The State Dispatch. I Items of General Interest Clipped j diet of the jury was th0,t he died From our Exciianges. lexington B!si»atch. Mr. Will G. Hinkle has purchas ed from Mr. Riley Everhart what is known as the-Gharlie McCrary place at Arnold. In addition to the dwelling house, Mr. Hinkle huva 120 acres of land and will a natural death. The body show ed no sio:ns of decay although it had probabl y laid where found since the night of the 3rd. 8e4(lsviIIe Review. Messrs. J. P, King, R. L: Som ers, J. F. Oakley and W. L. Champ Clarke’s Mules. | newspapers. Modern civilization Omaha Ree. ; ^ I through its most powerful agen- mil. -j i-T. ^ cy for progress, the public press, the hitherto hiddeh elected speakei of the House wounds inflicted upon society, would drive a span of mules dow n : that they may be cured and their Fennsylyama avenue in ^ prevented. No, the ton. It looks as if the Missourian; world is not growing worse. There! i would have the ^ Mb. ert Medi cai Scieiiitists Annouiice Stardia^ RescU Obtained by Senpise I is less of poverty, crime and suf’. I making good on hisireak promise. : fAnS-,f>- .ovi s move his family to his new home! prosperous farmers of within the next few weeks. .Itl^ county, were on the will be rciYierribered tiiat Mr. | Wednesd^ay, Hii'kle r. f enily sold his fine farm | Jelling tobacco at Leader Ware- I)air\nit ile Park located two miles I with Neal ^ Dixon and sf-'uth of Lexington to Mi% Jno. I themselves as being Q, I well pleased with prices. Mr. I Oakley made an average of $15. WHH-..S Pr,tfi.u. ^ ^ 32 for his load. I ongTessnian .^has. H. Cowles j * While driving from Melver to left ivl ondfiy for Washington City. | Reidsville Monday afternoon, He will snil from New \ork Wed [Mrs. J. H.'Rfiscoe and hei sister Viesda;\ ior Panama where he | Mrs. J. W. Jacobs, were thrown will^ sjierid few^ days returning i from the buggy by the ,horse to \\ dshirig'ton for the opening running away and Mrs. Rascoe of the short session ot congress ■ was considerably bruised up, but in Docember. inot seriously injured. She is now Oliieei-s Shepherd and Harkins getting along nicely. The run- located and destroyed two illicit i av/ay w'as caused by the buggy wliiskey plants the last of the | uncoupling and the horse taking week. One was near Spurgeon | fright, postoffice and the other near I supj. QHy Lovelace. Both plants were com-1 „ ^ _ . . pleted except the still at the first! J- H. Bowman is the new place had been hastily removed.! sent to the Chatham Cir- The second plant was in o\)eYa~ '^\ Conference, tion and the operators fled atthe m session at Kerners- approach of the ofiicers. ! ville last v'eek. He was on the ^ K i baxapahaw Circuit the past year. ' ‘ I He will continue his residence at The public school building of ’ Kimesville. Rev. Mr. Hutton was Flat Rock district, situated near jmade conference evangelist and Volunteer church in thti South- ! our people give him up with re- westevn part of the county, was ■ gret. destroyed by fire on the night of I A force of thirty men is now the 14th inst. School had been in I busily engaged in changing the progress in the building the day Southern Ry. wooden bridge before but it is not known how over Deep river near Cumnock the fire originated. The building; into an irou bridge. This work w^as a one-room log structure and j will require all the winter and had a chimney. The school was i most of next summer to finish, being taught by Miss Wilmeta | It is understood that when this Smith of King Route 1. The build I iron bridge is completed the ing v.ull probably be replaced j Southern will operate larger tnis year. , RandSeinan News. Last Thursday evening^ about 6 o^clock while running his ma chine home Mr. J. 0. Pickard came very near losing his life as v/ell as that of Mr. J. A. Ilussell, who vras riding with him. The auto was running down the Rardleman hill at a pretty lively speed, apparently every thing was going well until the time came to make the turn going up the Ferguson hill, when the steel ing gear refused to work and the machine run almost straight on and off about a four foot embank ment. Mr= Russell was uninjured and so was Mr. Pickard, save a few jars and bruises, but the axles and wheels on the machine were pretty well twisted ^ about. If the machine had run five feet farther she would have been in the race ten feet below. &i^eBsDoro Patriot Mr. Mason W. Gant of Stokes- dale has accepted the position of chief deputy in the office of the clerk of the Superior court of Guilford county, which will be filled by Mr. James W. Porbis after the first Monday in Decem ber. Mr. Gant is one of the most prominent young men in north western Guilford, and his friends will be glad to know that he is to occupy a position that will bring him in closer touch with all the people of the county. 9aleigli Gacausian. Ed. Sunday aginger-cakecolor negro was arrested in Raleigh Monday charged with entering homes on North Blounr Street. He would gain admittance to homes on the pretext that he wished to read the eletric meters. One lady found after he had left that he had opened all the doors and unlatched . all the windows upstairs. He was probably afraid to carry out some articles in the dav-tlme and expected to enter the house that night and secure the valuables. The negro claims to hail from New Hill, lee Gountr Times. ^Squire J. D. A, Secrest, of North Monroe township made on one acre of land this year 97 bushels of threshed oats and fed ten dozen bundles in the sheaf, and after the oats were harvest ed planted the patch in corn and made 100 bushels of good sound corn on it and Squire Secrest says that he is getting too old to farm, St. Airy Laatler. Green Cundiif, an aged negro, found dead in a meadow near i ilot Mountain on last Friday and it. is supposed- that he froze to ip,th on the night of the 3rd of November v/hen he disappeared. On that night he left home to at tend a corn shucking but failed to a])pear at this gathering and his friends feared foul play. freight engines. Mortgage Sale. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a mortgage deed executed on the 20th' day of J une, 1905, by D. B. Tickle and wife, Selie Tickle,' to liindon Wagoner, and recorded in the public registry of Alamance County, in Book 33 of Mortgage Deeds, pages 61, 62, 63, inclusive, the said Lindon Wagoner will offer for sale at public outcry to the highest bidder, for cash, at the court house door ijf Graham, Alamance County, North Caro lina, at 12 noon. Friday, Decem ber 23d, 1910, the following des cribed tracts of land, lying and being in Alamance County, North Carolina, Mortons Township, and described and defined as follows, to-wit. Lot 1. Beginning at a stone In Peter Troxler’s line, running thence with the line of said Trox- ler, south l7 1-2 degrees west, 115 feet to a stone on said line; thence north 67 1-5 degrees west; 6 chains 66 2-3 links to a stone; thence north 17 1-2 degrees east, 115 feet to a stone; thence south 67 1-2 degrees east 6 chains, 66 2-3 links to the beginning, con taining one and one-half acres, more or less. Lot 2, Bounded on the north by Henry Troxler, on the west by Jas. N. Williamson, on the south by the same, on the east by Henry Troxler, containing one-fourth acre, more or less. This property will be sold to satisfy the payment of the debt for the security of which said mortgage deed was executed by the said D. B. Tickle and wife, Selie Tickle, of Morton's Town ship, Alamance County, N. C. This the 23d day of November, 1910. Lindon Wagoner. He is re-elected, his party has gained control of the jlouse and he will probably be its choice for speaker. But it is not distinction of th-is sort that Mr. Clark and his party will most need. On the contrary they will need to resist such ten dencies. They have already been driving mules too mnch. They have been handicapped by m'ulish caprice too long. That is one reason they have not been ' en trusted with power more often. The country has feared their lack of dignity and their lack of stabihty. It has not in this tem porary turn of the tide experess- ed any special confidence in the Democracy. The conditions by whicVi Mr. Clark and his partly gain the ascendancy in the lower branch of Congees connot be construed into popular esteem of the Democracy and the things it has stood for. The result is rather negative^in character, so far as the DenriOjcrats are concerned. They will do well therefore, not to mistake this fact and con duct themselves accor ingly. At best, they are only installed on probation. What is done in 1912 depends v(ry largely on how they deport themselves betv^^e^^^'n this and that. There will be enough mule driving and bray ing which Mr. Clark would like to prevent, and to it would ill become him to go out of his wa,y to do any of it himself. New York; - Thousiands are lering than existed only a few ’ taking adva,nfage of the gener- years ago. Life is easier, more' ous offer made by The Wood- full of joy, The man with the] worth Co., Dept 0 shovel gets more out of it than '1191 Broadway, New York City, did the man with the two hand-i requestmg an experimental ed sword in his castle, a brief re- i package of Sehpine, the great move back in the lifeof therac6. | discovery foi* Asthma, Hay Fever Bronchitis, and Catarrh, which Mother’s Joy. One bottle of your Mother’s Joy Quickly relieved my little bor, Who, in delight exclaimed. Oh Mother - Please send down town and get another. I complied at once' with his re quest _ , And relieved all pains in back and chest. Should isneumonia hold you as a vice Just send at once to R. P. Rice His Mother’s Joy will cure you too With this advice I will say adieu. For Sale by A. Bradley. is mailed free of charge to all who writejfor it, It: is curing thousands of the most ■ stubborn cases. It makes no difference how long you have been suffer ing or how severe the climatic conditions are where you live, Senpine will cure you If you have experiniented .and have failed to fiiid a cure do not be discoirraged but send ' for a trial of this wohderful truly mer it ous remedy which is a scienti fic compound discovered by; a Professor 'of Viena University;, an d is beih g reconilmended by thousands. BEST FOR THE It yon bKv«n’£a nffttlM,b«iiIthx)iMTew bowofs ever? asTi you’re lU or will te. Ke® yo36 1)0 ,vola owi>,:%Forctiiin tbti efi V! ., !eii4 tshi'sic or »il1 jioison. Is dan*crtw.s. TiSf snioiotheetj, e^Iest, axOst of tlje bow;els clear and. U to CANDY OATHMWiC Texas came in with 2,000,0()0 Thanksgiving turkeys. We al ways did hke Texas.' ■' Republican Missouri. St. Louie Globe Democrat, State Chairman Morris refers to a fact of notable interest when he says that ‘ ‘Th'is election pro ves conclusively that we have a sufficient number of Republicans to carry the state. All that is necessary is for all to get busy at the same time.’’ There are more Republicans than' Demo crats in this state, and future campaigns will emphasize the lead. The Bourbon Democracy lost its hold on the state 16 years ago. In 1894, an off year, the Repubhcans carried Missouri by a plurality of a few thousands, but there was a separate Popu list vote of over 40,000. Two years later, in 1896, the Democrats and Populists fused under Bryan’s leadership, and the so-called Democratic vote ini Missouri reached its highest j point. It feb off in 1900, and in j 1904, when Parker was the nomi-1 nee and the Populist element! drew off, slumped to less than 300,000. The Republicans carri ed the state that year by 25,0C'0. They won it agaijg in 1908 though Bryan was the Democratic nomi nee. Now, in spite of what is termed a general Democratic ti dal wave, but in reality is a tirtie of ill-radvised Republican disaffec tion, the Republicans of Missouri again have a popular majority. At the last three elections in Missouri the Republicans have had a majority. They are justi fied in claiming now that the state is in the Republican colurii and that the Republicans wi' hold it hereafter when they are united and cast a full vote. Southern Railway Schedule New Trains Between NEW YORK, WASHINGTON, AUGUSTA AND JACKSONVILLE. Effective November 27th, 1910 the SOUTHERN RAILWAY will put in effect new train service between New York, Washington Augusta and Jacksonville, schedule of which will be as follows: , Lv. New York, Ar. Washington, Lv. Washington, No. 31. Ar. Augusta via Blacksville, Lv. Augusta, via Trenton, Ar. Jacksonville, 12.38 p. m. 6.10 p. m. 6:20 p. JW. 11:35 a. m. 11:45 a. m. 3:45 p. m. 9:00 a. rn. 3:00 p. m. 3:15 p, m. 8:53 a. m. 9:05 a. m. 2:45 p. m. Lv. Jacksonville, Ar. Augusta, vta Trenton, Lv. Augusta via Blacksville, No. 82. Ar. Washington, Lv. Washington, Ar. New York, The above trains will be known as the SOUTHERN'S SOUTH EASTERN LIMITED and will consist of Elegant Pullman Sleeping Cars, also Dining Car Service. This train as well as all other SOUTHERN RAILWAY TRAINS will arrive and depart from the New Pennsylvaiiia Station, Seventh Avenue and Thirty-Second St. New York City. For all information pertaining the same, address the undersigr ned. W. H. Parnell H. F, Cai*y, Traveling Passenger Agent, General Passenger Agent, Raleigh, N. C. ' ' Washington^ D. C, in ill A Lesson in Opportunity. » The Govern or-elect, of T^ennes- see is Benjamin W. Hooper, less than 40 years of age, who does not know his real name, or who his parents were. He was found on the streets of Knoxville and committed to the care of an orphan asylum, whence he was taken 10 years later by Captain Hooper, of Newport, Tenn., who ga"s?^e him his name and educated him. It is one of the splendid things about this republic of ours, that the name a man makes for himself is the only thing that counts; the thing he does, the only ones recorded, when the people look about them for their leaders. From orphan asylum to the Executive Mansion! JVom nameless waif to Governor of a, sovereign state. The way is always open in this country to those who work and strive and keep the faith. Subscribe for the Dispatch. World Growing Better. Cieveland Leader. Every issue of a newspaper which tries to record the most important events of the day seems to be on its face an indict ment of a human face and ttio- dern civilization. Stories of gregd, oppression, wrongs and crime of ten take up most of the space: in the columns. The effect upon the reader is sometimes to make him think for the moment at least that the world is growing more hard and cruel, and that society, as it is constituted, is a failure. But such a view is all wrong, and the thoughtful rea der soon realizes it. The world is growing better all the time, and humanity is steadily advan cing from one plane of life to an other. . ' The reason there seems more wickedness is that tlie people of the earth are in closer communi cation with one another than they were'^only a few years ago. Crimes which once reitiained un known to all but a comparatively few are now revealed to the en tire civilized'world, that it may the sort of men it must suppress the extent of the harm they in flict and the manner in which once flourished because they were hidden are now dragged into the Jight of day and exposed in al^ their meaness iii the pages of GOLDEIM r: OPPORTUIVITY! North Carolina Agricultural & Meclianical Gollege Young man, golden Opportunity kocks at your doOr today. If you w'ould enjoy some of the rich blessings op portunity is offering you, write at once to the A. & M. College for catalog and learn how you can become inde pendent as a scientific farmer, a skilled mechanic or an experienced teacher. Board, lodging and tuition $7.00 per month. For free tuition or further imformatioh, address President JAS. B. DUDLEY, Agricultural & Mechanical College, Greensboro, N. C. The entire household revolves around the telepKonfe. Neigh bors, friends, market, doctor and store can be reached in an instant by the home having telephone service. The Rural Telephone provides this home necessity and pleasure at very low cost, to peo ple who live in the country. It is proving a paying investment to thousands of fiarniers. Write, today, for our free book. ; It tells you how y^u may have telephone service in your home. Address iFajrmerS Mae 55ep»rtBfieiat. SeiTTHE«N BELL TEtSPHOISE & TELEGRAPH COMPANYi 200 .Soiaila Pryor St^-. AlSawSa, M EAT *EIW LIKE CANDY PIcaHanti. Pftlfttuljle, Potent, Taste Qoo^i, Jkii; Good, Never Si.cJteii, Weaken or Grjjw; 10. 33 an* , woentsporbox.,,Write for free sample, and br.oto'-'' ' letgnhoalih. Addvess Sterlinfl Rertiedy Comoanj, ' ^Icago o> New Yojk KEEP yQUit BLO&P OLEIi KE R N A N European Plan. Absolutely Flrepr«M*f, Ih the iitart of the Lbeiness section: of BAITIMORE. MB. LuxTirious Koiomej and En siuitfo Wrtfa or Without' BathW #1 Up. Palatial Dinii^ Roome. ! OnBurpafi^ed Oueine; Shower «nd. Plnnf« in. Turkich B«th« ’ :o '£iiert«. ' JOS. L REBTO, . SEND FOR BOOXJ>MT. PirevOTiltaaid Rdieye H^dadie “It gives me great pleasure ^! be able to refer to Dr. Miles- Anti-Pain Pills as the best Tem- edy we have yet had in oxir house for the "prevention atii cure of headache. My wife has been a constant sufferer for a number of years with abovt^ complaint joins’ me in the hoxjr that they may fall into the lian# of all sufiteriers/* JOHN BUSH, W Used Them Four Years. /*Dr. Miles’:Aj^ti^Pain Pills are the best I ever tried for ti« relief of headache. I have usei therii for nearly four years they never faif to giv;p nie ajdiei I have tried many other reos- edies, but have never found better.*^ joskpH frAnkowick:, 854 Trombly Av», Detr^j MicHt/ There is no remedy thact yeM more quickly reliCTc any ic3«!» of headache thaii Dr. mM The best f^ttt)re of this re markable remedy is the iact tliai it doeis not derange the or leave any dis^gi'eeable effects. DrugglatB »v»rywher« a«tt 4MiN. 'It fSrtt package, fails to benefit, yow* r>(i • alat: will return your monoy. MtUKS MKOtCAk CO* I promptly o%t«li^ to j _ THAOJe4i)AIIICS. and J 1 e«itirtrlee(w . JiandComMSbMiwttt^] J terect. 8wd Sketcb, Model or Wfirto, f >r wo 1 I report on Akt. MClNCSSj I STRICTLY coHrjncirn«tH. VtMm vnsuot I ] ^dnrivel)'. 8urpa^^TetmiM!eit._ Yiuuauici jjuuriutwM/u* ppitt> Afiao i :D. SWIFT & CO. UgJ Severtih St., Wa«lilngfo«, D. C.J Bitters I Gacc^fed when everything ^se ^la. In nervous pro&tratioti and fenxj^le weakness^ they are; the sopixine remedy, kk thousands have testi&ed. rOR KIDNEY^IVER STOMAQH TROUBLE ;j is the best me^cine tflwsr erid i over a druggist’s cQimter*