Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Sept. 30, 1915, edition 1 / Page 5
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The Courier. Xrteboro, N. C, September 30, 1916. UfEQtLT WEATHER FORECAST iMvetgr-the 17. S. Weather Bureau, WsAtagwn, D. C for the week be rfarinc Wednesday, Sept 29, 1915. Per South Atlantic and Bast Gulf Stat." JUfn tad blgfe wbida' , are probable in th Eat Gulf States and 3ockl raina in tfae South Atlantic ."States the Arat hahf of the wee, the latter half wiHbe fair awl cooler. LOCAL AN PERSONAL A sen waa born last week t Mr. and Mrs. Chae. M. Fex. ' 1 Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Worth return ed from BaHmere Friday night. Mrs. J. T. Wood ia the guest of Mrs, 'T. L. Russell at Denton this week. Mr. Walter Pemberton, of Troy, waa a business visitor ia Asheboro 'Tuesday. Mrs. H. H. Kennedy is spending the -week with her mother, Mrs. Peace, at Grave's Siding. A large number of Asheboro peo pie attended the meeting at Gray's Chapel last Sunday, Mr. J. M. Luther, of Pisgah, went to High Point for treatment yester- day, returning in the afternoon. Mr. Sam Phillips has opened a meat market in the Winslow stand on South Fayetteville street Mrs. Lewis is very ill at the home of Mr. J. M. Betts on South Fayette ville street Mesdames F. G. Grimes, Jennie Haneock and Miss Daisy Page return ed Saturday from Washington, Mr. J. T. Wood will return Satur day from a business trip through -South Carolina. Addison Allred, who waa condemned for larceny years ago has returned after an absence of several years, It used to be called a pro traced meeting will begin in the Methodist 'Protestant church next Sunday. Miss Rhodema Cox is the guest of 'her sister, Mrs. L. D. Birkhead, this week. Miss Jessie Lee Cox, of Pisgah, is the guest of ber aunt, Mrs. Chas. L, Tresnell. Mrs. N. J. Chandler and son, of 'Chandler, N. C, are visiting at the .tome of Mrs. J. T. Winslow. You are invited to attend the meet ing In the Methodist Protestant church next week. Mrs. J. W. Swaim attended the fu neral of Mra. J. W. Curtis at Liberty Friday. Messrs. Luther Perry, James Boling and Ed Murray, of Burlington, were in town on business the first of the Miss Lilhe Bulla of the graded - school faculty spent the week-end with home folks on Randleman Route 3, The Courier publishes in this issue the address of Dr. J. Y. Joyner be fore the State Press Association at its meeting at Montreat in June, Mrs. K. U. Williard came home Sat urday from an extended trip through Western North Carolina. Mr. Williard remains at Elkin where he has enter ed business. Mrs. J. Reese Blair, Master J. R. Blair, Jr., Mr. W. A. Cochran and Miss Mason, of Troy, were in Ashe boro Friday, Mrs. Charles M. Hauser, of High Point, with Mr. and Mrs. Cummings, came to Asheboro last Thursday for the day. Mr. Arthur Ross has taken (he agency for the Saxon can. He has purchased two caw, a two passenger ana a five passenger car. Kev. J. C. Broomfieid, D. D., of cmirch at Fairmint, W. Va. He ia a rive next Monday to assist in the pecial meeting fa flie Methodist roteatant church. Mr. F. King has recently purchased -uievrelet car of Mr. B. F. Mc- DopsTL Mr. King went to Troy Mon wi his car, he was accompanied y King who will spend a week in Trv. praying people of our town aJe ' re'-crd to pray for the success ' "Hiag at the Methodist Prot estant chu wWch to to beg.n -Sunday. m t0 T T ' ,. 1, who will assist in mt f P. church next week, has Just ft hia tenth as pastor of the hodat church at Fairmonw He Scotchman and wa.or sa.lor on the hgh Come'to hear mm. nr. T t tit: :t. : ; . V'vate sec retary to the general mT of the Southern Railway, after a? sev cral days with his father n, cgntrai Palls, nnd nthpr rplAtivpB in v' c t oun J uas uuo w et iaiuw( from there he goes to t Washington vaites tne trip over me uuuii Bora to Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Cex. at Staler,- son. Come to hear Dr. Broomfieid at the Methodist Protestant cmirch next Mrs. John T. Moffitt ' k visiting friends and relatives at Elba College this week. Miss Laata Winslow left Saturday for Duplin county where she will teach this winter. Mr. .and Mrs. Carl B. Grkfln have returned from an extended visit to Washington, D. C. Mrs. John Winslow mho has been seriously ill at her home , on Worth street, ia-.reowparaiing; slowly. Mr. and Mrs. Ivey Hall returned last Saturday night from Washing ton, D. C, and other points north. Messrs R. P. Deal and A. B. Beas ley, of Randleman, were in town sev eral hoars Tuesday. - Mr. and Mrs. John T. Penn and children, of Greensboro, eame - down for a few hours Sunday afternoea in their car. Miss Grace West, of Waverly, Va., is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Elijah Moffitt. Mesdames D. B. McCrary, J. V, Hunter and E. H. Morris spent Friday shopping in Greensboro. ' Little Miss Lillian, the seven-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. C Curtis, of Franklinville, is recovering from an attack of scarlet fever. Mrs. Mitchell and children, of Brooklyn, N. Y., are the guests of Mrs. Mitchell's sister, . Mrs. E. R. Clark. Cotton is selling for 12 cents per pound. It is to be hoped the price will hold out. Work on Mr. J. C. Hannah's, new homo in west Asheboro is progress' ing rapidly and will seon be complet ed. Mr. Osborne Slack, of Pisgah, has purchased the J. M. Allen place in South Asheboro and moved his family here last week. A birthday dinner was given Satur day at Spero in honor of the 83rd birthday of Mrs. Marinda Clapp. A large crowd assembled to do her hon or. v Mr. Dewey Lentz, of Albemarle, has accepted a position as bookkeeper with the Randolph Chair Company. Mr. Lentz is a brother of Mrs. Ferd Ingold, of this place. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cox, of Lexing ton, passed through' Asheboro Monday en route home from a visit to Mrs Cex's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. E Stuart, at Why Not. Naomi Springs, near Kerneesville, has been sold to Mr. J. H. Dunlap, of Bonlee. The purchase will no doubt develop the property. Mr. E. R. Gark returned Wednes day from Carthage where he has com pleted the plastering of the new coun ty home for Moore county. Miss Grace Wood arrived home Saturday from an extended visit to relatives and friends at Lexington and Jackson's Hill. Asheboro Graded School base ball team defeated the Ramseur Graded School team in in a close game of ball on the Ramseur diamond Saturday, The score was 7 to 8 in favor of Ashe boro. Special attention is called to the at tractive ads in this issue. Read them carefully and see what our merchants have to offer. You can do better and save more money by trading at home than by buying from mail ard houses. Dr. and Mrs. Claude Hayworth, of Coleridge, went to Jackson Springs last week to take their daughter, Miss Golda, who has had typhoid fever, Mrs. S. L. Hayworth, of Asheboro, ac companied them and returned Sunday. At the M. P. parsonage, Randleman, Saturday evening at eight o'clock Miss Lou Fogkman and Mr. F. W. Farlow were married, Rev. J. B. O'Briant of ficiating. Their many friends wish them a long and happy life. "A Handbook of the Law of Evi dence for North Carolina" is one ef the latest law publications from the press, waiter S. Lockhart, the author attributes in his preface much credit to Mr. R. C. Kelly, of Asheboro, for offering valuable suggestions and reading proof. A ThomasviHs dispatch to the News and Observer Tuesday states: Fred J. Cox, who moved from Thomas ville about five months ago to take charge of the Thomasville branch of the Cen tral Auto Company, has returned to Lexington to go into the automobile business." Mr. Cox is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Cox, of Asheboro Star Route. Tuesday night the ten days revival at the Baptist church closed. The se ries of meetings has been marked by the interest manifested and the large congregations in attedance. The pas tor, Rev. Mr. Powell, has been ably as'sisted in the services by Rev. Pru ette, of Charlotte, who is a Very able preacher. The music during the serv ices was in charge of the Cullom Bona to Mr. and Mrs. E. R, Clark, SOB. Mr. P. S. Page, of Steeds, ia visit ing hia daughter, Mrs. C. E. Davis. Miss Bess Coffin, of Raleigh, ia the guest of her brother, Mr. W. A. Coffin. Friends of Mr. "and Mrs. Will HughM, 'of Seagrove, will rejoice to learn that their sick baby is imaroving. Mrs. F. A. Henley ia visiting her kuater, Mrs. Fredonia Clarke, in Char lotte. Mr. Walter Bunch left yesterday for Oak Ridge where he goes on busi ness. Mr. Dewey Lentz, of Albemarle, has aeoepted a position with the Randolph Uiaar factory. Mrs. John Porter, of Charlotte, is visiting her pare, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Morrng. Mr. J. A. Hardin, of Dlwyn. Va., is the guest of hia son, Mr. J. E, Hardin. Mrs. J. G. Morgan, of Danville, Va., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. L Brilcs. Mrs. John M. Porter, of Charlotte is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Moring. Misses Litlie Richardson and Jessie Ward have returned from a visit to Miss Annie Davis at High Point. Mr. and Mrs. S. Kin Wilson have re cently moved into a part of Mrs. Jean Rush's residence. Miss Myda Wimpey has purchased a place at Lakeview. She still retains her home about two miles north of Asheboro. Mr. J. D. Ross and family went to. Greensboro Sunday night to hear Dr. Broomfieid preach, who will assist in a meeting here next week. Miss Annie Lee Hall celebrated her seventh birthday this week. Sixteen of her friends were with her on the happy occasion. Miss Corrinna Auman who has been teaching music in Thomasville, con templates going to High Point to teach. Mr. Smith, who is with the Norfolk Southern Railroad has recently moved his family to Asheboro, in the cottage next to Ridge's store. Mr. A. W. Council, of Glenola un derwent an operation for appendicitis at High Point one day last week and is getting along nicely. Rev. Mr. Eli Reece has been appoint ed to the pastorate of the Friends church here and will hold services-each Sunday morning and evening. Glenn Turner died yesterday in High Point from a wound received from a falling trap door, the night be fore. Messrs. George F. Tyson and Blair Jennings, of Greensboro, spent Sun day in Asheboro. They came down in Mr. Tyson's car. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Garner, of Ral eigh, weiie the guests of Mr. Garner's mother, Mrs. G. F. Garner, at Why Not the first of the week. A protracted meeting will begin next Sunday at the M. P. church. Dr, Broomfieid, of West Virginia, will as sist in the meeting. An interesting ball game was play ed Tuesday between the sixth and sev enth grades of the Asheboro school, The score was 6 to 5 in favor of the seventh grade. A breakdown last week and another this week has caused an unavoidable delay in getting out this issue and last week's issue of The Courier. Hereaft er we hope to get out on time. Mr. Lewis White and Mrs. C. L. Whitaker left Monday for Enfield to join Mrs. White and tittle daughter in a visit to relatives. They went in Mr. White's car. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Page hare re turned to Raleigh where Mr. Page is connected with a leading drug Ure, and is also principal of a Phannacea- tkal School. The heaving plant of the house is being overhauled. The old boiler has been taken out and placed in the new jail and another boiler of the wne size has been installed. - Both of the boilers will be in the jail. A thorough overhauling of the other parts of the plant has been made. The heating capacity of the plant has been doubled. the lot sale at Seagrove last Sat urday was a success. A nomber of pefaofts purchased lots with a view of building business houses and resi dences. Seagrove is located in the center of a timber section and a good agricultural . community, surrounded on every side by an active, industrious citizenship. Last Thursday evening at the M. E. church at Mechancisville, a suburb of gigh Point, Miss Grace Lewallea and Mr; Charles Hamlin were married. The marriage came as a surprise to the friends of the young people. Both the bride and groom are natives of .Ran dolph. Mr. Hamlin ia the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Harah'n, who reside near Asheboro, and ia at present barber at High Point. Rev. J. F. England died at Lenoir Sept 29th, in his 75th year. He had been a minister for more than 45 years in the Methodist Episcopal Cmirch, South. He is survived by wife, one daughter, and one son, Miss Maude England, and Mr. Will L, England, all of whom reeaide in Le noir. Mr. England was at one time a resident of Ramseur and was pastor of the Methodist church at that place and other places in that section of the county. There are over two hundred pupils enrolled in Trinity high school. Six ty-flve are enrolled in the high school department and twenty in the seventh grade. Prof. D. C. Johnson Is the principal and is assisted in the high school department by Miss Ma rie Moody. Fifty-seven are enrolled in the 4th, 5th and 6th grades taught by Miss Josephine Reeks. The enroll ment in the 1st, 2nd and. 3rd grades ia sixty. These grades are taught by Miss Kate Norment John Hodgin, the, negro convict who shot and killed guard J. C. Freeman, Saturday morning, . September 18th, was captured Thursday morning at 5 o'clock by Chief of Police Love and T. M. Jordan, both of Albemarle. Hodgin was discovered asleep by a fire near the railroad track about 18 miles from Salisbury on the road to Albemarle. He offered resistance and was shot so severely that he died later after hav ing been lodged in jail at Albemarle. Chief Love was shot in the foot during the fight, whether by the negro or by himself it is not certain. Messrs. W. A. Underwood and J. W. Hadley arrived home Saturday night and hav ing been through that section for the past week confirmed the reports of the press regarding the details of the cap ture. DAHLIA AND FANCY WORK SHOW AT RANDLEMAN The Ladies Aid Society will give a Dahlia and Fancy work show at the G W Elliott store building Saturday, Otober 2, for the benefit of the M. P. parsonage. Those who wish to exhib it fancy work must send it in Friday afternoon. The flowers must be sent in Saturday morning before 10 a. m. Doors will be opened at 10:30 in the morning and refreshments will be served. Prizes will be awarded at 8:30 p.m. t '3 Rupture Expert Here Seeley, Who Fitted Czar of "Russia, Called to Greensboro. F. H. Seeley of Chicago and Phil adelphia, the noted truss expert, will be at the Huffine Hotel and will re main in Greensboro Friday only, Oc tober 8th. Mr. Seeley says: "The Spermatic Shield as now used and ap Droved by the United States Govern ment will not only retain any case of rupture perfectly, affording immedi ate and complete relief, but closes the opening in 10 days on the average case. Thia instrument reeeived the only award ia England and in Spain, producing results without surgery, harmful injections, medical treatments r prescriptions. Mr. Seeley htt doc uments from the United States Gov ernment, Washington, D. C, for in spectioa. All charity eases without charge, or if any interested call he will be glad to show same without charge or fit them if desired. Busi ness demands prevent stopping in this section. Ksw Coals acd Coat Sits For Fall and Winter Wear for Women, Misses and Children Our line of elegant cotta and coat suits surpasses ia distinctiveness of style, and beauty these of other seasons. Quality is first and the prices are reasonable. AUTUMN OPENING SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1 Warner s Rust Proof Corsets Represent comfort, service, and health when correctly adjusted. " "Vast Worn by hundreds of well dressed 'Proof men ! Shield Brand Clothes Latest styles and correctly tailored. $10, $12.50, $15 AND $18 Shoes For every member of the family The latest style is a comfortable last Long wear and well worth the moderate prices asked. New Fall Millinery The correct fashions for the Fall Seasons. Special showing of new arrivals. We sell reputable goods that bring the customers back. Our unusual reputation is due to our repetition of pro ducing first class goods season after season. Carter Mercantile Co., RAMSEUR, N. C. The Charlotte Observer says in part: "Along about this season of the year as the almanac would say, look out for talk of the split in the Democratic party. In North Carolina it is going to be on acount of the tax assessment. The forecasts for the coming split ia the North Carolina Democracy are based on the same solid arguments and the split that is coming is the one that the Republicans always bepefally predict and that aa persistently fails to materialise as scheduled." Farm for Sale One hundred acres, one mile west of Guilford College; pine and oak timber; level upland, good bottom, a two-story house. A fine stream of water forma the east boundary. Apply to L. L. HOBBS Guilford College, N. C. Better Groceries For Less Money Is why you should order from us. Always fresh and cost vou lest. Let us send you a pound of our sliced boiled ham and you will be pleased. And ion't forget our Stent's Wrapped Cakes All Kinds. J. C. Hannah TheOne-Horse Grocer. Davidson county's big attraction, the Outlook Days, will be the 6th and 7th of October. There will be par ades, exhibits, and contests and prizes, will be awarded. A splendid program has been arranged. COME AGAIN! TO ALL OUR FRIENDS WHO DROPPED IN FOR OUR OPENING, WHETHER YOU BOUGHT GOODS FROM US OR NOT : We thank you for the interest shown in coming to see us. It's a pleasure to show honest goods to good people. Remember that we are in business to stay and intend that you shall get a dollar's worth of goods for every dollar you spend with us. Sincerely yours, W. A. COFFIN, JESSE M. SCARBORO. Miller Building, Depot Street, Asheboro, N. C. - i vay. School of Music. so
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 30, 1915, edition 1
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