i. I A' w. THE NETtS-RECCb( tAlIALL. N. C, IJn.LE.Gann 7r LiiuieixVPec ' i a-a a- folefil SIZE OF D TO BE UHGHAU6ED III OPEII IR01I HIIIE AT MURPHY Chance for the "Fighting Daughters" Health Brings Beauty ' Discovery That Hu Don World .. of Good ' 1 , Anm.ata n"M fatWa family Waa kept well ever tince I can re member by ming Dr. Pierce remedies. M father used to get a eovery' every spring, as a tonic. He took it himself and gave it to the rest of us. He did not wait until we were sick. He said, 'An ounce oi preven tion is worth a pound of cure.' When I was about Sixteen my parents saved me, I believe, from serious feminine trouble by giving me Dr. Pierce's ravonte rrescnpuon. awa. - Gunn, 506 Moore Ave. Keep yourself in the pink of con dition by obuining Dr. Pierce's Gold en Medical Discovery in liquid or tablets from your neighborhood drug gist, or send 10c to Dr. Pierce s In valids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y for trial package. Loosen Up That Cold With Musterole ' ! THREE HUNDRED MILLION 13 THE E8TIMATED COST", GUARD v GET8 MORE. Have Musterok handy when a cold starts. It has aU of the advance! grandmother's mustard plaster WITH OUT the blister. You just apply H with the fingers. First you feel a warm tingle as the healing ointment penetrates the pores, then comes a soothing, cooling sensation and quick relief. -r Made of pure oil of mustard and other simple ingredients, Musterole is recommended by many nurses and Tnr Mitotprnl fnr bronCnluS. sore throat, stiff neck, pleurisy, rheu- autism, lumbago, croup. '"" ralgia, congestion, pains and aches oi the back or joints, sore muscles, sprains, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest. It may prevent pneumonia and "flu." 35c and 65c, jars and tubes, letter than m nxuttord plotter - Mrs. William Cumrnlng Story has opened again the -controversy -which raged.abnut her during the war. when four Indictments were returned against her for her conduct of the af fairs of the National Emergency Be lief society. ; , - .The four indictments have long since been withdrawn, but she never came to trial, and she feels that "the poison and sting will last forever" un less she receives a moral acquittal at the hands of the 135,000 Daughters of the American Revolution. Kho naked this acauittal when she announced that she would be a candidate for the office of president general of the organization at the bi ennial election In April. The nomlna tlon was tendered her by Roosevelt Chapter of Bye, N. T at a meeting at the Waldorf-Astoria. Her acceptance is expected to pre cipitate a battle such as even the mar tial annai. of the "Daughter." ha. never equaled JZTZ ta eontest with the shadow of the Indictments over her name, and with in SS anlinoslty of thousand, of "Daughter." who ffStX in previous contests. She was le.ected Vg? 1810, arter a Datrie in wmcn uer Wo.4, There are already three other candidates In the field-Mrs. Wallace O. Hangar of Washington. D. C. Mrs. George ,n?LthoS Wayne hereditary enemy and former president general), and Mrs. Anthony wayne Cook of Pittsburgh AIR SERVICE GETS BIG SUM Army of 126,000 Enlisted Men and 12,000 Commissioned Officers Pro vided For In Bill. DEPOSIT ESTIMATED TO YIELD TWO HUNDRED TONS. OP , ORE A DAY. FOR THE NEXT TEN YEARS Vein of One-quarter of Mile In Length. and 100 Feet Wide Known to B on Property. W. Hohenzollern and Frau von Ruchow , ' n Women ' Made Young Bright eyes, a dear skin and ft. body full of youth and health may be yours if you will keep your system in order by taking It now amtears that Frau Gabrtele von Ruchow (portrait herewith) was secretly engaged to WUhelm Hohen sollern six months before he married princess Hermlne of Reuss. At least h un an and she oucht to know. The Jilted lady says her husband died In April, 1921, about the time the kalserin died. Soon after the kaiser wrote her begging her to visit him at Doom. He called to her because she had been his friend for nearly four decades. So she went to Doom last summer. And here's wnat nappenea August 22: ' "He did not beat about the bush, but straightaway said: 'Markgraefen (a pet name), I have come to ask you to be my wife. , "I tried to Interrupt hlra. As I spontaneously raised my hands, as If to hid him cease, I felt a sickening An eta inn Tn that fraction of a sec- KHOUIIVUI - m0n"tCZot yoV. .Ton are the only being on earth who can mn;u3Gb:rrieb,,ee loucd tlTherarrairconsented to become aollern family and ultimately were successful. . y I ..... - LATHROP'S Emile Coue's "Every Day in Every Way" HAARLEM OIL The world's standard remedy for kldny Ilvsr, bladder and uric add troubles, the namies of Ilia and looks. In use since ; 1696. All druggists, thras sizes. Laak lor Aa un GoH Mdl oa amrr "Bilious people need them Dt KING'S PILLS , -"for constipation h , v inflamed 3Hd or other M ' v ' ( ' f eye irritations. You will i I find a soothlM and safe OrI V LnvBr,TCHELL of i , j& . V at all kaaat . druggiata. r a... hut Not in the 8wlm. "Four years Isn't a very long perloc of public service." " ' "No," 'replied senator sorguum, . a man doesn't get well started holding an office before he's liable to begin feeling like a lame duck." ' A man Is foolish to go around look ' lug for trouble unless he Is strenuous ' enough to take a fall out of It, . ' Anyone who enn make biscuits Is t sSool amp cook. That's the test. This Is a new portrait of Emile Coue, the little pharmacist of Nancy, France, made world-famous by his cures through auto-suggestion as em bodied in the formula. "Every day, in every way. I'm growing better and better." s No wonder Coue comes to Amer ica. He got his great Idea from a correspondence course on hypnotism which le secured for twenty francs from Rochester, N. Y.V.Boyd Fisher says so In his new book, "Mental Causes of Accidents" and quotes Dr. Coue thus; . ; ::" "'C' "It was a very good course, Coue said to me. "It taught me how to , hypnotize. The preliminary , experi ments It gave, to use as a means of testing a subject's suggestibility, are the ones I employ today In my seances and I have never had to add to them," , Mr. Fisher says Coue had for labored as a pharma- he began his hypnotic studies by taking the correspondence course. Washington. A standing army o; 12K O0O enlisted men and 12,000 com missioned officers, the same as au thorized lRBt vear. Is provided for in the last army appropriation blllre noftad to the house. ' The bill carries $314,064,294 for mil itary and non-mllltary activities, or 916.bl0.444 less than laBt year. Of the5 total, 37,000,000 goes for river and harbor projects heretofore au thorized. Last year $42,815,661 was appropriated for the purpose. . Budget estimates for flood control on the Mississippi, amounting to $5, 986,000, were allowed. The amount recommended tor the Mississippi com pletes the authorization of $45,000,000 contained in the 1917 act For the Panama canal the bill car ries $6,599,683. An appropriation of $750,000 with a contract aumorizauuu of $750,000 additional, is recommend ed tor replacing worn-out portions of the Washington-Alaska submarine ca ble' system. '' A fund of $50,000 Is provided for continuation of airplane bombing tests against obsolete naval craft. The air j service gets $12,426,000 and the Chem ical Warfare Service $650,000. For the National Guard the bill provides $28,939,140, compared with $25,815,000 last year, the increase being made to permit the maximum growth of the or ganization to 215.D0O men during the next fiscal year. An appropriation of $3,250,000 Is recommended tor the reserve officers' training corps, an increase of $150,000 over last year. Civilian training camps are provided with $2,500,000, of which $500,000 represents an unex pended balance from last year's ap nrnnHntinn. The war deoartment had recommended larger appropriations . . At tor both the training corps ana mo civilian camps. U. 8. Prooosal Still Before Nations. 1 Washington. Secretary Hughes' proposal for reference of tne repara Hon. problem to financiers tor rec nmrnanHaHnna based noon purely eco ' considerations is regarded in Washington as still before the allied governments for acceptance or rejec inn a White House sookesman stated that the government was not moving in the Herman reparation crisis In any way at this time and coud not move unless the powers concerned onnwpn a desire that It should do so. it wan added that the friendly pur poses of the United States had been made plain to all concerned. Ultimate ly It is hoped that a way to the help ful will be opened by action of the French and British governments. At the state department it was said that Secretary Hughes' suggestion stood unchanged; that nothing had been done by the government to wun draw the proposal. Murphy. Opening what Is pro- . m of the finest iron ore deposits in the South. Heaton & Ma- haffey, of Murpny, are u..."i i ln handle 200 tons of ore per day and It has been estimated that at thia rate tne aepo". --- dUce for the next Ten years, m. ,tnn.it la a tract of 1.800 acres, AUU k . . nart located sumost in n v. .mAriv known as the Hltcn- v nJ,ni.rv. and now owned by Dr. S. Westray Battle. W. H. Garrett,, h. H. Bourne, Dr. J. A Sinclair ano . a ciiitinr nf Aahevlllo. o. ouib'o - . . in., trmrt au one time ownea oy Mrs. Colt, of Paris, France, and was acquired by the fVahevllle business men, who hate leaaed the Iron oca a vnin nne-auarter of a mile In length, 100 feet wide, with the depth not determined, is known to-be on h nrnnrtv. and this Is the vein to be worked by the Murphy men, who will ship the ore to steei piama. rwninr of this valuable ore de posit adds another of nature' depos its in Western Norm carotin uu io among the features attracting ouai- ness Interests to this section. life1 Men at Hlah Point. Hih Point. Newspaper men and women from all parts of the state are In High Point to attend the mid winter meeting of the North Carolina Press association. . iri.itr.Ta wrn welcomed to the city k. M..nr John W .Hedrick: Fred N. Tate, president of the chamber of commerce; Dr. H. B. au. prea.uou. k Rntm rluh; T. J. Gold, of the Kiwanls club, and representatives of other local organl organizations. J. to n.iiav former colector of internal IT f revenue, will be the chief apeaaer i k nnnvnntlon. Newspaper men 'of High Point, re ceiving the co-operation of local cltf .... hava mane elaborate prepara tions for entertainment of members of the Fourth Estate. One of the fea tures of the meeting will be a banquet v. .ina tv tha r-h amber of com- IU UD B"" "1 merce and the RoUry and Kwanle clubs. UO'JMl SUFFERED THREE POUTHS Paint m Back and Neroosness. eWeU by LydaLFinkliain'g . Vegetable Compound . three months with pain in my back and H1UUB, BJHU " nervou8othatIwas unfit to do my work. Alter iDeganwuHng Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound 1 grew BTXong, arui now 1 Wfrfffh 160 . pounds. IkeepnouM ana ani twin w iu and do any kind oi Tr I- k.va tnA wonderful results , V.m Varafnhla ' Compoand andrteemmenditery highly to myfriend. I Pr.T, , CIWo Ofl Tfitii TSL So. Monte video, Mixinesotav Aaother Nervous Woman Finds Relief t l tt Mkk "T aaifFeMd for two years wttk pam hi my aide, and if I worked very much. I was nervous and Vast as tired in the Btornu s when I went to Deo. a w an7 r j j:j-. RV. Anmtr anvthtnir. ana was so nervous I would bite my linger nails. One oi my men ww," Lydii E. PInkham'a Vegetable Com- ( pound, and it helped me ao rxch that I infeltf."rs.CHAiasBBBLKK, ' 1810) Elk street, ran nurcav m-Ka. KEEPS CIEDREH WEIL AND STRONG mHIN, pale, impoverished blood Gude's PcptoMangaa creat-s-a bountiful supply ol pure, red blood. twvrlilu atranirth hruin back color to the cheek and buuds firm. weU-rounded flesh. ) rut vva. , Tr : Mangao has been recojraiendedby leading pnysicians. umn. mm umm enricher. Your druggist has it liquid or tablets, a you preier. pepto-Manan Tonic andnlooa znncner vh TURKISH vs )A Dentist Goes to United States Senate A , . Dr. Henrlk Shlpstead upset : the Bepubllean political traditions of Min nesota In being elected United States senator on a ticket other tfcan.that of the G. O. P.. which has happened i. rhraa thnen before In the history of the sfrate. Defeating Frank B. Uel- logg. Dr. i Sljlpstead, eiectea ou Farmer-Labor ticket, will go to the senate tor six years. Joining Knute Nelson, veteran Minnesota semuur. Hiring out when fourteen, yeara old," shocking grain bebina a oinuer at a dollar a day and waning on muic while completing his dental course at Northwestern university. wucaBu, Shlpstead has made , his own way in life. He was born on a farm in Kan diyohi county, Minnesota, January 8, 1881, making him forty-one years old. He was one of the .12 children of Saave Shlpstead, who came to Min nesota from Norway. Minn" l?d&T U MM hrd Miss Lulu Anderson at Belgrade. UU-jj w . ;Pforrt candidate he was twice elected mayor of Glenwood and was elected SiZv&sSw ? a- wrisfSHwii vast ly the Non-Partlsan party, he ran for governor In 1920, but was. defeated. Health Standards Women's Subjects. Washington. Health standards for women in industry, . women's wages and home work performed by women were on the program of the second day's sessions of the' National confer ence on women in industry, called by the women's bureau oi the Department of Labor. With nearly 400 women delegates present from 41 States, the conference was deciarea dt " ers to be truly representative of the women of the Nation. Mrs. Ellis Yost, legislative represen tative of the women's Christian Tern nresided at the meet ing session and Dr. R. A. Spaeth, of t.i... Tjr,iHn University, was chosen uuuun .... i.t, to lead in the discussion ot health standards tor women, in inausiry. Another speaker was Mrs. Florence Kelly,' executive secretary, National Consumers' League. ' Mrs. Thomas G. Winter, president general pt the Federation ot Women's clubs, was the presiding officer at the afternoon session, and . Mrs. Maud iSwartz, president national women s trade union league, -New York, and Mrs. Sophonisba P. Breckenridge, as sistant dean ot women,. University ot Chicago, were the principal1 speakers on the subject of "women's wages." A general discussion worn tne nour was a part of the consideration of each subject taken up. i - rtmr far Railroad Gradlnn. Santordl At a meeting of tne ooara ot directors o fthe Carolina Coal com pany at their office in Sanford a con tract was let to Summers & McAu ley for the grading ot the three miles of railroad to conect the mines at Coal Glen with the Norfolk South ern and the Southern roads on the west side ot the river between Cum mock and Gulf. 'The contract calls for the completion ot the work n 90 days. The Carolina company is uw i.v. onai faater than it can be waiufi vuv - moved away, and so much coal is in sight that the railroad nas necome m- Tha coal company will op erate the road unless present plans are changed. The headings in we m.u are now driven tar enough into the coal to make at least 100,000 tons oi coal available for, mining as fast as it can be moved away trom the collery. Rritiah Columbian Honey. rn.. tha 700 000 rounds of honey ... hanraatMt in British Columbia tn 1022, compilation made by the provincial apiarist show. iny-inreo tons were contributed by the Koote ney beee. the Okanogan and Thomp son valleys yielding another- fifty. From Vancouver Island and the Gulf , Islands twenty-nine tons were gatn: nrhiia twentv-faur tons were har vested from Greater Vancouver and Westminster. The populous rraser valley produced more than half of the total yield, accounting for nearly two hundred tons. Unkind. "The word Idiot," writes a philolo gist, "did not Imply a lack of men tality until the middle of the Seven teenth century. It merely meant an average citizen." "But - what's the difference? Ex change. Fathers who think they have the brightest child in the world should keep the thought to themselves. Aqrpe to Release Greek Prlaonera. Lausanne. The Turkish delegation to the near east conference agreed that all Greek males seized br the Ottoman army at the time ot the Smyrna affair shall be liberated and teVt to Greece Immediately after s'gnkture ot the peace treaty. Most ol these able bodied Greeks at present are working in labor gangs in the interior of Ana tolia. A general excharge of the Turl and Greek civil pepul ivtlons that is Turks In Greece and Gieeks la Turkey probably will begin inMay, High Figure for Charlotte Dirt Charlotte. A minimum' sum of $3, 500 a front foot has been stipulated as the amount the City Hall property must bring when it is put up at pub lic auction on January 27. At this rate the property will net the city $290,500. The conditions are not be n.vaii tn ha ao severe aa to forestall the sale, as thero are two parties who are understood to be very desirous oi the site. u... e.unr Rnad Over Mountains. , Tnnlr There is a general feeling favorable to a state-built railroad among the legislators and senators at Raleigh, is the belief of Senator Mark ilerstood. Mr. Squires said, that the legislative committee appointed at the last geneVal assem bly to investigate the proposition, will i m.va its ranort soon. It is understood ! that this report will be unfavorable to i the proposition of selling the state- owned railroad stocK tor tne con 1 .mixtion nf auch a road.. but would fa vor the state financing the building . 1 T-.1 TIIJm cf a roaa across me uiuo amso. Two Meet Death Through Accident . Statesvllle. Two deaths by accident occurred in Iredell county when Mrs A. S. Storrs, of Montreat, was killed Instantly when an automobile in which she was riding with her husband was in nniiiainn with a train at tne uei mont crossing of the Southern railway . i.iat aast of Btatesville. ' V The other accidental death was thai nf n.nr shook, of Shlloh townsnip who was crushed by a faUIng limb as he was chopping wood in a rarest , neai his home. flotnorecohl, on't neglect; it - - Stnn that coueh now with this simple treatment that heads ofl tha development of serious ail ments. It soothes inflamed, ten der tissues, loosens hard-packed phlegm and breaks the cold. Now stop that cough In time . ask your druggist for DaKlNG'ssirovEr -a syrup for coughsvcolas Keep Stomach and Bowel Right - B? aiTing- bby tha baraden. paw aataUa,liuU'andchlldran'aracalwr. bring aitonlihlne.rattfyta MeuBS , - la Dakina- babr'a atanach diaaet food and bowwe mora mm ther ahonld at teeuiina ftnaranteed free from oareotlca, q- atea, alcohol and au narmrai tnareni. anta. Safe and aatlitaetonr. CuticuraSoap SHAVES Without Mu L . 1 I Jr 1& 4.1 ft I V . II RARN 0.0 WEKKI.T 8r-ABE TIM -at home addre.lng, mailing miwic clrcalara. tumd 10O for muslo. Information, to. Arnar- . i,n Mwle Co, 1 15. Broadway.. Nw Jork. Fnc Map ol Taiaa Townik, itreama., rall ds,oilftldi;go.sarw.i Id.p!l.lnji "v,iltv and Bo 1. Ft- Worth. Tv Pr. Btlter'i Km totioa n-llsyes ouick I 4il limit Aaa arugima. SORE EYES

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