Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / March 28, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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r THE ROXBORO COURIER, MARCH 28, 1917. PAGE TWO. . H : SSmSSmCmSmSmSmmRBSmm if " ' i. - i , I V'. I -. 3 f If IS i. i , , 7 Hope Almost Abandoned When She Found Reme dy Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin Relieves Chronic Case of Long Standing. After a ong period of suffering with liver and bowel trouble that brought on piles, during which she had tried many. remedies without ob taining relief, Mrs. Mary J. Jewell, of Berrien Springs, Mich., heard of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and ob tained a bottle from her druggist. This A simple, inexpensive laxative compound brought almost immediate relief rnd Mrs. Jewell wrote to Dr. Caldwell about her case. In her letter Mrs. Jewell says: "I had tried so many things for the piles, without being helped at all, I had about given up hope of ever being any better. I knew it was the condition of my bowels that caused them, and after I had taken a bottle of your Syrup Pepsin I knew it was just the medicine I needed. I am very grate ful to you for sending me the little book the advice and instructions it gives would teach anyone how to get well and how to keep well." Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin, free from opiate or nar- INTERNED "GERMANS ATTEMPT,-TO. ESCAPE All Captured By Marines and Police .fi.ii.ci ouuiii ti ere x'.uai. ; AFTER THE GRIPPE; Vinol Restored Her Strength Philadelphia, Pa., March 19. -Un der the cover of darkness, seven sailors of the German commerce raiders, Kron Prinz , Wilhelm ; and Prinz Eitel Freidrich, interned atj the Philadelphia Navy Yard, made an attempt to escape tonight all beirfg I equalled for chronic 1 coughs, colda - or recaptured bv marines anrV rmlW bronchitis.! Your money back if it after shots were fired at the filei- Canton, Miss. am 75 years old and became very weak and feeble from JJie effects of La. Grippe, -but Vinol has done me a world of good. It ' has cured my cojigh, built up my strength so I feel active andl .well again. -Mrs. -.lizzie Bau&win, Canton, Miss. Vinol is a constitutional remedy which . aids digestion,. ' enricjbe the blood ana creates strength, tin- fails. HAMBRICK & AUSTIN. cotic drugs; and is mild and gentle in its action, bringing relief in an easy, natural way, without griping, or other pain or discomforts. Druggists everywhere sell Dr. Cald well's Syrup for fifty cents a bottle. To avoid imitations and ineffective substitutes be sure you get Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin. See that a fac simile of Dr. Caldwell's signature ap pear on the yellow carton in which the Dottle is packed. A trial bottle, free of charge can be obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 455 Washing ton St. Monticello, Illinois. tives. A sentry on post near the raiders heard several splashes in the .back FIGHT LONG WAGEDV channel and iired a warning shot. ctmattv tc UMnn A police gusrd saw four of the Ger- : man-sailors swimming fifty yards Controversy. Between Railroads a:nd CHAPEL HILL LETTER PLANS TO MUSTER OUT THE 2ND AND 3RD REGIMENTS CHANGED Chapel Hill, N. C, March 21. Speaking on "America's Contribu tion to Peace", Mr. Albert Coates, of Smithfield, was chosen last week to represent the University in. the annual peace contest. Mr. J. S. Stell was chosen as alternate. Much interest was shown in the contest this year. The competitors and their subjects were as follows: W. H. Stephenson, Humanity vs Group Alliance; V. F. Williams, Im perialism the Disturber of the World's Peace; A. M. Coatjfc, Ameri ca's Contribution to Peace; Tom' Ruf fin, The Absurdity of War, the Reas onableness of Peace; C. I. Taylor, A Working Basis for Peace; H. B. Mock, The Hope of Peace; D. S. Spain Jr., The Unseen Empire; and E. W. Dunstaff, War and the New Internationalism. The judges were Drs. Wagstaff, Patterson, and Stacy. The first award of' the new Carr fellowship, endowed last year by General Julian S. Carr of Durham, and carrying an annual benefit of $300, was awarded recently to J. B. Linker of Salisbury and A. M. Coates of Smithfield. There were 26 appli cants for the fellowship this year and so keen was the rivalry that the com mittee had a difficult task in select ing the right student. It was final ly decided to divide the fellowship this; year as Messrs. Linker and Coates both presented so many desir able qualifications. This fellowship will be awarded each year to the stu dent in the junior class who has earn ed a large part of his expenses in his early years in college, and has in addition shown high scholarship, manly character and high promise of achievement. Mr. Linker led the University in scholarship last year in addition to doing considerable work each day in the University print shop. Mr. Coates has main tained a high grade of scholarship and also achieved conspicuous suc cess as an orator and debater. The University has just announc ed Robert deRosset of Wilmington and Elliott Cooper of Oxford as win ners of the fellowship offered by the National City, Bank of New York for Training for foreign serviee. The University is one of seventeen uni versities in the country to cooperate with the National City Bank in this manner and, with the exception of Tulane, is the only Southern univer sity to be granted this honor. Only men from the leading universities of the country are accepted. The plan provided a laboratory fellowship in practical banking. The undergrad uates spend their summer vacation in the bank where they acquire working knowledge of banking rou tine and organization. This coupled; with language study and class work, which is of such a nature as to earn them some college credit when they . have passed the bank's examination at the termination of the courses. The candidates are chosen on the basis of their character, personality, scholarship, practical experience and knowledge of languages. Two stu dents, of the University are already m the servictf of the bank. A neriod of training in the bank involves an actual working time of 12 months. During this: time the bank will pay theybolders of the fellowships fifty dollars a month and allow them their traveling erpenses, Despondency Dues to Constipation 'Women cften- become nervous and despondent. '; When this 13 due to constipation it - is easily corrected; by;- v laKing an occassional , uose vjuaui ,berlainV Tablets. These;tabTtsare -easy .to .take, and pleasant -in effect from the interned vessels and dis charged their revolvers over the heads of the men. The four turned back and swam back and surrendered without resistance. Meantime three other sailors slipped into the meadows. Running along the sea wall to , avoid the barbed wire barricade partly en circling the interned ships, they fri ed to slip past a sentry. The sentry Employees Has Been Going Over a Year. On New York, May 19. With the .na tionwide railroad strikeaverted and German the Adamson Act declared . constitu tional the railroads and their employ es for nearly a year over the question of hours and wages today passed into history. ' Appealed to by the President's fired and ran toward the little group, mediators to yield on the ground of i,ivu"vvu j-v.w w paxnousm to me aemanus oi uae meadows and caught two of the flee- employes, the railroads! just before ing men; The other one was found daybreak today consented on an I'- Best way5tb refinish Buggies and Fords Y This is the way: Wash off all '4irt and1 grease froip the surface "VitK warm water and soap; smooth the rough and glossy spots with sandpaper. Then you are ready to jtp'ply an even oat of . - ' N v' . .-:' A.' afterwards hiding behind a bush. WILL GQ INTO CAMP AT GOLDSBORO AND RALEIGH Raleigh, March 18. North Caro lina soldiers of the second and third regiments bound for Goldsboro and Raleigh to be mustered out, have received their orders to hold up on the muster and the whereforeness has not been intimated. Whether it relates to the Ger man trouble or to the railroad strike has not been intimated from any mil itary or railroad source. So far as the railroad men know there is no strike ahead. Those who have been running on the lines between Greens boro and Goldsboro have heard noth ing from the headquarters. One of the best known and among the old est in the service said yesterday: "All that I know has come' from you news paper guys. I have had no orders nor have others , of my division." His is a conductor's brotherhood. The military men have arranged to have their troops camp at the state fair ground and in Goldsboro. Both regiments are bound for North Carolina and expect to breach this city about Thursday. Their stay rould have been anywhere from one to three weeks. They will doubtless abide longer,- provided either the na tional or international issues become more acute and the military turns out to be a necessity. Col. H. J. Slocum of the United States Army will be here during the mustering out. This officer has had his share of chasing Villa and looks ood for any number of years of ser vice. - "A Good Old-Fashioned Physic" Foley Cathartic Tablets, a whole some physic, thoroughly cleanses the bowels, sweetens the stomach, tone up the liver.. For indigestion, bilious ness, . bad breath, bloating, gas, or constipation, no remedy is more high- agreement whereby the employes re ceive the eight-hour basis work day and pro rata pay for overtime, the Same as that provided by the Adam son law. . . All thatremains is to decide how much back pay the employes ; are entitled to, inasmuch as the agree ment signed by both sid-2s and the Adamson law provides that the oper ly reccomended Wm. 0. E. Bielke, Hancock, Mich", writes: "I have given ation of the new wage and hour sche Foley Cathartic Tablets a thorough dule shall be retroactive beginning trial and I an honestly recommend January 1. The brotherhoods and them as a mild DUt SUre laxative. fV,P rflilrnaH mnnafrers will tret to gether on this matter tomorrow to decide how it will be computed. It is 'estimated the employes have be tween $12,000,000 and $13,000,000 coming to them. The brotherhood chiefs were in a They work without griping." Give stout persons a free light feeling. GERMANS IN RETfcEAT DEVASTATE COUNTRY The Pneumonia Season The cold, damp weather of March seems to be the most favorable for the pneumonia germ. Now is the time to be careful. Pneumonia)often results from a cold. The quicker a cold is gotten rid of the less the danger. As soon as the first indica tion of a cold appears take Chamber lain's Cough Remedy. As to the val .ie of this preparation, ask anyone who has used it. To Operate. Asbestos Mine. STATE SVILLE. A company has bsen organized here with $50,000 .cap ital for the purpose of operating an asbestos mine, which has been dis covered on the farm of G. B. Halubur ton, near Statesville. The mine will be in operation within a month. Bad Colds From Sudden Changes Spring brings all kinds of weather and with it comes colds and the re vival of winter's coughs and hoars ness. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey wi.ll head , off a new cold or stop an old one) the soothing balsams relieve the sore throat and heal the irritate ed tissuesV Get a bottle today and start 'treatment at once. At your 'druggist; 25c. Formulan the bottle. Coal Gone Train Halted. GREENSBORO. A :: Southerns pas senger train en route to Madison was delayed here 'tnpre tha f ourv kdiars tpn account of the -supply of coal 4at the local coaling station being exhausted. Burn Villages, Destroy Orchards and happy mood today as they dispatched Even Blow Up Farm Lands. their codfc; telegrams calling off the strike. They had now won all they The British and French forces in had asked from the railroads when France are still pressing rapidly be- they first presented their demands on hind the retreating Germans all March 20, 1916, having lost the time along the front from the region of land a fcalf for overtime feature,, but Arras to the northeast of Soissons. they had agreed to take last August Forty more villages have been when they accepted the Adamson law taken by the British, who during- the provisions and which the railroads Monday's operations gained ground fought; in the courts. at various points, extending from 2 W. G. Lee, spokesman f or the to 8 miles in depths, .while twenty brotherhoods, made T it; "plam today additional villages and small towns that he looked for peace in the rail- in addition to 100 occupied during the last three days, have been re captured by the French. So, rapid has ben the advance of the French that they have penetrated beyond the village of Ham, 12 miles south west of St. Quentin, anjl beyond Chaulines which lies some fifteen miles north of the line from which the offensive was started. These op ations from the south and south west are menacing the St. Quentin Laon line and if the rapidity of the movement is kept up for any length of time will menace the town of St. Quentin itself. The Germans in their retreat are devastating the country, burning vil lages and destroying orchardjs and even Slowing up farm lands in which great critters have been left by ex plosions. In addition, bridges have have been destroyed and roads of of communication cut. The inhabi tants of the places evacuated are said to have Been left destitute. Meanwhile the Russians and Bri tish are keeping up their strong of fensive against the Turks in Asia Minor, Persia and Mespotamia. Along the Diala river the British have occupied the village of BahrizJ and a portion of the town of Baku kah, about 25 miles northeast of Sagadah and the Turks are reported to .be in hasty retreat toward Khani kan on the Turco-Persian frontier a little to the northwest of Kerman shab. In this region the Ottoman forces, are likely soon to meet the oncoming Russians who are reported byj Petrograd ' to have dislodged the Turks from the town of Harunabad, 26 miles southwest of Kermanshah. i The situation on the eastern front in Russia, in Galacia and Rumania lis .unchanged. Artillery duels and small infantry engagements continue on the. Austro-ItaUan front. x In Macedonia reports from Salo nlkfsVythat the Germans have shell ed h Monastir, ' causing ' loss - of life among vthe civilians. Fighting con tinues in the Lake Presba and Lake Ochrida sector; where French attacks have' again been ; repulsed, according to Berlin. To the east of the - Lake road world for a long time. Asked whether there was any intention to bring up in the conferences tomor row the question of punitive over time, Mr. Lee said: "That will not be brought up now. We believe that overtime can, largely be done away with by speeding up the schedules." Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the Interior; Wm. B. Wilson, Secretary of Labor; Daniel Willard and Sam uel Gompers, the mediators of the Council of National Defense, who brought the controversy to an end after 48 hours of almost incessant ef fort, returned to Washington this afternoon. Mr. Lane in a statement expressing the satisfaction of his committee over the outcome, praised the railrefad managers "for their high sense of obligation and their unwill ingness to permit any embarassment ho the country at this time of ex treme strain." Chambcfrto's'Cpng v - brite' for Colds -J. L; Easley Macon,' 111., in speak ing of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy says: .'.'During the past fifteen years' it has been my "sister's favorite rem edy f orlds ibii thevl Doiran region,- still according to Ber- iiu ..tuc jjiiusu ; nave ueeii anven backfrom oai position. 1 - c ; To Curb a Coldn Pne bay Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. It stop the Couch and Headache and work off the Cold. Draaxista refund money . H It fail to ' ce iL. w. UJioVK'S 8iaftatarejoneacrjbox.tc mjm Negro Educatora Meet;ft 1 myself i FAT SEVILLE. The . .annual have; taken it a numr pf ; times '.conference of negro school superin when suffering witn a cow. and it steridents m this ' State is bem: held ' always rejieyed me promptly'. here this week. Cut This Out It Is Worth Money DONT .MISS THIS. Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing) Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds, and croup; Foley's Kidney; Pills, for pain in sides and back, rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Ca thartic ; Tablets, a wholesome .and thoroughly cleansing cathartic, for constipation, biliousness, headaches and sluggish bowels. ' - , hre. . f $38,000 Loss iit Lumber Fire MQUNT OLIVE. The Smith lum ber plant, located near this place,' was destroyed by fire. The loss is esti- xriateck'at $38,000, with insurance of about $ll,000.v r " ; . v . Little Girl Had Croup , ; Every mother knows-" and " fears crojip. Mrs. R. ' M. Raney, R.JF. Di 2,: StairfordKy;,-wris;f MIJittlf girl1 had been having r croup. every few' nights I bdgari to give her a few drops of Foley's' Honey and Tar LCompouna every two or three hours, and that night she slept well, never fioughed any, and -the next -day her cold was- gone.; To 11 my friends I am: saying, 'Get a; bottle of Foley's Honey "and Tar for la grippe, coughs, colds and eroup - A geniune"; cure' r. v. Vrf:.-"''-f'L'.''i-Al V - JL. i,. venz is our specja GLOSS CARRIAGE PAINT We guarantee that if this paint is properly applied it will give to any vehicle a durable, varnish-gloss finish that will withstand hard usage and exposure, without cracking or chipping. ' We recommend it also for porch furniture, lawn swings, iron fences, and all other exterior surfaces to which you wish to give a hard, lustrous hnish. Made in ten attractive colons. . , 1-ONG, BRASHER & Ca Hardware, Farm Implement and Machinery, riues, iinware ana riumDing, FaTorite Stbree and Ranges. ; ,? . - -,.r ROXBORO, N. C. THE UNIVERSAL CAR 320817 Have been built and actually delivered to re tail buyers since August ! 1916. v These figures 320,817 represent the actual number of cars manufactured by us since Au gust 1st, 1916, and delivered by our Agents to retail buyers. v This unusual fall and winter demand for Ford cars makes it necessary, for us to confine the distribution of cars only to those agents who have orders for immediate delivery to retail customers, rather than to permit - any. . agent , to stock cars in anticipation of later spring sales. . ' ,. : We are issuing this1 notice to intending buyers that they may protect themselves against de lay or disappointment in securing Ford cars, If, therefore, you are planning to purchase a Ford car, we advise you to place your order and , take delivery (now. Immediate orders will have prompt attention. Delay in buying at this time may causeyou to wait several months. Enter your order today for immediate de livery with our authorized Ford agent listed below and don't be disappointed later on. PRICES Runabout $345, Touring Car $360, Coupelet -505, Town Car -595, Sedan, -645, f .o.b. Detroit FORD MOTOR COMPANY CRO WELL AUTO COMPANY, Roxboro, J$r. C 1 Come to see us for your Boy Dixie Plows and plow castings. We carry Farmer's Friend, Boy Dixie and Old Grange one horse plows and repairs for Same. We also carry the Imperial Two Horse lpw and repairs. Repairs for Syra cuse Plows. , We carry a full line of Hard ware at all timesv Come to see lis. "Hardware for Home and Farm." Jhar mers iHldl we Co Dir.. Heiss Pbuillhry mMwm si-ce-a. mes poultry healthy; makes bens lay; riot a stimulant, but a tonic, that hesturithe dormant egg organs, brings back the scratch and cackle andlBmlels lachChen to put ner share: of eggsjin the rrjarket basket. .. enough, for 30 Jjens jper day.
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 28, 1917, edition 1
2
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