- n r . ii vi. ji - ft .. I . . , im HAS - URGES ' T IIAT. Z7E TOTAL ECLIPSE OF FOUND MISSING USK MASON AND DIXON. LINE. ' ' M A - T- a.' A VM. Ail 2 t 1- f t If 1 it' ....Ti 1 55 -5 I, 'J '-E'i 5 ii 1 !'! 4 ; i. is i :1 ! i V ;t. Si r s I 4 .' 'I I 1 .1- 5 1 Pa Befflc&i S Or as the Mohair Suits are a little more dressy, possibly you might like them best, but for the comfort there is no differ ence. "As to cost the Palm Beach Suits sell for $8.50, are washable and will not shrink. The Mo hair Suits sell from $10 to $22.50. They dry clean beautifully and will not spot, pucker or draw from being wet. They are not rain proof but a shower will not hurt them, but why get wet when you have one of our zephyr weight Slip ons at $5.00? $1 Regal Shirts always a bargain at $1. Savoy Shirts $1.50. Boyden Oxfords $6.00. Crawford & Ree& 300 South Elm St. aviV iBTi&wn' PARXUF ant snr&rean -tcpa. ,V i . TV" - I n 1 fnrrntfon iimmm V. J..1.11. kknlih (orvuo at "our YnfE. UU W luicici uibwvr annauikced at the annual meeting qilvsiw - , " The eclipse of the'sun on August" the Eugen,oi Research Association, , of u. - o oi w-fntal in nart of Europe at Columbia University a few aays : . .... . ;r-n!Rt-1 ;,' ho hoiiovpH tbo "missine I adelphla to Gettysburg artrt A sifL H.I1U uai n" " i acu, luov . . I ...... firn America Is attracting the wide- hink" had been found at Ellis Island. Rtiread attention of astronomers and Dr. Knox told of the strange indi scientists, various expeditions being vidual he believes to have been a to Gettysburg througn Washington, the president suggested that it would be a good means of further obliterating sectional feeling arranged 'to witness this phenomena, "throw back" to the caveman, or, as between the north and the south In view of the public interest in the the surgeon himself calls him, "the In his letter to Mr. Joy, President event. C. G. Abbott, head of the as- man Darwin wrote about, but never Wilson says: : tronomical branch of the Smithson- sawV ' " ' ' ' ' 1 yi am sure.uiK me eau uiu, ian institution, Washington, D. C The man's full name cannot be Is interested to see to it that there and a recognized authority on soiar disclosed, according to tne rules 01 wiuu.u '"" phenomena, gives the following pop- the service. . He was called Joan, South In this absolutely unitea coun- ular account of the eclipse, and the came from Finland' just two weeks try. which we all love, and that the scientific results sought from such ago and was deported on account of imaginary Mason and Dixon's line events: : "constitutional inferiority." He was should be made once and for all a On August 21,. 1914, the moon Qf average height, but his strength thing of the past, and as a small con- will pass exactly between the earth was prodigious. tribution to that end, I earnestly and the sun, and there will be a total "His gait was roving and his eyes suggest that the Lincoln Highway solar eclipse. t will not be observed constantly searched the ground,"- Association should -grant permission in America, except as a small-partial said Dr." Knox. "His features were to place the official Lincoln highway eclipse at sunrise in the northern distorted with a strange grin rather markers on the. macadam roadway states and Canada, but in Persia and Gf recognition than of understand- from Philadelphia to Washington Scandinavia the full effect will ; be mg. His forehead was startlingly through the- properly. .. selected seen. receding, his ears much lower in streets of the latter city to the Lin- Although- the moon looks about the head than is normal with man, coin monument, and from there the same size as the sun, it is very placed exactly, in fact, as are an through Frederick, Md., to Gettys- much smaller and nearer. The sun ape's ears. The top of the head was I burg. is 865,000 miles in diameter and 93,- round and covered with coarse, wiry 000,000 miles away, while the moon hair. With Malice Aforethought. is 2,163 miles in diameter and 239,- "The under jaw stuck out much I Mrs. Cronan heard her little 000 miles away. On account of the too far, .and in place of cariine teeth J Kranddaughter. Margaret, crying as moon's small size compared with he had long fangs that madehis lips L i ' ol h,( tn tha protriid Tliey eyebrows v were shag-lij. Waterrneloii and Cantaloupe Seed the kind you can depend on. All varl etles of Seed Corn Come and see us, (bo Scon : . Lom - - Groccrloo end Sccda For TKizi Hired Sprint Feeling Take DHce's Compound Extract of Sarsa. parilla With Iodides ..SQSJZE.i'AWD 01. OO IT WILL HELP YOU the sun, the shadow cast by the moon is a cone, and the point of this cone just barely reaches the earth. In the August eclipse the diam eter of the cone at the earth's sur face is only about 85 miles, so that the eclipse is visible as total only in a belt about 85. miles widestretch- gy and the'j above them were C0NYERS & SYKES, Druggists The Busv St- McAdoo Hotel Corner unusually "prominent, another characteristic lacking in man. The nose was of the spreading saddle type. "During his examination the Finn was docile and in a dumb way good- "Why, dear, what is the matter?" ape I inquired Mrs. Cronan. "Did you meet with an accident?" "N-no, grandma!" sobbed Marga ret. "It w-wasn't an accident! M-mother did it on purpose." ing over the countries named above, natured. He had had' four years The important cities of Bitlis, Trebi- schooling and showed the mentality zond. Kief, Minsk and Rega lie nearl 0f a ten-year child. the center of this belt. It passes "The big toe of each foot was like about 100 miles north of Stockholm a thumb and could be used for any and Trondheim. The eclipse will be purpose that the latter could be put seen as partial over a. very wide area, to. The most remarkable feature including northeastern America, Qf the case was the hands, which Greenland, Europe, half of Asia and were ape-like in nearly every partic- half of Africa. Within this regian only a portion of the sun's disk will be hidden by the moon. Sometimes the moon and sun oc cupy such positions that although the moon passes directly between the riority.. earth and the sun, the shadowed con "With the present laws," he does not quite reach the earth. Suchv added, "we are absolutely powerless solar eclipses are called "annular" to stop them, although it be a sim- ular." According to Dr. Knox many of the recent immigrants from certain countries have show a marked indi cations of mental and physical infe- "If it's Gardner's, it's Good" and are nowhere total eclipses. In the most favorable case a total eclipse may last over seven minutes at a station, but such occasions are very rare. i There will be total eclipses visi ble in the United States on June 8, pie matter to do this if we had defi nite physical standards. "It would seem from my. observa tion that it is the unfit of all classes who show the strongest tendency to remain here a the present time. for it is here that the struggle is THE NORTH CAROLINA Callage of Agriculture And r.;c cffCmis Arts The State Industrial College of fers strong courses in Agriculture, Horticulture, Stock-raising, Dairy ing, Poultry, Veterinary . ' Medicine, in Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engineering; in Chemistry and Dye ing; in Cotton Manufacturing, and in Agricultural teaching. Four year Courses . in Agriculture and in Ma chine Shop Work. Faculty of 61 men; 738 students; 25 buildings; excellent equipment and laboratories for each department. On July 9th' County Superintendents - conduct en trance examinations at each- county seat. For catalogue write E. B. OWEN, Registrar, West Raleigh, N. C. lie lie Mi eg on At This Old Reliable anci Well Established Furniture - Store Will Last Only a Few Days More, WE? k2L 2 The stock is selling rapidly can't afford to miss this stupetccu3 Furniture, Rug, Window Shade zzi Matting Sacrifices. Dont fail to s?--cure your share of the Bargairs u will be to your advantage to com pare the following prices with Those you have been paying: Dressers, $5.00; Folding Be-3 Springs, $1.73; Room Size Rugs, $1; Iron Beds, $4.50; Felt Mattress. $6.50; Bed Room Suits, $18; Bur. fets, $16.00; Cliina Closets, $12.00; Go-Carts $45; Davenports S16; Kitchen Cabinets, $19.00; Sema Machines, $18.00, and hundreds c! Bargains we have no space "to men tion. Take advantage and outft your home for the next five y?ars ACT QUICK. McDuffie's Furniture Store Opp. KrcGG 5c and H Oc Store i rv 9i 1 Q 9 ? ; lnvo-o ofnrP flnrt vnil I As the glare of the sun in the sky JO C lUi. tVTM.- J have only a small purchase to make that we aon t care possible at times of total solar for yOlir trade. It IS not SO. eclipse to see all the celectial obr We knOW that the man Who jects near the sun. These can not be moVoc a email mi rpHstRP: this seen at other times because they ttaaIt tmqv liQva a Iflvorp nnp wzv cj """J- ig this which makes astronomers so next Week. We knOW any eager to observe total eclipses. The POOr gOOds from this Store most striking thing seen is the solar m -mt . ' 1 1 . . .... wnillfl he noticed SOOner Or corona, a oeauuiui peany light later by big customers. We know that the better we treat every one the better our reputation will be. Our facilities enable us to make your every purchase satis factory. t 1918; September 10, 1323, and Jan- easiest and it is here that the kiridl (i i ' . est provision is made for their ex istence, and it is here that the law of the survival of the fittest does not apply." stretching away from the sun n all directions, something like the Auro ra Borealis seen in northern countries. HOWARD GARDNER Druggist and Seedsman Opp. Postoffice. Greensboro, N. C. For Sale 63 acres unimproved land two miles north from James town, $20. f 76 acres D. H, Jones landi with buildings, orchard, etc., lj miles south of Guilford College station. 107J acres, buildings, or chard, etc., five miles west of Greensboro. 426 acres several tenant houses, plenty wood sprne nipocir, nne: stock tarm, seven miles northwest from city. 72 acres, four miles west, mostly timber and wood, one fourth mile from naacadarrj rood, $3,500.00. ; Brcvjsi Real Crop Prospects in Southwest. With a crop in excess of.100,000,- 000 bushels, of wheat almost cer tain in Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas this year, pro ducers, millers and grafn cealers are giving consideration to prospects for prices. Every advance of a cent in the price of the cereal will mean an increase of $3,000,000 in the re turns to the southwest from its un precedented crop auc evrey decline of a cent will mean, of course, a con traction in wheat revenues of $3, 000,000. The general opinion is that the southwest . will average about 65 cents per bushel for its wheat on farms, which should make the crop of that section worth $200,-000,000. Iteduced Rates Xow in Effect. The reduced interstate freight rates into North Carolina from west ern points and from the Pittsburgh one in the east, that were ' fixed through the compromise settlement between the railroads and the state authorities and approved by the leg islature and the interstate commerce commission, became operative Satur day, applying to all freights origi nating on that day. These reduc tions, it will be remembered, are ex-" pected to work out savings to. North Carolina shippers aggregating two million dollars a pear. Also new and reduced rates on furniture to the west became effec tive Saturday. . The western and Pittsburgh rates, it will-be remem bered, were worked out in confer ences between the railroad officials and the members of the corporation commission at Old Point Comfort, and were later accepted in the spe cial session of the legislature. "(Self Dti siit (WaSeWs99 QUMITV FinST mm Against Star Chamber Proceedings. Representative E. Y. Webb, of the Ninth North Carolina district, has introduced in Congress a bill to pro vide that persons irdicted or inform ed against for crimes and misde meanors, other than capital offenses, shall be furnished copies of the in dictment or information at or before the time .of arraignment, or plead ing. Names and addresses of wit nesses would also be furnished de fendants at least one . day before trial. Mr. Webb, who heads the judici ary committee to which the bill was referred, seeks to liberalize the "star chamber" features of prosecutions. mm 3f i ill? Too Much MUitaney. "Would George enlist?" "No, I don't think he would." "What's the reason ? He comes of fighting stock." " ' ' ' "That's; the reason. He's soured on fighting. His grandmother is a Colonial Dame.' his? aunl 4' a t va School For Feeble-Minded. Definite announcement is made that the State School for the Feeble Minded, at Kinston, which has had such, a checkered history during its period of erection, is to be formally opened for the special work for which it was established the best possible training for feeble-minded children on July 1 under the su perintendency of Dr. C. Banks Mc Nairy. It is announced that the pol icy will be to take in first the high est grade of the feeble-minded eirls In the state and then the highest grade boys, the age limits being 6 to 21, and then admit the lower grades m their order until the limit of the capacity of the school is exhausted. It's a Hard Job," Bud. Reidsville Review. ) With everybody clamoring fpr the news concerning important cases in court, and everybody ; playing favor ites in the hearings and "taking sides," it is a' hard" matter for a newspaper man! to " do "his duty by keeping " his head and printing only the salient news oK th 'case; ut this is the plain and manifest 'riiiiv Special .20 Per Ceimt IDis count on am assoitt- mentof nohlfeld. Pateimtedl Hammocks rang ing in price from 2J to $7 JO nn n i 1 on.nnn r C r7,J frr M M I ji; - s : : :. '.'v; -':-.:-.-v " - : ;r,; offa Ihewspipr.lianjlieYry: veW hard to hh iftAnZ' V-- R. aiid liis mother is a miliUnt.' -s