IS furnish- authorities sure their Winfield Diego Ex> the mat- the crews ey are in /ith Mr. iured that an Diego t time to tingcere- with the >osition in nt Opens :ress. rt. l~The ation ex- iT opened ied labor officials which in- both of pening of housands was the days ex- 5 to be ex- 1 grounds 10 streets d by hun* or unions in Knox- parade >wn town grounds. Wilson, sage ex- i and ex- thy with ly opened message reef' the tion city had been I followed resident's )oper and ivelcorned and visit- ty. Both lucationai ition. y Wright ded. He ' the un- motion of resources be Pett^ew w e have recently added a com» plete line of tin ware to our Grocery Store and can supply your Kitchen Needs wi\h ware as well as Nice Fresh Groceries. We are looking for country pro duce and hope to find it by paying the highest cash market prices. Phone No. 380 and your needs will be promptly supplied. Pettigrew & in VIC £111 CrC(EFiIS Front St. Burlington, N. C. i $150 Pianos S Look “ShoAry” and for a few months sound pretty well--then your expense begins and the Piano Tuners have to call very often. We Furnish $150. $175 and $200 pianos if you want them, but don’t advise you to buy them. Our store is full ot good pianos, organs and machines now. Get prices and terms Ellis Mch. & Music Co. Burlington, North Carolina. 183 acre red land farm at Me bane, N. C,, with good 5 room resideiice. t^6,500 00. 100 ac"e farm 2 milps r^ou^h ''f Mebane, N. C., on Macadnm rof'd, $2500.':0, 41 acre farm 3 milets s nithof Mebane, N. C,, $1300 00. 201 acre farm 2 miles west of Mebane, N. C., $4000.00. 206 acre farm 3 miles of Saxapahaw, N. C., $2000.00. 80 acre farm at Glen Raven, N. C , $4000,500. 75 acre farm 2 miles east of Mebane, N, C., $1000.00. All the above farms are well located on good roads. Central Loan & Trust Co. Burlingt on W. W. Brown, Manager North Carolina H[IIEVEII KOO NEI k mm. TOl TAKE GIIIIVE Atlanta Ga.- While city detectives Monday night and Tuesday morning searched the city for Miss Clara Biell Griffin, aged twenty-three, of 265 North Ashby street, she lay in the Grady hospital recover ing from an illness which had suddenly attacked her. Her whereab6uts was discover ed shortly before noon after members of her family and the police had begun a systematic search of the city. Miss Griffin was an employe of the National Pencil factory and the coinciden ce led to the beginning of another investigation of the building. City Detective John Black late Tuesday morning, together with Louis A. Griffin, a brother, were ready to start a tour of the factory when attaches of the Grady hospital, who had heard of the disappearance, telephon ed that she was in that institu tion. Although her mother and bro thers were greatly agitated over her absence, the girl considered their hunt a joke when Louis Griffin talked to her at the hos pital early Tuesdsy afternoon. ‘‘It was nothing, she laugh ed. I just didn’t want to wory mother, sol didn’t tell her I was sick. ’ ’ Miss Griffin, who is the dau ghter of Mrs. Alice Griffin, left her home at 6:20 o’clock Monday mooning, telling her family that she was going to work as usual. She had been employed in the pencil factory since July 10. When she did not reappear in the evening, as usual, her brother went to the pencil factory. He was told that it Had been closed all day, Monday being a holiday. He immediately notified the pol ice. A preliminary search was made by plain clothes men Mon day night. This was continued by the detectives Tuesday morn ing. Mrs. Griffin was deeply petur- bed over her daughter’s absence. She feared a repetian of the Mary Phagan murder. When told that her doughter had been fonnd in the hospital she pictured an attempt at suicide recalLng the death of her sister by this means last fail. She was soon reassured that her daughter’s illness wasnot serious, however. At the hospital the[girl told her brothev that she had worked at the pencil factory until 10 o’clock Monday morning and then feel ing faint had gone to the hospi tal on a street car. This is in contravention to the statement of Manager N. V, Darley, of the factory, who declared that the plant had i6e«n closed all of Monday. . Hot Springs, Ark., Sept 6.- Fire which started in a negro's cabin at 3:30 o’clock this a^er- noon is slowly dying out at the foot of West Mountain, the southern extremity of Hot Springs, at midnight after re ducting to a smoldering mass of wreckage an area more than a mile in length and from seven to ten blocks wide in the eastern section of the city. An accurate statement of the monetary loss is not possidle tonight but it is roughly estimated at gl0,000,- 0)0. Governor Hayes arrived in Hot Springblate tonightand will probably order a military patrol of the burned district tomorrow morning. United States troops also are expected from Little Rock to add to the guard on the military reservation. In the path of the flames were manufacturing establishments, hotels a number of the more pre tentious residences and public buildings. All were destroyed. It is estimated that 2,000 persons are homeless. So far as can be ascertained there were no fatalities and the few that were hurt suffered only minor injuries. Among the buildings destroy ed were the city’s light, water and power plants, the county courthouse, the high school build ing the park Moody and Princes hotels, St. Louis Iron Mountain and Southern railroad station and shops and the Ozark sanitari um. Smaller buildings by the hundred were reduced to ashes. But few of those whose homes were burned saved any of their belonging, and guests of the hotels gave little heed to their valuables and luggage in their effects to escape with their lives. The fire orginated within se veral blocks of the United States army and navy hospital and took a south and east couise. Standard Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic is Equally >^luablc as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver, Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the whole System, For Grown Peojplc and Children* You know wh»t yon are taking when you take Grove'* Tasteless chill Tonic s ^ e formula is printed 6a every label sho'mng that it ciotttalhs the Well known QIC pro{Mrti«s of QUININB' and IBlON. It is strong as the strongest bjitter wnieand is in Tasteless Form. It baa io equal for Mfalariai, thilla 'and F^ver, wea^su, ^aeral debU% aiid tos»‘x)fiiippitite;. Gi^ilife td Nur^iAg ©«ert;and P»ie,> Sickly Childre«.:) Removes ! V,i«rilhDUt ]pnTg;ing. ikadil^iWfispitits, ;Aironsea' (the? :t»/ action, Sure Appetizer^ ■ A?jC,oiap^te .j^i^rengtheiner. 0* tmhdut it. (^ranteed bjr your Druggist;. We mean it. SOc. Seeks Job and Finds Lose Husband Instead. Mrs. M. B. Wallace, of Ander son, South Carolina found her husband who she says, deserted her several weeks ago, by a pec uliar co-incidence Tuesday morn ing. As a result Wallace is lock ed in the police station on a charge of desertion. He prob ably will be arranged before City Recorder Pro Tem Prestom Wed nesday afternoon. Mrs. Wallace had last seen her husband in Anderson last August she told the police. He had left her and their two children to go to Lindale to seek work. She never heard froni him again, she said and finally she came to At lanta where she intended to find employment and support her children, Wallace, it has been disclosed went to Lindale but remained there only a short time. He then came to Atlanta with the inten tion of getting a job here. Tuesday morning both went to the Fulton Bag and Cotton milis. The husband arrived a few minutes before his wife. It is required of persons who apply for positions at the mill that they sign their name on a register before they enter the mill. As Mrs. Wallace was affixing her name to the book she discovered that of her husband on the line above. She immediately communicat ed with the police. Probation Officer Hollingsworth was sent to the mills. He arrested Wal lace at the g;ate Choice Of Several Sites For Hospital. Raleigh, N. C., Sept. 7.—The chamber of commerce Tuesday night will offer the United States government the choice of five sites for the location of a proposed hospital for the treatment and study of pellagra in this section. Several citizens have come for ward with locations and these will be submitted through the business organization here. Jno. C. Dewey is president Not until the State Supreme court determines whether or not the city had the right to sell its sidewalks will the sale of the market hoii|j^. property to the Tucker estate be confirmed. Theresia little doubt of the city's right to sell sidewalks and the case that will be carried up will be for the purpose of forever securing the title. It is expect ed that work will begin on the new market house site by the last of the month. Neither President Finley nor Vice President Andrews of the Southern railway will be able to attend the hearing here tomor row for the purpose of investi gating the sale and dismember ment of the old Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley railroad. The president of the Coast Line will be on hand, however Piesident Finley will be unable to attend and Colonel Andrews is indis- j)Qsed. For this reason it is ex- petted that the first session will be short. One of the largest fall dockets to confront the officers has been placed on the docket in Wayne county for this week 125 cases being enrolled. All these will have to be disposed of in a single week. Included in the number are two murder cases. The re mainder run the gamut from larceny to assault with deady weapon. Football practice has started at the A. & M. College and the prospects are bright for the best team in six years. : Idailha $10 f OB 86-pound Feather ;Bed and receiva 8-dou '3 pair pilfows frme. Freight preps, d. f^theira. best ti«ski»i8:, d^tisfaetida, ■ ■jftftdjf fits DR. ANTISEPTIC orc.asur- iricaf that reSlevi* pai» aad at (lie came time. Mot a Ikilment. 29c. SOc. $1.00 Milk Cow Without a Calf. The unusual case of a cow which gives a plentiful supply of milk, although she has never had a calf, is reported by Mr. W. E. Benbow, of Oak Ridge, who is experienced in the industry of dairying. He says that he owns such a cow and that she is at the present time giving a gallon of rich ipilk daily. Mr. Benbow aacri bes the remarkaible result to tbe pastunng of t|^e young cow v^th aciaif. The poster mother bteing wth the (^if of the%bility to f&iBi itE the c&piousistr^me tiiat net a new The animaTis a year old.—Green- * sbK)ro Rccord. We have a farm containing 83 acres, part of this adjoining the corporate limits of Burlington; N. C., with 9 room dwelling, goad outhouses, well watered, plenty of wood, fine orchard, in every way a desirable farm. Will sell on easy tenns. Alamance Insurance and Real Estate Co. W. E. SHARPE, Mgr. We buy and sell Real Estate. We write insurance in Strong Campanies, We lend money on real estate. We buy and sell stocksand bonds. Some Good Farms and City Property For Sale. LET US SHOW YOU. Strong Company. Home People. *‘THE SQUARE DEAL V Our Motto , N. C. Offices J. P. Montgomery. Pres. W R Sellars V-Pres. G C. FonTHte, Sec-Treas. DIRECTORS. J. A. Barnwell M. A, Coble C. V. Sellars A. A. Apple L. Banks WllliansoB J. P. Montgomery W. P. UwntBcs C. C. Fmllle W. A. Hamaday W. R. Sellars J. A. Lewe. One Night Only Wednesday, Sept. 24th, M '/ // > i J "4,/^ The Musical Comedy sensation of the age. Filled full of pretty girls, catchy songs, novel dancfs. One big laugh whichcontinuegj for two and one half hours. Seats bn sale Mon day morning 10 o’clock at Freemans. MAKERS bo You Waste Time Dissolving Hafd Lye? DON’TI Potmh and a Cnn «fl BUnt lr« €oini»ln>cL Save ttoat flm« i*y a»lnK Bed, nevB PVjLVKKIZKO Xy*. It dissolve* at onca in cold water. Add sir pounds of mm Kod in minuted you bars twelve poundsof the beet hard yoa ever mw. Make your soap and be done la le«* niD« than ft takea to diaaoWe old-atyte You save just an much time mjJttog! IwJIfd ■oap, it you prefer it, because BED OBVIL I,ye diasolrea instantly. DEVIL Pulverized Lye WM. SCIHPLD DvpMtment 80, St. UiMbt Mo. •hmlMrnU, isnrMmi