Newspapers / The Caswell Messenger (Yanceyville, … / July 15, 1926, edition 1 / Page 7
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BIG PRICE REDUCTION 1 Silvertown Balloon Cord Tires and Tubes * Overalls, Work Shirts, Dress Shirts, Collars, Ties, Summer Underwear, Men's Sox, Ladies Silk Hose. _ S GET OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY Remember "Velvet Kind Ice Cream in Electric "Frigidaire and Ice Cold Drinks All The Time. Pure Pork Sausage and Tender Loin Steak Every Day. YanceyviMe Motor Co. JOHN A. MASSEY, Proprietor. Yanceyville, N. C. S P SATTERFIELD A. C. GENTRY 8 M BASON Caswdt durante & Reaity Co. OtBee in Bank of Yantayvilla YANCEYVILLE, N C Fire and AH Other Kinds of Insurance and Bonding and Reai Estate With the Service of Experienced Men. "Protection That Protects" STOP THROWING AWAY YOUR SAFETY RAZOR BLADES BRING OR SEND THEM TO US AND HAVE THEM RESHARPENED BETTER THAN NEW Tty M tad b* conviacad. Wt Zcev what t thuinf tdyo )i). PKltlHS—Durham Duplex Bladen, 4 eta. eaeh, 48 eta. dozen GiHette Blade*. 4 eta. eaeh, 48 eta. dozen AH Hinkle Edge Blade*, 2 eta. aaeh, 24 eta dozen WALL STREET BARBER SHOP 128 Market St.. Dan villa. Va. FOR SALE—Gentte Guernsey mitch cow, giving 4 gaHons of milk. Mrs. SaHie H. Jones, YanccyviHe, N. C. Your Photographs WiH Re Appreciated Whether It Be Bride, Busi ness Man, or Family Group. Arrange For a Sitting Now! Duntord's Studio 127 MAIN STREET ^DANVILLE, VA. L. D. MEADOR Attorney At taw Ofttoe MU Penney BrntMiaf Hwna 1W1 BURtOrOTOW B. a FOR SALE A farm of 371 acres on state highway No. 14, seven miles from Danville, Va., two miles from Park's Springs—one half mile frontage on highway. Good farm land, especially adapted to dairy farming, tye!) timbered. Price moderate. \ Caswell Rea! Estate Company, Yanceyville, N. C. FOR SALE 63 acre farm, 5 room house, 2 tobacco barns, good we!!, fence around farm. 6 miles from Dan ville. Good community. Hose to schoo! and church. Price $2,500.00. Terms, !-3 cash, Lo cated between Danville and Yan ceyville T. H. Hodges. Danville, V., R. F. D No. 5 To tobacco belongs a large share of the credit for developing the wealth and prosperity of the Sohth. The census of [920 shows that in Alabama, Georgia, the Carolinas, Tennessee, Florida, and Mississippi, while the acreage of cotton was twenty times that of tobacco, the value of cotton lint and seed output was only 6.t times greater than that of tobacco. Tobacco, the first American ex port commodity, for 300 years held a distinguished place in our foreign trade, and its culture and manufactured treatment continue to be an important industry in the South today. Throughout the South there are great deposits of asbestos, cement, lime, clays, fuller^ earth, mica, glass sand, ochre, graphite, tung sten. pyrites, lead, silver, copper, iron ore, and precious stones. The Carolinas have bauxite, and phosphate rocks abound in Ten nessee and South Carolina. Way* fo Mow yon pat away your clothe* inspect them carefully for concealed moth eggs, whiA can be destroyed by a- thorough boating of your abthee Heat, likewise, will do the work. Hang yonr clothes oat of doors in the hot eanehine fbr a day 6r two, if possible, before putting them away, tor pva* them with a hot iron, or aeakthpa in boiling water. For safe storage, cedar chaste and eedar lined closets are effective if they are kept shot tight. Open them only to put in and remove eioth iag Since moths detest Mght, a wine dow in your clothes closet will do much to beep the insects from your things. Shake and brad) the clothes at least twice a month If poaaible use air-tight contain era, each as paper bags, sealed pasteboard bores or paper wrapping for storage. Pack clothes with moth bells or flakes Purs should be brushed, beaten and aired thorough ly every two or three weeks during the summer. When your clothes become old give them away. Every garment, especially if made of wool, hung on a hook at the hack Of the closet, ia a potential home for moths. Finally, when you see little I clothe# moth millers .Hitting or crawling about, swat them.--Popu !ar Science Monthly. HOW SHE DAWCE3 He—Darling. yen danw divtnsly She—Your stuff is kind of un earthly, too - ,. Dtdn'f Car. To Mary Elixahcth was sending the day with her grandmother, and. seehing s more cxnting type of en tertainment Mum was offers!, the quietly shipped out of the door and headed for the neighbors. Half way there she wee found by her grandmother, who wee appalled to eee ahe was without either hat or coat in the near xero weather.. Has tening to the door, she filled after her: "Mary come back and put on ywar coat." To which Mary turned a deaf ear. As the command was repeated e little louder Mary celled beat: "I didn't"hear you." *TMdn't hear what?*' her grand mother countered "Didn't hear yon aay toy put on my coat," the lit tle eelprit replied—Exchange. fwraxtxsre "Tewtgdw" A monumental "temple of furni ture," of Egyptian pyramid type of architecture, towering thirty-four etoriee end coating more than $6, 000,000, is to be built in Grind Rapid*. Mich. When completed, the "temple " will he used primarily for - a furniture exhibition building. It wiM hare more titan 1,000,000 square feet of door space A central tower of thirteen stories shove the main structure of twenty-one stories will be Hood lighted at night. Too Strong Mary was six end attending school for a few month* when ahe tooh her tittle sister Dorothy to visit The letter utterly disgraced her aieter, for when she wax salted how much two and two were she aaid sixteen ' In telling it to her mother, who said, "well honey, ahe'a only a baby and don't know any better," Mary replied "But she didn't need to say so many." Trade With CMwa Declared exports from China te the United States during 1926 totaled $169,602,913, compared with $129,133,380 in 1924 and and $172,966,603 in JM^JTheae totals represented the comEned re turns for all of the American con sulates in Chine The inereese in 192B is remarkable in view of the numerous serious obstacles to trade daring the period **<f FausAiow Sfarf#<f 6y &winf (MM«! Cabinet ofBdais will be obliged to outfit themselves with the costumes of many weird lands if the innova tion of Georges Tchitdherin, the csamHeear of foreign af tadtum fairs of the Union of Soviet Social ist Republics, becomes the vogue When he received the delegation from the Mongolian autonomous ro pnMie, which only 8oviet Russia recognises as a separate p^A of China, Tchitcherin wore a Mon golian eoetpme. A long gown with nowing sleeves started under his dun, a peaked Mongol cgp was on hie heed and the table where all were grouped to he photographed wee trimmed with candles The new style edds to the pictureaqueneee of diplomatic comedy. Machine Melts Snoso A !)<" motor-driven device for the remove) of enow from highways has been invented. !t t'onsists of * tie#ted steel drum suspended before a truck on which is the machinery for forcing crude oi) into ihe drum, where it i$ ignited An the motor driven truck moves forward Mr# heated drum rotates over the snow, melting it tnpidly. The truck mover #4 a)amt three mdoa an hour. Can Put FaM tn Mot Wafer anJ Snap "Hot soap nude and water," the good old-fashioned remedy for all cleansing purposes. has reat germi cidal pro^wrtiea, acs^rding to ex periments carried on at the Army and Navy General hoepita) at Hot Springs, Ark., by Dr J. E. Walker In the Journal of Infectious Dis eases, Doctor Walker says that any ordinary soap used with a reason able degree of care will kill sev eral kinds of bacteria, notably those that cause pneumonia, diphtheria and several of the pus forming or ganisms. The dysentery and typhoid bacilli die harder. Strong aoapa made of what is known as saturated fatty acids are necessary to an nihilate these tough ones A salt water soap, prepared exclusively from coconut oil, is the most readily available efficient soap to rid the hands of -possible typhoid bacilli. Unfortunately an all-round coconut soap is too irritating to the skin for ordinary use. Ms* ClaeA Doing "Stssnts* Tbs town clock of West Chests*, Pa., lost its reputation for accuracy and there was talk of retiring th* veteran of 1842, when Joseph W Belt, photographer and man of all trades, volunteered to take it over for a year without pay. He soon had the dock running true to form and even doing tricks in its sparv time. Every day at noon it casts a baseball from the top of the tower and the person who finds it receives a reward of ten cents from the mer chant whose name it fames A reservoir carries halls for three weeks end the scheme is working perfectly Belt is planning other doings for the clocks Indianapolis News. " Are f rash for Face Patsy Chapman of Mt. Pan!, Minn., has a new idea for applying face paints. She uses an air brush, the liquid colors being blown on he% face, according to Popular Science Monthly . * One day she observed a painter blowing paints on an automobile. He explained that the paint went on smoother and looked better than if he hed used a brush Miss Chapman determined to try it in the art of theatrical make-up. A friend agreed to manipulate the brush. The method is said to r* suit in a more delicate Mending of tints. gficAer* First Frenchman—%ees American foot ball game ces. well named. Secon^ Frenchman—Ees it so? First Frenchman-r-Oui, first as team keeks, zen ze umpire keeks, and zen ze whole crowd keska— Tiger T&ed, Aching Feet 9^dUTt^-wdw!thDtS<*df!<H Foot E<mr Rwom WMtt M<4 H bwtMR-^pwmMtixtL C !p c<TH ' .... . - H S^ecitti—FreeFootComfort DEMONSTRATION REIDSVILLE SHOE STORE RBIDSVIMJE, W C. Foot troubles are universaL Government records show that 7out oi every 10 adult people have acme iorm oi loot trouble. You are probably ioot-miaerable youraell. It may be only a com. a callous, a bunion or some more serious trouble, auch aa weak and broken-down arches. You might not know the nature oi your trouble but you do know that your ieet ache, pain, and get all tired out on the slightest provocation. Foot Expert from Chicago Coming This man is irom the persona! ataH ofJDr.Wm.M.Schell, the rec ognized loot authority, and demonstrates Dr. Scholl's Method oi Foot Correction. Come i n, on the above date, and meet him. Its well worth your time. There's no charge ior this valuable service. Free Pedo-graph Prints of Your Feet !n a iew seconds' time, without removing the hose, he will make, without charge, a perfect print ol your ioot that positively shows ii you do have ioot troubles and to what atage the trouble has progressed. Free Samples Come in and get a iree sample oi Dr. Scholl's Zino-pada ior corns. They remove the cause—iriction and pressure. Instant, aaie, sure rebel, fui one on- /A. pain o gone. jB/<on CcMegfe In the Heart of Piedpmpt North Carotin* A Christian College for Both Men and Women, Preparing for the Professions and for Life. New, modern and are proof buildings. Moat approved typer of fund turf and equipment Courses offered in Teacher Training. Liberal Arts. Engineering. Commerce. Religious Training. Music. Etc. For Catalogue and Rates. Address C. M. CANNON. Registrar. ElonCollege, N. C. HARRIS COAL, CO. DANVILLE. VA WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS r<*we W*M OccMp!eJ, Soys o/ Cwntaa Mrs. Albert Einstein hnds being the wife of o genius no sinecure. Having herself no penchant for sci ence, she devotes the tong working day she has laid ont for heraetf to reading md answering her hus band's toad, a huge mass of which tomes in haif a dozen languages, and which has to do with scores of subjects, from relativity to auto graphed photographs She says her husband believes that a woman who aspires to scientific eminence ehouid forget ecs and become "a sort of ueutrai character." He does not "en per-t as much from a woman as from a man," and when Mme Curie's name was mentioned to him, he said, "She is ths exception to the rule When yon will produce four other women lilte Mme. Curie, then you have eetablished something of a foundation for a new rule." Pro feeeor and JMhrs Einstein, who are orthodox Jews, are pronounced Zionist^ believing that the Jews "need a homeland for the dske of their dignity and their self respect." San Francisco Aroonaut Nofposf FeeJ Arwvfoe A. W. Maeonochie, inventor of the "M. and V," or meat and vegetable rations, known to millions of British soldiers during the World war, reccntlv died at the age of seventy tn a hospital in London The rations consisted of beef and vegetables, and were first ussd in the Boer war They had been coked in cans, and army cooks had only to heat the cans. inasmuch as 80 per cent of the people live in the open country, agricultural progress, while less conspicuous to the casual visitor, is most significant of all. "It Pays To Look Well" COMMERCIAL BARBER SHOP Hot*<l Burton BuihMag DAJTVILLE. VIBOOHA \\ AN tH) 1 wo good ^farmers as renters. One to take a four horse atx] the other a two-horse crop. Good [and and good buiidings P. M. Sobers, Alta mahaw. N. C, Route 2. ! he pla<;e (d the South on the map of the wortd ought to make it the heart of industry and civiliza tion. The greatest system of waterways on the g!obe gathers into a mighty trunk line which pours through the South to hod its outiet in your Southern Gulf. Thi^ vast land protected sea is an tn:ean in itsetf, giving to the South trade advantages which, if used, woutd he unrivaled. The Panama Cana! opens the commerce of mankind to the South more than to any other single paid of the public From Norfolk to Galves ton the South has a chain of sea ports, the poorest of which is bet ter than the best German seaport, and the best of which is as good as those of England—Review of Reviews. When one travels through the States of the South, he sees every where signs of great materia! pro^ gress He sees scores, of pros perous cities all in a real sense new, many of which were but vil lages twenty five years ago.—Re view of Reviews. It is of great significance that this zeal for education anticipated the material progress of the South, and has conditioned it.—Review of Reviews. '
The Caswell Messenger (Yanceyville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 15, 1926, edition 1
7
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