Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / July 1, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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WHY NOT ITEMS (Delayed from last week.) Corn is looking very well in this section. There seems to be plenty of peach es anil blackberries, but apples and pears are almost a failure. Little Miss Blanche Sturdivant, who has been spending some time at the home of Mr. C. E. Stuart has re turned to her home at Star. Messrs. J. C. and F. R. Auman, Misses Bertha Garner, Harriette Smith and Hester Stuart went to Afheboro last week to meet with the Baracas and Hiilatheas and make plans to form a county union. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. King, and Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Vuncannon and child ren, of Star; Mrs R. C. Cox, of High Toint, and Mr. Carson King, of Thomasville, spent a day last week at J. A. King's. Dewey Slack has returned from a visit to his brother, T. X. Slack, at Eagle Springs. Mrs. Rocity Spencer is visiting her daughter, Mrs. D. J. Johnson. Mr. Farlow and Mr. Davis, of Marl boro, visited Miss Myrtie Lawrence recently. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Trogdon, of Kemps Mills, spent a night recently at M. A. Cagle's. PROGRAM FOR PROVIDENCE TOWNSHIP SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION, JULY 11 10:00 a. m. Devotional. 10:30 Greeting Mrs. A. O. Adams. 10:35 a. m. Response Mrs. Lynn Pugh. 10:40 a. m. The Importance of Early Training in the S. S. A. R. Wil liams. 11:10 Song. 11:15 a. m. Do we Nee the Old People in the S. S.? C. L. Cran ford, Climax. 11:30 a. m. Business Roll call of schools Reports from township of ficers Appointment of committees. Recess for dinner. 1:30 p. m. Song service. 1:45 p. m. Does it Pay to Teach? Dr. J. D. Gregg. 2:05 p. m. Round Table. Organized S. S. Work L. F. Ross, Asheboro.j 2:25 p. m. How to Study the S. S. Lesson Rev. Pike, Liberty. 2:45 p. m. Is the S. S. Worth our While? Rev. O'Briant. I 3:05 p. m.Teacher Training A. R. Williams. ) 3:25 p. m. The Necessity of Accu- ( rate Records and How to Keep Them F. M. Wright. j 3.45 p. m. Short Talk by S. S. Work ers, Led by A. O. Adams. 4:00 p. m. Business. Benediction. A. M. "MACON, Fres't. Sstelle Neece, sec. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTORIA PROGRAM Following is the program of Frank linville township Sunday School con vention held at Bethany church the fourth' Sunday in June: 10:00 Song service. Devotional, by Rev. J. B. O'Briant. Report of schools. Bible Study, Its Purpose and In fluence, by Prof E. E. Farlow. The Importance of Early Training, by Rev. J. B. O'Briant. Appointment of committees. Dinner. 1:30 Song service. The Influence of Those Not in Sun day School, by N. S. Sherwood. ! Dividends on Our Investment, by E. O. York. I The Teacher's Responsibi'ity, by! Dr. W. I. Sumner. J. C. ALLRED, Pres't Mayme Ellis, Sec. RANDLEMAN ROUTE I TEMS (Delayed from la' week.) Mr. and Mrs. C. Gray, of Pleasant Garden, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Palmer. Miss Partha Wall, of Greensboro, spent Saturday night and Sunday with home folks. Miss Elsie May Rockett, who has been visiting in Chatham county, for some time has returned home. The township Sunday School con vention will be held at Level Cross the first Sunday in July. Rev. Shu ford Peeler of Greensboro is expected to be there. Mrs. Dorcie Palmer was called to the bedside of Her father, Dr. Claborn Gray, of Pleasant Garden, who is very ill. Mr. T. C. Lamb, the merchant at Level Cross, spent Tuesday in Greens boro on business. Restored to Good Health. " ' I was sick for four years with stomach trouble," writes Mrs. Otto Gang, Zanesville, Ohio. "I lost weight and felt so weak that I almost gave ' up hope of being cured. A friend told me abVat Chamberlain's Tablets, and since using two bottles of them I have been a well woman." . Obtainable ev IN MEMORY OF MR. LASSITER Thou art gone to the grave, but we will not deplore thee, Though sorrow and darkness encom pass the tomb, The Savior has passed through its portals before thee, And the lamp of his love is thy guide through the gloom. I am made sad that thou art so soon departed, thy friend has passed' over his three score and ten and J vet it is my sad lot to miss thee I first. I can hardly realize, "You were so much better than I. How wonder- j ful is God's dealings with us. May-i be the Lord is holding me back off ering me another chance; how I am grieved when I think on these things." , But thank God for bright hopes of the beyond. Brother you are not dead, "He that believeth in Me though he were dead yet shall he live," John 11-25. "There remaineth a rest to all of God's children, I praise the Lord, for giving you that promised rest i from all anguish and toil. I wait the ; call from the good Shepherd to cross j over the River to meet thee under the j shade of the trees. I am the way the j truth and the life." John 14-6. "Down in the valley with my savior. I would go, Where the flowers are blooming and the sweetwaters flow." A Friend. THE MEXICAN SITUATION A year ago war with Mexico was imminent. Hearst and American in vestors seemed to want it. But wiser counsels prevailed. Gen. Wood estimated that had we engaged in such a "war we would prob ably have sent to the front 600 thou sand soldiers. Thousands of our American youth might have perished. Guerilla warfare would have been carried on for several years. We would have lost the esteem of all the countries from the Rio Grande to Cape Horn. War was averted by the mediation of the A. B. C. powers that is, Ar gentine, Brazil and Chile. It is a good thing for us that our nation did not war with Mexico. For seven years the American peo ple fought the War of the Revolution. No outside nation stepped in and told us that we were in a state of anarchy that we couldn't govern ourselves. Our forefathers were ieft to solve their own problems, and the result was a grand triumph for free govern ment. It is not our business to make a bad situation worse. Mexico contains many semi-barbarians. We do not want to annex that country. We do not want those people for fellow-citizens. . . . TRINITY ROUTE I ITEMS (Delayed from last week.) We are jrlad to learn that Mr. Alex. Bulla, who has been very ill with ap-' peiidieitis, is improving. Mr. Lee A. Briles and family visit-1 ed his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fate' Briles Sunday. I Mrs. Nannie Welborn spent part of last week with relatives near Climax. Miss Betsey and Mrs. Clayton Wel born visited at Mr. Pete Walker's one day last week. Mr. Enos Skeen and family spent Friday night at Mr. John Briles'. Messrs. Jim Ledweil and Dewey Bulla were among the large number of boys who attended services at Pop lar Ridge Sunday night. Rev. Mr. White preached an excellent sermon to 'the young people, and we hope many of his remarks will not be for gotten. On account of the tent meeting, the Children's Day services at Gilead will be held in the afternoon only, of the second Sunday in July. So there will be services at the tent in the morning, and at Gilead in the afternoon. AN INSPIRING UTTERANCE President Wilson said in a recent reference to the American flag: "The flag of the United States has not been created by rhetorical sen tences in declarations of independence and in bills of rights; it has been cre ated by the experience of a great peo ple, and nothing is written upon it that has not been written upon it by their life. It is the embodiment not of a sentiment, but of a history, and no man can rightly serve under that flag who has not caught some of the mean ing of that history." OLDER GUT STROISGElf To be healthy at seventy, prepare at torty, is sound advice, because in the strength of middle life we too often forget that neglected colds, or careless treat ment of slight aches and paint, simply undermine strength and bring chronic weakness for later years. To be stronger when older, keep your blood pore and rich and active with the strength-building and blood-nourishing properties of Scott's Emulsion which isa food, a tonic and medicine to keep your blood rich, alleviate rheumatism and avoid sickness. Ho alcohol in Scott's. Scott ft Bowoe. T' 8. . REPORT OF RAINFALL (Delayed from Mr. John L. Williams enlisted in the U. S. army at Greensboro, N. C, on the 27th day of May 1911 and left for Columbus, Ohio, left Columbus on the 27th day of June for Fort Mc Dowell, Cal. On the fifth of July he sailed for the Phillipine Islands and landed at Manilla, P. I., on the third of August. He left there on the 14th of February. 1912, and arrived at Tientsin, China, on the 19th of Feb ruary. He left there on the 20th and arrived in Japan on the 29th. From there he wei't to Honolula, arriving March 11th. On the 20th of March, he landed at Monterey, Cal., left Monterey December 10th, 1913 for San Francisco. On the 27th of April, he left for the Mexican border at Xogales, Ariz. He was discharged at Nogales on the 31st of May, 1913, I YR. YR. j YR. j YR. YR. , YR. , MONTH 1910 j 11U j 1912 f 1913 1914 1915 j January 3.19 j 1.57 j 1.96 3.35 '2.34 6.55 3.19 1.57 I 1.96 3.55 2.34 j 6.55 '. February 1.62 1.37 3.04 2.19 2.28 3.92 ; ' 4.$1 2.94 5.00 5.74 4.62 1 10.47 j March 2.04 2.99 6.11 8.07 1.85 ; 2.47 1 ' 6.85 5.93 11.11 13.81 6.47 12.94 j April 5.45 3.45 3.89 2.00 3.28 3.99 , 1 12.30 9.38 15.00 15.81 9.75 16.03 May 3.13 .76 5.62 2.28 1.18 1 4.25 15.43 10.14 20.62 18.09 10.93 21.18 June 6.37 2.20 3.75 2.99 1.97 : 21.80 12.34 24.37 21.08 12.90 July 6.79 .66 2.48 3.16 3.56 27.57 13.00 26.85 24.24 16.46 ! August 6.01 11.17 1.85 3.20 3.61 33.60 24.17 28.70 27.44 20.07 September 2.33 1.35 2.82 4.10 1.53 35.83 25.52 31.52 31.64 21.60 October 4.10 4.00 .92 2.21 1.79 39.93 29.52 32.44 33.75 23.39 November .56 4.07 2.46 2.68 1.76 , 40.49 33.59 34.90 86.43 25.15 ! December 4.02 2.61 1.96 3.01 7.11 ! Total For Year 44.51 36.20 36.86 39.44 32.26 j UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU DEATHLY SICK Stop Using Dangerous Drug Before It Salivates You! It's Horrible. You're bilious, sluggish, constipated and believe you need vile dangerous calomel to start your liver and clean your bowels. . "Here's my guarantee! Ask your druggist for a 50 cent bottle of Dod son's Liver Tone and take a spoonful tonight. If it doesn't start your liver and straighten you right up better than calomel and without griping or making you sick I want you to go back to the store and get your money. Take calomel today and tomorrow you will feel weak and sick and nau seated. Don't lose a day's work. Take a spoonful of harmless vegetable Dod son's Liver Tone tonight and wake up feeling great. It's perfectly harmless, so give it to your children any time. It can't salivate, so let them eat any thing afterwards. " GOOD ROADS ASSOCIATION ' The annual convention of the North Carolina Good Roads Association will be held at the Hotel Langren, Ashe ville, N. C, July 14th, 15 and 16th. Since the last convention one of the chief objects of the association has been accomplished, that is, the crea tion of a State Highway Commission by the General Assembly of 1915. At this annual convention the work of the State Commission will be discussed and plans developed for furthering the work and influences of the Com mission. The subject of "Maintenance of Roads" will be thoroughly discussed; also. "Organization of Road Forces." You are cordially invited to attend this convention, and, also, to appoint five snecial delegates. Please s?nd names to Joseph Hyde Pratt, Chapel Hill, N. C, as early as possible. This convention will be of special interest to county and road commis sioners, road engineering superintend ents, foremen and all who want to see good roads built and maintained in North Carolina. There will be an effort to make this the biggest road convention ever held in the State. COOL SPRING ITEMS (Delayed from last week.) Mr. Deaton and family, of High Point, have moved to the Lane Field place near here. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Moody, of Asheboro, spent the week-end at Mr. J. H. Walker's. Rev. Pike, of Liberty, spent Sunday night at Mr. Enoch Pugh's. Mr. T. F. Bulla, of Asheboro, was in the neighborhood recently locating the new school building at Hrirdin's Grove. - The heavy rains which fell in this section last week did much damage to growing crops. ' AND RAMSEUR NEWS last week.) and re-inlisted at Fort McDowell, Cal., for G. S. I., Infantry, Columbus Bar racks, Ohio, June 12. Mr. Williams is a son of Mr. John D. Williams, of this place. He comes home with the highest honors as sharp shooter and Sergeant. He had made extra good on all examinations. The Texas Oil Co., has landed at Ramseur to stay with the distributor, A. H. York, tank wagon equipment No. 369, and will visit all the sur rounding towns. All users of gaso line will do well to see the Texas man before placing orders. Following is the report of rain fall in inches in Ramseur (Latitude 35 de grees end 47 minutes, Longitude 79 degrees, 34 minutes, elevation 442 feet) from 1909 to the present time: CHILDREN'S DAY AT BROWERS Following is the program of the Children's Day exercises held at Brow er's Chapel last Sunday: Song, by the school. Greeting, by Fleta Brown. Song, by the school. A Gift, by Pearl Spoon. Gathering in the Children, by Beulah Sluder. Recitation,, by Lillian Spoon. Song, by the school. Recitation, by Hazel Pugh. Our day, by Lillian West. Flowers in Life's Garden, by five lit tle girls. Recitation, by Mabel Burrow. An incident of the War, by Eertha Brown. My Dear Mother, by Beulah Claike. Recitation, by Ethel West. Song, by the school. Recitation, by Shellie Spoon. Giving to Jesus, by six girls. The Minister's Daughter, by Fleta Brown. Song, by the school. Our Children's Day by Iola Lowder milk. In My Father's House, by Eertha Brown. The Children's Offering, by Nannie Lowdermilk. Song, by the school. The Little Pilgrims, by Kate Winning- ham. The World Lest Machine, by Carson Vestal. Recitation, by three girls. Song, by the school. Married to a Drunkard, by Annie Hen ry. Recitation, by three girls. Recitation, by Etta VestaL The closing address. Plant Wood's Seed Potatoes In June and July f Fop Fall Crop. Potatoes planted now mature in the cool weather of the Fall when they can be harvested to best advantage for use or sale during the winter. Wood's Seed Potatoes are choice selected seed, put in cold storage early in the season, so as to keep in first class, vigorous condition for late planting. Writ for "Wood's Crop Special," giving prices and infor mation about Potato for lot planting. Cow Pods, Sola Boons Millot, Crimson Clovor, otc T.W.WOOD O SONS, SEEDSMEN, - Richmond, Va. Rexall Olive WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A SHIP MENT OF THIS FAMOUS MEDICINE FROM THE UNITED DRUG CO., OF BOSTON. MASS. The Price is $1.00 per Bottle. The same old price prevails and the WAR HAS NOT EFFECTED IT. Formula: PURE OLIVE OIL, Calcium, Hypophosphite, Potassium Hypophosphite, Sodi um Hypophosphite, SynJp of Glycerine and flavor ed with Wintergreen. Ask your Doctor about this medicine and see if he tells you it is not good. IT IS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED. REXALL OLIVE OIL EMULSION CANNOT BE BOUGHT AT ANY STORE IN ASHE BORO EXCEPT THE STANDARD DRUG STORE AND THE REXALL STORE Have your prescriptions filled at the Standard Drug Company by a Registered Licensed Drug gist of years of experience. No substitution and no inferior drugs at this store. Your prescription is carefully filled by a careful Druggist and carefully filed away in a Filing Cabinet and when your Doctor wants it re filled it is easy to find. We invite you to call to see us. Standard Drug Store Drink Have Tried There's a world of people in Ashe boro who have tried Parfay. Who have put it to the test And found it more than good. Who have learned for themselves that Parfay is delicious, delightful, wonderfully refreshing, gently and wholesomely stimulating. Are you one of these ? Or have you been missing the good things that they have been enjoying? If you haven't already try Parfay today. Grown Bottling Works Asheboro, N. C. Binders, Mowers, Binder Twine JUST RECEIVED A carload of McCormick Binders and Mowers. Also McCormick Binder Twine. If interested, 'Phone, Write or Call to see as. MCCRARY-REDDING HARDWARE CO. 7 GUILFORD COLLEGE 1915 fiss OLDEST COEDUCATIONAL COLLEGE IN THE STATE THOROUGH TRAINING HIGH MORAL TONE IDEAL LOCATION Courses in Arts, Sciences, and Music Ten Buildings with all Modern Conveniences Ample Athletic Facilities PRICES UNUSUALLY LOW SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR WORTHY STUDENTS For Catalog and further information address THE PRESIDENT, Guilford College, N. C YOUTH IN AGE There are sopie people who turn gray, but who do not grow hoary, whose faces are furrowed but not wrinkled, whose hearts are sore wounded in many places, but are not dead. There is a youth that bids de fiance to age, and there is a kindness which laughs at the world's rough usage. These are they who have re turned good for evil, not having learned it as a lesson of righteous ness, but because they have no evil in them to return upon others. Whom the gods love die young because they never grow old. Marion Crawford. Oil Emulsion You Parfay? Here. There. Everywhere At IbwtsY or Bottled ASHEBORO ROUTE 1 ITEMS (Delayed from last week.) The infant of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kinney is very ilL Mrs. Isaac Brown, who has been sick for some time, does not seem to im prove. ' Miss Ethel Brown visited her broth er, Mr. H. Brown Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Mebane Henley spent Sunday at Mr. A. S. Pugh's. A nice program has been arranged for the Children's Day at BroweVo Chapel next Sunday, which you will find in another column. ' t erywhere.
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1915, edition 1
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