- " 11 JUST FOIL J? UN. vr:X; IsJTATE NEWS ''XX; The first brick of the Masonic and Eastern Star Home for Aged and In digent Masons, their wives ana daughters, was laid last week at Greensboro in' the presence, of a -jiumber of Masons who went out to Mia - work begin. The building occupies a lovely site of twenty-five acres just beyond vLindley Park and to the norm 01 rumuua buiuuu. The tobacco farmers of North Car olina, particularly in the old tobacco section in Stokes, Surry," Forsyth and -adjacent counties who have seen their products taken for twenty -years by the trust at about fhe cots of cultiva tion, have come to the conclusion that there is no hope of protection for them by the State or Federal Govern ment bo -long -as the American Tobac co Conmpany has the influence it now lias and they are organizing in order to try to help themselves. Governor Kitchin last week granted . ni.nno r frrnr nrisoners in for vari- -ous terms and crimes, and a commu tation of sentence to one. Robert Harrison, the young white man of Cary whom it was sought in the Wake court at Raleigh to convict of manslaughter for the shooting of Vessie Turner, a small negro boy, last New Year's night, has been ac quitted by the jury, members of which took the view that the killing was en tirely, accidental. Harrison was try ing an old revolver by shooting at the door of a shed and the boy came up unexpectedly, the ball glanced from the door and took effect in his head. In a batch of twenty-three opinions delivered last week, by the Supreme court, State vs. Sandlin - from New Hanover was the most notable, this against L. M. Sandlin, under sentence to be .electrocuted for the murder of his wife in Wilmington. Fred Ritchie, a lineman in the em ploy of the Southern Power Company, was electrocuted at Lexington one day last week while strapped to a pole thirty feet from the ground. He was one of a force that has been working around Lexington for sever al weeks and when the accident oc curred he was helping to make some changes in the line at the jWenonah I nmill in Ilia cmittiara end nf tho r city. Last week at the regular meeting of the board of aldermen of Shelby an election was called for December 5 to vote $15,000 worth of bonds with which to take over the electric light plant. The town closed the deal for the privately owned plant several days ago, but willjhave to have the act approved by the citizens in the form of a bond issue. The sentiment Is strong for municipal ownership. Catawba county advocates of bonds for roads have prepared petitions for circulation in Newton- and Hickory townships, calling for an election to pass o nthe question of issuing bends to the amount of $50,000 in each town ship. These will be presented to the commissioners at the December meet ing, and they will be asked to call the election. It was the intention of the bon dadvocates to take sters to have a county election but it appears that the J i uau icgiaiauuu iui uic vuuuijr was made with the township idea in view, instead of the whole county as the unit. t Cleveland county farmers are hold ing their cotton for beter prices. Very few bales are being sold and these go on the market by people who are una ble to hold and whose creditors are pushin gthem for settlement. The Farmers'. Union is 1,400 strong in the county and every union man has pledged himself to hold his; taples. Mr. R. M. Gidney, one of the leaders of the union, has been appointed to make a campaign for the union in the Interest of the holding movement. The Durham and South Carolina Railroad Company, running from Dur ham to Bonsall, the extreme edge of Wake county, last week awarded the contract for an extension of twelve or more miles to Kipling, where it 30ms. the Raleigh and Southpcrt and enters into direct connection with the Atlantic -Coast Line. The cotton leaf caterpilla which has a.eared in so many counties is all over Catawba county, and spreads with the greatest rapidity. The green leaves of the plant are eaten while you wait and the horde moves on. many call it the army worm, although the State entomologist has dubbed it the above-mentioned caterpillar. No damage wil lbe done by it this late in Catawba county. Islsiiiiiiii Stages, Cured by MILAM . : the great -..- Reconstructive ' tonic and blood, renovater We do not set forth MILAM as a cure for consumption, but it has proven so bene ficial to such patients that we believe, and are supported in our belief by a practicing physician, that MILAM will arrest incip ient tuberculosis or consumption in its early stages. We know that it greatly benefits even those in the advanced stages. Read the following ,' Scrpfulitic Consumption City of Danville, State of Virginia -To-wit: . I, Edmund is. Meaae, iMotary ruDiic in and for the City of Danville, State of Vir ginia, do hereby certify that Abram Word, of Danville, Va., to me well known, did ap pear before me, and being duly sworn, de poseth and says as follows: "For ten years prior to August, 1909, I was under the care of a regular physician. Last spring this doctor told me he could do me no-good, and I tried another for four months without receiving any benefit from him. In August, 1909, 1 began taking Milam, and am now able to do my work without difficulty, my appetite is good, and I can eat and digest any food. . ' ' My trouble was said to be Scrofulitic Consumption, and I was wasted away to a shadow. O I was so weak that I could hard ly walk when I commenced on MILAM. I regard MILAM as a truly valuable reme dy in all cases of blood trouble, whether eruptive, or proceeding from a lack of full, free circulation. I have recommended MILAM to about twenty of my friends, and so far as I have seen or heard from them, they all speak In the highest terms of it, and are recommend ing it to their friends. It was particularly beneficial tome in aid ing digestion and building up an appetite." (Signed) ABRAM WORD. In witness to the above. I have hereunto set my hand and the seal of my office, this 23rd day Ol March, A. D., 1910. EDMUND B. MEADff. (SEAL) Notary Public, My commission expires Jan. 14. 1914. Ask your druggist or writ for booklet Llilam Medicine Co.,Inc Danvme, va. Have you anything to declare V asked the ixuStoms Inspector. "Only that J still love George," replied the bride, with a ; Jblush-Detroit v Free Press '. : ':' -" V; X " y-i ' w"- Small Brother Are you going to marry Sister. Ruth? Caller Why er I Teally don't know, you know! Small Brother-r--That's what I thought Well, you are! Life, 7: " : 1 . '- "Behold the ruins of Pompeii." "Been this way long?" "Some 1800 years." "Bah! We had San Francis co rebuilt In less than six months." Pittsburg Post. t ' They had begun to call Andrew Jackson "Old Hickory." "It only shows" he said, his . face wrinkling Into a grim smile, "that I'm pretty good presidential timber." Chicago Tribune. "The people in .Noah's time were like a great many ' modern business folks." "How so?" "They didn't know, enough to come in out pf the wet, and so they naturally went un der." Baltimore American. "I ordered some material a weeK ago to be cut, and it has'njt come yet. May I-ask why?": "We have waited for you to come in and change your mind, madam, before ' disfiguring the cloth." London Opinion." i "There's one of the wisest men I ever met. He does seem to be mighty well informed." "Well . informed! Why,( that ma nactually knows al most as much as Senator Bailey thinks he knows." Chicago' Record-Herald. Judge," sai dthe guilty man, "I Inherit this felonious habit. , I can't resist it. My afther was a grafter and my mother , a photographer. I can't halp taking things," "Then take seven years at hard labor," said the judge kindly Cleveland Plain Dealer. y'ww "Im shr and and w ybgQj and Can you not wait on me immedi ately?" demanded the -richly dressed lady. "I'm in a great hurry." "Yes; let me have your prescription," said the harassed druggist. "I have no prescription. I want yo uto look up a number for me in the telephone book." Washington Herald. BODY PIERCED BY CBOWBAB Xnther Simmons of Jfewbern Dies From Injuries Received In Peculiar Accident at Bichmond. Richmond, Va., Oct. 29. Luther Simmons, 21 years old. of Newbern, K. C, whose body was pierced by, a crowbar when he fell from a scaffold Monday afternoon while at work at the plant of the Richmond Guano Company, died early tonight at the icetreat for tne Sick. The bar. which fell from scaffild at the same time, assumed an upright , posiicm as it hit -the 'ground the upper end penetrat ing Simmons' right thigh a he fell upon it. The bar then passed up through his body, coming out at the light shoulder. Simmons was rushed to the hospital jyith the bar still in his lody, it was removed as soon as possible after his arrival there. The surgeons regard ft as miraculous that he lived as long as he did. , ; . Simmons body was shipped tonight to Newbern, where his father, T. A. Simmons, resides. He came to Rich mond several months ago to work. He also has a sister Mrs! Minnie Larkins of Dover, N. C. J. E. Yarboro of Nashville, N. C, who has been at a Richmond hospital for some weeks leaves for his home tomorrow. His hip was broken in a runaway ., accident, and it was not until the surgeons here mended the fracture with the aid of a ten-penny nail that it began to knit. The nail was removed last week. . - . . . ... JTIAKO FOR SALE At a bargain, a comparatively new Ep worth niano. THE FAVORITE LAXATIVE. One at Jfight Makes the 'ext Day Bright; No Charge if It Doesn't Because of its extremely gentle and effectiye action, Rexall Orderlies have become the most popular Remedy for Constitpation. We are so positive that Rexall Or derlies will do. all that is claimed for them that we positively guarantee to hand back the money you paid for them upon your mere request, if you are not entirely satisfied. Rexall Orderlies are eaten like candy, are very pleasant to the taste, do not gripe, cause nausea, or any other annoyance usually experienced when ordiary cathartics are used. - Rexall Orderlies have a positive regulative effect upon the bowels and tend to provide permanent relief from Constipation and the myriad of associate ailments. Besides, they help to overcome the necessity of the constant use, of laxatives to keep the bowels in normal condition. We honestly believe . there is .'no similar medicine so good as Rexall Orderlies, especially for children, aged, or delicate people. They are prepared in convenient tablet form in tnTee sizes of packages. Prices, 10c, 25c, and 50c Why not try them at our risk on our guarantee? Remember,. Rexall Remedies can be obtained in this community only at our store The Rexall Store. The Justus Pharmacy. WANTED AT ONCE Persons who " v desire to join a private class in stenography, book-keeping and typewriting. If interested 'phone ' Traction Engine and Disc Flow Lexington Dispatch Messrs. George P. Morefield and G. W. jGrouse went out .to Mr. James Bell's farm In Boone township to watch the workings of a big traction engine, hitched to a . six disc plow last v?eek. The plowing outfit is the prop erty of a young man by the. name of Fmerson. It Is 14-horsepower and fie six plows cut the hard earth to depth of ten inches with all ease. There were a number of farmers there to see it work and more than one declared that they were through plowing the old way, pulling their horses and mules to death. No. 35 or address "M. Hustler office. L. D." care 10-5-3tp HOLY ROLLERS SPBEAD OUT New Religious Sect in Catawba Has Strong Hold on Converts Large Number of People Ally Themselves With New Faith. Newton, Sept. 30. For some time past the "Holy Rollers," as they, are called, have been operating in the eastern part of the county, and there has been, no little interest in their doings. Strange stories are told of the complete mastery which the pe culiar doctrine obtains over the minds of cenverts. It seems that the ministers of the sect have no faith in doctors of med icines and lay claim to healing pow ers. At least one case has been re ported where a girl died of pneumon It, refusing to the last to have a phy sician and spurning even the appli cation of home remedies. Tobacco, also, seems to be under the ban and it Is reported from the new field of their labors in the west ern part of the county that a coun try merchant, immediately after his conversion, piled all his stock of to bacco, amounting to no little sum, and set it on fire. Converts are said to go off into. trances and to quiver as if they had St. Vitus' dance. In these trances they claim to have visited heaven, it is said. Not a few people have joined the organizations and some of the mem bers are fairly well-to-do . Outsid ers marvel at the hold which the doc trines get on persons and compare the effect to hypnotism. .IT K1 ooodooooooo'ooopoopoooooooo o o o o o o o o o o O A Q .i cS ' 'I : ; Av:;Wjranauni.: ' . ' . TAKE Ll I 1 o v. o o o o o o o 111 W8M lr 1 " o n me ,0 o o .0; o o ( 3- 1 .V i ( V ' ft 'i y 1 Iff Vx .OA I Ml ! a. mm - m Leather .Trust GutQuality X---X v ' ; Force Hiah Price X'- - i 4 Jlf there' is any man in this country who- 'ought to get good, nonesr snoes ax an nonest nnce it is tne workinsrman. N Yet what happens when he buys the average shoe for himself or ..nis--iaiimyf, X ; .- - -; t ) Instead of a shoe that protects his feet properly for the work he has to do he gets a. poor, weak thing that breaks down cracks and leaks, loses its fit and. comfort, j Adulterated Leather in Trust-Made Work-Shoes Jr The shoe goes back on him because the leather is weak tanned by a cheap, hasty "process" by the Leather Trust "weighted" with adulterants to swell the profits of the Trust. For those low-grade shoes he pays an outrageously high price because the Leather Trust fixes the price of the leather to suit itself- and because the shoes carry four needless profits 1 jr -v Profits to the Hide Trust, the Leather Trust,-the Leather Jobber and the Shoe Jobber. The Only Work-Shoes Independent of h the .Leather Trust K Why doesn't the shoe manufacturer buy good leather? . Man alive, he can't! The Trust controls the tanning industry of America. The ordi nary manufacturer has got to take Trust tanned leather or shut his factory down. There is only one shoe factory in this country that is independent of the Leather Trust. That concern is Endicott, Johnson & Co., and they make the most dependable, sturdy work-shoes in the United States. ...... . Shoes for the farmer, for the miner, for the bricklayer, for the teamster for' all heavy work and wet work outdoors and indoors. They, get good, old-fashioned leather be cause they tan it themselves in their own tanneries.1 They are the only shoemakers in the-world who tan every pound of leather they put into their shoes. Wonderful Endicott - Johnson Leather Endicott-Johnson Work-Shoes are made of leather tanned and finished expressly for work-shoe purposes . Chrome-tanned upper leather, heavy, tough and strong, but pliable and soft so that the shoe will wear a long time, be easy to the feet and give them ample protection. "Kromelk" soles (chrome tanned); the most durable sole leather ever produced proof against weather and heat, and all but proof -against wear. Remember this "Kromelk" sole leather. It is the first and only perfect chrome-tanned sole leather in the world. Nobody but Endicott, Johnson & Co. can produce it though the Leather Trust has tried. Work-Shoes Honest All Through Endicott-Johnson Work-Shoes are solid leather shoes no "filler" or shoddv or pasteboard inside. Just good, honest Endicott-Johnson leather through and through. They are handsome shoes good lines and good style, because they are designed by the same men who design the Endicott-Johnson dress shoes that sell for twice the money. And they are finisned just as carefully, too,' inside and out. Endicott-Johnson shoemakers do not know how to make a poor shoe. ! Now you would naturally suppose that shoes made out of this extra-grade leather, with such style, and finish, would cost you more than the ordinary Trust-made shoes. As a matter of fact Endicott-Johnson shoes come to you cheaper than any shoe of the same general type you ever wore. - How Price Is Kept Down 4 Endicott, Johnson & Co. make good leather in their own tanneries at rock-bottom cost, remember. Endicott-Johnson shoes pay no prof its tojrusts or Middlemen. They carry no exorbitant retail profits. Endicott, Johnson & Co. sell direct to your local shoe dealer who is willing to make his money by a fair margin on many sales rather than a big profit' on a smaller volume of business. Endicott-Johnson Work-Shoes are made in several grades, selling at $2i00 to $3.50 a pair. You can have your choice of numerous shapes and styles, and a full range of sizes. Other Endicott-Johnson Shoes You can get other Endicott-Johnson fines ' shoes for men and women, for boys and girls. lhe popular dress and business shoe is the END WELL (Goodyear Welt) selling at $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00. Go Jo the Endicott-Johnson dealer in this town, and look over his stock. Remember the name of the makers , " !E Cj DD D (1) "TT TT13 cD GD CO C3 t Shoe buyers wb fire ontnde t&e city viler 1m paper li pnUuiccI can Wrm lm names of tlkeb Borne dealers who carry END WELL shoes by rriting to Endicott. Johnson it Co.. Endicott, N. Y. i. CLIMAX ' V The most up-to-date sanitary shop in. this part of the state. Ixperienced barbers . to wait on yon. Cigars & Tobacco. West VACATION OUTING ' T1IE GL0E10US MOUNTAINS OF ern North Carolina f I : "The Land of the Sky" . ) - "The Sapphire ContJT,, 5 .r, "The Balsams" - f Where there is-health in every breath. The climate ia perfect the yeas JOnS. r . In Spring and . Summer the region is Ideal V , , : . - BEACHED BT : , ! SOUTHS A Y Solid through train, including parlor car between Goldsboro, Ashevitfe S Waynesvtlle via Raleigh, Greensboro, Salisbury. Other convenient th?oH ;ear arrangements. . - - ' Summer Tourist Tickets on Sale Until 1 . SEPTEMBER SO, Let Tour Ideaw and TTlsie be Kntwn. .' & J. H.TT00D, B. H. BeBUTT -. ' D. P. A; AshtTfllt, K.ia ?. r. An Charlette, & T Tom P. Jlmlton, Hora Shoe, N. C., . H. F. D. 9-21-2tp EL 1 o f f. f fi. , 'fcj W "hal W "W "fcj taW W KmS -.' !CL T lm Hsltfb 21. Cm