Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Aug. 28, 1912, edition 1 / Page 6
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W‘\- rhe^?&ta F0r Register ol Decds: Jane kdumf. The Case ®f pttEOF niBUGSF f Church Directory. | Ike Cka^ »f lira CdmforleV. (Episcopal) iMt’H«veKp4 JfM B«i»«^ GaWe, R«*l«. Every Sunday, 11 *.00 a. ni. 8:00 p. in. u i « Holy Communion: First. Sun- i®y, llrf)0 a- ni. Third Sunday, Y^30 &• Ztte -««-' ^ — #irk- Holy syidSaints’ Day6, lOrOOft^ *’S»nday School, 9:^a. m. lie public is cordially invited. All pews 'free. ^. j ; ■ / Cbiii^iaii Qiorch., Cofner Church and Davis Sts. Rev. A. B KtnAJl, P«*U*. S«rvkes: r Preaching every Sunday, 11:00 (i. m. and 8:00 p. m. Sunday Schoolf 9:45 a. m. Jnq. ' B. Foster, Si^t. , Christian Endeavor Services, Sunday evenings at 7:15 Mid-week Prayer Service, eve* ry Wednesday at 8:00 p. m. ' Ladies’ Aid and Missionary So- fiety meets on Monday after the Second Sunday in each month. A cordial invitation extended to all. A Church Home for Visitors ind Strangers. SirSngton Reformed Qmrdb^ Corner Front and Anderson Sts. Rot. J. D. Anorew, PMtor. Sunday School every Sabbath, Iii5a..m. Preaching every 2nd and 4tn Sabbath, 11:00 a. m. and 8:00 p. Mid-week Service every Thurs day, 7:45 p. m. A cordial welcome to all. Parsonage 2nd door east of firorch. Preibyterisua Chorck lt«T. Dm*U M«^cr, Pa«t«f. Services every Sunday at 11:00 a* m. and 8:00 p. m. Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Prayer-meeting, Wednesday at 8:00 p. m. Tfce public is cordially invited to all services. ftmH M. E. Omreh, Soutit. Rct. T. a. Sy^e*, > , , Preaching every Sund^ty mom* las and evening. Sum jiday School, 9:30 a. m. Prayer Service, Wednesday •veuing. intibtei^ Qiivdk. Front Street Rct. C. L M«r{pu, fatter. CBetidence next door to Churph.) Morning Service at 11:00 a. m. Yespers at 3:30 p. m. Ko services on third Sundays.) Sunday School 9:45 a, m.,,ev» ary Sunday. Teachers' Meeting, Wednesday iiOO p. m. (at parsonage.) Woman’s Missionary Society Ijt^ter morning service on fourth landays.) L. C. Bs., Saturday befoi^ lliiird Sundays, 3:00 p. m. , L. L. L„ third Sundays at 8:00 9. m. . Bftptist Church. |; ter. S. L IlMfM, P»^. I Preaching every Sunday 11 ai JKL, 8p. m. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Sunbeams, second and fouj*^ tik Sundays, 3:00 p. in. I; Prayer Meeting, Wednesd4y 8p. m. Church C-onference Wednesdsiy before first Sunday in each month Communion, first Sunday. Woman’s Missionary Society?, ftnt Thursday 3:30 p. m. Ladies’ Aid Society, firat Mon day 3:30 p. m. Methedist Protestant Church, East Davis Street. Rev. TkoiM* E. Davis, Psator. Parsonoge next door to Church) Services: Morning, 11:00 Evening, 8:00. Prayer meeting Wednesday avenings. ladies’ Aid and Missionery So cieties every Monday afternoon aft^ first Sunday in each month. Sunday School 9:30 a. m. Rev. R. M. Andrews, Supt. Exellent Baraca and Philathea Classes. You are invited to at- i«Qd all services. Webb Avenue M. E. Oeurdt, Rot. B. T. PmIot. Preaching every first Sunday M 11 a.m. and 8:00 p.m., second Sunday at 8:00 p. m. 5Jun4^ School every Sunday moraing at 10a. m. I John F. Idol, Supt. Everyb(«iy Welcome. Miss Mable T; Boardman, _^x^ ecutive head of the'National Red Cross Society^ ^atJtiounced iast week that she could not tkke at| active hi&ndin piolitids because of her identification with this great non-political work. She w^nt or to' expi^ss the opinion that Mi Jane Adams for the same reason had “no right to identify hersei with any political party” | ; The most eomplete repl> to this critiijism was made by\ Mis^ Adi- amif her^sfelf i^ her spee^hWcijnd- t|ie no^inktipn\ o| .Coloneli Kdp^veit ^ which' sj|e gaiiS,: | ‘‘MeasjirjSs of inap^ri^i ajfnelj- ioi'ation,/demancis/fpr social just^ ick, iohg discussed by small ^oups in charity conference^ and economic ^sociations, ’l]iiav0 here been con3idered in a 'glrefiA national convention and ar^ at last thrust into the stern arena of !j^Uti(cal: action. j ; ‘’A great party haspled|ged|it self to the protection of children, to the care of the aged, to the re lief of overworked girls, to ^the safeguarding of burdened nieri. Committed to these humane i nn- deriakings, it is inevitable that such a party should appeal |to women, should seek to draw up on the great reservoir of- thjeir moral energy, so long undesired and unutilized in praciical politics —one is the corollary of the other, a program of human weilare, the necessity for woman’s participa tion. “We ratify this platform not only because it represents our earnest convictions and formu lates our high hopes, but because it pulls uiwn our faculties and calls up definite action. We fi«d it a prophecy that deiriocr4cy shall be actually realized.untiljno group of our ^ple~ certainly not 10 million of them so badly in need of reassurance—ihall fail to beai* the responsibility of self government' and that ; no class of evils shall lie beyond ire- dress, 1 "The new paity has become the American exponent o| a world-wide movement toward juster social conditions, a mc^e- ment which America, -lagging behind other great nations, pas been unaccountably slow to fm- body in political action. !; “1 second th6 nominatioi^ioJf Theodore Roosevelt becausej he is one of the few men in our pub lic life who have been respdn- sive to modern movement. [$e- cause of that, because the pi-6^ gram will require a leader of! in vincible courage, of open mmd, of democratic sympathies, lone endowed with po^er to interpret the common man and to idenjtify himself With the common l^t, I heartily second thenominatidh.” Persons who wereisd fortunate as to h^r MissAdams make jtiiis confession of faith will not ^n forget the tremendous earrtest- ness and sincerity of the appeal. From a part in the old political intriguing and maneuvering, such a woman might readily ab stain. But to ask her to t^fe no part in amoyement directed to* ward thesnds to which shj^ has so nobly and unselfishly devoted .her'life, would be to impl^i that 'hi^d been only playing with] these ideas, and that she had nbi ^reat WEDS; MAN TIPS SCALES AT 135 V New York, Aug. le. —The hea-^ vy weight record was broken jit the matriinonial bureau in Bro^ oklyn today,, wheii Miss Alpine Bitch, ^7 yeiirs an^ Lois ^Henry Aiken,, a printer, obtained a lie* ehs0.to Wed, apd half an ' hour MterVhad, the kndt'tled by an eld'- erntiati.:^ . TO i35^ouh^^ •. i ' Wlieti, the marriage d^k ask^d the bride's occupation,^^ccbcding to the routine custom, she; t'epU- ed ^‘djemon^t^tdr.’’ , , , !'X>em6stryt6h bf ‘ What?^ ’ qtii- zzed th4 clerk, y . ^‘Avoirdupois,f’ she respbnded meeklyl. Hundred of clerks and other peirsons cheer^ the bridal pair away in a taxicab. concern eflfeCit. in putting them; into Ciothiug Hiigher in * 28 NEW YORK, July 19j~The price of clothing is going ito be advanced next year. This in- cr^^e tax on the already nigh of living is clearly indicated mer chants say to-diay, by the , prices named by leading producers of cloth, who have lifted the:prices for the spring of 1913 season from , seven and half ceints to 2® cents a yard above thos^ whch prevailed last year, wh^n the values for the last spring season where announced. ; How much the merchant tailor or the retail clothier will charge the consumer because of the ad vances that have taken place cannot be stated accurately, be cause there is ever iikelihood that the quotations just made will be further abvanced before the season is very old. Cloth pritjs are higher for next spring agents say, beause of conditions over which the manufa^turs ha ve no control. They say that the most' impot- ant element that brought aaout the advance is that the domestic wool clip this year is about 30,00 0,000 pounds smalleir than a year ago. The price of wool has also gone up abroad, while mill owne-r rs say that the high scale of warr ges and the shorter working ho urs will also have their effect on the increased ^rice of cloth. [ ill The Dispatch a year for $1.0f / ' , - I Vi Shortest Stpry Sh-h-! ’Twas night in Snyder’s woods. The hero took her in in his strong young arms, and as their lips met, his’n her’n and her’a his’n, a faint splash might have been hieard in the dense, dank, dismal darkneSss. Might liave been, we say, but was not. When lovers’ lips are meeting, what reck they oi splashes? As the villain crept Qpon them, his long dripping knife in his mouth (the wretch had pocket, but villains, praise be, are alw ays in their author’s power), he laughed horseiy. He had been a. villain for some tiirie, and He could laugh horseiy, yes, exulti- ngly; with his knife in his mouth. He was father damp, for he had swam the river, but he refl ected that damp has a dam in it, and’ twas enoug;h. Suddenly the, iheroine freed herself form the hero’s arms and pointed, her eyes, her teeth, wide with teiror. The hero was, for a moment, quite up in the air. How could -he know that a dev ilish form was bending over him. that a glittering knif^was t>oi- sed above his fifth vertabra? There was a long, awkward si lence. The heroine looked at ;the hero, the hero looked at the beiOjne, arid th^n both turned ■and looked at the .vjllia.i), who, meanwhile, had been looking at them. All three smiled foolishly land bit their nails. , For ,the author had deliberately left them in that predicanient arid gone out for lunch. FOUND! •A certain amount of , money. Iiy;he owner will call at the law cffices of E. S. W. Dameron and furnish proper evidence of the amount and character of the money, same will be returned, less the expense of this advertise ment. Almosr Lesr His Life. s. A. Stid, of Mason, Mich., will never forget his terrible ex posure to a merciless storm. ' ‘ It gave me a dreadful cold,” he writes, “that caused severe pains in ,my chest, so it was hard for me to breathe. A neigh bor gave me aev^al doses of Dr. King's New Discovery which brought great relief. The doctor said 1 was 0(i the vei^e of pneumonia, but to continue wi^h the Discov- ery. I did so and tWo bottles completely cured me.” Use on ly this quick, safe, reliable med icine for coughs, colds, or any throat or lung trouble. Price 50c and ^1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by Freeman Drug Co. r THE MOST ACCURATE-.22 CAUBER Repeating Rifle in the WORLD. Made in two models: one for .22 Short R. F. oar- tridg^—the other for .22 Lonir Rifle R.F. * STEVENS ^VISIBLE LOADING” RIFLE NO. 70. Uj- /Handles 16— .23 raiCE •22 Sk Aa cartridges. ^^Sehd for handsomely I illustrated Rifle Cata log and “How to Shoot ^lycU”. Order Steven* Rifles- PSftolsandl Shotguns from your Dealer. STEVEfNS ARMS' TOOLCOHIFANy, “I hereby announced niy cai|i-: didacy for the office of regisi^r of de»^s of Alamanade fjounty, subr ject to the aitiph of the demiocra-; tic cbnvention to be h^ld oh.the 7j th day of September, ;1912. , ;' | i-1.'I). Lambeth.*^!’ Read thib Bo«k; > We take pleastfra in van^ipvi#^ ing that apy of pqr te^derfii can' secuire 'thfe abbvfe ye&t j poek^t booK fr^, of charge by bei^iif^ 2c. for pt^tage' tb D, SWift aiid Co., Patent! Ijawyersv Washing ton, D. C. This 'bctok * k>ntainB tables shoeing, w|ii(i^ istat^s. each presidential candi^afe^ in 1908, the number and Republicans elected by feacn, state to Congresi?, in;A 1908; and 1910, the leading j^'efit^' of. .tlfe life of each; Pre!ffl4?nt» ;froin. Washington to Taft. It als^ gives the population of each stat^ according to the census' re^rlk of I890i 1900 and lOlO, the poj)i:i- lation of about 20 of the Urgcyt cities in each state, a calend^ for 1912 and 1913 and ihuch btt|- er useful ihformation. ; Caugltf in a Rain. Douglasville,- Tex* — years agb I was caught in tli|e rain at the wrong time, ” writes Edna Rutherford, of Douglas ville, “and from that time, was taken with dumb chills ahd fe vers, and suffered more than ' I can tell. I tried everything that I thought would help, and had four doctors, biit got no releifv I took Caniui, the woman’s tonic. Now, I feel better than in maiiy months. ” Cardui does one thing and does it well. That^s the sIb- cret of its 50 ■ yeire of success. Try Cardui. TerflMe Picture Suffering,; i Clinton. Ky.~Mrs. M. C. Uq Elroy, iii a letter fro^ Clinton, writes: “ For, six years, I wasi a ^uff^er from female troubles. ; I could not eat, dnd could nbt stand on miy feet, 'wijthout stjiffering great pain, I had; lost hope. After using Cardui/a week, I J^eganito improve^ Now I feel, better th^n in six yeap.” Fifty yeat^ ;of success . in ‘ actual practice, j is positive probf, fumisheS by those who have usi^ it, that Cardtii can always be relied on for re lieving female . weakness abd ditease. Try Cardui, today, now! Hines, Al^~In' a letter frbm place, Mrs. Eula M^ Brad ley says: ‘ ‘I to spit up all | ate; l ijvas .tired arid sl^py • all the'time. My bead* achedV and i coiild haMly dragarodnd^ Sineib taking Cardui, this has ehtil^ly quit, and now I f«l quite fit.” Mrs. Bradley suffered from rjer- vous indigestioii. Cardui builds ij the ' nervous* system' and stSrengthens the i^?oij4anly eohjsti- tution. That’s why Cardui he^^ ed Mrs. Bradley-and .why; it wiill help you.;^;'I^,it.’/ , . ,';,,V ,; N*W Nortfllfc V Sii MAT 26,’SlS'- ' ; ,22 ; ... ,No.84f p^iy . 1/V. WinBton 2:00 p.m. Ly. Walnat C. 2:46 p. m,; ■ 7:42 al iit Lt. Madison 8:03 p. m> , 8;10:ai xl, Lt. uayodan, 3.06 p. na (3:14,a. Lt. M’rt’nv’lle 4:04 p. m &:ll a. pj Ar BkVancike 6.20 p. m. 11.-30 al.im No. /I. No,28y ■ r\ D^lil.V'^ ; Lv: Bbanoke ! 9:35.a. u. in, Lt. M rt’nvlle 11:56 a. m; 7:27p, ’jaj Lt. Majodan 12:47 p.m. 8:2.9p. m Lt. Madison, 1^:51 p^m. 8:27p.im. Lt. WalnntC 1:20p.ni 8:54p.;m. Ar. Winston 2:00 p. m. 0:851p. m. Ar. Ctarlotte 5:50 p.m. > Connections at Boanuke for all' ^ktiuts Worth, East and West; Fulln^an Parlor sleeping cars, dining care; a^la carte. ' ' 'Jrains 21 an! 22 carry PulliHan sl«epe 8, Wi 8ton-Sale»m and Kew iVork Tia Shenandoah Valley roiiteig. Dihiiig Cars north oi Rbanake. ' ■ - Tr^ihe ieate Durham for koxbciro 8opth Boston and Lynchbnrg 7:00 a..ia daily, and 5:80 p. ib. daily except Bnnday W. B. BEVILL, Gen. Pass'r. Aart. W. C. SAUNDERS, Ass’t 6en’l,Pas. AjtH. Roanokei Va ..lljri ^ T.l-' in may rot Snow the Company l , But: Probably My, ^ . thought of tfot had you ’ hadn’t Need Trotection— '- f, Insmrance Co. J. Sqllars, Mgr. Arlington, N. c. If Y(^ii Onfy Knew Wbat 22 Years has taught US about SewDg Machines We Believe You Would BUY a Absoliitel^.noi e:^peiise for Needles, Bands, Macii^e^s or Ypu g^t jjnorhef bne FI^EE if it breaks, wears out OF burns up iri 5 years. ; ; is Madliifte ^ Music SS,i Wwile Owners. wc, are jpiow, in a positioh'^o db Idiitds of au tomobile repair work promptly ini tlie’ teiost satis- factory manner. We eithplby abi^c but skilled machihi^s; thei’^forp; wc ask that Vou give us iui opportunity to demohstrate the efficiency of our equipment. We can do any and eyerythin^ in the line of macmne shop ,woi^., v BURLt^^TONi a '-Uv . .J.j. i / J; .1^ N.^C.r“ .1 V". ; The North Garofina SmE NORMAL INDUSTRIAL COtLEGiE ^intain^ by the State for ithi Women of North Carolitia. ti5e regular Courses leading to id^ ,®P®cial Courses for t^ch' era. Free tuition to those ww iteiphs Sepr JDUUSLFOllSTrres. aieiMIt RATES ON ■» •1 'j, X Ice and Storage Go.; er. ' order that the v>tei been asked to vqte bonds Oreensboro, Northern i tonlic be ?well ^ aajto the facts in the ioJlo1«i»« dates and plao l^n Bamed'wHene there iiDf»?ned} sp€«kera jthie pe>(^le and. giy infoifliation possible; oo t1 iOQ^rtanl; au68tion: . f ■ 'fdc»day 'August 27, ; ^cii66l House at lon Colleflre . at , V at 7: /; ;, ^edne9day Ausrwst i . at OaroliAa 7:i / ;. llwirsday Augtist a Sutphin*8 Mill . ? 1 Clendenin’siiShop G^ham w 7:; Burling^n , 7:J ^ FridayJAugustSO. ^xapahaV"::^ 7:3 pwepsonville 7r3 Eyery body is urged to j these meetings to the end i . inay be informed as to the of this proposition, . and t j fiirability of its acceptanciq various townships through the road wil 1 be built W. White, .7, A. Long, . j« Q. Qaht, ^ 'i Eugene Holt,: H. W. Trolling^ _ R/ M, Andrews J.“ M! Cook, J. W. Cates, Jno. R. Hoffmj Comi f v: E'iJilfed iStf tei Sdnator ^ the Progitessive rrOm ^rt a, has decided to stick w „epubJi(»Ln organization state because he-says he v eted as ^ Fepublican, and i not be right: for him to a the pasty now, Liks ^nator Works, Gi .ense of loyalty toi he Repi party is far greater than t Qublican party's sense of r w the people. But it Will long until both Works and hay, reconcile their party J their sense ^ of popular jent, fair the end of the f jean party is in sight* disappear as rapidly as , Thig party after the Repi Arty was origariized. Philadephia Evening Ti rbere DoesBiuiness Com Businosa in this country, by the bounties of a gr© /ear, and despite the ha of an ex^sive yield of i^litics, is trying deters sulsc^dMg ^ one o4 tj^ey ms»vels \( Standpat Republicans y Taft are fig' ly reduction 6f emocrats aroiitri tariff Tssl^ . le of battledore and cock all thoughts of solid b interests and concerns, 'welfare of the people, is en. The spectacle thus pr J the best possible art |[n favor of turning nation rol over to theProgressiv wich will give the coui^tr e of statesmanship and ^ ption in i)iaceof polities,ai ! rht K) nuoy u lelpnia Evening Tii The Progressive Spj Another North Carolina lizesXhe imMr^ctl ive Party, J „Jof.Tl |can. ilim^h to thanks you^^J , ^tt-you^aye tak^n.sftjj'jl tnd righteousness in esjif inecause of the Progressi v politicians, surely, are •I they think that the proper Jiovement is a transrtory l^nt a*ffl wiU die oUt qi, thejFarmer/sAll|aj)cei ^opulidt p7rt>. ^ in this southland of oi St, the Prrgressive hasl stay. In this Republica| an exception in the i of but three Taft . All the others 9velt and Johnson,/ |t A 'tljfird otf ihe Pemi t all over thj ^js like it is here the f ^**>iv«party will win in al , (Mr8.)L. M. El ®oon£ord, N. C., Aug.* . ■■ '■■'J
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 28, 1912, edition 1
6
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