Newspapers / The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, … / Oct. 3, 1916, edition 1 / Page 3
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thkiuv rfrv ?Rn 1Q1 page tithes I . It Always Helps gays Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., In writing of her experience with Cardui, the woman's tonic. She says further: "Before 1 began to use Cardui. my back and head would hurt so bad, I thought the oain would kill me. I was hardlv able Kr to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles of Cardui, I began to feel like a new woman I soon gained 35 pounds, and now, I do all my housework, as well as run a big water mill. 1 wish every suffering woman would give The Woman's Tonic a trial I still use Cardui when I feel a little bad, and it always does me good." Headache, backache, side ache, nervousness, tired, worn-out feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman ly trouble. Signs that you need Cardui, the woman's tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying Cardui for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing women for more than fifty years. Get a Bottle Today! IHHHHHHE ic EEMm ROCKINGHAM COUNTY FAIR LEAKSVILLE-SPRAY, N. C. October 3 to 7 4 Big Days and Nights Daily Aeroplane Flights Biggest Free Attraction Ever Shown In This Section! STRONG MIDWAY ATmACTIONS Write for Premium List. C: P. ROBERTSON, Lcaksville, N. C. 17TH ANNUAL CENTRAL CAROLINA FAIR ' a. mm m If - : . i & ' ' k? u r U CI SIS uv t iki-m-i j r a nni ilia IvUKl n LAKULIwArf 4 DAYS AND NIGHTS -4 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13th, EDUCATIONAL DAY Magnificent Fireworks Display. The Battle of the Dar danelles will be reproduced. Reduced rates on all railroads. Always something to see. Fine harness and running races. Big automobile parade. The largest an ay of exhibits that have ever been shown at any Fair In the State will be seen here. Our Midway wil be of a high class and very 'attractive Some new amusements such as the Whip. Submarines and Silodrones. Don't forget to attend the Baby Show Canning Gab, etc. Many free acts. ' rrr. " HAPPENINGS IN THE OLD NORTH STATE A Mormon church is to be built in Wilmington. The Presbyterian Synod of North Carolina meets in Salisbury Octo. 24. Governor Craig has returned to Ral eigh after spending the summer at his home in Asheville. USE THE SOUL IN SPENDING DOLLARS IS WILLIAMS' ADVICE The North Carolina W. C. T. U. workers will hold their thirty-fourth annual convention in Wilmington from October 3 to 6. The Jewish synagogue in Ashavllle was practically destroyed by fire a few nights ago. The building had only re cently been completed. The city schools of Washington N. C, will take up military training and it is thought therer will be three companies of students. The operation of an electric car line between High Point and Thomas vllle has been discontinued after three months because it did not pay. The Raleigh Equal Suffrage League plans to enroll all men in North Carolina interested in equal suffrage as associate members, and recom mend the same to the State League. Absalom Wise, a Confederate vet eran who died in Lincoln county a few days ago at the age of 79, had not during his life had the services of a physician until his last illness. The Journal relates that a citi.ien of Monroe 'phoned a drug store that he had been "snake bit"; aud after the doctor had made a hurry call he reported the wound was a chinch bug bite. The bed-bugs in Monroe must be full grown. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Vogler of Winston-Salem have instituted suits against J. T. Simpson, also of W'n-ston-Salem. Simpson's automobile collided with the Vogler car and it is alleged that both the Volgers were in jured. The aggregate of the damages asked amounts to $15,693.61. - Mrs. W. A. Perrall of Durham, who is asking for a divorce from her husband, and for alimony, t llegda that Ferrall gave her but one dresa in 23 years, called her "Red Devil," carried a gun for the avowed purpose of killing her and made fun of the religion of herself and her daughter. In the twelve counties of the State where the State Board of Health con ducted anti-typhoid campaigns last year there were 43 deaths and 430 cases of typhoid fever less than the previous year. The work of Immuni zation this summer brings the total ot patients treated above the hundred thousand mark for the two summers. In Johnston county Hubert Gower and Sim Baker engaged in a fight and while the fight was in progress Baker called to Bud Baker, his 14-year-old son, to shoot Gower. The boy responded with a shot jun, tearing away Gower's Jaw. Gower died of his wounds and the Bakers are in jail. The report of the homicide says Gower was drinking and indicates that he provoked the fight. Hon. James Haywood Southgate, 57 years of age, president of the North Carolina Peace Society, president of the board of trustees of Trinity Col lege in Durham, and former president of the National Association of Insur ance agents, and at one time Vice Presidential nominee of the Prohibi tion party, died Friday afternoon at his cabin near University Station, in Orange county. Death is believed to have been due to an attack of heart failure. He was one of Durham's best known citizens. Factories Increase. The number of manufactories in creased in the past fifteen years ;'pm 207,000 to 275,000, or 32 per cent. The average number of workers enmplcyed in factories on salaries or wages in creased from 5,076,090 in 1899 to 000,000 in 1914, an increase of nearly $3,000,000 almost 60 per cent, while the Value of the products of our man ufactories was increased from $11, 406.000,000 to $24,246,000,000, an In crease in the value of the products of this period of nearly thirteen billion dollars, or 112 per cent. The production of pig iron for the year ending June 30, 1914, was report ed at 27.000,000 tons; for the year ending June 30, 1916, the output is given at 37,000,000 tons, against pro duction for 1902 of only 17,000,000 tons The output of iron ore for the year ending June 30, 1914, was 57,000,000 tons; for the year ending June 17th 1916, the production was 66,000,000 tons, against only 35,000,000 tons in 1902. The production of steel, whicn for the year ending June 30, 1914, was given at 27,000,000 tons, had Increased for the year ending June 30, 1916, to 39.000,000 tons, against only 15,000,000 tons in the year 1902. From Address delivered before the National Bankers Association by Comptroller of the Currency John Skelton Williams. FOR SALE. Six-room house on Lawsonvllle avenue; well and outhous es. Apply to Mr. WiU Hooper. City. National bankers gathered in Kan sas City at the annual convention of the American Bankers' Association, were told by John SkelUn Williams, Comptroller of the Currency that they could fulfill their duty to the world in the great financial reconstruction fol lowing the European war only if they "put the soul of the people in the use and application of the dollars." "We have outgrown responsibility to our country and generation," said Mr. Williams. "We have become re sponsible to the whole world beoeupo we avo become the supreme world power, especially in that vital depart ment reaching to the root and core of all things which we here directly rep resent as the financial. It is for you, gentlemen, controlling the powerful banking interests of this supreme country, to determine whether these dollars of ours shall prey upon our country and the world with teeth and claws, or shall have souls put into them te upbuild, to help to ueal the horrible scars of war, to lift the stricken to strength and hope." The Comptroller spoke before the National Bank section of the Assocla ion. He levnicwed the progress of banking under the Federal Reserve Law, sketched the commanding posi tion the United States has taken in world finance, declared that for the first time America had become dis tinctly a creditor nation, urged the hankers to take a moro active Inter est in politics, and warned them against the danger of too great con centration of wealth at the expense of small enterprises. "Is it not hard to grasp the thought that this country of ours, which in 1902, had already reached a pinnacle among tho nations, has since that year doubled the volume of its business in virtually all the great cities of the land?" asked he. "If we should dlvldo! the new wealth created annually among all tho men, women and chil dren engaged at work, they would have not far from a thousand dollars per year each. "Our deposits in all the bankj throughout he United States at this time are so hnge that If there should be withdrawn from these banks an amount of deposits equal to the total resources at this time of the Bank of England, the Bank of France.the Bank of Spain, the Bank of Netherlands the Bank of Norway, the Bank of Swe den, the National Bank of Switzerland and the Imperial Bank of Japan, all combined, the deposits of our banks would still be as great as they were three years ago. "If a balance shoulld be struck to. day, the probabilities are that we would find ourselves, for the first time in our history, a distinctly creditor nation. We hold a mortgage on the world's physical assets. The world holds a mortgage on our soul, on our good will and broad nobility of pur pose. "Patriotic Americans have a right to gloat over such a showing with swell ing pride. Thoughtful Americans will find in them cause for $ir that wealth may betray us into rapacity and ine quality of distribution that will mean destruction. We are in aworld infin itely vaster than Rome knew. We can hold in it power and placo far be yond the wildest vision of (he proud est Roman. Tn all time of our tribu lation, in all time of our prosperity, in the hour of death and in the day of judgment, good Lord, deliver us,' runs the Litany. Men wise as Caesar Au gustus wrote that for us to use In our prayers. They understood, as he did that the dangers of prosperity are as deadly as those of adversity," death and Judgment. "The law of gravitation.as we know, applies in finance as in the physical world. Huge accumulations of value naturally draw to themselves the lc? ser masses. While we are planning gigantic schemes for world develop ment let us not forget that the most Immediate and vital business duties which lie before us relate to tho up building of our home enterprises, es pecially the small factories and mills and development undertakings in the lessor cities and towns and in our country districts. Those provide the surest and safest foundation on which to erect national wealth." The Comptroller paid tribute to Sec retary McAdoo, who, he said, bad solved financial problems during the past three years compared to whieb the tasks of Hamilton, Gallatin, Chase McCullough and Sherman seem small In summing up the results achieved under the Federal reserve system, Mr Williams said rates for money hod been lowered and equalized, business of all kinds placed on a strong founda tion and bank failures greatly reduced "It is certain that Just before us, a few months or two or three years " he said in conclusion, "a mighty tas'i is to be done to reorganize and re-establish the nations of the earth. W'a have the right to do it to our own profit But It is eur duty and our opportunltj to let the word 'fair" go hand in hand with the word 'profit' Let us hKvt the great American soul go In com pany with the great American dollar We have the people with the sou's ii them. We have the dollars beyom' our most exagerated hopes. If we pu the soul of the people in the use and application of the dollars, the loftiest and noblest conceptions of the cen turies will be fulfilled by us. And gentlemen, you govern the use ef tae dollar!.- - a ARE YOU GETTING , ... Profit Sharing Coupons With Your Purchases? They Are VALUABLE. You Can Get them By Trading At BURTON CHANCE WALKER CO., FURNITUREUNDERTAKING tresiaent Wilson has Jusf signed a proclamation excluding about 97,060 eres from the Angelus national for 6tt, California. Of this area about 56, 000 acres will be open to settlement In advance of entry. These lands will be subject to settlement only under the homestead laws from 9 a. m., Oct. 23, until and Including Nov. 21, 1916, and thereafter to disposition under the public land law applicable thereto. Despondency. When you feel discouraged and de spondent do not give up but take a dose of Chamberlain's Tablets and you are almoat certain to feel all right within a day or two. Despondency U very often due to Indigestion and bi iousness, for which these tablets are especially valuable. Obtainable everywhere. DEMOCRATIC SPEAKING! Legislative and County Candidates Will Address tbc Citizens on the Following Dates: NEW BETHEL, Tuesday, October 3rd. 11 o'clock A. M. All Day. MAYODAN Tuesday, October 3rd, 8 P. M. Night. MARTINS, October 4th 8. P. M. Night. STONEVILLE, Thursday, October 5th at 8. P. M. PRICE, Friday, October 5th, at 8 P. M. BETHLEHEM, Saturday, October 7th at 8 P. M. RUFFIN, Monday, October th at 8 P. M. WILLIAMSBURG (HHW) Tuesday. October 10th at 8 P. M. OREGON (Stew) Wednesday October 11th. AO Day. LENOX CASTLE (Slades) Wednesday, October 11th at 8 P. M. DRAPER Thursday, October 12th at 8 P. M. - -SPRAY Friday, October 13 th at 8 P. M. GRASSY SPRINGS. Alliance Hall, Saturday, October 14th at 8 P. M. PLEASaNTVILLE, Monday, ctober 16th at 8 P. M. IRON WORKS (Stew) Tuesday, October 17th. All Day. BENAJA, Wednesday October 18th at 8 P. M. MAYF1ELD, (School House) Thursday, October 19th at 8 P. M. REIDSVILLE, Friday October 20th at 8 P. M. THOMPSONVILLE, Saturday October 21st at 8 P. M. SYLVANIA, Monday, October 23d at 8 P. M. INTELLIGENCE, New Bethel Academy Tuesday Oct 24 at 8 P. M. ROCKY SPRINGS, (Stew) Wednesday October 25th. All Day. EDNA COTTON MILLS, Reldsville, Thursday October 26th 8 P. M. LEAKSVILLE, Friday, October 27th at 8 P. M. PRATT'S SCHOOL HOUSE, Saturday October 28th at 8 P. M. SHARON SCHOOL HOUSE October 30th 8 P. M. SETTLES' BRIDGE, Tuesday October 31st at 8 P. M. MADISON, Wednesday, November 1st, at 8 P. M. Everybody isjlnvited to Attend! Especially the Ladies IRAfR. HUMPHREYS, Chairman, JAS." T. HENDRIX, Secretary Democratic Executive Committee They will save in insurance en your house, for they can't burn. And in addition they are permanent, weather proof, fine in appearance and inexpensive. 2 For Sale by JAS. W. W LLK EE. EewUviUe- N. O- - -
The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, N.C.)
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Oct. 3, 1916, edition 1
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