Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / April 22, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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prung And we are wait ing for you to show up at our store and select the new Suit from the great number of pat terns that we have for your cnoice. $15 is our special Suit and we feel sure that you can not get more for your money than we offer you in our $15 Suit, $1 Regal Shirts always a bargain at $1. Savoy Shirts $1.50. Boyden Shoes $6.50. Crawford & Rees 300 South Elm St. 2,785 Acres Tc, we actually own and control two thousand, seven hundred and Ufhty-flve acres of land in Guilford county. This land is all for sale, and In any sized tracts wanted and on any reasonable terms. The prices rne from $18.00 to $100.00 per Acre. Doubtless we could close our office and hold this land five years and make more money than to sell it now. But we are in the real es tate business and prefer to keep buying and selling. So if you want a farm a good farm and at the right price, see us. Brown Real Estate Co. Wither Building North Elm Street A lu BKOOKS, " O. Ii. 8APP 8. CLAY WILLIAMS rooks, Sapp & Williams Attorneys-At-Law GREENSBORO, N. C. 03m In Dixie Insurance Building 0 V. Taylor J. i. tm Taylor ScMei ATTORNEYS AND COUNSEL LORS AT LAW Or eons boro, 1C. O. SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS FRANK'S DEATH SENTENCE. IPECAC PBiJNOUNCED'Xi f In an opinion handed down Thurs- CURE FOR RIGOS DISEASE Nearly everybody has Rlggs. dis dav the "Supreme court of the United ease. Dentists tell us that at: least i States held that the state of Georgia , 96 adults out 01 a ivy nave u u ihad denied Leo M. Frank no right j more or less extent, mis disease in Hoa haffied dentists for years. The Ullii"! I i A C l j a am aamw sentencing him to death for the mur- loss of about half, the permanent der of Mary Phagan. The court af- teeth is said to be due to this obstl- o. disease. Now it' is nnrKr. HonrHo t-a- iitnaH tn he curable. Thanks to fusine to release Frank on a writ of science! habeas corpus, Justice Pitaey an- Riggs' disease, or pyorrhea as the nouncing the opinion. dentists call it, Is a chronic disease Justice Holmes delivered a - dis- of the gums, or rather the membrane sentine opinion in which Justice i that surrounds the roots of the teeth Hughes concurred. and lines the sockets of the gums This decision, it is believed, ex- it causes the gums to gradually re- Ko..t oil moanfl nf flfhtinc in the roHp fmm the teeth, exposing the i r. km i u m. a u u w n o " v v w more delicate neck of the tooth and giving the teeth an elongated ap nearance. This process continues At the end of that time and in the course of years causes the only the possibility of gums to bleed easily and to become courts to save Frank's life. His at torneys, however, will have '30 days In which to file an application for a rehearing, apparently executive clemency will be between the prisoner and death. The habeas corpus proceedings rested on the claim that the trial court had lost jurisdiction over the prisoner by reason of "mob domina tion" during the trial and by Frank's involuntary absence at the time the verdict was rendered. It was claimed this denied him "due process" as guaranteed by the federal constitu tion. Frank's legal fight for life has taken a place among the celebrated murder cases of recent years. Seven times since his conviction in August, sore and ulcerous. It finally causes the teeth to become loose and almost drop out. Now it has been found that all this trouble is due to a peculiar germ that destroys this membrane which surrounds the root of the tooth and which lines the socket in which it rests. This particular germ is read ily destroyed in from three to six days' treatment. To begin the treatment one should consult a dentist and have the teeth thoroughly cleaned. Deposits of tar tar or yellow calcareous matter which accumulates, particularly 1913, the lower and Supreme courts along the inner edges of the teeth of the state of Georgia refused to grant Frank a new trial or to set aside the verdict; three times the sentence of death was passed upon him and twice appeals were made to the United States Supreme court. the first being unsuccessful and the second resulting in the decision of Thursday. Mary Phagan was murdered April 26, 1913, on a Southern holiday in observance of Confederate memorial day. Shortly after noon of that day she was seen to enter the pencil fac tory in Atlanta where she had been employed and where she went to ob tain wages due her. Her body was found next morning in the basement of the factory, with a cord tied about the neck. Leo M. Frank, a young Jew, a col lege graduate and married, whose home had been in Brooklyn, N. Y., was superintendent of the pencil fac tory. Three days after the murder Frank was arrested on suspicion and on May 8 Frank and a neero watch man at the factory, Newt Lee, were held by the coroner for the grand jury's action. Lee subsequently was released. Sixteen days later Jim Conley, a negro sweeper at the fac tory, made a confession to the po lice in which he accused Frank of having killed the Phagan girl, and declared lie had helped dispose of the body. Conley, who was one of the chief witnesses for the state at Frank's trial, was convicted as an accessory after the murder in Feb ruary, 1914, and sentenced to one year's imprisonment. He began his term last July. and between the teeth, should be re moved, as these deposits irritate the gums and furnish lodging places for many kinds of germs. After the teeth are cleaned, or even before cleaning, one should begin the use of some form of the drug Ipecac. This is Conveniently taken in tablet form under the drug name of al cresta ipecac. Directions for taking the ipecac usually accompany the drug or any dentist can furnish the information. Emetine, a similar drug, is sometimes used with equally good results. To prevent reinfection, which is very easy, particularly with the use of common drinking cups, it is rec ommended that in washing the mouth and teeth a drop of a solution of one part fluid extract of ipecac to ten parts alcohol be used on the wet tooth brush. The use of one drop ot this alcoholic solution as a mouth wash on a wet tooth brush should be continued regularly at least twice a day to prevent reinfection. DO INDIANS STIXi OFFER HUMAN SACRIFICES? Cato Sells, commissioner of the In- I dian bureau at Washington; has be gun an investigation of the allega tion that the TWa Indians still offer human sacrifices." Mr. Sells, who was aroused to "action by a states ment made by Mrs. Matilda Coxe Stevenson, of the bureau of Ameri can ethnology, announced that as soon as he learned from Mrs. Steven son the exact facts about the sacri ficeshe would send agents from the Indian bureau into the field to inves tigate. "Such a condition is almost un thinkable in the twentieth century," he said. "If it exists, the Indian of fice will lose no time looking into it. There should be no red- tapeto in terfere with an inquiry o this kind." j Not for many years has any Indian question so stirred both scientists and those charged with the adminis tration of Indian affairs as the state ment of Mrs. Stevenson. Criticism was aimed at the Indian office for its failure to know of this practice, but such criticism, Mrs. Stevenson said, is not justified. "Though one of the villages is only 10 miles from Sante Fe," she 7 said, "yet the Indian rites and cere monies are kept hidden from the white man with a secrecy that is astounding." If there is any blame, Mrs. Stevenson intimated, it is with Congress and not with the Indian of fice. "What is needed," she said, "is for more ethnologists to be sent there. For 30 years now, I have been struggling along alone. Many assistants might have been used to advantage. We are only beginning to penetrate the secrets of Indian mythology, religion, poetry and so cial customs' UUilld MBiCii i uu wuiit a nui water QSf that Uont teak or Burst Leaky rubber godfls are a nuisance and never a comfort We guarantee all bur articles of rubber to give satisfT' tion or we will refund your money. Ever try rubber gWpC to protect your hands when cleaning with strong solution! and soapy water? , r CONYERS & SYKES, Druggists The Home of "Sy-Co" the Better Ice Cream. (UJaOSTIEIlSQ L. M. Ammen C& Co., Funeral Directors and Em balmers, have moved from their former location at 600 South Elm street to new quarters across the street at 607 South Elm, next to Lowe's grocery store. We have added to our business a department of Picture Framing and solicit the pa'ronage of the public. 1L. M. AMMEN & CO. Day Phone 488 607 South Elm Street. Night Phone 1521 Man Takes His Own Medicine Is an Optimist. He has absolute faith in his medi cine he knows when he takes it for certain ailments he gets relief. Peo ple who take Dr. King's New Discov ery for an irritating cold are opti mists they know this cough remedy will penetrate the linings of the throat, kill the germs, and open the way for nature to act. You can't de stroy a cold by superficial treatment -you must go to the cause of the trouble. Be an optimist. Get a bot tle of Dr. King's New Discovery to day, adv. Subscribe to The Patriot. 1 I s F. E. TIPTON, Monuments, , Mausoleums, and Headstones. New marble yard corner North Elm and Gaston. Seventeen years actual experi ence guarantee artistic lettering and carving. Corner N. Elm and Gaston Sts. Watch Your Label and Don't Let Your Subscription Expire President Ambassador and French 8 peak. The need of self-possession, calm ness and a judicial temperaWnt by the United States in the present world crisis was urged by President Wilson Thursdaxsin a speech before the opening session of the twenty rourth Continental Congress of the Daughters of the American Revolu tion. The president said self-possession was the supreme test of a nation's mettle and urged the congress to rally to the cause of righteousness as ministered by those who hold their minds quiet and judge upon princi ple. Railrvad Freight Rates Upheld. The interstate commerce commis sion has rendered a decision dismiss ing a complaint brought against the Southern Railway Company by the North Carolina corporation cpmmis- sion, in conjunction with the Odell Hardware Company, of this city, and several other large shippers of the state, alleging certain class and com modity freight rates to be unjust and discriminatory. The commission holds that the railroad's joint through rates from Cincinnati have not been shown to be unreasonable Neither are the rates assessed by the company on shipments from points in central freight association terri tory that did not have through rates to North Carolina points. The commission also holds that the through rates from the Pitts burg-Buffalo territory to North Car olina points are not unreasonable or unjustly discriminatory, and neither are the rates from Lynchburg to North Carolina points. Decreased Export Trade. American cotton exports have been cut in half, wheat and flour shipments have increased three-fold, tobacco products have dropped 25 Following the president's speech Per ent and the value of exPlosives Ambassador JusseranH f v exports has trebled when the first - , J L 1 1 1 I I I f l w, , I . , n , eigni monins or tne present tlscal year are compared with the corre sponding months of 1914. These sweeping changes have been caused by the European war, the figures for the 1915 fiscal year embracing the first seve'n months of that struggle. ihe export trade as a whole, not withstanding various great gains, is much smaller than for the eight months ended with February, 1914. told the congress fliat the United States had behaved in the European crisis so as to rommanH ti1Q tude and thankfulness of the world "We in France," he siad. "hav! learned to know what the American heart is made of the pure American gold that is in it. I am elad tht t may affirm the thanks of France for the generosity of America the neu tral United States." The ambassador PMnt said the "chief question in the European struggle" Some lonus of Rheumatism. Curable vvas the same nmhiom con- America in revolutionary 'We though we had solved the problem of h .....wmj iiucilj, ne "But it again confronts us. It will be solved now jst as it was solved in former times, as it was solved in the trenches at Yorktown." fronted times. White Man With Black Liver. The liver is a blood purifier. It was thought at one time it was the seat of the passions. The trouble with most people is that their liver becomes black because of impurities in the blood due to bad physical states, causing biliousness, head ache, dizziness and constipation. Dr. King's New Life Pills will clean up the liver, and give you new life. 25 cents at your druggist. adv. Rheumatism is a disease charac terized by pains in the joints and in the muscles. The most common forms are: Acute and chronic rheu matism, rheumatic headaches, sciat ic rheumatism and lumbago. All of these types can be helped absolutely by applying some good liniment that penetrates. An application of Sloan's Liniment two or three times a day to the affected part will give instant relief. Sloan's Liniment is good for pain, and especially rheumatic pain, because it penetrates to the seat of the trouble, soothes the afflicted part and draws the pain. "Sloan's Liniment is all medicine." Get a 25 cent bottle now. Keep it handy in case of emergency. adv. Hav you paid your ubcr4pticmT s Paint half your job Devoe; paint the other half whatever you like. If Devoe doesn't take less gallons and cost less money, no pay. The cost of putting it on is about two-thirds of the job. If Devoe doesn't wear a year or two years or three years or four years longer distinctly longer and better we'll give you enough to do it again. But we warn you how it will all turn out. The best half of your job will cost you so much less than the other half, and wear so much better too, that you'll never divide it again. You won't get ytmr paint free, you'll get what is better. You ll know Devoe; you'll know strong points; you'll know weak points, and the question is settled. ji rui 01 ji Uifii
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
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April 22, 1915, edition 1
2
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