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BUM CONFERS WITH PRESIDENT * i * OHIO REPRESENTATIVE COME? OUT IN STRONG DECLARA TION AGAINST CANCELLATION OF WAR DEBTS Gives Several of "Many Reasons" Why United States Should Collect Debts in Full. Washington. A strong declaration ■was made by Representative Theodore E. Burton, Ohio, a member of the allied debt commission, against any cancellation of the debts of the European nations to the United States. His statement to this effect was the unanimous opinion on the question of all American delegates to the inter parliamentary union conference at Vienna, a number of senators who, with Representative Burton, toured Europe and conferred with leading statesmen and publicists having pre viously declared that the allied debts should not be remitted. Representative Burton conferred with President Harding and. after cam paigning in Ohio, will return here for the meeting late this month of the allied debt commission with Great Britain's financial representatives. "There are many reasons why the allied debts should not be cancelled,'' said Representative Burton. "First, they are binding obligations, a nation al debt, and their cancellation would throw doubt on national credit which Is an all-Important part of all com mercial and Industrial relations. "Second, these loans were not made from any abounding revenue, but were obtained by borrowing from the peo ple with no small difficulty and with a great deal of sacrifice. There was no thought at the time that they would not be repaid and indeed the law,under which our people took our bonds provided for their exchange In kind." "Third, the United States Is sin cerely Interested in the world peace. "If these debts were cancelled It lead to an expansion of the military and naval establishments of other countries and thereby bring a threat of war and all the waste It entails. VFourth, proportionately the in crease In the debt of the United j States as a result of the war Is great er than that of the borrower. The In crease In taxation also Is proportion ately greater. "Further, while we recognize the | wonderful sacrifices made by the al- I lies during the war their danger j was more Imminent and we have ! gained no territory and are not ex- | pectlng any large indemnities. The general feeling abroad Is that these j debts ought to be paid." Mr. Burton also declared against any further national loans abroad, adding that private credits for Amer ican raw mat£ri/(is might and should be arranged, but that the United States treasury should not be called upon again to aid any foreign coun try except for human relief. Greeks Prepare to Fight Turks. Adrlanople. f- General Anastaslos Leonardopoulis, new Greek command er In eastern Thrace, was greeted by the populace and soldiery as "The Liberator of Adrlanople" upon his ar rival here. He was the first Greek to enter Adrlanople after the Bulga rians and Turks werr driven from the city In 1918 He now has returned to the midst of the extensive prepara tions being made to resist the Turkish reoccupatlon. At this moment It Is evident that the army has little Intention of evac uating Thrace without a struggle, whatever the orders from Athens may be and there Is no doubt that many of | the officers are looking back for In spiration to the examples of Guhrlele D'Annunzio at Flume and General Zel gouskl at Vllna. Events march very • wlftly In an atmosphere of turmoil luch as exists throughout Greece to day and anything Is'possible. —^ Immediately after General Leonard opoulos had passed through the cheer ing columns of troops In the Rue Karagatch to the new headquarters In the government palace, he received the Associated Press correspondent, with whom he freely discussed the altuatlo^i. In reply to the question whether Thrace was going to fight, he said. "We are prepared. The whole army asks nothing better than the oppor tunity. We shall not surrender Thrace. Anyone who saw the soldiers along the Rue Karagatch knows In stinctively that my words reflect ab solutely the spirit of the troops." Utah Hsstens to Near East Waters, London. —A Central News dispatch from Oibraltar says the admiral and officers of the United States dread naugh Utah, who are touring Spanish cities, have been recalled to the war ship, which has been ordered to pro ceed immediately to the near east. A Oibraltar dispatch on October 3 reported the arrival there of the Utah, jrlth Vice Admiral A. T. Long, com joader-ln-chlef of the European sta tlon. It was stated he would await the arrival of the cruiser Pittsburgh, whlcb sailed from Philadelphia r SEVEN IN FAMILY KILLED BY TRAIN. Valparaiso, Ind. —Seven persons, members of a family of nine were hilled near here when an automo bile in which they were riding was struck, by a train at a crossing. The dead Harriet Hargot and six of Rene Har lot, the and Ren,e Hargot, Jr.. a son, narrowly escaped, death. The family was moving from Chi- j cago to Plymouth when the acci dent occurred. A truck loaded with furniture from their Chicago home i was traveling ahead of them. Mr. Hargot said just as the auto- ; mobile reached the crossing the j motor stalled. He said he seized 1 his son, who was seated in the ; front seat, and threw him from the car and jumped from the track him- j self an Instant before the train , struck the automobile. PARLEY IS HALTED ABAUBTLY VARIOUS EXPLANATIONS FOR CONFERENCE BREAK ARE j GIVEN IN RUMORS. One Most Generally Credited Relate* to the Evacuation of Conatan- | tinople. Constantinople. Abruptly, though not unexpectedly, the Mudania con ference came to a halt. When it will be resumed is a matter of conjecture. Brigadier General Harrington,- com mander of the allied forces and h e»d of the allied delegation, returned on the battleship Iron Duke, and the Ital ian delegation also came to Constan tinople. It is understood the allied generals will go Into conference with the high commanders on certain se rious difficulties which have arisen at Mudania. Various explanations for the sep aration of the delegates are given in the rumors which quickly developed here. The one most generally credit-: ed relates to the evacuation of Con-i stantlnople. According to unofficial Information, Ismet Pasha, the nation- 1 allst representative, suddenly raised the question at the afternoon confer ence of the evacuation of Constanti-j nople. General Harrington replied that that would come after the conclusion ofthe peace treaty, as set forth in the joint allied note. Ismet Insisted re peatedly on an earlier evacuation, and , it was found Impossible to reach an agreement for the present on this im- , portant point. General Mombelli, of Italy, sup- | ported General Harrington, but the I French delegate, General Charpy,', was non-committal. At this Juncture, M. Franklin Bouil-:, lon, French envoy, declaring that he , had been Instructed by the French | ftoernment to support the Turkish de- ], mand The discussion grew very warm , and the allied generals adjourned to;, confer with the commissioners at Con-j, stantlnople. Both General Harrington and Gen- ], oral Mombelli have asked for further ! , Instructions from their governments. ! If these are received in time, it Is pos- ] sible that the conference may be re- , eumed Immediately. Another report was current, but ac cepted as only a partial explanation,' | that the stoppage of ,the conference | sessions was due to the necessity of , the Greek delegates referring all mat-jj ters for discussion to their government | at Athens. j, Protracted Drought Grips Country. | Washington-- The weather elements | are not exactly right. This Is the only | explanation the United States weather; bureau can make for the protracted. ( drought which grips a great portion of , the country. Meteorogicnly speaking, j | the winds and the barometer pressure • am acting contrary to nature. The \ air Is sluggish and there is little j movement in high or low strata, con-! sequently the moisture bearing air can- 1 not Journey over the country. '|, With the exception of California | and the northern Pacific coast, Flor- , Ida and the east Gulf coast, there have been few areas where any rain ] to speak of has fallen for four or five , weeks. There Is "low" extending , from Washington, D, C., to south of ( Knoxvllle, Tenn., which Is hardly mov- , ng and which forms a barrier to the | aolsture bearing winds. When that t moves away, says the weather bureau. | there will be some chance for a i change for the better. Cotton in Texas and Oklahoma was , slightly damaged several weeks ago ( In the early stages of the dry spell. , Truckers In the South have been sav- ( 1 ed from loss by recent showers from i the Gulf of Mexico, but most of the i late truck crops In northern sections i have reached the stage where the dry , weather does little damage. if Thirty Persons Dead In Wood Fires. J Quebec —A toll of more than thirty persons Is certain. It Is reported, In the brush and forest-fires which are ' raging over two widely separated 1 areas In the province of Ontario. ji Although the fires which razed six i mining, towns In the Haleyburg dis-'i trlct In northeastern Ontario are re-i ported checked, timber land In the St. j Maurice valley In Quebec is ablaze, fires spreading south an southeast to-j wards this city and the vilages ly ing north of Montreal in what is de-j scribed as Canada's worst. LABOR SITUATION | IS NOWJPBOIG REPORTS REVEAL INCREASE IN EMPLOYMENT IN MANY CITIES. ■ t - , 65 CITIES REPORT INCREASE i Common Labor Shortage Reflects Por tend of Prosperity Over the Entire County, ■ | Washington. lndustrial employ ment In all parts of the country has been accepted by adjustment of coal [and rail strikes, although Inadequate , car" and fuel supply has retarded a j further Improvement, the department of labor announced in a survey of re-j I ports from the principal industrial, cities. | Reports from 65 leading cities | showed an increase in employment during September is compared with j August, which 17 cities reported de creases. Industries showing increas ed employment were railroad repair j shops, tobacco and textile manufac turers, iron and steel and their pro-1 j ducts, food, leather, lumber, paper, | printing and chemical and allied pro- 1 ducts. Decreased employement was dis-j ; closed In "liquor and beverages," ve-1 hides for land transportation, metal and products other than Iron and l steel and stone, clay and glass pro-1 ducts. Building construction, said the sur-1 vey, is maintaining a steady pace in ! practically all sections, while the j most encouraging sign of prosperity I is the threatened common labor short age everywhere. Elimination of trans- j jportatlon and fuel difficulties, the de- j partment declared, will speed produc tion and employment "to a higher! degree than has obtained since the I war." ] Adjustment of textile labor contro versy has "increased employment in! that industry tremendously" while im-j provement in the textile situation was shown generally In New England. Lieut. Gordon Wins Air Race. Detroit.—Lieut. A. W. Gordon, U. S.; N., won the Curtlss marine flying tro-1' phy race here with an average speed j for the eight 20-mile laps of ll*.fri> | miles an hour. Eight planes piloted j by aviators of the navy and marine I corps started. Lieut. H. A. Elliott, of the marine corps, won the prize for tfie best average speed In the air. i The race was not so much a speed . event aB a contest demanding good I I piloting. One of the difficult man euvering feats required was that at the end of the fifths, sixth and seventh i laps each pilot should bring his ma-1 chine down to the water and.taxi over | a 1,200 foot stretch before making j 1 a hair-pin turn and again taking the air. | I , I Lieutenant Sanderson had the race J won until a mile from the finish line; i on his last lap, when he was forced to j land with an empty gasoline tank. His average speed in the air was 125% 1 miles an hour. He piloted a Curtiss ' 118-T trlplaiie. Lieutenant Gordon, winner of the 1 trophy and who was the only one to ' finish the race except Lieutenant Ra-j' dla„ had an air-cooled motor. His' average speed In the air for the first! , three laps, during which the contest- ( ants were not compelled to taxi on the j water, was 117.8 miles an hour. I Of the six planes that failed to | 1 finish the race, two were damaged In I' forced landings. Lieutenant Rutledge Irvine's plane | got from under control when the left j 1 wing pontoon became loosened. He I brought it down on a huge pile of coal. ' The machine was partly wrecked, but 1 the pilot was unhurt. Invite Greek Army to Evacuate. London An official communique ' was Issued after a full cabinet meet-]' Ing. resummoned to consider a long dispatch from Lord Curson at Paris: j' "M. Poincare and Lord Curzon have ! reached an agreement that the Greek'" army should be invited to evacuate, eastern Thrace on the understanding 1 that the allies should occupy the evac- ( ' uated territory for a period of 30 days ; from the date of the completion of, the evacuation of the Greek forces. 1 In order to guarantee the safety of ' the non-Turkish population. I 1 "This agreement now must be pre sented to the Turkish representatives at Mudania on the understanding thatj effect thereto will only be given If the i Turkish representatives accept the ; remaining conditions laid down byji the allied note of September 23, par ticularly respecting the neutral tones i on both sides of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles." Pays Honor to War Relief Workers. New York.—The Italian government through T. F. Bernardi, general coun sel In New York, announced It has i awarded the decoration of Vavllier of: the Order of the Crown to Louis Wiley, business manager of The New York Times; Edward Howe, president ofi; .the Princeton (N. J.) Bank, and! , Trust company, and Rev. John Murray,! j pastor of the Church of Divine Science In this city. The decorations were in '"recognition of Interest in the causa' lot the allies during the war." THE ALAMANCE GLEANER, GRAHAM, N. C I mmwmm —_imm PROTECT LEGION HOSTS FROM LIQUOR PEDDLERS. I New Orleans, La.—Federal in- I junctions will be applied for to P prevent proprietors of certain gro cery stofes and soft drink estab | lishments selling intoxicating liq -4 uors during American Legion con vention week, it was announced i here by United States District At ! torney Louin H. Burns. Mr. Bums said the action was taken at the request of Hugh Larre, prohibition director for Louisiana, and W. W. Tuttle, chief | prohibition enforcement officer, , who are said to have charged that certain proprietors of groceries ' and soft dring places have been guilty of, violations of the Vol | stead act. ! GEORGIA WOMAN TO SENATE J r I t MRS. W. H. FELTON APPOINTED TO SUCCEED U. S. SENATOR 'I • THOMAS WATSON. i * t Woman Selected to Serve Out the i Unexpired Term is an Active Leader in Civic Affairs. Atlanta, Ga. —A woman from Geor ; gia won the distinction of being the I first of her sex to obtain appointment j 'j to the United States Senate, when! Mrs. W. H. Felton, of Cartersville, j ! Ga., long known as the "grand old | | woman of Georgia," was. appointed! jby Governor Thomas W. Hardwick j |as senator to succeed the late Thom-j [as E. Watson until the November | I elections, when a successor will be I chosen at the polls. Mrs. Felton is i j 87 years of age and has been proml-! nent in state politics for nearly half j ja century. Mrs, Felton has accepted the office I I and In expressing her gratitude for! j the honor, stated that it was going |to thrill the nation when the news j is conveyed from the lakes to the , gulf that a woman has been chosen | |to become a member of the United! States senate. | "England borrowed an Amerlcan jborn woman," said Mrs. Felton, "to ! accept a seat in the British parlia ment, but noble old Georgia exper ienced no need to borrow, and the forty-eight states of the United j States had a governor with courage I |to say so and to conflr.n the saying j jby executive proclamation." Before tendering the appointment, !to Mrs. Felton, Governor Hardwick, j I through mutual friends, offered the ; office to Mrs. Thomas E. Watson, i widow of Senator Watson, who, the i governor said, declined it because 'of ill health. | In a statement Mrs. Felton said: | "It was eminently fitting that this j | position should have been tendered to the widow of the late Senator; j Watson." "For myself," said Mrs. Felton in | a communication to Governor Hard-; I wick, "I wish to thank you, expressly j and emphatically, in the name of; j thousands of Georgia women—wives ! mothers, grandmothers and great-j j grandmothers who are enthusias- J ! tic Georgians and who represent tie | j state in various lines of noble philan-j throphy and endeavors." Mrs. Felton was born In DeKalb, Georgia, June 10, 1835. She was the [oldest child of Charles (Swift) Lat-j •tlner. She was married October 11, i ! 1835, to Dr. W. H. Felton, who diedi -in 1909. Five children were born ofi' this union, but only one of them, Dr.] j Howard E. Felton, survives. i j The new United States senator wan! !on of the two Georgia women on the ! executive committee at the Colum- j jbian exposition in 1893. She has al ways taken an active and lively In terest in civic affairs. J Mrs. Felton has been one of the !' principal exponents of woman's suf frage in the South. She is an active j : member of the Daughters of the' j American Revolution, a member of j the Colonial Dames of America and one of the earliest members of the Atlanta Woman's Club. Simultaneously in announcing the apointment of Mrs. Felton, Gover nor Hardwick announced himself a • candidate for the unexpired term of the late Senator Watson. The gov ernor in his announcement gave a brief resume of what he termed his 1 ' political faith In his efforts to get back into the United States Senate,', ! grounding them on the proposition that he is a democrat of the old I school. Dr. H. W. McCain Dies Suddenly. j High Point. N. C—Dr. H. W. Mc- Cain, eminent physician and surgeon and one of High Point's most promi nent citizens, died at a local hospital where he hid been a patient for sev-! eral days, suffering from a septic in fection caused by a carbuncle on his neck. Drives Plane to New York. Charlotte. N. C. —L. S Sheal>y has' returned from New York wher • he delivered an airplane. In which he made the trip in nine hours. I It was a Curtiss plane of nlneyt-! horsepower in which Mr. Shealey ! flew from Americus, Ga., to Charlotte and thence to New York. He bough', the machine when several fine planes were sold at Sutherfleld, for a friend in -s4ew York. The trip here was made in a day and after resting a 'day or two he continued his flight to iNew York. U. S. AND FOREIGN SHIPS MUST BE DRY WHILE IN AMERICAN WATERB; NO SALE ON U. S. CRAFT _ ANYWHERE. I A COURT EIGHT FORESEEN Lasker Considers Ruling a Blow to American Merchant Marine. ' I Washington.—All vessels, American 1 ; or foreign, are prohibited from hav ,!ing liquor on board in American ter ritorial waters under an interpretation of the prohibition amendment and the enforcement act handed down by the department of justice. Moreover the transportation or sale of intoxicants on American craft, wherever operat ed, was held to be inhibited. Amerioan territorial waters were constructed to include those not only within the three-mile limit of con tinental United States but also those within the same limit of the Philip pines, the Hawaiian Islands, Porto I Rico, the Virgin Islands and Alaska, j The law would not apply in the Pana- I ma canal zone, as that zone is spe- I cifically exempted by the statute it self. So far as American ships are con j cerned the sale or transportation of | liquor will cease at once, or as soon !as those vessels reach their home | ports. In the case of foreign ships, j the decision will become operative ; as soon as tlje necessary regulations ] can be prepared and promulgated by jthe treasury department. Court action looking to a final de- I termination of the application of j American dry laws to foreign ships | entering American ports was fore- I seen both by Attorney General Daugherty and Chairman Lasker, of the shipping board. Mr. Daugher |ty said he had already been advised I that a case was about to be filed which would bring the issue to the supreme court. Chairman Lasker was of the opin ion that the first move of foreign lines would be to seek an injunction j restraining the government from en j forcing the law. He said it was rear I sonable to suppose that the courts ; would grant such an injunction with j a result that foreign ships would con tinue to arrive with liquor on board 'until there was a final decision by |the highest court. Publication of the opinion of the ! department of justice followed a White House conference to which j President Harding summoned Mr. Daugherty, Secretaries Hughes and | Mellon and Chairman Lasker. Vari ous phases of the situation were dis I cussed, including the possible results |of enforcement upon the international relations of the United States. Chairman Lasker predicted that en ,forcement of the law would operate jto an immediate disadvantage of the j American merchant marine and ■ would make more necessary enact ; ment of the ship subsidy bill if the J American flag was to stay on the high seas. He believed the ruling would have great influence in Congress , when the subsidy bill was taken up. | An undoubted effect of the enforce ! ment, Mr. Laskgr said, would be to [hamper the board in Its efforts to build up American shipping to the O.rient and South America. He ex pected Vancouver, British 'Cothmbia, to profit at the expense particularly of | Seattle and Portland in the Oriental I trade and Montreal at the expense of , New York in the South American j trade. Also he looked for Montreal •to gain over New York in the trans- Atlantic trade. Aviators in Air 35 Houra. San Diego, Calif. —Lieutenant John A Macßeady and Oakley F. Kelley, who had been flying over San Diego since 5:56 a. m. in the monoplane T-J, landed at Rockwell field soon after 5:11 p. m. the folowlng day, having broken all known records for sus tained flight in the heavler-than-air fly ing machine. They were in the air 35 hours, ilB minutes and 30 seconds. The aviators were well tired out but I willing ,they said, to have continued their flight except for their desire to reach the ground before darkpess should make landing more difficult. The landing of the big plane was j the signal for amifchty chorus of ; whistles from the vessels In the ! harbor. W T hen the alf-men circled down Into the field, a small army of spectators was waiting to greet them. Capt. E. R. Erwin, commandant of ; Rockwell field, soon after the flight ended, gave out the time the aviators had bee naloft as 35 hours, 18 mln [ utes and 30 seconds. i ■ ■ Near Riot Follows Raid. Baltimore. —Riot calls were sent to all eight Baltimore police stations when a cro'&d of more than 1,009 per -1 sons surrounded a saloon which »as raided by prohibition agents, fand threatened the lives of the agents. J Two automobiles of the dry agente were wrecked, bricks were thrown through the saloon windows and the police were virtually helpless to quell the disturbance for several hours. The dry agents were In the raided saloon fearing to leave for a time. [ CONDENSED NEWS FROM ! THE OLD NORTH STATE SHORT NOTES OF INTEREBTJO CAROLINIANS. Greenville.—W. H. Whichard, aged 71, highly respected farmer, died at his home near Staton's Mill. Mr. Whichard was one of the best known men of his section and was helff In highest esteem by a wide circles of friends. Wilson.—The ber.t average price for tobacco since 1919 was established here when 646,628 pounds was sold for $236 719.54, or an averagS of $36.60 per hundred pounds. Whiteville. Don Nobles, charged with the killing of his kinsman, Frank Nobles, .was brought back from Sea ville, Fla., by Sheriff Amnions. No bles, it is said, admits to the killing freely, but refuses to state a reason for the homicide. . Durham. Sharpe Roberts, former Piedmont league baseball player, who was stabbed and seriously wounded in an affray, which occiwred during one of the Durham-High Point post season «eries games, will recover, It was announced at the Watts hospital. Wake Forest.—The running of the Ralelgh-to-Richmond division ot the national highway through the heart of Wake Forest was assured when the trustees of the college called in ses sion, voted to allow the commission right-of-way al6ng the sast side of the campus. Lenoir.—Marshall Webb, of Leaks ville, one of the smaller students in the Patterson school, in Happy Valley, was seriously injured when run down by an automobile. Both legs were -broken, one in two places, and a com pound fracture was made on the oth er in addition to the break. Lumberton.—Sellers Skipner, white barber of Red Springs, Robeson coun ty, who was found in a road in the outskirts of that town in an uncon scious condition, died in a hospital in Fayetteville. A blow on the back of the head caused the death of Skipper. Durham. Walter Dayton, cotcher of the Durham, Piedmont league, base ball team, who suffered a fractured ankle in the fourth game of the lea gue's post-season series, has recover ed sufficiently to walk on crutches. Physicians say he will be able to leave the hospital within a few days. Hickory.—The Catawba county fair, enlarged so as to include four coun ties, war formally opened by Presi dent John W. Robinson in the pres ence of an unusually large crowd. This was known as Burke county day and J. Earnest Erwin, of Morgan ton, was the speaker of the afternoon. Greensboro.—Definite answer as to whether Greensboro will retain its franchise in the Piedmont Baseball league must be given to W. C. Bram ham, of Durham, president of the league, immediately after the meeting of the stockholders of the club and others interested op October 17. That is the ultimatum delivered personally to oJhn T. Rees, president of the lo cal club. Charlotte. Lew Hahn, managing director of the National Dry Goods' association, was the honor guest at the Made-in-Carolinas Exposition, on the occasion of "Merchants' Day." He delivered an address before the Cham ber of Commerce and the exposition audience on the general subject of more cordial relation between retail distributors and consuming public. Winston-Salem. —The Forsyth coun ty fair opened at Piedmont park and the thousands in attendance were free to admit that the commercial and farm exhibits were decidedly the best they had ever seen at a county fair. All of the space this year in the com mercial building is taken by Winston- Salem merchants and manufacturers who have arranged a regular exposi tion in which many locally made pro ducts are featuring. Chapel Hill.—All records for attend ance at the North Carolina University have been broken, it was announced when figures at the end of the third day of enrollment showed 1,788 stiN dents on the campus. Wilmington.—Contracts for twe"h4jw five Pacific type locomotives at a cost of $1 350,000, has been awarded to the Baldwin Locomotive Works of Phila delphia, by the Atlantic Coast Line railroad, it was announced here. Lumberton. —Sheriff R. E. Lewis ar rived here with Joe D. Kemp, who was arrested in St. Augustine, Fla., on the charge of killing Daniel E. McNeill, near Red Springs, Robeson county, on August 15, 1878, 44 years ago. Marshall. Henry Humphrey, (11- yeard-old negro boy who shot and kileld Blaine Moore, a. Sevan-year-old playmate, when he discharged a shotgun at Aaron Logue, a nineteen year old lad with whom he had been disputing. Is being held in the city Jail, awaiting the decision of Coroner E. R. Morris as to what action to take. Wallace* —Mr. Marshall C. Teachey, living five miles east of Wallace, waa killed instantly while brtoging a load of cotton from the field.. Two,-mules became frightened by cotton falling on them and ran into a tree, throwing Mr. Teachey agalnat it. breaking his neck and leg and crushing his skull. Rocky Mount. —Plans to take an lm oortant part in the fall reunion of the William R. Davie chapter Rose Croix and Joseph P. Montford Lodge of Per fection for the Valley of Enfield No vember 7 and 8 .were made at a meet ing of the Rocky mount Scottish Rite CHfc Mrs. Laura Kimbrough. Columbus, Ga. "Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Is certainly ,a grand medicine for stomach trojible. I ha-ve suffered greatly all my life from a disordered stomach. My food seemed to set so heavy, no matter what I ate. I have taken many of the medicines advertised for this trouble, but none of them has ever come up to Golden Medical Discovery for giving prompt and lasting relief. Whenever I have a sluggish liver, I have found Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pel lets a very efficient remedy. They do not gripe or cause any other distress ing condition such as a great many pills do." Mrs. Laura Kimbrough, 3503 Erlene Avenue. Obtain this Medical Discovery of Doctor Pierce's at your nearest drug store, In tablets or liquid, or send 10c. to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel In Buffalo, N. Y., for trial package, and write for free medical advice. Keep Your Skin-Pores Active and Healthy With Cuticura Soap Seap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcam 25c. EXfSHURT? barn in® or »e«ly lids, / to relieve Inflamroa / Mitchell / / V. Aire, according to dir«*> / f tiooe. Soothing, heeling. ' / It ALL A RUCKEL UT Wwerly Heee lie Twt FORD OWNER—A pure asbestos brake lin ing, lasting 3 times any other, $3.00 a set C. O. D. Chevrolet $4.26, Dodge $6.00. Agents and garage distributors wanted; excl. territory. Nanbwitos Products Co., Inc., New Haven, Conn. liMMfflfrl TOBACCO—YeIIow Pryor—Chewing, 6 lbs.i $1.60; 10 lbs., $2 76. Smoking, 6 lbs., $1; 10 lbs., $1.90. Plttman Tobacco Co., Mayfleld, Ky. When You Need e Good Tonic Take BABEK THE QUICK AND SURE CURE FOR Malaria, Chills, Fever and Grippe CONTAINS NO QUININE All druggists, or by parcel post,prepaid, from Kloczewski & Co.,Washington,D.C. Baby Chicks, Poultry, Ducks, Geese, Turkeys and Canaries —Shipped anywhere. Write for prices. Heldel Poultry Farms, St. Louis, Mo. YOU CAN ill " W W m m ■ m Hair Color Re •torer. Safe to use as water. Makes you look young again. At all good drngglsts, 75 cents, or direct from HEBBIO • ELLIIi. Chemists, Memphis, Ten*. Keep Stomach and Bowel* Right By flaring baby tha harmless, purely Tegetabie, Infanta' and children's regulator. MRS. WINSLOMJ SYRUP brings astonishing, gratifying rasulta In making baby'* stomach digsat JL I food and bowels mora as , they ahoald at teething [ time. Guarartaed free V/. Helpful Youngsters. Tommy and Bob Just came home from a visit to grandma. "I suppose grandma was quite busy cooking her basket of peaches?" said mother. "Not very," replied Bobby. "Tommy and me saved her a lot of work. They tasted so fine we didn't leave her but a few to cook." Every woman should read the ad vertising in this paper of the Art Jewelry Co., New York. —Advertise, ment English ChMd Pedestrian. England has a very youthful walk ing champion In the person of Master G. O. Edwards, aged ten, of Moss Side, Manchester. Recently he dem onstrated his prowess in the toe-end heel contests by walking from London to Brighton, a distance of 50 miles. 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The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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Oct. 12, 1922, edition 1
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