DRUNK DRIVERS INCREASE RECORDER’S COURT HAS 10 CASES OF TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS Violation of the Motor Vehicle Law comprised three-fourths of the thirteen eases tried by the Re corder Tuesday, consisting of five cases of driving while drunk, one of reckless driving and four of speeding. Liquor, the only othec charge, had three cases. Judgment in the case of Linwood .Ternigan, white, which case has been continued since October 10, was absolute on bond, and the case was nol prossed with leave. Arthur Pittman, colored, who was tried on liquor charges, plead guilty. Judgment was suspended on payment of costs. The case of Lonnie Hicks, charg ed with driving while drunk and assault with deadly weapon, was continued. Herman Fisher, colored, who was tried on liquor charges, plead not guilty, but was found guilty and sentenced to sixty days in jail. Ira Baggett, white, charged with reckless driving, plead guilty. Prayer for judgment is to be con tinued on payment of costs. Jim Ilewitt, who was tried for driving while drunk, plead not guilty. He was found guilty of reckless driving, but judgment was suspended on payment of the costs. The case of C. C. Hazelwood, white, charged with driving while drunk, was continued. Elbert Lyles, white, charged with speeding, plead guilty, and was fined $5.00 and costs. The case of T. D. Lewis, charg ed with driving while drunk, was continued. Bussell DeBerry, white, charged with speeding, plead guilty and was fined $5.00 and costs. Ashby Delbridge, white, charg ed with speeding, plead guilty, and was fined $2.00 and costs. Lee Nicholson, white, charged with speeding, plead guilty, and was fined $5.00 and costs. In the case of Sam Small and Andrew Shepherd, colored, who were tried on liquor and larceny charges, Small plead guilty of drunkeness and transporting liqu or, but not guilty of larceny, while Shepherd plead guilty of reckless driving and transporting liquor, but not guilty of larceny. Small and Shepherd were both found guilty of both charges and were sentenced to five months in jail as to each to be assigned to work the roads. "When grandpa tells the kids th it he used to get up at 4 o’clock, do the chores and walk four miles to school, they will think he was “nerts” to start with. The first discovery of an aster pid was made by the astronomer Guiseppe Piazzi in 1801. . The amount of milk produced by the average cow in this coun try, is loweir than it should be, and many farmers feed their cows at a loss, government dairy spec ialists declare. BUY NOW! A Nation-wide food dis tribution company reports August sales on a unit bas is 20% ahead of August last year.__ Despite Hollywood Screen colony conviction that Mary Pickford win soon be seeking a divorce from her husband, Douglas Fairbanks, now abroad, Mary says emphatically •■Vo" Above is a recent picture of in her Hollywood home Society in "Silks” More than a dozen of New York “s ultra social set donned jockey silks last week to ride in a race for lady i jockies in the U. S. Hunts Racing Ass’n. on Long Island. Above is Mrs. Geraldine Redmond, who rode the winner in a erruellins race. CLEAN COAL There are also many new coal burning furnaces which are quite as good looking as the oil burning type', and may be equipped with automatic heat ocntrol. If your present furnace is in bad condition it will be wise to look over the new developments before spend ing money repairing the old. A few additional dollars may mean a tremendous saving in the long run. TOWN TALK Mr. and Mrs. William Boone, Jr., and daughter, were the geusts of Mrs. J. P. Welch, Sunday. R. L. Burton spent the week end in Manola with relatives. Mr. Hicks spent the week-end in Raleigh. Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor and son, of Gumberry, visited Mrs. Alice Underwood Saturday. Mrs. Charlie Baird, of Belmont, spent the wt(ek-end with Mrs. John Baird. Miss Bertha Woodruff spent the week-end in Thelma. Miss Tunie Doyle, of Brink, Va., spent the week-end with Mrs. Uynn Taylor. Misses Nita and Irene Turner spent Saturday in Weldon. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Spruill and Mrs. Nettie Morris and Edythe Morris spent several days in Ral eigh last week. Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Smith and children, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Wil liams and Horace Williams spent the welek-end with Mr. and Mis. J. T. Pearson. Mrs. Mary Smith, of Lasker, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Smith. Miss Florine Holt has returned from York, Pa., where she has been spending the last week with her sister, Mrs. Joseph Kling'. Misses Hart Sheridan, Martha Craddock and Margaret Clark spent the week end in Wadesboro, N. C., with Mrs. Robinson. Wiley Hawkins spent the week end in White Plains, Va. Liver Kick Pronounced By Users The World’s Greatest Laxative Not only has Liver Kick gained the name of a miracle prescrip tion in reducing high blood pressure, relieving rheumatic pains, regu lating sluggish or torpid livei and rectifying the very cause of con stipation but unnumbered hosts are proclaiming this prescription the greatest, easy acting laxative known to medical science. . Liver Kick contains no calomel or alcohol and is compounded in such a way that permits the drugs to reach and thoroughly cleanse the lower intestines without being absorbed. Give those lower intestines an internal bath for their first time and notice such a vital and different reaction from any medicine you have ever taken. Just put Liver Kick to the test. Sold by ROSEMARY DRUG CO. Paid Adv. 2t-ll-2 “DETECTIVES” WORK HARD ON MURDER MYSTERY Will Rogers Picks j A Story For This Spot j By WILL ROGERS 'T'HE other day Junior came horrn from school with a new bool; under his arm, so his mother asked Tgf?. IT ^P|S ft <^0E*SW6 j him where he got it. “I won it mother,” he -says, “it’s a prize.” “A prize,” iris mother rcp’.iem “and what did you wm it for'.'' “For natural history, mu. Teache-' asked us how many legs a hippo potamus has and I said five.” “But sonny,” she objected, hippopotamus has on’y four legs!1 “I know that now, mother, but u'd the rest of the kids said six and I was nearest, so I won!” (American Ks-ws Features. Iisc.l BUY NOW! Pennsylvania State De partment of Labor report ed August employment 7% ahead of July and pay rolls 15% ahead. i Mass Meeting Col. Jno. D. Langston, of Golds boro, will address a mass meeting at the High School auditorium Sunday at four P. M. All persons interested in the election Novem ber 7th are invited to attend, ol. Langston is a strong speaker.— Rev. D. M. Sharp. John Hopkins and University of Maryland, Thanksgiving Day riv als for many years, have changed the date of this year’s game to Nov. 18th. Geo. A. Sauer, Nebraska's 200-lb. fullback, is a good passer, a punt er, a line smasher and an open field star. I Extra-Fast Relief GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN BECAUSE of a unique process in manufacture, Genuine Bayer Aspirin Tablets are made to dis integrate—or dissolve—INSTANT LY you take them. Thus they start to work instantly. Start “taking hold” of even a severe headache, neuralgia, neuritis or rheumatic pain a few minutes after taking. And they provide SAFE relief— for Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN does not harm the heart. So if you want QUICK and SAFE relief see that you get the real Bayer article. Look for tne Bayer cross on every tablet as shown above and for the words GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN on every bottle or package you buy. _Member N. R. A. GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN DOES NOT HARM THE HEART The Marvel Cullom murder has brought forth a lot of weird fan tasies and queer superstitions. We suppose the Coroner’s jury would classify some of the testimony they heard as such or worse, but investigators were approached by persons, who, in all seriousness and anxious to solve the mystery, had worked out, heard of, read or dreamed of sure-fire solvents. There was the Lantern detec tive. A lantern, placed at the death spot, with a red cross on the globe, would draw the perpetra tor of the deed to the spot like a magnet. He could not stay away, once the. lantern, crossed with blood, sent its rays out over the gloomy spot where the dark deed had been committed. Similar was the Crossed Sticks trap. Take two hickory sticks, each two and a helf feet long. Cross them on the top of the bed formerly used by the victim. Leave them there five nights or six. On the next night, take them from the top of the bed and place them in the same position under the mattress. Then wait outside the house in a concealed place where you can see in the room. The mur derer will come on that last night to steal those sticks. We remember reading this one ourselves in some magazine. Take >■ a photograph of the victim’s eyes, while wide open. On the photo graph you will find the picture of the murderer. The theory here is that on the retina of the victim’s eyes is pictured the last object seen before death; in the case of murder, the murderer.. But the best detective of them all was the one who came, to the officials and asked for a piece of the murderer’s clothing. With this, he assured the officers, he wou’d identify and capture the murder er. b Rev- /. N. Demy says: ' I have found nothing in the past 20 years that can take the place of Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Ptlls. They are a sure relief for my headache.” Sufferers from Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache, Backache, Sciatica, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, Muscular Pains, Peri odic Pains, write that they have Used Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills with better results than they had oven hoped for. Countless American house wives would no more think of keeping house without Dr. Miles Anti-Pain PiTla than with out flour or sugar. Keep a pack age in your medicine cabinet and save yourself needless suffering. At Drug Stores—25c and $1JM #nrii^piLis • i