Elsi^ch w^'' i i i 1 ■>> ■^ i;.' • . l^|S^::^;^'vvt.r.;v--r,' THE STATE DISPATCH told them or they think f ™S'|?.7o a'‘J.Se": ^ that our town and city j^iontgomery’s corner, thence N. Published F.very w«L««da.v j have the best chance of winning. {.^rj 3,4 \y^ 2OO it. to the be-; _Bv— , To all such we want to say that i gjjj^ing the same being a part 01, lo.... ' ' YOU were never more mistaken [the property ccmveyed to the u^,, i Our country! parties, of the flrst^art by Edi-. joriuuioo, N. .c, jin ajijour uieume, u^ffot*^son Carr and wife under aeed; Or. J. A. Fiekett. - - I'resideut | fi-^ends nave a much bearing date of Sept. 17, 19041 lAMES e. FOUST, utiiJ Treworer | chance to win than those who re- i recorded in the office of Reg-1 side in town. In the first place | jg^j, q£ Deeds for Alamance j they have more time, and then j County, in Deed registered No. too they do not have so much pages H5-116 to which will as4 Sasiness Maiia)(4i^ Office First Floor, Waller BuUdinic. Telephone No. abflcription, One Dollar per jear, pay able in advanct'. AB commanicati jas in res.iii c^ to liewB iteme or bnsiEesa roatwrs ehould be addre«8ad to Tie S*aU and uot (Q auj' iodiTiduai connects? witn tu6 ^*S*new8 notes anS comm -ja'ications ol raportfUMK mnst beaigned b j lie writer. We ans not responsible for siipinjons of cur correBpoodentB. Snbacribers will take notieeJthaA •iipt for sabwription Sor Tk»r SJate Di^^a wiB be honored at this office itfllaw it w •lunbered with stamped fifiliire*.: Butered a» eecond-elaae matter May 10,1908, at the post oflBct at Burling ♦on, Norih Carolina, andei:' the Afct GonRTe88 of March S IBTft. WedBesday. Feb. 28, 1912. We want to again asirn our republican friends that this is a presidental election year, and if you want to vote, you must qualify yourself by paj lng your poll tax. And this must be done on or before the first d ay of May competition. Where there be a dozen contestants from one town to divide the votes, there is Rot likely to be more than one or possibly two in the country. JThen brides the country people take and read more papers than the town people, we of course fer to ^pers that are only ed once or twice per week. The tbwn^pe^le take moire daily pa pers and magazines, ahd hence 4^hey are^ harder to work for sub scription to a weekly paper, than our country friends.' There is nothing to this proposition if you are a hustler. If you are a hustl ing hustler you will win no matter where you are located. Wade in it is not near so deep as you! think, and besides the water isj fine. An automobile, a motor cycle, a pony and buggy, a said deed reference is hereby express ly made. This the 26th day of Feb, 1912. The Central Loan & Trust Co., Trustee. Execoion Ifodce. Having qualified as Executor and Executrix of the last will and testament of Laura J. McAdams deceased late o^ Afenaaiiee Couniy North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having cl^s a^inst the estate of said deceased ex- Mfeit them to the: undei^gn^ at Elon College, N. C., on or be fore the Isfc day of March 1913, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of theu’ recovery. All pier- SOTTS indebten to said Estate will please immediate payment, i']Js J eoruary 26th, 1912. Joseph C. McAdams, Annie C. McAdams. Executor and Executrix of the dia- last will and testament of Laura No Offical Repjart. Rome, Feb, 24 — A semi-dlficial ccmmunicHSion ifsuod toTijght s the gt vt'ir mt rt has received no official} c r ort of ihe operatioins at Beirut. The government cently learned that two Turkish uarshipp wcie ststicned at Eeiru.. for the ptrpose of attacking It alian transports and facilitating' contraband trade. Orders wer dispatched to the Italian wars! ips to capture them. Advertise in the Dispatch. Indian Motorcycl|e FOR SALE BY Horne... mond ring, a gold watch with a ■ McAdams, deceased diamond set, a sewing machine, I a bed room suit, a scholarship toi To the PhWic this year. It may have i)een the ^ business col^ge m tl^ state, a: Parker of Raleigh N. C. custom lieretofore for scrne friend double barrel breecn loading ham-1 present at the closing of i to sometimes pay them for you, jmeriess shot gun, an automatic I Oakwood school on March 9 19121 especially when you had bad luck, j winchester rifle one that you do | and will conduct a Farmers !•>-1 fltiH wprp unable to at th-^ have to load every time you j !=^titute. All Farmers should at-, and vvere unaDie to pa,, Lv . fiirAno-Vn 't«"ndand are requested to do so,; time they were due. :;atif you jsncwt and that thiough i^cks, McCulloch the prin-; depend upon this being- done this | Kail road spikes wnile you jg {^g con-^ratulated on i wiil be dislranchised I If’ad, and a leather lounging; his success in getting Mr. Park-j those wlioca,!, not read:''O-th having, and it er. Program will be published! and write, and wiH be classed j matter whether the with them. Now we feel surej '^^'inner lives in the country or in that you doont want tl .is to hap. 1 These are valuable prizes i pen. But unle.ss you attend to Wc arc Agents for the Ind ian Motorcycle. The above cut shown is a 4 Horsepower—30.50. Regu iar Model price |200. Our T. T. Model 7 H. F. 1300. 7 H. P.—61. Regular Model $250. r. r. Two Speed Mode P. 13.25. 17H. lit le year you along witii later. J. M. Hayei=', this matter in perse n it will surely happen. -The Dispatch is trying to do its duty to t;:ie i>arty by warning you of whac lies be fore, if you ignore the advice given, you will have no one to blame but yourselves. Fay your tax now’, do it tdday. and well worth hust'ing for j ]||{5[Uy Get into the hustlers race, and: stay until the clouds roll by.: Everything, comes to him who! Hustles. WITH CHLOROFORM The Lexington Dispatch a detn- ocratic newspaper of good and r^ular standing points out in a recent editoral, “Why Bryan Fail ed", In this he points a«t that the United States was liking for a man of fim buaineaa ability who the people had con;:idence in. In the three defeats wi; iiih Bryan suffered he advocate^;; policies that men were afraid, of and would not uphold. Tbe question asked is: “Will the pt aple sup port Woodrow Wilson the man who Bryan stands for, 7/hen they have thrice turned dowji Bryan. ” Answer is plain to on- and all alike. If Bryan himself can not be elected will he not tiiige the the platform of his noiaiinee, or man of his choice '^nlh such faddish ideas as to frighten the conservative business men. Is Champ Clark Leads Oklahoma City, Okla., Feb.lT— Returns from 50 of the 76 Dem ocratic county conventions, held throughout Oklahoma today, to, select delegates to the ^te con-; vention show that 189 of the 3^ delegates accredit^ to there counties had been inst^ctedi to vote for Champ Cl^k as the presidentiial nominee f lBO were instructed for Woodrow Wilson, and 31 delegates from Oklahoma county were uninstructed. Rev. Andrew at Biick Church. On next Sunday Rev. J. D. Andrew will exchange pulpits with Rev. D. C. Cox of the Guil ford charge. Rev. Cox will pieach at 8t. Marks at 11 a. m. and at Whitsett at 3 p. m. Rev. Anarew wiil pnach at Brick church hold a memo]' ial servi^!e for Mr.'S. Michael Cl m p who died in beuemoer ol iaiit year. Notice oi Sale ot Real Estate. By virtue of the power con tained in a certain deed in trust executed to the Central Loan & Trust Co., on the 1st day of Feb ruary, 1911, by the Triple City Realty Co., and duly re^stered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Alamance County, N. C., in Book No. 51, pages 366- 374, to secure the payment of six boi.ds, therein recited, de fault having been made in the payment of said bonds, and the holders thereof having applied to me to make Rale of the real e»- it not readily seen that Woodrow ! tate therein conveyed, in accord- Wilson stands little more chance' with the conditions con- if as mu?h of securing'; enough electorial vot^s to make him more sucessful than the great Nebras kan. We will see. Bob-0"Link Sure Sign Spring. We are told by old sure auth orities who know that BoV-0- Link is the surest sign ryf' spring. We are listening to hear the mel odies of his charming voice as he IS a dart of spring iaii spring without him is not complete. At other seasons of the yi;ar he is generally voiceless. We trust he will soon drive I'.h a dreary weather of the ground into its hole and his voice will fca heard clear and sweet. Then the gen ial rays of the sun will .ifarm the earth and winter will have fleet ed away. tained in said deed cf trust, we will expose to public sale to the highest bidder for cash, at the Court House Door of the County of Alamance, N. C., on Monday, the 1st day of April, 1912, at 12 o^clock M., the land conveyed in said deed of trust to wit: A certain tract or parcel of land in Burlington Township, Al amance County, adjoining the lands of Davis St., Coble & Home wood, and others bounded as fol lows. Fronting , on Davis St., with 25 ft. front and 64 1-4 ft. deep upon which there is a two story brick building occupied by the Paragon. This lot being a part of the lot No. 104 in the pain of the town of Burlington. N. C., which said land was conveyed to J. D. Pavne by D. F. Lamb and wife under deed bearing date of April 2, 1901 to which said deed reference is hereby made and re- A Contest for ail ■We hear that some of our country friends want to enter our gre*^.t Hustlers contest for the twelve grand prizes to be given away for the twelve best hustl ers who succeed in getting the mc»t subscribers to The State Difi|^tch. But that iUey are besl^tang because soni« »e has corded in the office of of Deeds for Alamance County, in Book No. 25, pages 123-1^, A certain tract or parcel of land lying and being situated on Mebane St.. in the City of Bur lington, adjoining the lands of J. P. Montgomery, the N. C. R. R. Co. land and J. W. Lynn and de scribed and defined as follows to wit: Beginning at a stone on Southeast side running thence S» 54 3-4 W. with the line of said Mebane St., to an iron bolt, cor ner of J. W. Lynn, thence S, 25 1-2 deg E. 214 ft to a stoite Lynn’s Yarmouth," Maine, Feb. 15.— Pleading for chloroform to ease his suffering, Harry Corliss, a brakeraan pinned under the wreckage of a freight tndn which collided with another freight here today, was giyeji^ a handkerchief saturated with iJhe pain-deadening drug which he applied to his nostrils just be fore he and two other men were burned to death in the flaming debris before the eyes of a group of horrified spectators who were powerless to render aid. The wreck occurred on the Grand Trunk Railroad near the station at North Yarmouth. Two freights collided with terrific im pact and the wreckage had caught fire before the villagers arrived on the scene. Three men in one of the locomotives were buried beneath the mass of heated and twisted iron, around which was piled the wreckage of several freight cars, all burning fiercely. Two of the men, Ray Jordon, of Yarmouth, a fireman, and William Bames, of Island Pond, Vermont, were unconsci ous and apparently dead, but Corliss was alive when the would- be rescuers reached the burning pile. “For God’s sake get me out.of, here,'* implored Corliss, who was pinned by an enormous weight of burning debris. Fran tic efforts were mode to release the doomed man, some of the villagers working so near the fire that their clothing was al most burned off before they were compelled to stop. Soon the fire reached Corliss. Begging pite ously for relief, the man man- s«ed to cry: “Give me chloroform; give me anything to put me out of my misery." As a last resort Dr. George F. Bates, of Yarmouth, risking his own life, crawled on his hands and knees under a portion of the wreckage until he reached the suffering man. The doctor drew a large bottle of chloroform from his pocket and soaking a hand kerchief with the liquid, passed it to Corliss, and backed out from REST AND KEALTH TO MOTHER AND GHilU. Mrs. V* i.vsi.o'.v s SooraixG Svsit:? has used for ovffT SIXTV YEARS by MILLIO.S.. of MOTIIEKS fur iac:r CUILOREN -WHiUI iliKTinXG, wi'h PKRFECT SUCCESS It .- ooTiiDs tht t scftkns ti-.e cu.ms' ,\.Li:,AVb all I'AIX C VRES WIND COJ-IC stnd ;s t!i-best r»—le'iv f r IMATRHCi.\. It i! : iliilciV iiattule-s s-.ire and ».->!€ tor .';:s Wiaslo’^'? v'-'T'.ip,“ lake ao .iUex kiiij T-weRtv-avc Kcuis a txHUr Yifi iJU wih§i hch "Qutm «Im» mrt igffmuU, ditf a9 %am jPrvonv** muAni§ dU«i W fltx^k tmi Thtg mn m» eww/ortfg8& — WT fnm cAc fnt mangnt wiorH, IC E'Tl'V- SH: It Paj^s To Isley’s Great Department Store. The offerings and savings stand ont very plain. We have neyar | been better prepared to save he people money than nav^; Lock at the few prices judge the sties. ‘ a 8 8 8 8 Just received three cases of fancy white goods in bar, stripes, small and large checks, the entire lot goes on sale at lOcts per yd. Easily worth 20 cts and could not be bought elsewhere for less 3000 yds. of fine bleeching, cambric finish ?2 1-2 value, special at 8 cts. per yd. 2000 yds. of bleecWng regular price 8 cts. special at 5 cts per yd. 2000 yds. staple fancy ginghamto U) cts., special at 5 cts. per yd. 1000 yds. ot gingham value 10 cts. speciaMt cts. . Large and well >selcctcid of ^rcals ^d ginghams |Et iO cts. and^^ t^ Large and beatuful line of dress goods, ;white:€oods and laficyjjoods. ^O^ds. of sea island worth 8 cts., special at 6 cts. 2000 yds. of good sheetings value 6 and 7 cts., special at 5 cts. iiOOO yds. of yard wide sheeting just the thing for canvassing for wul paper, sp^ial at 3 cts. Great offerings in Men’s Boys and Children’s clothings. We havn’t the space to quote the prices but are ready to deliver the goods at a great saving. Come and see. Just received the newest thing in ladies voat suits for spring, ladies waists and skirts, imely tailored and styled to the minute. The prices are verv attjactive, and will appeal to any one wanting the best at an economical price. Ladies do you wear the R and G Corset. Any price from 50 cts to $3.00. Men’s, Women and Child ren’s guaranteed hose m black and colors at 10 cts. Fully guaranteed and only 10 cts. In all our twenty-iSve years of experierice in the Mercantile business we have never been able to offer such values at 10 cts. Try a pair and see if they are not equal in wearing quality to 25 ct. hose. Grocery Department. 25 lbs. sugar at $1.50 cash or six cts. per lb. Register *his perilous position, just as a portion of the burning pile col- lasped and fell around him. The last seen of Corliss, he was hold ing the handkerchief close to his face. The debris flared up fierce ly, and the three men were burn ed to ashes before the helpless on'lookers. Come to Isley’s great department store for what you want and save money. t I s 8 S 8 8 Jos. A. GREAT China npw has a republican form , of goyemment, although aeyefal years m&y Elapse before ap^priiauatthe Gh^es^^^^ it Burlington STORE North Carolina. We Have Jus^ a full Urn For sale by wj spray your trj FREEI phone 20 JjOCAS. spent aBhortwhiW It^isses Francisi aBi)W>n aw tjl® T). pate. Miss Lei of M^* Pate. I John LynchJ some days at homd relatives., I Mr. Spencer w| the Liggett &Milej on our local markel dav at Durham onl Mrs. S. C. Patte arday 1 her.sister Mrs. N.| Greensboro. Misses Ruby Lunnie Davis of Gl ed at'the home E. ' Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. L.I are rejoicing oyer I a boy baby at theij Mrs. Martha Coli the guest of her d Arthur Way has rl home at Mebane. Miss Mable Lea_ Walker Jr., of L Tuesday the guestj Miss Mable Long I Miss Mary FosteJ in a hospital at gome weeks 18 Saturday. Glwhl much. improved. Mr. and Mrs. J.j Tuesday o>\ No. her father Mr. whois very ill. iEflandfoentSund his cousin Mr. W.j family at their W ban hotne on the Mr. R. K. Davi Foftiit waft the*gue en^ Mr. and ,BSrBj pwrt Satun3&y aur Miss Sue Mebat 6|Mnt Sunday in tt of her parents H. Meb»ne and FORD AUTOL, have the exclusive Famous Ford A« Alamance and a If you intend purd mobile write us t^ Catalog and lMk . buying. It will pi Ford Garage I Greer Does it If you I for twe the diff and ntf Placed in the Savi of this bank at 4 pound interest. Kept at home or out interest and t bery and fire Difference in favoi the bank In other word! Years, $2.63 on e bank, Come ii ALAMA STRONGE (■'lElcoo Bwfiai