Newspapers / Polk County News and … / Dec. 10, 1915, edition 1 / Page 7
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' -.V '.'I'' -., - --.j. "-' . ; THE POLK COUNTY NEWS, TRYON, N. C. v a a A . r "A.c riinton f8; Kansas flinihenead- '.sed Peruna. Lfwell pleased r hA results. r-t need n7 medicine. 'Pl-flU-IM'' (Registered Trade Mark ul s. T. Mr. William B. Penny, 1023 Park Are., Springfield, Ohio: 4Waa troubled" with ca tarrh of the head, nose, throat and stomach t and CatarrKIlAlsAm,i ivi Peruna The Ready-to-take Where She Scores a Htt. Singleton A woman cant propel a I" - - 1 . . . Vedley wo; DUl- wnen it comes Ijrowing niuus nugs me gong Always Havt It on Hand. Wt wait until you get scalded or kjjjed because that will mean much ' . . ,Vii1a mil o fa tsarAHir 11 Cher's . for Hanford's - Balsam o Cvrrh. Always have it on hand and Cnrecared for accidents. The Bal- gnouiu eio yuiuit reuei. aov. A. fje wise gin Binues ai a compli- Ut and men pruceeas 10 iorget It. The Explanation. Aimee I wonder- how Hazel man ages lo preserve her complexion? Mary I believe she keeps it in a cool place, tightly corked,, when not in use. To Fortify the System ", Against Winter-Cold Tn,Bei? ?' GLOVE'S TASTELESS, chill TONIO make it a practice to take a number of bottles In the fall to strengthen and fortify the system against the cold Veather durin tho winter. Everyone knows the ionic effect of Quinine and Iron which this preparation con tains In a. tasteless and acceptable form. It purines and enriches the blood and builds nn the whole system. 50c. A woman's face may be her fortune, but men usually get by on their nerve ' JjkS, c m Bac Ao.n for a real Christmas Dinner Absolutely necessary to make the Holiday Feast complete ' In over a million homes throughout the country, Arbuckles Coffee-will b ab solutely necessary to make the Christmas feast complete. The women of these homes know the importance of having the right coffee for three t r IJus is the signature you tKe most popular coffee iniWrica generations, they have known that in Arbuckles' Coffee they get just the flavor every one enjoys.' If you have not tasted it lately, serve it now. At your Christmas-dinner, get all the, enjoyment good coffee gives. I r ..fcl u i 4 Save This Trade-Mark and Get a Complete Set of Oneida Community Par Plate Silverware Given Free With O, Macaroni Products SEND us your name and address on cou pon below, and we will tell you about linnr wA r crivino comolete sets of Oneida IIW V V V W w f- " 1 Pnmmtim'hr Pr Plate Silverware, crnaranteed WIAtaaAMsut - ' v mJ ten years, FREE with Skinner Products. In the meantime commence saving up the trade-mark signatures from Skinner packages. Skinner's Macaroni Products are made' from the finest durum wheat in the largest and cleanest macaroni factory in America. Combine with cheap cuts of meat, left-overs, cheese, fish, oysters, mushrooms, etc Cheaper than meat and better. Send Coupon Today 4 Wo will at nnr rhirn fin recioe d&ir Wl book and full information how to secura a beautiful set of Oneida Community Par Plate Silverware FREE. Silver ware you'll be proud of and which will make your table look fine. Allgood grocers aeil Skinner's. Cheaper by the case packages. , " " ., . Skinner Mfg. Co. Largest Macaroni Factory in America DeplB Omaha. Neb. AT SjT "r 7S. 1 'Sm: ' J"- wr ill H 1.' I. MFC COMPANY A. . UCU1. D f Omaha. Neb. Please send me full nn obtain Oneida Com- mnnitv Pr Plate Silver- war fr with Skinner's Macaroni V roducw. Addnts...... B B AGRIGULTURA L BOARD CURTAILS NO WAGES RAISED AND BUDGET FOR NEXT; SIX MONTHS IS REDUCED. LATE STATE CAPITOL NEWS Review of the Latest News Gathered Around the State Capitol That Will Be of Interest to Our Reader Over North Carolina. Raleigh. The State Board of Agriculture de termined o na general policy of re trenchment for the next six-months period in view of the falling off in revenue from decreased sale of fer tilizer tags, the budget for the next six months adopted being $107,770 compared with $108,455 for the six months period beginning December, 1914. The board refused -to raise any salaries at this time and all the work was cut as. miich as it would possibly bear. It was ordered that the size of the department bulletin be cut to not exceeding 16 pages, There was a cut in the appropriation tot farmers' in stitutes, the hope of the , members of the board being that the state will come into a share of the National Lever fund that will , bring the work among the farmers up to at least the standard and volume that has prevail ed the past year. They also count on the additional co-operative work, especially with canning clubs that the National Department of Agriculture is giving the state to make up for the cut in the institute work. During the session an order was made directing the Commissioner of Agriculture to increase the fire insur ance carried on the department build ings and contents from $20,000 to $60, 000. This is a precaution deemed to be wise pn account of the $60,000 loss the state sustained in the burn ing of state property stored in the Uzzell printing house November 6. The board made final disposition of the question of premium money in volved in exhibits at the last State Fair. It was decided to allow the $200 premium for tobacco 'exhibits; but not to allow nearly $500 of premiums offered for other exhibits, the reason being that the exhibitors and fair management failed to com ply with the new regulations as adopt ed at the June meeting of the board. , The board deferred until the June 1916, meeting acting on a resolution by Mr. Shuford of Hickory stipulating that after 1916 the budgets for de partmental work shall be annual in stead of. semi-annual as at present. The board adopted the resolution ordered by Clarence Poe reommend lng that 'theTlegislature repeal grad ually the North Carolina crop lien law. . Washington Emplos 468 Tar Heels. Special from, Washington. North Carolina has 468 people employed in governmental departments in Wash ington, according to information available at the office of Senator Sim mons. They are distributed as fol lows : 4 State department, 2; treasury de partment, 85; war department, 31; department of justice, 7; postoffice department, 40; navy department, 24; department of the interior, 72; de partment of agriculture, 49; depart ment of commercce, 17; department of labor, 6; intersatte commerce commission, 12; civil service," 6; Smithsonian Institute, 2; government printing office, 50; government of the District of Columbia, 64; state-, war, navy building 1; library of con gress, 3. Selling Christmas Seals Fast. Greensboro has already sold over 60,000 Red Cross Christmas seals and has so far set the pace for the sale of the seals in other towns her size By Thanksgiving she had not only sold 60,000, but had placed 30,000 more where they will most likely be sold before Christmas, and had given her order for 50,000 more seals, increas ing her original order of 100,000 to 150,000. Match Law Will Soon Be Effective. Attention of the people of the state Is being directed by Commissioner of Insurance James R. Young to the fact that the new Uniform Match law passr ed by the 1915 legislature . , is to be come effective January 1, and will materially change the type of matches that can be sold or used in this state, eliminating entirely the so-called parlor matches that are single-dipped. Also1 it stops the sale of the white phosphorus double-dip, strike anywhere matches unless certain tepts are withstood. Stacy Files Resignation. J W. P. Stacy of Wilmington, who was appointed by the governor as superior court judge for the eightu Judicial district to succeed Judge Rountree, January 1, filed with the governor his resignation as a member of the board of trustees of the Negro Agricultural and Technical College at Greensboro and as the New Hanover representative in the lower house of the General Assembly. The governor will probably make r no appointment of a successor to Mr. Stacy as mer her of the legislature. State Quart Law Constitutional. The noted whiskey case of G. M. Glenn vs. Southern Express Company, testing the North Carolina quart law, was one of 21 appeals decided in a batch of " opinions delivered by the Supreme Court. Judge W. R. Allen writes the opinion for the court and fully upholds the state law, affirming the judgment of Judge Daniels in the Wake superior court declining to grant the mandamus sought- to compei the express company to receive at Rich mond and deliver in Raleigh a quart of whiskey oftener than once in 15 days and in quantities of one gallon where the package is specified for "personal and private use." The orders on which the test suits were based were placed with H. Clarke & Sons, Richmond, last April. The suits were for writ of mandamus to compel transportation on the ground that the North Carolina quart law is. unconstitutional, recovery of damages for failure to deliver being included in the first case. Annual Inspection Military Companies The annual inspection of the' com panies composing the North Carolina National Guard will take place early in the new year, beginning about the middle of January to be completed by April 1. The itinerary is being ar ranged with a view to having Col. Thomas Stringfield of Waynesville, inspector of small arms for the North Carolina Guard, to take part in the inspection of each of the companies. The infantry companies will be in spected for the war department by Major H. J. Hurt, inspector-instructor for North Carolina; the coast ar tillery inspections by Capt. Alexander Craig; the naval reserves by Lieuten ant E. Hollis Conner; the sanitary troops by Major Henry Page and the medical corps by Col. Creeds F. Cox. The itinerary' has been "roughed out" by Adjutant General Young here and forwarded to Colonel Strinfield for his approval. .-; State Board Inspects Hog Plant. A special committee from the state Board of Agriculture remained over in Raleigh for a special visitation to an inspection of the hog cholera serum plant, which the Department of Agri culture .has iestablished two iniles south of the city. The committee in cluded Major Graham Commissioner of Agriculture, C. C. Wright of Wilkes county, William Bledsoe of Gale, A. Cannon of Horseshoe and R. W. Scott of Haw River .members of the board. The serum plant is under the su pervision of Assistant Veternarian Flow and there are constantly on hand and under treatment from 400 to 500 hogs. During the past year a series of concrete stalls have been built into which the inoulated hogs are driven for the purpose of obtain ing the serum from them. Praises Greensboro Mill Village. Dr. C. W. Stiles, government health expert, stationed at Wilmington, was a caller at the offices of the State Board of Health and talked enthusi astically of improved sanitary condi tions at the mill village of the Cone Manufacturing Company at Greens boro. Doctor Stiles has just spent some time inspecting conditions there, and declared that Greensboro can now boast of this settlement as about the most sanitary mill village to be found in the state. He doubts if Its equal in sanitary conditions can be found in the entire South. Will Provide New Equipment. Adjt. Gen. Laurence W. Young spent the day in Wilson to assist in the adjustment of the fire losses in the burning of the armory and equip ment of Company K, Second Regi ment. Geenral Young will obtain from the war department a release from obligation on the part of the state for the value of the burned equipment and provide a new issue for the equipment of the company at once. 4 Second Reprieve For Willie Bryce. Governor Craig prepared and sent to the State Prison the official reprieve for Wylie Brice, of Mecklenburg county, who was to have paid the death penalty in the electric chair last Friday for criminal assault, his victim- having been the six-year-pld child of a well-known Mecklenburg county physician. This is the second reprieve the governor has granted in this case. The reprieve fixes the next date for electrocution on Friday, January 5. Barnes May Succeed Carr. While the utmost secrecy is being observed by those connected with the Department of Agriculture, a pretty safe' prediction is that EL W. Barnes, of Lucama will succeed Elias Carr, who retires January 1. Mr. Barnes is a former member of the Board ot Agriculture, and is familiar with the duties that devolve on the secretary to the, board, both in the officce de tail and the fork as purchasing agent for the department. It is un derstood that it is to Mr. Barnes that the commisioner has offered the place. "Blue Sky" Men Are Tried. The State Department of Insurance was officially notified that in the Ala-1 mance Superior Court J. C. Tibbitt had been: discharged enj the payment of costs and Wallace Agery fined $100 and costs in connection with the charges against them of violating the North Carolina "Blue Sky" law in Offering for sale, without having stat license, stock in tne Southern Fig Or chard Company of t Reidsville, G: Wallace Agery appealed to the S preme Court. The department st ha indictments against these xne. l-NB et Ccateatj 15 Raid Dracfcn ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT. AVegc tabic Pre pamlioaibrAS similatingthc food nd Begula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of MM Promotes Digestfon,Cheerful hess and Rest.Contains neither Opitim,Morphine norNiiicraL JcfouDcsbrmpfitas Ciafifitd Sugary 1 HWryraiTrw)r .4 ,ftpeHect Remedy I5rEoiisliT0 't " r a L ix. " juon. oonr ojomacituiarrnoca norms, revensnuess wul. Loss of Sleep foe-Simile SigtmturTjBf l- m r ! The Centaur coMnut? JEW YORK aT -11 Por Infanta and Childreiu ' UBMKiaHBMaaaMBaaaBiBBaHM Mothers Know 1M Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of r In Use Exact Copy of Wrapper For Over Thirty Years KB TM CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK OfTT. 0) WE"w Try this easy way to clear yowir skora with A Bathe your face for several minutes with Resinol Soap and warm water, working the creamy lather into the skin gently with the finger-tips. Then wash off with more Resinol Soap and warm water, finishing with a dash of Clear cold water to close the pores. Do this once or twice a day, and you will be astonished how quickly the healing, antiseptic Resinol medication soothes and cleanses the pores, re moves pimples and blackheads, and leaves the. complexion clear, fresh and velvety. If the skin is in bad condition through neglect or an unwise use of cosmetics, apply a little Resinol Oint ment and let it remain on ten min utes before the final washing with Resinol Soap. Resinol Soap U not artifiriallr colored, its rick brown beinntireiy due to the Resinol balsam it contains. Sold by all druggists and dealers im toilet goods. For free sample cake and trial ot Resinol Ointment, write Resinol Chemical Cau. Baltimore. Md. Physicians have prescribed Resinor Ointment for over twenty years tn the treatment of skin and scalp affections. A Real Test. "When a young man proposes you should always be careful and test his love," continued the chaperon. "But I go one better, auntie," twit-, tered the pretty Bayswater girl. "Do you see this ttnybottle?" "Yes. Does it contain perfume?" "No; it contains acid. I test the en gagement ring." From the Philadel phia Public Ledger. Lady Uses Tetterlne for Eczema. Edgar Springs, Mo., July 15. 1908. The Eczema on my faae usually appears In the spring and your salve always helps it. I Use no other preparation but Tet terine and find It superior to any on the market. Respectfully, Elsie M. Judvlne. Tetterlne cures Eczema, Tetter, Itching" Piles, Ring- Worm and every form of Scalp and Skin Disease. Tettertne 60c; Tetterlne Soap 25c. At druggists or by mall direct from The Shup trine CoJSa vannah, Ga. yf With every mall order for Tetterlne we five a box of Shuptrine's 10c Liver Pills free. Adr. Rah! Rah!! Rah!!! "What did you punch the half back of the opposing eleven for," asked the captain of the football team. "Because," explained the fullback, "punched halves don't pass." It advertises itself Hanford's Bal sam. Adv. 1 Some men think a luxurious stand of whiskers adds to their dignity. Taught by Mail.. Sally Gay Well! Well! Do yo think that is the way to kiss a girt? Young GumpThat is what the cor respondence school says about it, any how. Kansas City Star. Always keep Hanford's Balsam cm hand for accidents. It's good insur ance. Adv. The entertainer who expects to get a laugh does not tell the funny story in the presence of his wife. Write OTurliie Eye Remedy oM C3kleass for illustrated Book of the Eye Free. . - Every man is a promoter of his own interests. m - 1 oaj REBpry tub It ca 1 throat, cheater partial ed and k im aLaurtad tfif iHn stnrs rniisV map pndjeeJds ptoaptrjr." R neves praiainnma bytadiaa. In coMMtico ad ,1cm. Foe sale by aO daalas im Zfe.50caadSI.OUl Write I WaMoJa wwaiaav 'Demand Cowsas laeasaa fmrsaiiiai iinnniliatbai COWAN flHieu eo. Concord, N. C. WHAT IS URIC ACID? THE CAUSE OF BACKACHE, RHEUMATISM, LUMBAGO Ever since the diseovery of uric acid In the blood by Scheele, in 1775, and the bad effect it had upon the body, scientists and physicians have striven to rid the tissues and the blood of this poison. - Because of its over abundance in the system it causes backache, pains here and there, rheu matism, gout, gravel, Neuralgia and sciatica. It was Dr. Pierce who dis covered a new agent, called "Anuric," which will throw out and completely eradicate this uric acid from the sys tem. "Anuric" is 37 times more pc tent than lithiay and consequently yov need no longer fear muscular or ar Jcular rheumatism or gout, or many other diseases which are dependent on an accumulation of critf acid within the body. Send to Dr. Pierce of ti j Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., for a pamphlet on "Anuric," or send 10 cents for a trial package of "Anuric" Tablets. If you feel that tired, worri-out feel ing, backache, neuralgia, or if your sleep is disturbed by too frequent urination, go to your best store and ask for Dr. Pierce's "Anuric. Dr. Pierce's reputation is back of this medicine and you know that hi "Pleasant Pellets" for the liver and his "Favorite Prescription" for the Ills c women have had a splendid reputatl for the past fifty years. - -
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 10, 1915, edition 1
7
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