professor Slocum said scien­ tists are not prepared a s yet to name the gas or to ,discuss Its' probable properties. ' veranda, outside the rooms, are the individual fireplaces over which the treasured head racks are placed. “The D yak men are sm aller than the average W esterner, well propor­ tioned, and of a type adapted for ac­ tivity, speed and endurance, which are valuable qualities In jungle inhab­ itants. T he wom en affect a queer m ethod of adornm ent/. w rapptng them ­ selves In brass corsets m ade of num er­ ous hoops of cane covered with brass rings. These m etal garm ents cover their bodies from ju st below the arm ­ pits to' the hlpline, and even below. H eavy necklaces and ear pendants are also worn, and the costum e Is com­ pleted by a length o f cloth folded around to form a short skirt. “Borneo is th e second largest Island In the w orld outside the P olar regions, having ftn area of about 290,000 square m iles—approxim ately th at of Texas and W est Virginia combined. Of this area the N etherlands owns m ore than 200,000 square m iles; the rem ainder Is controlled by G reat B ritain under three jurisdictions, B ritish N orth Bor­ neo, B runei (or Borneo) and Saraw ak. ■The latter has a rom antic history. For three generations it has been ruled by ‘w hite rajahs,’ m em bers of a B ritish fam ily nam ed Brooks, who are the hereditary rajahs. • One of W orld’s Biggest Islands “Borneo Is alm ost completely cov­ ered b y a. thick- blanket of tropical verdure: valleys, hills and m ountains alike. The density of the tangled m ass of vegetation Is equaled, probably, only In parts of the valley of the Ama­ zon. Enorm ous forest tree3 grow close together, their tops Interlacing -and shutting out the sunlight. Sm aller trees push far up, fighting for a place In the sun, w hile vines w rap them ­ selves about the trunks and ferns fill the rem aining space. The observer from the ground sees little but som ber greens and browns. The color, chief­ ly orchids and other parasitic plants, is fa r above, topping the sea of foli­ age. "W here clearings have been m ade B orneo's soil is highly productive. Cof­ fee, cotton, rice, sugar cane, tobacco and num erous fru its are among' the cultivated crops, w hile forest and orchard products Include rubber, gutta percha, spices, cam phor, nuts and sago. Blch deposits of valuable me­ tallic • ores, m inerals, petroleum and precious stones have hardly been scratched. “Few er than 2,000,000 Inhabitants, Including natives, Im m igrant M alays, A rabs, Chinese and Europeans, occupy Borneo’s vast area.” U. S. Shoe Sales Average Same as 25 Years Ago S anta B arbara; Cal.—A mericans are w earing no m ore shoes than they were w earing 25 years ago, regardless of ex­ travagances In otlier directions, John G. McKeon of Philadelphia, president of the N ational Boot and Shoe Manu-- facturers’ association, said In speaking before the annual convention of the California Shoe R etailers’ association, In session bere. “People w ere buying three pairs of shoes a y e ar'a quarter of a century !ago and they are. still buying three pairs a year,” he as­ serted.' U . S . L a b o r B e s t P a i d i n W o r l d Receives Twice as Much as British Cousin. W ashington.—A m erican labor Is to­ day th e best paid In the world, the N ational Industrial Conference board reported,' following a survey of condi­ tions prevailing both w ith respect to wages paid and th e purchasing power Of such wages. Philadelphia w as chosen as the typicfll AfflSriCSU IB' dustrlal city fo r the purposes of com­ parison w ith leading cities In other countries. Statisticians compiled a ’table of “real’’ earnings, and give each city an index num ber. Philadelphia Is given an Index num ber of 100 ,as par, the second m ost prosperous city proving to be Sydney, A ustralia, w ith TO as Its Index num ber, and O ttaw a, Canada, third, w ith 69 fo r its Index num ber. T he results-w ere m ade public a t the conference board headquarters, 247 P a rk avenue. Figures accepted by th e board were those prepared a t the lnternatloial la­ bor office at Geneva. The results are graphically shown In a detailed chart. A supplem entary study of the condi­ tion of Industry proves th a t In the. U nited States prosperity roles, as it does In w age-earning powers. Twice As Much As British. The A m erican wage earner, on the basis of w hat his pay w ill buy for him, is paid m ore th an tw ice as well as his B ritish colleague In London, nearly three times- as w ell as the wage earn­ e r In Amsterdam, H olland; m ore than three tim es better than the w orker In B erlin, and nearly five tim es as much as th e Industrial w orker In Italy. T he cities, w ith their corresponding index num bers, a re ; Philadelphia, inn- Svdney, 70; O ttaw a, 69; London, 4 5 ;' Copenhagen, 4 !; Oslo, (ChrIstl- anla), 38; Am sterdam , 37;_Stockhdlm, o r. p aris 33; B erlin, 29; Prague, 29; K e l t 2 8 ; Lodz,,Poland 27; Borne, 23; Vienna, 2 3 ; W arsaw , 23 ? Milan, 21.’ I ’ ■■ ■ ''VT hat stability continues to be the outstanding elem ent In business an<l industrial conditions of the- United States is reflected In th e m onthly cost of living figures -ju st issued by the board, with little change from the pre­ ceding m onth's figures. Clothing -re­ tail prices In April w ere nearly I p,er cent low er and fuel w as 2.4 per cent low er than M arch, bringing the gen­ eral cost of living. Index num ber down three-tenths Of one per cent for the month. Remaining Vacant Tribal Indian LtTnds to Be Sold W ashington.—F or the purpose of concluding th e tribal affairs of the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, and Creek Indian nations of Oklahoma the Secretary ef the Interior has auth­ orized the sale of the rem aining va­ cant tribal lands and town lots be­ longing to theBe Indians. There are 438 tracts of unallotted tim ber and segregated land and 95 tow n lots to be offered for sale. Mosl of them have been solcfprevlously, but' the purchasers have forfeited them through failure to m ake paym ents. The secretary authorized the super­ intendent of the Five Civilized Tribes w ith headquarters a t M uskogee to con­ duct auction sales for the disposition of the tracts of lands and tow n Jots. They are to be sold w ithout regard to valuation to the highest bidder. The sale w ill be held at certain rail­ road points In' eastern Oklahoma from July 13 to July 18,1925. Term s of the sale w ill be 25 per: cent cash, the bal­ ance In three equal' annual install-' m ents payable In one, , two, and three years with. Interest a t 5 per cent per year. No lim itations as to the num ber of acres and lots any one person may purchase has been made. Receipts froin th e sale of the 438 tracts of laind and 95 tow n lots will be placed In the tribal funds of these Indian's to be distributed to them with' the final settlem ent of their affairs. • DOINGS IN THE I TAR HEEL STATE i; NEW S OF NORTH CAROLINA TOLD IN SHORT PARA-’ GRAPHS FOR BUSY PEO PLE < > \ P - N ewton.— R ay H edrick, the m an »ho got his skull crushed in a- fight about 1:30 Sunday m orning in the hom e of M yrtle Spencer in Catfish, the northern p a rt of C ataw ba county, died from his w ounds in the Bichard B aker hospital in H ickory. Spencer.— Seized w ith w hat w as supposed to be an epileptic spasm -to which he w as subject Edw ard C anter, aged about 25 years, of H igh Point, w as-drow ned in the Y adkin river a t Grutnbs F e n y tw o m iles 'from Spen­ cer. Chapel H ill.— The Chapel H ill H igh School com m encem ent exercises w ere brought to a close w ith the. presen­ tation of diplom as and certificates to th e larg est class in th e history of the school. The g ra d u a tin g ' class num bered 54. Newton.— Fielding D rum , a farm er, n ear B all’s Creek cam pground, aged ^bout 05 years, dropped dead w hile helping his sen stack a load o f w heat. H e leaves a w ife and a large num ber of children, 11 of whom are grow n and m arried. Greensboro.— C ontract fo r placing 10,000 chairs in th e auditorium s of 21 G uilford county scHbols w as let by the board of education ttf the Sou­ thern D esk com pany,' of H ickory, a t $3.25 p er chair. The installation m ust be m ade before O ctober 1,1925. Heidsville.—J. T. Pendley, a plum ­ ber, of Gainesville, Ga., and a local negro helper nam ed W illis, lost their lives w hile doing plum bing w ork on Jefferson Penn’s new hom e tw o m iles w est of Reidsville. G reenville.— The Scoville M em orial H om e which w as erected by_ friends As a m em orial to the late Rev. V irgil V. Scoville and given to M rs. Scoville and her children, w as opened M onday flight w ith appropriate exercises and an “old fashion" house w ariging. Ahoskie.—The annual M asonic pic­ nic of N ortheasteri) Carolina w ill be held this year on T hursday, July 30. The com m ittee on tim e and'place re cently m et in C olerain and m ade te n tativ e arrangem ents fo r the g re a t day. A speaker fo r the occasion w ill be secured by the W indsor, Lodge and the CoIerain M asons w ill arrange fo r th e refreshm ents' and other ,arran g e­ m ents. Scotland Neck,— D istrict Engineer Pace announces th a t he has succeeded in securing from the S tate F arm a t Caledonia fo rty prisoners to w ork on the E dw ard's 'F erry B ridge through tiie co-operation of prison officials w ith the S tate H ighw ay Commission. T his is in line w ith the policy o f the S tate authorities to use the surplus labor in th e S tate prison on highw ay construction w ork. Dunn.— A daring hold-up and rob­ bery w as com m itted w hen an .un­ m asked w hite m an held a large auto­ m atic pistol in the face of Floyd Lucas, keeper of the M idway filling station, .between D unn and D uke, w hile he rifled th e cash register of be­ tw een $50 and $75 in cash. The only thing left in the reg ister by the rob­ b er w as a post-dated check. H igh Point.— Police Officer C. J. Beeves of the H igh P oint departm ent, died in a hospital here of-wounds sus­ tained in a gun battle betw een police and negroes here. A rth u r H arrell, ' negro, w as killed instantly and Officer F . G. Claywell and tw o negroes, Jam es Staley and John W hite, w ere seriously w ounded in the battle. K inston.— The eight specially, tra in ­ ed boll weevil expert's w ho have been secured by -the "Eastern Caroling C ham ber of Commerce to tu rn their guns loose on th e bug in E astern C ar­ olina fo r ten w eeks beginning I June 15, w ill Teport fo r duty in th eir re­ spective tow ns and com m unities next M onday b right and 'early. Iiaieig h --A g ricu ltu ral college edi­ to rs from m any S tates w ill assem ble in B aleigh1 Ju ly 7 to 9 fo r the con­ vention of the A m erican A ssociation o f A gricultural College editors. The official program announced by P . H . Jeter, of R aleigh, secretary, lists pros­ pective participants from A labam a, N ew H am pshire, N ew Y ork, Ohio, Louisiana, T exas, A rkansas, V irginia, G eorgia, the D istrict o f Columbia, Col­ orado, M aryland, Florida and N ew Jersey. ’■ Asheville.— W ilm ington w as select­ ed as th e 1926 convention city a t th e district m eeting of Lions d u b s here. E stablishm ent o f jun io r colleges in th e la rg e r centers . throughout th e S tate as an addition to the public school system and to relieve the con­ gestion in th e higher institutions of th e State, w as favored in a report unanim ously adopted by th e conven­ tio n .' ‘ , , Burgaw .— Bocky P o in t tow nship is th e sixth tow nship in Pender county to vote a bond issue w ithin the p a st y ear to build and equip a modern consolidated school. L ast Saturday th is .township, by a vole of 132 to 17, voted a bond issue of $30,000 fo r this purpose. N ew B ernr-A lthough the mova- m ent of Irish potatoes from Craven Pam lico and 'C arteret counties fcas been'considerably less this y ear th an last, th e price has been so 'much bet­ te r th is season th a t the farm ers are le ft in m uch b etter condition, accord­ in g to_ statem ents by potato men. High Point.—Carl Cain* iflS ArOnW Chilton, both of A sheboro, w ere ser­ iously injured w hen an autom obile .In Whlchj they w ere riding'crashed Into a telephone pole ‘n ear Jam estow n. Fayetteville.—W ith six judges pres­ ent, including for. Justice of the Super­ ior Court, the b ar association ot the N inth Judicial D istrict held its annual m eeting and barbecue. a t Lake Bim Beach n ear this city. The principal ad­ dress w as delivered by Chief Justice W . P . Stacy and -all the m em bers ot the Suprem e C ourt w ere present ex­ cept Justice Adams, who sent his re ­ grets. Elizabeth City.—B. I/. Gray, ot the publicity division of the S tate D epart­ m ent ot Conservation and Develop­ m ent, which has succeeded the form er Geologic and Econom ic Survey, will be here to prepare articles on .the Dis­ m al Swamp Canal, and on the seaside resorts of N orth Carolina, according to Secretary Job, of the Cham ber ot Commerce. W aynesville.—A conference on re­ ligious education w ill be held a t Lake Junaluska July 15-18. A lthough the conference will be under, the auspices of. the board of education ot the M eth­ odist Episcopal Church, South, It has been announced by Dr. Stonew all An­ derson, general secretary, th a t mem: bers ot two other denom inations are a t w ork on the program . Ooldsboro.—Preston Sutton has re­ turned to his hom e In LaG range after receiving treatm ent for a pistol wound said to have been inflicted by Bam on Langston, his bed companion, during a night-m are. Sutton w as spending the night w ith Langston,--both of whom are young m en hardly m ore th an 21 years of age. R aeford--A seven-passenger car en route from Badin to Fayetteville, oc­ cupied 'by three colored men, five women and tw o babies, all- of Badin, turned turtle over a ninety foot length down the highw ay four milek out frpm B aeford tow ards Fayetteville and Elm a K ehdall and A lex M cLean were killed instantly and It Is reported th at Jam es Ford died before he could be carried to the hospital shortly after the acci­ dent. W ilson.—A fter they had nam ed Gen­ eral W illiam A. Sm ith, ot Ansonville, to succeed him self as com m ander ot the NortIf Carolina D epartm ent of the U nited C onfederate V eterans and had selected W ilm ington as the m eeting place of the 1926 reunion, the gray arm y evacuated W ilson regretfully, bringing to conclusion Ote m ost suc­ cessful of the S tate reunions th at have been held since the. survivors of the Confederacy were organized eighteen years ago. Bedisville.—OtIs K. W ilson, a young w hite m an apparently 22 or 23 years_o( age, w as instantly killed here by exti& freight 4860, southbound. W ilson at­ tem pted to board the freight a t the Southern passenger statio n .w h en he w as pulled under the rapidly moving cars and crushed to death. H is body w as badly m angled. W ake Forest.—Tuesday w as regis­ tration day tor the opening of the s i Ti­ m er law school of W ake F orest Col­ lege. Dr. N. Y. Gulley, dean of the school predicted th a t the enrollm ent would reach 30. Tlw sum m er school w ork is intended prim arily to provide review to r students who expect to take the next bar exam ination. The schoorM ill continue through A ugust 25. j \ ’Raleigh.—The Suprem e Court ot N orth Carolina ordered docketed the appeal of the S tate H ighw ay Commis­ sion and the^county of Johnston from the injunction granted, by Judge F rank A. D aniels restraining the fulfillment ot a contract for tfie loan of $500,000 by the county for State roads, the m oney to be repaid out ot any future funds th a t m ay beoome available for construction In Johnston county. W ar?enton.—Aftftr packing his bag preparatory to a business trip to South Hill, V a., Edw in Boyd dropped dead a t the hom e o t his brother, H enry A. Boyd, here, from A ngina Pectoris. Mr. Boyd would have been 68 years old In July; Funeral services w ill be con­ ducted from the M ethodist church by the Rev. Dr. J. T. Gibbs, assisted by the M ethodlstm inlster of South Hill. R ojky M ountz-T he grand jury of Edgecom be Superior C ourt has been sum m oned to reconvene a t Tarboro to take action on the death of Joe Arm­ strong, negro convict} who, SCCOrdiHZ to the report’ of the coroner’s jury, cam e to his death as a result of blow* inflicted on his body and bead by sticks and a whip in .the hands o t V?. C. O alley and R. V. Tyler, road fore­ m an and guard respectively,. of- the Rocky M ount road district pr'son caaip. ■Winston-Salem.—C harged w ith the larceny of a Bible from the Salvation A nny and w ith malicious Injury to personal property, th e arrest following the destruction of the Bible by the de­ fendant, Charles Pulaski, a young m an claim ing New Y ork as his hom e, w as given a hearing in the m unicipal court and jras sentenced to serve IS m onths on the county roads in th e tw o cases'. Six m onths w as entered in the larceny case and for the destruction of .th e property a sentence .of 12 m onths w as Imposed. Ahoskie.—Sherift B ism ark Scull,, Ot H arrellsville, continues very sick a t a Norfolk hospital, w here he w as taken two w eeks ago for treatm ent. The sheriff is one of th e county’s m ost pop­ ular officers and his illness lias .caused universal; concern am ong the people of the county. ; ■ Greensboro.—C. M. Freem an, form er Postm aster of Troy, M ontgom ery coun­ ty, m ust raise $1,400 of which am ount he is alleged to have embezzled $1,335, the rem ainder due on a check, o r go to A tlanta Federal' prison for tw o years, Judge E . Y ates W ebb, ordered in Fed­ eral court hare. alt Umes After eatlne cs IM fleyliftcA eiistte end sweetens the breath. Nervei are soothed, throat is Kfoeshnl and di Seeesy to cany OelltlleiadKt! m n s \ - a fter every m ealf J§ Area of Leading Cities Few people could probably nam e the leading cities of the United States Itt the order of their .area. New York comes first w ith an area of 318 square m iles; New O rleans is second w ith 264 square m iles; Chicago Is third w ith 200 square m iles; Philadelphia Is fourth with 129 square m iles; Seattle flft-h -with 90 square m ilep; D etroit sixth w ith 81 square miles.—New York Times. C h a m p io n is b e tte r b ecau se o f its gas*tight, tw o-p iece construction, w h ic h a llo w s i t to b e t a k e n a p a r t fo r c le a n in g . B o x f o r a t i o t h e r c a r s t 7 5 c . M o r e t h a n 9 5 * 0 0 0 dealer* tell Cham* plans* Y o u will know.tbtgen* ttlnc by the dovbU*ribbcd c o r e . C ham pion Spark Flug Co* Toledo, Ohio . Windsor* Oat* London, Faxitj Zambeai Makes Record Zambesi river In flood recently ex­ ceeded all previous height records by eight fe e t Clouds of spray complete­ ly enveloped the bridge which spans the canyon beiow the Victoria falls. The Victoria falls, a mile wide and 42& feet high, are double the w idth and more than tw ice t?ie height of the Ni­ agara falls. D uring the w et season the spray has been m easured to reach a height of 3,000 feet. Doid>Ie the Life of Yonp Shoes nnth USKIDE S O L E SThe Wonder Sole for Wear Wears twice BVlong an beat CoatherJ —gad for a Better Heel"U.S.’' SPRING-STtP H oeta United S ta tes Rubber Com pany G O U tO SRUimnM _ Y f i K l P U M P S ANO WATER SYSTEMS W r i t e f o r b o o k l e t D C 8 U L D * B s t o i a g d e t a i l s o f o a r A t i T A W i T C l H c o m p l e t e l i n e o f e l e c * * • • • ■ t r i e e n d C S g u e d r i v t t p u m p s a a d w a t o e y v i e m s f o r e v e r y o e e d , T h e G oulds M sau factu rin g Co. - Seneca Falls. N. Y. ^3915^10999452499416 PdE WM INCOME TH UNDERWOOD URGES SURTAX OF APPROXIMATELY ONE-HALF RATE PROPOSED. M ontgomery, Ala.—Prom pt retu rn to- pre-w ar Income tax rates w ith a blank­ e t norm al o f tw o per cent and a m axl-i m um surtax of thirteen per cent w as urged here by Senator O scar W . Un­ derwood, of Alabam a, in an address before the state m eeting of A labam a Tax clubs. This surtax is approxim ately one- h alf o tn h a t proposed in th e M elton plan and one-third of the m axim um in th e present law which w as w ritten Jff a coalition of dem ocrats and republi­ can insurgents. 4 i Senator Underwood -also proposed a reduction' of estate taxes from the present m axim um o f 40 per cent to the pre-w ar rate of 10 per cent. The A labam a senator, who had a prom inent p art in the w riting' o£ the first incom e tax law, said he believed th e pre-w ar rates would furnish the needed revenue, h u t added th at if they did not he would "give the president blanket authority to abolish govern­ m ent bureaus, and there are m any of them th at are m ere conveniences and not governm ental necessities, until our expenditures did not exceed our revenue.” “In other words,” he declared, “I would slow down the governm ent be­ fore it slows down the business of the nation.” . . Condem ning the present rates on^e- cum ulated w ealth as confiscatory. Sen­ ato r Underwood asserted th at the pow­ e r to tax "is ju st as potent a factor to use in the destruction of private property as the red flag or the lighted torch.” “The tax advocates o£ com m unistic tendencies m ay welcom e the dissipa­ tion of thfe w ealth of the nation,” 'he said, "but w hen we accept his theories we will come to the daw n of a new era. The question before us is w hether this nation is stronger, safer and m ore pro­ ductive w ith a great store ot accum u­ lated w ealth or w ithout it. ' Feel Concern For Missions. New York.—Grave concern over the .im m ediate future of C hristian m issions in China and a bew ildered pessim ism about the m ore distant prospects, in view of recent outbreaks and th e de­ velopm ent of an anti-foreign and anti- C hristian m ovem ent in the form er Selestial Kingdom, w ere expressed am ong representatives in New Y ork ot the m ore than 5,000 A m erican m is­ sionaries In th e C hina field. The first w ord of w ithdraw al of m is­ sionaries from outlying posts of guarded cities w as received today by the departm ent of m issions of the Spiscopal church to whom Bishop A. A. Oilman, ot H ankow, cabled: "Situation serious. W om en and_ children m issionaries have been order­ ed to this port.” The Episcopal m ission has about SO fam ilies in the H ankow region, w hich includes the provinces of H upeh and H unan, around the m iddle Langtze. R epresentatives' of other m issions expressed opinion th a t th eir own w orkers around H ankow would be or­ dered to follow the Episcopal exam ple. Bishop Gilman’s cablegram did not say w hether the consular authorities had ordered the w ithdraw al’, or if it was4 made by his own order. Death Claims W. S. Stone. Cleveland, Ohio.—W arran Stanford Stone, 65, labor leader, finacier and president of jthe B rotherhood o f Loco­ m otive Engineers, died in a hospital here of B right’s disease. Mrs; Stone w as a t their hom e here w hen his death occurred; T hey had no children. Telegram s of condolence w ere pour­ ing into the brotherhood offices from railroad m anagers, national labor lead­ ers, cham bers of com m erce and other organizations from m any parts ot the country. M r. Stone w as taken sick in New X ork last April, his first serious ill­ ness. He cam e hom e and w ent to a hospital for tw o w eeks and then re­ tu rn e d to work. Tuesday, he w as tak en from his office’ to a hospital suf­ fering from an attack ot uraem ic pois­ oning and w as semi-conscious from th a t tim e until his death. Officials of th e brotherhood said, th a t several presidents had offered Mr. Stone ap­ pointm ent to political offices and th at he had received tentative offers to cab­ in e t positions. All w ere declined to . continue his w ork in the brotherhood. A t the triennial convention of the brotherhood here ISst June the con­ vention created a new office, president -of all the brotherhood’s activities, and elected M r. Stone to this position for six years. H is previous title had been grand chief engineer. - ; Must Protect U. SP Nationals. W ashington.—B lunt w arning to the M exican governm ent th a t the U nited S ta te s cannot countenaince violation by •Mexico of h e r international obligations o r failure to protect A m erican citizens, -was served by Secretary Kellogg. The strong language em ployed by th e secretary cam e as a surprise, al­ though it had been indicated lie would m ake a public declaration as a result o f recent conversations w ith Ambas­ sa d o r Sheiffield, who .appears to have returned from h is post on leave to dis­ cuss the-grave situation in M exico. FIVE RAILrfdAD MEN K lL tE D IN COLUSlfcN. Louisville, Ky. — Five railroad m en w ere Killed and tw o probably fatally injured in 'a collision be­ tw een Iw o freight -trains near Paris, Tenn., according to inform a­ tion received a t headquarters of the Louisville • & NashiHlle R ailroad here. The engineer and firem an on one train and three section hands w ere killed, arid the engineer and brakem an of the other tfain injur­ ed. The* cause of the collision U not known here. FlEHT ON PACT IN EIIiPE BRITAIN AGREES TO GUARANTEE FRANCE AND GERMANY WILL NOT ATTACK EACH OTHER. London--O fficial papers explaining the Anglo-French accord in replying to Germ any’s overtures for a pact guaranteeing Germ any’s w estern front­ iers w ill not be presented to parlia­ m ent Mr. Baldwin, the prim e m inister, explained in the house of commons, until the B ritish foreign secretary, A usten Cham berlain, returns to Lon­ don'about the end of next week. An. authoritative statem ent given out, however, indicates fully the nature ot the proposed pact, which, should Ger­ m any accept—as deem ed likely by the B ritish governm ent—will institute an entirely new factor in Eui-Opean re- lationshipsj First, G reat B ritain will abandon h e r policy of isolation and become virtually a m em ber of a four pow er alliance—for it is assum ed th a t iltaly will join-—to preserve the peace of Europe and guarantee the frontiers of France, Belgium and Germ any as established under the V ersailles treaty against violation from any side, and will employ the whole of her defensive forces to r this purpose. The pact, w ill bi-lateral, G reat B rit­ ain undertaking ‘ to guarantee the frontiers against unprovoked attack by either France or Germany. B ut-The whole pact will be under the agency of- the league of nations, which. Ger­ m any m ust join, and any action taken w ill be under the league covenant. Chinese Fire on Americans. New York.—A dispatch to The Even­ ing P ost from H ong Kong said four A m ericans in a launch flying the A m erican flag had been fired on by Y unnanese a t Canton, China. •The party, com posed ot F rank Cram pton, head of an A m erican con­ tracting firm a t Hong Kong, and M ont­ gom ery Ogden, bursar of the Canton C hristian, college, and th eir wives, w as endeavoring to cross the river at C anton from - H onan Island to Sha- m een, the foreign settlem ent, w hen the firing ;started. ' / M rs. Cram pton w as wounded in the arm . The others of the party w ere injured by splinters of glass. . The firing continued 30 m inutes and com­ pelled the* party to return to H onan and take shelter in the Canton Chris­ tian college. ,The Evening P ost dis­ patch said. Mr. Cram pton w as said to have told frtends the anti-foreign feeling w as in­ tense and th a t he hojjed the U nited States would intervene. Two Men Killed, Others Injured.. Greenville, N. C.—Two m en are dead and seven injured, one probably fa­ tally, a s ' the result of an autom obile accident near hpre w hen an autom o­ bile In w hich seven young m en w ere en route from Rocky M ount to W ash­ ington, left the hard surfaced road.’ The m achine plunged into a tree and then a dwelling, com pletely dem olish­ ing a room ot the house, in w hich'tw o negro children w ere asleep. The car was a total wreck. R obert Cooper, 17, of Rocky M ount, w as instantly kiiled and Bonie Lee W ilkerson, 23, of Belhaven, died four hours later in a local hospital. C har­ lie W ells is in a local hospital w ith a fractured skull, and broken leg, while the others suffered less serious In­ juries. , Charoes Arson Ring Operates. * W ashington.—A rsan rings, headed by “unscrupulous politicians and busi­ ness m en,” are operating in practically every city in the country and are caus­ ing indirect loss to business .annually of $100,000,000, T. A lfred Flem m ing, supervisor of conservation of the na­ tional board of fire underw riters, as­ serted in an address before tife' con- vention of the N ational A ssociation of C redit Men. D eaths resulting from: 1 incendiary fires In the U nited S tates gverage 15,000 a year,'M r; Flem m ing said. In the end, he added, the consum er has tg pay the loss from such fires be­ cause business firms naturally add to their prices the resulting higher pre­ mium rates for insurance. Prepare PJanes For ArctIe Dash. Philedelphia.—The, am phibian air­ planes, NA-1, and NA-2 and NA-3 are undergoing th eir .final te st a t the Philadelphia Nfcvy- Y ard for their A rc­ tic w ork w ith the M acM illan expedi­ tion. -A ircraft , factory .em ployes w ere engaged in installing earth conductor com passes and additional gasoline tan k s on* all three m achines. Itw a s planned to send aloft the NA-3 for an engine tes't. •• It w as said th at if there is no hitch in the final preparations jth e three planes will^ leave W ednesday. ' WERE ON WAY' TO HAMLET WITH REGIMENTAL BASE BALL TEAM. I 'Fayetteville.'—W arrant Officer W . A. Cross, 44, and Sergeant H arry J. W eld- erm an; 37, of the seventeenth field a r ­ tillery, F o rt Bragg, were killed instant­ ly-in an automobile accident while on th eir way to H am let w ith their regi­ mental baseball team . The accident occurred at the con­ crete bridge a t the Hoke-Cumbertand county line, w here M r. Cross’ car stopped at the scene of an autom obile w reck. A m achine gun truck bearing other m em bers of the team rounded the curve on- th e’ hill approaching the bridge, and the driVer w as unable to stop until the heavy truck had crashed into the touring car, throw ing it over the em bankm ent, • M r. Cross arid Sergeant W eiderm an w ere on the front seat of the car and w ere crushed to death. - Sergeants A lsea Davidson, H erbert W illiam s and H arry Heff, in the rear seat, escaped w ith -m inor injuries. Several of the m en in the truck also sustained slight injuries. A board of officers from F o rt B ragg w ere appointed to investigate the acci­ dent im m ediately after its occurrence. W arrant Officer Cross had been coach of t h ^ seventeenth ball team •for tw o years and he and Sergeant W eiderm an.w ere Well know n through­ out the state. Both w ere soldiers of a high type, probably the m ost popular m en of th eir regim ent, and th eir tragic death has c is t a gloom over the post am ong all ranks of the garrison. M r. C ross w as from A sheboro. He leaves a wife and three children. Ser­ geant W eiderm an w as unm arried, Gloversville, N. Y., w as his home. 4 Deaths on Same Road in a Week. Raeford.—The third w reck of the w eek and the second of the day to happen In H oke county occurred whgn tw o soldiers of F o rt B ragg w ere in; stantly killed by an oncoming W hite truck on the Raeford-Fayetteville highw ay. t The car, a five-passenger N ash, ig­ nited a sit turned over, and w as com­ pletely; burned.! The soldiers, en route to H am let to play baseball, w ere slowing to take a Jcurve at the! bottom of a hill.- Im m e­ diately behiiid them w as a large W hite truck also containing players. The truck having no brakes crashed into the car, turning it over, a five foot em bankm ent. T hree other m en in the rear seat w ere uninjured. A t the sa'me place a t an early hour a car containing tw o boys and two girls ran into the .concrete bridge and wa'B com pletely dem olished. AU w ere injured, tw o severely, and w ere rush­ ed to the hospital. This, car had not been rem oved w hen the soldiers w ere killed.- Two negroes w ere also killed on this highw ay last Friday, this m aking a total of four'killed w ithin a week. Miners to Give Exhibit. Springfield, Ill-T N inety judges w ill be required in determ ining the stand­ ing of team s entered In the Interna­ tional M ine rescue and first aid con­ tests, to he held here Septem bef 10-12. E ighty team s, of six m en each, in­ cluding cham pion team s from m any states, have indicated th eir intention of ..competing. Thom as T, R ead of W ashington, safety service director of the Federal bureau of m ines, said state cham pion team s, would come from V irginia, W est V irginia, Pennsyl­ vania, Ohio, Indiana, K entucky, Ala­ bam a, Iowa,/M issouri, K ansas, Oklaho­ ma, Colorado, New Mexico, W yoming, M ontana, W ashington, U tah, Idaho and Louisiana. It is a&o likely th a t Mexi­ co w ill send a team . The. m ine rescue team s w ilf prove a country-wide attraction. .A tem por­ ary gallery to represent a m ine w ill be erected next to tie state arsenal and w ill be filled w ith a gaseous m ixture of form aldehyde and'sulphur. To pre­ vent any sectionalism ,influencing the judges, the team s will, be -known by num ber only. A w ards w ill be m ade at a banquet. It is planned to take all the contestants on a trip to Lincoln’s tomb. Peking — Five thousand lives w ere lost in the earthquake and ,fire th at destroyed the tow n ol. TaIiful in northw est Y unnafi M arch 16, according to F ath er Sal- v a t of the Catholic m ission there, whose stoiy of the'holocast has ju st reached P ek in g .. -‘ -'j Taliful is alm ost inaccessible ex­ cept by river from the gulf of Ton- king ,and the letter in questiop had been en route since M arch' 20, w hen the earth shocks still w ere continu­ ing. The tow n itself w as , al­ m ost entirely destroyed, only . the w all and a few houses rem aining the letter disclosed. H undreds ot people w ere trapped In the flames which followed the first shocks. Four or five neighboring tow ns also suffered severely. 4-POWER PlGT EUROPE SIBNED IT WILL NOW BE SUBMITTED TO GERMANY FOR SIGNING. . Geneva.— G reat-B ritaIn and F rance reached a com plete accord on the prob­ lem of E uropean security, and if Ger­ m any, to whom the accord ysoon w ill be sent, agrees to the conditions, a four-power- pact will com e into being based on the invilability of the _Rhine frontier as are lim ited by th,e V ersail­ les treaty The pact will include G reat B ritain, France, Belgium and G erm any. Italy is not included, Jhough the text w ill be com m unicated to her out of cour­ tesy, and Poland and Czecho-Slovakia are not directly affected, though they -vyill benefit by the operation of F rance's alliance w ith them . The next step in the negotiations w ill be the dispatch by F rance to Ger­ m any, also in behalf of G reat B ritain and Belgium, of a letter replying to G erm any’s offer to negotiate a pact of guarantees for the G erm an frontiers bordering- on France and Belgium. There are som e indications of dis­ appointm ent In Polish and Czecho^ Slovakian circles th a t th eir countries do not specifically en ter the dom ain of the proposed p a ct yIt is understood th at G reat B ritain agrees to come ■ to the support of France w ith her entire m ilitary, naval and air forces in ,case F rance is a t­ tacked or in case of £tny aggression across the R hine district. This con­ stitutes an elaboration of an obliga­ tion already contained in the V ersail­ les treaty w hereby the allies- agree to regard as a hostile act any infringe­ m ent of the dem ilitarized zone be­ tw een France and Germ an^. . G reat B ritain gives b irth to 'th e old W ilsonian tribarte pact on the ground th a t h er -national interests dem and peace in w estern Europe. She de­ clines concerning G erm any’s eastern frontiers, because she realizes th a t the B ritain dom ains would not approve ot such a com m ittm ent. HIGH PbINT-ROLICEMAN KILLED IN DISCHARGE OF HIS ' DUTIES. H igh Point--Police O fficer C. J. R eeves, of t h e H igh P oint'departm ent, died in a H ospital here of w ounds sus­ tained in a gun b a ttle-betw een police and negroes here. < A rthur ,H arrell, negro, w as, killed, instantly, and Offi­ cer F .G . C la y w ell-and tw o negroes, Jam es Staley and JQhn W hite, w ere seriously w ounded in^th e b attle. . T he'police are holding for investiga­ tion six negroes, Lizzie D orsetti -A nna. R obbins, C harles B arnett, Bozie Saun­ ders, Tob R obbins and Jan e Robbins, and are searching fo r C harlie G reen and Jim C arter, w ho are alleged to have participated In th e shooting. A negro answ ering the. description of C arter w a s; arrested . a t Salisbury, b u t w hen officers w ent th ere to identi­ fy him they found he w as n o t th e m an w anted. A nother negro thought a t first to be C hartie G reen iWas arrested a t W inston-Salem , b u t He also proved not to be th e m an sought by the officers. : • Police and county officers searched all day for C arter and G reen, w ho w ere reported to be hiding in 'th e woods southw est of th e city. T he woods w ere scoured, b u t th e negroes w ere not foifnd., It is believed now th a t they h ave left the city. F our Die As T rain H its A uto., N ew O rleans.—A dvices received from O pelousas, La-.; said four persons w ere killed and one probably- fatally injured w hen an autom obile-driven by Clifford D ihm w as struck by St. Louis and San F rancisco tra in No. 2, en route to N ew O rleans, O pelousas. 'Clifford Dihm , said to be about 42 years old, w as taken to a n O pelousas hospital and th e nam es of th e o ther four occupants of th e aiffom obile w ho w ere killed w ere given as follow s: - M rs. S. J. Gdfizelin, 65, w ife of the president of the L aF ayette B ank and T rust company, M iss Ida Gonzelin, 32, daughter o f M rs.' Gonzelin, W illiam Dihm,. 45, son-in-law of M rs. Gonzelin, and Lee D ihm , 9, grandson of M rs. Gonzelin. ■' M O TH ER ! Even c o n s u l tons, feverish, or sick, « ,5 an d ChUdren love to take genuiJ?!8 Ifom la F ig Syrup.” X0 oth tive regulates the tender littta so nicely. It sweetens t t e J S ? and sta rts the liver and IloweI3!?? /o n t Sniping. Contains no narcotic* soothing drugs. Say “California- 2 your druggist and avoid counl.L Bisist- upon genuine "California « Syrup” which contains directions ' Hard to Do ' “Profiteers,” said MasLstnite W N brris a t a dinner in Xen- York * not very easily done. SometiBe5llI! is th eir'cu n n in g that protects than Som etim es again it is their Isnotan! A poverty-stricken swell butted to on a profiteer one day and offered f«, a good round sum, to supply the L n w ith a coat of arms. “B ut the profiteer tamed the sa-.ii dow n cold. -1 ‘‘ ‘Nix, bo,’ he said. ‘I g„t note clothes now tnan I know what to J0 w ith.’ ” I-ove van| yl°y Coope f ° afw sye*cftinyS rom- \ v y o r o i n S - o i l - b o o m t o ? 4« « « t t h e w a n t o£e ia thoroughly ‘ ° , rt h s u c h s c e n e s a n d 7.™ that belong w ?t ta also a StOry Of thand the American Le w h i c h a r e n e a r a S i s h e a r t — f o r h e w a s f n F r a n c e a n d ' s a n e T , e e i o n n a i r e . A n d t h e f a c t i o n — w i t h e x - s e H n o n e S i d e a n d s a m b l e e g e r s a n d p a i n t e d !he other. ' Dirty W9crossroads, inpludme r c „ „ f o r e e r y , f a l s e w i tS y i ^ s f u n a n d o t h e r m i s d e m e a n o r s . A n d t h e l o v e - r o m a n c e o f B Lnd A b i t a F r a n n i s t o n f g o o d d e e d . i n a n a u A n d o f c o u r s e t h e M a t h e s i t u a t i o n w e l l B u t o n l y a t t h e w i h a v e h a r d g o i n g , a n d l o v e r s . I f s o n e o f C o s t o r i e s — a n d t h a t s s a d e a l , f o r h i s s t o r i e s n a m e I s l e g i o n , t o o . If You Need a ” ‘ L Germany’s Payments. Berlin.—G erm any's reparations' pay­ m ents through the office of the agent general totalled 100,100,000 m arks dur­ ing May. Of this France received 42,.- 500,000 m arks, chiefly in deliveries of coal, coke, lignite and chem icals. Eng­ land received 10,800,000 m arks of w hich 7,300 m arks w ere credited to paym ents under the recovery ac{. O ther sum s w ere . devoted .to vote var­ ious paym ents under the D awes plan. Princess Gives' Property "For Blind. B altim ore— The W ashington resi­ dence of the P rincess von der Lippe- Lipski, w as presented form ally ; to Lieut.- Raym ond Day, .president of the Blind V eterans association, to be used as a perm anent hom e.for blind veter­ ans of the W orfd w ar.. The p re se n ts tion took place at. E v erg reen . School^ to r the Blind, w here th e 'n e c e ssa ry transfer papers w ere signed.' The princess cam e-from W ashihgton and w as escorted to the’ school by M rs. H enry P. Baker, form er national presi­ dent of the Service S tar LeglQn, W ar M others of A m erica. . . ' ;Fire Sweeps Home Town of Lodge. N ehant, M ass^-F ire starting in a boys’ club house destroyed betw een 40 and 50 cottages in N ehant, hom e tow n of th e late Senator H enry Cabot Lodge. The dam age w as estim ated a f $350,0*), T hree of the buildings burned were lodging houses an d -it w as said eight­ een of the houses w ere occupied the year around. 1 The origina of th e'fire w as undeter­ m ined. It started In W bitlirop cot­ tage, u sed as a clubhouse ‘ by a group ot boys and young men. Mine Gas Blast Claims 17 Men. /S tu rg is, Ky.—Five bodies, three of them unidentified, had been found j n the w orkings of the explosion-wrecked m ine Na. 9 o£ the K entucky Coal Min­ ing company. AU of the know n vic­ tim s w ere negroes. Twelve m en re-, m ain In the m ine and are all believed dead. A pocket of gas, ignited by a m iner’s lam p, is believed to have caused' the disaster. A nother rescue crew of picked m en was being o rg an ized 'to reenter the' m ine to assist in the search for other victim s. Mud in some places w as found a foot and a half deep. To Inspect Shipm ents. W ashington.—A plan of inspection for Porto R ican fruits and vegetables to prevent ■ the im portation into con­ tinental U nited S tates of injurious in­ sects, including the W est Indian fruit fly and the bean pod borer, has been decided upon by the federal horticul­ tu ral board. , - A quarantine has been ordered ef- fectivjs July i prohibiting entry o f’cer- Two Lose Lives in Cave-ln.’ Reidsvillej N. C — J. T. Pendley, a plum ber, of G ainesville, Ga., - and a local negro helper nam ed W illis, losti th eir lives w hile doing pum bing woi?£ on Jefferson .P enn’s hew hom e, tw o m iles w est of R eidsville. T he plum b­ ing contractor, M r-P endley1 w as-build­ ing his ow n-ditch and had been cau­ tioned by Superintendent Phillips th at the ditch was*b'eing-dug through rock, and a cave-ln w as likely to 'o ccu r. A bout 2 o’clock, While the tw o m en w ere-at w ork in th e ditch, th e cave-in occurred, and before they could be re­ leased th ey w ere sm othered to death. T he bodies w ere brought to a local undertaker’s establishm ent and pre­ pared for burial. The w hite, m an w as em ployed by an A tlanta concern. Hia body w ill be sen t to his hom e town, G ainesville, Ga. The negro5s rem ains w ill be buried here. Church Women Meet. C harlotte, N. C.—A pproxim ately 200 w om en from L utheran congregations In N orth C arolina w ere in C harlotte for the opening sessigns of th e 40tb annual convention of th e W om en’s M issionary society of the synod o f this state. The- sessions arje being held at St. M ark’s church. T he m orning and altern o n sessions w ere devoted largely, to rep o rts of offi­ cers and departm ental secretaries^ chief ^m ong w hich w as th e re p o rt’ of M rs. 'G. W . M cC ianahan- jjf Gibson- ville,; president-, w hich rep o rt sum m ar­ ized th e activities o f \h e organization In- its m anifold phases. A brief session w as held, a t w hich tim e a highly inspirational ta lk w as given by. M rs. G. C. L eonard, of Pros­ perity, S. C. D r. and M rs. L eonard are returned m issionaries from A frica, w ho are now In A m erica on furlough. T hey have been in th a t field 10 years, and Jirs. L eonard gave an interesting discussion of th e' problem s w hich the church representatives .m eet there and the g reat need of enligB tehlng influ- ences . of C hristianity* ^ ’ A fter the regular m eeting, th e 40th anniversary 6t th e m issiockry society of St. M ark’B .and also the 4 0th vefrsary of the N orth C arolina-synodi- cal society w ere celebrated. M rs. T. L- H arrison sketched thetain fruits and vegetables from P o rto Ifor t h ^ ^ ueu “ if b? 0k8r01,®d Rico, b u t grapefruit, oranges and S ' t t o T S Z Z T f ' citrus frmts. pineapples, bananas I A * , Concord^ re* plaintains, avocadoes, dasheens an d'ization. M u s ic a rn ^ b e rs ^ W 9 °rg<m’ onions, m ay en ter under certification lvid*rt i m . w ere p robased on field and Vi_ded_by C. A. W orkm an and C. V alaer,based on field and packing house in­ spection by representatives • of the board in Porto Rico. ’ 24 More Died of Heat. Philadelphia. A lthough the heat wave of last w eek has ended, its ac­ cu m u lativ e effects'. w ere ' strong enough to cause 24 deaths, records a t the coroner’s office showed a to tal of 136 persons have died in -th is city so far as result- of the intense W bodies rem ain-ea in tne city niorgue. T Jjile^the tem perature, w as consid- erable low er than it has been, for sev- eral^daya, w eather bureau offlclals'an- spelL * ® * rettti‘n of the hot - \ and M rs. J .L. Ilgenfrltz, of L u th e r yille, Md., gave' a ,.reading , “The Patchwork-Window.” -- Six-Fingered "Negroj Puzzle. Richmond, V a .-William A- Toler, Bertillon expert of the local police de- partment, was confronted^ with . tb« problem of finger printing William Heath, a negro with s?x fingers on e^ch hand, who was 'arrested on a charge ^ robbing a local jewelry store Mr. Toler-said «9 method has been worked out foj such Oise8 and he will take up th< 5®*® wJ? 1 bureau of thsJM Awciayon of WentMca- tip* Etepaifo, of ^rjjtdt he ia a member; Have you ever stopped to reason *lr Ifc is that so many products that are ex­ tensively .advertised, all at once drop«« of eight and are soon forgotten? Us reason is plain—the article did not WflI the promises of the manufacturer. TMi applies more particularly to a mtdicim A medicinal preparation that has ml curative value ialmost sells itself, as Hb an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, - to those who are in need of it. 'A prominent druggist says: “Take br example . Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, > preparation I have sold for many yews and never hesitate to recommend, for b almost every case it shows excellent re­ sults, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large > sale.” . According to sworn statements ml verified testimony .of thousands who kve used the preparation, the success of Br. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is due to the fact, so many people daim, that it fulfills al­ most every wish in overcoming Kdner, liver and bladder ailments, corrects uri­ nary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle ot Swamp-Root by Rircel Post. Addiea Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y, and inclose ten cents; also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale a t all drug stores. Proud American Mothets T he Presidents whose mothers lived to see their sons receive the highest honor in th e nation’s gift were: Wash­ ington, M adison, Monroe, J. Q. Adao;. Polk, - Johnson, Grant, Garfield and M cKinley. Those who did not were: A dam s, Jefferson, Jackson, VunBuron. W . H.. H arrison, Tyler, Taylor. Fill- m ore, Pierce, Buchanan, Lincoln. H ayes, A rthur, Cleveland, Benjafflia H arrison, Roosevelt, Taft, V.ilsoft H arding and Coolldge. Mail Planes Catch Boati . F irst class mall -for the Orient which reaches Seattle w ithin,a few hours al­ te r ships have sailed from there is saved one to three weeks’ wait f°r “* n e st sailing by airplanes which ca» th e boats a t Victoria, B. C--Sdslice Service: S o o t h in q A n d H e a M H R r B a b y s T c n d e r ^ Th« H ousehold and Veterinary Reme# for 78 years is Hanford’s Bilsam of For Cuts, Sores, Galls, etc., to Pre"" Gangrene. Antiseptic, healing. 3 sizes.— ' Appropriate /| “I am a t a loss for a name f»r Saby boy, born on the first 1 m o n th ” .. “C all him •Bill,’” promptly s i l k ­ ed J. F u ller Gloom.—Kansas Cily an- Never Failed Her in 60 Years “ Beeeh«m.*s hem e for - ' m other's hom e In cngwuu. '• to relieve th t w o rn he»d*che« T o r FREE SAMPLE-™'' yak B .F . AHeft C o^ 417 Capal Street,Ne* B a r from vour d rajg itt In SS A r c ru tfl •■CBOd” M aslcaI IM tram enU . Hell"no t.. (B oehm ) T r u m p e t s .BhoaM,1 Saxophones. Tromboo” * J ir pile* B a iu u . H Jch a n d low or #trlctiy Qoz 44; F o rt VaUeyl Georgia- CHAPTE- No Mortg As if by instinct, Ba riably hesitated as h door which proclaim e panel, th at beyond la Leon B arrow s, atto m e Rogers never had s" the reason; he simply t(j be necessary, in th m anner in which one opening the heavy doo Jrigerator. And perha Bimilarity in th e ideas of Leon B arrow s w as he w as frigid—a grea pictureless walls. In keeping w itlr tl attorney him self, a row-eyed person wh were lengthened by a three-inch bald i straight back from h Such w as the atto pled the big, uncomf the orderly, tlironelik cause of whom B art [ even w ith his hand ; le t, w ithal,' he i scious revulsion, [ iciness of the i I snappiness, his gene I appearance and of [ could look-upon him [ a benefactor. It had been the' code from his lean filled, the breach ’ had come home to s fering from the sic sis. It had been . had helped rehabilit of irrigated land thr laine—land .which re tags and the toil an- B art and his father, the seed to s<5w, both until the harv Now th a t harvest B art, w ith his first to the office of X eo w ith his hand on t a t last, to sm ile wi an approaching f and to go In. Le up sw iftly from hi “W ell, w hat is i question as thoug turbed. B art Ro had not. H e we- an'd reached fo r I 'I w ant to Indo nounced. “Go ahead.” . •him narrow ly, the street?” “Yes.” “How’s the elec ‘T om Jordan’s "H ow do you tion cam e sharply "W ell,- I don’t knowledge^ I’m people are saying. Franniston’s beat “T he votes ar* chance for Jord “T hen If you meT* T here w a about Leon Ba stirred a sleep' only telling you "All right, th “Very well, long to find closing in ten n Jp know pretty s* the m ayor’ll be. “W ho’d you ^Jordan.” “Oh, you did? T he exaspera “In the first j ' to. In th e se. don’t like ‘Bull’ th a t isn’t w hat about. This for you.” "F or w hatT ’ ' “F or w hat?” “W h jv fo r p art gage.” T he narrow Leon B arrow s big chair. » “ Xou’re talk *a*e?” ^ ■ -D *S B E S T THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. LAXATjvp ••••*._ I COURTNEY RYLEY COOPER © By the Bell Syndlcatef Inc* WNU Service f w f s h , bli. F “^ ta^ S j plates the tender ]i» ’f , la*>- - I.v. It sweetens the « m rts the Uver and h it f 0T°aci fy to g . Contains™ t ' ‘ - d™ gs. Sav V n?i - * °i Uggist and aVoid ciun?'3’’ k '-^H Pon genuine "Califn? *rfeits- M a a i - W - S S E ' * Hard foDo~ ' I teers,” jaaitl IliWi,,,.„ i* a dinner in > CflsiI.v doiio Crt , 5 ^ cunning that p r o t e c t “ I ies again it is H l e i r ; " theni- I vert.v-stricken swell b n ,T T e' ' Q t e e r o n e d a y a n d o f f e r e d V * ■’ , ' o u n d s u m , t o s u n n h - T h ! ' f o t o a t o f a r m s . ‘ m a i 1 t h e p r o f i t e e r t u r n e d t h e S l v e l | bo,’ he said. 'I „nf Now than I bnow ^ aI W v $ ' I - S ifl itesS *01 - S ** 'pl I - Sjg i< v Ueefi a Medicine N Haw tiia Ha# h m ->*>’ S * ] ■i; * ' CU ever stopped to reason *W t so m any p ro d acts th n ^ IdZ ertlsed' *11 at once drop ^ n?-* a +t £°°n forSOtten? The ’i=es of th lartle,e<'did not fui^mdl the manufacturer. TM, J o r e P a r t 1 0 U l a r l r t o a m e d i d w • mai preparation that has real .e ',aImosfc seUs itself, as Ife ;if* “ am system the remedy « to th thf e who have been5 SHig thoJe *ho are in need of it ■ ' i r D™fn t druggist saj-s: 'Take fw T , r 5 Swamp-Root, aon I hare sold for many veais r hesitate to recommend, for in ra y case it shows excellent re- many of my customers testifv Jadney remedy has so IargeV J n g t o s w o r n s t a t e m e n t s m i I e s t i m o n y . o f t h o u s a n d s w h o h a v e I P r e P a r a t i o n , t h e s u c c e s s o f D r . «1 '-'ramP-Root is due to the fact, i m p .e ° p l -e c i ? i m ’ t h a t ! t f u I f i H s a l - 1 J t T w i s h i n o v e r c o m i n g k i d n e y , T bladder ailments, corrects uri- fubles and neutralizes the uric ®h causes rheumatism, fa y receive a sample bottle of foot by Rircel Post. Address Sber & Co., Binghamton, Jf. Y., jfSe ten cents;, also mention this JLarge and medium size bottles Et a]] drug stores. id American Mothers ! r e s i d e n t s w h o s e m o t h e r s l i v e d I j h e i r s o n s r e c e i v e t h e h i g h e s t J t h e n a r i o n ’ s g i f t w e r e : W a s h - | I a d i s o n , M o n r o e , J . Q . A d a m s , p l m s o n , G r a n t , G a r f i e l d a n d y . T h o s e w h o d i d n o t w e r e : J e f f e r s o n , J a c k s o n , V a n B u r e n 1 J a r r i s o n , T y l e r , T a y l o r . F i l l - ( P i e r e e , B u c h a n a n , L i n c o l n , i r t l i u r , C l e v e l a n d , B e n j a m i n R o o s e v e l t , T a f t , W i l s o n , l a n d C o o l i d g e . -fjtljy Planes Catch Boats s | | | | f * a s s m a i l J o r t h e O r i e n t w h i c h - j J h e n t t l e w i t h i n ^ f e w h o u r s a f - h a v e s a i l e d f r o m t h e r e I s , l f | S e t o t h r e e w e e k s ’ w a i t f o r t h e w i n g b y a i r p l a n e s w h i c h c a t c h J f f | l s a t V i c t o r i a , B . C . — S c i e n c e this!*ijf* Isehofd and V eterinary Remedy * ' *■“ ! r s i s H a n f o r d ’ s B a l s a m o f J I v r r f i - S o r e s , G a l l s , e t c . , t o p r e v e n t A n t i s e p t i c , h e a l i n g . 3 s iz e s.—A d v . Appropriate a t a l o s s f o r a n a m e f o r c a r ’, b o r n o n t h e f i r s t o f t h e■I-;:.,... 0 •? “ i ■kii I1-Ii i i r n ‘ B i l l , ’ ” p r o m p t l y s u g g e s t - i e r G l o o m . — K a n s a s C i t y S t a r . F a i l e d H e r i nears r h a m ' a R U * h a v e b e e n f t b y w o r d t o » 7 f o r o v e r 6 0 _ y e a r a , a n d w e r e t o I e r ’ a h o m e I n f c n g l a n c L N o w I * ® ^e never'known Beeeham’a l i e v e A e w o r s t h e a d a c h e * * » “ c o °a* Mrs. G. RusieU* Pltsburt*** p8‘ F o r PREE SAMPLE—***** v ^ a C o ^ 4 1 ? C a p a l Street, X * * J * * J r . , . . y o u r d r a g f f U t i n S f s a d f 0 * ' ^ 0 . i p a r t o n , H f i e u n M t f * sick headacha ■.j o Aer Jifestive ailmenu tote ©s &s m i ’s F S I S s p o f h in q A n ^ H e a lin g > a b y s T c n d c r S K i n rJafiIcnI l D 8 t r o m e D ( « . Flut*5' jjeilO' j ehm ) T rum pets. CorneWarItoo** [» fxophosee. T ro m b o n e s , g pjwl*' k; cJJph and low o r strictly 1° 'Sv o n V a l l e y , Georgia. U O V E AND O IL ' T o v o a n d o f t w i l l m i x , a s C o u r m c y B y l w C o q P c t P ™ v e s « I * t h i s e x c i t i n g r o m a n c e o t a " v o n - . i n g o t l - b o o m t o w n . A n d I:* l u s t t h e m a n t o w r i t e i t , f o r i s t h o r o u g h l y f a m i l i a r L t h s u c h s c e n e s a n d t h & c h a r - t c r s t h a t b e l o n g w i t h t h e m . I t i s a l s o a s t o r y o f t h e M a r i n e s a n d t ^i e A m e r i c a n L e g i o n , b o t h H f w h i c h a r e n e a r a n d d e a r t o h i s I s e a r t — f o r h e w a s a M a r i n e i n F r a n c e a n d i s a n e n t h u s i a s t i c L e g i o n n a i r e . A n d t h e r e ’ s B l e n t y o f a c t i o n — w i t h e x - s e r v i c e m e n o n or.c s i d e a n d g a m b l e r s , b o o t ­ l e g g e r s a n d p a i n t e d ' w o m e n o n t h e o t h e r . D i r t y t r t p r k a t t h e t r o « « r o o d s , i n c l u d i n g m u r d e r , / a r - s o i h forgery, f a l s e w i t n e s s , b r i b - i r > , a s s a u l t a n d o t h e r c r i m e s a n d m i s d e m e a n o r s ! A n d t h a t ’ s w h y Ihe l o v e r o m a n c e o f B a r t R o g e r s a n d A n i t a F r a n n i s t o n s h i n e s l i k e a g n f i d d e e d i n a n a u g h t y w o r l d . And O f c o u r s e t h e M a r i n e s " h a v e I l i f s i t u a t i o n w e l l I n . h a n d . " B u t o n l y a t t h e w i n d u p — t h e y j t a v e h a r d g o i n g , a n d s o d o t h e l o v e r s . I t ' s o n e o f C o o p e r ' s b e s t s t o r i e s — a n d t h a t ’ s s a y i n g a g o o d d e a l , f o r h i s s t o r i e s — w h y , t h e i r n a m e i s l e g i o n , t o o . C H A P T E R I ~~ No Mortgage , .As if by instinct, B art R ogers inva­ riably hesitated as he reached the door which proclaimed, on its glass panel, (hat beyond - lay the office of Leon Barrows, attorney at law. i Rogers never had sought to divine the reason; he simply felt the pause to be necessary, In the sam e sort of Banner in which one pauses betbre opening the heavy door of a giant re­ frigerator. And perhaps there w as a similarity In the ideas; f<tr the office of Leon Barrows w »s frigid—just- as he n as frigid—a great, bare room of plctureless walls. In keeping witlr the room w as the ottorney himself, a white-faced, nar­ row-eyed person whose long features trere lengthened by the sm oothness of a three-inch bald streak which ran straight back from his forehe&d. Such was the attorney who occu­ pied the big, uncom fortable chair at the orderly, thronelike desk, and be­ cause of whoin B art R ogers hesitated, even with his hand on the doorknob, let, withal,' he resented the uncon­ scious revulsion, for, in spite, of tha Iciness of the m an, bfs thin-lipped snappiness, his general clam m iness of uppearance and of m anner, Rogers could look’upon him as nothing if not a benefactor. It had been the'm oney which had com from his lean hands which had filled the breach w hen B art Rogers had come home to jin d his fath er suf­ fering from the slo V d eath of paraly­ sis. It had been this money which had helped rehabilitate the sm all tract of irrigated land three m iles from-Bel- laine—land .which represented the sayr tags and the toil and the faith of^both Bart and his father, which bad bought the seed to so’w, a n d ''^ trried them both until the harvest could come In. Now that harvest had arrived, a n i Bart, with hi’s first check, had hurried to the office of X eon B arrow s, to h a lt' with his hand on the doorknob; then, at last, to smile w ith the happiness of an approaching freedom from debt, and to go in. Leon B arrow s Jooked up swiftly from his w orkless desk.' “Well, what is it?” H e a sk e d 'th e question as though he had f>een dis­ turbed. B art Rogers knew th at he had not. He w ent forw ard happily, and reached for the pen and ink. “I want to Indorse a check,” he an­ nounced. "Go ahead.”. Tbe attorney w atched ■him narrowly. “Sou’ffe been out on, the street?” . ' “res.” “How’s the election going?" “Tom Jordan’s winning.” ; “How do you know?” -The ques­ tion came sharply. R ogers looked up. “Well, I don’t know—of my own knowledge! I’m just, going on w hat people are saying. They seem to think Franniston’s beaten to a frazzle.” “The votes aren’t counted yet.- No chance for Jordan to win.” . “Then if you knew, why did ^ou ask me?” There w as an exasperating air about Leon Barrow s .which alw ays stirred a sleeping resentm ent "I’n only telling you w hat I picked up.” "All right, then. It’s wrong.” " “Very well. Anyway, It won’t'ta k e long to find out. T h e'p o lls will be closing in ten m inutes. They ought to know pretty shortly a fte r th at who tie mayor’ll be.” “Who’d you vote for?” iiJordan." ' “Oh. you did? W h y r The exasperation returned. “In the first place, because I w anted to- In the second place,, because I don’t like ‘Bull’ Franniston! Anyway; that isn’t w hat I ’ cam e here to talk “bout. This check, M r. . B arrow s, Is for yon.” ' “For w hat?” ^ ' ^ “For w hat?” B art. R ogers stared. “W hyvfor p art paym ent on th a t m ort­ gage.” ■ The narrow_ eyeB blinked quickly. I^eon Barrow s cam e forw ard In bis % chair. “You’re talking riddles. W hat m ort- W tP ' n . “On Ihe faim Didn’t Dad give yon a mortgage when he borrowed that money?” “He signed notes.” “So did I. ^ B ut I alw ays thought they w ere secured by a m ortgage.” “Did he e'ver say bo?” “Of course not. In the week or so a fte r I got hom e there was so much to talk about th a t we only went, into things generally, simply told me th a t he’d gotten some money from you to tide him over and th at if I needed any m ore I could''^ t it at the sam e place. Then that, second stroke hit him, and, as you know, he lost his vocal control. B ut I alw ays sup­ posed—” ' “You’ve . alw ays supposed wrong. There’s no m ortgage.” ‘T m glad of that. ■ But. there are tlie notes. I w ant to; take some of them up.” A thin smile pulled slightly at the corners of the attorney’s lips. “Maybe they’re paid already,” “But they’re not.” “Young man,” and the attorney’s' lean finger w ent nearer than' ever to the desk, “the best w ay to handle a debt is to w ait until you’re called upon to pay It. You. haven’t been dunned yet, have you?’ : “Of course not.” . . “Then forget It. The debt’s paid.” “Paid? W hy— ?” Frank amaze­ m ent w as in the young m an’s eyes.- “A t least,” there was' quick hedg­ ing In the attorney’s voice, "as fa r as “A Client?" He Asked. I know It’s paid. It isn’t my money. I’ve sim ply been the disbursing agent. I—” ~ “N ot your !money? Then who’s been putting up— ?” ' “A friend of your Sather1 s.” “B ut who?” “Ask him. An attorney doesn’t tell the business of his clients.’’ “B ut yoSi know I can’t get any an­ sw er from him. He can’t .speak1 and he can’t w rite. How— ?” . “Don’t try to cross-examine me. I won’t tell. An old friend of tlie fam ­ ily helped the two of you out. Your fath er w as very grateful. They made 'a little pact betw een them which, to me, as an attorned, appears to be very foolish for—for my client, the m an who is putting up the money. B ut he seem s to think it's ail rig h t My part of it Is simply - the legal end which m ost be looked after by an attorney, ,ft is u p 'to m e to protect niy client against his own foolishness. T here­ fore- I ordered • the notes signed by me, and then transferred them to the m an to ,whom they really belong, so th at t£ he' does not care to ,collect them , well and good. If he doesn’t and if .he w ants to accept this other proposition In the eyes of the law when'ithe right and proper tim e comes, very well. M y interest ' is ended. T hat is all.? “B ut who Is this man', and w hat is the ,proposition?" “Ask your father.” . 'T ve already told you 'tliat I can’t do that.” '.Tve already told you all th a t I can as an attorney. SoYthere’s an end to I t How’s th a t Oil proposition get- ttn g -along out your'w ay? Been over there lately?” “D ay before yesterday.” - ^ “Struck anything th at looks like pay sand?” “I don’t know. The drillers seemed n r e t t y Interested In w hat w as coming up, bnt you never can tell.” . “O ught to be doing som ething pretty soon They’ve been' fodllng around 'w ith th a t thing fo r m ore than six m onths now.” _“L on ger-than th a t I w as still In the hospital at A urora w hen they started—my fath er w rote me a b o n tit T h a t w as ju st before he had Ws first strik e, and that’s been more thaa . a rear-ago. Then they moved me down to Arizona and I w as there four m onths before, they discharged me, “Gtiess th at’s rig h t ’ The ®5?n \ey I9Oked a t him appraisingly. Y oure ^ “'Obfye&OWFact is, I Was all right when Y got home from France. B ut I couldn’t argue the doctors into i t ”. “That’s the trouble with you fel­ lows.” Leon Barrow s said It thinly, sarcastically. “I never saw a m an yet who’d ever been In the arm y who didn’t Have something to kick about Can’t understand I t If you’ve got; so m any kicks, why do you w ear that button?” . “T hat button?” B art Rogere looked down a t his lapel, tow ard the star of the American Legion which showed there. Then, for tffe first tim e during the interview, he grinned. “I guess you don’t know soldiers, Mr. Barrow s. A m an hasn’t been In the arm y un­ less he’s learned to kiik against every­ thing-in the world. T hat’s w hat makes him a fighter, because he carries a chip on his shoulder. B ut ju st be­ cause be kicks' that doesn’t m ake him any the less patriotic!” “Guess that's rig h t B ut I don’t like, kicking. I like a m an to take his. medicine and not m a k e . f a c e s a b o u t it—." H e h a l t e d s u d d e n l y a s t h e t e l ­ ephone jangled and swung about in his cbnlr to answ er i t “Hello” he called, then letoed SUddenlya tow ard the transm itter. “Beg pardon. Very' sorry, but I can’t soe you now, W hat’s that? Xes." A slight pause. T hen: “About five minutes. I’d say.” B art Rogers rose. ', ■ "A' client?” he asked. “Yes.” Leon B arrow s turned-back to his desk In a fretful, agitated mood. "~S.es,.. a client Coming up here In five minutes. You’ll have to get o u t Let that money thing go. F q rg et'i t Don’t- come back here trying to give me any m ore' money unless I send for you. U nderstand? AU right. Get o u t" “Certainly,” Rogers already w as at the door. "Only I think that it would' be fair to m e to tell me w hat this deal is and let me know the identity of my. benefactor. I—”, “You’ll know that when legal ethics perm it me to tell. Now get out!” The door opened aiijJ. closed. A long m oment passed, while the Man-faced attorney listened'to the steps of the young man as they faded down the hail. Then hurriedly, alm ost feverish­ ly, he turned tow ard the telephone and called a number, drumming excitedly upon his desk as he aw aited the an­ swer. A t last it came, and the . at­ torney leaned- close to- the phone. “Hello,” he. called In a low voice. “Couldn’t talk a m inute ago. That party w as In here. Yon know the one I mean. Now, go ahead.” Something stream ed over the phone which caused the n a r iw eyes of the thin-faced attorney to blink rapidly, and which slowly brought a steadily deepening flush of color to his' high cheeks. H is free band seemed to/ tw ist and w rithe. Then his eyes set, and the color faded, giving his fea­ tures a ghastly, pasty expression; The thin lips seemed, ,.to lose them- 'selves In the w hite of his face. “All right,” came at la s t "I under-, stand. You’ve got a little m ore.than an hour. T hat’s plenty of time. Go ahead with that proposition we’ve talked over—and w ork fa sti Under­ stand me? WorIt fa st!” . A second m ore-he rem ained a t the telephone, to receive his answ er from the other end. Then the receiver clicked into place,-and the tall m an leaped from his desk th at he might hurry to the window and stare into the street below. In front of the main election bo,othi w as a knot of men, one- of them B art Rogers. And upon that figure the eyes of Leon B arrow s cen­ tered, eyes whi<^i suddenly had as-- sum ed a snakelike glitter, eyes which bad become deep-set and vicious, eyes which spelled for the moment the true story of the brain behind them. And as those eyes watched the young man below, the lean hands w rithed and tw isted, tw isted and w rithed, one Into the other; the tijin IJps drew back from heavy teeth, and the unw hote some fape seemed suddenly to contort' In an agony of hate, of fear—and of victory. " , Well, here’s a m ystery right a t the s ta r t Is Leon Barrows a-snake in the grass? (TO BE CONTINUED.) Manafacfuring Crayona Crayons are m ade chiefly / from chalk. The coloring m atted Is-m ixed In with the aid of w.Pter .aiid is pulver­ ized by means ol*triple rollers. This Is dried to . a certain consistency and fed into a machine which.. expels It In the form of a rod through a circular opening, the diam eter of which equals that of a pastel or. crayon. Cut to the requisite length,!J h e crayons are set to dry on tra js whlch. are stacted In racks on Steani-Iieateci shelves, th e process of m aking colors In the “called form differs from th at employed for crayons. A fter, being mixe# . and ground, the p a ss Of color Is- cart-Jed to the drying rooms In paha.1 j t Is. left In cham bers of varying degrees of heat-until the w ater has been evap­ orated! w hen the resulting dough Ie ready for kneading .The m ixture I? then fed through -a’ machine, -emerging In the form of a strip, pressed to about an eighth of an inch thjck, which Is cut Into “cakes."—Fam ily H erald. Jap Festival Marked - by Display of Flags Japan’s boys’ festival is. m arked throughout the country by the display of fish flags from every Bouse blessed w ith “sons—for- every soti a fl’ag Households • vie with one another ac­ cording to their resources, and, -the show is m ore or less colorful and brave. The fish flag is In the form OX a carp, each flag indicating a particu­ lar age. For instance, from one polle seven carp, bellied out in the sun by a strong breeze, conveyed/the intend­ ed suggestion of the fish fighting their way bravely and strongly against the current, as boys m ust fight th eir way upstream through life. The flags are gayly colored, and along"the country­ side one. sees them near and fa r against the new spring greens .In hun­ dreds and thousands, representing the new generation of Japan, heirs to a new manhood suffrage. Cutieura for Pim ply Faces. To remove pim ples and blackheads sm ear them w ith C uticura O intm ent W ash off In five m inutes w ith Cutl- cura Soap and hot w ater. Once clear keep your skin clear by using them for daily toilet purposes. Don’t fail to in­ clude Cutlcura Talcum. Advertisem ent. Chinese See Disaster As though the atm osphere of Pe- king w ere not thick enough with ru­ mors and omens of impending nation­ al catastrophe, a m essage has been brought In from l ’aiyuanfu, capital Of Shansi province, to the effect that three “w hite rainbow s” have been seen there, w rites a Chinese corre­ spondent. Instances dating back to the -Wu dynasty are cited to bolster up thfe indication th a t both internecine and extraneous troubles are In store for China in the near future. A s i m p l e , o l d - f a s h i o n e d m e d i c i n e , a s f f o o d t o d a y a s I n 1 8 3 7 , i s c o m p o u n d e d i n - W r i g h t ' s I n d i a n V e g e t a b l e P i l l s . T h e y r e g u l a t e t h e i t o m a c h , l i v e r a n d b o w e l s . A d v . Snaps C lose F inish A new camera clock times horse races and takes a picture of the run­ ners as they cross the finish line, so that no mistakes can, be made In plac­ ing them. ' —» FREE PELLAGRA'!DIAGNOSIS N e w t r e a t m e n t f o r P e l l a g r a b y a g r a d u a t e p h y s i c i a p o £ 3 0 y e a r s ’ e x p e r i e n c e i n g e n e r a l a n a . h o s p i t a l p r a c t i c e . E a r l y s y m p t o m s a r e n e r v o u s n e s s , s t o m a c b ' t r o u b l e , ' , d e s p o n d e n c y , s h o r t n e s s ’ o f b r e a t h , b u r n i n g f e e t , , b r o w n o r r o u g h s s k i n , c o n s t i p a t i o n ; l o s s o f - s l e e p , t o s s Of W W g l l t , d i a r r h o e a , a n d g e n e r a l . w e a k n e s s . Vou may not have all these ByDiptOiDfl in t h e b e g i n n i n g . M y F R E E / b o o k l e t , “ T h e S t o r y o f P e l l a g r a , ” w i l l e x p l a i n . I f y o u h a v e t a k e n o t h e r t r e a t m e n t s | w i t h u n s a t i s f a c t o r y r e s u l t s . Y O T J a r e t h e o n e I w a n t . P u t m y t r e a t m e n t t o t e s t .' L e t o t h e r s t e l l y o u w h a t I t d i d f o r t h e m , i n m y F R S B b o ? k o f t e s t i m o n i a l s . S e n d f o r q u e s t i o n n a i r e , f i l l o u t a n d s e n d t o m e a n d I w i l l d i a g n o s e y o u r c a s e F R E E . W . C . R O C N T K E E . M . D . T e x a r k a n a ~ T e x a s C ryS T ‘M O T H E R :- Fletcher’s Gis- toria is a pleasant, Iiannless Sub­ stitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in arms and Qiildrqi' all ages. To avoid ,imitations;' always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. FIsysicians everywhere recommend it. B B D )B U G S them / Bee Brand Insect.Powder won’t stain —or harm anything except Insects, Houoehold sizes, IOc and 25c—other<lre*,50o and $U)0, at your drocg&t or grocer. Wrftefor Pfcee Booklet, uIt Killa Them”, J frCOBMICKjc CO. Baltimore, Md. _ ECZEMA After Others Fail PETERSONrS OINTMENT Big Box 35 €ents The mighty healing power o f Peter­ son’s Ointment when eczema-or terrible itching of-skin'and 3c«lp tortures yon Is known to tens of thousands of/peo­ ple the country over. .For pimples, acne, rough and rea skin, ulcers, old- sores,-, piles fllld flU blemishes-and eruptions it is supreme­ l y efficient, as any broad-minded drug­ gist will tell yon. 4 F O R S A I , E — P E D I G R E E D A I B E D A L E P U P P I E S , r e g i s t e r e d A . K . N o g r a n d e r , b r a v e r d o g k n o w n . M a l e s , $ 1 5 . 0 0 ; f e m a l e s , * 1 0 . 0 0 . B . M . L E E , F O R T M I L L , S . C . FLORIDA REAL ESTATE W i l l ‘ b u y F l o r i d a r e a l e s t a t e f o r c a s h a n d f r o m o w n e r s o n l y . S e n d f u l l d e s c r i p t i o n a n d p r i c e . S . T . R O G E R S . 7 D e K a l b A v e n u e , . B R O O K L Y N , • N E W Y O R K . W A N T W O R K T O D O A T H O M E ? I f s o , w r i t e A L D E R S O N . C O L L E C T I N G S Y S T E M , B o f 1 6 T . S O U T H B E N D . I N D . B U R l K D T R E A S U R E S R E A D I L Y L O C A T E D w i t h o u r n e w s c i e n t i f i c I n s t r u m e n t s : 2 c f o r p a r t i c u l a r s . P r o s p e c t o r s ’ A p p l i a n c e C o . , 1 2 1 0 N o r t h K f n g s h i g h w a y , S t . L o u i s , M i s s o u r i . . P A R K E R 'S H A m B A L S A M Bemovea Dandroff-Stopi Hair Flflhg Restore* Color and BeantrtoGrayend Faded Hair GOc and fl.CO at Druggists.Hteeox Chem. Wka..?atehogoe.N.Y. H fIN D C R C O R N S Removes Corns. Cal-louses, etc., stops all pain, ensures comfort to tha feet, makes walking easy. 15c by mall or at Drag* gists. HiscKa Chemical works, Fatdiogue, N. T. P l o t T v a - B l a W r i t i n g ; I n k ; S e l t - T h r e a d i n c n e e d l e s ; s a v e t i m e a n d e y e s . P a c k a g e e i t h e r , d i m e . L i b e r a l a g e n t s ' p r o p o s i t i o n . V a t . p r e m i ­u m s . I n v e s t i g a t e . T e a s d a l e C o . , S a v a n n a h . G a . . CARBUNCLES. Carboll draws out the Cera . and gives quick reltff.GMtBOIL. eentRous soteoxAt «11 DnggkU—Mnwytek CtunntM- SAMPSON WIND MILLS- and Towers Save* time, and labor. Keeps1 the household and Uve nodi1 •applied with water. Write i o d a y lot deolli a n d prtcra. SydnorPnmp and Well Co., IUcfimoiiif,Va. Pomps. Engines, Saw M i l l s ,Wind Mills, Radlofcu, Etc, W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 25-1925. M R S . A D A F R I C K P M iim u n , OHto “ V OU can be just as healthy, Btrong and happy as I am,’ said, one woman to her neighbor after listening to the description of her ailinents,— ‘if you -will take Lydia B. Pinkhain’s Vegetable Compound. My condi- iion was very similar to yourS, I suffered from those awful bearing down pains, weakness, backache, nervousness and headaches until I could hardly drag aroqpd. Today I am strong, wall and happy because I followed the advice of a friend Vho had been greatly benefited by this old-fashioned root and herb medicine.” Nearly fifty years ago Lydia E. Pinkhaii of Lynn, Mass. prepared from medicinal roots and herbs Lydia E. Pinkham’s Yegetable Compound. Ite jw has spread from shore to shore. Yoii will now find m every coiamunity 4>r neighborhood sonws woman who has been restored to h^altai by its use, or has some friend who lias. Therefore ask your neighbor. Thousands of unsolicited testimonials such as the following are oo file at* the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., and prove the merit of this medicine. Therefore no woman should continue to suffer from B U C h ailments. ‘ « Mn. Fricfe TeHs of Her Experience ' Pebbysbcbo , Ohio—“I took Iydia E. PinkhamVVegetable Oompomia because I enflered with pains In my sides all the «n?e. I can’t remember juat how long I suffered lmfit was for some-timg. Ona day I was. talking with a neighbor and I told her'how I waa feeling and she said she had been just luce I was with pains and ~ t T - J X aaI, ^ TTnsMvfnVtla ~ _ _ _ i f r a n a B O O B S l Q M J i e U W t uccu j u s v ■ • * * * • T ~ “tToibies andsha took the Vegetable GompoMd ^ i^ p e d h w .^ the. I went and got some and I certairiy recommend it_for it w j £ o i _ .1»“ a-woman who Is sick I try to get her to take Itfdia- E. Pin pound."—Mrs. Aoa Fbick, R. No. 3, Penysbwgj Ohio. . ’s Vegetable'Com- Sucii letters Should induce others to toy L Y N N l N A S tiLYOIA E . PINKHAM H E O IC IN gk C O , A C4B I?.. p ; | l » Si Il I !" |f;r;:R i/:* IJjfif :}i Jv';:;?-: j f e I?$ ‘‘ l-if- THE DAVIE RECORD. MOGKSVILLE, N. C. P ; ? £ wI' :1 A C.■•^ Ir.;*-; ” ’ 'h? m :!• m h i ■ !€ . "ft-: Bk*v ; i-v1 Ji^.-,' j--.:;j| I' ■.' ' Hl S r t.’t- ! f . 1 J p i t I S I ® '- I f I S ;; I f*1J: i ,p s I ijI- i;f w 1« m i« ; i s ' i l l I lJ t liftT.'it s'p':,;!Ijv1 I # ^ m •*■•#. s I M iff igpi. P b . :;-rf I i I i s n | t i f i l M M I I I H ' 1 1 -. I i l n llW USffiJ i J n f ' Timely Facts on Meat Production F o o d A n im a ls S la u g h te r e d in 1 9 2 4 R e a c h e d H ig h e s t _ P e a k in H isto r y . ( P r e p a r e d b y t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s D e p a r t m e n t o f A g r i c u l t u r e . ) A compilation of figures on m eat production and consumption, by the U nited States D epartm ent of Agricul­ ture, contains the following inform a­ tion : D uring 1924 the estim ated num ber of food anim als slaughtered in the U nited States reached the highest peak in history, totaling 119,980,500 or about 1.1 anim als fy r every man, worn an and child of the population. Federally Inspected. About two-thirds of all food anim als slaughtered are federally inspected; the rem aining one-third, which do not enter interstate or foreign commerce, are not subject to federal inspection. More swine than any other kind of anim als were slaughtered last year, the total exceeding 80,000,000. The sm allest slaughter of food ani­ mals w as for goats, of which 92,300 were converted Into m eat; but goats showed a larger per, cent of Increase In slaughter over tbe previous year than the other classes of food ani­ mals. The United States stands first among the stock-raising countries of th e world, but A rgentina and A ustra­ lia, which are sparsely populated, have large surpluses of beef and mut­ ton and are the principal factors in supplying the European deficit in these classes of meat. The U nited States habitually ex­ ports from 12 to 15 per cent of Its to­ tal production of pork. The United States has approxim ate­ ly one-sixteenth of the world's popu­ lation, but has w ithin its borders about one-seventh of the food animals. Meat Consumed. The total quantity of meat con­ sumed in the United States, has in­ creased steadily each year for the last six years, but the ever-increasing pop­ ulation reduced the per capita con­ sumption about one pound in 1924 compared with the previous year. Per capita consumption was 164.9 pounds exclusive of 15.8 pounds of lard. Indications point to a somewhat shorter supply of m eat for the next year or two a t le a st P la n t B e r in u d a G r a ss to C h e e k B lig h t o n P e a r s For blight on pear trees the best thing to do is to cut out the blighted parts and destroy them. C ut from six to eight inches below the blighted part, otherwise you may spread tbe disease by having the knife or shears become infected. P ear trees alw ays blight w orse on rich soil, or when they are In a vigorous growing condition, there­ fore, in order to check the blight we m ust check the growth of the trees. This may be done by sowing grain around the lrees in the fall, allowing it to m ature on the land, and turning it under In the spring, if you have only a few trees you may easily check the growth by planting Berm uda grass around them and letting the trees re­ main In sod permanently. N o x io u s P la n ts A r e B a n e o f A lm o s t E v e r y F a r m e r Pasturing w ith sheep will kill lots of weeds, for sheep like the tender plants of w hite top. Red sorrel is a sign that soli needs lime and manure. A good growth of grass will crowd out sorrel. Mowing sorrel tw ice a year before seed forms, In connection w ith liming; m anuring and crop rotation, will soon get rid of it- v Prickly lettuce will soon disappear If no seeds are allowed to ripen, for It is an tfhnual p la n t A few plants In a fence corner may seed a large field— hence keep down all weeds In fepce corners. The sam e goes for other weeds, too. One of the best ways to keep your farm clear- of weeds Is to sow clean seed. P o is o n in g C u tw o r m s to S a v e th e G a r d e n T r u c k W atch for the lowly cutworm on cabbages and tomatoes, for great- may be the destruction it causes. Plants set out on newly plowed sod land are likely to be especially subject to attack by this pest, states H. Bi. Hodgklss, extension entomologist of the Pennsylvania State college. If the worms appear destroy them quickly by using sweetened poison b a it The form ula given by Hodgkiss Is as follows: 20 parts of bran, two quarts of cheap molasses, .one pound of parls green or w hite arsenic, and 3% gallons or w ater, or enough to m ake a "sloppy” m ixture. , A b u n d a n c e o f N o d u le s o n R o o ts I s E s s e n tia l. W ithont inoculation ^alfalfa, sweet clover and soybeans can be only par­ tially successful and are often nearly total failures. According ,to ' A. C. Arny of University farm at • St. Paul,, Minn., the following method Jia s been found satisfactory In securing inocula­ tion when the work has been -well done: Secure from a field that is growing or produced last season well inocu­ lated plants, as indicated by an abundance of nodules on their roots, as much soil by m easure as there is seeji to be sown. Sift this through a fine sieve when still moist and' spread in the shade to dry. • MoisteD the seed and then mix with it approximately- an equal am ount by m easure of the dry soil. By drying ihe soli it will take up the w ater on the moistened seeds and adhere to them. Fresh soil mixed with the seed and sown immediately gives good results. W hen commercial inoculants are ,used the-grow er Sliould=follow accom­ panying directions for applying to the seed. Inoculation is so necessary on sandy lands that Mr. Arny advises the use of both soil and a commercial Inoculant Fine black soil Is much su­ perior to sandy soil for Inoculating because It contains greater num bers of bacteria and adheres to the seeds better. . T h in n in g A p p le s a n d P e a r s W hen apples and pears set a good crop there will be far too many of them to develop as they should.. M any tim es there are enough to bend the lim bs over and break thAn. Thinning is not alone to give relief ft> the over­ loaded limbs, hut to m ake the quality better and the fru it larger, if you have ady doubts of w hat It will do, try it out. Apples w ill not only be larger and better formed, but they will be of finer flavor, and pears will be still mot-e. benefited. M any' pears have rather hard cores, b p tjf tl.e whole strength of the tree Is thrown into a crop th at can be made, to grow large and perfect yon will find there will be little of this hard cors even in such varieties as the KelS.sr. Secure Inoculation for Legume Crops G e t P ig s I n te r e s te d in ' T h e ir M o th e r ’s -R a tio n s Plgs at about three or four weeks of age begin,to take an active interest In ttielr m other’s rations. Successful swine raisers have found that this in­ terest should be encouraged; for the sow’s milk flow generally begins to decrease three weeks after farrowing and a t this age the pigs can success­ fully use small quantities of solid food. The decreasing supply of milk m ust be m et by the use of feeds to supply tlip needs of the growing pig whose re- qulrem ents are’ Increasing each day. Prof. W. C. Skelley, assistant ani­ mal husbandm an at the New Jersey A gricultural college, recommends a small pen having a small trough or a self-feeder th at will allow the young plgs« to eat at frequent Intervals by themselves. H e advises th at the pigs should not be fed carelessly. “If w et feed is used it should not stand In the trough but should be cleaned up at once. Dry feed should not be, fed In such quanti­ ties th at It will Temaln In the trough over 12 hours. T he trough should be/ cleaned daljy, or if a self-feeder is 1 used It should be adjusted so as not to^ allow It to feed t6o freely. These points are of especial Importance, as they help to elim inate one of the com­ mon causes of scours.” /e ttu c e I s P r o fita b le C ro p f o r M o s t F a r m e r s It is believed that the average cost of growing lettuce (in 1924) did not exceed $100 per acre. K eturns made to grow ers by shippers and associa­ tions varied considerably but w ere al­ m ost double the ( 1923 returns. It should be borne in . mind th at many grow ers cut only a small part, and In some cases none, of their acreage due to seed stalks and Wp' burn. However, reports from several concerhs show th a t a t least $2 per crate w as the average return to the grow er after de­ ducting all charges for crates. Ice, packing and selling. R eturns to indi­ vidual' grow ers w ere In many cases much higher. One concern' reported average returns to its eight best grow­ ers ranged from $200 to $46® per ,acre. On the. basis of $100 per acre growing cost this would give the grow er a good net profit.—John D. Snow, M arket News Service, U. S. B ureau of Agricul­ tural Economics. I n o c u la te S o y B e a n s To inoculate soy beans dissolve a pound of flake glue In tw o gallons of w ater and sprinkle the solution over the seed sufficiently to moisten It well. Then sprinkle from four to six pounds of Inoculated soil over-the seed, stirring It well to make sure th a t par­ ticles of soll adhere to each seed. Ex­ perim ents have shown that this Is as effective as other processes. The in­ oculating soil should not be unneces­ sarily exposed to direct sunlight CHIC SUITS FOR THE BEACH; . ■ - .MODES FOR YOUNG GIRLS IN A sum m er of gay apparel one would ■ expect beach and bathing suits to outstrip all others In audacity of color and design and among them there are many that are vividly col­ ored. But they are outnum bered hy suits made up In black or dark blue, with touches of bright color In pipings or bands. T here Is considerable variety In design and much diversity in m ate­ rials used for beach wear. SIiks are represented by satin and by taffeta In plain and printed patterns Including plaids, by cotton broadcloth, cretonne and terry cloth and wool by plain or figured knitted garm ents—the new est of the last In Jacquered patterns. In entitled to 'lt A nyw ay, m em bers of the youthful - Parisian sm art s e t,'a s rep­ resented In the Bols, are w earing-the m ost fetching coats th a t ever revealed the genius of the French. L ittle children usually seem ail liegs—their coats and frocks are so brief, rarely reaching to the knees. In the early p art of the season stockings th at are rolled Just below the .knees are worn, but In w arm er w eather these w ill dwindle to short sox. ■' For their youngsters’ pretty coats the French are using flannel, duvetlne, poplin broadcloth and. sim ilar light­ w eight -m aterials.- They choose attrac­ tive colors—rose, green, blue, salm on ffcKWS-SW* ' -At.......~ _ _ _ PRETTY BATHING SUIT beach toggery rubber and rubberized silk Is represented In caps, scarfs, capes and bags. : Capea and robes-of terry-cloth are scheduled for much., popularity and capes of gay>y flowered cretonne, may dispute ,honors with them . Blazer stripes, In the strongest colors with white, are featured In coats, of heavy twill cotton fabrics. The coolie coat of • flowered cretonne or satin, worn with black satta trousers, is a prom­ ising aspirant for favor as1 a beach costume. Then there are beach pa­ jam as of flowered cretonne or a com­ bination of cretonne, coat and black satin trousers. • Black taffeta softs make tbe fate of long, gayly colored rubber scarfs very pink -and gray, to so-lt shades." Trim ­ mings are simple—bias bands of self m aterial, flat braids groups of machine- stitched lines .or a contrasting m a­ terial In collar and- cuffs, as show n In the little flannel coat pictured.- Soft felt or fabric hats are worn w ith these coats, which, are very, sim ply cut. There .are a few cape coats among them. A pretty model has the short cape, scalloped at the bottom and the fullness gathered under, the coat’s turn-over collar. Crepe de chine is In high favor w ith the French for HttIe children’s frocks and Is a very durable and practical m aterial. The little tw o-piece affair pictured m ight be m ade of It or of voile or ,dim ity, w ith needlew ork in F a r m H k ii/ A lfalfa cuts feed bills and enlarges profits. t. , > * * * This chemical w arfare is terrible, say the Insects.* » » Some weed seeds will live In. the soil for 20 years, it has been found. " * » • ' P ut a salt box In the pasture as soon as' the stock is turned out, and then keep it filled.* • *- f Farm products are w orth no more than you can, get for them. Remember this w hen planting. •>'* ♦ * . Get the bugs before they take the garden^. Don’t nurse the vegetables along to m aturity and then let Insects or diseases take them. * - * ’ .■ In one ^ e a r Canada exported to the United States, tw o and three-quarters million gallons , o f fresh cream, most of it coming from tha province oi Ouehso. TWO YOUTHFUL MODELS I certain—they will be found. In each other’s company all. summer. Rubber garters and cap to m atch the. scar!1 lend much chic to the black costume. B athing slippers, are as varied as the. suits and may be had In rubber, satlB or terry cloth In m any different' pat­ terns and In varied colors. Spring days In Paris bring out 'th e little tots otr' fashionables, for hours 'of- play In the Hols. T here they absorb, plenty of fresh alr-rnone too warm—and such quarter-hours of sttn- shlne -as are usually alotted to ,the French capital In the early p art of the season. The 'French m ust have got that-fairy taie-about “Sunny France” •down on the Riviera—where they are I colored floss. Am erican designers have presented just as attractive dresses for L L 0ne3,' choosinS English prints In bright colors for bloomer dresses- voUe .and dimity m plnk, blue l ^ or w hite atid wash silks./ For sum m er w ear the frocks are made w ithout'sleeves and finished w ith M U necfc Sometimes small patch pockets of lace are added. Thr rtm r a IUtle longer, than Fre1^h l I"6 reaching about to the knera Bn? wide, TOLIA B O TTO M Lnr C a 1 9 2 B . W e s t e r n N « / , B a o e r - - V R A I S I N G G E E S E I S Q U I T E P R O F I T A B L E D uring the p ast y ear I have been raising geese and I have found them to be profitable. T here is a good m ar­ ket fo r geese. : ' In the first place geese require, less g?ain than any other fowl. T h at is Im portant. • T he geese derive a' great- 'e r p a rt of th eir living from ,pasture and roam ing about, and they get ju st w hat they require in the w ay of feed. !In ' w inter ;it’s different. W e m ust feed them , but they do not ^ a t ilk* other fowls, and I have found they will fatten m ore quickly than other fowls, says a w riter In the Indiana F arm er’s Guide. T he im portant thing th at I do not w ant overlooked Is th e fact th ^ t the goslings are the easiest o f all fow ls to raise. T h at has been m y ex­ perience of m apy-^ears past, perhaps ten years or longer. Once they a re hatched out, w ith ordinary care, they will thrive and grow w ith rapidity to m aturity. T he thing th a t is hardest Is to get them hatched. Ih a v e found so m any eggs th a t w e r e Infertile, so I alw ays set- plenty of them . T he little .’goslings will seldom touch feed other th an bits of grass sntil after three o r four days. One thing Is essential, and th a t is having plenty of drinking w ater. They m ust have this, and require it, for th a t seem s to be th eir very nature. T he hen and goslings a re kept In their coop, w here it is w arm for the first week. Som etim es I keep them in ten ■ days w hen It is dam p and cold'. A fter that they are allow ed all the free range they w ant, except on rainy days. T he first feed I give the goslings is hard-boiled eggs m ixed w ith m ilk and cornm eal; T hat is' the best thing in the w ay of feed th a t I have ever tried. The mill: m iist be sw eet for best re­ sults. The .eggs m ay be crushed up, shell an<t all, and mixed w ith th e m ilk and cornmeal. The first m onth the goslings a re fed about four tim es a day.. I have alw ays done this, fg r w hile young and grow ­ ing they require nourishm ent often, although sparingly fed each tim e. It Ia folly to overfeed and it is also In­ jurious. T he breeding birds are fed care­ fully during w inter. I give them clover, vegetables and sprouted oats, so they do not get to® , fa t. ■ Y o u n g T u r k e y s R e q u ir e S h e lte r in W e t W e a t h e r Young turkeys are susceptible to wet w eather. ■ Ohe precaution th a t • m ust alw ays he observed I n . handling- th e yettng poults Is to see th a t'th e y have a (fry place w here they are protected front the- rainstorm s, and th at they liave a dry place' to- roost. Turkey hens w ilt lay w hen a year old; if they are well m atured. It Is probably best to keep th e m ajority,of the- flock older hens, but It Is neces­ sary to keep some of the better young hens to gradually replace th e older liens. In this w ay the flock can be kept In the best of condition. In feeding and caring for young poults there are as m any different rations and methods advocated as there are fo r chicks. N o food should be given to tbe young poults for the first 36 to hours. D uring th e first week hard- boiled Infertile eggs chopped fine and mixed w ith equal p a rts of rolled oats •rad fed In lim ited quantities three tim es a day is a ’'satisfactory ration. Sour skimmed m ilk o r butterm ilk is. excellent fo r drinking purposes. A ft­ e r the third or fourth day clacked corn, hulled or steel-cut oats, cracke.d w heat o r .other siigilar grains m ay be scattered; In the light U tter or in the short- grass outsld^ o f the brood coop In order to . encourage th e poults to exercise In getting their food. . J u n e I s th © B e s t T im e t o C a p o n iz e C o c k e r e ls W hile capons are produced, only In small nutnber w here th eir quality Is1 known, they sell/fo r fancy’prices, ac­ cording ta D. H. H all, extension poul­ try specialist of Clemson college, who- suggests th at the m onth of June is the. best tlm i to caponize young cockerels.1 At this season th e m arket lS usually low fo r broilers and ii will pay to ca- ponlze cockerels and keep- them for' capons. In selling these capons th e local m arket m ust-he developed first: Some of o,ur tourist-- tow ns-are already pro­ viding good m arket for capons .and are Paying good'prices for them ./ Several men In South Carolina are capbnlzing for the farm<vra, and a re m arketing their proflucts for them a t a sm all cost. U The; operation on the cockerel Is hot difficult usually, but ! should be per­ formed w ith care. If th e cockerels are starved out from 36 to 48 hours be­ fore Ble operation, It will help greatly. U -the intestines .are full of food the operation is very difficult. , D ir ty F e e t R e ta r fl EJggs W hen yards and houses a re w et and-ooze w ith m oisture, m ost of the time, it means cold and dirty feet for the hens. A hen th at “gets cold feet" seldom lays the right quota of eggs, and dirty feet m ake dirty nests and dirty eggs. In cases w here a sult- able dry locathw is Ii^rd W get, along Jfith other desirable, factSrs, place a three-lnjph tile even w ith the bottom of the foundation on th e O utsida-^nd provide proper ouUet for e x e s * 'm ola.lure. - . j “ ■ " V . _ noyingld^ey i ^ X e^3at ‘S ’ 1 t e n , p ' f . S h e uAve, Spfa0j?1' ^ Is a y 5: C, ached anTij'k I stood loa> B a v e o u t 1 suffered ,“H I Her voiia I. ota3 - l c h e s . t o S h t J j - f e w m e A & ; DAVIE RE( r^Tc^ULATiON OF [ PUBLISHED IM DAVlE < one a n j.'a 'Talf^boxef aVov’ ***« every symptom of the X tA I w as cured.” attaCk aiJ e v e r y s y m p I w as cured S T I M U L A N T D I U R E T I C T O T H E F c t e r - M a b u m C . , M t , . O id Fishing : Several hundred Indians, inC|„,,h women and children, assembled , F isher Bay, a t the mouth of the v. river, In early spring, awaiting the? rival of the oollclians, accordine k w ord from Prince Kupert1 British lum bia. T he annual run of the u usually lasts a month. The Indian come from great distances to fisb them through the ice, and out of u» catch they make ooliclian Ctms. which they use In place of butter, [j previous years as many as 1,000 of H4 Indian.^ have assembled at the mouth of the river, but this year there iteie not m ore than 300. R o ya l G orge in Filnu M otion pictures of the Itoyal £0rge in ,Colorady, one of the scenic spotso[ th e U nited States, are being taken for exhibition throughout the world. \ special train has been necessary to m ake the picture properly. Tht wl^gels of the cars had to be perfect so as not to m ar any of the camera reproductions. O n e a p p l i c a t i o n o f R o m a n B r e B a l n n • f i l l p r o v e h o w g o o d u i s f o r s o r e e y e s . C o s S o n l y 3 5 c e n t s . 3 7 2 P e a r l S t . , N . I . A f r . T o rc h Fights* Forest Fires A new apparatus for fighting forest fires consists of a kerosene bloutorcli. useful for beating back fires, says Pop­ ular Science Monthly. By its use ah the firing, it is claimed, can be done by one experienced man, thus reducing the attendant danger to a minimnni. S u reR eIief FOR INDIGESTION i n m m 6 B ell-ans H ot wafer SureReIief _ ELL-ANS 254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE ■ S I C K BA BIES .Respond instantly to a short treatment of Dr. Thornton’s EASY TEETHER AskYour Druggitt " V b u r s y s t e m n e e d s ' H a n c o c k S u lp h u r Compound I f y o n s u f f e r f r o m e c z e m a o r h i v e s , o r I f.t DlOtCnw t h i s t r i e d o l d i e i M d y . . j n a e a n d b e n e f i t f r o m S u ’> ' ' - - j n t t r . t i o n . i t s o o t h e s a n d h e a l s . ' " e J t o u b Ie . n a l t y . i t g e t s a t t h e r o o t o f “ 6 0 c a n d $ L 2 Q a t y o u r ^ c a n n o t s u p p l y y o n , s e n o r u s• the price in stamps a n d w e w " a b o t t l e d i r e c t . ^ HAwcocKLrQOTDsuiPHDiiCo31p Balttoore*Manrtan« Baneoeh Sulphur Compwnd Oin and Wo —for we with the Lwi li Co Baby Loves ABaAW itli G u tic u ra Soap --,,,SB,_ Bland »n<1 Settling f~ IjlV11Jit5-" ScAL AND PERS0NA1 Jew York spot cotton Miss Sarah Charles is sJ |k with friends in Davi<| Jisses Essie and Eva L beth N aylor spent Fg irlotte. I -jrs. J. L- W all, of Ledd H jt Thursday and FridaJ H guest of Miss Jessie \Vj >:iac Booe, of near CaniJ p n Saturday on Iiis w a y f H cst to enter the suinm ej B ,rA N T E D r-T en an t fori if! ,locksville tow nship foif I VV. H E N R Y D A V IS ,I S iiss Sallie H unter left ; jffgAsheville where she w il veeks attending suinm ^ Iiss Clara Moore who t illin g at F raiiklintoii.l , li® e last week to suend tj Iiss Essie Call returnt] ‘‘ liiifw eek from Cumnock sbjfepent a w eek the gu estl Bfflche Perry. hietically all the w heatl county has been harvel aield is going to be bet| J-.st expected. hert WineeoIT who li tile past three moil 1 go!® Io A sheville where I spfend the sum m er. T-S. John Pope, of Ledd I Thursday and FridJ allier J. B. Canipbelll ill at his hom e near t| lrs. A . M. McGlanimI sou B illy, o f G it I guests of her father, Iliaflin a few days las'. jr. and Mrs. Jam es li Jjlittle daughter Claj L||§|nsboro, spent several in town guests of j|J. VV. Rodwell. PR S A L E — Improve* |o plants, all vatielil Icoo, 5000 lots 75 c p) ppt shipm ents. D O R R IS P L A N 'l .Valdif Jplias Christian liasl Irom Furm an UiS liville, S . C ., w here| *a student for the |>s Dorothy Gaithcj |s. Ji. C. M ortis pll atteu.led the Jolij wedding at Allenda Tuesday. Iof the shade trees a | side of South Main s t| Jaken down to make gucrete sidew alk that I Irotn the ; qua re tot j church corner. [and Mrs. J. G. Be “ii. J. G . Jr., of B r| aud spending so |I>r. Booe’s fatherl ^uear Cana. Dr. b ! Pn in the Bridgeport j S A L E —Saturday] ?ell for cash to the : °ur entire line of In sistin g bats, shoeL jjaidware, drugs an | Biles. Sale begins atL f ' e> W ood’s store ill W O O D & i\I AdvantJ Smith' left Thurl |He where he will sp ays with his son [attending school thl visit his brothel I at Petra Mills, bf home. IllaIl1 the little two-| ar old son of Rev. Jradleyi died ThurJ Ian illness of colitl 3V was laid to restf °u at Rose ^emeteryj I® childreu'to come - I t^etn not, for o| jRdom of heaveu. PcSsL4a^ f1 ^ a c I ti . ^ 1 8 agsarv’^J^fi.j B’^You^kTdoei l" rK fOnce they fall behind ■ bQ ^ 8ThtVaT^ offeieadaches, dizziness anj°m? W ; kidney m egu laritL ^ t^ t r kidneys are sluggish v*,* wait' stimulant diureti? ft^'S, Hem Doans are over. Ask your«• _ »' "''♦ytbor/ N,w^E aroJina Case |A v e.. Spfa01ul^M V s: "Vi v ^«1fohed atia ^ * Stood lr.v.~^ ok sSve o*?, "I I SUKered ut and i ^ V0 tv„ »J® r & T ’S Slytold m.A P*1U WouilTwJu' ;®e. so i t hel» act so I k elt> r . kIS k i^ te S j tOh^ e Abiau? Jcured. °£ the & A N ’S pSls O d d F ish in g hundred Indians, inciUl1i„ I and children, assembled « Jay, at the mouth of the Naa early spring, awaiting the T the oollehans, accordine km Prince Bupert1 British C0! ' 11,e annual run of the Bsh lasts a month. The IndIam great distances to fish for Jrougli the ice, an<l out of the Ihey make oolichan greas. Ile.'" “Se In place of lnitter. Ia I years as many as 1,000 of the |have assembled at the moutl, liver, but this year there were ‘ than 300. ctyal G o rg e in Film s pictures of the Iioyal gorge ado. one of the scenic spots ot eil States, are being taken for In throughout the world. Irrain has been necessary to Ilie picture properly. The j)C the cars had to be perfect to mar any of the camera •tions. [ p l i c a t i o n o * R o m a n E r e B a l t a m 1 h o w g o o d i t l a f o r s o r e e y e s . C o s t a ' n t s . 3 7 2 P e a r l S t . , N . T . A d v . F ig h ts-F o re st Fires apparatus for fighting forest sists of a kerosene blowtorch, • heating ltack fires, says Pop' nce Monthly. By its use all r. it is claimed, can be done xperienced man, thus reducing idant danger to a minimum, ire K e lIe f INDIGESTION 6 B e ll- a h s Hot water VjgPI SureReIief . L b A N S 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE :k b a b i e s ;pond instantly to ihort treatm ent of r. Thornton's IY TEETHER k~Your Drftggisi u n c o c k , I p h u r C o m p o u w i s u f f e r f r o m r h m S J f f J S h P t ® "or hives, or il troubled ^ P „ Bkin eruptions, yvu* he purifying and healing ■ied old remedy. j SicianB agree that “ul?^rp“rifi«ra standmosteffectiveblopa P . i to science. Hancock S u ^ ttf >und ia the nioat «fficaej°us J(> ,d benefit from Sulpbuj^ jn^r. lit soothes and heate, I i t s e t s a t t h e r o o t r f t h « b( i n d $ 1 . 2 0 a t y o u r a n d t s u p p l y y o u . s e n d nio , yoa a s t a m p s a n d w e w » u E t 'i c e i n _ _ _ e d i r e c ta i r e c t _ r >c e L i q u i d S u l p ^ J B B a l t i m o r e , M a r y l a n d ^ > y L o v e s Ja tli W ith L ticu ra S oap J ntitl KEjA V lE RECORD, r^ H m aiu T IO N OF ANY PAPER » 5 PUBLISHED IN DAVIE COBWTY. r ' " ‘ MOCKSVtLLE LODGE NO R 134. A. F. & A. M.. m eets every 1st and 3rd Friday > night. Visiting Brethren al­ ways welcome. Meetings ODen at 8 o clock. R M. HOLTHOUSER1 W. M. , jj_ ANDERSON. Sec. ________ f H g n m m , M d c k s m t s . % " £ . JtJN E 17 , tQ2 S I^AL AND PERSONAL NEWS. HMeff Vork spot cotton 23 55. H y j s s Sarah Charles is spending a Iek with friends in Davidson. Ifjjlisses Kssie and Eva Call and ■jfizabetli Xaylor spent Friday in I l F loue- KMrf- I- T" ^ al1, of Ledgetwood, ItKnt Tliursdav and Friday in town , ,Tiiest of Miss Jessie WafE. •S]<aac Booe. of near Cana, was in M vn S a tu rd a y 011 his way to W ake Mrcst to enter the summer 'school. IvAXTHI-)—^Tenant for my land iMocksville township for 1926. \V. HLiNRY D A V IS, Fork. U \ | j ss Sallie Hunter left Saturday \ A s h e v i l l e where she will spend weeks attendingsummer school. PiIiss Clara Moore who has been inching at Franklintou1 arrived iine last week to sueud the sum - :r. !\lhs Kssie Call returned hom e It week from Ctinmock, where spent a week the guest of M iss Kndie Perry. B ’raetieal'.y all the wheat crop in f countv has been harvested, and Itevielil is going to be better than Kfirst expected. I l ibert WiuecoH who has been H|lor the itast three m onths has Tie Io Asheville where he will Bud the summer. |lrs. John Pope, of Ledgerwood, Emit Tluirsiiay and Friday with B§ father J. B. Campbell who i-> Iijte ill at his home uear town. p iK p s. A. M. M cGlainniery and IjIe son Billy, of- Greensboro, re guests of her father, Mr. NI. Cliaffin a few days last week. Iflr. ami Mrs. Jam es Dickerson Eft Iiltle daughter Clarice, of jJensboro, spent several days last B k in town guests of Dr. and J. \V. Rodwell. !'OH SALE— Improved sweet |ato plants, all varieties Jt 00 6 icoo, 5000 lots 75 c per 1000 . igsnipt shipments. DORRIS P L A N T CO . m .Valdosta, Ga. gleplias Christian lias arrived K le from Furuiati University, JEpiiville, S. C., where he has a student for the past two h i s.| | B iss Dorolhy Gaither, and fs's. K. C. Morris autl Pay |dell atlcn.led the Johiisou-Le Ifnd wedding ai Allendale, S. C., jTnesday. IIlI of ilie shade trees along the Mr. and Mrs, P. J. Johnson an-'< nounce the arrival of a fine 8 pound daughter at their home, on Mon day, Ju n e515th.' FO R S A L E — Pony and buggy. Bargain to qnick buyer. J- P. G R E E N . . _ _ Mr. H . S. BiggerstafF1 of Okla- = hom a wiil begin a protracted m e e t - I s ing at Jericho n ext Sunday at 11 | g 0 clock. I h e public is cordially invited to attend. Refrigerators and ice boxes going at 10 per cent discount. . M ocksvilIe Hardware Co. Pension checks ior D avie county Confederate soldiers and widows § are at the Clerk of Court’s office in H court house. Please call and get =H them as early as possible as they j = are not good if not called for in 60 J ji days. Save a third of your paint bill bv using Stag Brand Paint. M ocksvilIe Hardware Co. 0 About 33 members of the Mock.s- ville Eporth League went to W ins­ ton Salem last Tuesday evening to attend the District m eeting of the League. The M ocksville mem­ bers won the banner for having the largest attendance present. N ew Perfection oil cook stoves. M o^ksville Hardware Co. M isses Jane H aden and Dorothy G aither, of this city,- and M iss' _ Sarah Clem ent, of O xford, left W ednesday evening for N ew York j City from which place they will 1 sail for Europe. T hey will spend I ®(j about two m onths touring the vai-■ Bious places of interest in the old j i world. I WHAT TO DO IN CASE OF SICKNESS FIRST. Call a Doctor. Many ills of st se­ rious aature can be averted by ca'ling your Doc* tor in time. ’ SECOND. Bringyour prescriptions to our Drug Store where they will be compounded by a Registered Pharmacist, using only the purest and best quality of drugs and chem;cals, strictly in accordance with your Doctor’s instructions.% '> ' We call for and del ver prescriptions any­ where in the .city. Let us serve you. Harris-LeGrand Pharmacy S t s JSWg SuccessorsTo CRAWFORD’S DRUG STORE. 1 0 O O Do you want a $5 gold piece for FOR SA L E — W ilL sell, at the nothing but a few hours work. Let court house door. M ocksville, N. The Record tell you how to get C., on Monday, July 6 th, 1925, at one- 112 o’clock, in., for cish , to the r'- t it 1 highest bidder, some old stills andJames Green, of Thom asville, fixtures was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J.,I n _ M _ D EA D M O N . Chairman, •’ P. Green several days last week. | Board County Commissioners Those Who Have Passed Over. Mrs, Robert Dwiggins. an aged L d / of tbc Jcricko section, died Sunday, follow­ ing a long illness. The .burial took place a t Center Tuesday. Mrs. Dwigginsis is survived by two sons. Satn and Frank. Jam es Murphy a - former resident of j Davie, but later of Winston Salem, was ' found dead in bed at his home in that ■ city Sunday morning. The body was j brought to Davie and laid to rest al 0«k 1 Gr.ive Monday afternaan- Mr. Murnliy is :1 survived-by his wife and one son William, 1 who lives n e a rCalahaln. |b Ellis Stewart, of the Fork section; was'g. ran over and killed by an automobile Sun- j day night. From reports it seetiis th»l a . a large touring car came along and run over, him, killing him almost Instantly. S hort-1 I/ afterwards another ear came along; Em-CF on Refrigerators and Ice Boxes. They are low at the regular price. The 10°|o discount is a .genuine bar­ gain. KITCHEN CABINETS Made by Sellerfs. Please look at our line of Kitchen Cabinets. Mocksville Hardware Co. I CHICKEN FEED We carry a complete line cf Purina and Quisenberry chicken feed. You cannot find any better feed on the market. Call to see us. MARTIN BROTHERS “We Carry Feed Fcr Everything.” I I ^ m W A m W ^ m W Sheffield News. Mr J. A. Sinitli is on Ihe sick list tills week. Mr. S. W. Marlow who has been very ill is improving. A large ciowd was at the SUtiday School Convention at Ltbsrty church Sun­ day. Allen Gaither who lias been suffering with blood poison in his Iiand is impro­ ving. Crawford Smilh who has been work­ ing In Staiesville arrived home one day lastw eek on the pullmaii leg express. Rev. W hite pastor of New Uoion chur. Ii ! I will prracit a sermoii especially for young , \ \ peiple the third Sunday in.June at eleven | OC1OCk j W D Hunter who lias been in the hos : H side of South Main slreet have Pital at Statesville was brought home one | ? Iaken down to make roo.111 for |concrele sidewalk that is being I from the iquare to Piesby- |u church corner. and Mrs. J. Cl. Booue aud Kesu«, J. G. Jr., of Bridgeport, 5*“-' aud spending som e tim e I J jr- Booe’s father, R. L . I 1 near Cana. Dr. Booe is a- 1 B e°n in the Bridgepoit hospital, j! SALE—Saturday, June 20 , if1 -ell for cash to the highest | er ollr emire Iiue of uierchau- I r?Uj'slinS hats, shoes, cloth- .JHidware1 drugs aud patent. Si ,,les. Sale begins at 9:30 a. - Aood's store near Post WOOD & MOCK. . Advance, N . C. -Smith left Thursday for V|He where he will spend sev - 1 a S S with his son W illian11 !J aUei|ditig school there. H e dav last week and is getting along line b is, many friends will be glad to learn. j There is some work for the Welfare dicer to do around Sheffield. y slid also ran over the body smashing the head almost into a pulp. Neither of the cars stopped and no one has any idea who was driving either of the cars. P M U fe S S S T H m tT R S WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY* A matrimon­ ial comedy drama “Tosnosrow’s Love.” A Paul Bern ■ : production with Agnes Ayers, Prt O’Malley, Ray Hat- | ton and Jane VVinton starring. Better than “World- v jy Goods.” FRIDAY and SAl URDAY. Buffalo Bill in “Rar- in’ To Go,’’ and two-re;eI Pathe'comedy “Goofie Age” MONDAY and TUESDAY. Another Paramount Famous 40, “Open All Night,” featuring Viola Dana and Raymond Griffith. LONGTERM J REAL ESTATE LOANS. I We have funds available for first Mort­ gage Loans at 512 per ccnt. Interest payable 1st day; of November each year. Glad to have your business large or small. Davie Real Estate, Loan & Insurance Co. E. C. MORRIS, Sec.R. B. SANFORD, Pres W HEN YOU W A N T 4 * Banking service and courteous treat­ ment coupled with consistent and sound business give us a trial. We try to treat all alike and do our best to please you, and at the same time protect our deposi tors and our­ selves. Southern Bank & T rust Co., Mccksville, N. C. PROGRESSIVE SERVICE Y 3 visil his brother H . S .' 4 Petra Mills, before re- '"2 home. j I f aI'. little tw o-andone- I5e^r Oldson of Rev. and Mrs. I/ f ratIIey1 died Thursday fol-j |e a n Hin e ss o f c o jU js T h e j j I 0 I was laid to rest F riday' B t t T 'k0seveuieterY- -S u f- I u I c llldreu-to come unto Me. tin i l^Wm Uot’ ^or sucI1 -ls I111SiIou1 of heaveu „ WHO CARES TO DRESS TOO WELL? Y ou’ll look like the. winner if you are in our distinctive sum m er Shoes. _ j Tan, wide sw inging lasts for business-. / Black Shoes for evening. . - Sw agger Crepe Rubber Soles, for street .and golf: / , Trem endous stock and all' the smart leathers. ; ;• .• $4.50. $5.75^ $6.75 . $8,00 $12.00 J O N E S & G fiN iT R Y “THE SHOE MEN’^ 447 Trade Street Winston-Salem, N. C. $3.50 8 LetExperts Overhaul Your Gar. / IF YOU don’t know your car and its complicated workingsr you’ll have a hopeless job on your hands trying to “fix” it. Cbme to this garage where only the best mechanics are employed and on­ ly the finest m aterials are used; Mocksville Motor Co. •(I a i A2$:82+./6-7-6/^^:^.+..4747.-494/::.:^B 99722425558392444451445555555554155140^95540013 446999999999999999999999999255511119999999955 235353232391482348235348485323485353235348482348235390020101232353020100020101 53532348232348235353534823532323485323234823239148535353230223534848235348230123534823482353 2323532348482353482348532323534823534823532323532323232353482348535323485353534823534848232353232353482353314848235353482323232353 ^ Hfe fiAflE RECORD, MOCRSVILLE. N c. JU N E I Ilii m , f-s§ p i S I P a a w H-Ij ill! l|j M f t e ikm p - p Ilil Illli'ffi!:! m -P ’: 11'wIilSl i$ M T f T if?3; »s^-i ■ip , , , *B i as” in i r i i } !■:' ..b !.'•-• H f; i l lHvr». tSi? S L K WIaii lSK s!‘g ! , -s* I I I IB ! i m I ' © it W P i ! 8slI i Sheriff’s Sale of Land ForTaxes. - The following persons in Davie county having failed to pay -their county taxes W tfie year 1924.1 will offer for sale at the court house door in MocKsviIIe. N. C., on-Monday, the 6th day of July. 1925. the following tracts or parcels of land to satis­ fy said.taxes. In addition, to the amount of taxes due by you. the costs for adver­ tising and selling this land will be added, which amounts to $1 40 on each piece of land advertised. Please bring this extra amount when you co-ne to settle. Follow­ ing is tbe list of those owing taxes, tbe number of acres of land and tbe amount of t»xes due. less the $1.4# on each tract or parcel of land: , CLARKSVILLE TOW NSHIP $78.04 24.69 29.89 13.19 37.24 18.23 41.85 11.70 14.40 '32.00 95.23 9.11 78.34 41.60 D. N. B aity, 173% acres J. W alter Bogcr1 43% acres V. L. Bogor, Sb acres M. T. Chamberlain, 58 acres W alter Critz estate, 153% acres W. J. Dillon, 55 acres Dixon-Harp M illing Co., I lot J. 0. Draughan, 56 acres C. W. Dull, 44% acres N\ C. Eaton estate, 84% acres Elkin Box Co., 209 acres C. L. Graves, 39 acres - H. C. H unter, 197 acres S. K> H unter, 66% acres M rs. Eliza Kenyon estate, 76% ac. 26.48 Mrs. M. E. Mason, 46 acres 20.29 A. S. Ratledge, 19 acres I'®? M rs. I. P. Richardson, 7 acres 5.33 R. C. Smith, 4 acres Sutton Iicirsj 9% acres Mrs. Elma Todd, 21 acres J. B. Cain, 10 acres Sarah Hendricks, 2 acres G rant Patterson, 7% acres H enry Patterson, 12% acres ____ CALAHALN TOW NSHIP W. S. Bovd. 37 acres Campbell heirs, 28 acres B. P. Gaither, 13% acres G. E. Horn, 3 acres R. A. Jones, 89 acres H. T. M cdaniel, 52% acres J. B. Sherman, 53% acres D. G. Tutterow, 42 acres G. L. W hite, 93% acres .Tane Peebles, 4 acres S. P. Willson, 13 acres Mrs. S. M yers, 7% acres JERUSALEM TOW NSHIP $25.99 69.75 27.90 187.52 31.84 11.16 Tricking The Judge. A clever young law yer was de­ fending a man accused of house Jjreaking..- - “ Your H onor, I subm it that my clien fdid uot break into, the house at all. H e found the parlor win­ dow open, iuSei ted his arm and- re moved a few tnfltug articles. N ow , .m y.cheut’s aim is uot him self, and I fa ilto se e Iiow you can punish him for an offeuse com mitted ou.ly by oue of his limbs. ” ; ‘•That argum ent,” said the judge “ is very well pul. . Follow ing it logically, I sentence tne defend-, aut’s arm to oue year's imprison­ ment H e can accom pany it or not, jr.st as he chposes.” The prisoner calm ly unscrewed his cork arm and leaving it on the table, walked out. 1.65 1.63 4.66 2.43 1.22 5.62 9.93 21 55 11.16 14.89 6.99 46.78 8.35 20.00 18.23 36.45 2.43 7.14 2.74 W. H. Aaron, 48 acres Brown & M organ, 89 acres Casey & Clodfelter, one lot W. K. Clement, 265 acres L. C. Deadman,4 lots R. L1-Hlliott, 2 lots S B. Crump, 600 acres Mrs. L, C. Deadman, 167 acres Miss M ary Foard, Admr., 206 ac. J. H. Gaybard, 63 acres K err Graves, 57% acres -B $ Hnlleman. 63 aeres W. A. Langston, 170 acres B. C. Link, 5 acres Thomas MdCk, 77 acres J. P. M otley, 45 acres Lee M cdaniel, 103 acres W. T. Sechrest, 40 acres A. C. W alker, one lot H . M. W eirj 42 aeres R. K. W illiams, 198 aeres .A. E. Willson, 104 acres Mrs. F. P , Yovmg, 161 acres Sue Anderson, 9 acres Sa,il B ear^1 one Jot A rthur Fowfer, two lots • Anttiiiny' Fowler estate, 5% acres Jim Fowler, one lot John H airston, 7 9-10 acres' John Hobson, one lot Coldwcll Mason, 4 acres Lomax Oakly, three lots Lou Payne, one lot Frank Payne, one lot Josephine Steele, 7% acres Gaston Woodruff, one lot Alec Young, 7% acres W. S. Crews, one lot John R. Sfew art, tim ber right MOGKSVILLE TQYfNSHIP •F. M. Carter, 3 lots T. W. Carter, 3 lots, Mrs. W. K. Clement, eight lots Philip, A. Clement, six lots J, N. C'tiyk, seven lots P. D. & W. G. Peebles, 108 acres 52.49 Jane Potts heirs, I acre " , .49 r. A. Rice, 55 acres 26.7 C urt Wood, 8 acres 4.62 Keelv Wood estate, 35 acres 2.48 John A. Wood, 101 acres 47.29 N. F. Young, 23 avres 21.89 Paschall H airston, 6 acres 12.19 Charlie Mason, 6 acres 2.55 Sam Mason, 5% acres FARM INGTON TOW N SH IP W. W. Allen, 11 acres Mrs. M artha Allen, 3 acres D. R. Beck, 26 acres rs Jersut Unwins. 25 acres Mrs. Bessie Cornatzer, 34 acres C. -Xf. Dull, 139 acres W. A. Dunn, 6% acres Mrs. L. L. Furches, 7 acres C. S. Furches, 75 acres Mrs. Sani Furches, 32 aeres Conard Furches, 56 acres T. W. Hauser, 23 acres D. T. Helper, 18% aeres Mrs. N ettie Hill, 10 acres Airs. W. D. Hodge, 44 acres P. H. Howard, 28 aw es Airs. A da Howard, B6 acres E. C. Howell, 2 acres II. C. H unter, 29% aeres E. C. Janies, 112 acres E. D. James, 14% acres 74.42 C. L. Kimbrough, 72 aeres 161.98 M ary E. Leonard, 120 acres 85.66 J. M. M arkland, 53 acres 13.60 C. M. M iller, 52 acres 11.85 Lillian M iller, 28 acres 45 26 N. S. M ullican, 40 acres 62.85 Geo. M yers, 15 acres 12.46 J 1 D McClamrock, 160 acres 3S.27 J. W. M cKnigkt, 8 aeres 6.93 J. E. Potts, 121 acres 71.43 Mrs. R. L. Sain, I acre 31.09 Airs. Sarah H. Smith, 13 acres 25.56 P. T. Seats, 40 aeres 25.67 Mrs. Sarah H. Smith, 15 acres 97.65 Mrs. Lucy Sm ith, 3 acres 58.03 G. tV. Smith of Levi, 102 acres 80.00 J. H. Smith, 15 acres 3.79 J. E. Smith, 23% acres 3.03 tVesley J. Smith, 112% acres 6.62 Jed Smith, 214 6.98 Mrs. C. R. 'Summers, 25 acres 6.34 A. L. Boger, 150 acres 15.19. J. Monroe W illiams, one lot 10.46 Patsy Allen, 4% aeres 5.58 Jake Bohannon, 4 acres 10.29 S. L. Cain, 8 acres 5.43 Cephas D outlictj-12 acres 5.43 W ill H. Eaton, 31 acres 6.98 M. G. Furges estate, 43 acres 6.40 Ida H airston, 12% acres 7.58 Toni Holdcrley, I acre 7.75 ~ ................................... 56.11 35.71 2.19 10.13 4.66 5.78 j. tV. Etchisori, I‘>5. acres land 0 , F- Erb.a'nks, one fat Wi. A. Foster, one lot H. ft- Foster, 5ft acres X'.DJ Frost, S-pt 'acteo L. (jriflJn, owe lot Ajfrs- ^ -E - Ho1Itoah, 88 acres II- W 1 Hoots, one lot ft. E. Harne, eight lots ftenk»l-Craig Live S H o, 7 lots IInnniih & K luttz, 206 acres T l. 0. Howard, one lot Eugene H ow ard 7% acres W.- MJ Howard,' Cl acres G. K Howard, one' lot :K, BI H unt, oiie lot W. Fl KellcI', one lot C. Wv K urfees, 48 acres ' J. W. M artin, one lot W. R. M crohey, two lots R. 'A. Nealy, one lot : Mrs E H Pass, 360 I 4 acres ' Tom Poplin, "one lot D. P. Ratledge, one. lot E. L. Shields, 36 aeres W. K. Stonestreet, 109 acres G. G. W alker, 10 lots T. M. Young, one lot Ernest Brown, two lots John Clement estate, two lots Giles -Clement, one lot R obert Foster, one lot Till Foster, 4 acres Truelove Furches, one lot ' Mollie Furches, one lot R ufus Furches, 28 acres E lijah G aither 7% acres J. L1 Gaither, one lot Bpcncer H anes; two lots RacheliHairstoh estate, one lot John1 Holman, 10 acres Frank Houston,, one lot Luua H unt, two lots .Jam es Long, one lot -W. A. Pettigrew , one lot Frances Scott; one lot G; L. Scott, 42% acres M ary Scott, 7%„acres ■H. D. Scott, 7% acres F. :N. Scott,- 69>-acres ' F la k e Studeyenf, 10 acres Simon VanE'atoii, one lot Chas- W illiams estate, one lot ■ Annie; Wiseman, 3 acres - FULTON TO W N SH IP C. L. Aron; 4 acres,L r" Rowland Baitv. 26 : acres Petor W--Blume, 81 aeres Reatricc Brewbaker P acres F M Carter. 222 a res 1 J.T i. Dwire, 83 acres e Mrs. Jno. W. Foster, 23 acres G. V. Green, 5% acres Daniel J. Hobbs, 50 acres n . B. Ireland, 69 acres Qeo. W. Miuorj 104 acres 97.71 4 86 - 27.72 17.30 148.37 12.15 15.77 9.29 170.19 27 HO 116.64 30.92 2.43 7A4 '8.30 67.84 23.60 . 23.33 14.58 44.88 409.12 40.72 10.24 9.95 12.03 59.67 511.10 $49.28 9.78 9.72 8.20 17.50 4.25 7.29 7.29 15.03 6.10 " 3.76 16.41 2.43 8.10 10.75 17.24 2.40 9.72 18.23 20.66 3.65 3.65 31.85 8.10 3.89 24.84 6.08 $17.23 7.05 64.01 29.05 94 41 33.85 . 7.43 35.13 5.14 47.75 . 34.40 S. B. Howell estgte, 28 acres Jim Layman, 10 acres Andrew Longworth, 17 acres Luke Tatuiii,' 11 acres PrecilIa W atkins, 2 acres Lonnie W illiams, 40 acres Bettie W illiams, 5 acres Sary W iseman, 2 acres Tom W iseman, 15 acres Jam es W iseman, 6 aeres Crawford Young, 1% aeres $69.91 4:40 6.27 9 28 17.08 49.15 3.32 11.Si 35.76 50.05 29.70 12.77 2.20 4.74 43.34 1.70 19.07 ^8.36 20.59 136.24 9.58 6.05 19.62 - 35.91 32.40 17.80 13.20 7.43 83.69 20.23 109.07 7.43 10.33 20.76 10.33 2.23 44.80 4.24 28.61 70.75 36.45 14.85 ' 81.68 1.49 2.02 8.81 5.65 6.55 14.21 17.79 9.54 3.82 10.8; 4.67 10,20 8.54 1.03 17.16 6.20 .15 10.91 1.63 2.56 « Frequent ~Jg j Bilious Attacks g A g "I sufferedjvith severe bill- g p S OUS attacks th a t came on two g p S or three tim es each m onth,” g g 1H says Sir. J. P. Nevins, of ™ S Lawrenceburg, Ky. “I would I P get nauseated.. I would have S g dizziness and couldn’t w ork, g p a a I would take pills until I was g p rjjj! worn-out w ith them . I didn’t a p seem to get relief. gg. § § “A neighbor told m e of H v BLAeK-DRAUGHT js Ljver Medicine ® S g and I began its use. I never j § S jj have found so m uch relief ® as it gave me. I would not jjjjF fig be w ithout it for anything. It g g ^mn eeemed to cleanse m y whole g a wnl ByStem and made m e feel like nrn t i l new. I would take a few I P ■m doses—get rid of the bile and g n ™ have my usual clear head, feel full of pep, and could do S S « tw ice the work.” S ll Bilious attacks are “sea- SST 0 sonal" w ith m any people. B S « M illions have taken Thed- Q ford’s Black-Draught to w ard ^ off such attacks, and the good W fig results they have reported g p TjS should induce" you to try it. B. C. BROCK Attorney-At-Law MOGKSVILLE, N. C- OFFICES—Second Floor Mocksville Hardware Co., Building. Practice in State and Federal courts, j i n m i m m n i T f T r * * SItIiiinC in iim im iM iii I.................. I LESTER P. MARTIN S PHYSICIAN* N D 'SURGEON Office Phor.e 71. Nighi Phone -120. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. G R IF F ’S C A FE “HOME OF GOOD EATS” Next to Kurfees & Ward MOCKSVILLE - - N.C. AH Druggists’ n s e i a i a a s i i S SH A BT GROVE TOW NSHIP Mr?. R oetta B aity, 3% aeres $ 1.45 W. A. Barneyeastle, 51 acres 23.53 T. M. Barneyeastle, 18 acres 8.81 J. S. Beauchamp. 29 acres 17.30 B. L. C arter, 69 acres 18.54 J. S. Cornatzer, 2OVi acres 11.34 Mrs. Z. C. Cornatzer, 46% acres 49.10 Coleman Foster, 125 aw es 85.44 H. G. Fry, 94 acres 54.88 A. P. H endrix, 54% aeres 40.91 E. C. Howard, 30 acres 15.48 J. H. Jarvis, 2 acres 7.76 M artin M iller, 2 lots 2.88 Boss Newsom, one lot . .40’ Mrs. M innie Shermer, 107 acres 98.99 Mrs Sarah Spry, 62 aeres 27.58 Southern Pub'. UtL, 12 aeres 8.64 O. D. Zimmerman, 20% acres 11.60 Rebecca W orth, one lot .87 rs. W .' T. Eagle, one lot 11.52 This May 21, 192S. ' KELLEY L COPE, Sheriff, Davie County. C. C. YOUNG & SONS FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMD EMBALMERS Mocksville - . phone 133 Cooleemee - - Phone 5720 PdOMPT AND EFFICIENT SI RVJCE DAVIE CAFV / FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEV MEALS AND LUNCHES/ i ICE CREAM AND COLD DRClKS » P. K. MANOS, PJfcOSV ; ON THE SQUARE MOCKSVILLE. IS. C. Where Luxuries Cost. It costs money to smoke cigars and igarettes, drink cnca-cola. cat candy, ride in automobiles and other­ wise live in the lap of luxury in South Carolina The recent srssi n of the legisla- ure in that State put alm ost a’ con­ fiscatory tax on . many things and he new law is about-to drive many of. the merchants, especially the drug stores to distriction Business is being diverted from the State and a number of stores have shut up shops and moved aw ay. It is said there is not a town or city in' the State but that a “ to rent” sign may be seen tacked up in dt zens of places where at one-time business was flour­ ing until the tax grabbers and politi cians all but wrecked the business of the State. A South Carolina paper says that somebody has figured it out that the man who sm akes a 15-cent package of cigarettes a day pays the State of South Carolina $7 30 a year in taxes. Twenty nine .dollars and thirty cent a > tar for the two. Ii the cigarette smoker also drinks a Coca-cola a day he pays an addi­ tional $3 65 a year in State taxes. Thirl v-two dollars and ninety-five cents, . Perhaps he owns, an automobile in which he must have gas. If he does much driving he will buy 20 gallons a week The. SLate tax on ihor for a year will amount to $62 00 . Ninety-four ninety-five. Granting tbajt he gets on a wild spree i nce or twice a year and in­ dulges in a few saucers of ice cream or if he be of a more sober Lemp- arment,and buys his girl a box of candy occasionally, he would not nave enough left out of a hundred dollars to finance an evening’s en­ tertainment at a m ovie—on which dissipation, may it please the legis Iature he m ust likewise pay a tax.r- Union Republican, _ S r The Ruling Passim a> Doctor N o. you hold the mireor to her tf ce tQ see -g she was still breatja j„.g Doctor l j 0 . /2J - Y e s . and she opened Jitie er C| g raSped and reach­ ed for her p /,wder puff.” \Ve noP ee jn the news dispatches th at'Jqfj ge Drinnon in bis charge to thegr' ,nd jury at Morriston’s "high aoete' „y” and instructs them to in- dgate the infractions. If Mor- f -stown is anything like som e other towns we m ight mention there are I some other things going or. in “ high s >ciety” the grand jury m ight find very interesting to invertigate.— Ex ..IllM llllW Ttn Beautiful Big Dolls For Little Mocksville Girls. f H f NOTICE Having nualified as administrator of J. L Chaffin deceased, this is no tice to all persons indebted to his es late to make im mediate payment, and all persons holding claims a- gainst said estate are hereby notified to present them to me on or before Vlav 18th 1926, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery This May 13th 1925. E C MORRIS. Admr. of J. L Chaffin, deed. f \k KTSV"'.----! NOTICE! Notice is hereby given that "Crawford’s Drug S t're ” owned by E P. Craw­ ford and John P. LeGrand has (bis day by nutual consent been disso;ved and the business .will be continued by the new copartnership, owned by W H Harris and John P LeGrand—under the firm name i.f • H anis &. LeGrand Pharmacy.” AU > debts owing up to and including Vlay 4th,- 1925. will be paid^ by E. P. Crawford and ‘ John P. LeGrandjAiid all hills receivable snail be paid to the new Iirm—Harris & LeGrand Pharmacy and all debts contract ed since May 4th. 1925 will he paid by the new firm. This May 4th, 1925. E. P. CRAWFORD. JOHN P. LEGR 4ND. W- H HARRIS. Every little girl in Mocksville should have one of these fine, larpp $3.00 dolls. Bring 30 Mother’s B read w rappers and 99c. to your « local grocer and he will be glad to \ present you w ith one of these fine i dolls which are on display in the j local stores. Call and examine the I dolls a t any tim e. If you haven’t tried M other’s Bread, buy a loaf today. T here is no better bread on the m arket. _ NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator of Gideon Brown dee’d this is notice to all persons having claim s against said estate to present them tom e for payment on or-beforeJHay the 5th. 1926. or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery and all persons owing said estate will olease truk'-; im mediate Vavment of sam e. T'uis Mav 2nd. 1925 E. C. MORRIS; Admr. Cideon Brown, deed. NOTICE—SALE OF LANOiUNDER MORTGAGE. By virtue of the powers contained in a m ortgage Deed executed to me by Gus. Wiseman and w ife Annie Wiseman, and default, having been made in payment of same. I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, at public outcry at the court house door in Mocksvi'lp, N. C.. on Mon day July 6th. 1925 at 12 o’clock m , the property described below to satisfy said debt, secured by said mortgage; Bounded and described as follows: Beginning at an old pine____ stump corner of W'. C. Denny and = ' Lige Gaither, tfience East 225 feet to I I P a stone Lige Gaithers corner, IhenceJp".= N. 177 feet to a stone Gaithers ner, thence S 69 degrs. E, "or‘ to a stone, thence N. 21>P' ° 367 feet to a stone rs W' thence. S 87 d e g r a /^ -rrIs corner, beginning, eonfc*^ . , minutes or less—souTv -'Lln* 4 acr,es ,ntorTe to 'Gus W y -vd from A J L igle —page seman registered in Book Q8V' — Register of Deeds office of F ie county. N. G . for full descrip .on 'T his May 25th 1925 A J LAGLE, M ortgagee. B yB . H MORRIS. Atty. Building Supplies. W e arV b etter prepared this year th an ever before to furnish the public with all kinds of building sup­ plies a t prices th at cannot be duplicated. Orders are filled prom ptly and satis­ faction guaranteed. Con­ sult us before buying. DR ROBT. ANDERSON, DENTISTt Phone. OffiM No. 50. Residence No 37 .- OHim over Druy Store' MOCKSVILLE. N. C- • IN SUPERIOR LOURT. I FOA THE RELIEF OFPain in the Stomach and j Bowels. Intestinal Cramp ! Colic . Diarrhcea - SOLD EVERYWHERE -* i NorthCaroIina Davie County E, C. Morris. Admr. of Gideon Brown, defe’d vs George Yhnmas and w ife Lula Thom­ as, Ollie D avis and husband Da­ vis, and Bessiej,Brown, heirs-at-law. NOTICFr-SALE OF LANDS TO PAY DEBTS AND FOR PARTITION. By vi *tUO o f an order of the Clerk of the S iperior- Court, made in a- hove CE j . I a s admr ot Gideon Brown i. ji ;£. will expose for sale at public mu try at the court house door in Au dtwville, N C , on Mon­ day Juli Iii £ 1925 at 12 o’clock m., Il e land. o ' (the deed, described and bounded si follows: on the North west by Ah r iDiIIard, on the South west b> M -.« Sallie Kelly; o i the South east iyyA . T. Grant, Sr. on the North '--est by the old Salisbury road, corstaini. yg brie acre more or less. Said IaniA will be first be sold as a wbnie.; subiject to the-w idow s dower, as dilott ed and then in three Iotsas shown b y'tbe plot of M C ljam es Miry eyoi see plot and re­ port of Conr biss;»ner in aii„( m ent for mt re perfect description Terms n ; ^ale, I six tronths' with bond ant, a j prov »d security, or all cash at oon« n of pxrehaser -T h isis valuable, pry-pert r, located on the old Salisbury roaoi-near the R R 1925 c MORRIS, Admr i of ( fideou Brown deed. D. H. Hendricks & Sons Mocksville, N. C. % I I If You W ant The Purest I And Best Flour, Buy MGCK^VILLE BEST ■AND OVER THE TOP HORbLJOriNSTONE COMPANY J MANUFACTURERS y ' "T H A T OOOD K IND OF FLOUR.’’ MOCKSVILLE \ - * • ^ D R -Ee:, CHOATE D^ .NTIST In Mocksville Mou Jay. Tuesday and Wed- n e s d a v a v a f . l ; > » _ ( H a n t s S i J J r . z - b E c z c ‘0° - U U m nesday; over Swtthern Bank &. Trust Co- FJ none 110. In Cooleeoiee Yfeto -sday. Friday and Satur- 4aJ' ovec QovteeoJl Drug. Store: Phones. . ®c? 33, Resiitwa e 86. : X-ray-Diagnosis H 1S T r 7*^; 1,1,5 U c a U a e u t a t c u . U 6 k - C r a w f o r d U r u g ' fh o r c h and Screen. !is, of course, w ell knov ttitude of the clergy reen has changed gre t years. And w e kum) com pelling proof ed attitude than is fo ,on, delivered receutlv q L Collins, in tli st Church, O cala, Flor Collin’s serm on was the fact that the ian unit was at that tiij xteriors in Ocala. \V, say is of veiy w ide i Pd prove particular! o exhibitors in coniti the sam e liberal ail re attitude m ay not rated. T h e chief oiii I sertuon follow: iy,i courses vyith refer arsonage of, m otion ire" are open to the Cj " to say, we m ay att< re" or absent ourselvi (jnr choice betw ee pei'oatives is im port nn our attitnte in L together w ith the ati s hlce us in other conn M iids quite largely tli ot Ihe w hole industryj :e. ff (. hristain people alw il elves from the I-, the m anagem ent one but the baser eh m niunity for his p: ie must cater to- then t business. It seem s| fore, that tin- moral atj people hold the que or poorer pictures ve| their own hands. Better pictures?' Y es- yes. A m erica’s c youth— the m ost ii mt of all ainuseiiiet —deserves the best; re older m ust do ail I vide for them iufiueti ;e rather than degrad, he motion picture in But I firmly beli resistible tnoveuieul t is characlerisli iu that industry, jago, I saw an A lal r close his house afte ie first reel of a pict ked for the tw o da [re was su ggestive— bi exhibitor was uot e bluntly told his ie was not a sainll his house dark, rat| picture that jtionable. few m ouths ago, a output was then iud quite generally a com plete c'lanjj Those com panies! ,t work iu O cala— wl clean pictures are g | me. hristian people can ud niaiu this niovd betterm ent. W e 6 aud foster a vir nent that will dem res and iioue other ve candid, but uot h iws with local exhil proval of a picture yed, w e can make eOUsly and direct! igenient—uever brif Wie m anager, beliiticj [conversely, we she 'aost hard w heneverl sceeir production 0 I’ hen the m anager k l ^iy clean people are ! e4> -aiId w hen he kn 1 good pjcttires, t | r People w ill show office—w hy, that eni. I* busiiless is cond AU legitim ate sd for profit. T lI [e industry is no"exl ule- IIere is one o | C:.++/.++/..+/:.:/^:06/..::./^/4+4^^ 5 ' Ji - I ii i l l Asville Girl*. Jf *' ^ ^ Cl . ( S i W J B m M ocksville hese fine, large . 30 Mother’s I 99c. to your will be glad to e of these fine display in the id exam ine the J r you haven’t d, buy a loaf > better bread Il SI J m I 1K - ,*S .Jdpi frIlb - S S T ies. r prepared ver before Dubiic with tilding sup* hat cannot O rders are and satis- teed. Con- uymg. D * . ! .1". i 'I :{7; f " Si ks & Sons , N. C. ^ ISs § The Purest I £ BEST NE COMPANY IRERS OH FLOUR. N . c - • ; S « a 5 S a . ; .- .-UtmtUt ofltulvEctc. r.E-orm.-l.tlftrot=',’fr"tn,0a a »ki.. - 's*'*;*;. S r'cdtm cnt ut e*-.ii n c n tu tc s .. ♦«-— C r a w f o r d D r u g S ^ T h e m e r c h a n t s A D Y EftfiSl In R f l o f t l WiLL APPftECiATi VoUft BUSINESS. -/ -HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN! UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” LUMN X X Y L M O CK SVILLE. N O R T H C A R O L IN A , W E D N E SD A Y , JU N E 24 . 1925. mg fhorch and Screen. ijS, of course, well known that Luitude of the clergy toward |creen lias changed greatly' ill . v(Mrs. And we know of 110 compelling proof of this ■cd auilude than is found in (uion delivered receutly by the C L Collins, in the First Pt Church, Ocala, Florida. Collin's sermon was prompt- the fact that the Thom as Il1-Hi unit was at that'time film- i\teriors in Ocala. W hat 'Iie |o -;av is of vetv wide interest; mlii prove particularly va.u- [to exhibitors in com m unities' fe the same liberal and con- live Httitnde may not yet have tmted. The chief points in 'ollins' sermon follow: courses with reference to cqwrson ige of, motion picture [res are open to the Christian j< io say, we m ay atteud the r,.< or absent ourselves froiu Uur choice betweeu these .Itematives is im portant be- 011 otir attitnte in tnis re- -Inuether with the attitude of ; like us in other com m unities nds (piile largely the cliar- ( nl the whole industry of the effective appeals to the conscien - tious producer and exhibitor. In the interest of thosih things in otir lives that are worth much more U lan Iiioiiey, I believe it is entirely fair for us to lake the position openly, frankly and positively that will do all w e can to m ake good pictures profitable; and'by the sam e token, that we will em ploy ,all fair and honest m oney. It is a matter of self-defense— where our motal w elfaie and that of our children is involved.” — M. P. N ew s. istain people alw ays al>- I'elves from the picture lie management is left none out the baser elem ent of OMimmity for his patronage e must cater to-th em or go if business. It seem s to ine, foie, that the moral and Chris- people hold the question of -r or poorer pictures very large- tlieir own hands; ' \r -- Belter pictures?' Y es—euiplia !>*, yes. Am erica’s childhood youth—the most num erous ut of all am usem ent enter- i—deserves the best; and we older must do all .w e call jovide for them influences that ;le rather than degrade, he motion picture industry is {. Hut I firmly believe, that resistible m ovem ent toward est is characteristis of the iti that industry'. N ot very ago, I saw an Alabama ex- jor close his house after screeu- Iie first reel of a picture that ioked for the two days. The re was suggestive—broadly so. exhibitor was not a prude, He bluntly told his audience he was not a saint; but he his house dark, rather than a picture that was morally itioiiable. i few mouths ago, a producer « output was then often ris-, uid quite generally suggestive a complete change in his )'• Those companies— like the it work iu Ocala— who always clean pictures are getting less tune. ■hristian people can help speed ud iiiaiu this m ovement tc- Letternient. W e can help ■e and foster a virile public went that will demand good res and none other. It will eandid, but not heated, in- e"’s "’illi local exhibitors. If lProvaI of a picture seems^-U we can make our 'kick eously and directly to the !aKenient-never brutally, a- die manager, behind his back, conversely, we should boost IOost hard wheuever a notably productioncom es along 3 eu the manager know s that y clean people are really inV ■M, and when he knows that, good pictures, the Jow n’s ,er People will show up at the Irved, Office-VvIjyi that solves tl.i Mein. business is conducted, for All legitimate busiuess is Sure • f°r profit- T b e : motion I J imdustry *s 110 ex Ceptiou to 1 e- Here is oue of the most N U M BER Si Up-Trend Io Farm land. ’ If you have been fartniuf for the past fo.ur or five years without- any real success: If you are becom ing discouraged over the chance of re­ alizing any' profit by tilling the soil and if you are m akiug plans to sell out and get into som ething else, just pause and^ think this matter over carefully. Then make up your iuiiid to hang on for another year at least. For farm lands are rapidly re­ covering in value throughout the country A special inquiry con ducted by the Tribune brought to light the follow ing facts: Farm lands reached the lowest point in ten years at the beginning ot 1925, w ith an average price per acre for the entire United States of $63 . T he past few m ouths, bow­ er, have seen rapid rebound from his low price because values have uever been lower iu recent years in proportion to incom e, and values are based upon possible or average incom e per acre iu any given ter­ ritory. T he Brpokinever-Econoniic Ser­ vice basing its prognostications up­ on these facts, ■ advises people to cnisider farm land at present prices ail excellent investm ent. And this advice will tend to create a far more active market for farms dur­ ing the next few m onths than we have seeu'iu the country before for som e tim e. Backing up these statem ents is­ sued by the Brookineyer Service are opinions, of Federal and laud bank and farm Ioau officials, farm organizations leaders, and farm real estate men. • Throughout the country confi­ dence in feature possibilities of farthing is ou tlie upw aid incline So whether you plan to continue on the soilJ o r the rest of your life or not. you had better liaug onto your place for a little while longer. •'Good Iarm laud will increase from twenty-five to fiftv dollars per acre during the next twelve m ouths,” is the statem ent of a pro­ m inent Chicago banker dealing iu farm land m ortgages. N ow you know-how much laud you h ive. S o sitr ig h t down and figure what profit'you can make by farm ing througliqut_one more year at least.- ,E lkin Tribune. Evidence of tbe Rebirth. A tramp from N ew York was stranded iti W inston-Salem without m oney and was hungry. It seems that he stole a Bible from tl'ie S al­ vation Arm y and after an argu UieTit'w ith a pro-Billy Sunday cil:- zeii on the street, lie began to tear leaves out of the book. H e was? arrested, charged with stealing aud m utilatiou of property. H e said the Bible was given him but lie didn’t ''believe in” it. T h eju d ge at W inston. Salem does “ b eliveiu ” it and to the rockpile for the titne Tiinit or ' to hell” w e presume with auv benighted wayfarer who does not perceive the beauty of the love and charity that are in it! So sav w e all? A tram p can’t "get aw ay’ ’ w ith an outrageous blashem'ous crim e like that in the tobacco capi­ tal right after a Billy Sunday- re­ vival. ' T he boob!—'High Point Do you-want som e gold? See us, Going To Cities. The U niversity N ew s Letter gathers som e interesting and in­ structive Hala and statistics ousuu- dry and various subjects. W e are told that there is a de­ cided drift of the population from the country to the cities, that ten years ago a little more than 45 per cent of the population of the Unit­ ed States lived in cities and now the urban population is more than 50 per cetit. The trend is espe d aily marked in N ew York. 83 per per cent being found iu the cities in that state. ' North Carolina is oue of the highly rural states of the Union, yet the trend in this state is also towards the cities. In 1910 75 per cent of our people lived iu the open country while b y'1920 tee rate had dropped to 71 per cent and is much lower today. In a few more years half the population of the stale will live in towns, our present rale of increase. Iu addition to the above statistics we are given the death per 1,000 of population in the state for 'the year 1923, based cn the report of the Bureau of Vital Statistics is­ sued by tbe State Board of H ealth. The number of deaths in each county are given ; nd then ranked lo.v or high in deato per 1,000 for that year. Graham cotiuty had" the lowest death rate and fewest deaths. Buucotube, kuown the world over as a health resort, led in the number of deaths, but due to her numerous hospi als for tub ­ erculosis aud other ills.. Biuicom- be had 1,309 death wjiich is 18 8 per L ooo ' inhabitants. Catawba had 308 deaths which is only 8 5 Farmers Meeting Held at Mocks- 7 ville Saiorday,. June 13. - A very interesting m eeting was held in the court at M oeksvilleSit- tirday June 13.! W hile there w as not as many in attendance as we expected those present eujoyed the m eeting Mr. B. Fr W hite, Field Representative of the Tobacco As sociation was present. Miss H attie M: Berrv, editor of the Market N ew s Letter and Secretary of the Farm Savings and 'Loan Associa­ tion was present, and was the priu cipal speaker. Mr. W hite made an euteresting short talk to those present ab ou t.th e new arrange ment The association has mafie' in regard to furnishing the members with all the information possible through the locals aud urged all the locals to meet regularly and learn from them what the associa­ tion is doing. Mr. white insisted on the members taking more interest in their own association aud reminded them of the fact that this is their own or­ ganization and that the members should feel this responsibility morc- tliau they have iu Uie past. Ii could be well for the members to think more about this organiza­ tion and if anythiug they wish to find out they should fiiiil out from headquarters instead of listing to what John says. Miss Berry made a very interest­ ing talk on farm credits, stating that the Farmers Saving aud Loan Plan, where they have organized these associations, have been aole to save borrow m oney at a reason Humorist Writes Signs Belter Than He Knows. "Bugs” Bier, a well known news­ paper humorist, has written and Piiblislied as a series of "road sign, probably merely intended to enter­ tain. But many of ; he:n m ight erect­ 'd .with hen-fit to the safety of traffic. ‘‘Don’t run up your mileage v:th skids.” contains a lot of real caution iti tabloid form. * Don’t do ajqle rate of interest ,and pay .cash ypujv4 hjii,kin&,.wilh-*yi[m!t,,hiaikegTr’- -i^accouipiLshiid-.with-Tittle-- money,--4 - will strike afor what they bought. Taking the average from a survey made of per 1,000 inhabitants, only eight ^ two of the richest counties in the other counties in the entire state state and two of the poorest, that having a better health rank than Catawba. W e have a great asset ill our fiue, health giving clim ate and fail to tell tfie world about it. Many counties and towns now cotn tnercializiug their clim ate and drawniug thousands of visitors, cautiot compare with the equable clim ate of our section but we have failed to list it am ong our great as­ sets.— H ickory Record.! Faol Stunt. Members of a California church (at R edLuds) assembled iu the churcu to read the Bible through iu a stipulated time. T hey took turns iu the ■ reading, aud as one gets it from the rather meager in­ formation in the press dispatch, there would be a continuous per­ formance until the reading of the Book was completed. W hat for? Sim ply a fool stunt to attract a'- tentioii; so far as appears at this distance. Of course the affair was a matter for the California!. But it will appear to anybody that a continuous Bible reading, with the sole purpose of fiuishing the read iug within a limited period, wouid be beneficial neither to readers nor hearens. Maybe it was som ething .of a marathon, to make a record in Bible reading. W ell, there are sorts of thing!?, wise and otherwise. If The.California congregation, fancies that method of attracting we don t see that anything is to be done a- bout it, except to add them to the lisc.—Statesville Daily. His Only Chance. ‘ Why is a strong man like you found begging?” ‘. Ah, niadam -dt-is Ibe only,pro­ fession ih w hich-a gentleman cau address a. beaUtifnl lady without the form ality-bf an introduction ” the farmers were paying thiriy- eight million dollars interest 011 time prices, Where they should be paying les_s that half this amount if they had the Farm Saving & Loan plan organized in the counties and use their own credit for collateral. Miss Berry stated that the farm ers in several instances have used their credityto establish Bank after Bank in towns and the banks have loaned their m oney to other com­ mercial business aud when needing money them selves have been unale to borrow their oivn m oney. Misr Berry stated that any com uniniti could establish its own Farmers Savings • and Load Association if interested. Miss Berry outlined tbe work the division of Markets is doing in order to help the fanners get more for the produce they produce. She mentioned the work that'has keen done iu the shipm ent of poultry and eggs iu car load shipm ents stating that they had been able to net tbe farmer from 3 to 10 cents per pound more for chickens and eggs per dozen than the local buy­ ers will pay besides relieving the surplus on the local markets The same has been accomplished with the lambs, wool and beef cattle. The Peach Growers ' Association and truckers associations have been organized through the help of the Division of Markets. I am very sorry that there were not more to hear this address of Miss Berry’s It would be well for som e of our town people to Bear som e of these lectures a n l atteud the county m eetings in order that they-m ay keep informed as to what the Dept, of Agriculture of our state as -well as the different Farmers organiza­ tions are doing. It had been plan­ ned to organize som e kind of poul­ try association at' this m eeting ‘ buf ow ing to the busy season that kept so iiiany away nothing was done (!SM GOLD G IV E N A W A Y -T h e Record has a few $2 .50 gold pieces, that we'.are anxious to give to. otir subscribers., A ny boy or girl,'m an o r woman who wtll send or ;briug us five uew. yearly subscribers, will 1® receive oiie of. these gold pieces ab j dlsclis-s the ^liatter' . solutely free. T h e first ones w h o j A com mittee was appointed to get the subscribers will receive the; arrange a datt*for the annual pic- gold pieces. T lie supply is IiinitSd. | u jc aI1,i to secure speakers for the You w ill have to act quick if Vouj . -. " . ■ , want to be one of the IUc^y ones, ! occasiou. It was agreed to have the picnic as near the 30th of Juli­ as possible to suit the speakers. " After a long disctissiou in regard to the change of the date of our county m eeting it was agreed to bol l them the 2nd Saturday of ev­ ery month at 2 p m. ' The next county m eeting will be July 11th. W e were sorry nut to .Uave Mr. Luther W oods, otir new directbi, with us H e was kept away 011 account of sickness. -Mr. V. W . Lewis, livestock marketing ageut, was uuable to come bn ac- couut ol finishing up loading a car of poultry at R eidsville. W e hope to have these two meu ivirh us at our next m eeting at which time I hopfe we will have a large crowd. I want to urge all the members of the Colton ai.d Tobacco Associa­ tions of this county to tealize that these are their associations and that the officers who manage them are employed by them; also that these officers would be glad to receive from time to time suggestions ot how they would like to have these Associations ruu. T hey are farm- rs organizations ail I the farmers should coulroi them, GEO. E V A N S, Co. Secy. re. p --ti>i e chord in every man who has had near-nervous prostration at Ihe sight of the ieclt- ?ess drivers stopping in a hurry; “There are three grades of eggs, ■ut only one grade of crossing and that's dangerous,".ought to be past­ ed in-the hat of all those who try to beat the traiu” cross its right of .vay. “ The glass in your windshield is -the same stuff they put in the bus oital wio.1i)ws. Which will you look ,.!■rough?” is a pertinent query, and Fifteen miles an hour may be a chill out fifty is fever.” is not too medi­ cal to be understood. To towns troubled-with too much speeding by tourists. Mr. Bear sog gesta. Bpeed limit in this town iif- ceen miles a:: hour. One day for every mile over that!” or “ vVehave seven hotels and one jail, take your pick!” Don’t try to scare locomotives with your horn.” "You wouldn’t travel on a freight train, so don't try to'travel under one,” are all good to remember. J Mr. Bear intends to be funny, aud succeened; he may tiot have intend­ ed to be seeios, but many can take his clevernerness seriously with bene­ fit- to themselves and the general public. In other words (Mr. Bear once more). "Accident insuretice is a good thing to Bave without the accident ” Never Too Old to Wed. Benjamin Pollard who recently celebrated his 85th birthday was married the past week to Miss Pansy' Dixon, who acknowledges to have seen 73 birthdays. The blushing bridegroom is a native of Chatham county, a civil war veteran, while his demure little bride is a native of Harnett. Owing to the. ext.rem° -heat the youthful couple decided to forego an extender! honeymoon trip and moved into their new home at Coats. Harnett countv. where they exceet to enjov life to the fullest. .' “ That. Old Sweetjbeart of Mine.” .Mrs Eden Martin B°nefi_e|d, of Eufola and Iifr FrancesK Oswaft. of Ostwalt. were niaried the past week following'aiL-arqiiaititance of more than 40years. It is said they were hoy and girl sweethearts hot theiH ivesin some manner got se­ parated, in their youthful days ,hut nnw.in the mpturer days they are united in life. Mr Ostwalt owns Iiraclically alkof tbe I rede! 1'county town that bears his name. How About Yoiir Children? The greatest concern iu a parents life, should be his childred. N ot only is the parent concerned over the health and development of the child, but the future should be well considered during the child­ hood of the city. The thought that the parent him self will be largely rceponsible for the success ot the failure ok the child, should ever be 111 .mind, for as a rule, the child is large a continuation of the life of the parent. W hether the hie will be a successful coulinua- tion in the child, largely depends upon the aciiou of the parents while the child is stiil young. To prove that that the parents largely governs the success of the child we find that it takes 48,000 families of the unskilled laborers to produce one person of sufficient euiiueuce to be admitted into W ho's W ho,” a book giving the names of men and women who have accom ­ plished som ething big iu life. Look­ ing fuither we see that 685 farm families produce one such person, 1 6 1 pysicians, 52 lawyers and the ministers leads with oue out tf every tw enty families. From these statistics ive come to the conclu­ sion that success is dependent large - Iy upon the exam ple set by the parent for the growing child. The ministers take time to develop the child. The ministers take tim e to develop the child. The ministers t ike time to develop the child, and being a man of clean habits and clear thinking, he makes footprints that leads to a broad iile. Yet this for it is a well knoivu fact the ministers do not rcce.ve very large salaries. The elem ent of m oney does not enter the chances of suc­ cess by the life' you are now living, the character you are building, the work you are doing?- The very language you use is vital to your boys success, your very thotighls have their bearing. Remember voti assumed a great responsibility in becoming a parent, are you dis­ charging your obligation?—Cliair- toivu News. S UMMER COLDS are lingering and annoying. The very first night apply V J S I S S Otter 17 Million Jare VeeJ Yearfy Children’s Home Buys Davie Farm A tract of land, com prising ap­ proxim ately 275 acres, has been purchased by 'ne the trustees of the M ethodist Children’s Hom e, aud will be used for farming - and recreational purposes Tlie land is located 011 the M ocksvitle-Yad- kinville highway, aud includes both timbered and farming sections. The tract is a part of the estate of the late Dr. Cain. It is the intention of the home officials to have farming on a large scale on the new purchase, and this summer home some activity is being carried 011, ’to be increased in future years.. Several streams 011 the farm will provide water for a pond which will be used as one of the recieation.l features for out-- jngs of the children liviug at the 'Home — W inston-Sentinel. A London scientist says he will - 30011 be able to . determ ine the -a mount of heat iu a girl’s blush. In a lot r-f business we see nowadays there is more vn-nish than heat. - A Good Thing • DON’T MISS IT ' Send your "name and address plainly written, together with 10 cents, stamps or coin (and- this slip), to Chamberlain Medicine Co., Des !bines, Iowa, and re­ ceive in return atrial package eonti CHAMBERLAIN’S TABLETS fora troubles, indigestion, gassy pains (hat crowd the heart, biliousness and constipa­tion; . CHAMBERLAIN’S COLIC AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY for pain in sto-. mach and bowels, intestinal cramp, cotie- . and diarrhoea; CHAMBERLAIN’S SALVE, needed-in every family for buna, scalds, wounds, piles and skin affections. Tty these valued family medicines for only, lOcents. Don’t miss it. 041847495956 ^^+.//:/.59922^^B & I M I I A ' 'I W J M^ ^ ^ S S e m B B A t : * f : :::;';M |iiS ,^PfeMogr , A ; 4 *« > V i^ * 4 ' - < . 1 *«gg . -i giJSfc I w m m w t u B m 'S'Sb-i ,fc p^r U yj gflH II M n I *- 1 1 I ii^ . 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I §1 Is 1SI;v Il^ ,m iIiil' --iv-5I M :.i§ P ill I # i£s III® Jsiii -I E j ~ ^ b p # « ■ tlj i t :P I # SjfcMH III'•! * SS1;-IiiiiK im mM :®:,i.i| ill- r; Sirtji: -.-.V,-:;. - AsM BK il>-i - I M fcSf W M I I iI;, 5 ] im111km.f:' \*&$ jiltgiiI; ;■ jT-s’ii' IK iiiii -fi-ii’i]j !vlj-SJ S S^i I ill III I iii- E 111 J$ thk ■'4;- $tuV H iblsSl IIffIl-:: 0 P fl i I # I jm 1[fclp:If m II? it In --' f M o c m m m JU N E 24 ;!92S -T H E B A t lE REGOk D , Shoots George Smith.Bad JeakinisTHE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - - EditorI TELEPHONE -I. Elntered at the Postoffice in Mocks- »ille, N. C.. as Second-class Mail matter. March 3.. 1903. ____ SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ I OO SIX MONTHS, IN ADVANCE - $ 50 THREE MONTHS, IN ADV ANCE $ 25 W hat this country needs today is more old tim e religion, more peo­ ple at work, more m ules and horses and less jazz and auto speeding. Controversies and dissentions a m ong the people of a city, town, chnrch or school will soon put the said town, city, church or school out of business. - T he blackberries are ripe at last but there is always some bitter a- Iong with the sw eet. W e are hav­ ing trouble in getting the crusts and sweetening. If you don’t belive property is high iu Mocksville try to buy a lot anywhere near the square. Don’t go to the tax books to find this out talk to the owner of the property W e don t believe there are many parents in M ocksville who would want an evolutionist to teach their cnildreu, and yet when the girls and boys are sent away to som e of the state colleges they are taught by these same evolutors. T his immediate section has been blessed with refreshing showers while most of the surrounding country has been suffering for want-of raiii. T his again proves that the Bible speaks truthiully when it says that the rains fall ou the unjust as well as the just. It would seem that there are a few merchants in this section who do not want auybody but Dem o­ crats to trade with them . I f ' this is the case we hope that their fond­ est hopes will be gratified, aud that the Republicans who- have any m oney to spend will spend it-where ic will be appreciated. W e are liviug in a wonderful country, the greatest in the world. W e were talking to a gentleman a fevv days ago who had driven a Ford car from Dallas, T exas, to M ocksville in four aud a half days and hadn’t even Ind a puncture. Tw enty-five years ago it would have taken at least a m onth to have made this trip. - W e read every few days about different counties in the state get­ tin g so matiy miles of hard-surface roads. W e wonder if the state highw ay commission has forgotteu that there is such a county as Davie. U p to th isgood hour, our county has received less than -fifteen miles of hard-surface road' w hile our neighboring counties have managed to get tw o, three and even four tim es this am ount of good roads. A re we going to sit quietly and see every county in the state se­ cure good roads without m aking an elfort to secure at least a few m iles of much needed highway? There is but one way to lower the tax rate iu Davie couuty. More m ills and factories which means more people aud more taxable pro pertyV T he farmers this in couniy have to pay m ost otfctlie taxes to keep up the roads.-the schools, the couuty home aud everything else. W e have room for ten thousand good people in M ocksville provided w e could give them som ething .to do. A m illion dollar -cotton m ill, a couple of furniture factories, sash and blind factories, overall aud shirt m ills, etc., would make a good start W e cannot have a growing town without m ills aud factories. There is no more dangerous corner in * M dcksville than at the intersection of A von and North Main streets, yet this corner has been w ithout a light for four weeks. T he Record has goue to the city manager aud also oiie of the alder­ men- on more than one occasion aud asked that tins light be kept burning but so far nothing, has been doue about the ma'fer. One wreck or one life will be a dyar price to pay on account of the negligence of somebody' but it' m ay take som ething like this to get anything done. But it is a long lane that has no turning. Gooe But Not Forgotten. Charlie Tom linson is still mourn­ ing the death of his aged friend Tom , who departed this Iifeasliort while ago at the advanced age of 21 years. Tom w a sa good fellow and it will be many moons before he is forgotten. W hen in the prime of life he made his home with Mr., and Mrs. Z. N.. Anderson, but they reluctantly parted with him som e 18 years ago, giving him to Mast er Francis Austin, the-little son of Mr. and Mrs. Lander Austin. W hen the A ustins sold their home on Church street several years ago and left M ocksville, Thom as was turned over to Charlie Thom liuson who now lives in the A ustin house. So far as we know Tom w as the oldest cat in the United States. But few felines live to be more than half that age. May he rest iu peace and dream through the ages to come of the thousands of fat mice he enjoyed while ram bling 011 this niuudaue sphere. Masons, Take Notice. A public address 011. Mosonary will Ge made and the officers of Harmony Lodge N o. 657 will be publicly installed by Leon Cash of W inston-Salem , N . C,, Grand Ma­ ster of the Grand Lodge of N . C. A. F. & A M. at the Harmonv IiighschooI auditorium at Harmony N C.. on Saturday night June 27 If M u>ie will be furnished bv the * Kitnel O rchestraof W.inston-Salein. AU Masons and their families es­ pecially and the public generally are coidially invited to attend. Woodmen’s Annual Picnic At Court­ ney. .Theattiiual picnic of the W ood­ men of the World aud their friends will be. held at Courtney, Yadkin county, 011 July fourth,, according to announcement made this week. The com plete p ogram has not been prepared, but an address by a speaker of uote'.is said to be iin eluded There will be a big dinner iu the grove and a ball gam e in. the afternoon. Many Davie folks will alteud this big picnic. • Sunday was the longest day. of the year and just about the warm­ est. T he thermom eter registered 98 degrees. A bad shooting affair took place Friday evening about seven o’clock in Farm ington township near the Yadkin river bridge. Bud Jenkins, who it is said, had been drinking, got his shot gun and started out on the war path to shqot- a fellow named Peoples 'w h o had turned him up iu connection with- some liquor business. George Luke Sm ith, a brother in-law of Jenkins remonstrated with him, telling him to let Peoples alone. Jenkins then turned on Sm ith and em ptied a load of shot into his body. H e shot at Sm ith tw ice but only one load took effect. Jenkins then made his getaway. Sheriff Cope and his deputies spent the night searching for Jenkins but-cam e in Saturday m orning and reported that no rrace of him had been found. T hey secured the service of two bloodhounds from Rowan but as usual the hounds, failed to locate the fugitive. Mr. Sm ith was carried to. a W inston Salem hospital Friday night and' under­ went an operation. T he wound is dangerous but there is som e hope held out for his recovery. Jenkins was given a hearing—in M ocksville a Week ago ou a whisky charge and placed under a $500 bond for his appearance at ■ the August term of Davie court. Buildiag Store aad Filling Station. The Statesville Oil Co., has begun the erection of a store building and filling station on the corner of North Main ancT Avon streits The store buildings witl be of brick, the store to be 20x40 with entrances on both streets, and the filling station will occupy the' corner lot KurtVes & Ward will occupy the ' buildings which it is hoped to have completed in 30 days. Turrentine News. Rufus Foster, ol Salisbury spent Satur 1 duv evening with his sister Mrs. Beulah VicCoiloh. " Mrs. R. H Lagle spent Sunday with Mrs L. F Waguner near-Bethel. Mrs. Guruer Foster has been v. ry sick for Hie past two weeks, hut is improviug now, we a e glad 10 note. Mr ana Mrs Author hinnot and little d tughtc f Louise, Misses Cb de Cret Ia s n I Iutte Imrtie 1. >.oy Forest, spent SuiKiay at the botue of Mr and Mrs Frault Barney at Hanes- Miss Jennie Sedberry, of Coofeeu ee, spent a few days last week with Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Foster at Turunentine Retnetuber preaching next Sunday by by Rev. J. L Kirk our pastur at 11. Sun­ day school at 9:45 a in Prayer Service at 8 o'clock. Everybody invited. Children For Adoption. I If your hom e is lonesom e be cause no baby is there, we have fifteeu liaudsouie boys and girls from four w eek s-to tw enty four m onths old. T h eseare infants of the most prom ising type aud the foster home offeted must be the 'very best. Iuterested parties are invi ed to write for application I blanks. Children's H om e Society of N . C. Greensboro, N . C. N O T I C E ! 1C1 1 I 1 v * 1 ' sI l *1* *1* ' I 1 t i t ^ O ur force of sheet m etal workers will be in MocksvilIe for a few days in a- bout two weeks. Let us gutter your buiiding while we are here. W e have first-class workmen and will do your guttering while here at 15c. per f t. W rite us and we will arrange X o take care of your work. S H E E T M E T A L bE P T . ^ REALTY BOND COMPANY, Cor. Third and Liberty Winston-Salem, N. C U se FLIT to K ill tb e H ie s. 50c., 75c., and $1.00 Cans ~ G et PHENOLENE tor^prny Your Chicken Houses and Hen Nests. Also for Nleas and M ange oh Dogs- ItjS an Excellent Poultry Spray. 65c/gal. C. C. SANFORD SONS GO. of the celebrated JUST UNLOADED M a k in g S ix C a r lo a d s o f P ia n o s a n d P la y e r s W e J e s s e G . B o w e n & C o . 526 N. Liberty Street W inston-Salem , N. C. | I "7 .7 7 IBuy a Baldwin for low first cost and low upkeep cost I.aldwin Refrigerators aud Ice C hests,have been our most popular line for m any years, d«e 10 th- fact that they. are. both low in cpst and extrem ely econom ical in ice consum ption. I here is such a wide range of styles and sizes in both chests and refrigerators that the Iicedi of every-hom e can be satisfied in our selection^ . < „ . . ' I here is no better time to choose than now,, right,in the heart of the refrigerator seai-uii. Baldwin Chests $18.50 and upwards Baldwin Refrigerators $23.50 and upwards^ T rade and; W est Fifth Winston-Salem PU n i l si CIENTIFIC THROUGHOj WORLD REJOICE RETURN. Oslo. Norw ay.— T he ent IM m u n d se n N orth Pole e31 I f [« d fsafelr in Spltzber 1^ h e party did n o t retui ay by Plane but w as pick s h i n g fioat and conveyed It is reported th a t this P l .ached n orth latitude 83 W a u t e s . or about 100 milt forth Pol®* ' 4/;» Th© governm ent, on tn ■ iS l L new s of th e arriv al oi t !ig lL expedition in Spitzber J 'l m undsen a telegram of ons.rpjje new s created exciter ver it becam e know n. T >yful celebrations in ;he c Copenhagen.—'The Socia I M ublishes a rep o rt from Osl “ egian capital, stating t J , roaid A m undsen, w ho retii ri H >burgen a fte r his sensat ® | ight, is dissatisfied w ith S ltained and is “quite det P K 8Bine the attem pt" to ret j | | "q>]ie explorer is quoted ;i fcl iat the experience gain E ' 9 resent att& npt would <*na S h a i n his goal. The otlie T l I the expedition, the ac Sifm ies, appear equally an it tffesire to neat the aerial x ?|l ons planned by other coi in ,!©[pressed the view that 71s iientific results had bee " " us far. C aptain Amunds , _ , as reticent. s:S| Amundsen’s com rades u ous in th eir appreciation •ship. The A m erican men ly, Lincoln EIIswortl:, W . by the new s aw aiting jath of his fath er in Italy t ay in the north, but sa S a ould continue his financial ;§§ iptain A m undsen. Tl7§s New York.—E xplorers . ? J Is rejoiced w ith laym en i ‘ " the world a t the safe re _.undsen-E llsw orth N or T l ane expedition. The retu m iy, Spitzbergen, exactly 2° i ^ ipping off, w as greeted sessions of “I told yo words cam e principallj forers and scientists, _nundsen’s courage and lping w ith the hazards os lgions. I SThough the expedition fell ort of landing a t the P oj Jipelled to retu rn partly il id partly by fishing sckoa its expect to glean m ud Iow ledge from the flight. I tlonald B. M acM illan, Whq iscasset, M aine, a t the [l-American A rctic expedil I that a big burden had \ I bis m in d .' A m undsen’s said, would enable hin I bis energies to sciencel jet hunting for the Amung also altered his plans JpIane base of the expe be established a t CaJ hbbard instead of Cape TI always thought they jek,” said V iljalm ur Stef^ !explorer, here. “I am |d of the outcom e, and if fth e r in A m undsen’s cap all th a t we all thoughtf !Uld go to the Pole and [ Alaska. B ut doing Be leaves the U nited S tl Kat opportunity to dia ds if they lie in this Jernon S.- P rentice, b rl I Lincoln E llsw orth, flnaf I and lieutenant of th e ! pressed the g ratificatil perican advisory com m its ght. W hen anxiety for I Jety w as w idespread sev ■*’ if w as P rentice, as U am ittee, th a t headed o | " I of relief parties. Phe Norwegian GovernrL IiJune 4 sent two relief Pgs 8ay, cabled congraf fundsen. Earl Roasffia I big game hunter, who | |t° New Y ork from two . jptic, told how Eskimo! wait for "Amundsenl fih at the former’s supu Jinwright1 Alaska. It "as in an attempt t i jjpad great dream of h | Ihndsen organized the I* ®aving discovered, gfc the nortwest passal I v ,I8netlc Pole he wa I North Pole to his conq Fing the expedition wasL Jfcun1tH Ellsworth ad'val L u ? j t0 have been ?8I8 °f the to tal cosl Sam L. Rogers Def Ij Iille'—Puneral servl [fc' Rogers, director ot| WtracHn8us ^Hreau C a 01 PresideatLa ,,’ and Prominent in si l w ? , ltiC3’ w h0 Hiod J Tto 5 > were field FriJ I °rd received here] H ' s « ith , pa: I S e r v i Methodist church |«ervicea. r. Rogers w as strickeni aPpplexy on T h u rsl 62095985^409795985 43^4985299854284^319^^^944959849842919849919494953442755942946^^^49 T T O O A U T R R R ( JO R P . M O O T K SV T T JiR . N . C . fo r m a n y y ears, due consuiiipton. need5 IlENTl FlC THROUGHOUT THE WORLD REJOICE OVER RETURN. N o r w a y . —The entire Roald W sen North Pole expedition ar- Sed safe’y in Spitzbergen in one b t Dartv did not return to K ings bv "’-ne but w as picked up by a .iBg boat and conveyed there :t fs reported that the expedition nhed north latitude 88 degrees 30 iutes, or about 100 m iles from the th Pole. f;he gove'-nment, on the receipt of news of the arrival of the Amung- expedition in Spitzbergen, sent ,undsen a telegram of congratula­ t e news created excitem ent w her- I r it became known. T here w ere Ifnl celebrations in the city. C o p e n h a g e n . —The Social I^em okren llishes a report from Oslo, the Nor- Jginn capital, stating th a t C aptain lid Amundsen, who returned to Spit- I urgen after his sensational A rctic Tfat i3 dissatisfied w ith the results Fined and is “quite determ ined to |nme the attem pt" to reach the pole. Jhe explorer is quoted as declaring ft the experience gained in his |sent attempt would Stable him to Fin his goal. The other m em bers Itbe expedition, the account con- appear equally anim ated by a sjire to beat the aerial polar expedi- s planned by other countries. They Iressed the view th a t im portant Intific results had been achieved ; far. Captain A m undsen him self 5 reticent. inmdsen’s com rades w ere unani- i in their appreciation of his Iead- jhip. The American inem ber of the Br, Lincoln Ellsw orth, w as sadden- Ihr the news aw aiting him of the |th of his father in Italy during £is in the north, but said th at' he Ld continue his financial backing of Itain Amundsen. ~ I FIVE p e o p l e k il l e d IN WEST BY STORMS. Chicago.—Plve persons w ere kill­ ed In the m iddlew est and southw est ‘by wind and electrical storm s. ' T hree children m et death and 15 persons w ere injured half a dozen seriously, w hen lightning struck a school house 1 0 , m iles sbuth of B reckenridge, Tex., a t the close'’ of a cojiim unity m eeting. Eye w it­ nesses said the bolt .went dow n the fiue I and ojjjt of a side door. An aged w om an w as crushed to death near Chicago w hen a shed toppled Jver h er “during a freak rain and windstorm s. Several persons in the jity w ere cut hy flyingrglass from ^ roken panes. 36 OIE III TRAIN WRECK FAMOUS LEADER IN MANY CAM­ PAIGNS HOPED FOR BEST UNTIL LAST. FOUR COACHES OF PASSENGERS HURLED INTO MAELSTROM OF DEATH. H ackettstow n, N. J.—Thirty-six are dead, 36 in a serious condition and at least 35 m ore are suffering from in­ juries received w hen four cars and the engine of a seven-car special train on the D elaw are, Im ckaw anna and W est­ ern railroad w gre derailed and piled uppn one another a t Rockport, N. S., two m iles w est of here. One hundred and eighty-two passen- ! gers, im m igrants of a form er day who ' had becom e prosperous in the corn belt and w ere on th eir w ay to visit hom elands across the sea, w ere hurled into the m aelstrom of death' as coach pounded upon coach and scalding steam from the bursting engine added torture. The engine plowed over ties for 150 yards before it struck a sw itch and left the tracks. Two day coaches and a Pullm an w ere piled on top the engine as it toppled over. One other Pullm an car was derailed and three rem ained up­ right. The injured w ere taken to hospitals at E aston, Pa., Phlllipsburg, M orris­ tow n and Dover. T w enty of those taken to E aston are dead. M orristow n reported two deaths, D over six, a n d -eig h t bodies are in the m orgue a t H ackettstow n. H elen W agner, 9; P rank Bendich, 50; M ary Cinck, 40; Mrs. A nthony E rnst; M rs. Lois T roike; M artin Hein- Sev York.—Explorers and scient- ] rejoiced with laym en in all parts Ihe world at the sate return of the Iundsea-EIlsworth N orth Pole air- Iie expedition. The retu rn to K ings Spitzbergen, exactly 28 days a fte r ing, Sr.; M arUn H eining, Jr.; Edw in fpiag off, was greeted w ith m any B runner, Sr.; Edw in B runner, Jr.; Iressions of “I told you so.” B ut M rs. W ilgam eir; tw o unidentified [words came principally I from ex- women aged 30 and 40 respectively; iers and scientists, who knew unidentified girl about six years old; Ldsen's courage and Ingenuity i n ' Philip S chuster; unidentified wom an Ing with the hazards of the P olar ; belived to be wife of M artin H eining;S T l- - : .l —____ . Tl/T—. hough the expedition fell 100 m iles irt of landing at the Pole and w as Ipelled to return partly in one plape j partly by fishing schooner, scien- expect to glean m uch valuable Iwledge from the flight. Ionald B. MacMillan, who sails from ioasset, Maine, at the head of the !American Arctic expedition, adm it- Jthat a big burden had been lifted s mind. Amundsen’s sate return, ^aid, would enable him to devote energies to science instead of I hunting for the A m undsen party, galso altered his plans so th a t the |lane base of the expedition now j be established a t Cape Thom as fthard instead of Cape Columbia. I always thought they would come Jt,'' said Viljalmur Stefansson, not- Explorer, here. “I am exceedingly I of the outcome, and it is another her In Amundsen’s cap. Y ou will |U that we all thought A m undsen |ld go to the Pole and continue on “(Alaska. But doing w hat- he has ! leaves the U nited S tates w ith a |t opportunity to discover new Is If they lie In this area.” Frnon S.- Prentice, brother-in-law P ncoIn Ellsworth, financial back­ ed lieutenant of the expedition- |essed the gratification of the Irican advisory com m ittee over the It. When anxiety for A m undsen’s Sty was widespread several w eeks 1 1J was Prentice, as head of the suttee, that headed oft organiza- I of relief parties. Ee Norwegian Government, w hich Jfuue 4 sent two relief planes to P cabled congratulations to pudsen. Earl Rossrilan, explorer jcig game hunter, who just return- E lV York from tw o years in the Ra’ t0id how Eskim os said they r wa't for Amundsen and Ells- at the former’s supply depot at F light, Alaska. I was in an attem pt to fulfill the C 8reat dream of bis life thatPflsen organized the N orth Pole aving discovered the South the nortwest passage and the W nnfrietic poIe he w anted to add Bnir hT P°Ie to his conIiuests. Fin- I nmn expeditiOn w as a trying Irtoii Ell8W°fth advanced a sum |v i “ t0 have been $85,000, about juurds of the total cost. ! - sam L. Rogers Dead. ’ . IL plle'~ Funeral serVico of Sam- ! « 7 gers, director of the ITnited U cbsu3 burean during th e ad- Ion »°? of Pre3ident W oodrow I prominent in state and na Iranirii wbo died a t his home ■to » Were beld Friday, accord- T worrI received here. Bkiin^u Smitbr Pastor of the IcrVices aist church’ condUCted I was strIeken w ith an at- I apop'cxy on Thursday. June 4 O scar D aniel, negro porter; M rs. Otto G runder; N athaniel J. Bunker, Lacka­ w anna employe. The dead a t D over are: George Taule, K arl Gantz, M rs. A ugustus Isi- niann; M rs. A ntonio-B ernhardt; Mrs. K atherine K arling and an unidentified woman. T he. dead a t, M orristow n hospital are: M rs. B arbara F arm er; Mrs. George B rechner. The dead at H ackettstow n include: John Iron; Jacob Scanion, trainm an, Scranton, P a.; F red Loomis, engineer, Scranton, Pa.; Carl H aehn, firem an Scranton, P a.; a young girl; tw o un­ identified wom en and an unidentified m an. -Uneasy Over Safety of Foreigners.! W ashington.— Continued uneasiness over the security of foreigners in China w as m anifest in the sum m ary of official advices m ade public a t the state departm ent, b u t no case of an at­ tack on A m erican citizens yet has been reported, requiring action by the W ashington authorities. On the contrary, a report from C harge M ayer a t Peking th a t repres­ entatives of the Chinese student group concerned in the Shanghai incidents had required A m erican assistance in seeing justice done in th a t case, in­ clined officials to increasing hopeful­ ness th at the anti-foreign outbreak would not develop into a m ovem ent w hich, threatened A m erican lives. T here w as no wopd available eith­ e r a t the W hite Houde or state de­ partm ent to show th a t the Chinese situation had engaged the attention of' the cabinet extensively. It was' said a t the-departm ent th a t no note to the C hinese provisional governm ent In P eking w as contem plated, the diplo­ m atic body there still being given wide discretion by the various governm ents to deal w ith 'such aspects of Khe un­ re st and disturbance as arise. ' In th e absence of direct w ord from cabinet circles, how ever, a telegram m ade public by Chairm an B orah of. the senate foreign relations com m ittee de­ claring he favored “w ithdraw al of extra-territorial rights i n . C hipa as speedily as practicable,” took on spe­ cial significance. Speeds Settlement of War Claims. W ashington--Frederiek C. Hicks, alien property custodian, plans to speed up the Settlem ent of Claims for properties seized from enemy aliens during the W orld-W ar. U nder the law the custodian adjudi­ cates all claim s under $10,000 and these are now being disposed of at the ra te of 75 a w eek. W ith the cus­ todian holding approxim ately $275,- 000,000 in alien .property, the w ork of the office could not be com pleted until 1932( if figured o n -th e present basis. W ashington.—Senator R obert M. La Follette, for m any ygars a storm y pet­ rel of A m erican politics, died here after several m dnths illness. D eath resulted from h eart failure induced'by a general breakdow n and an -attack -'o f brbtfch'tal "asthm a, The W isconsin Senator and late in­ dependent Presidential candidate,, be­ gan failing in health even before the 1924 cam paign. Several weeks ago he contracted a severe cold which, de­ veloped into asthm a. H is heart, which [bad been unable to stand the strain, gave w ay and he sank rapidly. Senator L a Follette long w as a vic­ tim of angina pectoris, a heart ailm ent, and this, w ith his asthm atic attack, caused him to suffer greatly- from shortness of breath. V iolent cough­ ing spells accom panied his illness. To the last, how ever, he insisted on cheerful reports being given out as to his illness. Dr. Charles C. M arbury, the family physician, who w as a t Senator La Fol- lette’s bedside w hen he passed away, issued the following statem ent cover­ ing his illness and death: “Senator L a Follette had suffered from angina pectoris for ten years. The attacks gradually increased In frequency and in severity. The stress and strain incidental to political cam­ paigns and his Senatorial duties fre­ quently w ere attended by anginal at­ tacks of varying degrees of intesity. “These attacks becam e decidedly worse in 1923. H e spent the Fall o f th a t year in Europe and on his re­ tu rn suffered severe attacks of angina pectoris for a m onth or m ore. H e re­ sum ed his duties in the Senate during the W inter of 1923-1924 for about six m onths and then had an attack of pneum onia fropi w hich he m ade a good recovery.” CAR WITH 6 PERSONS BLOWN 150 YARDS. Peoria, Ills.—T ourist arriving In Peoria say the stormi w hich hit M ason City did dam age estim ated a t $150,000 to farm houses, crops, telephone equipm ent and autom o­ biles. -M any persons w ere h u rt by flylhg debris and m otorists were h u rt w hen th eir cars were wreck­ ed. Touris'ts said they saw nine autom obiles w ithin a distance of eight m iles this side of M ason w ith tops blown away. Some of the cars w ere turned over in ditches. One was blown w ith its five occupants 160 yards into' the a ir and into a corn-field; N one-w ere hurt. AU along the w estern side of the high­ w ay for a distance of several m iles barns and farm buildings w ere un- -roofed. IOD GANGSTERS PENNED DP CHICAGO IS NOW AFTER GANGS WITH FIERCE DETERMI­ NATION. 1 Warned of Pine Beetle. W ashington.—Tim berland ow ners in the south are urged by the departm ent of agriculture to keep a close w atch this sum m er-over their pine lands to note any clum ps of pines dying from attacks of the “southern pine bqetle.” R ecent studies m ade by the bureau of entom ology indicate outbreaks of this insect occur during periods of abnorm ally low rainfall. The w eather bureau reportsT hat the rainfall for the first five m onths of 1925 ■ has been m uch below norm al in the south­ eastern sections of the U nited States, the deficiency a t some stations being as m uch as 15 inches. All tim berland ow ners in this re­ gion are fam iliar w ith the destructive w ork of the beetle. If the present dry spell should continue, it is likely, says the departm ent, th a t serious, losses, w ill occur this sum m er. Pine ow ners are advised By the de­ partm ent to m ake an exam ination of tim berland once a m onth or oftener for clum ps of dying trees indicated by fading or brow n foilage. Such trees, it'is advised, should be prom pt­ ly w orked up into lum ber, or the logs placed in w ater until a m ore oppor­ tune tim e for sawing. One Killed, 10 Injured. K enton, Ohio.— One person w as in­ stantly killed and ten w ere Injured w hen a Big F our passenger train struck an open siding and left the track at G rant, Ohio, ten m iles north of here.The engine and th re e .choaches.roll­ ed from the track. A diner, parlor car and sleeper on the re a r end of the train rem ained on the rails. The dead: C. -C. W oodward, train news- “butcher” of Toledo. Both the engineer and firem an w ere severely injured. Restaurant Cakes Kill Three. C hicago^-The restaurant of B ryan K ane w as closed and sam ples of food w ere taken for chem ical analysis after three m en who had eaten pancakes there died and a fourth !becam e seri­ ously ill. D octors expressed the opin­ ion th a t th4 pancakes w ere poisoned. The d e ad 'a re -Samuel Selbiger, 45; Jam es M cGuire, 37; H erm an Glender- m an, 47; M ichael R eidy becam e ser­ iously ill And m ay die. Selbiger cook­ ed the pancakes for the other three m en shortly after noon and then ate som e him self. 28 Killed In Storm. W ashington--F rank N euhauser, 11, of Loiuisville, Ky., proved him self the b est speller of 2,000,000 Am erican school children w hen he won the na­ tional spelling contest here. A gold m edal and $500 in gold w as the re­ w ard to the w inner. Second place w as w on by Edna Stover, 11, of T renton, N. J., who re­ ceived $250 in prize money. Chicago.—G angland is on the run, m unicipal and county authorities as­ serted confidently after a 50-hour broadside against the gangster and his gun. { Sim ultaneously, it w as declared that the drive against terrorism w hich be­ gan Saturday would continue w ith un­ abated vigor “until the underw orld is licked to a frazzle.” S tate’s A ttorney R obert E. Crow after , a conference w ith Chief of Po­ lice M organ A. Collins and Sheriff P eter M. Hoffman, asserted vehem ent­ ly “we will not let down in our ef­ forts until we have sent to jail every gangster, beer runner, crim inal and law -breaker we are able to appre­ hend.” A special session of the Cook coun­ ty grand jury indicted John Scalise and A lbert A nselino, m em bers of the beer-running Genna gang who were wounded In Saturday’s battle w ith the police. Each w as charged w ith the m urder on tw o couffts, one for each of the police officers slain. Efforts will be made to h are them brought to trial im m ediately. Prelim inary hear­ ings w ere' set. R aiding squads arm ed w ith rifles, and some traveling in arm ored cars, continued th eir round of outlying roadhouses and the city’s gang ren­ dezvous, w recking stills, confiscating liquor stocks and arm s, and arresting inm ates, proprietors and patrons. A t least one roadhouse w as sealed by the federal injunction process, and Sher­ iff Hoffman said sim ilar action would be taken in m any other cases. R epresentatives of tile federal pro­ hibition, intelligence and im m igration bureaus are co-operating w itji the city and county authorities. Chief Justice Jacob H opkins, of the crim inal court, conferred w ith Mr. -Crowe on plans to speed up the gang­ sters’ cases In the courts. Several judges of the crim inal court announc­ ed they would abandon their vacation plans. M eanwhile, Vudge Hopkins ad­ vised police officers to shoot gunm en on sight. “The quicker the police are on the trigger, the quicker the gunm en w ill disappear,” he said. IL L III « 1 1 1 1 SOME SPOTS, HOWEVER, ARE SUF­ FERING; CROP AND WEATH- ER REPORT. W ashington.—Crop and w eather con­ ditions in southern states w ere sum­ m arized by'the departm ent of agricul­ ture as follows: M oderate tem peratures to rath er w arm w eather prevailed in the south, and w hile rainfall w as of rath er local nature, good show ers occurred in m any places in the astern, central and northw estern portions of the cotton b e lt M oisture w as still insufficient, however, In some sections, and droughtly conditions ,continued over the southw estern districts, especially in central and southern Texas. Cotton m ade fair to very good prog­ ress In the Rio G rande valley and in w estern and- northern Texas, but it deteriorated in m any central and south portions w here plants are sm all and blooming prem aturely, w ith some dying; the general condition of the crop in Texas varies greatly, ranging from very poor to very good, depend­ ing on the local m oisture. In Okla­ homa, A rkansas and Louisiana grow th w as fairly good to excellent, though there w as some dam age by w ind and sandstorm s in w estern Oklahoma. E arly cotton is blooming In south­ eastern Oklahoma, and squares are form ing in nearly all parts of A rkan­ sas. ■Conditions by states: N orth C arolina: Corn, tobacco, pea­ nuts, sw eet potatoes and truck bene- fitted by w arm th, am ple sunshine and rains In east, but too dry In w est and drought becom ing serious in m oun­ tains. Cotton shows considerable im ­ provem ent, except In southw est; con­ dition fair to very good in east; poor in w est; clean and good progress in chopping. Favorable for harvesting w heat and. shipping peaches. South C arolina: Good rain coastal plains greatly benefiicial but drought in northw est portion becom ing inten­ sified. E arly and interm ediate cotton fairly good In northw est and progress I DOINGS IN THE I TAR HEEL STATE!: NEWST>F NORTH CAROLINA ! I- TOLD IN SHORT PARA- ! I GRAPHS FOR BUSY PEOPLE I L < * Asheville.—Five thousand visitors are expected a t R idgecrest, the South­ ern B aptist assem bly grounds, 18 m iles east of Asheville, during the season Of sum m er conferences, June 18 to Septem ber I. ^ R ockingham ^-Judge Bryson a fter hearing argum ent m ade the tem porary . receivership of the Carolina Coal Mine Company perm anent continuing John H. K ennedy, the tem pojary rec liv.ir,' as perm anent receiver. R utherfordton.—The county commis­ sioners have decided to build a new m odern courthouse'' for R utherford county to cdst around $250,000., It will be erected on the sam e site as tne present building. Statesville.—T here were 7.918 auto- . m obile license tags sold during the past year a t the branch office here, ac­ cording to E . B. Quinn, local m anager of the Carolina M otor club, who . h as charge of the sale of license plates. Mr. Quinn estim ates th at a t least 10,- 000 plates will be distributed from the office here during the coming year. Rocky Mount.—Progress In the eradication of tuberculosis am ong cat­ tle is reported in Nash- and Edge­ combe counties. In Edgecombe 356 cattle com prising 178 herds, have been tested w ithout the finding of a single reaction o r1 suspect. In N ash the sam e result obtained during the test­ ing of 395 cattle, com prising 214 herds. W ilson.—D uring the progress of a rain storm lightning struck a farm house five m iles south of this city. Lindsey Bass, w hite, w as -instantly killed, his father w as rendered uncon­ scious and never revived until .m orn­ ing and ,his m other and several other m em bers of the fam ily w ere severely shocked. Lillington.—By virtue of an agree­ m ent reached betw een the local board of trustees and the county hoard of education, Lillington high school and the school farm are transferred to the very good on coastal plain; chopping [ caTe Gf the county. The trustees have late crop in few sections; first bloom I surrendered the charter of the local reported; some weevil. Com plaints of corn becom ing yellow In northw est; im proved elsew here. Tobacco irregu­ lar grow th; curing begun. Sw eet po­ tatoes slow growth. T ruck crops suf­ fering from, dronght in northweBt Peaches and blackberries plentiful. 50 M anufacturere Pay Fine. ' C hicago--iFines aggrgeating $166,- 000. w ere assessed against 5 0 ' chair m anufacturers w ho pleaded guilty be­ fore Federal Judge Adam C. Cliffe to violating the, Sherm an anti-trust act. They are the first of 269 furniture firms nam ed, in indictm ents returned recently here after-a grand ju ry inves-;- tigation, to be sentenced. Those sen­ tenced .were punished in groups, and the fines w ere fixed, it -was said,' ac­ cording to'fin an cial staff ding of the com panies -involved, ranging from g lj1 000 to $5,000. - .’ 12,000 Rotarlans Attend Meet. Cleveland.—A vast arm y of Rotar- ians—officially estim ated a t 12,000— “from the four corners of the earth,” storm ed Cleveland to attend the open­ ing session in public of the sixth an­ nual convention of R otary InterBa- tionl. , George H . M iller, president of the Cleveland R otary club, delivered an ad­ dress .of welcome to which Canon W illiam Thom pson Elliott, of Liver­ pool, England, responded. Then the curtail w ent up on the outstanding feature of the opening session, the colorful pageant “R otary," w ith its cast of 500 perform ers. The spectacle, depicting the devel­ opm ent of the principles of Rotary from the day of “creating," w as direct­ ed by R obert H. Burnside, of New York. The’ scenario w as . w ritten by A rch C. Klumph, Cleveland, p ast in­ ternational president. In the m em orial addfess M r. Mll- -holland said’ in part: “Tonight, as w ith loving thoughts and cherished m em ories, we recall these R otarians who have heard the sum m ons of the ’muffled, oars,’ we know th a t to ‘live in the hearts of those we leave behind is not to die.’ ‘In the w orld w ar, m illions of verile, capable and am bitious yogng m en of our tim e and generation faced the dis­ com forts and agonies of trench w ar­ fare, charged across No M an’s Land am id the hail of hostile bullets, until the grave reached out’ and claim ed the m as its ow n—glad to die for home and native land. “W hile m en gladly die for their country, should we .find i t . difficult to live for o u r cjountry?" MacMillan. Begins Voyage. Boston.—Amid the din' of roaring guns and shrieking m arine w histles Lieut. Com m ander Donald B. Mac­ M illan and his little crew sailed from the Charlestow n navy yard on the steam er Peary to start officially his ninth voyage into the A rctic. - W hen the Peary passed beyond sight of the cheering crow ds M acM illan left the steam er,and boarded an autom o­ bile to speed to W iscasset, M aine, w here his schooner Bowdoin is anchor­ ed and ready to sail north. Ju st before the Peary sailed, Mac­ M illan outlined his plans to the nota­ bles and the throng of B u n k er. Hill day celebrants. He explained th at his original plan, the exploration of the v ast and un­ know n A rctic tract called Crocker land, m ight be delayed a w eek to per­ m it his expedition to search for Capt. Roald Amundsen, who has been lost to the world since he started his polar flight alm ost four w eeks ago. If w ord is not received from the N orw egian explorer by A ugust I, w hen the M acM illan expedition expects to reach E tah, G reenland, the norther- m ost point its ships can go, MacMil­ lan’S flyers w ill begin a search. Am undsen, he said, w ill rim out of food if he has failed to reach Cape school and deeded the property over to the board of education. Statesville. — A -200-galJon steam blockade distillery was captured an<j destroyed in W ilkes county, near An­ tioch church, by T. M. H alyburton, fed­ eral prohibition agent, whose head­ quarters are in Statesville. The plant w as running in-full blast w hen the offi­ cers unexpectedly appeared on the scene. The three m en In charge m ade good their escape. Statesville.—Miss M attte Adams, of Stony Point, is in a critical condition in a local hospital, suffering from in­ juries which she sustained w hen she jum ped from a fast-moving car driven by A rthur Fox, on the Taylorsville road. M iss A dam s’ skull was fractur­ ed a t the base. She has been uncon­ scious since the accident occurred. M ooresville.—Three young boys w ith a .22 caliber rifle resulted in the death of W hitfield Dry, Il-year-old son of Mr. and M rs. N. M. Dry, at their home on South Broad street W ednesdky afternoon. The victim was in a room w ith his. sm all 8-year-old brother, Paul, and Jack H arvell1 II. The two D ry boys w ere fooling w ith the rifle while H arvell w as looking out a window. Albeniayle.—At a funeral In Fair- view Cemetery, a black snake about 3 1-2 feet long crawled fro'm the hood of a touring car and tried to bite one of the men in the crowd near by. A shovel was secured and used-as a de­ fease and the snake was killed before the interment was made. - Goldsboro.—W ayne county continues its truck shipping. Beans, potatoes, cucum bers, squash, and ..a num ber ofColumbia. The A m erican believes the „ . , _ lost explorer w ill be found in one of Pther Products, are daiI? flowing trom the three places he plans to search. I bere and nearby towns, going to the Am undsen's fate settled, MacMil- nortbern and w estem m arkets. Poul- lan’s party will fly to the unknow n tlT cOn t uuea strong T h erearesey er- polar continent to com plete their orig- al aSent3 a t * e depot aI1 the « m e inal task. H e said he expected to re- durlnS business hours to greet their Two Policemen Are Slain In Battle. -Chicago.—G angsters by killing tw o policem en w rote another bloody chap­ te r in Chicago’s already lurid talk of beer running. ■ '< A young policeman. In turn becamg a hero by.killing one gangster—one of the UiosiL desperate thugs fn the city— after a hot chase. • . The dead: Patrolm en Charles W alsh and H erold Olsen, John Gcnnaj brother of Angelo Genna. beet baron w ho was killed three w eeks ago in the city’s perennial beer feuds. m ain there until the m iddle of August and probably would return to the U nit­ ed .States about Septem ber 20. I ' —-------- Naval Nurses Acquitted. W ashington.—Cool and collected in th eir w hite uniform s and trim straw hats, tw o naval nurses sa t as defend­ ants in w hat w as said to be the first court m artial trial or women in the navy’s history. They w ere charged w ith bringing liquor into the U nited S tates in vioia- tion of the prohibition act, and speed­ ily w ere acquitted. M iss R uth M. A nderson w as voted an acquittal by the court, sitting at the. W ashington navy yard, a fte r an executive session of about 10 m inutes to consider evidence previously pre­ sented in open session, and the case of M iss K atherine C. Glancy, tried im­ m ediately afterw ard, .'was disposed of in about the sam e length of time. Admiral Robinson Chief of FIeeL W ashington-A dm iral S. S, Robi­ son, commander-in-chief of the battle fleet, has been selected to succeed Ad­ m iral R obert E. Coontz, as comman- der-in-chief of the U nited States 'fleet, •Secretary W ilbur announced the selec­ tion in m aking public changes in h lg i fleet com m ands"to take place this fall after a com pletion of the . fleet’s chuise to A ustralia. ? ' R ear Admbral G. F . H ughes, , in com­ mand. of fleet training a t the navy dw. partm ent, will succeed A dm iral Robi­ son. .L farm er friends w ith th eir products. Monroe:—P. E. Llnnell, 65, shot and killed him self in his home on Frank­ lin street. A fter breakfast Mr. Linnell w ent to his room to prepare for work. He w as only In his room a few minb- tes w hen his wife heard a gun fire. She rusned to his room to find him dead. He had tied a ribbpn around his' right foot and onto the trigger of a 20-guage shot gun. Then he point­ ed to the .left, side of his head and jerked his foot, thus cousing his death. -Morehead 'City.—A s'a p art of a stu­ pendous road-building program which involves the construction of m ore than 100 m iles of hard-surface highw ay in C arteret county, the board of commis­ sioners placed a contract for the con­ struction of 12 m iles of road betw een B eaufort and A tlantic which is to be the com pleting link of the highw ay from the Tennessee line to the eastern m ainland point of C arteret. W ilm ington—The body of M rs, Clara Ellen B ennett, 74 years of age, who w as killed a t. 17th and Dock streets, this city, w hen an autom obile in w hich she w as riding collided with a suburban car of the Tidew ater Pow ercom paoy, was carried to Reelsj- boro, ra h lic o county, w here the inter­ m ent w ill be m ade in the fam ily burial grounds. D unn— The first 1925 cotton blos­ som reported'here. w as .brought in by H. W. Jernigan, prom inent D unn dis­ trict' farm er. H e states th at th.Is.'is • Hie earliest date he rem em bers seeing a cotton bloom on his farm . I n K l'llllf It? lbi t '5 k $ p i l l K IiJ pS,!fi§§ rrg-'igW 1?« I WIha SSffi tf 0 IiSs Stf-SsS “ 1 1 1 i l l Ip lli l lIibis 111 t!3 A mpSilf?# JS. 1« Sllj 'ill I s lj’i b ‘ 3etj-stf I i i i IiliiliI?I> !,Hii- "f'W.Tte-V Mr U $$ Rt&'- I tf K tfi P f.IB-iji IsjiS.wiilfe l?n urtiSA |i& -IfiFM p ' - # I K lik i |c-|-i-tte' Sfl HS:'?; W m IiibIbtf ;V'p'f I f ii iifejS SItjj- Ikiil-f # i l lJfe m P W-iI INCOME W IT is ™o mium i ' I . FIGURES IN INTERNAL REVENUE COLLECTOR'S OFFICE SHOW REDUCTION. Raleigh. Wiith most of the .June payments In Korth Carolina's Federal income tax collections for the fiscal year ending July I, 1925. are running about two million dollars behind the income tax collections for the entire figures in the office of Gilliam Grissom, Collector of Internal Revenue for the North Caro­ lina District. Collections for all kinds of Federal taxes, however, are ailready about two million dollars ahead of the entire last fiscal year. ; Total collections of income taxes 'during the fiscal year ending July I, fl925, in N orth Carolina totalled about !eighteen, m illion dollars. To date in !the fiscal year 1925 which ends July I, approxim ately sixteen m illion dollars have been collected. : T his falling aw ay in income taxes w as expected on account of the cut in th e income tax rate this year, and Col­ lector Grissom is pleased w ith the showing m ade, as he expected th a t the slum p would be greater. M r. Grissom expects to collect little m ore income taxes during the balance ■of the fiscal year but is counting on ,the heavy receipts from tobacco taxes jto pull the total taxes of all kinds col­ lected in N orth Carolina this fiscal ■year five or six m illion dollars ahead Iof the am ount collected last year. • The full effect of the cut In income [taxes probably w ill not be felt for an­ other year as m any of the deferred ,paym ents on the taxes which fell due in M arch, 1924, are included In the to tal of the fiscal year ending July I, 1925 and on account of the cut in the |tax rate a great m any m ore people paid th eir taxes in full this year, thus ,elim inating the deferred paym ents and fu rth er swelling the total of the pres­ en t fiscal year. W h e a tc rb p H u rtB y D is e a s e . Specim ens of a disease of w heat af-, fecting the crop in D avie county, have been sent to Dr. F. A. W olf and were identified as “take-all,” a destructive w heat disease foun,d in A ustralia about 25 years ago, it w as announced.” This disease,” stated Dr. W olf, "w as first found in N orth Carolina in 1923. Col­ lections w ere m ade about the sam e tim e in 1923, near Lineolnton 1 by County A gent J. G. M orrison, and near Statesville, by County A g en t-R . W . Graeber. It has since been found in restricted areas in three other coun­ ties. The collection m ade in D avie county by County A gent Evans, m akes the sixth county of this state in which “take-all" is now know n to occur. “This disease is very destructive,", continued Dr. W olf. “It has certain features which will enable any w heat grow er to recognize it w ith consider­ able accuracy. The grow er w ill find the affected plants in well-defined spots to be dw arfed or shrunken. These plants m ay be only six to ten inches in height, w hile norm al plants are about four feet in height. M any of the affected plants will die prem aturely or rem ain green until harvest tim e. The heads are alw ays poorly filled, w hile the low er joints are dark or en­ tirely blackened and surrounded by a layer of delicate brow n threads. These threads are a part of the causa] fun­ gus and imbedded in them are the black fru it bodies of the fungus The roots are also blackened and som ew hat decayed.” D r. W olfe explained th at investiga­ tions w ere now under w ay by the N orth Carolina Station, co-operating w ith the U nited States D epartm ent of A griculture. These studies have show n th a t oats and rye are im m une to the trouble and th at certain varie­ ties are im m une. Dr. W olfe stated th a t the studies now being m ade/m ay develop varieties of w heat th a t m ay be grow n w ith safety in the infected soils. “This fungus,” he continued, “will attack w heat, barley, spelt, quack grass, cheat and num ber of the wild cultivated grasses." A ppoint Board For Training School. ; G overnor M cLean has appointed five people, three w hite and tw o negroes, to a ct as a -board for the M orrison industrial School, a t Ham leL w hich is a training school for negro boys. The board w as appointed under th e act passed a t a recent session of the State L egislature providing for a uniform m ethod for the appointm ent of certain boards of charitable and other institu­ tions. The following w ill serve for a term of four years: M rs. J. Legrande E v­ erett, of Rockingham , to succeed M. B. H art, of T arboro; W . L. Parsons, of Rockingham, to succeed L. R. Var- ser, resigned: W . N. E verett, of Rock­ ingham to succeed him self; Rev. W . •H. Haywood (Colored), o f Lum berton, to succeed Thad Tate, of C harlotte; 0 . C. Spaulding, of D urham , to succeed S. G. A tkins, of W inston-Salem . The tw o last nam ed are negroes. THE DAVTE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. NvC. a Island, to Get Close Scrutiny^ by MacMillan. W ashington.— “Ellesm ere island, the second nearest know n land to the N orth pole, is to get the closest scrutiny it has ever had by w hite men as one result of the M acM illan Arctic expedition,” says a bulletin from the W ashington headquarters of the Na­ tional Geographic society. “This land lies at the head of Baffin bay, the broad w ater highway to the Arctic which is inclosed on one side by Green­ land and on the other by Baffin Island,” continues the bulletin. W illiam Baffin, for whom the bay Norfolk Wall Safe * Yields Valued Relics Norfolk, V a .-Tw o commis­ sions engraved on Sheep-skin parchm ents, th e first signed by President John Adapts, and the second by President Thom as Jefferson. m aking Jonathan |> Cowdery a surgeon’s m ate and I a full surgeon In the United v States navy, hove been uncov- % ered by Dr. John C. Sleet of this ? city, who will m ake an attem pt % to have the docum ents restored T % to their law ful owners. The first $ commission bears the date ofW X ilI c tL X l J J (1I1I U | t u t . . n m '* * * l , , v * x i and island are nam ed, w a s the first 4, istlt) and the second 1808. Auto Bureau Shows Saving. A report m ade to Governor A. W . M cLean and S tate A uditor B axter Durham shows th a t collections w ere increased and expenses decreased in the autom obile bureau of the State governm ent, during A pril and M ay of this year, the first tw o m onths th at the transfer of the bureau from the Secretary o f S tate to the D epartm ent of Revenue w as effective. , I The bureau, w hich collects all auto­ mobile license taxes and all gasoline taxes w as m ade a p art of the general revenue m achinery of the State which is presided over by Com m issioner R. A. B roughton on A pril I. I The report shows tjiat from A pril I to M ay 31, 1925, collections totalled $1,107,868.31 as against $769,579.24 for • the sam e period in 1924, or an increase of $338,289.07. | F o r the tw o m onths of 1925 expenses am ounted to $64,774.85 as against $83,- 583.05 last year, or a decrease of $ i8,- 808.23, or over 30 per cent. Bus Lines Expactea to Yield Less. The tax upon bus lines levied by th e 1925 G eneral Assem bly and which a t th a t tim e w as estim ated to yield all the way from $250,000 to $500,000 is now expected to yield less than $150,000, or half of the sum of $300,000 w hich w as finally agreed upon and used in estim ates of the total yield from the npw revenue law. The law regulating busses and plac­ ing them under the control of the ♦Corporation Commission, which car- .ries w ith it a tax of six per cent on gross receipts, w ent into effect on ■March 22 and paym ents for the first q uarter are not due before June 22. H owever, reports have been con­ s ta n tly received by the D epartm ent of :R evenue, which collects the tax, and it is estim ated th at the receipts for the first quarter w ill fall below $3,006, although it is believed the average for th e four quarters w ill be som ew hat .above th a t figure. The falling off in expected returns .from the bus lines are attributable to several causes. In the first place, a num ber of carriers th a t it had been thought would be classified as buses ■have been put down by the Corpora­ tio n Commission as “jitneys” and pay Ionly $10 a year on each car. Then, the bus lines proper are not !m aking the m oney th at w as expected I of them . BuL a t th at the business 'th ey are doing is by no m eans a .thing to be sneezed at, the minimum itax returns of $120,000 representing 'an annual business of $2,000,000. Salary Body is in Last Stages. The Salary and W age Commission ap­ pointed by G overnor M cLean under an act of the General A ssem bly providing dractic pow ers, is now w orking on the final stages of its report, w hich is ex- pected by July I. L ists of all em ployes have been fur­ nished the heads of departm ents, the lists showing the tentative classifica­ tions adopted by the com m ission and the heads of departm ents being re­ quested to recom m end a m axim um and m inim um wage for the classification, together w ith a wage for the employe and to state the salary now paid the em ploye and the salary paid on Janu­ ary 1,1925. S. L. Rogers, secretary to the com­ mission, has been ill at his hom e in Franklin, M acon county. Julian H. Price os G reensboro, chairm an iof the com m ission has succeeded Mr. Roger, in active charge. [Governor Paroles Seven. Paroles for seven prisoners, serving term s ranging from four m onths to ten years, were announced by Governor IlMcLean. Among the prisoners parol- 'ed w as Rose Steelm an, convicted at th e December, 1923, term of the Su­ p e rio r Court of Guilford county and !sentenced to serve ten years in the !state Prison. Officers Cut Up 120 Stills. Federal officers w orking under Pro­ hibition D irector C oltrane, whose headquarters are in this city, destroy- ed 129 stills in N orth C arolina during the m onth of May, confiscated 25 auto­ mobiles and did aw ay w ith 136,185 gallons of m alt liquors and m uch other m aterial used in the m aking of liquor.' It is estim ated th a t the liquids and m ash poured out w ere sufficient for the m anufacture of 20,000, gallons of w hiskey. As a result of the activities of these Federal agents, 85 arrests w ere m ade and 200 prosceutions filed. w hite ,mail tc catch a glimpse of the unknown land which cam e later to'be called Ellesm ere island. T hat was In 1616; but it w as only a glimpse, and other A rctic explorers w ere so long In duplicating Baffin’s farthest north that there came to be serious doubt of the existence of Ellesm ere island. Existence Long Doubted. “The land w as not sighted again un­ til 1852. Tiie first w hite m an to set ] foot on it w as D octor Hayes, a mem­ ber of Kane’s expedition in 1854. A fter H ayes explored an isolated section of the shore, the land gradually emerged from the traditional into the re a l; but as In other of the northern discoveries different explorers discovered various headlands and peninsulas idependent- Iy and dubbed each a ‘land.’ Hayes’ portion, the east const of the north central section of the big island, be­ cam e ‘Grinnell Land.’ The north end, along the Polar sea, becam e 'G rant Land.' O ther niimes which have stuck to localities of Ellesm ere Isiand are ‘N orth Lincoln,’—paradoxically the southernm ost portion—‘K ing O scar Land,’ ‘B ear Cape Land.’ and ‘Jesup Land.’ “Ellesm ere island lacks only about fifty m iles of being the northernm ost known land In the world, that distinc­ tion being held by the north, point of Greenland, Cape M orris .Tesup, not far to the east. Ellesm ere island’s north­ ernm ost point. Cape Columbia, is fa­ m ous as the starting point of Peary oh his memorable dash to the N orth pole in 1909. From Cape Columbia, Elles­ m ere island extends 500 miles to the south, its southernm ost point being still nearly 400 m iles farther north than Point Barrow . A laska, and 2,000 miles farth er north than the United States-Canada boundary. “Ellesm ere island is 300 m iles wide a t the point of greatest width, but the land Is so cut into by deep fiords that In m any places the w aters of the east­ ern and Wbstern sides lie only 50 to 75 miles apart, distances th at can he covered quickly by dog team s These fiords, reaching tow ard each other from the opposite sides of the island, m ark out the tw o or three routes that have been used so ta r by expeditions crossing the island:, It follows, there­ fore, th at Ellesm ere Island is known chiefly along three narrow bandR: One betw een G rant Land and Grinnell Land, one near the m iddle of the Island, and a third tow ard the south end. “D espite the fact that Ellesm ere island is perhaps better known than any of the other A rctic lands north of N orth America, knowledge of it is con­ fined largely to the coasts and the fiord crossings. Extensive areas of the interior are still unknown or imper­ fectly mapped and no careful surveys have been m ade of any of the regions The planes of the MacMillan expedi­ tion will repeatedly cross Ellesm ere island this sum m er In establishing the advanced base in Axel Heiberg Land, and. equipped w ith m ap-m aking cam­ eras, will m ake detailed records of the terrain. G rant Land in particular, over which the d ire c t' a ir line from E tah1 to the Axel Heiberg base lies, should be as well known topographical­ ly by next autum n as M aine or New­ foundland. Able-Bodied Prisoners Employed. , Governor M cLean announced that al) ■able bodied prisoners a t the S tate’s P rison are now profitably employed! 'th at arrangem ents are being perfect­ ed w ith the S tate H ighway Commis­ sion for the em ploym ent of about 125 m ore, who are able to do only certain kinds of work. This w ill leave about i200 prisoners. ~ “I feel better about th at than any­ thing th a t has happened lately; get­ tin g those prisoners profitably em ­ ployed has been our big problem ,” de- -Iarod the Governor. Checks Not Good For Auto License. The annual distribution of license plates to N orth C arolina’s nearly 400,- 000 autom obile ow ners begun M onday by the state autom obile license bureau and its 59 branches. L etters have gone out to all of last year’s purchasers inclosing application blanks and announcing th a t no checks will be accepted in paym ent. L ast year the bureau w as given considerable trouble by returned checks. State to Begin W ork. The dam to raise the w ater level of Lake W accam aw, Columbus County, tow ard the construction of w hich the General Assembly, after a prolonged discussion in the H ouse of R epresenta­ tives, appropriated $3i,000, w ill begin shortly, according to W illiam D Har-, ris, acting director of the State D epart­ m ent of C onservation and Develop­ m ent. U nder the provisions of the act the dam, which is to be built joint­ ly by the S tate and Colum bus County, W i l l c o s t 3 6 . 0 0 0 , f The docum ents include a Ma- J * sonic diplom a from W asliington * £ lodge No. 26. m aking ^Mr. Cow- 5 f dery a ■ M aster Mason, and an- Js other from the Hudson IN. Y.) * ? lodge, m aking him a M ark Mas- | .4 ,er’ 5 J The papers w ere found In a 3 steel case hidden in an old brick ^ wall of a house under repairs. 2 S A F E T Y C O N T E S T F R IZ E V W § NEW METHODS OF DUSTlNGt TON FIELDS WITH P0I5011' TRIED. “G reely w as the first to discover a pass inland into Ellesm ere island In 1882 when bis expedition w as sta­ tioned at Fort Conger on Lady F rank­ lin bay. He found a large fresh-w ater lake, and west of it. over a sm all di­ vide, a broad Ice-free valley leading to the west. One of his party, following the trail which G reely had blazed, reached the w est coast. In this valley and other sim ilar valleys are good grow ths o f . grass in the sum m er as well as a profusion of wild flowers. H erds of musk oxen graze In the val­ leys and have furnished a w elcom e food supply to explorers. In G rant Land are large herds of w hite caribou, wild cousins o j the reindeer. “It is believed that large areas of- Ellesm ere island, betw een the grass- covered valleys, are capped by per­ petual ice.’ “Three hundred m iles south of Lady Franklin bay G reeley’s party suffered its terrible privations In the w inter and spring of 1883-4 at Cape Sabine, “Sentinels of Safety" is the statue designed and executed by R egni del P la tta for th e Explosive Engineer, a publication for users- of explosives. T he trophy is to be placed in com­ petition as an aw ard fo r national m ine and quarry safety in a contest being conducted’ under th e . auspices of the U nited States bureau of mines. when 18 of th e 25 men died of starv a­ tion. T he site of th is A rctic tragedy, across Sm ith sound from Etaii, is now m arked by a bronze m em orial tablet, placed during tlje sum m er of 1924 by Commander. M acM illan on behalf of the N ational G eographic society.” ,G erm a n y N e e d s B e d s Berlin, Germ any.—Sofia G oetz of the G erm an W elfare Institute be­ lieves that for hygienic, m oral and social reasons, every man. w om an and child should have his own bed. She estim ates th at in G erm any 9,000,000 beds are needed to bring about this condition. Bring Big Money, But Are Gostly Dead Letters Result of Care* less Mailing. W ashington.—W hile it Is generally accepted th at this is not the age of miracles, nevertheless there are thou­ sands of patrons of the U nited States m ails who take it for granted that Uncle Sam has m any w onder w orkers on bis pay roll. T he very fact th at there are wiz­ ards in the employ of the Post Office departm ent—men and women who are uncanny, to say the least, in decipher­ ing illegible, handw riting—has caused no end of trouble and expense to the governm ent as well as to the tax­ payer, along with inconvenience In tlie receipt and delivery of mail m atter. Yet, with all this expert handling and careful study of handw riting on the part of the postal clerks, the an­ nual revenue from dead mall m atter received by the governm ent am ounts to approxim ately $300,000. W ealth in Dead Letters. Last year the dead letter office re­ ceived $120,000 from the sale of or­ phaned packages which could neither be forw arded to the addresses nor re­ turned to the senders because of inad­ equate addresses. ■ The sam e office Goes Through College With Son W Mrs. M ary A. Church and her soh, Jam es- Church u m ates for four years a t W illiam Jew elt college Lffiertv Mc I beZn classi graduated w ith A. B. degrees. M rs. Church ^ !Lave iu8t been entered college. Along with Ie r studies and t a k i n g Brandm other w hen she activities. M rs. Chqrch has kept up her home.- active p a rt In student I ' L : ‘ turned Into th e U nited S tates treasury $55,523.96 In cash rem oved from m is­ directed letters or found loose in th e mails. Postage-stam ps w ere taken from let­ ters or found loose In the m alls h av ­ ing a value of $12,165.67, alm ost doable the ;n tire revenue of th e postal serv­ ice In 1789. Three-cent fees collected for th e re­ turn to senders o f letters w hich could not be delivered totaled $92,007.54. B ut this is not h alf the story. Checks, drafts and m oney orders, whose ow ners could not be located, and am ounting to $3,546,542.43, finally found a. resting place In th e dead let­ ter office. For w ant of correct or com plete ad­ dresses 21,000,000 letters w ere depos­ ited in the dead letter office, not Jo speak of 800,000 parcels which had been Im properly addressed o r w rapped. Strange to s a y ,. this depositing of letters and packages in the m ails with incom plete,' inadequate or Incorrect addresses and. w rapping comes, in a large m ajority of cases, from those patrons who are the m ost liberal con­ tributors to this branch of the U nited States governm ent. Big Business Is Big Loser. It has been estim ated by postal of­ ficials th a t 300,000,000 pieces of mail are given “directory service” every year, which m eans th a t employees m ust take tim e from the' regular han­ dling and dispatching of mail in the endeavor to provide correct addresses for this huge volum e o f m isdirected m atter. In New York city alone the- cost of this service approxim ates $500 every eay in the year, and the total am ount through th e country is stu­ pendous. W hile the revenue from the dead letter office is sufficient to keep that branch of th e postal service function­ ing, It is not nearly enough to pay the annual toll fo r support o f the “nixie.” A "nixie’’ is a letter or parcel so Im­ properly addressed th a t it can neither be delivered to the addressee nor re­ turned to the sender w ithout special treatm ent. T his special treatm ent costs the P ost Office departm ent, or the taxpayer In the final analysis, ap­ proxim ately $1,740,000 every year. T a m es J a il B ird s Los Angeles, Calif.—c . E. Jenntoes stnthfaLk0t e / PDr ,st- aceordin£at the Los Angeles county Jail. A rrested on. a check charge, Jennings w as Placed In a cell. T here w ere several I 0 H8 F f toJ au a“dJ esehad dOTeloped sw eet dispo­ sitions. Some even hopped and jum ped and w ent to sleep fo r Jen- nlngs. who revealed th at sev4fal years ago he w as th e principal to a' bypno- tlsm sketch on .a vaudeville d rc o tt. Rockingham .—No doubt tho-, a weevils th at have contemplate? 40,000 acres of Richmond counts ton lands with anticipation a,/’ joym ent are now wonderin* it p tf it m ight not be best for them to. uate or to move on to other cowT th a t are not so progressive ^ fearful onslaught of white cloud- calcium aresnate shot with m. gun precision and force irom a hi airplane traveling at the rate oft m iles an hour 10 feet above “ ground should be enough to quell I stoutest hearted weevil T hat is what happened four B: south of Rockingham. Throagj, efforts of Frank I. Mason 0;! agent J. L. Dove, and the Poqt patch; the HuffDaland Dusters fc porated, of Macon, Ga., agreed to j- on this- demonstration here A 35 acre field of J. II. Dockerv fc. m iles south of Rockingham was tf ed.for the demonstration, of whichtj w ere given. Around 100 farmer- ered a t the field to see this nradmt ed of dusting, and hundreds of jet from m any adjoining counties ag! bled there to see the demonstnf repeated. Mr. Morgan. <jf the Hj D aIand company, was present and a plained the commercial side Oflhej6 position. It is not known vet hi m any acres are signed or contrary for. The enterprise is a new ones th e dem onstration was received m any favorable comments. It fc m any attractive features over fc slow er hand poison method and: doubtedly this pioneer movement r eventually spread and perhaps he Ei eventual w ay of fighting the pest i soon as the proper number of its a re contracted Inr here, the planerr retu rn and begin the battle against!? w eevil in earnest. -i T C am eron Ships 130 Cars of Ecrds Cam eron. — Once again Casec has passed the peak of its ousy seas: O ver 130 carloads of dewberries he been shipped from the siding in Ih little tow n this year whica m me tim es doesn’t have many over Suds habitants. H ow ever, for the last lew davsu population! of the place has been sta t e ed. The largest dewberry uia„u,iij|!*-, the w orld attracts a number 0. n ors w hen the vines which hang on 1 Btakes to the fields are loaded .vitln. luscious black fruit. One gel. s cents per quart for picking dewbtit and a good picker has been knout rem ove over 200 quarts of berriM- day. from the vines when the fnnt. large. B ut besides pickers the to m ust care for government inspect. and representatives from the Fr. G row ers association. T he prices were good this year. C grow er averaged near Jo per tr- w here last year he received ai ac age of Eot more than $3 per tto B ut the crop was short. In big K- over 200 car loads are sent to * e ra and w estern markets bn.L year’s num ber will probabl.. m. over 150. However, as it # $145,000 has gone to gorwers whoh shipped their berries througn Cam eron m arket. W eevils Quite Plentiful. Tarboro.—Bruce Mabee, accent^ ed by Sam Hill went out on .« ■ path looking for boil wee-b- _ T heir search was not a very ok sive one, as they visited but one - th a t of Mr. Julius Edward=, m- Tow nship, just below Eagle- H ere they found on on- a ^ w eevils, growing and getting - the cotton to develop so — ,c' U reir attack on it. Most of Ik _• vils w ere very small, but to. •there all right. • In the neighborhood wie - M abee and Mr. Hitl were tbe« ' heavy infestation of weeul and the dam age from the- ',a be quite heavy. B ates Re-Elected Conference H igh P o in t—Rev. C. « , A sheville, was re-elected P ... th e pastors’ summer conferee M ethodist Proffestant churc- .. Carolina. The election 010 ^ ed th e annual conference o isters. p*. , O ther officers chosen nere W. G erringer, past°r “ . i church, near Greensboro. president; Rev. F. M- ,^,.y W hitakers, second vice pre s- J. A. Burgess, of Altoe* n c ta ry ; Rev. R. A. Hunte1- ^ lem , treasurer; Re''. H- r of C harlotte, librarian. tRapid Movement ot ^ Clinton.—Truck is m° 10 here. W ith the dewberry cr •out- o f the way, the huchleDe > , are ; begun to move and tue. v fast. The crop this year is^ fil-j the prices are excellent ^ brought In fifty-two craZraJe Iotn" ed oyer eight dollars a ^ te ^ Seventeen hundred era i; k Pyr-fSaturday. Green aljcw| ntog to come in and in ^ of w eeks will be at floo H iS By C O U R T N E Y R Y I @ B y the B e l l S y n G W N U . S e r - “ R IC H | ' S T N O P S T S - - B a r t f a t h e r I s s p e e c h l e s s a l y s t s ; c a l l s t o p a J m e n t o n a m o r t g a g o f L e o n B a r r o w s , r t e l l s . . t h q y o u n g m h e d e n t t h e e l d e r I ■ t o - r e h a b i l i t a t e h i s h a r d , t a k e n n o m o r t 1 a c c e p t e d . o n l y n o t e m a d e o v e r t o a p e n b t l n a m e . T h i s u i f a c t o r , e x p l a i n s I n o t e x p e c t f u r t h B a r t I s i n f o r m e d I t h a t d r i l l e r s s e e m w h a t h a s r e c e n t l y u p o n o i l p r o p e r t y o f B a r t ' s h o l d i n g s . r C H A P —2- A N e w -Bart’s interview wi| had been but little ers to the past. Tl refused to tell tlie idj son who had furnisl sustain Franklin Ri days w hen his son hospital a fte r hospit B art in tbe least, ment w as the fact father had possessed sired to rem ain i friends, w ith them, h Seven years beforj W est to play w ith fai a quarter-seetion of] They had fought for and obtained them , ai had w orked as only can w ork when thei munion. A dry w inter in th] a consequent dwindl: ply had taken thei summer. T hen a cr) m arketed a t high them to tb e pinnae! lowed by w ar. More than tw o yei ing of the w ar B art to come home and , ning road, in spite tber and the pressurj find a m ystery at th W ho Had been the notes only as a fo: entered Into a pact B art gave it up group In front of th surrounded Tom Jorj Iy successful candii around -for the othe] shouldered, bluster! ston, but failed to H e "moved forwai cam e around the childish-appearing at girl, who hesitated, the bent, angular who followed her, her side w ith a so tion in obedience mand. "Coming for the niston?” he questio “Yes.” She smil won?” “They haven’t fin ballots In here ye precin cts, gave a 100 to Tom Jordan. “Did -they hones believed he caught her voice. “Then—then Fatl “It looks th a t w “I’m so sorry, at her quickly, wo said w ere the tru t “If you’re sorry, Franniston.” H e B ut to tell the other w ay.” “I—I understand.' turned aw ay as th pression which a orought to her fc Then, the dog-1 Ik following her, she Rogers w atched aft represented more able g irl; she w as unattainable ideal. To him shejrepri near-hatred which and “Bull” Fra gap which dated b; fore B art had left been w alking aloi town, when sudd at the sound of a lowed by the hoa voice of a man. running back the w ard a m an and a| tog and frightenei over her, fist c! blow. Then B art fought w ith all fought against siip| had won, w hile in frightened girl hi arm s of a whimi aged m an ; only . victory had Ween fought a fath er ti beating his own di M ore than one w ondered if “B h strove to beat his Jim shrunk, whiml to the background too, had he dreami the load of debt ooula be lifted thi other things than haps, a'g trl for wl that the . frlghtc m ight 'd e p a rtfro i and glowing bappl ftoad. B ut the tone. .*jPLANE MAKES M ETHODS OF DUSTINg fO N FIELD S W ITH P0ls0ft t r i e d . I1 I \> 'J Cot k*nghritn.—Ko doubtthosg thal ,haJ e cOnteapialVd 7 1 acres of Richmomi coum* w ith anticipation so progre.*« :1 onslaught of white or ■ I * I l Ii ands '•i-“ i‘yu andent are cow wonder Ir - * e®' not be best for r~ea FerllaIlj to move on to on co° ' 7 are not so p ro- ™UDt'i . e- Tie ;i aresnate shot wilh “ ecision and force from a FF8 e traveling at t'le. an hour 10 feet a!.0.-e F nd should be enough to q,lell!?’ v t hearted weevil. "5 at is what happened . of Rockingham. Th s oi Frank I. Ma L J. L. Dove, and - h. the H unD aland n.i; iu put “t Biles nroaSl tie I cOUUIj I 110 PostDis. tea. oi Maecn. Ga., agreed - ° 0r’ n:s aemonstration here So acre field of J. M. Dooker1- w I i south of Rockinghat -v elw, 1 >r the demonstration, of WhtcV17 , - g;ven. Around 100 Ta rmer gqj. [ at the neld to see this much taft. : dusting, and hundred? of t>»ojij many adjoining counties a==ea. there to see the demonstrate I ated. Mr. Morgan, of the HuJ. nd company, was present and e- !|fted the commercial side nfrIiepnii ion. It is not known vet Pdl I ■- acres are signed ur comrade I ie enterprise is a new one Jtd I aemonstration was r-ceived with I y favorable comments, it Jtts[ v attractive features over tit I er hand poison method and up I htedly this pioneer movement toll itually spread and perhaps be He I tual w ay of fighting the pest v | as the proper number of acres icntracteil .’or here, tne plane will I rn and begin the battle aaainst the | vi! in earnest. H meron Ships 130 Cars of Eerri!!. I | nmercn. — Once again Cametoil * ' pa=sed the peak of its busy season f Jr 130 carloads of dewberries bin I n shipped from the siding in to town this year whicu in normal doesn't have many over 3u0 ID­ 'S ants. nwever, for the last few- days tit illation of the place has been swelt- The largest dew Derry market ip world attracts a number oi visit* when the vines whicn hang on He Kes in the fields are loaded with tie -ious black fruit. One gets two ts per quart for picking dewberries a good picker has been known to gjiove over 200 quarts oi Dernes per from the vines when the irnit is we. But besides pickers the ton |st care for government inspector representatives from the Frail iwers association. ^ 1Oo prices were good this .-5*1, TlD ; iwer averaged near so per cratt ere last year he received ao aret- I of Cot more than ?3 per crate, the crop was short. In big ye® r 200 car loads are sent .-o nortt- and western markets bu. this kr's number will prooubl,- -ivi Sllil Pr 150. However, as it is. «™r 1.000 has gone to gorw ers who Jpped their berries through lmeron market. tie I W eevils Q uite Flentiful- oro.— Bruce Mabee, accotnp^ Sam H ill w ent out on Jie joking for boll w ee-■-?■ r search w as not a very e- e, as they visited but one ' Mr. Julius Edwards, in hip, ju st below Eagle. -wrc,.-.| th ey found on oa<= ; grow ing and gettin.-s • ■ tton to develop so a-* 10 I ttack on it. Most of the I ore very sm all, but th .. J til right. vr- .he neighborhood whe and M r. H ill w e r e there ^ infestation of weevil _„jdtd| I dam age from them e heavy. Re-Elected Conference H'^, Pclnt--Hev. C. , He, w as re-elected P-e ^fdie I !tors’ sum m er Conlerer f port's list P ro testan t church o ^ ta. The election oi oft- ^jll. annual conference I Ir officers chosen V erf .A-3rf I erringer, pastor 01 rite-1 , n ear Greensboro, „| | ■nl; Rev. F- " - cident; era, second vice pre secT B urgess, of AlbeniarR lev. R. A. H u n te r ^ 1V p ti, easu rer; Rev. H- F irlotte, librarian. M o v e m e n t o f T r u I -T ru ck is 7uovin^0 almost I i the dew berry cro I vay. the buckle* [ove and the} a ajd crop this year I® ^ I are excellent- rece|f fifty-two cralI lte for the®' j ;ht dollars a «_ ^ere sW hundred crate js 6eP“ lay- Grf about J cC Iie In and in .-de. | rill be a t flood THK PA VIK RECORD. MOCKSVILLE, N. C,, :O URTNEY R Y L E Y C O O P E R \ B y t h e B e l l S y n d i c a t e , I n c . W N U . S e r v i c e mRICH !" S Y N O P S I S . — B a r t R o g e r s , whose f a t h e r i s s p e e c h l e s s t h r o u g h p a r ­ a l y s i s , c a l l s t o p a y a n i n s t a l l ­ m e n t o n a m o r t g a g e a t t h e o f f i c e o f L e o n B a r r o w s , a l a w y e r , who t h e y o u n g m a n t h a t w h e n I , . : o n t t h e e l d e r R o g e r s m o n e y t o r e h a b i l i t a t e h i s p r o p e r t y h e h . t . i t a k e n n o m o r t g a g e , b u t h a d . f c e p t e d o n l y n o t e s w h i c h w e r e i i a d c o v e r t o a p e r s o n h e c o u l d : n a m e . T h i s u n k n o w n b e n e - f - ’ - c r , e x p l a i n s B a r r o w s , d o e s n o t e x p e c t f u r t h e r p a y m e n t s . K . . r t i s i n f o r m e d b y t h e l a w y e r m a t d r i l l e r s s e e m I n t e r e s t e d I n v h a t h a s r e c e n t l y b e e n c o m i n g , j n - i f o i l p r o p e r t y i n t h e v i c i n i t y . , t : ' , a r t ' s h o l d i n g s . CHAPTER II —2— A N ew M arsh al Pact's interview with LeOD B arrow s h-l been but little different from oth- ... In the past. T hat B arrow s had refused to tell the identity of the per- .-I- who had furnished the money to cijsuiin Franklin Rogers during the -l-jvs when his son had been held in Iiiicpital after hospital did not surprise G-.rt in the least. T he true amaze- -IlfJiit was the fact th a t he and his fnl her had possessed a friend who de­ sired to remain in the dark, for friends, with them, had been very few. S e v e n years before they had come West to play with fate in the tilling of a quarter-section of dry, sandy soil. T h e v had fought for their w ater rights and obtained them, a t last. Then they had worked as only a fath er and son can work when there is perfect com­ munion. 4. dry w inter in the m ountains, w ith a consequent dwindling irrigation sup­ ply had taken their savings in one summer. Then a crop, bountiful and marketed at high prices, had lifted ibem to the pinnacle, only to be fol­ lowed by war. More than two years after the end­ ing of the w ar B art had -been allowed to come home and start on the win­ ning road, in spite of an invalid fa­ ther and the pressure of debt—only to find a mystery at the bottom of it all. M ho had been the m an who had taken notes only as a form ality, who had entered into a pact with his father? Bart gave it up and joined a little group in front of the polling place who surrounded Tom Jordan, the apparent­ l y successful candidate. B art looked around for the other aspirant; broad- shouldered, blustering “Bull” Franni- ston, but failed to see him. Instead— He moved forw ard quietly as a girl came around the corner, a rather clnldish-appearing and w istful-featured girl, who hesitated, then turned tow ard the bent, angular figure of an old m an who followed her, and who hastened to her side with a sort of dog-Ilke devo­ tion in obedience to her silent com­ mand. •Coming for the results. M iss Fran- niston?” he questioned. -Yes.” She smiled quickly. "W ho won?” -They haven’t finished counting the ballots In here yet. The other four precincts gave a m ajority of about 100 to Tom Jordan.” "Did they honestly?” B art Rogers believed he caught a tone of hope in her voice. Then—then Father’s beaten?” It looks that way.” Tm so sorry.” B art Rogers looked at her quickly, wondering if w hat she said were the truth. -If you’re sorry. I’m sorry, too. M iss Franniston.” H e moved closer to her. But to tell the truth, I voted the other way.” I - I understand.” Sbe hesitatedand turned away as though to hide the ex­ pression which a b itter memory had urought to her features. Then, the dog-like Old Jim once more following her, she w ent on. B ut B art Ilogers watched after her. To him she represented more than a pretty, lik­ able girl; she w as all and nothing—an unattainable ideal. To him shefrepresented the gap, the near-hatred which stood betw een him and “Bull” Franniston, her father, a gup which dated back to the night be­ fore Bart had left for France. H e had been walking along the road tow ard town, when suddenly he had stopped at the sound of a girlish scream , fol­ lowed by the hoarse, anger-burdened toicc of a man. H e had turned, and running back the road, had leaped to- ■I urd a man and a girl—the girl cring­ ing and frightened, the m an bellowing oier her, fist clenched for another bi.iw. Then B art Rogers had fought fought with all the strength In him. fought against superior odd s. And he had won, while In-the background the frightened girl had' crouched in the arms of a whimperjng, prem aturely aSed m an; only.to Ieam when once victory bad been his, - th at he had fought a father to prevent him from beating his own daughter. More than once had B art Rogers wondered if “Bull” Franniston- still strove to beat his daughter, and if Old Jini shrunk, w himpering and helpless, In the background. M ore than once, too, had he dreamed of the tim e when the load of debt which now w as his could be lifted that, he m ight think of ether things than work—of a girl, per­ haps, a girl for whom he m ight shrive, that the frightened, w istful glance ™?ht depart'from h e r’eyes forever, *“<i glowing happiness beam there In- ftead. But the dream had not come So now, as in the past, he w as a w atcher, looking after them as they m ade their way down the street. The crowd a t the curbing moved for­ w ard, the w orkers surging about the red-faced, som ew hat docile appearing Tom Jordan as he w ept forw ard to re­ ceive the verdict. The election judge grinned and put forth a hand. “So, Fm mayor, eh?” Genial, easy­ going old Tom Jordan, ex-cattlem an, m erely stood and grinned. “G osh!” Then the porkers surged about him, w hile a t the very edge. B art Rogers stood sm iling and satisfied. H e had w anted Tom Jordan to win. N ot th at Jordan would m ake a won­ derful. mayor, but Rogers knew one thing—th a t Tom Jordan would try to do the right thing w hether he accom­ plished the feat or not. . - At last the - group about the newly elected mayor parted, and B art Rogers, true to sm all w estern town form, went forw ard to proffer his congratulations. The big cattlem an boomed w ith hap­ piness, ju st as he had done with the others who had shaken his hand. Then suddenly he sobered. “B art,” he said quietly as he drew him aside. “I’ve had my eye on you for a long time. Now, I w ant to ask you a personal question: Are you as friendly' w ith Bull Franniston as you are w ith his daughter?” “I didn’t vote for him. I’m not a Franniston man. Mr. Jordan.” “Good enough,-B art! I had a hunch you w eren’t, but I just w anted to be sure. You see, B art, I’m easy goin’. I'm the sort of fellow, who lets his friends play w ith : him and do him up brown, rather’n say ’no’ to 'em. So I’m lookin’ for a young fellow with a good, strong chin, that I can say to : ’Here, there’s only one job in this tow n that has to do w ith the keeping of the peace, and jh at’s the m arshal. I’m go­ ing to give’you that job. I w ant him the kind of-, a fellow that’ll pinch my best friend If he’s done wrong and tell m e to go. to h—I if I come along and try to get him out. U nderstand?” “Exactly.” “AU right, B art Rogers,” and a big, friendly hand -found a place on the younger m an's shoulders. “I’ve been looking over-the herd considerable, and I’ve ju st about come to the conclusion that you’re the critter I w ant. W hat say?” “B ut I don’t know anything about the job.” “Didn’t know anything about w ar until you w ent into it, did you?” “N o; th a t’s true.” “AU rig h t; the sam e thjng goes here, W hat say?” “Can I have a little tim e to think it over?” “Sure—a week If you w ant it.” “I guess I ought to know by that tim e.” Then B art thanked Jordan and started to run home. A half-m ile and he dropped into a w alk again, to ease the pull on bis lungs—for the m ark of a bullet still rem ained there, unnoticed m ost of the time, but ready to protest at the first heavy strain. Five hundred yards, he gained his breath again, and once more Increased his speed, only to turn suddenly from’ the road, to stop and to w atch w ith som ething’ of am used in­ terest as a car lurched over a hill, bore down upon him, then, in a swirl of dust, passed him on the way to town. ■ “ ‘Bull Franniston,” mused Rogers as he eyed the dust-hazed form of the m an a t the-.wheel. “Sure is hurry­ ing. Guess he m ust be beating . it into town to find out how bad he got whipped in the election.” Soon, however, three more machines roared past, and he once more re­ sum ed his journey, wondering slightly the cause of four racing machines, each loaded to its limit. B ut only for a m om ent; then the throbbing of other engines from the rear caused him again to stand aside. In straight succession three blus­ tered by, nor did the occupants seem to heed his w aving signals as he strove to flag them . At last; however, in obedience to his frantic appeals, an overloaded vehicle came to a skid­ ding stop, and Rogers laughing, ran tow ard IL “Ju st bad to flag you,” he apolo­ gized. “So m any blamed machines passing, I can’t keep to the road.” “W ell hurry up— ” iThe driver w as playing w ith the hand throttle. “This thing’s to big too miss.” “Thing?” Rogers stared. “W hat thing? W hat’s happened— ?” “W hat’s happened?” The m an at' the wheel stared blankly at him, as Rogers 'caught the windshield and clung precariously to a footing on the running board as the m achine ptarted again. “Don’t you konw? Oil I 'T h at’s w hat’s happened!” “Oil? You mean over there w here they’ve been drilling?” “W here else do you suppose?” don’t know.” A sudden ex­ citem ent bad sw ept cool thoughts from the brain of B art Rogers. “Do you really mean it? They’ve struck oil over there—you m ean the derrick over by my place?* “You’re Rogers, aren’t you?” the driver looked a t him with, a new/Tq- terest. “How much land have you got?” “A hundred and sixty?” . “W hat do you w ant for It?” «X I ■ don’t know. Tell me about the oil.' T here isn’t any joke about this, is there?”“Joke?" Of course n o t Bull F ran­ niston brought the word. The .well cam e In about an hour agcn-it s a gush­ er. From ’-w hat-he said, if U run 10,- 000 barrels a day.” . . B art Rogers could only neT eaJ. the shouted announcem ent of the driver. Ten thousand barrels a day—and the well was- less than a half mile from his division fence! T hat meant— W hat did it mean? W hat couldn’t it mean? Oil pools are not selective things; they extend for miles, and this B art Rogers knew. As the chugging motor car whizzed aw ay the last mile, the shouting driver told him of the possible w ealth which lay for him In the future. Then the cap turned the last bend in the road— And there before him B art1 Rogers saw a dream come true. The sun was just setting, and silhouetted against-it w as the oil derrick, a black, skeleton­ like thing, spraying tow ard the sky a spouting stream of ebony which, dis­ integrating and 'drifting with the wind, caught the sheen of the dying sun and burst into m yriad rainbows. A float­ ing m ass of colors—such w as that spray which flew high from the gush­ ing well—colors which seemed to wipe out for B art Rogers his colorless past, and commingle into a painting of happiness for the future. N earer and nearer they came,, to the derrick and the thronging persons about it; then B art, unable to hold him self longer, leaped from the running board of the car as the machine wallowed In a mud- hole and raced tow ard the derrick. “W ill it last?” .I t seemed to be the only question he could think of as he forced his way tow ard the drillers. “W ill it—” “Last?” They looked a t him with scornful eyes. “Of course it’ll last. It’s ju st the beginning! This coun­ try’s going to be a madhouse of money inside of three months. That’s oil, and it’s high grade!” B art Rogers turned away, pale with the realization of w hat had happened, trem bling with the excitem ent of It, throbbing with the knowledge that his troubles and the troubles of the man who aw aited him in the little cabin over the hill w ere over. “R ich!” he gasped, and there w as an instinctive reverence in the tone. “R ich! R lcli!’’ H e swerved aw ay now, running, plunging through the Irrigation ditch In w ater to his arm pits, then, drip­ ping, scram bled onward, neither realiz­ ing his w etness nor caring. A half- mile aw ay lay a little cabin, ju st vis­ ible when he reached the top of the hill, a cabin w here the rays of the setting sun had blazed the windows to ruddy gold, as though in prophecy, and where aw aited the m an to whom B art Rogers longed m ost of all to give the news of happiness and of wealth. “I’ve got to be careful w ith him,” he said to himself. “Got to break It easy—m ustn’t get him too excited. B et­ ter not tell him the whole truth—bet­ ter let it grow day by day—yes, that’s it—better just tell him th at they've brought in oil enough so th at we won’t have to worry—” Then, through sheer will power, he restrained him self to a walk so that his own excitem ent ,m ight not betray the true im portance of his message. T hen his eyes beam ing w hat his lips could not say, he forced him self to a leisurely pace and approached the house. “Hello, D ad I” It w as the usual eve­ ning greeting. Placing his hand upon the shoulder of the slumped figure, he w aited, as he alw ays had w aited, In the vain hope th at this m ight be the night w here there would come an an­ swer, when some faint vocal sound would tell of a return of speech—and a chance for recovery. B ut there w as only silence. As usual, B art pat­ ted the shoulder, lovingly, meaningly, and turning, groped through the gath­ ering darkness for the lamp. “Got a little new s today, Dad,” he chatted, as he shook the old oil burner and scraped the wick w ith the burning match. “They brought in some oil over at the ■ derrick. Don’t think it am ounts to so much, but w hatever it Is, it boosts the price of our land. Anything th a t looks like oil, you know, means money. Of course, it may am ount to a ’ lot, and then it m ay am ount to nothing, so I guess we shouldn’f get. excited about it.” H e wiped the chimney- and adjusted it, set the lam p upon a table. Then he went to the chair which alw ays aw aited him ; the one beside the big, comfort­ able one where rested the Invalid. “Yep, Dad, w hatever it is, we’re bound to come out ahead. Oh,’\pnd he allowed a bit of his enthusiasm to rOU forth in a laugh. “We’re going to get there yet/ you and I. Ju st w ait and see. I—” H e stopped. H is out­ stretched hand had touched the placid one of his father. It w as c o ld - ghastly cold. Suddenly trembling, he rose, and faced the form in the chair. “D ad!” he called. “D ad!” B ut the faint reflected rays of the lamp showed no answ ering light in the set stare of the eyes. The mouth w as dropped and draw n. The features were fixed. Again B art Rogers called in a voice th at bore a note of agony. Feverlshly he grasped the icy hands and rubbed them—hoping against hope. H eburled his head against the chest where a s a tousle-headed boy he often had rest­ ed, praying—hoping— B ut B art Rogers’ father w as dead. Cabinet More complications—the hero a t war with the heroine’s fa­ ther! “But love will find a way.” ( T O B B C O N T I N U E D . ) Revolutionary Movement The (Jommune of Paris, 1871, was a municipality proclaimed by the Insur­ rectionist clement in Paris om March 17, 1871, while the victorious German army-’ was encamped on the heights outside the city. The Commune wa? an insurrection motived by a desire for local or self-government of Paris ®nd the democratic expression, loose and incoherent, though It might be, of diplike tor the prevalent centralisa­ tion. < © . 1 9 2 5 . . W e s t e r n N e w s p a p e r U n i o n . ) W i v e s a r e t h e o n l y l a b o r e r s o n e a r t h w h o ' w o r k f o r b o a r d a n d c l o t h e s ; e v e n t h e s e * a r e o f t e n i n ­ d i f f e r e n t . WHAT TO DO WITH BREAD There is probably no greater waste In the kitchen than that of bread. A piece of bread that has become dry is usually con­ sidered useless by a vast m ajority oi cooks. There are a countless leftover bits that cannot be used for toast, that are thrown into the garbage pail. These small scraps could be made into palat­ able and wholesome creations, to say nothing of the saving. AU crumbs left from the bread board, all trim m ings of sandwiches, all broken pieces- not available for t ast should be gathered. A dish which is both appetizing and filling may be .made of these crumbs and bits while they are still moist. Try the follow ing: Egged Bread.—Remove the crusts from broken bits of bread. B reak It into small pieces—there should be two and one-lialf cupfuls. M elt four table­ spoonfuls of . butter or two of butter and two of ham fat ; add the bits of bread and toss them lightly until well coated w ith fat. Pour over the bread three eggs slightly beaten and diluted with one-half cupful of rich milk. Con­ tinue to toss the m ixture lightly with a fork so that each bit of bread is enclosed In a coating of egg. Season with salt and pepper and serve. Tom ato T o ast—Dip slices of stale bread into w ater and p la 'e {ft a hot oven to ’ become heated through, or steam In a 'ste a m e r until m oist and hot. B utter generously and cover with well-seasoned tom ato and serve hot. Rhubarb Pudding.—B utter slices of bread and lay in a deep pudding dish, cover with finely cut rhubarb, mixed well with sugar; repeat until sufficient bread is used to serve the fam ily; add a few spoonfuls of w ater and bake un­ til the rhubarb is soft. Serve hot or cold. Bread Fritters.—Cut stale breaei into thin slices, shape with a small biscuit cutter, spread w ith butter and raspberry jam , press a pair together and dip into fritter batter, fry In deep fat and serve hot with maple sirup. There are bread puddings, milk toast, and any num ber of dishes In which a few buttered crumbs add to both the appearance and nourishm ent. Everyday Good Things. D ried beef cut Into bits, added to a w hite sauce and used w ith scalloped m acaroni makes a good luncheon or supper dlsb. Charleston Egg T o ast--L ay nar­ r o w s trip s of toast In a pudding dish, then a layer of sliced whites of eggs, then a layer of toast, then a layer of riccd yolks. Pour over a highly seasoned cream sauce and beat in a hot oven. Cheese N uts--B lanch and brown lightly almonds or walnuts, chop and I place in a buttered pan. Sprinkle with I grated cheese and bread crum bs; sea- : son with salt ami pepper. Soften with boiling w ater and bake tw enty m in­ utes. Serve with toasted crackers. Oatmeal Pudding.—To one quart of miik add one cupful of \ureooked oat­ meal, one-half cupful of sugar and one-half cupful of molasses. Season with salt, dot w ith butter and bake I slowly In a moderate oven one and I one-half hours. Serve with cream. I Raspberry Flummery.—Cover a ’ quart of raspberries with cold water, boil ten m inutes and strain; add a cupful of sugar mixed with half a cupful of cornstarch, thinned for pour­ ing W ith a-little cold W ater. Cook to­ gether until the starch is thoroughly cooked. Pour into wet molds. Serve with whipped cream. Peach Cake Pudding.—Line a baking dish with slices of sponge cake soaked In orange or peach juice. Fill the dish with fresh sliced peaches well sugared. Cover the top with a m eringue and hake until brown. Serve with cold cream, - Creamed Chicken Salad.— Soak a tablespoonful of gelatin in half a cup­ ful of chicken broth. Chop the white meat from a well-cooked chicken or put it through tlfe m eat grinder. Beat well the yolks of four eggs, add one and one-half .cupfuls of hot chicken broth, cook over w ater till thick, add the gelatin anil seasoning to taste. Stand in cold w ater to chill. Mold and serve with mayonnaise. Parsley will keep for two weeks If well washed and placed In a mason jar. Set In the ice box and sprinkle once -with cold water*- Savory, Sliced Ham.—Mix together three teaspoonfuls of dry m ustard, one-fourth of a teaspoonful of pepper, two tablespoonfuls of catsup and a few dashes of cayenne. _ Have ready a pound of thinly sliced boiled ham. Spread each slice With the m ustard m ixture, with a sprinkling of grated American cheese, using a cupful. Place the slices on top of each other and bake for fifteen minutes in a hot oven, Remove and chill. W hen ready to serve cut down at right angles to the layers. I W Poiaon Ivy EurIpIdese—IVhatsa m atter? Cold sore on your lip? Iripadose—N o; I kissed a girl under what I thought w as mistletoe, but It m ust have been poison ivy.—Youngs­ town Telegram. Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It is wonderful what Cutlcura will do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red, rough hands.—Advertisement. Flaming “W hy all the red-headed girls on the lot?” “W e’re filming ‘Flam ing Flappers* this week.” — Louisville Courier- Joum uL F o r b l o a t e d f u e l i n g a n d d i s t r e s s e d b r e a t h * Ingr d u e t o l n d i s e s t i o n y o u n e e d a m e d i c i n e a s w e l l a s a p u r g a t i v e . W r i g h t ’ s I n d i a n V e g e t a b l e P i l l s a r e b o t h . A d v . Merely Convalescent “I think her voice is improved a great deal, don’t you?” “Yes,- but not cured.”—Penn S tate Fro tin !^CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP IS I j CHILD’S ' am* a- BEST LAXATIVE j M • • • i a a * • * t a » M OTH ER; W hen baby is consti­ pated, has wind-colic, feverish breath, eoated-tongue, or diarrhea, a half­ teaspoonful of genuine "California Fig Syrup” prom ptly moves the poi­ sons, gases, bile, souring food and w aste right out. N ever cram ps or overacts. B abies love its delicious taste. Ask your druggist for genuine “Cali­ fornia Fig Syrup” which has full direc­ tions for infants in arm s, and children of all ages, plainly printed on bottle. A lways say “California” or you m ay get an im itation fig syrup. WAS NOT FIT TO PO HER WORK Dreadful Condition of Mrs. Fullerton’s Health Remedied by lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Clearfield, Pa.—“I cannot begin to tell you how much Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- "ietable Comppundlms I helped me in every it !couldn't stand on my feet w ith o u t pains ru n n in g all through my whole body from my waist d ow n , j u s t lik e threads pulling. I was not fit to do any work. My mother got me to try the V e g e ta b le Com­ pound and Ihave found great benefit, and I not only recommend it for such troubles, hut to build up the whole sys­ tem. I have used it for most every­ thing that gets wrong with me. When I begin to feel nervous and irritable I don’t stop long in getting a bottle of the Vegetable Compound if I haven’t got one in the house. It gives a fine appe­ tite and makes a new woman of me. Yonmayuse this testimonial in my own town or anywhere else, and I will an­ swer any letters I receive.” — Mrs. Rush Fullerton , 525 S. 2nd Street; Clearfield, Pa. If you are suffering from nervous troubles, irritabijity, give the Vegetable Compound a fair trial. For sale by druggists everywhere. VvtmuimA for the Perfection of Your ComfrIexfon TWb p m fnow-wblte creua remove* *1) dbeolomtiem, UetWhbefc petebes. pimples, etc, sad produces • soft Ain end creemy complexion. Ataratfer dept, stores or by mill prepsiASLtS. Send for free Besaty Booklet. Atfente wanted. OR. C. H. BEBfrY CO., 397« HDeMtfan Ava.. CHtCAQO Nothing New About That “I heard today,” rem arked M rs. Jones as she came in from shopping downtown, “that w e are going to hare a broadcasting station in the village.” Mr. Jones put aside the evening paper. “T hat's nothing,” lie replied, “there’s been one on our front porch for years.” “O ur front porch! W here?” “Those two rocking chairs on the shady side.” Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION : J 2 ''C j Prompt Service TheretAnyhow I’honer—Hello, C entral! I w ant Blank 5497—and say, get it quick, Uke they do in the movies. Be Careful of Infection from Cuts, Burns, Wounds and Sores. Ap­ ply Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh ; it prevents infection and heals. 3 sizes; all stores.—Adv. The greatest m an rem ains ever a child of man. Have lovely (omplexion Y o u e o n m a k e a n d k e e p y o u r c o m p l e x * i o n a a l o v e l y a s a y o u n g g f r l ' * b y g r r f n g a l i t t l e a t t e n t i o n t o y o u r b l o o d . R e m e m b e r , a g o o d c o m p l e x i o n i s n ' t e k t y d e e p — i t ’ s h e a l t h d e e p . P b y B i c I a n e a g r e e t h a t s u l p h u r i s o n e o f . t h e m o s t e f f e c t i v e b l o o d p u r i f i e r s k n o w n t o s c i e n c e . H a n c o c k S u l p h u r C o m p o u n d i s a n o l d , r e l i a b l e , s c i e n t i f i c r e m e d y , t h a t p u r g e s t h e b l o o d o f i m p u r i t i e s . T a k e n i n t e r n a l l y — a f e w d r o p s i n a g l a s s o f w a t e r , i t s e t s a t t h e r o o t o f t h e . t r o u b l e . A s a l o t i o n , i t s o o t h e s a n d h e a l s . 6 0 c a n d $ 1 . 2 0 t h e b o t t l e a t y o u r d r u g ­ g i s t ' s . I f h e c a n ’ t s u p p l y y o u , s e n d h i s n a m e a n d t h e p r i c e i n s t a m p s a n d w e w i l l s e n d y o u a b o t t l e d i r e c t . H ancock Liquid S u lp h u r Company , B a l t i m o r e . M a r y l a n d Haneoek Sulpfutr Compound Ointment—toe and 60c—for u u with Hancock Sulphur Compound ABS reduce Inflam ed, Strained, Swollen Ten* { done, Ligaments, or Muscles. Stopsthelamenees and pain from a Splint, sue Bone or Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair gone and horse can be used. $2.50 bot­tle at druggists or delivered. D ew iibe your caee for special In* etnictiona and interesting boree „_______ Book2 A free. I W. P. YOUNG, be* SI, Lrau St, SprinSeU, K u. j IWPlGErSgol^I 6 B e ll- a n s Hot water SureReIief DELL-ANS25* AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE DAISY FLY KILLER agD- i!!asg!gA T T R A C T S A N D K I L L f l A L L F L I E S . N e a t ,der------------------— s & r S f c s & so r I n j o r e a a y t h l o f f . G u a r a n t e e d e f f e c t i v e . S d d b y d e a l e r * , o r 6 b y E f P R - - . - ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ p r e p a i d , $ 1 . 2 5 . H A B O L D S Q M S R 3 . 1 6 0 D c K a I b A v e . , B r o o k l y n , N . Y . A G E N T S — C A N Y O U S E L L T O C O L O R E Dp e o p l e ? I f s o , a n d y o u w a n t t o m a k e $200 t o $ 3 0 0 p e r m o n t h , s e n d 6 1 . 0 0 f o r f o r m u l a a n d w o r k i n g I n s t r u c t i o n s . S a t i s f a c t i o n g u a r ­a n t e e d o r m o n e y b a c k . W E S T M F G . C O . , 1 3 N . . L i b e r t y S t . , C U M B E R L A N D . M D . WOMEN AND MEN Earn big money selling-wash dresses; manufacturer to wearer. No deliver­ ing or collecting. Write for details. QUEEN CITY GARMENT CO. 214 East Eighth St., Cincinnati, Ohio. P i n t T r u - B l u W r i t i n g I n k ; S e l f - T h r e a d i n s n e e d l e s ; s a v e t i m e a n d e y e s . P a c k age either, d i m e . L i b e r a l a g e n t s ’ p r o p o s i t i o n . V a ! . p r e m i ­ u m s . I n v e s t i g a t e . T e a s d a t e C o . , S a v a n n a h . G a . SA L E SM E N A m a z i n g n e w i n v e n t i o n ; s e a l s 3 , 0 0 0 e n ­v e l o p e s a n h o u r ; r e t a i l s $ 4 . 0 0 o n l y ; n o c o m ­ p e t i t i o n ; l i b e r a l c o m m i s s i o n . W r i t e o r w i r e C H A R L E S G . F E L D M E Y E R , A n n a p o l i s . M d . G e n u i n e L O U I S I A N A P E R I Q U E T O B A C C O I d e a l p i p e a m o k e . d e l i c i o u s a r o m a . B l e n d w i t h a n y t o b a c c o y o u w i s h . P o s t p a i d : C a r ­r o t s , h a l f - l b . , 7 5 e t a . ; o n e I b . , 6 1 . 7 6 ; f o u r l b s . , 5 6 . 0 0 . C a n s ( f i n e c u t ) , q u a r t e r - l b . . 7 5 c t s . ; h a l f - l b . , $ 1 . 2 5 : o n e I b . , $ 2 . 0 0 . W r i t e — S t . J a m e s P e r i q u e T o b a c c o C o . , L u t c h e r , L u . A G E N T S W A N T E D — B i g p r o f i t s , q u i c k s e l l e r , r e p e a t e r . S e l l s t o c o l o r e d t r a d e a n d p l e a s e s . W r i t e u s n o w . E d t v n r d s M f g . C o v 2 0 0 S a r a h A v e n u e , B i r m i n g h a m , A l a b a m a . W A N T E D — F L O R I D A L A N D I f y o u w i 6 h t o s e l l , w r i t e f u l l p a r t i c u l a r s , n u m b e r o f a c r e s , l o w e s t p r i c e , l o c a t i o n , e t c . N . I . S H E E H A N 1 4 0 9 A l a m e d a A v e . L a k e w o o d , O h i o ROlLS■ w There’s quick,quick, positive; relief in GENEROUS sofaoirA t d D rvggff--S- Mon,yb,cK Guarant.. U A U U W V B T U fc Dr.Satter'a S U n I h J L I I h S ByeLottoa r e l i e v e s e n d c u r e s s o r e a n d i n f l a m e d e y e s I n 2 1 t o < B b o l g s . H e l p s t n e i n k e y e d , c o r e s w l t h o n t — — A s k y o u r d r u g g i s t o r d e a l e r t o r S A I . T J U C ‘ 8 . ( m m E e t o r m D i s p e n s a r y , p . o . F W. N. U, CHARLOTTE, NO. 26-1925. D E L T A B R A N D m ore th an 90 In density. Recom m ended a s highest quality obtainable b y Georgia S tate B oard of Entom ology, w ho purchase from ua year* Iy b y contract several m illions of pounds. Y ou Take No Chances W ith DKLTA BRANDI W irg o r W rite, fo r P articaIara CO M M ERCIAL CH EM ICAL CO . M B M P H l S r T E i m * (Southeast O fR d , A tlanta, C a J ¥ r** , V ' * ' % *' ^ >1 >i'Z* / i I ; . l ? * I r 4 a :b 'c ( '** A - . I *. v -'£*? ’- " v«^s ' z i ' f o H- -A '■ * i i «; *•IBgHgBggr*-f * * .i > s : » I * *111111 H * - #« r ■*, ■MBB1 — f ? 1* v > $'3 '■■--H j §!11 !Isgiij H L 'V ^ l ^ * , =rIS*' . I* v '" t ■ ' * 1 ^ ^ i B B i l i « l,ft* iO , e f ' J J-* r t ' n * V ' Jtf' 3 e f > >i rr’^i M M ^ if !J£f *■> * v ; ’- l W ‘ ! *' y ,J; ' A ? i 1 - i f O T t i J % ’* c*SI i i i l l J P I l p i n|iS t.Stv=E p t t m m h w I j y i l m m - t a p ; Iijl ;fsfe ■ ]n l i | l I I I m K giip . ^ s P M feyIM;- ;rp i P V V i 1\ Ilm p g ; .... I l l I r l l f i l l Ifiir -IW- Ifll- ■ "VVx' Ifl: : © P JfV m m Si I* I m m J i f i I t r f i P I: I ,V P - WSriiv V1-YVr ] i « i I p ;i i i p # I f J l r r i I-If S I f e s gJV i f f 111 Ifci, I* Vwi IiLfSrS 1 « ! 111!IillmmIe ^ l & 'i ^ h i IlK Rri IJ fj:I? -I ill irk | t . M P i s l iI' :| • ite r U I T C H E C K B L A C K H E A D . I N T U R K E Y F L O C K Every year blackhead In turkey flocks becomes a little more common, and every year the losses ■ from the dread disease are a little larger.- And while no positive treatm ent has ever been discovered, a remedy is being used by hundreds of successful turkey growers that proves very satisfactory if used before the fowls are In the la st stages of the disease, says a w riter In Successful Farming. A slight lam eness is usually discern­ ible In a turkey coming down with blackhead. The bird gradually grows weaker, refuses to eat, but drinks an unusual amount. D iarrhea Is usually present, and when the disease Is in an advanced stage, the droppings are usually a bright yellow. The wings and tail are not held up. The head is drawn close to the body. Sometimes the flesh parts of the head turn a bluish-black. If you are not sure w hether It is blackhead or some other ailm ent that is affecting the bird, It will be wise to m ake a post­ mortem exam ination. If the liver Is covered with black or gangrene spots it will not be necessary to look further for the trouble. You may be sure blackhead is the trouble, and begin treatm ent accordingly. Powdered ipecac may be used either as a remedy for blackhead or as a preventive. W e prefer to use it as a preventive, as any disease Is better prevented than cured. W hen black­ head enters our flock It usually causes the greatest losses before the poults are six’ weeks of age. For this rea­ son we begin feeding the ipecac to the poults as soon as we begin- feeding mash. It is fed in a w et m ash—one teaspoonful of powdered ipecac to ' enough mash for 20 turkeys—tw ice a week. The sam e amount is given to the young birds and the m ature fowls. This treatm ent will prevent black­ head entering your flock, though the y oungsters are allowed to range with the older birds, and on infected ground. If blackhead has entered your flock Iiefore treatm ent is begun, the sick birds should be fed half a teaspoonful of powdered Ipecac in wet mash (for each bird) for three successive days. If the disease is not in the advanced stage it will not be difficult to remedy, but if the fowls are nearly dead when the treatm ent Is begun, you cannot ex­ pect a large percentage of cures. H eretofore, the OnlIy cure for black­ head lias been, to move to new, unin­ fected land, and this is usually only- effective for the first season. UNO FOR CHIWS HOME Methodists to Arrange For Recreation as Well as Intensive Industrial Training. W inston-Salem --A tract of land, com prising 275 acres, has been pur­ chased by the trustees of the M etho­ dist Children’s home, and will be used for farm ing and recreational purposes. The land is,located on the Mocksville- Yadkinville highway, near C ourtney, and includes both tim bered and farm ­ ing sections. The tract is a part o* the estate of the late Dr. Cain. It is the intention of the hom e offi­ cials to have farm ing on a large scale on the new purchase, and this^ sum m er some activity is being carried on, to be increased in future years. Sev­ eral stream s on the farm will provide w ater for pond, w hich will be formed, and this will be used as one of the recreational features for outings of the children living a t the home. f I------------------------------------------------ Mebane Sued For $40,000 More. ' Burlington.—Three additional suits involving $40,000 have been filed against the tow n of M ebane, the result of alleged- dam ages caused by that tow n’s sew er disposal. The C entral Loan and T ru st com­ pany seeks to recover $10,000, W . W. Brown, executor of the late George Troxler estate, $10,000 and the Bur­ lington Rod and Gun club, $20,000. In each case Lake Latham is the cause of com plaint, the result of a aprt of the sew erage of M ebane run­ ning into it,, dam aging it as a property and as a gam e perserve, it is claim ed. M ebane’s sew er disposal now has been sued in all for $100 ,000. a ver­ dict ag ain st.it of $10,000 in the case of E rastns and Tom Cook, Mill Creek m illers, whose suit for $60,000 was tried before Judge Thom as H. Calvert in Graham last week. D o Y o u R e m e m b e r ? The following questions which are put to the record flock keep­ ers of Iowa by the Iowa State college are pertinent suggestions to all poultry keepers. “Do You Remember?’’ they say: WheD milk ever spoiled the fertility or hatchability of an egg? W hai a chick didn’t make good growth when it has milk in its ration? W hat a tim e you used to have getting a Iol of early chicks batched with hens? W hen you had a mongrel flock and Wished some one would come along and get you started with a good breed? The tim e you had raising chicks on the old ground that had been used for 25 years with­ out a change? How your chicks acted when they were affected by worms and coccidiosis? How you tried to fight internal parasites w ithout new ground? Cherokee Farm Values Make Increase. M urphy.—Farm values in Cherokee county increased from $2,563,726 on !January I, 1920, to $3,937,984 on Janu­ ary 1,1925. The total num ber of farm s increased from 1,903 to 2,22S during the sam e period, it is shown by ft press sum m ary released by the departm ent of com m erce a t W ashington. T he num ber of farm sl^opejated by w hite farm ers increased from 1,894 to 2,205 and the num ber operated by ne­ gro farm ers from 9 to 22 during the five-year period. The num ber of farm s operated by w hite ow ners increased from 1,497 to 1,769 and the num ber operated by negro ow ners from 406 to 458. None was found to be operated on the m anagerial.basis. All land in Cherokee farm s on Janu­ ary I, 1920, am ounted to 173,518 acres. By January 1,1915, the acreage had in­ creased to 12,865. Factory For Rutherfordton. R utherfordton.—A ccording to infor­ m ation disclosed, a chair factory for R utherfordton, costing approxim ately $50,000, and giving, w hen reaching the full capacity, w ork to fifty men, is as­ sured by the bifsiness m en of the city, if developm ents now pending m ature. A t the K iw anis m eeting, held at the Iso-Therm al hotel, a com m ittee was ap­ pointed to solicit for this purpose, stock funds, whioh would be suffi­ cient to guarantee its establishm ent. The com m ittee will m ake its Teport w ithin ten days, it is stated. THE DAVTE RECORD. MQCKSVTLLE. N. C. TINY TOTS REVEL IN SILKS; KNITTED ENSEMBLE COSTUME W HEN occasion calls for splendor and little M iss Baby is to be among those present, she Is. m ore than likely to become a small splash of vivid color—If she be French. The sm aller she Is the brighter the color that will glow in her little silk frock— once she has m astered the use of her scarcely-covered legs. E ither a gay silk, am usingly short—and decorative, or a fine, sheer, hand-m ade w hite dress, is favored for the youngest mem- age and generation are privileged to enjoy. -We have even reached the point w here m achinery Is doing most of our knitting for us. The latest accom plishm ent Is the knitted ensemble suit. It Is indeed a te r cry from the sturdy m ittens, socks and knitted neck-wrappings of the iong ago to an exquisite creation which in­ cludes not only an adorable frock but a * topcoat which has all the chic and classic detail of a most perfectly ap- atO X M i P o u l t r y P a c t s Milk in some form should be kept before chicks during the first month. * • • One of the things that our culling should do is to weed out the persist­ ent sitters. Tlie heavy layers do not w aste tim e In broodiness.* # * M any chicks are not getting enough green feed. If they are not on ,range carry sod to them, or fix up a feeder and give them cut alfalfa or clover hay. You’ll be surprised how they will eat It.* • • . W heat treated- with copper car­ bonate to prevent stinking sm ut is not harm ful to chickens, at least if fed for only a short time. N either is . it harm ful to hogs, when fed in small amounts.* * * Sunlight ’and cod liver oil are said to prevent leg weakness. So will get­ ting the chicks onto the ground, either outside the brooder house or on chunks of sod placed on the brooder floor. Rememifer th at heavy, sudden rains and floods do great damage to young poultry which are not given brooder Iinusing under the right conditious. A house set. low and open to rats and vermin Iste menace to the profits of .the flock. AS State Adopts Mining Course. Raleigh.—To aid further in the de­ velopm ent of the natural resources of N orth Carolina and to add to its pro- - gram of research, instruction and ex­ tension. S tate college has established a departm ent of m ining engineering, w hich w ill-be ane of only three such departm ents 4n the south. M ining engineering a t S tate college is being established prim arily to de­ velop the latent m ineral resources of N orth Carolina and to stim ulate the m ining industries In the state through research and also to train m ining engi­ neers, who w ill aid In . and further the whole developm ent. A com plete cur- riculum in m ining engineering will be offered during the next lSchool year w hich will com pare w ith those of the best m ining schools of the country. It has long been know n th at N orth Carolina w as rich in m ineral resources and m uch m ining has been done in the p ast 50 years, but due to lack of tech­ nical and engineering m ethods the his­ tory of m ining in the state has been largely one of failure. Mrs. Morgan Heads Lutherans, / C harlotte.—M rs. J, L. M organ, of Salisbury, w as elected president of the W om ena’s M issionary society of the N orth Carolina synod of the U nited L utheran church a t the annual conven­ tion at St. M ark’s LUtheran church here. M rs. M organ has iong been prom in­ ently identified w ith m issionary w ork in this state, her husband being presi­ dent of the state synod. She succeeds M rs. G. W . M cClanahan, of Gfbsonville, who served during the past y^ar. Kennedy Receiver Coql Mine Co. Sanford..—John H . Kennedy, of Cum­ nock has been nam ed . by Superior C ourt Judge F ran k A. D aniels as tem ­ porary receiver fo r.th e C arolina Coal M ine Company. The question of m ak­ ing the receivership perm anent will be considered by Judge T. D. Bryson at an early date. The relief fund for those affected by the recent explosion a t the m ines of the Carolina Coal Company and the consequent death of m ore than fifty m iners has reached $30,000. ber of sm art assem blies. In one sue darts, about like, a shining butterfly, In the other she becomes a w hite fairy and is adorable in either. In the sketch shown here, Paris sends us two designs that reveal little ones, tw o and six years old, clad In silk frocks for dress occasions. The little two-year-old has on a cerise crepe de chine finished at the edges w ith a black border. It has two flower' mo­ tifs. em broidered on it, showing blos­ soms and green foliage and could hardly be sim pler or prettier. The little miss of six—at the right—is very much dressed up in a frock of plaited georgette with a quaint black satin sleeveless coat embroidered at the front In colors and the neck is finished with a piping of crepe de chine and fastened with ties made of it. For outdoor affairs, girls from six to fourteen are noted w earing plaid skirts and jersey jum pers - with the plaid of the skirt reappearing In the tam or soft hat. B ut the mode of the WHAT TINY PARISIENNES ARE WEARING pointed tailieur. Consider, for In- stanceP/ the w ondrous knitted costum e ensemjble here pictured. The marvel of it and the luxury. It is knitted of rayon which feels, w ears and has every appearance of real silk. The coat is knit In tan rayon to resem ble benga- Iine—this ribbed stitch which simu­ lates bengaline is, by the way, the very new est idea In things knitted. An­ other trick which knitting machines are perform ing is that of Im itating a crepe weave. The handsom e~coat is collared and displays revers In w hite knitted crepe. The dress which shows itself so effectively when the coat Is throw n open and which adapts itself so SHOWS CHIC AND CHARM OF TA1LLEUR ensemble is more often reflected In m atching hats and coats for children. Poplin and duvetyn are popular fab­ rics for these sets, to-be worn, In warm w eather and three-piece m atched sets for fall, are shown In brushed-wool .cloths for little ones from one to three years, consisting of coat, hat and leggins. They are m ade In pretty colors, as light blue, pink, tan, and canary. ■>- W hen our ancestors industriously clicked their knitting needles, as an­ cestors w ere wont to do, little did they dream of the knitted glories which the future would reveal. Not even those most possessed."with the gift of imagination could picture the trium phs of knitted stitch as,;nn interpreter of sm artest fashions, such as we of this charm ingly to sum m ertim e wear, is of, the w hite crepe knit w ith border and trim m ing of tan knit bengaline T here Is real economy In the pur- chase of a knitted outfit, which Is so adaptable to occasion, of w eather or event. F irst of all raybn knit is de­ lightfully cool and refreshing in the wearing, also durable, therefore verv practical. The fact that the coat is strictly tailored in the latest ensem-' bles, Insures appropriateness for street w ear; .also it provides a . separate w rap over lingerie frocks for summer evenings. Then, too, there is W enough dressiness about the frock to suffice for inform al teatlm e hours or other Informal affairs. Striking color appealI is an outstanding ndte in these knitted coat and frock'-com hinatinr. Featured are exquisite shades orchid, maize, powder blue, J l nl and Ianvin green, as well as d irk e r colorings which 'com bine navv with Si W hile the strictly tailored knUted ensembles are in the m ajority, there are also many dressy types w h & show touches of genius in the way of han l llke?rim m iatfern?' embrolflerJ- also fu r like trim m ings of sheered wool ' JU U a b o t to m l ey• NewaDapAr Union./ ■ SELLS HEART FOR CSfiOO TO SAVE SISTERtS UFE Advertised for Husband Re- cause She Didn’t Knout Hoiv-Klse to GeiM'bhey. Indianapolis.—;Dowo in sun-parched A rizona, fighting a battle w ith Iliat dread disease, tuberculosis, is a young woman, M iss M artha B ailey by nam e, who actually beam s w ith joy when you ask her about her fam ily and she starts telling yop about her sister, Amelia, now M rs. Eugene Ells­ w orth of Indianapolis.. : F o r it w as Amelia -who gave her a chance to w in back health. And Ame­ lia did it by selling herself to a m an who had $5,000 that he w as w illing to pay for a good-looking w ife who could cook. . Worked as Stenographer. A m elia w as w orking In Indianapolis as a stenographer when word .cam e from h er hom e back in Johnson coun- Responses to the Appeal Were Nu­ merous. ty, Indiana, th at M artha had been stricken w ith the w hite- plague anfl should be sent to Arizona. < T he seventeen-year-old stenographer had a few dollars saved up and couldn’t for th e life of her think how she could help. T hen a boy friend from her home tow n suggested th a t she m arry a m an w ith money. B ut Amelia didn't know any m en who had money. P ut Ad on Poster. The friend suggested she advertise. N ew spapers wouldn’t accept the ad. Then the friend said she should de­ sign a poster and he would put it up In the Indianapolis Pfen and B rush club, w here he worked. Responses ^to the appeal for a hus­ band w ith $5,000 w ere im m ediate and num erous. T he letter from Eugene Ellsw orth, a young business © an, stirred Amelia strangely and she in­ vited him to call. H e did, fell in love w ith the girl and tgarried her. Now they are liappy arid M artha is in A ri­ zona fighting for her health. Blinded by Wife, Iflan Pleads fot Her in Court New York.—,Lonise Keyes, colored Jamaica, charged with blinding her husband, John, was released from, cus­ tody in Jamaica court after the hus­ band, who will be blind for life, plead­ ed with Magistrate Doyle to free her. Mrs. Keyes-, durlflg a quarrel with her husband March 22, threw lye into his eyes, He was rushed to Kings County hospital, and on being released went to court to defend hts wife, who had been held in Queens Counfy jail awaiting the outcome of his injuries Mrs. Keyes told Maglsitrate Doyle she would care for her husband as long as she lived. Keyes interrupted her to say he would not be a burden to anyonet that other blind persons make theif own living and he could learn to do So. He pleaded with the magistrate to have mercy on his wife, as he.knew she was sorry and the quarrel was all his fault. -^ A fter lecturing.the wife, th e m agis­ tra te told h e r to take her husband home and care for him. _ The couple kissed, and then Mrs. Keyes, led the way to the court door and out into the open. Ima Rose Bus^t Only One of Many Queer Names Columbus, Ohio.—I. c. Plummer, chief of the state bureau of vital sta­ tistics, has 6 hobby of making a note of unusual names appearing on the thousands of reports that come into his office from all over the state. JFourth1 Liberty Loan w as the nam e o fflin e birth certificate recently re­ ceived by him. Other names of which he has made a aote include: • , M innie B. Sw ift, F rank D elay,' iona Carr, Iona Ford, Im a R ose Bush' and Liberty Bell. T riplets w ere nam ed M argaret Prog­ ress, M arjorie Aid and M artha Purify. i t e a and , E u ta Case a n d F r o s t y Lane were other names._ air. Plummer has received mall ad- H easedJ J the B ureau of idle Statis- Not Wei! Since T hree Years Old Catarrb of the Ear Neighbor Recom­ mended PE-RU-NA The experience of Mrs r c J>acus, 1621 Booker St., Littie R01-V Ark.,_was not an unusual one S was in fact a repetition of wk, has happened in thousands thousands of instances, She had n running condition of the ear from the time she was three years ol“ In spite of treatment it Mr.‘ sisted and became very offensm- One day a neighbor recommended Pe:ru-na and La-cu-pia which hid rfheved -his wife of the sam. trouble. Mrs. Dacus used three bottle of each of these quick acting reme. dies and reports that the discharee and offensive odor are both gone. Her disease was one of the verv many forms taken by Catarrh and is known as chronic Otitis. . Wherever the catarrhal condition xs located Pe-ru-na reaches it* May be purchased any place in tablet or liquid form. Dont let baby be forfured by skin trouble! Apply Resinol OintmenF and see how quicklv the itchingand burning stops R e s i n o l ^ ^ i W O R L D ’S C a n a d a is > G R E A T E S T S t e J O l L F I E L D For particulars address David T. Stuart, 25 Broad St, New Yotk F O R OYER SOO YEARS haarlem oil has been a world­ wide remedy for kidney, liverand bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric add conditions. HAARLEM OIL correct internal troubles,stimulate vitil organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal - T en Your Shoe Repairman You Want R u bber A B eH w K ee lto WaHi On MoH for the Ixat shoe safe yaw Merb0t* USKlDE —the W oader Sole for United States Rubber CoffiPan/ The Pmily of Cuticnra Makes It Unexce&sd ForAUToiIet Pnrpasg JTrtE PAVlE B IlaBCEST CIRCULATION OI EVER PUBLISHED IN DAl MOCKSV1L1 134. A. F. &. every 1 st an night. Visitii ways welcor open at 8 o’cl R. M. HOLTHO Z. N. ANDERSON. Sec. LOCArAND PERSOl N ew York spot cottc Grady Call spent ^ G reen sb oro. Erven Bow les spent I eek in H ickory with j Mr. and Mrs C. B. Uchildreh spent WednesJ [eron. S jjrt Little M iss Em m a L Fv ’f jo i Salisbury, spent tl 1It- * fin town guest of .Miss I iK M M isses E ssie and Ev K fretunied from Chai I-- jffthey w ent Thursday t( ■' Hjtonsils rem oved. Rev. J. T . Sisk - JIfd ays last w eek in IIid intending a Pastor’s C | ■ |tb e M. P. cnurch. Mrs Jam es M cIvJ Green’s August Flower far Constipation, Indigestion and Torpid Lher S u c c e s s f u l f o r 5 9 y e a n . SOe and 90c Lottio- ALL DRUGGISTS u m .laughter Bernice, of i j jj|ein, are guests of her ; 1 Ij1Uid Mrs. R. L- W ilsoii Miss Isabel de Ylaml K boro1 a graduate of W t' ’"'ege, has been elee'ed „ pnblic school m usic in j ;-;7 . vfville schools. .jf Hariett Howerton, -I,YSoIdest wom an in Ii / . A v , died last W’edna 'i;jpjno at her hom e in Bel Caterpillars in Salvador Salvador’s recent scare over i threatened invasion of the destructive boil weevil has been found to have been caused by the appearance o£ cat­ erpillars In the cotton fields. I n s i s t o n h a v i n g D r . P e e r r ’J f o r W o r m s o r T a p e w o C m a n d the cross w i l l v e t I t f o r v o u . 3 7 2 P e a r l S t . . - N . T - The barber has a scraping acquaint­ ance with many strangers. — •/ j.:-|sliip, aged 111 years. f- ''I Chief C. N . Christl Yjlflast week from a vtsilf onnty. T he Captain! [years in H alifax looki| fj|State farm there. ti I V isiting H ours at C Beginning July ist, I -l||hours at the county Ii I; flfroni 2 to 4 o’clock on J K j b o a r d c o . c o m m ; M isses H azel Baity, ,sM issie and Eva Call wt -Ifto the B. Y. P. U Si--j^which met in Salisbtir VllMore than one thoust[ V|Were present. Ir -.J About 25 meuibersl :~jtvorth L eague enjoyed .V|picuic on the banks < ::: | \ ’a-tkiu last T uesday iounteous picnic IuncJ ___ nd the young folks! V vficcasion to the fullestl 'Ji FOR S A -L E -Im l : Villulato plants, all v| I- Uflicr 1 coo, 5000 lots 7 ' ' iS 3Iom pt sh ip m e n ts. S D O R R IS PI I W illiam LeGrand \ file Philadelphia Stt To , in Florida, arriv week to spend a few - parents. H e spent aj Flnladephia the past |iete Saturday. ( P- K. M auos, thee - tIle D avie Cafe - J i r c Of the m ost dre: T0Upes that has eve ^he fine concrete strei yiHe. A Cadillac i Jietter car but when |°o k s the Ford slautl A tent m eeting ^ B ' x b y on next Tuesc Ir-Efl?!1'1 continue until Ji IjYtIs B- Cox, of Oliit I r achillS" assisted C p iissouti, and J. F. f a"ce. T h ep u b Iici JrHed to these service: , Dr- H . W . H arris PltrChased Dr. Craw | n Or. Crawford’s TtloVed his fam ily T'iiIirsday and they i ! j 6. ^ r- T aylor hoi I ain street. T he R I 0 welcome Dr. and I lul children to the f orth Carolina. FOR S A L E — W ii -Jurt house door, I) - - on M onday, Jutv ‘L ° ’cl°ck. m ., for Rhest bidder, som e ixtiires. 11 • M. D E A D M O N Board Com ity C s m r n k ¥ ejU-S Old r r:-'. r:'-' ! -sperience of Mrs I n 621 Booker St., Littic Rock as not an unusual on- ft fact a repetition - " 1’ “ « a repetition 0‘ wW ' V K lii JP^ned in thousand, Z l t ''N I S h eha?i?.^ c o n d itio n of the ear from I e. sh e T as three -ye=,. ^ o f treatment ft „ ’ became very ofimSve 1 | his Wife Sf the same * f ! d ^cus “ =ed three bottle of these quick acting rernc reports that the discharge :pstve odor are both gone. Iisease was one of the verv brms taken by CatarrhandIn as chronic Otitis. , ever the catarrhal condition gf :d Pe-ru-na reaches it. be purchased any place ; >r liquid form. let babv be tortured >y skin trouble! ily Resinol Ointment a see how quickly the itchingand burning stops Green’s August Flower fir Constipation, Indigestion and Torpid Liver Saccessfnl for 59 yean. SOc and 90c bottles— ALL DRUGGISTS : geol- - eIs^IlE A T S Sf e°de:JOIL FIELD For particulars address Stuartr 25 Broad Str New York . f >E O V l l O Y EA R S n oil has been a world- S lfll medy for kidney, liver and emi r disorders, rheumatism, ;o and uric add conditions. HAARLEM \.1&SS3£ iternal troubles,E m ulate vital Three si2 es. AU druggists. Insist >riginal genuine G old Medai- LEM OIL asjM irpillars in Salvador or’s recent scare over » ;U invasion of the destructive vil has been found to hava sed by tlie appearance of cat- in tlie cotton fields. i h a v i n g D r . P e e r y ’ s s o r T a p e w o f t n * n d t h e ^ r t i r s f o r v o n . 3 7 2 P e a r l S t . . N . T - rber has a scraping acquaint- many strangers. ■si ra W ant I u b b e y H e * * 8 I W a iu © » G foftos sole you < USKIDE Wondee1 Soto fof !States Rubber Company riiy of Cuticura s It U nercelle(S ITifctPtfP**! v M Batig fiBCOKD, MOCKSVILLE, fc C. JtJN E 24. I'<325 IlHE DAVIE RECORD. -4 iT rGEST circulation of ant pa per EVER PUBLISHED IM DAVlE COUNTY. - MOCKSVILLE l o d g e NO ® 134. A. F. & A. M.. m eets every 1st and 3rd Friday * night. Visiting Brethren al­ ways welcome. Meetings open at 8 o'clock. ' R M. HOLTHOUSER, W. M. z Jf. ANDERSON. Sec. I1OCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS. Vew Vork spot cotton 24 25. Grady Call spent Thursday in ^Greeiirtlwr0- Erven Bow les sp en t o n e 'd a y la st \ ftk ju H ickory w ith frien d s. Mr. and Mrs C. B. M ooney and f‘chi Wren spent W ednesday in Ciam e r o a , Little Miss Emma Lew is Miller, 5of S ilislmry. spent the week-end ■ ji, town guest O lAlissLucile Horn. ; Misses Essie and Eva Call have returned from Charlotte where -Hhev went Thursday to have their tonsils removed. R e v . J. T. Sisk spent several 3Mivs last week in H igh Point at­ tending a Pastor’s Conference of tlie M. I’, cnurch. s Mrs Jnm es M cIver aud little daughter Bernice, of W inston-Sal­ e m are guests of her parents, Mr. ■,,id Mrs. R. L. W ilson. Miss Isabel de Vlaniing of R ox- b o r o , !1 graduate of M eredith col- tiI e s e , has been elee’ed as teacher of <JiubSio school music in tlie Mocks- \ ilc schools. < 11:u iclt llow erton, colored, the ?o ld e s t woman in Iredell couu- iiv ilitil last W ednesday inorn- 111. it Ihm home in Bethany town- '■lnp aj>ed 111 years. Chid C. N. Christiau returned I m w e e k from a visit to H alifax county. The Captaiu spent m any 'm rs in Halifax looking after -the tbUle farm there. * \ isiliug Hours at County Hpuie 1 —beginning July 1st,, the visiting ’hours atlbe county bouie will be tfroni 2 to 4 o’clock only. KURD CO. CO M M ISSIO NERS. ■? Misses Hazel Baity, Jessie Waff, 'sie and Eva Call were delegates <l» the B. Y. P. U . Couveution winch met iu Salisbury last week. More than one thousand delegates uire present. v Ahout 25 members of the Ep- ■jwortli League enjoyed a delightful I 1 ipiunc 011 tlie banks of the South A aikiiiliistT uesday evening. A sboiinteoiis picnic lunch was served .'and the yonug folks enjoyed the ^xOccisiou to the fullest. KjR SA LE— Improved sweet I putdto plants, all varieties $f 00 Sper Ii-(X)1 5000 lots 75 c. per 1000 . l’lompl shipments. DORRIS P L A N T CO . Valdosta, Ga. 5i William LeGraud who represeuls jtlie Pliihideiphia Storage B altety ^t-O , in l'lorida, arrived home last ;s"eek u> spend a few days with his p ireiits. H esp eu ta few days in IPliiladepbia the past week arriving tIieie Saturday. , P- K. Miinos, Ihecleverpropriet- ,S|Urof the Davie Cafe, has pufchased j-June of the most dressed up Ford wtipes that has ever rolled over r jtlie line concrete streets of Mocks- | ‘ 'tlie. A Cadillac is no doubt a ■ejJjlUer car but when it com es to Jluoks the ford stands at the top. • y g tel>t meeting will begin at M ttxhV <»n next Tuesday, Juue 301I1, coMimie until July 12th. Rev. I'-- B- Cox, of Ohio, will do the !Preaching, assisted C. A . R ife. oC jMissomi and J. F. Potts, of Ad «'?"*• Pbe public is cordially iu- Ig Httl Io these services ^r- II. W. Harris who recently ,I1"'chased Dr. Crawford's interest Iln Dr. Crawford’s Drug Store, ■Wived his family to M ocksville 1 Itursday and they are occupying ls I)r. Taylor house on . North . a'" stfeet. The Record is glad 0 1'eleoine Dr. aud Mrs. Harris !!" cMdren to the best town in lNurU> Carolina. co!?1! SAL E -W ili sell at the 0 , h‘*use door, M ocksville, N . » ilonday, July 6 tb, 1925, at0 '-lock, £ & E S g m u & 1 1 « u e a d m o k . ^ t u County Cotuiuissioners. Hanibncli ol Uoxboro, N. 0. -■The Ten Com mandm ents will be shown at the Princess in July. M ilton N eely, an aged colored man who worked for W . R. Clem­ ent, died M onday m orning and was buried Tuesday. M iss Fronie French spent a week the guest of Mrs. T . F. M eroney, on Salisbury street, before leaving for Greensboro to attend sum m er school. Oil Friday before her de­ parture Mrs. M eroney gave a de­ lightful dinner party in her honor. • Farmers w anting loans of from $100 to $251000 at a low ^ te of in­ terest and long terms, can be better served through the Federal Land Banks'than any other source. AU applications for loaus m ust be in by J iily 1st for the next appraise­ m ent. See B. 0 . Morris. Sec. T reas., Davie County Farm Lpan A ssocia­ tion. M ocksville, N . C. L ittle John H aire, Jr., who has been in the Baptist hospital at W inston Salem undergoing treat­ m ent for acute kidney trouble, was able to be brought hom e Saturday. T he friends of Mr. and Mrs. J. S Haire will be glad to learn diat th; little fellow is m uch better. Ou account of revival service s at the M ethodist church next week the "M ovie" will be closed except Friday and Saturday. D eputy Sheriff C. V . Miller cap­ tured a com plete blockade still out­ fit together with som e beer, mash and a sm all am ount of w hisky near Bixby Sunday.. Sheriff Co )e tells us that since taking office in De­ cember he has destroyed 18 stills in D avie county. Dr. E. P. Crawford aud June Me#oney left Monday morning for Lenoir where they will take charge of the drug store which Dr. Craw­ ford receutly purchased. Dr. Craw­ ford will return to M ocksville the first of next week aud m ove his fam ily'to their new home which he has purchased in Lenoir. The R e­ cord is m ighty sorry to lose Dr. Crawford and fam ily, for they are m ighty good people and Lenoir is fortunate in having them locate there. < ■ j.. F. K urfees and son J. F. Jr.. of Louisville, K y. , spent several days here last week w ith his brother J. Lee K urfees. Mr Kurfeeg is president of the J. F: K tirfeesPaint Co., of Louisville, and is an old Davie countv boy who has made a success. .H e b a sm a n y friends in and aiound .M ocksville who are al­ ways glad to see him. Mr. K ur­ fees and son left Monday afternoon for their home. FOR S A L E — Dirt cheap, a pen of John S. Martin liigli egg record W tiileW youdottes J. S. D A N IE L . W ork has begun on Eaton’s Baptist church, near Cana. C. B. M ooney, Ihe popular contractor of this city, is doing the work. The new church-iii.being built on the site of the old building and will cost about $15,000 . The building will be of brick and will be modern in every respect with a large audi­ torium and a number of Sunday school class rooms. The Baptist folks iu that com m unity are to be congratulated ou securing such a 'fine house of worship. . Federal-prohibition officer Rat- ledge had a lively little chase- in Clarksville township last Tuesday Fred outran the Ford roadster w ith -h is. big Buick but when i f c a m e to'a footrace lie wasn’t iu it w ith the booze tuuner. . A s a Je­ suit of tlie race officer Ratledge captitied a Ford roadster and .35 gallons of pretty fair corn liquor. T he booze and car were brought to M ocksville and tlie joy water was poured out in front of the court house in the presence of a number of prominent citizens some of whom looked like they were sorry. • Garwoid-W alker. - Mr-Duke w Hlkfr1 and Miss R^th Gar­ wood, botli of WJnston-SaIero.-were uoit- PIJ in marriage at the SonthsHe Bai«i«t parsonage Sitturday evemnil June; ZOtb.- »t seven o'clock; They are spending this week with the groom’s parents. Mr. anil Mre r! I/. Walker. 011 Wilksboro street. Tlie Record wishes for this young couple a long, happy and prosperous life. Miss Stewart Eotertains: 5 Miss Mabel Stewart delisbtfuly ,enter tained Friday evening at B id#e ard Rm k a t her borne on North Main Street Qje6" s A n n ’s Iacecorreopsis were used for de coration. Miss Kathryn Brown c»Ptu,ed the top score prize, a vanity couipact. _ A delightful salad course waa served by the-hostess assisted by 'ber slater Mrs. Harry Fyue and >'iss Regina Horn -■ - T h o s e present were; Misses Regina Mnrne Kathryn Brown. Kopeha Hunt. I WHAT TO DO IN CASE OF SICKNESS j FIRST. Gall a Doctor. Many ills of a se- -" rious nature can be averted by calling your Doc­ tor in time. , ~~ SEQOND. Bring your prescriptions tt> our Drug Store where they will be compounded by a Registered Pharmacist, Using only the purest and best quality of drugs and chemicals, strictly in accordance with your Doctor’s instructions. We call for'and deliver prescriptions any­ where in the city. Let us serve you. Harris-LeGrandPharmacy Stoat Successors To CRAWFiORDjS DRUG STORE, j For The Hot Summer Days Make cooking a pleasure. Spend more time at leisure by jising a BLUE RIBBON OIL STOVE. It takes less oil and saves half the toil. 3, 4 and 5 burners. They satisfy. G. G. Sanford Sbns Company \ v 1 0 1 » DISCOUNT On Screen Doors. Four styles of* screen doors in standard sizes. W e offer these doors now at 10 per cent, from our regular prices. - 1 0 Ol O on Refrigerators and Ice I ■ I: Boxes. _ I This price reduced our stock con * jf siderably last week. A good op- ( portunity to get an Ice Box or Re- Jf frigerator at reduced prices. j| Mocksville Hardware Co. ■ LONGTERM REAL ESTATE LOANS. We have funds available for first Mort­ gage Loans at 5 1-2 per cent. Interest payable 1st day of November each year. Glad to have your business large or small. Davie Real Estate, Loan & Insurance Co. R. B. SANFORD, Pres. I:. C. MORRIS, Sec. C H I C K E N F E E Di We carry a complete line of Purina and Quisenberry chicken feed. You cannot find any better feed on the market. Call to see us. - MARTIN BROTHERS ‘j J “We Carry Feed For Everything.” ®j V o # A W W »8W A V W « a . V W i I: H av e Y ou T hough t of T his? That this bank is run by real hitman beings, men interested in you and thor­ oughly approachable. Not the old type of Bankers whom one had to remove his hat to when entering bis institution; not the hard boiled type, but honest to-goodness- Let our institution serve you.men Southern Bank & Trust Co., Mocksville, N.‘ C.. PROGRESSIVE ^ SERVICE P H X M E S g T a i i i f f I S WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY. “Code of. the I . ' TSea.” A roaring action tale of the sea, with Rod | LaRocque and Jacqueline Logan starring. Story by | Byron Morgan: f- ., ■______~ ~ _____________ J* FRIDAY and SAl URDAY. ; A Universal.Western | feature and a two-riel Mermaid comedy, “Low Tide” | House closed Moiiday* Tuesday, Wiednesday and Thursday of next week, but friday and Saturday a big Paramount Famous 40 Action Picture, “The Dev­ il’s Cargo.” s. it .I * y w W Overhaul Your Car. IF VQU don’t know your . car and its complicated workings, you’ll have a hopeless job on your hands trying to “fix” it. Come to this garage where only the best mechanics are employed and on­ ly the finest materials are used. MocksvOle Motor Co. m $ ¥ m $ $ felj : | f . 48232353535390235348482323232353484823232353535348482323235353534848232353535348484823235353534848 23535353484848232353535348484823235353484848232323535348482323235353484823235353484823235353482323 00010002482323534823484823484823530123482323530101232353482391532348535353482301020001235348482302010032020102000101232323020101000148482323482348482323535348235348235348485323022323535348232323534823535348234823535348482348482353235353482353482348535348234853234823534848534853234823535301000201 •n. ' J f- I M aW l l I I REPdT PROGR WJ P I I 1 I , ' 't *: I I \i 4&fc d A tifi R ie o f e ij ,. mocks V itiJ , k c. ju n e 24 . w s IN THEIR WORK Southern Convention at Memphis AdoptsStatement of Baptist Faith and Message for Information of World—Co-operative Program for Support of Enterprises Endorsed. M any large achievem ents w ere re- ported to the Southern B aptist Con- rentlon' a t I t B recent eesBion at Mem­ phis by it* TftrloUe m issionary, educa­ tional a*d benevolent.enterprises, al­ though non* of them h a d .a t its com­ m and during the past year as large funds ai w ere needed. The Hoapital Commission reported. Zi B aptist hospitals In operation In the South, with three others under construction. These Institutions treat­ ed ever 100,000 patients during the year and did orer $1,000,000 in char- Ity work for deserving poor. More than 1,000 aged preachers and their dependent ones w ere aided by the Relief and Annuity Board. MANY BAPTISMS REPORTED The Sunday School Board reported a gain of 980 Sunday Schools for the year, with IBB1JSS new pupils, bring­ ing the present num ber - of Southern Baptist Sunday schools to 21,570, w ith an enrollment of 2,563,963. 'O ther items In the hoard’s statistical report show that there are now 27,517 Bap­ tist chutches affiliated w ith the Con­ vention Vhioh last year reported 209,- 671 baptisms and which now have 3,7(8,862 m embers. D aring the past 26 years Southern Baptists have Increased the num ber the suprem e standard by which all Iiuman conduct, creeds and religious opinions should be tried.’1 THE FALL OF MAN "M an was created by the special act of God as recorded in Genesis. •So Ood created m an in his own im­ age, In the im age of God created he him ; m ale and fem ale created he them .’ (Gen. 1:27). ‘And the Lord God formed m an out of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils- the breath of life; and m an becam e a. living soul,’ (Gen. 2:7). H e w as cre­ ated to a etate of holinfess under the la w /o f his m aker but through the tem ptation of Satan he transgressed the command of God and fell from his original holiness and righteous­ ness; w hereby his posterity inherit a nature corrupt and in bondage to sin, are under condem nation, and as 3 0 0n as they are capable of moral action, becom e actual transgressors.” THE WAY OF SALVATION "Salvation of sinners is wholly of grace, through the m ediatorial office of the Son of God, who by the Holy Spirit w as born of the Virgin M ary and took upon him our nature, yet without sin; honored the divine law v»y tajg personal obedience, and madeB aptuts have increasea tne nuinuei »•- ■— . , .. of Uieir schools, colleges and theolog- atonem ent for. our sm s by We death^ _ . - . • D a l M t r xtsaA ffnm t n A I l A f l n Dfi IB QOWleal sem inaries from 65 to 117 and the ^ Pains U Very Severe “I suffered, from womanly troubles which grew worse and worse as the m onths ■ w ent by,” says Mrs. L. H. j ‘ Cantrell, of K. F.- D. 9, G aines­ ville, Georgia. g- \"I frequently had very ^ severe pains. These were so W bad that I w as forced to go » to bed and stay there. It ^ sejm ed to me my back would R come in two. - ^ CARDUi For Female Troubles "I taught school for a while, but m y health w as so bad I would have to stay out sometimes. This w ent on till I got so bad I didn’t know w hat to do. “One day I Tead about the m erits of Cardui, and as I had some friends who bad been helped by it, I thought I would try it. I began to ® get better after I had taken fgs half a bottle. I decided to keep g> on and give it a thorough A . trial and I did. I took in all about 12 bottles and now n DR. J. E. DILLARD . Chairm an Program Commission. of Southern Baptists total assets of these schools from *7,500,000 to $48,000,000, it w as re­ ported by the Education Board. In these institutions there are 38,000 B aptist students. The Home Mission Board employed 1,077 w orkers during the year who reported 30,027 baptism s and 50,354 additions to the churches, the erec­ tion or repair of 355 church houses and the organization of 608 Sunday schools. On 17 foreign fields the Foreign Mission Board has employed 618 American m issionaries and 2,443 na­ tive workers. A total' of 12,134 bap­ tism s were reported by these work-,, ers for the year, bringing the present m em bership of the foreign churches toill7,961. * ENDORSES CO-OPERATIVE > PROGRAM The Convention heartily endorsed the" co-operative plan for the support of all its missionary, educational and benevolent work and named a Com­ m ission on the Co-operative Program which will seek to enlist all the Bap­ tis t churches of the South in the reg­ ular, system atic support of _hom e, state and foreign missions, m iniste­ rial ’ relief and -B aptist Bchoolsi hos­ pitals and orphanages. Churches not already supporting all Jjiese enter­ prises through w eekly contributions are invited to assum e such support at once. The Convention endorsed the plan of the Commission discour­ aging independent .appeals to churches and individuals on the part ot special denom inational interests, urging all of them to look to the Co-operative Program for their support and asking all the churches to support the Pro- grapa. STAND BY THE OLD BIBLE T hat the world m ay know w here Southern B aptists stand upon the g re a t fundam ental C hristian doc­ trines, m any of which are being as­ sailed today, the convention adopted a statem ent of the B aptist faith and m essages in which attacks upon the inspiration and authority of the Bible and the divinity of C hrist w ere vig­ orously refuted. H ere are som e, of the leading declarations in- the' *statement as - it was adopted: THE SCRIPTURES “W e 'believe th at the Holy Bible was w ritten b y ' m en divinely in­ spired and is a perfect treasure of heavenly instruction; th at it has God for its author, salvation for its end, and truth, w ithout any m ixture of irror, for its -m atter; th at it reveals the principles by w hich G oi will JudM v*, and therefore is, and w ill rem ain to the end of the world, the {rue eentyr of Ohriatian union, and Being risen from the dead he is now enthroned in heaven and uniting is his person the tenderest- sym pathies w ith divine perfections, he is in every way qualifiej to be a com passionate and all-sufficient Savior." CO-OPERATION Christ’s people should, as occasion requires, organize such associations and conventions as m ay best-secure co-operation for the great objects of the Kingdom of God. Such organiza- ions have no authority over each other or over the churches. They are voluntary and advisory bodies design­ ed to elicit, com bine and direct the j enegries of our people In the m ost ef- ; fective m anner. Individual m em bers \ ot New Testam ent churches should co-operate With each, other, and the churches them selves should co-oper- ate w ith each other in carrying for­ ward the missionary, educational and benevolent program for the extension of C hrist’s Kingdom. C hristian unity in the New T estam ent sense is spirit­ ual harm ony and voluntary co-opera­ tion for common ends by various groups of C hrist’s people. It is per­ missible and desirable as betw een the various C hristian denom inations, when the ,end to be attained is itself justi­ fied! and w hen such co-operation in­ volves no violation of conscience. or compromise of loyalty to C hrist and H is W ord as revealed in the New T estam ent.” STEWARDSHIP “God is the source of all blessings, tem poral and spiritual; all th at we have and are we owe to Him. W e have a spiritual rtebtorship to the whole world, a holy trusteeship in the Gospel, and a binding stew ardship in our possessions. W e are therefore under obligation to serve Him w ith our time, talents and m aterial posses­ sions; and should recognize all- these as preaching the Gospel of Christ, and of God and helping others. Chris­ tians Bhould cheerfully, regularly, sys­ tem atically, proportionately and lib­ erally contribute Df their m eans to advancing the Redeem er’s cause' on earth.” EVOLUTION IS DENOUNCED To the statem ent of faith proper the Convention added a declaration upon the relation of science and re- l glon in which the theory ot evolution w as denounced. R eferring to evolu­ tion the statem ent says: lIts best exponents adm it th a t the causes of the origin of species have not been traced, nor has any proof been forthcom ing th a t' m an is not the direct creation of Kod as recorded in Genesis. W e protest against im position of this theory of evolution upon the m inds , of our children in denom inational or public schools as if it w ere a definite and established truth of science. W e in­ sist th a t this and all other theories be dealt w ith in a truly scientific way, th at is, in careful- conform ity to established facts. ■ . "W e record again our unw avering adherence to the supernatural ele­ m ents in the C hristian religion. The Bible is God’s revelation of him self through m en moved by the Holy Spirit, and is our sufficient, certain and authoritative guide in religion. Jesus C hrist was born of the Virgin M ary, through the power of the Holy S p irit H e was the divine and eternal Son of God. H e w rought m iracles, healing the sick, casting out demons, raising the .dead. H e died as tho vicarious, atoning Savior of the w orld and was buried. H e arose again from the dead. The tomb was emp­ tied of its contents. In his risen body he appeared many tim es to his disciples. He ascended to the right hand ot the Father. H e w ill come again in person, the sam e Jesus who ascended Irom the M ount of O11Ves. "W e believe that adherence to the above truths and facts is a necessary condition of' service lo r teactisrs in o u t B aptist schools. W I am perfectly well. I do not suffer any pain and can do all my housework.” At All Druggists’ Sheriff’s Sale of Lanii For Taxes. The following persons in Oavie county having failed to .r»ny ttaftir county taxes for the year 1924 I will offer for s»1e At the court hou.«t» <iorr in Mocksville. N. C , on Monday, > ho 6 h day of.Jufy- 1925, the To1Iowing I > acts < r p*r<:el« of land to satis* rV said tnxfs. Iu additj< n to the amount of taxes due by you for adver­tising Hnd selling ‘his Innd will be added, whic'i nmcunts to $140 on e*ch piece of land advertised tPiea^e bring thN extra amount when von coo.e to settle. Follow­ing is the Iis of those owing taxes, the number of acre* of tan 1 and the amount of ittxes due* less the $L.40 on each tnct or parcel of land: CALAHALN TOWNSHIP W. S Buyd. 37 acres 21.55 JERUSALEM TOWNSHIP B S Hollernant acres 45 26 MOCKSVILLE TOWNSHIP HenM Craig Live S Co. 7 lots 27 00 Mrs E H Pass, 3t>0 I 4 acres 40,72 FARKENGTON TOWNSHIP Mrs Jessie Bowlest 25 acres 9.28 This May 21, 1925. KELLEY' L. COPE, Sheriff, Divie County. C. C. YOUNG & SONS FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMD EMBALMERS Mocksville - Phone 133 Cooleemee - -v Phone 5720 PHOMPT AND FFFICIENT SERVICE DAVIE CAFE FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN MKALS AND LUNCHES ICE C RE AM AND COLD DRINKS p. K. MANOS, PROP. OM THE SQUARE MOCKSVILLE, N. C. DR. ROB T . ANDERSON. DENTIST, Phone* O fPti No. 50. Reudence No 37 Office over Drug Store. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. B. C. BROCK Attorney-At-Law MOCKSVILLE, N. C. OFFICES—Second Floor Mocksville HardwarefCo.. Building. , Practice in State and Federal courts. LESTER P. MARTIN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON OfBce Phone 71. Night Phone 120. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. IMMMlliwin MlIIIHHtIBinmtn rt, NOTICE. Having nualified as administrator nf j. L. ChafBn deceased, this is no lice to all persons indebted to his es tate to make immediate payment, and all persons holding claims a- gainst said estate are hereby notified to present them to me- on or before Mav 18th 1926, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery This May 13th.1925. B C MORRIS, Adtnr. of J. L. Chaffin, deed. Reason For Hi* Mirth. , You should always be exceedingly careful about your conduct, said Johnny’s mother, giving,him a mor- j al lecture Iwantyou never to do anything which you would be asham- j ed to have the whole world see J OU1 doing. The youngest let out a ysll of de­ light and turned a-handspring in bis exuberance. I What in the world is the matter with you? Are you craz ? demand­ ed his mother. ; No’m was the answer. I’m just ri;lad 'cause vou don’t expect me to take baths any more. _ Sympathy. An untimely frost effnctually com­ pleted the mischief done earlier bv enemies of Mr. Perkin's potatoes.. The tops of the potatoes which fca I' served as a. pasture for the pests were entirely destrayed and wi h (hem Perkin’s hopes of a crop. He was not a selfish man. however, and could think of others in the hour < f adversity In the afWrnoon he was accosted at the postoffice by a friend. Hello. Perkin*-! How’s everything up at the Corners? Trouble enough, Williams, it’s trouble enough, was the gloomy re­ sponse- Ten million potato bugs and nothing for e’m to eat. ' In an old out-of-the-way corner of a Boston graveyard stands a brown board showing the marks of age and neglect.* It\bears the«minds inscrip­ tion, “Sacri d to the me/nory of Eb n Harveywhodepartedthis life sic* d nly and unexpected y by a cow kicking him on the fifteenth of D « cember, 1853. Well done thofl j^ioil aid faithful servant ” GRIFF’S CAFE “HOME OF GOOD EATS” Next to Kurfees & Ward MOCKSVILLE - - N.C. ^ N O T I tL ~ Having qualified as administrator of Gideon Brown dee’d this is notice to all persons having claims against said estate to present them to me for Pavment on or before May the 5tli, 1926, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery and all persons owing said estate will nlease make immediate r avment of same. This Mav 2:id. 1925 E. C. MORRIS, Admr. Cideon Brown, deed. North Carolina SEASHORE EXCURSION TO Norfolk and Virginia Beach, Va. VIA Southern Railway System Thursday, June 25th, 1925. 3 Whole Days and 2 NighfS in Norfolk. ' To Norfolk To Va. Beach Round tripfarefroni Mocksville $6.75 $7,25 Special train leaves Salisbury 8:25 p. m., June 25, 1925. Arrives Norfolk 8:15 a. m., June 26th. • Tickets on saile June 25th only', limited good to relurn on all rpffiilar trails iip t.o and including train No. 3 leaving Norfolk 6:10 p m , June 28~h, 1925 • Tickets from Main Line points will be homored on regular trains to juncti >n points, connecting with Soecial Train. Tickets from branch line points will he honored «n regular trains to junction points, connecting with special train. Pullman sleeping car and day coaches. Fir>e opportunity to spend the week end at Virginia Beach, Ocean View and other resorts. Good surf bathing, boat excursions and sight seeing trips N o stop overs and no baggage will be checked. Make your sleeping car reservations early. For furlherinforinationcall 011 any Southern Railway a gent, or address: R. H. GRAHAM., D. P. A. C harlotte, N. C1 T H E NOTICE—SALE OF LAND U U ER MORTGAGE. I | By virtue of the p iwers contained in-a mortgage Deed executed to me hy Gus. Wisemgn and wife Annie Wisemanl and default having been made in paymfent of same, I will sell to the highe-it bidder for cash, at public outcry at the court house, doori- Vlocksvillp, N. C.. on Mon ; ;day July 6th; 1925 at 12 o’clock m , the property described below to satisfy said debt, secured by said mortgdgp; Bounded and described aV follows: Beginningatanoldpine stumpcorneroif W C. D-nnv and : Lige Gaither, thence East 225 feet to i a stone Lige Gaithers corner, thence I N. 177 feet to a stone Gaithers cor- ; ner, thence S 69 aegrs. E 363 feet j; tr> a stone, thence N. 24 desrs 1 W. ji 367 feet, to a stone Detinvn corner, I i thence S 87degrs -and 15 minutes' beginning, containing 4 acres more or less—see Deed from A J Lagle to Gus Wiseman registered in Book —page— Register of Deeds office of Davie county. N. C , for full descrip, tion This May 25th 1925 \ A J LAGLE1 Mortgagee.By B. H MORRIS. Atty. Building Supplies. We are better prepared Liiis year than ever before to furnish the public with all kinds of building sup­ plies at prices that cannot be duplicated. Orders are filled promptly and satis­ faction guaranteed. Con­ sult us before buying. D. H, Hendricks & Sons Mocksville, N. C. North CarolinaDavie County (1N SUPERIOR COURT E. C. Morris. Admr. of Gideon Brown, dec'd vs George Thomas and wife LulaThom- as, Ollie Davis and husband Da­ vis, and Bessie Brown, heirs at law N O IltE -S A L E OF LANDS TO PAY DEBTS AND FOR PARTITION. By virtua of an order of the Clerk of the Superior Court, made in a- bpve case. I as admr. or Giileon Brown dect will expose for sale at public i>ut<:r.v at the court house door in viocksvi'lle. N C, on Mon­ day Julj 6 1 1925 at 12 o’clock in., de lands of the deed, described and bounded as follows: on the North west bj Alsy Dillard, on' the South west b> ftriiss Sallie Kellv; on the South e;.st by A T. Grant, Sr on ithe Norh v.-est by the old Salisbury road, containing one acre more or less. Said land will-be first be sold as a wh»'<». subject to the widows ,dower, a- allotted and then in three Jots as £>•"»>» by-th6 plot of M O ljames Mirveyor—see plot and’ re' port of ( ommissioner in dower allot- Derfect description. honrfL"/ Jslx rronttlS withjbond ann Hpproved security, or ail cash at oniion of pxrehaser ThisJs valuable property, located on th® old Sails*-Siry road near the R. k' Co over,,f r id g e This cune 1st. f E £ MORRIS, Admr.; o f G id eo n B ro w n d e e d , ‘ t I If You W ant The Purest I % And Best Flour, Buy I MOCKSVILLE BEST I AND I OVER THE TOP I HORN-JOHNSTONE COMPANY MANUFACTURERS “ TrfAT QOOO KIND OF FLOUR.” M O C K jsV IL L E . . . N . C. DR. E C . CHOATE DENTISTi In Mocksville Monday, Tuesday and Wed­ nesday; over Southern Bank Trust .Co. Phone HO. In Cooleemee Thursday. Fridayand Satur­ day; over Cooiefniee Drug Store: Phones. Office. 33, Residence 8®. X-ray Diagnosis. k M o n e y b a c k w i t h o u t Q I l f H U N T ’ S G U A R A g J n f f S I S K I N D I S E A S E R E » W I ■ » I ( H o o t ’ s S a l v i t h e t r e a t m e n t o f m b 'IRliigwonBfTcttcfor _ tb& f tag «kln dlaeaaeft* 4 7 treatm ent a t our »»»* Crawford Drug Store- VOLUMN XXVI. (‘Southward the PathJ Takes Its Wajj fa n c lie ste r (N . H .) Li T h e W e st m a y n o t h | Jay, b u t it is p la in th a lim e to com e its s ta r wij Ihe zen ith , o r, to use aif nom ical m e a p h o r, w ill j it ion. C o n s id e rth e g ril jf th e g re a t w e ste rn rsj S jijA ie g litte rin g prosper! y ^ llo u tb e rn ra ilro a d s. Tl f financial life siu k s d<| nd a h a lf a sh a re , w entv-five a sh a re , ei}j ;een d o lla rs a s h a re in re .tern ro a d s w hose ice. arid* tlia t vvithiu rom fifty Io o n e I .venty d o llirs each , e a th e r p re fe rre d o n c l B ut th e s h a re s o f t f i_ 'jr|o a d s te ll stic h a d ifff •jkEven h ad th e y g one Ilijlv h a t in s y m p a th y 'v itll p jfS ia tio n a l slo w in g d o w n ,! t ad s h ru n k in p rice sotT :ss than did the sharei| ads the south have< fjfjlbetw een th e sh a re s o f \v | |3|S h e south could nave of ^ g b c h o ld th a t n e v e r have i:.“§ fir >u m ost in sta n ce s, fea|jLouisville and N ashvill ^ g b ijih as a t o n e time in ;^Bnnst remember lh a t| ' IlJtotk was doubled, th 'Xiffliolders were given ond ith each old one, and is are again nearly as I Iiat melon was aboutf ^hold the fortune Iiat run from the jtith, behold the pr<j nd> N orthw estern, onl iialiaged loads in A m l pative,' ves progress! Iiroiigh one of the u|. . . f e lo n s of the counlrv, ft^nd opulent cities, his Jtall in Ihe west, hardlv■'"■'T? . ' 1^-Jjjdivideiids, w hile Illi ‘^Pjvliich abruptly Iearel jA p rings from that C liil - ',Ils principal norther! ^'leaping toward the ’ -^liis road richer than JljShe bounty of the so :?gl>e Southeru railroad | ?Jiioii slock higher that ,.dpock not long ago anti ®rs of a stock divide !■ijf'ie Southern Pacifiq .||lie Missouri P acificga tls feet, the A tlantic ^iurstiug w ith m oney ' iOard A ir Line full of IJoon being a divided These roads that ru | Iiat lead into out ^ o u l d not be -rich if | 1 Ipot in the south and S 11ouev be but l»oney I J||liere out of our coffd stockiugs of N e i £gg?el,teted to furuish not the less Iil ;% loq u en t evidence tlj III0I1ey- M oney p r o c la im in g (he sou tll JwIien we are inourmi] f W ailroads are hard jggth eir backs against / aViug in. % i®§ v B * ou cannot £ get a | The south is rich and f it be tourists, as hiuk what we are n el " empire we of N e | jare letting slip froj lancls. asleep on our I ®Sl&l,roiie pt the W hiJ West and still most egion of A m erica, if et the country knej |d we so m uch need! 1 bills before the IeJ ore vital to our ft ery present hand rOvide for good road, ° ‘ds, dependable r l publicity, for m ouey [ 1Itelligent and devotfj Hug us back agaiu N g e o f our couutry I ' < : 198479684^830595^9^9559804591422485