ffOLSOAT. SITTO 6, Hit the ASiincono cou:. .ASIIEBORaN."C 444w$ 444 Bai -A A t rgPBaMains! 4- i You Wf beat the Baiaiiis that are offered iri this'Big; Fife Sale. 'Every thing in this stock is Now on sale at new; lol upw UMllAUai US. ; than the fdo close this stock so have made 3 WE are ontland1 another cut ;m prices which should tpr bus -?.$pim&&n- jvuftrir; raft,-, Cause you to mvestiate. Positively Wlfira and M' iooi when you have - f far Atsm ftW2miPi? The greatest sale : o Men's and Boys' -Clothes that has ever been seen is now f goitf & oi?at; the'EPIRD J'EIRE SALE, up-stairs in the Harris Hall. Don't fail to. avail yourself of this opportunity to buy luBtatifial, ytylisti 1 Suites while ' the sale prices are in effect Meri's sWr1uhderWear, hats, suspend n?ders; overalls, ttecjean tides of men's wear are included in this great price slashing sale. smeiiomsunUDStairs-j Corner East Washington and Wreiui Sts. larnstiau DI.DNOTiONS Our entire stock ot piece goods, inelud: ing everything front "fine silks down to cheese cl6th, is pffered in this saleat the lowest prices that it has been your pleasure to see in many years. W&are determined to sell egoodsand I have markedtdowp prices to the point wheevery yafdhtftlld go ia:a tverr .This Is your chance to buy real . Bar gains. - lddhV Visrf to th sale, - Come and buy your neeqj for the presoitand fottifortuF Xtffcxrr not have another dprtuhity ' to Imy Bach values again soon. . Of Our Fire Sale has' attracted hundreds nave come ncxe : ana uruuiu , uucrauy ui ? ' v . . "... . . , . . . . - ' - -v r . ! the nnmatchahle valura that have nrevail- ed here during this BIG SAL?; -at prices - that will attract your attention when you . . . .. . . .. . . . . . enter our store. GENERAL NEWS . . - -. .-.' The iraU'i ctwtMl kiipUM ia made moct occes&il flirtt IB lu &nt flight, at Barton. Ofcio. U kaova aa tha Earlmf Bakbr. It Dltd Ha BiakUa fllcbt at WO- bc Wright field neeatljr. Tha plana m la uta air W ttiinnira. tbu waa tha rreateat at . flirhta tinea ' tna Wiutt Brotbari aaoa their memor ial fiirht at Kitty Hawk, - N. C DaeemW. lSOS JThii Uthe Unui af all airplanca aad obtain a maxi mum speed af 93 mQa an hour. Officials of Henry county, VTr ginia, have raeantly found a - new rase in rum rannlnf business, - A motor track was stopped last week by tha officials of Henry county, which was empty and not lont; after tha sesura a neary ear knocked this empty car out of the road aad it was found .that the machine had a falsa body and an 80 inch tank running the entire length' of the body was se creted , nffilerneath, containing 166 gallons of liquor. The driver and tha car was held. . H. L. Whitefield received the om- ination for Governor in the second primary in Mississippi, last week against Theodore T. Bilboe. Drj I B. McBrayer, Superintend ent of tha State sanatorium for tu bercular patients in Hoke county, was recently recommended to be re tained in his official position by a committee appointed by the last Gen eral Assembly, but his conduct on certain matters was criticised as im proper but not sufficient to amount to any moral terpitude. Last year McBrayer was indicted by the grand jury in Hoke county on some of the charges which were made against him Def ore the General Assembly. One was for trading with himself, he having stock in a corporation f ronv which the Sanatorium made purchas es. The Statute of the State pro hibits officers from doing this and whenever it is done and is known in dictments are made and should be made for no man has the right to trade with himself and no self re specting porsecutor can afford to wink at such conduct. C. W. Trice, a Civil War veteran, 80 years of age, is actively at work as telegraph operator for the South ern railway at Lexington. , Capt. Trice began as an employee of the Southern railroad in 1865, about two months after the war closed. JSoon afterwards Jie was employed -an the road at Durham and in 1868, while agent at Thomasville he learned to be a telegraph operator. In 1873 he became agent at Concord and 1878 he took a similar position at Lexington, holding it for 25 years. He has served regularly now for 8 years at night, and on his 80th birthday. June 2, last, he worked 4 hours over time, taking the place of a sick man. In the last ten years it is stated that he has riot lost more than two weeks time. chairman of the executive board of the Brotherhood ol Railway Clerks, waa elected president of the Federa- tiorf Of . Labor ttf iuoceedM. Mlis, of Spencer, the the annual meeting in Greensboro last week. The next meeting wilt be held in Durham. Other officers elected follow: H. C. Caldwell, vice-president, who acted as chairman of the convention, was, re elected by acclamation; J. M. Cox; of Salisbury, second vice-president. .: by acclamation; James T. Robertson of Moo res vine, third vice-president, -tbv acclamation;, E. J. Wicker, of .Ral eigh, fourth vice-president; Chaa, C. woney, of Ashevule, was re-elected secretary by a rising vote; Lindsay Schaeffer. of Salisbury, sergeant 'at arms, and Rev. J. O. Belton, of Mount Airy ,r waa re-elected chaplain by ac clamation. .;. 'Julian Newborn, of Elizabeth City. said to Jto the owner and driver, of an automobile which was wrecked arf that town last week, causing the death of three and injury to tyinaelf apd another man, has pre sented nimseii at tna office or eaun ty prosecutor, Sawyer, and accepted service on a warrant charging man slaughter. He gave bond of $1,000 for his appearance at a nrellmiaarv hearing September 16th. la Sampson county it hei Aeen proven reeantirha three Coafader ata rataiaii !who nava been aea4 for three yeara m stiS en the panMo uati ksMc facMnd heii chaoka for Lpensioir-aad tha same have beaafen ooneo, apprevea ana aaaaaa, 4. lomMiones n tna craveyara that theet three ratal ana have toad thi years and looks lilea oody -wtu -wt la tha it aught U be the eewity affiaafs. WHEM KOKTH CAROLINA LXAD3 TU WDBLD factariaa, cifarattaa Wmaton-Sakm plant in tha the the Largest tobaeeo tare Uaa half the in the entire world, as4 Vuraam, Largest aluminum world. Badin. Largest tranita quarries in world, MC Airy and Salisbury. LAirest peach orchards in world, the sand hula. T alt. Airy section raises and ships mat cab bar than any single point in the world. North Wilkeeboro raises and sells aaore medicinal herbs than the rest of the world combined. Moore county has tha largest and finest beds of building sand in the world. : Asheboro has the largest double seated cane-bottom chair factory in tha world and the largest single-knit hosiery factory. Largest pulp mill in the world, Canton. " Wilson and Winston-Salem have the largest leaf tobacco markets in the world. Greensboro and Durham have the largest and second largest denim mills in the world. Kannapolis has the largest towel factory in the world. A Largest mill-stone quarry and best quality, Chatham county. Catawba has the largest gingham weaving factory in the world. t- Pinehurst has the largest and most valuable herd of Berkshire hogs in the world. .Durham has the largest per capita wealth of any city of like size in the world. Practically all of .the shuttles for ,1 At -11 . .1 au me nuns or ine enure world are made or sold by J. Elwood Cox, High Point. Largest apple tree in the world. near North Wilkesboro. '" ,The cabbage king of the world, R. OyParks, Asheboro. Largest dam. covering largest area in the world, Badin. - .North Carolina good roads, built and to be built, about $150,000,000. .North Carolina on education and buildings for educational institutions, $40,000,000. LETS KEEP BISTORT STRAIGHT Kaemks af socially eertaia aewspapeia aad their eorrospswdtnta, have gleefully herald ed the downfall af Norwood aad the indictment of Cooper aa serious, if not fatal, blows at what they term the "Siauaons Machine." La as doing they an either willful ly misrepresenting the facts or are woefully ignorant of the recent po iitieal history of North Carolina. They call Lieutenant Governor Cooper aad "Old Guarder" and honor Mr. Norwood, the late Democratic there la a Simmons Machine" at aU. State Chairman, with the same title, i Certainly na others have a right to In so doing, the enemies of Senator be enrolled among the "Old Guare Simmons are either making a studied j er," or to be classed among the effort to discredit him or are utterly members of the organisation which lacking in information concerning the . Senator Simmons perfected for his political records of both the present ! defense. tenant Governor and the former) Were Mr. Norwood and Mr. Coop State Chairman. I .p .mm. th man who rmlliAH fc the Geeraera chair, Mr. Kitekia (challenged Senator Simmon's right to ispreseut the State af North Caretiaa, in the United States Senate, j Thee it was that Senator Kim mews mustered around him Democratic men from all sections of North Care Una. These men may, perhaps, jast I ly and with entire appropriaeaeaa be) ' termed the "Old Guard." They want ' to the mat for their .leader. The or 'ginatioa formed by men who rallied jto the banner of Simmons for ...the aim ana aeaia struggle oj iiriz saay be called the "Simmons Machine." if If there is a "Simmons Machine" in North Carolina, it was most as suredly built and set in motion when such a machine waa badly needed. That waa in the year 1912. when Sen ator Simmons was called upon to make a life and death struggle for his seat in the Senate and, in fact, for his political life. That struggle is now known to every school boy and girl as the Simmons-Kitchin Cam paign". William Walton Kitchin was then Governor. He had back of him some of the strongest politiacal machines ever constructed in North Carolina or any other State. As the leader of that machine, or, we prefer to call it, organization, Governor Kitchin was a Pastmaster a clean and upright ity and long experience in the politics of the State, with all the power born of experience, train ing, ability and remarkable personal ity, and with an organization that had four years before triumphantly swept him over all opposition into men Senator Simmons in 1912 T They were not. On the contrary, Mr. Nor wood in Rowan and the Coopers ol Wilmington were among the chief est of the chief Lieutenants in the Kitch in organisation. They did everything in hteir power to oust Simmons front the Senate. They are not and never were "Oil Guardere" and neither of them had anything to do with building what the enemies of Senator Simmons like to call the "Simmons Machine". The Journal feels impelled to relate this bit of political history in Justice to Senator Simmons and also in justice to newspaper readers of North Caro lina who may have been misled bjr the anti-Simmons press to consider Messrs. Cooper and Norwood as sup porters upon whom the senior Sena tor leaned for his very political lir in this State. It is also well, now an8 then, to pause long enough to set history straight in ihe interest of the general welfare. Winston-Salem Journal. General Wood has fallen down as Governor of the Phillipines. His conduct is not only so reprehensible that it does not meet with the appro val of the natives but he has appoint ed an ex-conviot as mayor of Manila. fin rf v Henry Crotts of the Midway sec tion, Davidson county, enloved a birthday dinner last week when he rounded out 67 years of his life, hav ing 667 of his friends from Davidson Rowan and Randolph counties pres ent. .' Squire John W. Bowers of the Fair Grove community, Thomasville township, has been teaching for 42 years in the public schools of David soil county. Ife lye You Can Trust GeooinelDeiatheryeyW salts. Itiiiotnicalbec8mseofitacx DonlbptrttwkljcbeapwaateMbraw Ask your gro cer for the can with the smiling red devil on the label. Writ, for Fn BooUrt , , Wm. SchfcM Mfg. Co., St. Louis, Mo. ttisa those Wres top!" my And he's SALE NOTKB Br virtue of an'' order at the superior Court of Xaadolpn Gm ty.ii theTSpecW rroceedtag entitled, Rosetta York at at rs. Mary M. ftaot, et aL I will on the 15th day af Sept iber. 1928. at t o'clock a. m-sell to tha highest bidder at yubUe auction at tha court house door af Randolph county, the following described real state: . . . Beginning at a stone Reeve's cor ner, running net passing Reeves' and Hudaon'a orner - W chains and 60 links to s stone also Hudson's eomert thence south 21 1-1 degrees wast 46 chains and 60 links to a stone an Hln shaw'a line also Hudson's corner; thanes west 41. chains 18 links to a atone, Julian's corner thanes -north 21 chains to links to s stone; thence south 67 degrees wast 80 chains. 40 links to s atone formerly a post' oak in Patterson's line; thence north 26 chains and 73 links to a red oak on Ledbetter's line; thence east 28 thai ns 20 links to a stone Ledbetter's eor ner) thence north 4 chains 60 links to the beginning, eontalnig 296 acre more or lens.' ' . . . . . , v Except 112 acres heretofore, sold te This re-sale Is made a aeeotma of S five per cent bid being placed en the price bid at a former sale. . Tfrms one-third cash, one-tlilrd in "three months and one-third In s'x months. Fleet Boa. right, abflutely. Hit lorifc experience shown he thiT W Vtto to run on unialMteHib a !. t 15 or 20 potmi of sdr JesaWtnth tires can M rWh M ltd 7m-k perBalW; where an extra iWbgof ttrthrf only 7,o to' V, of a mile. Polarine liiuit around practical experience ofmoretKari tiftytxi wttch ha ihown us a thousand arid one thin at affect the per formance caWr ottorfueU You can trust It as thoroughly a you can trust the finest tire ikis tite I H7 or motor car STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jerser) Say "Pblarme" not just "a quart of oil0 i-t" The PoUA Chlri & eWe tnil $11 " C kbd ti f sd r-.4 tU rlsht eeehe el PeUrtae , f ( 4 N.C. title to be ilnH untill all the pur This !' 2 '"1 r.f A . i?n 1 rk I at (Ml dHkl. .V". r 'I V l'f .r I". J ' . r