Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Feb. 11, 1926, edition 1 / Page 3
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.vX - ■ t *■■■'■• -f ~ ^ ^ ''''^t. ‘ •'■ 'W^.v ^ V /*' ,f ■'■/'/'"■ 'V-'-^^v;.J^ ■ ,, y."'-'V'^^ -Hofe' /^TT^Ty iOITRyA WBA.BFOBTLJF....jC/:.; , - , • -t ' ■ I' ‘ ■■ ■ ' Ai^ Your Household ^ Caret A Bui^en? Looubuffc N. C—'^Wha I ibncd tilting Dr. Picr^ Gok^ Medical Dii* towy, my hboai- bold carcf wm ■ burden to nic,l wu weak and tundomi, nanroua, had a dry. backing umA of twanly jraan ituidr btc waa eonad- ^aisirs wnglit from 100 to SI potmda. After takW dw flrat M- -, tl« of the 'Diaemr- Vy I began to Impruvt and toj eras ahnoet gone. I.ain nom uio to w my domestic arork and have regained my regular weight I relish mr food and rest good at nj^”—Mrs. J. P. Pleasants, Route 2—Bom 37. All dealers. Tablets or liquid. SPOHN * ^ >1 . distemper^ 7 COMPOUND ^ edy for 32 years for Distempe Singles, Inflo Colds. Give to DOS fern /f>r Houses V.S0t Write for froo booklot a.' .■ I3i JllKil Nodiing more oomferting than **VascIine” Jelly. Eases pain. Hastens nature’s heal ing. Wonderful for cuts, scratches, bruises and other little accidents. ^ CHBSiBBROUOH MFG. CO. (O—nnlttetiC m M SciteScrtet NcwTock Vaseline J u. MT. err nraoLauM juxt Have you RHEUMATISM Lumbago pr Gout? _ Take RHBCMAOIDK to remore tbeeaose and drlTe the poison from the ■rstem, “BHBSaiCIM OS TBS miQL ^ nras BBSOBATISB OB fflT0091000“ At All Dmmclsts Jss. BaOj a See, Wbolstsls Dittribatsrs Ballimoro. Md. Boschee's Syrup HAS BEEN Relievilig Coughs for 59 Years Carry a bottle In your car and always keep it in the house. 30c and 90c at all druggists. FOR OVER 200 YEARS Haarlem oil has been a world wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric add conditiot HAARLEM OIL CAMSUL-fclS correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Mboal. BlUousiioss .....TMACHER’S liner and SIo62l£bnn9 Don't sllow such a condition when you can nUevlste your diacomfoita, prevent conitipation, cleanse your liver ana ■trcni^en your digestion. rnEg —Libersl sample bottle at your druggist,orwriteThacherMedicine -.s Co.,Chattanooga, Tenn. w Rsdncss Bnrtal Bnlarte- Bients, lUckeaed, SwolleB TtssiessCiirbs, Filled Tendons Soreness from Bmlses er Strains; mops Spsvin Lmnsnsss, allays palm Doss not blistsr, rsmov* the hsir or lay up the horae.* Only a fsw drops rsqnirsd at sacb application. $2.50 a bottle at druggists or dslivsrsd. Book 1 A free. W. r. f OUNG, he.. SIS Um It. SprimSsU. Ham. MHUIGO PUIS'JII, «SII HIGH POIh COMMANDER OF THE AMERICAN LEGION WILL ARRIVE MRCH 11. > RISC’S . /'Coughs Rsiii^^p|«Meu^bcdussyraBs' And MmSdipb ms PISO^ ThigsfaadChstt .Ssiss. 33c WANTED^a^'TliSi Bast csllsgs la tbs Sapth. Jobs awaiHas sv CBartolls Barbsr*Cells^ CbarlaMos N. C High Point.—John R. McQuigg, na tional commander of the American Le gion, will be In High Point March 11 to attend a conference of North Caro lina post officers. Those In charge of arrangements here say the conference will be the greatest ever held in the state, with the attendance being esti mated at between 400 and 500. The presence of National Comman der McQuigg is expected to augmient the attendance of local legion officials. Elaborate plans are under way for the entertainment of the conference. The local Andrew Jackson post is rapidly making arrangements for the one-day conference. City officials, the cham ber of commerce and other civic bod ies have proffered their aid, and are delighted with the news that the na tional commander will be here. Just where the meeting will be held has not been determined. t}-' Qeain Child’s, Bowels with \ "Calffomla Rg Syrup" Neuse Rnver Traffic Increasing. Kinston.—Neuse river fre ght ton nage will show a big increase this year as a result of the successful operatiODL of boat-and-truck service over the central highway and other routes from New Bern to up-country towns. Chamber of commerce and other trade bodies in the section who propose the deepening and widening of the river chann^ between New Bern and Seven Spnngs are watching the river and highway service with in terest. planning to capitalize its suc cess in future appeals to the govem- jpent for "relief.” Sees Room For Private Schools. Durham.—“A state of monopoly of education may benefit the authocratic, militaristic Prussia of the Hohenzol- lerns, or the Socialistic Russia of Bol shevistic rule; but it would be self- defeating in free and democratic America. I send my children to the public schools because I believe in the principle of public education for cit- ieznship in ^a democracy; but 1 am not willing that the state should force me to send them, thereby wiping out of existence ail private schools.” This statement was made by Dr. Luther A. W^gel, dean of the school of religious ’education of Yale Uni versity, in discussing “The Policy of Parochial Education,” at Duke Uni versity, the second in the series of the annual Aavera Bible lectures. Sunday School Meet. Wilmington.—Plana have been made for holding the annual New Hanover county Sunday school convention in the First Christian church, Wilming ton, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Febru ary 28, March 1 and 2. Officers of the County Sunday School association have announced that they have secur ed as speakers for the convention Walter E. Myers, Philadelphia, Pa., general secretary of the Pennsylvania* Sunday School association; Mrs. John Y. Boyd, Harrisonburg, Pa., teacher of Men’s Bible class, Pine street Sun day school; D. W. Sims, Raleigh, gen eral superintendent of the North Caro lina Sunday School association. The program for the meeting will include addresses and special conferences on the different departments of modern Sunday school work. Each .of the outside speakers will present a spe cial line of work. This is one of a series of .similar meetings being held in a number of cities of the state. Invitations to at tend will be extended to all Sunday school workers. * Durham Weed Mart Exceeded Record Durham.—The Durham tobacco mar ket has already gone ahead of any year in its history in the amount of tobacco Boid in any one season, the figures for the 1925 crop having gone above 15,000,000 pounds, acordlng to the report of Dewey Ray, secretary of the Tobacco Board of Trade. Approximately two and a half mil lion pounds have been sold since Christmas, while estimates plac6 the remaining part of the crop that will be sold here from one to two million pounds. The total sales of the 18>&5 crop here are expected to exceed 17,- 000,000 pounds. .Slightly more than 10,000,000 pounds of the 1924 crop were sold \ere. Prices for the present season have ranged around 25 cents? the secertary said. t Pay on Debt Made Before Civil War. Wilmington. — Wilmington people are still paying for^ the erection of a market house on Market street before the war between the state, ^nd which has long since vanished. Toseph E. Thompson, commissioner of finance, told Rotarlans of Wilmington during the course of an address on city financ ing. This, the commissioner explained, Is due to the fact that prior to 1917 tity governments were not governed by any very rigid restiicltno regarrlng the aale of municipal hours. MCIEM BUfiH ■ rii WILL OFFICIALLY SPEED TOUR ON ITS WAY AROUND CONTI NENT. Hurry Mother! Even a bilious, con stipated, feverish child loves the pleas ant taste of “California Fig Symp” and It never fails to cleanse the bowels and sweeten the stomach. A teaspoon- bil today may' prevent a sick child to morrow. , Ask your druggist for genuine “Cali fornia Fig Symp” which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say “California” or you may ^et an imitation fig symp. Guard Against "Flu’’ With Musterole Influenza, Grippe and Pneumonia usually start with a cold. The moment you get those warning aches, get busy with good old Musterole. Musterole relieves the congestion and stimulates circulation. It has all the good qualities of the old-fashioned mustard plaster without the blister. Rub it on with your finger-tips. First you feel a warm tingle as the healing ointment penetrates the pores, then a ^thing, cooling sensation and quick relief. Have Musterole handy for emer- geheyuse. Itmaypreventsenousillness. 7b Mothmm Musterol* ia also mad* in milder form for babies and small cbildren. Ask for Children's Musterole. Jars A Tabes Better tAon a arastord plaster niSPELTHAT RASH ^Why suffer when skin troubles yield •6 easily to the healing tou(^ of Resinol AD Stiffte and Muofiidqrinf Concens Reipm •V Transportation and Auditing Service CUSTOMERB GUARANTEED CASH PROFTfS LOCAL SALESMEN WANTED. Experience ua- necessary. Earn quickly $4.00 to $14.00. NATIONAL FREIOHT BUREAU (Eat. 1894) 1778 Bfoadway, New Yerfc. N. Y. Wear a Whipcord Suit Far WORK - HUNTINO TOURING Oxford or Brown Colors Coat and Trousers $10.00 Sinzls Trousers 3.60 Coat and Breeches 11.46 Rldlnx Breeches 4.96 Send for samples and measuring blank. EDWABD S. APFEL 4 CO. too Hopkins Pisco Baltimore, Md. HURT? . Forbonlnff or BBBlylidB, MM to rolioFO tfoo OBdfforoMB.OM mtetiell ' .Eyo BbIvo. oeeordimir to Ur^ tkioB. Booteteff, boiffiif. British Navy's Overcoat Sailors of the British navy no long er will be allowed to turn up their coat collars in ordinary chilly weather. The comm^der In chief at Ports mouth, Admiral Sir Sydnej;^ Freman tle, has set his fjee against tw prac tice. He says in a fleet order: “It has been observed tltat many men, particularly young men, have been in the habit of wearing the collars of their overcoats turned- up when the weather is not at nil severe. “Lt is considered to be a slovenly practice and mu«t cea^e.” Sailors of the old school are won dering what the young sailor of to day Is “conjlng to.” ' Raleigh. Governor McLean gave his enthu- mastic endorsement to the projected Carolina’s btoster tour across the con tinent and promised to be on hand at Hendersonville next June to give the party an official sendoff. A delegation from Hendersonville led by President C. E. Rodgers and J. E. Stubbs, of the chamber of com merce. was here in the Interests of the proposed eight thousand mile tour. In addition to calling on the governor, the delegation saw Major Wade H. Phillips, director of the state depart ment of conservation and development, and enlisted the support of the Raleigh chamber of commerce. Governor McLean wished the pro moters of the tour success in the un dertaking and readily agreed to book himself for the day in June when the tour is scheduled to leave Henderson ville on the long booster journey. He saw wonderful possibilities of giving North Carolina a lot of h ghly valuable advertising by carrying the news of the state's progress through seventeen states and into 200 and more cities along the route. Major Phillips will ask his conser vation board to lend its support. His department is in position to provide important advertising material. The board of directors of the Raleigh chamber of commerce gave a prompt endorsement to the prospect, making the seventh chamber to regis ter official approval. The others are at Charlotte, VV in- ston Salem, High Point, Salisbury, Spartanburg and Hendersonville. State School Enrollment Increases. School enrollment and attendance for the last year improved over that of two years ago. The February num ber of the publlation gives theie facts: Last year, 559,396 white children were enrolled in the public schools, and of this number 426,999, or 76.5 per cent, were in average dally attend ance. In 1923-25 (he enrollment figure was 544,142, and 406,661 children that year attended school dally a percent age of 74.7. In the negro schools, the enrollment was 248,904 in 1923-24 and 250,438 in 1924 26. The average dally attendance ^figures for the two years were 164,698 and 169,212. Expressed in terms of percentages, the latter- figures mean that 66.2 per cent of the childr^ en rolled in 1923-24 were in daily Stend- ance, and 67.6 per cent in 1924-25. The city schools continue to show a big lead in daily attendance over those in the^ rural sections, but the publication quotes figures to show that the rural schools are making gains on the city schools in the matter of daily attendance. Carteret county, in da!ly’ attendance in the white schools, led all the coun ties in the state and most of the cities. The county’s percentage of average attendance w^ 88.2. There were but five of the city systems which made a better showing than Qarteret coun ty, says the publication, and the aver age attendance percentage in Carter et’s rural schools was better than in any of the eight largest cities in North Carolina. Carteret came up to the leading place among the 100 coun ties in North Carolina from seventh jjosition in the matter of attednace Hn 1923 24. , Stanly county, sixth in 1923-24, was second last year. Dare, first in the former year, dropped to third place last year. Northampton moved up from tenth place two years ago tc fourth in 1924-25. Invidious “The geese are going south.” " “Aren’t you rather hard on society people?”—Boston Transcript. Sure Relief 6 BelL'Ans Hot water Sure Relief ELLANS FOR INDIGESnoN 25i and 75$ Pk$'s.Sold Everywhere Revenue Department Does Business. Collections by the State Department of Revenue during the first three days of February totalled over 1200.000, or practically as much as the entire sum of $220,000 collected during the whole of January, it was announced by Com missioner R. A. Doughton. 'The bulk of the February collec tions to date has been in insurance taxes but there have been good collec tions on other items, despite the fact that collection of inoome taxes has been seriously delayed by the fact that many citizens are waiting to pay their Federal and State taxes at th€ same time. The Federal government has not yet sent out its blanks due to the pendency of the tax reduction bill in Congress. IsbMS III* GALLSTONES,. ‘ Obrofiio Indlsestlon. Oss so 8toiiis«h. DIstreaa IB pit of StemMh, Moartbon, Sour StonuLch, Billouaaean DIrrY Spoils, Sick Hasdsiihoa, Psia or HoBTlBsaR In Rlsht Side, CoBStIpsttoB, Oslle, YsBtlUas, Stomach Troablo la say Penn. ■sBevoG teMhooS OsiraNiB la rmmr Own Noms Wrtts far PBBB BOOKLBT liOBDrO FAlK cumc IfSS RaraMB Ftoss, Mlaasapnlla, tUnn.. Committee to Draft Resolutions. Governor McLean announced the ap pointment of E. S. Parker, Jr., and A. M. Seales, of Greensboro, and A. H. Price, of Salisbury, members of the resolutions committee to frame suit able resolutions on the death of Judge William P. Bynum, member of the board of trustetes of the university The governor announced the ap pointment of John A. Hendricks, ot Madison county, and A. H. Graham, of Orange, ttietebert of the yiilting com- mittee. Help That Bad Back! Too Often lift a Warning of Dkordered KidneyB i W iY drag around fecHng okL'wocn cut and miserable? Why not make up youT fwinH to be well? That daily b?clrarbe, thosc sharps stabbing pains—dizziness, blad* der irregularities, nervousness and depression, are signs of kidney inactivity. Use Doens Pills. Thousands recomincnti Doan’s. AsA you'*’ neighbor / Here 1$ Convincing Proof: A North Carolina Case Mrs. J. P. Gatbingg, Orchard St., Wadesboro, N.C., -- Rays: “I had backache. It was almost impossible to stoop without getting a sharp pain. My kidneys acted too freely. Headaches and dizzy spells came on and little colored spots appeared before my eyes. I read of Doan’s Pills and after using them, the backache left and my kidneys acted regularly." Doan’s Pills Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys 60e all dealers. Foeter-Milbum Co.. Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N, Y. Explained Frosh—How come all profs have baggy knees? Soph—They get that way from callin’ the roil.—Wasliington State Cougar’s Paw. For Tan and Sunburn. Use O. J.’s ' Beauty Lotion, The Quickest Way to Beauty. Removes Pimples, Freckles, Blackheads and Beautifies the ^kin. 75c at all drug itores on a money-back guarantee. Adv. Getting It Straight "What do you mean, you are finan cially embarrassed?" ^ “I’m shy of cash.” Not Acting Mr. Turner—Do you think that 1 am acting the fool? Mrs. Turner—Now, John, you kneiw ^ you never could act. Shave With Cuticura Soap And double your razor efficiency well as promote skin purity, skin cc fort and ^kln health. No mng, slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no Ir tation even when shaved twice dal One soap for all uses—shaving, ba Ing and shampooing.—Advertlsemet After your death you were bei have a bad epitaph than ill rep w’hlle you live.—Shakespieare. Iren Gyfor MOTHER:- Fletcher’s Castoria is a pleasant, harm less Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, espe* cially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere reconunend It TktufamJi if ttiti/y O tit S IkufnmiMtir* ftrUntt. . V 1 *^But constipation is serious, Grace” “Not so long ago I was like you—headaches a good deal of the time, sleeping ba’dly, and the least bit of house work tired me out. My com plexion too, was bad. “Finally, I went to see Dr. Farman. He showed me that it was constipation that was back of my troubles. He said that it was a very serious thing because poisons from clogged waste matter were picked up by the blood and carried to every body organ. And if 1 didn’t correct it in time I might become a victim of one of those ter rible organic diseases. “He made me drop laxatives altogether, changed my diet, andputmeonNujol. I don’t chink I’ve ever felt better. I sleep well, my headaches have disi^ipeared, and you can see for yoursdf what an Nuiol ■ 'LiJrai ■■ TMS MFTtaMAL VWSWCANT For improvement there is in my skin. Nujoi has done won- .ders for me.” Nujoi ff^orks Like Nature CoastipetioB is dangeram for any. body. Nqjol is safe for Everybody. It is neither s food norAoiediciiie. It does not gripe. It is gentle end nstursl in its setion and is prescribed by leading medical authorities. Nqjol simply makes up for a d^ fidency—temporary or chronic — in the supply of natural lubricant in the intestines. It softens thq waste matter and thus permits thorough and regular eiiminatioa without overtaxing the intestiiial muscles. Nqiol can be taken for any length of time without ill effects. To iiv sure internal cleenKness, it should be taken regularly, in accordaaoe with the diiectioas on each bottle. As Nqjol is not a laxative, it doca not fora a habit and can be Am continued at any tiine. Ask your druggist fw Niyot today qpd bes^ theperfset bsadththal ia powbic 0^ iuesttaal b aonud aad i
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 11, 1926, edition 1
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