"Mow TWO FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1917 ITrTE REVIEW: BEtDSVlLL'v X. C. mm j FOR SALE DT Trent & Trent, ReldBTllIe, N. a Offered Exceptional Wages Considerable interest has been aroused around town by the activities of an agent of some mysterious fac tory who 1 offering expert mechanic here as much as $300 per month to sign an agreement to work in a fac tory for a period of eighteen months, segregated from their fellowmen. It seems that the mysterious factory Is to make some sort of war instru ment, the plans of which are to be Gardner Drug Co., Reidsville, N. a kept entlrt.iy 6eerct. Hence the ne- AND ALL GOOD DEALHIIS IA FARM HOME CITY LOT csHjty of segregating the worklngmen of the factory. Jt is announced that several Greensboro mechanics have signed up work in the factory. PROSPECTS BRIGHT FOR A FINE CROP OF TOBACCO Ask Anyone Who Has Used It. Tln're arc families who always aim to keep a bottle of Chamberlain's Col ic and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house You Want to buy or Sell, !,,r in :ase 11 18 needed, and find PKTTIPRF W Bi tnat 11 is not oc!y a sood investment ot rr I J V? ' iAo ,,ut s:ivc's t!,nm no en1 ot suffering. Sheriff old Office, 108 Aii to iu reliability, ak anyone who Gi'mer Street h.-is used it. Safest Druggists Sell E-RU-SA Pile Cure 1eoause It contains no opiates, no Irai.- no belladonna, no poisonous ' drug. All other Pile medicines eoi ,ui.n injurious narcotics and other poisons cause constipation uroViliintaKo all who use them. E-RU-SA cures or $fu pnl, .The tobacco crop in this section, according to reports, is in good shape at this time and the prospects are exceedingly bright for a fine crop, but a tobacco crop and a mule are very much alike you can never be sure of what they are going to do until they have done it. it is, there fore, best not to be optimistic regard ing the now crop at this time, for to bacco is a most sensitive plant, and a few; days can completely change its prospects. The wet spill recently gave the plants a good growth, enabling the leaves to spread to such an extent that the roots are now well shaded and the ground is retaining moisture well, but a good shower every three or four days for a couple of weeks Price of Corn Vs. Tobacco , Sidney B. Bullington, of the Axton Soapstone section, a sucofsisful farmer of the old school who believes In mak ing everything to sell and not risking everything on oue money crop, was in the city yetterday. He brought twen ty five bushels of shelld corn, which h? promptly sold for 2.25 per bushel, or $rt.25 for the load. This little occurrence points a two fold observation, one for the farmer himself to ponder, and the other for the consideration of the large tobacco companies or buyers of leaf tobacco. It is an old tale but one difficult to impress profitably upon the mind of the average farmer crop diversifica tion. If the farmer would devote the same land, pains, labor and fertilizer to corn that he docs to tobacco, he would find corn-gTowing, in most cast's just as profitable, and in many more than tobacco. He would find FJTZER'S DRIjG 8TORE, R. H. TUCKER, GARONfrt DRUG CO P-F-DMOT DRUG STORE CixrasiMVHwmm mm wn i tm mam. nu wiyw mmmmjmmmmmmrmammn3mgmn IS"'1 rj J j would no doubt help the crop toward maturity. A long dry spell now will that he could make profitable crops affect the crop to a marked degree. Krain and, at the same time, by- Reports from the South Carolina markets continue to be most encour aging. Sarting off with an average price of about sevenleen cents, the crop is now averaging around twenty three cents and the prediction is freelv made that the South Carolina crop this year will average close to twenty four cents. The bulk of the crop in that State will have been sold within the nert few weeks and then the East ern Carolina markets will open in full blast. Reports from the markets now open are to the effect that common tobaccos the us; of legumes improve his lands ea .-h year, but he will never get his farm lands rich if he plants them in tobacco with artificial fertilizers till doomsday. .Moreover, it has been observed that "no officer ever levies on a full corn house or granary for debt, yet it is not an uncommon occurrence for the horig to nail up undo process a fine barn of tobacco." This is a lesson in itself. Now again it is known that the laTe tobacco companies are paying very high prices on th" (reorgia. South The Physicians of North Carolina are not elackers. As a profession they are responding to the call!. There are 148,000 doctors in the United States, he points out. 2,000.000 would require 20,000 doc tors, or about one In every seven doc tors in the United State. Of the 1,700 to 1,800 doctors in North Car olina 300 have already volunteered their services, or one of every six, WHAT CATARRH IS It has been said that every third An army of person has catarrh in some form. Science has shown that nasal catarrh often indicates a general weakness of the whole system, and snuffs and vapors do little, if any good. To correct catarrh you should enrich VOUf blood with th nil-fnnrl in Srntt'n. which would be the state's ; proper-, Emulsion which is a mediCinai-food tion if the full army of 2,00,000 were , . . . - - . , , already in existence. . b",duiWc fr" fr0 w on jiaumui uiugs, j ry it ivui' Scott & Bowne, HooBfteld, N.J. Hopeless. Economy may be practiced con stantly, but no one ever se.-nis to be come export In it. WOMAN COULD HARDLY STAND Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. are gelling higher than lit years; In; Carolina ami Wast : in North Carolina ugall The Great McDo Cabinet Sale Join the Club and get this Kitcl.tr Caiiret jut in your home for $1 down and $1 the week. We are also pivinpr absolutely FREE Chest of 26 pieces Silver to members of this Mc I )oupall Club. Come in and we will tell you about it. BURTON-CHANCE WALKER;: CO.; furniture and ; -.i t takii-jr aV1. aMMaUMI 3053 THE SOUTHED RAJtWWSGCMPAIiY :k U'ir -f.T'77.V IVTVW' An Ambition and a Record fllE nerds of the South are identical with the nJ f the n..mhT Haiw i tkc ruwtl aucixaa tl one mean tbc upbuiMiiic l bc uihar. A D,r f.,w!irn Railway aaka no fort no fcdtl i!ilti aitvird to ott.rra. ; T!i amhtilon ( the Southern Railway Company It to tr la btii v tiitrtr ltis H tr" ol AMprnlioa brtwrea U publU- wS tl tilri1; o K-t p" U Il M lair miti liuik pulkr .n the iniiJt mrtit i.I riiiroa.:t ui.U imltM the rooSJeiif ol ri v"1""""' atenciet; to falrc ll.it U -ntUfvl ttmmtnt whirh will enable k to t.!,tein tl.' aciiht'iMMi r i: il M l" tlx oittiaMaa ul better at;4 rnlai(n.filto:r i'Ue( die 4emaii4 lur iucraieit tint battel aer.icet (ji.Uy To tak'r ir t U9 ! i ' bodf politic of ttit Swat alonraUe ( ,tl.i i rtrat ti.itnvfu - vnh no mure, but Willi ojuai UiienleK ejal rif Mi aiwt eiui iuitajuaca. The Southern. Serves the South." r"T-e fact, one report says they are "out-rag-ously high " The fine qualities those grades that sell around thirty rents aro said to he about the same price as last year. The big advance has been in th' common tobaccos. Quite a lot of tobacco is being pull ed, but not as much as shou Id be, ac cording to reports. "ISy all means," said a tobacco man to The Sentinel, "urge upon our tobacco growers to pull their tobacco, every leaf of it, when possible, and do not permit the lower leaves to burn up before they are pulled.' Th;n, too, there is the scrap that must be saved this time, for there is every indication that it will bring prices that will justify saving it. It Is estimated that one million pounds of scrap is thrown away by the grow ers of this section very year as worth less. There is mute evidence of this to be found at every barn door in the country. Very little' scrap has been sold on this market in the past ten years. There may be two hun dred wagons of tobacco on a ware house floor and yet one will seldom find more than a half dozen sacks of scraps in all this big lot of tobacco. When such tobacco brings only one or two cents per pound there is little encouragement for the growers to save it, but this year, if enough of our far mers save it, there is strong likeli hood of it bringing In the neighbor hood of five cent3.--Vinston Sentinel. markets wherever cotton also is grown. The prices this seasgn so far seems to be almost fabulous, and when a tobacco magnate was asktwl wny the large companies were pay- im; such excessive prices on those markets when there seemed to be no occassion for it, a,? the competition was chiefly, limited to about three buyers, he frankly said: "But there u another very influential competitor you have not seen follow the market. His name is Cotton which is now sell ing at twenty-five cents a pound and if we do not bid high for tobacco, which we are obliged to have, not only his year but next, the planter will grow a!l cotton and leave us short -of our needs." , With corn at $ 2.25 and wheat at $2.75, the tobacco companies must pay liberally for our tobacco or the farmers in this section may sl!p a cog and grow mere grain and less to- l bacco. On our lands corn at $2.25 per bushel can be grown as profitably as cotton at 25 cents a pound further South.. So it is reasonable to expect high prices for 'th?' weed" this sea son. Danville Register. A Correction Editor Review: We notio? in your account of i hi. death of our. old friend and comrade, Frank F. Jones, that he was a mem ber of the 38th Virginia .'Regiment and that history may be kept straight I ask the privilege of correcting tiii error. Comrade Jones was a mem ber of the same company to which I belonged Co. G. 14 N. C. Regiment. He volunteered in this county in ISfil and was one of the charter members. Captain Thomas Slade being their iirst commander, A. J. GritHth wan made 'Captain-, after the first -year ot the war It is true that our comrade was in the last charge at Appomatox and one of the 17 who volunteeivi! to hold the ifnemy In check 'tit! a field piece could be recovered 1 know these are facta as the writer was with him, and there are s vt rai living witnesses who will testify to the same, and It is too well 'establish ed, for any controversy that General W, R. Cox's N. C. Brigade made the hist charge at. Appomatox and those 17 men referred to did the last shooting iyll 'meinbers of 'he 14th X. C. Regiment, Respectfully submitted, K. It. HARRIS. - Co. G 14 Regiment N. C, Troops $100 Riwai d $100. The readers of thi paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis-ease that science has been able to cure In all its stagis and that is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly influenced.'- by constitutional condi tions requires constitutional tre.it meat. Hall's Catarrh Mcidcin-n is ta ken internally and acts through the blood on the mucous surfaces of the r.ytm thereby destroying the foun dation of the disease, giving the pa ti.mt Strength by building up the con stitution and nsr'rtini nuture in do ing its work. The proprietors have so much fait ii in the cuntve powers Of -Hails Catarrh Medicine that they . ilUl flril lillllillUii Ikrflll.llMa fun an.. Ras that it fails to cure. Snil r,r let of t btiimnlals. Address K. J. CHENEY' & C. Tol edo, O. Sold hy Druggists, 75c. Free of Chargo Any adult suffering from cough, cold or bronchitis, is invited to call at the drug store of Gardner Drug Co and get absolutely free, a sample bottle of Boschee'a German Syrup, a soothing and healing remedy for all lung troubles, which has a successful record of fifty rears. Gives the pa tient a good night's rest free from coughing, with free expectoration In the morning. Regular sizes, 25 and 75 cents. For salt In all clrlllzed countrk Read the paper regularly Fulton, N. Y. "Why will women pay out their money for treatment and receive no benefit, when so many have proved that Lydia E. Pinkham'sVege table Compound will make them well ? For over a year I suffered so from female weak ness I could hardly stand and was afraid to go on the , street, aione. uoc tors said medicines were useless and only an operation would help me, but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has proved 'it otherwise. 1 am now perfectly well and can do any kind of work." Mrs. Nellie Phelps, care of R. A. Rider, R. F.D. No. 5, Fulton, N. Y. Wo wish every woman who suffers from female troubles, nervousness, backache or the blues could see the let ters written by women made well by Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If you have bad symptoms and do not understand the cause, write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Jlio., .fcr helpful advice jjiverj free. FETZER'S DRUGSTORE HEADQUARTER? FOR DR. HESS' Stock & Poultry Tonic Think of it! Eeps 40c per dozen and your hens not layiusfl Feed them Dr. HessToultry Panac:a Every package guarantied. Ask us Charles Fefczer "THE DEPENDABLE JHUGGIST AT IT FOR OVER THIRTY YEARS What others tell me I may believe; but what I find out for myself, I know. Thos. A. Edison. I HAVE REPRESENTED THE MUTUAL BENEFIT Life Insurance Co. OF NEWARK, N.J. FOR 28 YEARS And I KNOW it is the cheapest, the fairest and ihe most liberal company on earth. Scores of business men in Reidsville have MUTUAL BENEFIT I NSU R A NCK. ASK THEM. FRANCIS The Insurance Man. FLUES! PI TIFxl i WASHINGTON WOOLEN MILLS Southern Railway System? ajiCLLi s!ilu!ifin, oiie ear each, $2. This Sitchl Offer expires Acsutf 15th, vfcen price vriiJ be $2.25 Their special report on : conditions affecting clothing values which this issue under the caption from loom to retailer says as follows: "This country is at war. The sit uation resulting therefrom ; affects clothing values so radically that we have delayed issuing this special re port because the unfailing truthful ness! of our statements have brought our friends to rely and act upon our reports, and the responsibility under present unprecedented conditions is very- great. . '..'" '- "": - . "..'.,.-' "We state following facts: "Medium and fine wools are selling at $1.20 to fl.50 per scoured pound, and losing 25 per cent, in manufactur ing. This means. $1.60 to $2 for the raw wool in each pound of finished cloth. -.'.' "The United States government paid in April GO per cent, more than In Dooeniber last for the same fab rics, '. ! "The wool on the sho?p's back has J every available piece of heavy staple cloth from mills and even from cloth iers, and cut them up Into blankets re gardless of color. "We raise only one-third the wool we use. Our clip of 1917 goes to the government. .We can import no wool except small quantities from South America and extremely Ine wools from Australia. "The rvbove are facts. The last thing we desire to do Is to encourage speculation of overbuying, and, as good AiTtpricrihs', wemust all face the situation calmly, sell what we own at fair prices according to cost, and not aggravate the exhaustion of wool by speculative purchases; but iwe un hesitatingly give one word of advice take delivery of whatever part of the goods you now have on order as soon as jou can get same." Owing to war conditions we are un aole to obtain any further shipment of flue iron this season. Fortunate-ly we have a limited stock of sheet Iron on hand, but when this is disposed of we canriot fill any more orders for flues. Prices are some higher than last year and are strictly cash to all. We will fill orders for flues as long as our stock lasts. "First coma, trst served. PL G. Gladstone. WANTED! OLD JUNK FOR CASH We want to exchange for CASH for your Scrap Material, such as Bags, Hones, Feed Baes, crap Bagging, Brass Copper, Lead, Zinc, Old Rubber Boots and Shoes, Auto Casings, lDiier Tubes, Carriage Tiies, and all ktnes of Scrap Metals and Iron. BriDg us your material. :. , FOR SALE 1 One ton Truck Winton. 1 Five passenger Ford. 1 Runabout with TrucK Body Foro, All In good running condition. Eth er for sale or will trade. Walker Hide & Junk Co. Diy Bribery Bid?. ft Opp. Depot Chronic Constipation. It Is by no means an easjr matter to cure this disease, but it can be one in most Instances by taking ChAraber laiu' Tablets and complying wlih the printed directions that accompany each package. Now is the time to subscribe i been sold twice. First, by mills to j wholesale clothiers In cloth for gen eral trado for next winter, and sec ond, to the government, since March 1, for military fabrics for the de fence of the country. . j "There can be no doubt about who gets the wool. Thj mills from coast to coast are running night and day ; for the government and ignoring gen- , eral trade. ; "The result Is a desperately criti cal situation. j I "The government has taken the mills and the wool under contracts to i Dtc. 30. 1917. 'Further, they have recently taken This statement from the above woolen mills was received here by J. . S. Hutcherson. He wants to say that his people were fortunate to be in position to buy their line ot Wool ens last September for this Fall and Winter. Therefore hi prices for Fall and Wintr Suits, Overcoats, etc., will be practically the Same as last fall. Dut no duplicates on any piece goods. So a word to the wise is sufficient. Gat busy. This line fall and win ter samples are now on display. You can place your order today and get just what you want and have it shipped any old time and all will come up as' usual to fit and please you. We are still making the best fitting and wearlag shirt that man has ever pulled over his head. HIGH GRADE BUILDING BRICK itrtck is the moot enduring, taunt fct-cura against Are; D"o1 comfortable to all weat&wr j mocvi ow.i-iji:al In ilnal cost, k.ad vii u-OM beautiful ot aay U uxaty appeals to yon, aa-viio .i ua get quotation tiuiim&Sat made promptly. rV 1 1 l lAMtiON ft ' utOGECOCK, INC JarunsTllle. Va. J. S. HUTCHERSON Heal Pressing Club W. W. WILLIAMS, Prop. All Garments Cleaned or Dyed on Short Notice. ' Hats Cleaned and Blocked Satisfaction Guaranteed on all Work. ... ..Price Reasonable...... . OVER SHARP'S BARBER SHOP Telephone 329 Prczpt Serrice. Eest VcHf