Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / June 5, 1912, edition 1 / Page 7
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farm nmniiig ing water d acres _ woodland SLB, & Treatt C VSellHre Cbns DJobjisoa i. fT W Brown instill WH MSWEIIS ers. kinds of au- le most satis- ^ but skilled /jji u give us an % :iency of oui AV in the line of PANY i N. C. p JSi t's Re- May 1st and not east fault of my tasing for the past d I am going to opie is the only ces tell others if k. igerous thing to rouble you should eyes and explain :eman Drug Co. s of each week. inston, dlist. N. C NDSEY BER V. igton N. C. EUMONIA ith a frightfiU eougb . I had speJls when ■athe or spoak for ip My doctor eo’old was completely curea : / KING’S r Oiscov8f]f J. E. Cox, Joliet, IH; $1.00 *T ALL PHUfl6«ST^ Davton" 0., May 30.- While j Lite arrangements tor the fun S Wilbur Wright, the noted , ;ctor have not been as yet made > is probable that it will be held Jaiurday afternoon with inter- at Lakewood cemetery Uth of Dayton. The death of the inventor came ddeniy at 3:15 this morning Members of the family being has- ?!v summoned from their rooms tn which they had retired in the ftelief that the patient was raak- ing substantial improvement. Dissolution came quietly, with- «iut strugg-le in the still hour of the early morning vrith the dis tinguished patient surrounded by his venerable father, Bishop Mil ton Wright, his brother, Orville, his sister, Katherine, the other two brothers, Lorin and Rousch- *in and Dr. Daniel Beckel Conk lin who has been in constant at tendance since he took to bed on Saturday, May 4. " At 12 o’clock this morning the •isuai examination showed that ihe dying inventor's temperature was high but his pulse and res- ciraiion had satisfactorily de- ‘n-eased. No fear was entertain- Tdat this hour but thirty minutes iaterthe attending nurse noted a raoid deterioration. For approximately two weeks, the patient has been unconscious but as his eyes rolled about the room in the direction of the nurs €s, the dociors and members of the family, he gave unmistakable evidence of a subconscious desire to recognize them. On Wednes day morning'as Orville sat at the bedside, Wilbur smiled faintly. At 7 o’clock in the evening the doctor expressed the opinion that death might ensue in a half-hour but the patient again railed and seemed to improve until the last attack which proved fatal. The noted patient was seized with typhoid May 4 while on a business trip in the East Through the early part of his illness Wright attributed his sickness to some fish that he had eaten at a Bos ton hotel. He explained to his physician however, that he had no particular reason to believe that the disease originated from this source. Wilbur Wright was born in Henry county. Ind., April 16 18- 87. Orville the sixth child, was born August 19, 1871. IDE HLLEI, SEVE8AI BimT Seattle, Wash,, May 30. — J. Clilford Turpin, the aviator, dashed into the grandstand and at the Meads in his first effort at flight today, killing one man and fatally injuring a man and child and less seriously injuring IS other persons, six of them wo men. The man and child who were fatally hurt weie taken to the county hospital where the man died without being identified Turpin and Phil Parmalee, his partner, declare the accident was caused by a spectator who ran acrc^ the track in front of Tarpin as he was headed north preparatory to rising for the first flight of the afternoon. The aeroplane was traveling at 50 miles an hour and Turpin tilted the right wing in order to miss the man. He was unable to right the machine in time and it swerv ed into the grandstand. Turpin was cut over the left eye and was rendered unconsci ous for several minutes. He is not badly hurt. The meet was called off. (kieB & McClure FiirDitiire Co. of Cftham, N. G. e the peo' ave and aim has pie of AlaiJMiMe are giving theffii. always been to their cu^o- mers perfect satisfactiortMgoibi^ and prices and the libera;j| age they have received shows how the people appreciate the square deal. They have never before had a larger stock than this Spring and are prepared to give the greatest values for the money 6ver given in the County. See them before you buy. Is the month to run the Jdhn Deere Cultivators^ cultivate shallow, and often if you want make big crops with lc!»s hand labor-^-- The Cultivators ar^ going faat, dent delay sending in the orders. Buy the John Deere and get the best~ See the Walter Wood '‘Admiral”; Mdwjer be fore you buy a Mower, they get fiJl the ^ass, high or low stubble~^One man used Walter A, Wood 17 years, bought (3) sectoins ma^chine now good for many years to (x>me Cost 1^ for upkdep. 2,500 Sections Bt all Mowers, big stock repairs Hocking VaUey Cider Mill$i wood roU(sr, does not color the Cider, as the cast miilB-. Hay Presses, Feed Cutters, Sheilere, hoes, shovels, forks Best 50c; long handle shovel in tot^ji, why pay 75 and $1 wheh y(^ can get good steel shovel for $0c. Grain Cm4N are selling fast Pjeas Millett Ask Cardwell, he will tell you where to get it and the ■ ;'.";price..■ Msrder In Second Degree Is Verdict Wytheviile, Va., June 1.—Af ter deliberating two hours and a half the jury in the case of Claude Swanson Allen this afternoon found the young man guilty of .niurderin the second degree for the killing of Judge Thornton L. Massie, and recommended that his punishment be fixed at 15 years in the state penitentiary at Richmond. Sentence was sus pended in order that the prisoner riiay testify in the other cases growing out of the shootiisif up ui Carroll county court on March last, when the five persons met their deaths at the hands of the Allen elan. The verdict rendered today does not mean that Claude Allen has escaped the eiectii': chair, tour other indictments against him are pending, on any one of which it is possible that he be found guilty of first-degree mur der, and the prosecution, taking advantage of this fact, sprung a surprise on the defense when it announced that it would next go into the trial of Claude Allen for the murder of Sherii® Lewis Webb V^e defense raised objection to tnis, and the objection will be ar gued and passed upon when court reconvenes July 1. ^ '^^dge Staples gave instructions ^or the summoning of a venire to report on July 2, and remarked he did not believe a jury c&uid be secured from Wytheviile county. The prosecution immed iately moved that a venire be sum woned from another county, the aeiense objecting. ^^Just before adjournment Judge ^"'Aples ordered that the prisoners to the Roanoke jail pend the reconvening of Wythe county court and five of them left tonight under a guard of detec tives. Byrd Marion did not ac- pnipany them, being again re- ®^ed today under $1,000 bond. Id Tike Hawkins Case. Hendersonville, May 29.—Open ing his testimony with the flat declaration that he had seen and talked with Myrtle Hawkins on Bay street, Jacksonville Fla., several weeks after her body had been supposedly found in Lake Osceola, W. Q. Shelnutt, an Atlanta traveling man long touted as the star witness for defense in the Myrtle Hawkins case, and who informed a press representative last week that for the sum of $3,000 he would pro duce Myrtle Hawkins alive in the Hendersonville courtroom, wilted under the scathing cross- examination today and declared “he would not swear postively that the girl he had talked to "’s Myrtle Hawkins;" tnat he might have been mistaken, as “no man was perfect.” He ad mitted that he had told a press representative that for $3,000 de posited in a local bank, he would produce the living body of Myrtle Hawkins, sow generally suppos ed to be dead. On the stand, howeverr when asked by the cross-examining attorney if he, being willing to see justiee done at that price, would produce the girl Shelnutt saidhe ‘‘‘thought he could.'’’ An unexpected witness appear ed in the per son of John W. le aver, of TransylvaHia county wiio, having stopped over in Hendersonville to change trains, voluntarily entered the court and informed attorneys for the de fense that he had met and talk' ed with W. 0; Shelnutt last Jan uary at Orlando, Fla., and that he (Shelnutt) had told him then that Myrtle Hawkins was not dead as he (Shelnutt) had talked to her a few days previously at Jf;cks(>rivi!ie.. Mr.- Deaver was iuiaifcaitiiei.v placed on the wit '■ess stand,, where he testified as stated. Stella Wilson, a boardinghouse keeper of Jacksonville, sent a deposition which was read in evidence, that Myrtle Flawkins, or a girl who gave her name as such, had boarded with her last December and January. The Wilson woman, .as shown in her deposition, had identified a pic ture of Myrtle Hawkins who had boarded with her. Dan W. MeCall and his wife, two of the defendants, took the stand and swore that they had no knowledge as to how Myrtle Hawkins, if she was dead, had come to her death. 4,_.^|9^der is looking pale. He's 5k himself wi& har^ . he engai^ )5- a ltDbor«saving -Puck. to xj«na> ^ 4 Trust Co. that will fit longer thap The thing to be admired by every body is a perfect fitting suit. Have you noticed how well those look made by the Imperial Tailor ing Co? We can make you a suit perfectly and wear much those you secure elsewhere. See Our beautiful $18.00 patterns^ they are beaut ies. All work done by Imperial Tailoring Co., at their place of business. Cleaning and Pressing a specialty. The Imperial Tailoring Co. Front Street, Barlington, N. C. N.S. XARDWEII, Busy PHONE SHOE SHOP In Connectibn With SAMPLE SHOE STORE We keep a high grade of Sainplc Shoes at Lowest Prices. All kinfa of Ladies, Mens’ and Children’ Shoes. REPAIRING Neatly and properly done. The best White Oak Leather used Also shoes made to order from H up. All work sent for and promptly deltvered. LEFKOWITZ At 106 Front Street Opposite First Natipnal Bswik, Burlington, ^ '^!rk ••'ii ■-.-H The A f* ■ I r I I Can Piedace Myrtle Hawkins^ He Claims. Hendersonville, May 25—W; 0. Shelnutt, the Atlanta traveling man who claims to have seen Myrtle Hawkins in Jacksonville after her body was reported to have been found in the waters of Lake Oceoia last September, and who is held as a witness for the defense^ declared to' a press re presentative today that if the sum of $3j0OO, was deposited to his credit in one of the local banks he will produce Myrtle Hawkins in Hendersonville counsd for the state, however, deelsure ti^t th^ tjdce littlfe stock in Shidnuttls story, ^pd'proimseanliit^restinjgr half hour whew lie the- 8t«i»dv• ■ ■ j- b;e r^iaaeditctoj^* tioB '■''j , f ^-nW a f'-hli Modd ‘T’ S Passenger Ford to be given away inThe State DUprfch Voting Contest JUST THINK TWELVE beautiful prizes and the list r eadedby a Ford^ Automobile, an Indian Motor* cycle, a Pony and cart, and ? ine other beautiful prizes. Who ever saw a bet ter hst of pmes. NOW. Join die contest now. By just a little hustle you can easily go ahead of the leaders^ See xis or write us. Phone 265. ?mmm of great F0BI), Model, TJ 5 Pas^ger Tduriiig-Car Iiidian Motdrcycte, Pony.'Hiirness apdC^ ; , . Gold^teh; Ladies or Gents Bixtgy likiifea t»r' G^ta ' Biciyc^ Ladwis or: Gents Business Gollei^ci' $900.00 260.00 moo 75.00 75.00 SOuaOr mco mm .1 mm •'••..'I !v': ' 'Q'H
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 5, 1912, edition 1
7
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