Newspapers / Washington Daily News (Washington, … / Oct. 9, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS PUBLISKfc&feVSBT AJTKRNOOh" KSOEPT 8CKDAT8. ?, 1*0?, at ttu H. GL, wUm at Xuoh 8, 1870. SUBSCRIPTION BATES Ob? Month .?.$ Foot Month* 1.00 Six Koatfas 1.50 On Tw 8.00 Btthwriptio? moat la paid fcw h idnaca If paper ia not re Mrr^d promptly, telephone or w*H* thia office. Subscriber* desiring tk* paper diseea tin tied, will plea** notify this office, otherwiw il W entinoed at nfulu nlaeriptUB rat?. JAVS8 L. MATO . . .... p. .. ?AJXOOEHCH ? ?? WASHINGTON', NOETH CAROLINA opt "Dresa Up Wqek" is coming. If you haven't made preparations jot for securing your glad rags, it's time that you began examining tke stock of some of tho local merchants. Another, and a better way, i? to watch their advertisements in the Daily News during next week. We can t help but wonder whether Biggs' marriage will attract as much atteuiiun as President Wilson's. Kioston is to be the bent paved town in the State. To have pro*' gretued from one paved street to a whole town full of them in a year's time, is a remarkable record and one that the "Metropolis of Lenoir' can well feel proud of.?Kinston Free Press. Although we are ashamed to admit it, we'll have to coufcss that we haven't put down any paving since Hector was s pup. llowever, we hon estly believe that by the time our children jcet old enough to ride a bicycle, we'll see another half'block or two paved. vvnue we an? only too willing U> publish the reports of the bouk club meetings in the city, we eiucecelv trust that the officers of the club* will see to it that these report? are in our office on the morning of the following Jay. iu order that they may be inserted in that afternoon's paper. IHE GET-RICH-QCIOK MA.MA. b'rom figures recently published by the Postotfice "department, it shown that the public ha* been swindled out of more than four! million dollars in the lust year, by sharpsters who operate through the mails. Some of tiio methods usod have been so absurd, so posi tively ridiculous, that it is a general source of astonishment that thure should be so many persons?thouaauds?who are so ready i,. be cheated out of their earnings. "Get rich quick" seems to be the great ambition of tho maj-?rit/ of tho people in the world today. The idea of putting a few dollars aside every week, of being economical in their living, doesn't appeal to thein. It is too slow. They want their wealth to come in all at once, so that they can live a life of ease and luxury. So matter how utterly foolish and hazardous a scheme or venture may be, tho sucker is always to be found who will bite only too eagerly. Ten, twelve or fifteen pcrccnt interest on investments, does not appeul to this class. It is tho hundred?the two hundred, th THOUSAND percent that they aro after. And in their searoh (o: THIS kind of an investment, they fall an easy prey to the first oily tongut-d rascal who conies their way. THE BASEBALL FEVER Everyone kuow? what the baseball fever is. Practically even* American, with red blood in his veins, ban become a victim of it some time or other. Today then* am hundreds of Thousands of por fcona in this country, wlu> are asking that one all-important question: "What's the score'" Business worries, home trouble?, war ncuro, politics, religion, everything is forgotten in the excitement of watcli ipg the results of the games as they are flashed all over the land. No town is so ?mall but that it doesn't wake some arrangements foi ?ecuring the details of the game. Baseball is one of the greatest institutions in our country today. It in the one sport which rich and p?*?r, old and young, bad and good, can enjoy together. It is a clean, wholesome sport. It affords tin boys exercise and pastime, while it affords the older men pleasure and enjoyment. There is nothing in our country today that has such a general attraction for the people an a good game of ball. NEXT YEAR'S COTTON CROP. There i?i a general f,,?r M t throughout the South that thit? year's good p riot's for cotton will cause tin- farmers to plant such large crops next year that they will forget till about their lesion in diver sification ami will so flood the market with 1910 cotton thai condi tions, similar to 'hose of In^t year, will occur again. Fii regard ??? this matter. ?lie Progressive Farmer curries an in tercshng editorial, from which we have clipped the following, l! is excellent advice. and il i- t?> l?c sincerely hoped that the farmr* of the South will adhere 1?? ir: "With cotton telling at u profitable price at thin time, the South stands on the hriuk >?f danger, probably greater than ever lie fore in her history. Safety exists only in maintaining 'ho progress towards feeding our selves. which we have male in Ifllf). If we fail to sow a larg? oat and wheat crop this fall ami seed the bare lands with cover, pasture and soil-improving crop*, no power on earth will prevent a large cotton acreage next year. The cotton acreage will lie increased next year, there is no doulit of that, bul by sowing a large oat crop this fall and determining to produce all the feedstuff* and other supplicH we need for IDlti, the increase in the acreage of cotton will not bo so great. We can not only hold down the increaae in the cotton acreage, but also lessen the Imd effect? of any increase which may occur, only by starting now to grow next. year's supplier. "If the price of cotton remains high we are almost certain to lose some of the progress which we have made this year toward "Diversification and Indepen dence;" but lo go back to old ideas snd conditions will be suicidal. Oats and wheat do better seeded earlier than is genially advised and practiced. The Hea rt an fly does little dsmage to wheat in the Honth, where the crop has not been generally grown, and for that reason it may probably be sown earlier than gen erally recommended. With oats earlier seeding 1? of tremendous advantage." Best Editorials of the Day. - A Ik "LUX" Editor of life, tftar ?ui? lining kis aaoeUtn: "Have the usual mjl an ljochings in the Sooth been turned in 1" "Ym." "Eu the *eokl7"?nimn*ry of mMow im Alabaaa been c latedt" ?Y?a." "His the MMl cartoon ban prepared, belittling the Seeietarf of the Nary I" "Doe? Prohibition con? in this week for its fall (hue of censure "Yea." "Very ??11. Tell tk? bUum mnnffr to hnstle ?round -end get a few more wbiakeyads to ill in on t half-down extra pages. *il humor can't find a market, it ir oar serious duty to mak? one for it."?Bal?jh-TU?a ?' - ? HUGGING A DELUSION. Some North Carolina nwnAmU do not believe in advertising, but Northern mail order htmsss da If it weren't for printer's ink nobody would erer he** tell of ameil order house, hence thore would be no complaint of their metod of jotting trsde. Our ides of tlic best wsj to get rid of the mail order houses is to convince thos persistent advertisers that a&vtftftsiAg does not pay. However, the fact that some home memhpnts do no% advertise surely mskes adver tising pay the mail order-ho use a Well, those trsde soouts simpli rejoice when they can exploit a community in which nobody does much advertising but themselves. Amorican jobbers have a costly- system of sending out drummers to call ou merchants wh? trade they desire. On the other hand, the big retail ws(aMishment< -depend on individual purchasers, but they don't seed any drummer lo them. Their drummer i*.printed ink and it does the work without having to chew the rag. Merchants who don't advertise ought to organise and fool the mail order houses into believing Uurt Airertiaing doean't pay. We know positively that the advertising of mail order house* does not pay. Their advertising Certainly doe? not pay our home mer chants who do not believe in advertising. That's the only way we can think of "that-advertisings doesn't pay. If advertising doesn't pay the mail order<honm, we beteh* they are gona bust. By the pernicious and yet judicious use of printers' ink, mail order bouses hsve made* themselves a perfect bogey to home mer chants who keep on pretending that they do not believe in adver tising. They hug the delusion of a false economy till they can't rest.?Wilmington Star. THE GREAT AMERICAN FLIRT. Mrs. Alec Tweedle, an English writer, in a recent book on ''Women the- World Over," pays a special tribute to American women. It isn't tbo usual oae,< at alL In comparing them with the women of other lands she is struck, less by their vaunted beauty or intellect than by their supreme gun i us of the world-old game of flirting. In this realm, we are told, the American girl has only one com-| petitor. "Of all coquettes on this globe, of many race and divers cwlors, the greatest flirts are the American and Spanish." The two types, however, are oharactoriaed by very different methods. "The Spanish girl U a silken, sinuous flirt, with beautiful little hands and feet and lazy ways. The American is an effervescent one. Shn bubbles all over with life and enthusiasm, is virile to her fingor tips. 'jollies' men until they do not know whether they are on their heads or their heels." Undoubtedly the compliment?if it is a compliment?is deserved,; as millions of male Americans can testify, many of them to their, sorrow. Whether the unflirtatioua feminist will take any satisfac-' tion in this eminence is somewhat doubtful. It is still more doubtful whether any American women except tliCj handful that hope to marry into English titles will be pleased by Mrs. Tweedle's conclusion that "the American woman in what the modem Englishwoman might have been had she not centuries of* conservatism and tradition behind her; we (the English) are what the fair American may yet bocome." Let our men, at least, utter a word of protest. If the evolution of the American is going to make her more and more like the Eng lish woman, we want no more evolution. W0 prefer Americau wo men as they are.?Orange (Tex.) Leader. WHAT IT WILL MEAN. The vote on woman suffrage in Now Jersey takes place on tho 10th and the suffragists aro encouraged mightily by the recent in dications coming out of the White House. It is not likely that? President Wilson ia going to disappoint them, if as The Obsemr has euggested, they keep quiet and let him alone. The advance an nouncement that the President's vote would be cast for the cause? would undoubtedly have a great effect on. tho. general voting popula-' t ion, but we are inclined to tho belief that The New York Post haa chub the real significance of it The Poet says that in Mr. Wilson's' case, a vote for woman suffrage would signify much more than is due simply to his official position, for ho. haa been suspending his4 judgment about woman suffrage* and heri* a tough-minded man, not easily swayed. "So, if he soon an noun eea- that ha favors grantiaj? the vote to the women of his State," aavs The Poet, "it will nt> longer I? possible to- say that the stlffragiat appeal has weight only with emotional and1 muahv-beadod men."?Charlotte Observer. North Carolina, U Beaafort Ooeoty Thomas Ball?? ?a. \rthur Ball?/ et al. Andrew BaUer. ona of the le 'endanta la tha above entitled ?e loo, will taka notice that an action has been commenced In the Super ior Court of Beaufort Couty. befere 'ho Clerk for the purpoao of p?jr-( tltloninf among the helra at lapp. of Chrtatophar Bailer oertnln lenda In the County af Beairfort of whlah the aald Obrletopher Bailey died nefted and poaaeaaed. Defendant will further take no^ 'Ice that aatd action la returnable^ before the Clerk of tha Superior Court, at Hit office. In the Court* houie. la a*J6 County of Boaufoft. la Waablactoa, on October lat, 1915, and that upon the defendant'? failure to ap?oar and anawr or d* ranr to the jromplalnt which hi been Died lat hla catiae that **?', plaintiff will demand ? Judfmeat up on the ret arm date thtreOf. T hI? the tOth day of Aftf net, 1M|. OSO. A. PAVU pierk Superior Court. I-11-4 w? ? n< doteadoat !>!?? lini Win Vortb Carolina?Boaafort Couatj. la Ik* Superler Court, lak? notice tbat aa actio* entitled as above baa bm eonii>eaee4 la lb* Superior Gw? of lteeofort emir la wblek tke plaintiff la aakUt tar *? abaaluta divorce from Lka bonds of matrimony, aad >ba aa'd defeod aat will further taka notica tkat A? la required to appear at tka tend o( the Superior court od ea:d Coon 17 I* be bald oa the tat Moadajr 1? Octo bor, 1116, at tko Conrthouee la aald Coast/ la Waaklactoa. M C., and aaawar or demur to tka ooaaplelat la aald action, or tko platntlfl will applr to tba eourt for tka retMf deaannded la aald oonpUlnt. Tkla If lb dor of AOkuat. l?J?. GEO. A. PAUL, Clark aoportax Co ar L J. ?. FAWU . NOT I (IB or %AIM. B j vir tu? et the pomiri of ul? contained in two otrobi 4?4? ef trust execatcd by MattU M ari h to D. MmUu. om dated lfsrch 1. 1910, racord?d in Ul? Register's of Oca of Beaufort county in Book lit. Page Mi. snd the other dated March I6th. 1911, reoorder in aald RcglstsrV office in Book 109. Pat? 141. both of which ara hereby re ferred to, the said True tec will nil. at . puhlic auction tor cash to'the higheat bidder at the oourthoaaa door of Beaufort county on Monday, October 18th, 1915, at noon. Lots Noa. 14, 15 and 19, fronting on Main and Water atrcets In the tow d at Bath, and Lota Nos.?40, 41, 41. >1 and 44, on-Church Street in aalQ town, reference being made to the map or plan thereof. The isle of asld lots however Is tot Intended to relinquish any -lghta of the Trustee or o t the own ?r of the debt as to the other prop I jrty described in aald deeda of > trust, but all rlghta In respect there of are exprossty preserved. This September 14. 191?. ?. D. MacLBAN, Trustee. B. J. DRAPE, Owner of Debt. 9-19-4 wc. "JUST Tine THING." ? tailor's work 1? sedentary. That 1? why moat tailors suffer from con stipation. O. W. Boberson. Wlchlts Palls, Tax., says: "I find Foley Cathartio Tablets the most delight ful. c'.eansint cathartic I have ever taken. They are Jnst the thing." They keep the stomach aweet and the liver active, drive away head ache. dullness, tired feeling, bilious ness, bloat sod other results of clogged bowels. Prompt and effec tive, without gripe or pain. Stout people praise them for the light, free feeling they give. Davenport Pharmacy. ?MMtaMtlSHaMMMKPVW pnMW^SPWeW* K58B3ZK3 1 the 18th day of October. 1 9'?lock soon. Mil to tha bidder for caah at tha dopr of Bsaufort county, tha 1 m g described tract or lat of land: Situata. tyi*? and being la the city of Washington, aad la tha 1 part thereof on tha Wain i and mora particularly follow: v Beginning- on Main street 84 faat cintwardlr from tha eaatward coe Of a lot formerly owned by L. Mayo and now ownad by L. R. Mayo and 114 faat tastwardly of H. C. Braraw's eastward corner and 48 faat weetwardly from Joseph B. Jonaa'a westward corner, and ma nia? aaatwardly with Main street 41 foot to Joseph B. J owes'i thence ?outhwardly toward Pamlico Rhref with Joaaph B. Jonaa'a 16? faat to C. M. Brown's Una; thence weatwardly with C. Brown'a line 48~ feet,- thence north wardly 166 foot to Main atraat, the beginning, 4 s feet from Joseph B. Jonaa's Una; It being tha ean Identical tract of land conveyed to D. C. Ros? and wife by L. R. Mayo an December I, 1807, and register ed In Book 188 at paga Hi of the Beaufort County Recorda. Terms of sala, cash. Tbia September 14th, 1816. JUNIUS D. QRIMB8, Traatee. WARD A GRIMES. Attorneys. 8-18-4 wc. NOTICE OP SUMMONS. North Carolina, Beaufort County. Superior Court, November Term, ms. Frank Hart. Marina Hart. The defendant Marina Hart will take notice: That an action ha* been Instituted In the Superior Court of Beaufort County. North Carolina. wherelr Frank Hart la plaintiff aad ab?\ said Marina Hart, la defendant, summonc In which said action Is returnable to the November Term of the said Court, to be held In Waahlngton N. C.. on the 22nd day of Novem ber, 1915. which said action la In stituted for the purpose of sfcurlncr an absolute divorce; and the said defendant la notified to he and ap pear at the said Court at aald tin to answer the complaint Which ha* been filed, or the relief demanded In the same will be (ranted. This 4th'day of October, 1915. G BO. A. PAUL, Clerk 8uperlor Court. HARRY McMULLAN. Atty. for Plaintiff. 10-S-4we. Subscribe to the Dally Newt. Ladies Coat Suits Prices $10 to $25 In A11 Colors The One Button Hatch UNION SUIT For Men and Boys. Price 75c to $3 Per Suit s i BIG REDUCTION SALE On account of the continued warm weather, Fall and Winter goods havebeen moving very slow, we are therefore overstocked and compelled to sac rifice some of it to meet outstanding obligations. Come in, look the stock over and if our prices are not lower than elsewhere it costs you nothing. Sale Closes Within a Few Days. Ff Next to Western Union Telegraph Co. AGENT ..... BL m. oum, m. ? ? Umni Ifcm Omtt ?? Brown*? Dru (to Hran I u It >. m.i 11> I > m. wAfluruaTOi*. *. a biO- ?*<?" ??." r 0. Boi 1S4 M. N. BERRY Boar. Med, H?y And Grain feed ;mitimoii n. c. ' 0 ? ? ? ? ? ? ,? ? ? H.' ? Ward. Jul? D. OHM ? ?AID ? GIUMM ? MnMtfi! ? WuttUltOB. N. C. ? * W? practice la the Court of ? Ob rtrst JtdlcUl District and ? t k? Federal oourta. * W. a AODkAH iiMiirin?,. Washington, W. 0. HARRY MeMULUA, ATTO RNK Y -AT-LAW. Aft*r l^noifT t?(, mg U'iivf<. 'Vit**' Corner mcoju? *uu iiutvi at f ? Jr- ' ?<? ' W. W. wutcum DAlflXL A WARREN. MAJf *nro a kitohin. AtturMTMU-Lcw PTactlc? la th? Bapertor, r?d?r ?1 tod Supreme Court? of QiUi flU t?. *- D. MmIch, ^Ifuhhit??, jf. R Anror*. If. c. "cMA? * nuuirsoa Anror. ul Wubtntton. N. O. BLEWART * BRYAN Wuhlnrton. H n. W. u Vtambmm SIMMONS * VACUHA* I-*wy?r*. i Room. 1*44-1*. Lanrklufhou* 1 BWMias. i Waihlnrton, N. C. i - A. ?? Melxaa S' ?r. a SMALL, MhLBAN, BRiOAW 1 M KOI?MAN , Offloet on Market Bt, Oppo- ? site City TT.n < WMiiBftoa. Nortt Omm ? ?. A. railXIPS ? BSO. "M mciuiroi WAHAllK/rui, IV. C. *o? e no mm. Ittonir-at-I? VMIlltn. K. e. Subscribe to Dally News NOTICE. North Carolina, Beaufort County. In the Superior Court, October Term, 1915. Ida Campbell ?0. Ma? Campbell. The defendant above named la hereby notified that the above en titled ?nit waa instituted* against him by his wlfo, Ida Campbell, for an absolute divorce upon natatory grounds, -alleged In the complaint; that euroraom therein waa return able to the October term, 1111, of .the Superior Court of Beaufort Coun ty; that anld summons wa* not per sonally served and said dc fonda?t le now notified to be and appear at the following term of the Superior Court of Beaufort Couatr on Mon day, November ISnd, HIS, at the oonrt houee In Washington. N. C.. then and there to answer the com plaint filed again* him in said suit, else the relief demanded will he granted aeeordlng to the course Of the court In such eaees. WITNESS my hand aad peal, th!e September It, 1111.^ 0?0. A PAUL. (SVAL) Clerk 8up M0-4wc. *a? J (Coo tin tied 00 1
Washington Daily News (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 9, 1915, edition 1
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