Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Sept. 8, 1909, edition 1 / Page 6
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. . . A. . '.r'.V . v "X. .. . I ';; i ...... t ! If J - t--::-''V''- U- - t ,- - . ... i - - c ; !-:.: :'.,. 1. . . M5V--:' TV .. , Ifi . . . - I . . ... . ' I 0 J .Church Directory. . V . i n-lL J St Atnanaaus tpiscopai -wiiuukt Rcr. Edward L. Ofilby, Rdr. -c-r, a tri. "-' Senior Warden. Mr.S. A. Steele.- ; - - Junior Warden . :, ' 7 5 Vestry: Messrs. Eugene Holt, James N. WilUam o T fwTftnne S .Holt. Jr., Fiuley Ij. Williamson, Julius C. Squires, Lewis , J. Carter, William A. iiau. , Services: Sunday, 11.00 A. M. 8.00 P. M. Wednesday. 8.00 M. fitmov Rlinnl 9.-15 A M. .3o1t Ck)mmnnion, First Sunday, 11.00 ii. Tnira sunaay, i .ou Christian Churdi. Corner Church and Davis Streets. ReT. P. H. Fleminf, Pastor. Senrices: Preaching every Sunday, 11.00 A.M. and 8 P. M.- Snnv School. 9.45 A. M. John R. , Foster, Supt. Christian Endeavor Services, Sunday evenings at 7.15. Mid-week Prayer Service, every Wed nesday at 8.00 P. M. . - Ladies Aid and Missionary Society taeets on Monday after the Second Sun day in each month. A cordial invitation extended to all. A Church Home for Visitors and Strangers. Burlington Reformed Church. Corner Front and Anderson Streets. ReT. J. D. Andrew, Pastor. Sunday School every Sabbath. 9.30 Preaching every 2nd and 4th Sabbath, 11 A. M. and 8 P. M. ' Mid-week Service every Thursday, 7.4o Acbrdial welcome to all. Parsonage 2nd door east of church. 4 A Presbyterian Church. i Rev. Donald McWer, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11.00 A. M. nd8P.M. v Sunday School at 9.45 A. M. Prayer Meeting, Wednesday at 8.00 The public is cordially invited to all services. Front Street M. E. Church, South. Rev. E. M. Snipe, Pator. Preaching .every Snnday, morning and evening. Sunday School, 9.30 A. M. Prayer Service, Wednesday evening. Macedonia Lutheran Church. Front Street. . . "'.x. Rev. C. Brown Cox, Pastor. (Residence next door to Chnrch.) Morning Service at 11.00 A: M. V .spers at 8.00 P. M. , (No services on third Sundays.) Snnday School, 9.45 A.M., every, Sunday Ceachers Meeting, Wednesday, 8.00 P. M. (At Parsonage.) - : "Woman's Missionary Society (after morning' service on fourth Sundays.) u. C. Bs., Saturday before third Sun days, 3.00 p. m. L. U, third Sundays at 3.00 P. M. Baptist Church. Rev. S. L. Horfu, P or. Morning Services, 11.00 A. M. Evangelistic Services, 8.1 5 p. M. Wednesday night prayer meeting ser vices, 8 15 p M J Business meeting, first' Wednesday evening of the month at 8. 15 P. M. Sunday School, .30 A- I. J. L. 8cott, Supt. , The Methodist Protestant Church, Rev. J. D. Williams, Pastor; 8unday Services, 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sundav School. 9:45 a. m. J.j. Rogers, Supt. ' Christian Endeavor, Wedpesday 8 p.m. JU V. Holt, f res. Webb Avenue' M. E. Church, ReT. T. G. Yidtew Pirtor. ' Preaching every first Sunday at 11 a m. and every second Sunday at 11 a. m. And 8 p. m. Sunday-school every Sun day at 10 a. nc. E. N. Jarrett. Supt. Everybody welcome. THE WORLDS GREATEST SEWWS MACHINE LIGHT RUNNING A IV Ifvoa want ei ther a Vi bra tin g f? h u 1 1 le. r. "in -.-, , . fchuUie cm: a Binarle Thread I ( .''Uii Hiui . '-' m - "- 1 toewmg Machine wrne lo THE MEW HOWIE SEWING MACHINE CCM?4f. Orange, Mass. Many sewing mach"ues are made to sell rerard less ot . i Quality, but the New Jlo.ue is made to wear , -, Our ruaranty never runs out -v! ' y lorixe dealers only,5 . ' Brief News Items. Th hie Dlant at the Farmers Pftunut factory m Y luUSor, O.I. , . . ' . . ' . . -r-r va., irn , . - - . The los8 is estimated to be $10,0Q0.with $8,0Q0 insurance.; The origin of the tire is unknown. , : f " , Postmaster General Hitchcock has ordered that maii clerks onthe ocean lioers arriving at New YorK Rhnll Rpnprate all sacks ot mail for th inferior of the, country from those labelled "New York City. Capt Harry S. Herman, aged 50 years, and treasurer of the city of IXOriOlK SlUCe , XOi7 I , UttOl laot ncca in a sanitarium near Baltimore. His death come suddenly to the family, Mrs. Herman, being a the time in DlOWing XvOCK, v. Machinists at the Seaboard Air Line Rail way's general shop at Portsmouth, Va., have struck be cause of the allege employment of non-unionists. The blacksmiths in the shops- have also gone, but on a sympathetic strike. While en route from Washingt)D D. C, near Charlottsville, Va., last week a colored womao gave birth to a child in the smoking compart ment of a Jim .Crow car. The rail way physician was on the train and gave medical attention. W hile eight men were at work on the foundation under the parsonage of the Catholic Church at Illeopolis 111., last week the underpinning gave way and all were caught under heavy timbers. Two men were mstantly killed and the others fatally hurt. While playing soldier at his home at Swedesborcy N. J., last week Henry Fredericks, aged fifteen years shot and killed with a musket he thought unloaJJjd his cousin, Geo. Lang, fourteen 'Years' old, who was on a visit to' thef :Kbme of his uncle. President TftVwas 'last week re- nupstpd fi'terA.f address the Vir ginia State'?, Bdfe&t JA ssociatjon on the occasion ot its annual session in Portsmouth NQvember 18, upon which datef Jheftesident comes to the Inland - VVatefways Congress at that place. , Roger M. Lee. 50. years old, an attorney, committed sucide by shoot ing himself m the head at Cleveland Ohio, last week. Ill health is sup posed to have 'caused the deed. Re cently Lee made a trip to Georgia in the hope that his health would be improved. ., An automobile in which were rid ing William ,L. Graul, and wife of Temple, Pa., and Dr. and Mrs. Samuel J2. Schlegel, of Reading, was struck by a Pennsylvania Railroad train at Dauglassville, near Redding Pa., last Thursday and all but Dr. Schlegel were killed. That rheumatism and nothing else is the malady from which Associate Justice; William H. Moody of the United States Supreme Court is suf fering, was- the statement made to The Associated Press last week by the Justice' secretary, John A: Kratz, Jr., at Havuhill, Mass. ; The contract forsupplying 3,487,- 000.000 : postal :caidjrcttrthe iPost Office Departi2en4;;dnrfng yeaxs begin hingia n uary 1 191 0, was a warded last week" by Postmas ter General Hitchcock to the gov ernment printing mce, which sub mitted the lowest bid, $934,717.95. The famous Negras gold mine, situated in the Carmen Mountains of Mexico, iust opposite Bouquillah, Tex , has been re discovered aften being lost for nearly two centuries John Young, of Alpfle, found the mine recently, and assays of the ore show that it runs $60,000 to the ton. . . . N L. r. bpencer, a INorfolk and Western passenger conductor, last week probably inflicted mortal wounds on a negro passenger with a knife. The negro was drinking and when'asked for his ticket cursed and assaulted Spencer. The conductor slashed the negro across the abdo men. ' As a result of attempting to board a moving westbouud freight train over thf Southern Railway at" Alex ander, Va., last week, Ellis Hollin a negro, twenty-seven years old, had his left leg cut off between th knee and ankle. Two cars passed over liis let; before the train' was brought tr a stop. T ; G. H. Penn, a Roanoke, Va., law yer last week institnted suit, through his attorney in the s Circuit tCourt aainst James vD.jJphWa'd';otIi lJeagu executive committee, asking for $300, which Peuri Claims is due him by the league for services ren-J aerea m.iue receut iouai upuuu whi test proceedings. , s " Two masked- men, with pistols held up Cashier F.;H. Nipp, of the Mills County Geqman Bank at Miniala, Iowai;laateek and escap; el with $li500 in cash. Cashier Nipp and two customers ' were kept in the back room of the bank by or- dei of one of the robbers while the other; took the money : from the safe ana counter.''',, ; Secretary of War Jacob M. Dick- mson appeareu in mecouri anasu ville,iTenn.i poe daylast week in behalf of his chaffeur, Vwho was charged with exceeding the; speed limit. It was shown the automobile was only making 28 miles ati hour and the secrtary: ,wis on his way to the ciistom house on official business. The case was dismissed.! After serving a year of bis life sentence for the murder of his father tie health of Beach Hargis, of feud tame, of Kentucky has broken and J he is confined to the Hospital ward tuberculosis. He has rapidly failed tyader close confinement. Efforts for his pardon will be made on the ground that he will soon die unless freed. The crop reporting board of the Bureau of Statistics, Department of Agriculture, estimates the average condition of the cotton crop on Au gust 25th at 63.7 per cent or nor- mal, compared with 7,1.9 lor July 25; 76.1 for August 25, 1908, and 73.6 average for ten ears. The Virginia condition is 73, North Carolina 73, South Carolina 73 Tex as 59, Louisiana 48. ' v While hunting squirrels near Ro anoke, Va., last Wednesday morning. James' Spencer, of that city, mistook the gray hat of his son,' Charles J, Ppencpr. a NorWk and Western Railway . fireman,",for a squirrels tail, and. fired, his shotgun through the bi'shes at the object,; t The load of shot took effect in' the son's face neck aud shoulders. He was carried to town and given medical attention. The wounds are not fatal. The Lurid Glow Of Doom; . was seen in the red face, haudsand body of the little son of H. M. Adams, of Henrietta, Pa. His aw ful plight from eczema had, for five years defied all remedies and baffled the best doctors, wh said the poison blood had affected his lungs - and nothing could save him. ''But." writes his mother, ''seven bottles of Electric Bitters completely cured him." "For Eruptions, Eczema, Salt Rheum, Sores and ' all Blood Disorders and Rheumatism Electric Bitters are Eupreme. Only 50c Guaranteed by Freeman Drug Co. Making a Farm Pay. Washington Poet. Southern farmers cannot fail to find much of interest and profiit in a recent Department of Agriculture publication. "A Profitable Cotton Farm," by C. L. Goodrich, one of tWe government's experts. Tliefartil in question is located inj cxjutiivaroiina, ana 111 iyuz, wnen its present owner to possesion, it was in a deplorably bad condition, after .-i.l v-1-' 'L 1 t rrn having been under cultivatiou for about 80 years. Now it is fertile, well improved with fences and farm buildings, and is producing crops which yield the owner 8 haudsunie profit aui a largeJncome. All this has been accomplished by a deep and il I 1. . 1 1 inorougn cultivation 01 the sou, y the use of the barnyard manure and some commercial' fertilizer, byv rota tion of crods of crops and bv the in dustry and good judgement of the farmer himself. The farm is not an especially large one, containing only 132 acres half of which ate planted The farmer divided his tilled land into three equal fields, on which he raise com oats and cotton , in succession Be fore he took the farm it was produc ing on five to eight bushels of corn or about 300 pounds of seed cotton to the acre. ;; Ihe first year he made it produce 1 bales f cotton and 37 bushels of corn to the acre. - Now hisyeilds per acre are 2J "bales .of cotton,' 85 bushels corn and 80 bus hels of oats. He keeps about 24 head of native cattle, mainly for the sake of the manure, although . they yield him a small profit besides, v A new flirtation makes a i good ;chaser! for an : old. ; love t aftair;; it sort of takea rfip bitter taste cut of yourouth.&Jf;f Richmond News-Leader. : . ' Governor Glenn of North Caro lina, must find the lecture busltress, languishing and in Deed of adver tisement, for he has worked his way back, into the newspapers by. the) familiar plan of wholesale and vio lent denunciation of the morals and social conditions of communities. 'At a Chautauqua lecture in New York States the other night, he-declared that if, he should undertake to tell the. things he had seen in New-York and Chicago, the men in the audi ence would tear him from the plat form and trample him1 under foot; that the two cities were the chief disgraces of the country, and that if they did not amend their ways they wotild merit destruction. We do riot' believe it all likely that the men in the audience before which the former governor was talk ing would have torn him from the platform and trampled him under foot in any circumstances, no matter whathe might have said. 'I hey might have had him arrested for us ing bad language, but folks up that way usually are peaceful and law abiding and not much given to tear ing and trampling. And we have not much idea that New York and Chicago, or either, will be destroyed because of their wickedness.) Such a measure would be rather drastic and difficult even for the most rigid North Carolina moralif t under Gov ernor Glenn's leadership to under take; and, the Supreme Authority promised that ten righteous in wick ed cities might avert from them doom and extinction. Surely Chicago and New York each has more thari that number of inhabitants who might pass muster, even by Governor Glenn's standards. Also, we have no doubt that both in New York and Chicago many thousands of peo ple living through years without seeing anything they .could not de scribe on penalty of being torn from platforms and trampled. It is cer tain' that the ordinary citizen may walk Broadway at all hours. of the day or night without' seeing any thing to offend his sense of decency or to tempt him to crime. It is equalcertain that people who' go sniffling and prying about in search of flith will find it anywhere and everywhere on this globe where m'au- kmd has a dwehng place. The pure in hear are not frequently offended. Violence, vituperation, general as saults on masses of people, andloose assertins rarely do "any good. They may cause sensations and win adver tisements, but they do not attract the confidence or command the coop eration of the judicious and tbough- ful . who faithfully endeavor to do something for the betterment of hu manity. Kills Would-Be Slayer. A merciless murderer is Appen dicitis with many victims. But Dr. Kings New Life Pills kill it by pre vention. They gently stimulate stomach, liver and bowels, prevent ing that' clogging that invites appen dicitis, curiug Constipation, Bilious ness, Chills, Malaria, Headache aud Indigestion. 25c at Freeman Drug Co. in Circumstantial Evidence, , t 1 Clyde was an' inquisitive young ster whose propensity for getting in to scrapes was matched only to his small sister's fertility of resources getting out of them. As a tribute to her cleverness he usually shifted the blame of his misdemeanors. Oe evening there was much excitement and fun among the older, members of the family behind closed doors Clyde, of course, was all curiosity. He battered the door, "he huffed and he puffed,' and finally when the door was opened frominside the lit tle man sprawled headlong into the room. Before making any attempt to get up he gasped out the usual, "It wathn't me; it wath Putthie." The Delineator for October. The first sure s gn of real love in a man is when he stops flattering and begins to moralize. Typewriters For Sale. I have several Second Hand ' Typewriters of different f. makes on hand, : ' will sell at a bargain, and -1 x.- guarantee themi - Come be- 1:; fore tHey are picked ever, ' - r ' w ms t ..... ( .-.. . .. , , .; ' 1 - .; : -, .. -. v.: ALAMANCE INSURANCE COMPANY, Burlington, 1- CORNER MAIN A SPLENDID GLUEING PROPOSITION As has beer announced the Daily News of Greens boro will begin Publication July 18th. It is the pur- y pose of the management to make it one of the best dailies in tKe State. It will carry the latest telegraphic news, together with an able; staff of special correspond ents. through out. the State, , The Price of the Daily News is $6.00 per year, k , . ; , 4 We have,; made arrgements whereby we "can B: send you aiid Daily News and the State Dispatch, both one year for $6 00.' Six months $3,00, Three months $1.50. ' iiThis affords you an excellent i opportunity to secuVe two of-jthe best Republican Papers in tlie State for the price of one. Don't 'put this; off, but send us your subscription at once, Z;-:: ;'-;-v A . -r. The State a r you one. of "the mrffer from female ailments Tf 30; dont be discour- agcu, km xp your uruggist Am:Jl - 11 Jii' Vyjjiui un theswrappere iictions use. l lurhig the la half cen been established in thousands of homes.' as a safe1 temedv for pain which only women endure. It ' is reliable. contains no harmful Ingredients aiid5ail be depend- eu un ui iumosc anyvcase. M Will '; V .tfTXA Mrs. Charles Bragg, of Sweetser, InoL, tried Cardni. SHe writes: "Tongue cannott tell how much Cardtii has done for me. Before I began taking Cardni I conld not do a day's work. I would work awhile and lie down. I shauSlways give praise to your medicine' ry CarduL AT ALL DEUG STORES promptly obtained in a.n nnnnt-Hoo n ir TRAOE-MARKS, Caveats and Oowrighta report on patentability. . all BUSfHES fJofn'SIil COHFIDEMTIAU- Patent TIScOcI erclnaiyelf.- eorpassing references. ; - "7 wJlja,nIen;ora honld'haT onrtand H am and Patents, What in ?nS3T? Paylow to get a partnerand other valuable inl ormaUon. Stnt free to any addreaa. 2 1-2 MHes Scmtlreit Burlington. New 6 room house, barn, grainery and othernecessary outhouses. wood, some fine Hickory timber. Weil watered 10 or 12 acres in good meadow. " This, is one of the best farms in Alamance County and owner is selling because cannot look after it. , . A keal Bargain. & REAL ESTATE N. C. AND FRONT STS. '-'V-- - ' ' , DiStorM 1 thousands of women wHo 1. .111: 'ifrrT' B aua get a opjue 01 win 01 ' y 17 0 Hi Help Ycm Qntj4 ! AtTAfTthin? else f in nervous prostration and femaie X weaknesses they are the suprenw remedy, as thousands have tesuasa. j J34 VII r STOMACH TROUBLE if is "the ' best medicine ever sow in ire ime fim n ie mt ra fed ndj Ion Pisl cos dt ept IVIC ed iue ie. tth 2 fee. EmsMacHne&MusiCb: 50l Seventh: St., .Vashiastca, D. C. ; , ' . over A druggist's counter.
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 8, 1909, edition 1
6
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