J i 2 1 TO MM if . - .if ;' ft-J ... '. 5 U. It'; W 1 - .v,-,,, ' - TONICS for Molting lien 8 builds up their tired-out, run down organs and makes feather growing easy. There is no cayenne pepper or any other harmful ingredient in - fcjonfceys roultry Tonic; it is just good medi cines that help 'nature do its work. Get a Pallor Pact age and see for. yoursejf. Money back if vou are cot satisfied. Your name here, HOWARD GARDNER Opposite Postoffice GREENSBORO N. C. CSS 8o4Jth Elm St., Greeraboro. Up-to-Date Jewelry of Every Description. BLm ElMAnt Assortment of Adapted for Wedding and Birthday Preeente. Cell and examine our goods, pleasure to show then. Its a U yen wish to buy er sell any kl cf Communicate With J, S. TtlOORE & Co.. Inc DR. L G.' COBLE DENTIST Booms 846-848, Benbow Arcade Greensboro N. C. Phone 601 r J. E. WYCHE DENTIST OECOND FLOOR FISHER. BLDG. PhoBMi Office. 29: Residence 22. C. CLIFFORD FRAZIER LAWYER Phone 629. Residence Phone 1615 OFFICES 102 Court Square, Greensboro 2r W. P. Reaves, M. D. Practice Limited to Eye, Car. Nose wit Throat. Offloe and Infirmary MoAdoo Building, Next to Postoffice. Phone No. 30. G. S. BRADSHAW ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Ceurt Square, Greembero, N. C. m ! A I BBOOK8, O. L. 8APP B. CLAY WILLIAMS Crooks, Sapp & Williams Attorneys-At-Law GREENSBORO, N. C. 49Qee in Dixie Insurance Building Dr. Daniel Dees Dr. Ralph Dees Dr. Rigdon Dees. DOCTORS DEES General Surgery and Diseases of Women. MoAdoo Office Building Next to Postoffice. GREENSBORO, N. C. QSnemiBt SB r own Att o rn ey-a t- Law 010 BANNER BUILDING, Green Hides Wanted Bring me your Green Hides. I am paying 14 cents per pound. J. C. OLIVE, Phone 713 City Market CHARLES A. HINES ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Wright Building. rth Elm St. Opposite Court House DR. J. F. KERNODLE DENTIST J TMt O.I.'cOaiKT COl 3 If Boesa 203 and 204 McAdoo Building taining Foley's Honey and Tar Coxn Over Still's Drug Store. pound, for coughs, colds and croup, woaft-wnwiwi Keswencel647 oreeftsDoro,' N Ci , ,t. ..vlkCA ' v I stoat TORRENS LAND 4 i .2 v In th$ SupefibicouHWttGuilford county oVemfer S Judge Thomas !j, Sha'4lgnCthe fiai papers in the first state guaranteed land title re corded in this county, under what is known as the Torrens title law enact ed by the legislature of 1913. The owner of the property is John W. Hicks, of Goldsboro, and it consists of something more than an acre of land near the State Normal College and is assessed for taxation at a valu ation of $2,420. The whole proceed ing was completed in just three months. Bruce Craven, of Trinity, who ad vocated the Torrens law for years be fore it was enacted, and who has since written a book on the subject which has had a general circulation in the United States and even in foreign countries, was the attorney for Mr. Hicks in securing the guaran teed title, and in response to the re quest for the statement about the cost and value of the Torrens titles, he gave out the following statement: "Mr. Hicks lives in Goldsboro and owns property in Greensboro which he cannot look after personally, and he wanted to be certain at least that he has the undisputed title to it. Ac cordingly he applied for the Torrens title by which the state guarantees that his title is clear and complete. The total bill of costs was a title less than $20 on this property, which is worth several thousand dollars, and this is the total necessary expense. In addition, where a new survey must be made, this will of course add to the expense, and the attorney's fee of course is another expense. On the other hand, this expense can be re duced by the property owner person ally getting the adjoining land own ers to accept service of summons and waive all protest. "If the desired title should be dis puted by some of the adjoining land' owners, the case would have to be tried out and the loser would pay the costs, but where there is any such doubt about the title is the very place where a Torrens title is most needed. If the title is not perfcet, the owner had beter know it. If it is perfect and the other party disputes it, then this party pays the costs. "This title which Mr. Hicks now has is guaranteed by the state of North Carolina just like the insur ance companies in the bigger cities, for a considerable fee, will guarantee a title. If anything should hereafter be found wrong with it, Mr. Hicks still has it, and the complaining party can only sue the state treasurer for damages' and he connot disurb this title. In future transactions the owner has an official certificate which" is just as good as a gold bond for the value of his property. By showing this certificate anywhere he proves not only that he owns the land but that his title is clear, and therefore the title is easily negotiable as secur ity for a loan or for sale. In case of another sale, there is no formality of expense except a simple entry at a cost of 75 cents and the new owner then knows his title is sound. "One extremely important point is that no one can dispute a boundary line of a Torrens title. If you have the old system and you and your Torrens title neighbor have a dispute about the boundary, you are shut out from any consideration. Your neigh bor keeps his boundary and you can sue the state treasurer, but .you can never get the land. If land owners could realize how many titles are de fective on account of the papers hav ing been drawn up by ignorant people, the Torrens law would soon become popular. "When the old form of registering deeds was first made the law, people would have nothing to do with it, and even yet there are hundreds of deeds unregistered. Very little progress was made until th statute w M. W 11111 made a registered deed conclusive against an unregistered one, and it is possible that after some years the Torrens law will be extended by re quiring all future registrations to come under it. At present the one trouble with it is that the npnnlo know nothing about it. "It is a safe and conservative esti mate that whatever the cost of a Torren title may be, it will add ten times as much to the marketable val ue of the property." May Let Church Women Vote. Women hereafter will be permitted to vote at parish elections in the Protestant Episcopal diocese of New York, provided the parishes give con sent, as a result of action taken in the convention of the New York dio cese. Woman IHcLV not.. hnwovflr have a place in church vestrips Our Jitney Offei This and 5c. Don't miss this. Cut out this slip, enclose with five tients to Foley & Co., Chicago, 111., writing your name and address v clearly. You will re ceive in return a" trial package con- p'oley Kidney Pills and Foley Ca- I thartic Tablets. Conyers & tfOUR.BIG FIRES IN A ,DAY mNTMONS PLANTS. ; New TprkijtfOY. 12. Four fires within tWeniyfouyhouranac toriesmaklng . su1ppUesT forhe allies" demanded the attention of the federal authorities today. Follow ing the $4,000,000 blaze at Bethle hem Steel works, ill which 800 can non were destroyed, fire swept two buildings of ihe Mid vale, . Pa,, Steel Company, in which were stored pat terns for the manufacture of 3,0 00, 000 Lee-En field rifles for the British government. v f Early today fire destroyed the rope plant of the John A. Roebling Sons' Company at Trenton, N. J., causing a damage of $1,000,000. The Roebling company was making barb wire for the allies. There was also a $50,000 fire in he pattern shops of the Baldwin lo comotive works at Eddy stone, Pa., just before noon Wednesday and a blaze-which caused $30,000 worth of damage to the American Sympathic Color Company at Stamford, Conn. The Baldwin works are under con tract to make locomotives for the Russian government. -Three Men Arrested. Scranton. Pa., Nov. 12. Three men were arrested here today and the nMno art keenins: close watch on several others as a result of the dis- covery of a trunk full of dynamite in the home of Eugene English. The ( specific charge against two of the ' men is impersonating secret service agents. The authorities are working on the theory that the men were plot ting to blow up the powder houses of the Du Pont Powder Company near Beckville. FINAL EXAMINATION FOR STATE TEACHERS. TTt. , J . 1J 1 TA.iU 1 n.n lina to clear up irregularities in the case of teachers now engaged in state high school work who dp not hold state hih school certificates will be held in Raleigh November 23 and 24, according to notice given from the office of Dr. J. Y. Joyner, superin tendent of public instruction. Under the high school law no one shall teach in a high school that re- ceives state funds who does not hold a state high school teacher's certificate. Examinations were held during the summer, but Secretary C. E. Mcintosh, of the state board of examiners, has found that a number are teaching in the schools without such certificates. The additional op- ! portunity for an examination fs given that the school involved may not lose its part of the state apportion ment and that salaries may not be affected. Examinaiions will be held as fol lows : November 2 3. on English, Theory and Practice of Teaching, School Law, American History, English History or so many of these subjects as may be necessary. All examina tions for renewal will be held also, beginning at 12 M. November 24, on Arithmetic, Algebra. Goemetry, Latin, French, German, Physical Geography, Agri culture, Botany, Chemistry or so manjr of these subjects as may be necessary. Getting Closer to Compulsory Re- 1 cruiting. I A strong intimation of compulsion at an early date is contained in a statement by the earl of Derby, di- : rector of recruiting for the British ' array. This statement is made, Lord ! Derby declares, with the authority of the prime minister. It says: "If young men medically fit and not indispensable in any business of national importance or by business conducted for the general good of the community do not come forward voluntarily before November 30, the government will, after that date, take the necessary steps to redeem the pledge made on November 2." On the date referred to Premier Asquith announced in the house of commons if young men did not come forward voluntarily and enlist "other compulsory means would be taken before married men were called upon to fill their engagements to serve." Lord Derby adds: "Whether a man is indispensable or not to his business will be decided, not by the man or his employer, "but by compe tent authorities and tribunals which are being set up to consider such cases." Should be In Every Home. j Coble's Croup and Pneumonia" Remedy should be in every home. It is the new liquid treatment for chil- j dren and adults for croup, pneumo nia, sore throat, hoarseness and all cold trouble?, and all inflammations. You Just rub it on and inhale; the vapor while it penetrates; not mes sy' to use and does not stain the clothing. It relieves instantly; your money back if It fails. : Sold on a guarantee hy your 'dealer at 2fM 60& arifc fl'tf iKttfteV - aft JTODGE HAB KEPT VOW HE MADE TO LINCOLN t Chester; f.,$ l2Sfederal jJidgeSimeoiyjbbdrow King, o Chi ?iiflwhois visiting theMisse Jabe aid Hannah JVooro flelatis, inTThat S6d f rOIT) 25C tO this, city, is a remarkable man. He is in his eighty-fourth year, and has never been sick s dayin his life. . He comes of a sturdy Quaker stock, and would ps for a man of 0. He was appointed judge for the United States "court for' the northern district of Illinois when he was 21 yers and six months of age, l?y Pres ident Abraham Lincoln, and has been sitting as a jurist during all that long period of more than half a century. "I have kept the promise I made to Abraham Lincoln," Judge King said today, "and that promise was that I would never smoke or chew tobacco, never touch liquor and never tell an untruth." Judge King is one of the most widely known and best-beloved of Chicagoans. His appointment to the Federal bench when he was barely past his majority was considered one of the most remarkable administra tive acts of President Lincoln. His rivals for judicial honors in those days referred to him as "the poor hired boy," because he had worked himself up from the plow on the farm to the bar. Will Watch the Lobbyists. Careful watch will be kept on lob byists during the coming session of Congress, according to Senator Over man, chairman of the senate's spe cial lobby committee. "The commit tee is still alive," said Mr. Overman, "and will be kept alive tor the pur pose of inquiring into any insidious lobbying that may be attempted dur ing the next Congress as a result of problems growing out of the Euro pean war. He mentioned proposals to pro hibit sales of war munitions to belli gerents and the national defense pro gram as issues likely to draw all kinds of outside pressure upofe-mem-bers of Congress Cheaper Than Home-Made. You cannot make a good cough medicine at home for as little as you pay for Foley's Honey and Tar, nor can you be sure of getting the, fresh, full strength, clean and pure mate- rials. Did you ever hear of a home- made cough medicine doing the work that Foley's is doing every day all over the country? Conyers & Sykes. GFT We Get We Saw InRBARMSftl This sn on our win dow is there for your buying protection t. I., , ' l. , r Plac&d; on GU ARANTEED. Money back if brushes ar C 0 IM5JE RSn & -: SLICES ThfilHorhcf of Sy-G6" Cor. Elm and -Washington Streets ' McAd for glares are as small as the cost of the glasses and frames you rjequke will permit. HARRISON, Optometrist Over Greensboro National Bank Cor. Elm and Washington St GREENSBORO, S. C Valuable Farm For Ren! NEAR SPLENDID SCHOOL. As attorney in fact, for the heirs at law of W. O. Donnell, deceased, I will lease for the year 1916 a part of the old home-place, lying along the macadam rqad between Sumraer field and Oak Ridge, and within from three-quarters, to a mile of the cele brated Oak Ridge school. - Will lease to proper party the. whole or any part of three hundred and nine acres .and more, if desired. The, neighborhood is healthy, the farm woll watered, with a seven room, two-story resi dence for the lessee and good f out buildings. Is adapted to the raising of corn, wheat and tobacco and has good curing barns. Will prefer to lease for money rent. Interested parties majr apply to the undersigned by letter or in person at the office of King & Kimball; at Greensboro, N. C. A. B. KIMBALL, Attorney in Fact. DP. J. W TA YLOR, - Fitting Glasses a Specialty. Ck.niiiHtinns Without "Drops RELIEF OR NO PA. Office Fifth Floor Banner Bldg. KIDNEY FILLC f ft - IT AT ODELL'S QUALITY FOLEY The Trade Because the Dematicl touring PORTSMEN are critical buyers. YYnen tney go into a Rifle or Shotgun, or nition, they want to be sure of finding assortments responsive to their demands. Right there you have the reason why more sportsmen every year are coming to us for their Rifles, Shotguns and Ammunition. Ever since we began in business we have been selling Itemington-TJMC Making our display of Remington-UMC ' Rifles and Shotguns, our assortments of Remington-UMC Shot Shells and Metallics our bid for the; trade of Sportsmen in this community. , We are glad to say that we are getting that steady trade of more sportsmen every year. Come, see for yourself how well we are prepared to serve you. 1 1 j . . i . of; JMTHBrajsaK Jate al Toithbrush cr at 25c eacrwn mggists the BetttfBlce Cream 00 Bldg. mi 83 acres good land with 5 room dwelling and good barn, on Deep River, 9 miles south west from Greensboro. For sale at special low prices. Terms if wanted. Brbwn 'R&l Estate Co. 103 East Market Street. k. L. VfeNTRESS ATTO R N E Y-AT-LA W. with .A. Waylan CU rUher Building Greenskor, N. C. Notary Publie. ELMER E. LULL, M. D. C VETERINARY SURGEOIf t Coble & Starr's Stables, 533 Soutb Kim Street, Greensboro, N. C. f fioe Phone 678, Residence Phone 1502 FIRST it store ior a for ammu 7&U MiHi

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view