! Pains, H
Dizzy n
Spells g
Mrs.O.P.Cartwrlght,ol
Whit well, Tenn., writes: II
"I suffered with bearing- 111
down pains, i . The HI
dizzy spells got so bad EO
that when 1 would start to 1U
walk, 1 would Just pretty 111
nearly fall. Was very ill
much run-down. 1 told 111
my husband I thought HI
Cardul would help me. .. EQ
He got me a bottle... It H2|
helped me so much that lil
he got me another bottle. 11l
1 got S whole lot better. 11l
The dizzy spells and the HI
bearing-down pains ... kZM
left me entirely." Kj
II you are weak and 'lll
run-down, or suffer from I
womanly pains,
TAKE
CARD 111
The Woman's Tonic
• Yon can feel safe In giv
ing Cardul a thorough I
| trial It is composed ol
J mild, vegetable, medici- J
t nal ingredients, recog- T
* nlzed by standard medi- J
I cal books for many years, ' I
as being of great value in I
the troubles from which j
J only women suffer. The J
t enthusiastic praise of the T
thousands of women who J
have been helped by ' I
Cardul In its past 40 years
of successful use should t
J assure you ol lis genuine J
t merit, and convince you t
that it would be worth J
your while to try this j
B medicine for your trou- I
■ bto. MOVU...U.
K Try Cardni j
'LADY ORANMORE AND BROWNE
Net content with partial service In
UM time of bar country's naad, Lady
lOranmero and Browns, shewn hsro In
| the garb of a nuroo, la now devoting
every moment to the men wounded en
I' . {the battlefield. She le one of the
roungeet of the peereeeee of Oroat
I Britain. '
? i 1.500.000 MEN UNDER MMS
HAS ARMY OF SUBSTANTIAL SIZE
I NOW IN FRANCE READY
TO FIGHT.
Anawore Crltleo of War Department
and Doolaroe Such an Army Never
) Waa Raited, Equipped and Trained
So Quickly.
Washington —Rvery phase of the
war department's preparations for
battle against Germany waa outlined
|aad defended by Secretary Baker be
fore the aaaale military committee.
Ho answered thoee who have qjltl-
Wsed the department during tho com
kalttee's Investigation with the aaser-
Un that no auch army at that BOW
{Wider tho American Sag ever had been
raised, equipped or trained so quick
ty, aad that never before had auch
provision been made for the comfort
' and health of aa army.
The aacrotary read an exhauetlve
prepared statement when he took the
r stand and waa not Interrupted until
tt waa concluded. Then queatlons he
Ran to fly (rom ovary tide of the com
ttlttee table, launching a croee-eiam
(nation that waa not concluded at ad
: jfournment.
, Chairman Chamberlain and other
committeemen wanted to know par
ticularly about delays In furnishing
Machine guns and -ifles. and much
attention waa devoted to the army's
supply purchasing system. Mr. Baker
K . Admitted that there had been aome
fi anistakes and dalayt. but declared that
| all fighting men In Prance were ade
quately equipped and armed and that
(all sent over would be. He took full
responsibility for delay In . approving
A machine gun holding that the
value of the Browning gun now devel
oped was worth It. He also said th.>
jj . superior weapon obtained by having
the British Knfisld rifle rechsmbered
£' fbr Americas ammunition compen
sated for the delay there
Members of the committee were
£ jfrank in their disapproval of the se
!->• icrst parchaaing system of the depart-
They did not shake Mr. Bv
i»r's support of It. however.
SOUTHERN PLANTS *
«LL CLOSED DOWI
BUSINESS MEN OF SOUTH 08.
BERVE FUEL ORDER FOR
FIVE DAYS.
NO VIOUIHS REPORTED
Cotton Interest* Are Hardest Hit
With Tobacco Following—lndustrial
Cantor at Birmingham Only SNghtly
Affected.
Atlanta, da.—Hundreds of Industrial
plants In the south wore closed for
• live-day period under the fuel re
striction order and thousands of op
eratives were Idle. No reports of vio
lations of the order had been received
and surface Indications were that
both manufacturers and workers view
ed the situation philosophically.
The South Carolina house of repre
sentatives. In session at Columbia,
voted down by an overwhelming ma
jority a resolution asking Kuel Admin
istrator Garfield to rescind the order
and the Atlanta chamber of commerce
adopted a resolution approving it. At
Roanoke, business men In mass meet
ing voted to observe the order, while
the Norfolk, (Virginia) Retail Mer
chants' Association asked merchants
to close all stores on Mondays during
the ten-week period.
The tobacco interests probably wns
the largest outside of cotton to be af
fected by the order. Cigar factories
in Florida. Virginia and other states
were closed an werer tobacco and
cigarette plants In Virginia, North
Carolina and other sections.
The Industrial center at Birming
ham was only slightly affected, as most
of the steel plants there are engaged
on government work and at the coal
mines e*tra effort* were made to get
out coal. Shipyards, Including the
navy yards at Norfolk. Charleston and
New Orleans and th* Newport New*
plant, were In full operation.
Richmond apparently had the great
est army of Idle worker* of any city In
the south, thirty thousand having been
reported out of work there. Norfolk
and vicinity reported from 10,000 to
12,000 New Orleans *ome 16,;000; Ma
con. Ga., 7,000; Memphl* from 6,000
to 7,000; Chattanooga from 16,000 to
20,000; Charleston, 8. C„ about 2,600,
and Knoxvllle, about 3,600.
In the Roanoke district whore about
1,000 workera were Idle, the Norfolk A
Western railway offered to employ
hundred* of pernona In ropalr and
other work on Ita llnea and In It* shops
during the daya of Inactivity, lnclud-
Ing Monday*.
RAILROAD WAGE COMMISSION '
WANTED BY DIRECTOR McADOO.
Washington.—Director General Mc-
Adoo announced appointment of a rail
road wuge commission of four public
men to analyse and recommend action
on all wage and labor questions pend
ing before the government railroad ad
ministration, Including tho railway
brotherhood*' demanda.
At tho ssme time the director gen
eral put Into effect a new system of
government railroad administration by
dividing the country Into three oper
ating reglona, south, east and west,
and placed a railroad executive at the
head of each as his representative.
The wage comtnlaalon conalsts of
Secretary Lane, Interstate Commerce
Commissioner C. C. McChord, Judge J.
Harry Covington, chief Justice of the
District of Columbia supreme court,
and William R. Wlllcox. who nnnounc.
Ed his resignation as chairman of the
republican national c6mmlttee.
In charge of the eastern railroads,
Mr. MeAdoo retained A. H. Smith,
president of the Now York Central,
who baa acted aa aaalatant to the di
rector general, with headquartersr In
New York. R. H. Alshton, president
of the Chicago A Northwestern, was
appointed regional director for terri
tory weat of the Mississippi with heal
quarters at Chlrago. Southwestern
roads were assigned to C. H. Mark
ham, president of the Illinois Central,
with headquarters at Atlanta.
The eastern division consists of ter
ritory north of the Ohio and Potoma;
livers, "and east of Lake Michigan
and the Indiana llllnele atate line also
those railroada In llllnola extending
Into that state from points east of the
Indiana-Illinois state line; also the
Chesapeake A Ohio, the Norfolk A
Weatern and the Virginia railways."
The southern district la defined is
Including "all railroads In that por
tion of the United States south of the
Ohio and Potomac rivers and east o?
the Mlaalaslppl river, except the Cheaa
peake A Ohio, Norfolk A Weetern and
'the Virginian railways
FREDERICK SPOEMANN
AND ASCH LIBERATED.
Baltimore.—Frederick H. C. Spoer
mann. brother of Walter Spoermann,
alleged German apy. held In Jail here,
and Marina Aach. both of whom were
arrested In Baltimore shortly aftir
Walter Spoermann waa taken near
Newport Newt. Va.{ were liberated.
Aaalatant United States District Attor
ney I-ntane aald the two men had been
arreatei '.n order to get certain Infor
mation and that inch Information had
been obtained.
STONE'S SPEECH IN THE
SENATE STARTS A BLAZE
Washington. Smouldering Ores ol
partisan feeling were eet ablaze la the
senate by Senator Stone, veteran Dem
ocrat. with a long prepared speech
accusing Republicans of playing poll
tlca In their criticisms of the govern
ment's conduct of the war.
There had been plenty of advance
notice of the speed, which adminis
tration leaden sought vainly to Induce
the Missouri senator to abandon or
pot t pone.
F —.
TWO N. C. SOLDIERS DIE
OF DISEASE IN FRANCE
Washington Sixteen deaths among
members of the American expedition
ary force, 16 due to nautral causes
and one from drowning, were report
ed by Perehing. among them were:
Private Joseph Bonner, engineers.
January 10, pneumonia. Mother. Ba-a
Bonner, Box No. 6, Ransomvllle. N. C.
Private Roland F. McArtliur, ma
rines. January I*. cerebro spinal men
ingitis. Mother, Mrs. Irene Jetale Me-
Arthar, Carthage, N. C.
010 NOHTE NEWS
Brlof Not** Covering Happening* I*
This Stats* That Ar* of lnt*r«*t to
All th* Peopla.
The partial destruction of a building
occupied by a negro hotel and the rip
ping off of the roof of a store build
ing were the worst effects wrought by
the windstorm at Fayottevtlle.
The lom to Lenoir county farmer*
from hog cholera during 1917 was be
tween 1160,000 and f 200,000, according
to authoritative estimates made here.
The loss wa* probably the greatest In
five years.
Garland Daniel, secretary of the
Central Carolina Fair association, was
unanimously elected by the board of
directors of the Greensboro chambpr
of commerce as secretary of that or
ganization.
The Graham Red Cross chapter has
been very busy for the past several
weeks. Ninety-four sets of knitted ar
ticles were shipped sevral weeks ago,
and 36 sets have been shipped this
week, making a total of 130 sets.
Mrs. Mary J. Hoover was accident
ally burned to death at Monroe. Hho
was stirring the fire when the house
robe she wore caught fire, and she
was badly burned before help could
reach her, dying about live hour*
later.
Damaged by floating ice the six mile
bridge of the Norfolk Southern rail
road across Albemarle sound has been
decalred unsafe and trains between
Raleigh and Norfolk are operated no
farther than Mackey's ferry, a point
on the sound. It is said that it will
take about two weeks to repair the
bridge
Old commissary building of the Wil
son Lumber company, at Lenoir, oc
cupied by the Piedmont Store com
pany, was partly destroyed by Are. It
Is not known how the fire originated,
but It Is supposed It caught from a
defective fluo' or else was caused by
rat*.
The contract has been let for the
enlargement of the plant of the North
State Knitting mills at Durham and
the work will be well under way in a
few days, The plant will be tripled In
size, so far as floor space Is concerned,
and the additional space will give
room for five times the knitting mn
chlnery that Is now In use. This will
give employment to about 200 more
people.
A Porkleßß Saturday and one wheat
loss and one meatless meal each day
of the week are announced by State
Food Administrator Henry A. Page a*
a part of the- more Intensive program
that must be followed If the American
people are not to fall down on the!r
Job of supplying the fighting forces of
our Allies with foodstuffs. In addition
to the voluntary co-operation, the Food
Administration proposes to require all
bakers to use 25 per cent as much of
other cereals as of wheat.
January 30th has been set aside as
National "Tag-Your-Shovel Day" by
the United Stales Fuel Administration.
On that day. school children will tie
tags bearing Instructions for coal sav
ing to every shovel in the country, the
purpose of this being to remind each
man, woman and child who uses a
coal shovel that every ahovelful of
coal saved means Just so much addl
tlqnul power and health and support
for the American soldier and sailor on
the filing line.
A base hospital to be designated as
No. 65, and served by North Carolina
physicians and nurses, provided the
latter are available, the hospital force
to include 600 people or more, Is now
being organized by Dr. J. W. Long of
Oreenaboro, chairman of the state
committee. Council of National De
fense, medical section, for North Caro
lina. Dr. Ix>ng Is authorized by the
Federal Government to equip a base
hopsltal at once to contain 1,000 beds
and to be served by thirty physicians
and surgeons. 100 nursea and 260 or
derliea. The hospital will be located
"somewhere in France" and is expect
ed to bo ready for use by May or June.
William C. Llneberry, an aged citi
zen of BuYllngton, was found dead In
hla chair, he having died some time'
during the night before.
Capt. Edward R. Blanton, quarter
master corps, national guard, who
comes from Raleigh, N. C., and who
has acted aa assistant constructing
quartermaster at Camp Sevier since
July 19 last, has been relieved of du'y
there and ordered to report to Wash
ington for assignment to additional
constructing work. Captain Blanton
has already left.
Julius Whaley. a Lesolr county
farmer, la exhibiting the talon of an
eagle shot at his place near Klnston
one day laat week. The bird had kill
ed and waa devouring a two-month*-
old pig when Whaley knocked It over
with a well-directed shot. The eagle
measured seven feet across tho wings.
Rosebud French, about four years
old. may die from burna sustained
when her clothing was Ignited from
a lire by which she was warming at
the residence of L. T. Moreadlth at
Klnaton.
WOMAN SUFFRAGE
BARELY WINS IN HOUSE
Wasblngtn.—Woman suffrage by
federal constitutional amendment won
In the house with exactly the required
number of afflrmatlvo votes.
While member- in their seats and
thronga In the gallerlea waited with
eager intereat, the house adopted by
a vote of 174 to 136. a resolution pro
viding for submission to the states of
the so-called Susan B. Anthony amend
ment for enfranchisement of women.
But for the promise of Speaker
Clark to cast his vote from the Chair
for the resolution If It was needed, the
chsnge of s single vote to the oppoel
tlon would have meant defeat. Re
publican Leader Mann, who came
from a Baltimore hospital where he
has been under treatment ever since
congreos convened, and Repreeenta
tlve Sims of Tennessee. Just out of a
sick bed and hardly able to walk to
his sest, brought the votes that ssttled
the Issue.
BUBtfCRIBB FOR fHB OLBANBB,
V MISST HELEN D. M'CORMICK
r • w \%
/n
I '
Miss Helen D. McCormlck has en
tered upon her dutl«« as an aaalatant
dlttrict attorney In New York city.
Her excellent work as state factory
Inspector brought her to the attention
of District Attorney Lewis of Kings
county. Miss McCormlck Is thirty
years old and Is a graduate of ths
Brooklyn l*w school. She was admit
ted to the bar five years ago. Bhs has
always been an active worker for |wom
an suffrage, being chairman of the
Tenth assembly district.
10 CLOSE FOR TEN MONDAYS
ALL MANUFACTURING PLANTS
ARE ORDERED TO CLOSE
DOWN FOR FIVE DAYB.
Industry and Business Generally Af
fected by Order Whloh la Estimated
by Garfield to Save 30,000,000 Tone
of Coal.
Washington America's manufac
turing enterprises with but few ex
ceptions In states east of the Mis
sissippi river was ordered by the gov
ernment to suspend operations for five
day* beginning Friday -morning, Jan
nary 18, as a drastic measure for re
lieving the fuel famine.
At the same time, as a further
means of relief, It was directed that
Industry and business generally, In
cluding all normal activities that re
quire heated buildings, observe as a
holiday every Monday for the next ten
weeks. This will close down on Mon
days not only factories, but saloons,
stores except for sale of drugs and
food, places of amusement and nearly
all office buildings. While the order
does not mention shipyards, it la
known that they will be permitted to
continue operation as usual, although
munitions plants will be closed.
The government's move came entire
ly without warning In an order Issued
by Fuel Administrator Garfield with
the approval of President Wilson pre
scribing stringent restrictions govern
ing the distribution and use of coal.
It was decided upon hurriedly by the
President and government heads as a
desperate remedy for the fuel crisis
and the transportation tangle In the
eastern states. Even munition plants
are not excepted from the closing
down order.
Officials would not discuss the far
reaching effects the action would hav6
oa the Industrial fabric and questlona
as to how the order was to be Inter
preted to me(t specific problems went
unanswered.
The order prescribes a preferential
list of consumers In whose Interest It
was drawn. These users will get coal
In the following order:
Railroads; household consumers;
hospitals; charitable Institutions, and
army and navy cantonments.
Public utilities, telephone and tele
graph plants.
Btrlctly government enterprises, ex
cepting factories and plants working
on government contrasts.
Public buildings and necessary gov
ernment, state and municipal require
ments.
Factories producing perishable
foods and foods tor Immediate con
sumption.
Save 30,000,000 Tons.
It was estimated the enforcement of
the order would cave a total of 30,000,-
000 tons of bituminous coal, which
probably Is about half the present
shortage. Tho Indications were that
at the end of the tea of Mon
day's holidays a permanent policy of
restricted consumption would hav*
been determined on.
MORE THAN 700 VESSELS
TAKEN OVER BY THE NAVY
Washington. Since tho United
States entered the war the navy has
taken over and converted to war use
between 700 and 800 passenger and
freight vessels, yachts, tngs, fishing
boats and other craft. This was dis
closed In a statement by Chairman
Oliver, of the house Investigating
commute*, commending the bureaus
of coarttuctlen and repair and steun
engineering for the preparations mad*
to meet war demands
Coal Famines at End.
Washington —The railroad situation
has Improved under government oper
ation sufficiently to guarantee that
there will bo no further coal famine In
any part of the country this wlnte-.
Director Oeneral McAdoo was Inform
ed by A. H. Smith, assistant in charg*
of transportation on eastern lines. Lo
cal shortages will be Inevitable under
existing condition. Mr. Smith said, but
Indications are that no Important in
dustries will be forced to shut lows
bees nut of lack of fusl.
>■
Call and Get Your Vest Pocket
Goldmine Book.
"""""""" * ■*
We are pleased to advise our adult
readers that they can call at this
office and secure free of charge, a
ueeful Vest Pocket Memorandum
Book, full of valuable information.
Call quick before they run out.
l&nortf
HALF THE MUM
OBSERVES HOLIDSV
ALL RETAILERS EXCEPT DBOO
AND VOOD STORES TO
CLOSE.
MOVING EMPTY COAL GARS
T* Continue For T*n Mondays-—Oar
field Requests That OfTfoe Buildings
B* Not H*atsd.—Condltltons Better.
The eastet u "half of th* United
States observed Monday generally
as a holiday,the first of 10 heatleas
Mondays decreed by the government
to conserve coal md to clear conges
tion from the railroads.
Although the clonlnffcrder, promul
gated by Fuel Administrator Garfield,
goes no further than to forbid the us*
of fuel for beating, fuel administration
officials expect business to cease and
Director Garfield issued a direct re
quest that nil retail establishment.],
except food and drug stores, close
their doors for the day.
At the same time office buildings
were requested to observe the spirit
as well as the letter of the order and
operate no lights or olevators except
to accommodate the few exempted
persons who ar» housed In their build
ing.
Food stores, which In the original
order were permitted to remain open
only half the day, were grntaed a spe
cial dispensation under which they
may sell goods throughout the day.
It was said that the use of fuel for
lighting buildings and for operating
their elevators probably could be pre
vented during the remainder of tho
Monday holidays. In drawing the or
der this was overlooked and thousands
of telegrams have reached -ffie fusl
administration asking for a ruling.
Whila reports to the fuel adminis
tration told of an increased movement
of coal to householders and to ships
under the three days oper'atlon of tho
five-day factory closing order, severo
weather held back the clearing of
freight congestion, which was one of
the chief purposes sought. At thj
office of the director general of rail
roads 4t was said that there was little
hope for material Improvement in traf
fic conditions until the weather moder
ated.
Moving Empty Coal Cars.
Efforts were centralized on the
movement ot empty coal cars back to
the mines, and to the transportation
of bunker coal to the Atlantic sea
board. A total of 160,000 tons of bun
kar coal had arrived or was en route
for North Atlantic ports while 100,000
tons had been delivered on the south
ern seaboard and 200,000 tons more
was on Its way. At one southern port
80,000 tons was delivered to ships that
have been tied up for more than a
week.
CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY
HAS BEEN DISSOLVED 1
Closed By Ballor Guards—Report Japa
Have Landed.
Petrograd—(By Associated Press) —
The constituent assembly has been dis
solved. The decree of dissolution was
issued last night by the council of na
tional commissioners and adopted
early this morning by the central ex
ecutive committee of the workmen's
and soldiers' deputies.
The text reads:
"When the coastltuent assembly'
voted against the declaration made by |
the president of the central executive '
committee after an hour's deliberation,'
the bolshevlkl left the hall and were
followed by the social revolutionists
of the letf on the assembly showing its
unwillingness> to approve the manner!
In which the peace pourparers were
being conducted. ' A decree dissolving
the assembly will be published."
The first hint the newspaper men
received that extreme measures were
contemplated was when they were in
formed that the Tauride palace, where
be closed to the members of the as
the assembly began Its sessions, would
sembly, to the newspaper men and to
everyone else.
STRIKERS IN AUSTRIA
OPENLY ANTI-QERMAN.
London.—A general strike is on
throughout Austria, according to an
Exchange Telegraph dlsptcah from
Paris, which reports 100,000 men quit
ting work In Vlonna and Neustadt,
closing down all the war factories.
The strikers are described as openly
antl-Qerman and the movement is
both political and economic and espec
ially aimed at securing peace.
Public demonstrations, It Is added,
have been held In many places.
NEED 30,000 MORE WOMEN
IN ARMY NURSING SERVICE.
Washington. Enlisting of 30.000
more women In the military nursing
service will be required if prospective
needs of the government are to met.
the American Red Cross announced In
, an appeal for volunteers.
In order to meet the increasing de
mands of the army and navy nurse
corps, the Red Cross has modified
somewhat it gformer requirements for
enrollment. The age limit has been
Inaaml t« tl VMTa
STOMACH TKOUBLES.
If .vou have trouble with your
stomach you should try Chamber
lain's Tablets. So many have
been restored to health b.v the
uite of these tablets, and their cost
is ao little, cents* th»C it is
worth while to give them a trial.
Becauae of the law that does not
permit any but citizens of the Unit
ed Statea tob ecome officers in the
American army, it was neceasary to
refuae the offer of a Russian offi
cer repreaenting a large number
of brother Russian officers in
France, to place a group of offi
cers at the disposal of CI en. Per
shing to be used as he saw fit.
RUB-MY-TISM-Antiseptic, Re
lieves Rheumatism, Sprains, Neu
ralgia, etc.
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE OLEANKI
SLM A YBAB
i LIEUT. PATRICK O'BRIEN
■ B
Lieut. Patrick O'Brien, an American
member of the British flying corps,
who was brought down In a one-aided
i battle by the Germans, and who had
I been taken Into Germany on hla way to
a prison camp, jumped from a train
i which waa going 30 miles an hour, and
I by many heroic and clever movea man
aged to get Into Holland, and then back
to England.
| r
TWO BILLS BEFORE CONGRESS
MAY CREATE WAR COUNCIL SIM
! ILAR TO THOSE OF ENGLAND
AND FRANCE.
I
One Proposes War Council of Five
Members and the Other Would Cen-
I trallze Munitions Control In a Dires
| tor of Munitions.
| Washington.—Framlrfg of legislation
contemplating drastic charges In the
government's war machinery, Includ
ing creation of an American'war coun
cil similar to those of England ana
Prance and a director of munitions,
was begun by the senate military com
mittee.
| Two bills—one proposing the war
! council of five members, Including
the secretaries of war and navy and
I three civilians oppolnted by the Prej-
I ldent, and a second to centralize muni
tions control In a director of munitions,
were prepared by a sub-committee con
sisting of Chairman Chamberlain and
Senators Hitchcock and Wadsworth.
Chairman Chamberlain announced
that the committee virtually had
agreed upon the two bills, In lieu of
his measure for a separate department
of munitions with a new cabinet mem
ber. The attitude of the administra
tion toward them has not been disclos
ed. President Wilson and Secreitarr
Baker opposed the original Chamber
lain bill.
Independent of Cabinet.
The plan of the committee for the
war council is to have It under the
President, but wholly Independent of
the cabinet. "It would sit with and
advise the President In forming broad
policies, similar to the British war
cabinet and the French war ministry."
said Chairman Chamberlain. "It wou'.d
give co-ordination now lacking In cen
tral direction of all government's war
operations."
The bill to establish a director of
munitions is modeled after the Brit
ish law. The committee proposes that
the director should be subordinate
only to the war council and the Pres
ident and not the cabinet, taking over
many supply functions of the war,
navy, shipbuilding and other branches.
The director would have control of all
war supplies, their production, pur
which rejected proposals to call the
head of the new agency the "director
of war Industrie*."
was definitely decided upon by the
committee and written Into the re
drafted bill by the sub-committea,
The committee received from Direc
tor Gilford of the council of national
defense suggestions for centralizing
munitions and war industrial control.
BATTLE FLAG ZEPPERLIN
BROUGHT TO WASHINGTON.
o
Washington.—The battle flag of the
Beppelin L-49, brought down near
Bourbonne, France, October 17, 1917,
has been received at the headquarters
of the marine corps and sent to the
national museum. The flag, deep Ted,
bears no distinguishing Insignia of any
kind. Accompaylng It were small por
tions of the outer envelope and of tho
gas bag of the Zeppelin. The flag waa
given to Major General Barnett.
Boom Addressed to Governor.
San Francisco. —A bomb addressed
to Governor William D. Stephens' man
sion at Sacramento, has been Inter
cepted at the ferry postofflce here, It
became known. The package contain
ed several sticks of dynamite. The
executive mansion waa damaged De
cember 17, last, by an explosltlon of
dynamite. A postal employe, opening
the bundle to discover whether it had
been ulosslfled wrongly, discovered the
dynamite and a clockwork arranga
tnert rtn«(»npd to exnlode the stfeka.
PREFERS CHAMBERLAIN'S.
"In the co irae of a conversa
tion with Chamberlain Medicine
Co.'s representative to-day, we hau
occasion to discuss in a general
wa.v the merits of their different
preparations.- At his suggestion X
take pleasure in expressing my es
timation of Chamberlain* Cough
Remedy. I have a family of six
children and have used thia reme
dy in my home for years, f con
sider it the only cough remedy on
the market, ana I have tried nearly
all kinda."— Earl C. Ross. Publisher
Hamilton County Republican-News
Syracuse, Kansas.
Catawba county farmers are or
ganizing to establish a county
wide telephone system on the mu
tual co-operative basis.
CASTO R IA
For Infants and Children
In U*o For Over 30 Years
Always bears
Bfacoamr* of
B Mothers Know That |j
l, " Vi|j»» I' ' f^JSIB
MISIAH CABINET
HIS RESIGNED
SCARCITY OF FOOD AND GENERAL
DESIRE FOR PEACE BRINGS
RESIGNATIONS.
6>
HUNGARIANS ARE DISCONTENT
—"
I Minister of Interior Will Form New
Cabinet at Once.—Count Czernln
1 Wai Head.—Held Portfolio of Mln
-1 liter of Foreign Affairs.
1 The crisis in Austria, arising from
l " the discontent of the people over the
*" continuation of the war, the scarcity
of food and a general desire for peace,
f has resulted in the resignation of the
w Austrian cabinet.
For weeks there has been bitter op
position to the government on the
9 part of the people and during the last
( few days this has resulted in nation
f wide strikes and some disturbances,
j ' The Internal strife in Austria, ap
j parently due chiefly to war-weariness,
r . the high cost of living and the dls
» location generally of economic life,
j ! continues to be of absorbing interest.
i. Although the exact situation resulting
P from the troublous times is not glv-
I en in the extremely meager details
j available, the dispatches that have
crept through are Indicative of a slt
. I uatlon that will require skillful hand
-9 ljng by the authorities again to bring
the dissatisfied populace into a state
r of tractability.
No newspapers in Vienna were per
| mitted last Saturday, The only pub
-1 licatlon allowed was a single sheet
.. bulletin, which told some of the de
s tails of the nation-wide strike and the
r developments in the peace discussions
at Brest-Litovsk. As usual, the hand
of the German propagandist was to
5 be seen in this one-sheet publication,
for the chief announcement in it was
'* from the German social democracy of
" Austria. This lay stress on last year's
declaration of the Austro-Hungarlan
I foreign minister, Count Czerin, that
the central powers were ready to
make an immediate general peace,
without annexations or indemnities.
' • Evidently, however, this statement
a failed to placate the strikers in Vi
enna, who sent a large delegation to
, wait upon the food minister to inform
' him of conditions among the work
ing classes and to impress on him that
their desire for peace overshadowed
'' and took precedence over all other
,_ demands.
, endeavoring to ascertain what are the
| prospects for a cessation of hostilities
and a return to normal. So insistent
I has been their efforts In this direc-
II tlon that the Hungarian premier has
' b«tn forced to announce in the lower
'* house of parliament that the govern
'• ment adhered to the principle of
t peace without annexation.
t
-9 GOVERNMENT MAY HOLD
► RAILROADS AFTER WAIT
(
I McAdoo Says It Would Be Injurious to
1 Stockholder* to Turn Them
> Back
h Washington.—Changes In the funda
mental prlnclleps of railroad opera-
Iton under government control will
make It inadvisable to tarn the roads
back to private ownership Immediately
after the end of the war. Director Gen
eral McAdoo urged before the senate
interstate commerce committee. Unit]
"comprehensive and rational legisla
tion" to meet the changed conditions
is enacted it woldn be injurioas to the
stockholders for the government to re
linquish control, he added.
Examination of the director gen
eral on the administration's railroad
. bill «nay be resumed later by the com
i mlttee, but Chairman Smith an
nounced that the hearings. Including
arguments, will be completed later,
The committee plans to begin work on
the bill and report it to the senate as
soon as possible. The chief questions
at issue are whether the measure shall
fl xa definite time for the return of the
roads to private ownership and tht
basis of compensation.
*•« fcaew What You Are Takiag
When yon take Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tonic because the formula |«
plainly printed 6D every bottle
showing that It la Iron and Qul
nine In a tasteless form. No
cure, DO pay.—Bo=. adv,
I Very Serious
It la a very serious matter to ask
for one medicine and have the
wrong one given you. For this
reason we urge-you in buymft®-
be careful to get the genuino—
BUcTffikHT 1
liver Medicine
IThe reputation of this -o(.l, TeH»-
ble medicine, for constipation,. in- -
digestion and liver trouble, kr firm- -
ly established. It does not Imitate '
other medicines. It is better than ' t
others, or it would not be the ts
vorite liver powder, with s larger ' '
sale thaii all others combined. •*! ■*s
- SOLD IN TOWN FX
n f>a mini model, •ketches or photo ud 3g
■ •ertptlon for rHEH SEARCH «iwl MportP* ~«|
■ on pttentebllUjr. Itenk wf#r«ni*.
I PATENTS BUILD *ORTUMM B JJH
■ you. Our Tree booklete toll how, -what to
■ and yoo money. Write today.
ID. SWiFT&CO.I 1
LM
UNIVERSITY OF 1
NORTH CAROLtNA
LAW SCHOOL |
Excellent Faculty • ,
Reasonable Coat
WRITE FOR CATALOG
THE PRESIDENT,
CHAPEX HILL, N. C.
W 1 t 535 a . '4f.
Help For Girla Desiring Education.
Wehaveonour campus an apart-,
meDt house, a two storyi>
of 25 rooms, with a frontage of
100 feet which may be used by
girls who wish to lorm duos and
live at their own charges.
Pupils can live cheaply and com- ,
fortably in this way, many of them ■/
having their table supplies sent to ,
them from their homes. z'
For further information
.J M. Rhodes, Littleton Collegu
Littleton, N. C.
JOB'pRININO**
I OONB AT THIS OPFICB. I
'> i n i v? m i J rlkl 1
MMIWWIHI
: Used 40 Years 1
CABDUI
S Tta Wtsu's Mi {
0 Sold Everywhere Z
--Hs auuTAtioN m a
fi £ALSi&
w WorrentetiTo ft'? J*
-All. t) v |
I Graham Drag Co. J
1 DO YOU WANT A «EW SIUMCI?"
I If you do "Digcstooeine" will give
" ouone. For "full particulars rrennl
'hi! woiri 'fid R(m"iy
Hayes Drug Co.