Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Sept. 4, 1912, edition 1 / Page 5
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► voe lOUS I others ap?*s. style. Fit and Appreciat- women the i’car in and siil statute for security and ^ iet us shew re y:7S that first. Bjyy new lATS-a ery taste. Son^ N. C Trips ALttorney to : in a distaixt sly interfere j made for Telephone, It client an^ at home. 3ne increasei ipt it to their I satisfaction [ Telephone? 'ELEPHONF COMPANY Tf vou want to be sure what's on the bottle ‘ig’ in the bottle here. We fill prescriptions with the utmost accuracy. comf freeman drug CO. phone 20 * Burlington, N. C, A o'en.ts for Eastman 'Kodak films,: . Hu^lers Candy, Rexall goods, \ an Lindley's cut flowers. Nyail Family Remedies, thOOAJL. A.isrr) , I>EIRSOJSr-A.L Mr F. P. Rogers one of No. 5 patrons who has been sick jlvs, Martha Foster of Gibson- spending this v/eek in ',11;-^' ..1. {own with relatives. r and Mrs. Wilbert Workman cv,‘ray. N. C. are visiting rela- ti-es in town. Vr. Cecil Workman who has ,^'!p -.vnding the summer at Jvr'te Siilp’ner Springs, is visit- j^o-relatives in town this week. A ca;! n- open meeting of the W. C. T. r wi!! be beld at the Baptist fs'drch Thursday afternoon, 4; t, 5th at 5 o’clock. Mr C- F. Foster has been pro- uioted to the position of suoerin- tendent of the Aurora Cotton MiH?. • ^ ■ In tho absence of the pastor of the M. P. Church Sunday, Rev. M. Andrews preached at 11 o'kock, and Rev. Mr. Guthrie preached at the night service. Rev. A. L. Crouse Of Char- lottesvii-e Va. was a pleasant visitor at Mrs. Dr. Crouse’s and avo Mr. A. B. Couse near Whit- 3el: Carl Barrett and Robt. Long went Sunday to Reidsvilleto be the guest of friends for a few ^ays. The attraction for Robert vas so great he did not return Wednesday, k class from the Odd Fellows’ Orphanage at Goldsboro will give a concert at the M. P. Church next Wednesday night, Sept. 11, at 8 o’clock, Everybodiy cordial ly invited. Dr. N. Rosenstein, the eye ?! ecialist of Durham, will be in Burlington, Tuesday, September IT lb, stopping at the Burlington Drug Co. for the purpose of ex amining eyes and fitting glasses. We GUARANTEE a god pav ing position to every young Wo man who finishes our course in stenography and typewriting as soon as her preparation has been completed, and furnish instru^- tonin English and Arithmetic without additional Charge. Littleton College, Littleton, N. C. j The Graded school will Monday September 9th, / • ^ ■ Jos. A. Isley & Co., are i^emc- deling the front of their great department store. The Epworth League held their social meeting Tuesday nigh^ with Miss Lola Losley. Dr . J. N. Taylor who has been 'Spending some time at Beaufort has retunied. / ■ ' Mr. Harry Graves who has been visiting here returiied Sun day to Danville, Va. Mr. Sam Gant of Cooleemee spent Wednesday in town the guest of friends.. Mrs. Jesse Bradshaw of Graha- m died Monday and was buried Tuesday. Misses Mabel Scott and Winfred Hahei who have been, the guest of frier ds in town returned to Raleigh Monday. Mi s Byrd Fonville and broth er Bryce of Benson spent last week the guest of Mrs. Martha Ler. Claudt Holt left TuesiSay for Raleigh where he will enter the A. &. M. College, taking a cours- e in civil engineering. Mifs Lois Cheek will leave to morrow for Reidsville where '•he will resume her studies at ihe Rei dsville Seminary. FOR CATALOGUE and furth er information address REGIST RAR. Littleton College, Little ton, N. C. Our scholastic year begins Sept. 18, 1912. For catalogue and furthur information address J. M. RHODES, Littleton, N. C. Miss Mabel Isley returned Friday from Monterey, Va. Cha- lottsville, Va., and other places where she has been spending her vacation. Mr. P. M. Fryur of Newbrn died'nt t,He home ©♦■’.his sister Mrs. W. W. Rippy •where he yras visirin/ Mnd -A'as buried,atPiiie* rtill ('emet«'rv iVlonday. He had be“n i^i 'he employe of the Sou- ■fiern iir)'! here on a visit. Mr. R. €, Callip^ll movmg mto his/.nice new iresidence on East Mo|ehead St. this week. • Mr. Tom Trog^en who has been the guest of relatives atO- berty has returnM to his duties with Mr. Rt L. Hol|. The mocher of Mr, C. B. Ellis and Mi’S, Nova Efland of Efland are the guests of Mr. C. B. Ellis and family this week. jMisses Irma Holliday and Be ssie Guthrie of Snow Camp pas* sed through town Tuesday en route for Guilford College where they entered school Miss Trixie Ward who has been at a Hospital at Norfolk suffering from attact of^ typhoid fever.has recovered sufficiently to be at home. Mr. 'Ernest Gross, of Norfolk Mr.. Lesiv,r Gross of Goldsboro and Mr, 1, 0. Gross and babj c3 Clinton have been the guest of Mr. L. B. Gross and family for several days. Jcs. A. Isley and Miss Evie G;ross will leave Monday for the Northern market for the purcha se of fall goods. I Miss Elon Heritage returned Sunday .evening from Chariotts- ville, Va.. where she has' been Spending several days the gues- is of friends. Meeting at Baptist Church. Rev. F. D. King one of the Evangelist of the home Mission Board •arrived last Sunday night and began a meeting at the Bap tist Church. He is wide y ^now as an evangelist and all the town should hear him and his delightful singer Mr. Preston H. Epps. Services begin every Evening at 7;30. Thursday aft ernoon at 4 o clock there will' b3 a specal service for all the young people of the town, Sunday at 4 o’clock a service for men. GET ACQUAIN rb:D WITH ^)UR TRUST DEPARTMENT > tV* *«>«• WHERE THERE’S A WILL r, And this Company appointed Executor— ’ The widow doesn’t have to worry about what to do in his case and that. ' , , •, > i r She is not obliged to shoulder a load of perplexing Und unfamiliar business'matters. She is never defrauded out of money, or property. She is never fooled into making bad investments, coerced into paying unjust or fraudulent debts. YOUR WIDOW GETS THE BEj^EFIT OF THE EXPERIENCE. IN I «:gRITY and ’ c judgement and safety that this company affords. Can you afford to deny your wife and children the protection and con venience a will affoids?* Come in today and talk it over. nor Will Furnish Alamance Conntjr with Log Drag. Graham, Sept. 2~ At a meeting today of the letter carriers on the R. F. D. routes of Alam^mce founty a move was made where by it is hoped much improve ment will be brought about in the condition of the roads of the county, 'the carriers decided they would furnish to log drags, provided the county commission ers would see they are used. This is a hew step in creatinp sentiment for good roads and ii is hoped the carriers in other counties of the state will take up the plan. For STATES GOVERNMENT DEPOSITORY UNITED 9 'V RVihcISm; Borah 0enies He Is To Taft SPOKANE, Wash., Aug. 29.- Sehator W. E. Borah, of Idaho, denied emphatically today the statement that he would cam) - aign actively insupport of Presi dent Taft. He declared any speeches he prd|)osed to make probably would not be acceptable to Republican national commitee. Rhode Island Rises Against The Bosses T^ims To Roosevelt. Colonel Roosevelt at the head of the national Progressive party movement, will sweep Rhode Isl and. That state Uke Penn sylvania, will doher part to put an end to reign of the political bosses in American politics.” was the statement made yester day by John A. Bolan, secretary of the Progressive party exec utive commitee of Rhoke Isl^nck Mr. Bolan isO’^'e of the prominent citizens of Providence, and until the inauguration of the Roosevelt movement was identified with the j Republican party. He is in this : city to attend the field day ex ercises of the middli;; Atlantic section of the Drexel Bible class- ies, which will be held today at ! the Bible Class Home in Lans- owne. He is the secretary of the section^ He reached here I on Saturday with John G. Dobel, I ofProvidehce, managing director ■ of the section. Both Mr. Boln n and Mr. Dobel are the guest of Anthony J. Drexle, Biddle found er of the association, j “In Rhode Island, as in Penn- ' syivania,” declared Mr. Bolan, “the plain people are enlisted in ; the fight to overthrow a system of machine bosism that ~ has dominated the state for years, and to find a way of escape from a condition of political thraldom and slavery that has wrested froia them all o^port^ity ^ real representatiye govi^riiijient We will win. ' “Rhode Island, in m^inv' res pects, is similar to Pennsylvania Botll are industrial states, in which thfe principle of a orotective tariff is uppermost and vital 0 the intertsts of the people, and irt both states the people have suff ered under-th(?'rule of, political bossies until that system reached a positon, by reason of its alliance with special interests, that vir tually left the voters helpless. Beveridge Predicts Robsevel Victory INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Auff 80.— “If politics inrerferes wi’*' business, cut out the busin sr, ’' is the watch Vvord’paSaPii over ip county and direct chairmen b;. former Senator Aibert J. Beveri dge, now a candidK.te on the Pr- ogre.ssive ticket for governor o/ Indiana. “W^'eri i startf-d ou' in thi? thing I had uQ ideal could be elected, or that Mr. Rooseveit could be fclt-cit'd, but it is a fip;hf • worthV the etFr>rt'. , ■'The pcoijie have taken up the cfiufe to >uch an pxterit that now I V(-' K!>os.'V'lt will car ry __the couiitr.y, and ihac Indiana ^ iil not bt ht-hiini in her share of tht\ vic! «>[■>. ^ “I have been in ..Vermont for several da's, nnd ' t have .been astounded by the movemejit. It vv;,s only three weeks ago that a Progressive ticket put in the field in thnt state. We had no expectation of winning but the people tiiein.selves have taken it UD, and now it re>iliy appears that ripxf Tu*^sday Vermont will e)eot ^ ,Proj2!>»ssive gdvernor;and if it do t3.' it means thi' ‘ampai- gn is ended if^ght here and now. ” Over 100 Founds A; Day, Cow's - Average. Woodland, Cal., Aug 30.- Riverside Sadie de Ko! Burne. a Yolo coun ty co w is i 1^ wnrld i - average more than K 0 poutibs of miik a day for six months. This announcement was made f;t th state university raim at Davis yesierd;i.\ For t h^ fir?:t six mi nths of the second \ ear’s test, the cow yield ed 1,S275 I o mdis -. of milk In 365 dav(^. Ar»H» KoI, her neatest riva’, recently ,jroclaimed ihe wone’s th inpi n cow, has yitldea 2(r,0i5 j out ds ot milk. i Cop]'rl(br;t90S*|:l>]f C. E. ZlmmtrniaB Co««Na.. M: IN tims of disti*ess, noin2i|^ t n e ciii s?e; a ba®k aceount^iU ren iier_ ics. a i, .aridi r is at such times that I hose withoiit one re^ folly for iidt s.oon|c.':v:beeHt0^ j u net ■ t Di ha¥^: ■ -arie. '-St ai’t a. account'today.' - If ^I.! 1}t: ’ 1 f J.f . been good, > .N ei) r i ^, I; j, \ a!! y, Ht o &J df.il k,uj . SAVED MY "1 Recommmd It Wherever i Am.” Mrs. John M. Stabler, MillerBba]^ g, Ind., writes: “I haTe been cured of a yepy '^bad case of ca tarrh the stomach and constipation, and a compli cation of ail- mentB that I have had for several years. It^octor e.d wUh three doctors, Vlio did me not much good, so I quit doc- torlngi ... “Iboughta ^r& John lvi. Stabler, bottle of Pe- rtrna and commenced taking it. I found >I(-was getting some better, but thought I ■was not doing as .well as I might. So I wxpte The Peruna Medical Departsr ment, to see what they thought about me. They gaTe .me sj^ecial directions and , medical advice. To pur astonish* ment I improved and am to-day a well woman and weigh as much as I ever did in my life. %f‘I tell my friends that Feruna saved my life. I recommend it .. wherever 1 am, and when any of our folks are sick» I give them Peruna with success.” Three of the very beisti. Try them. If you cannot get, one take the Other,; But get one, and take no bth' er. Corn; Oatsi Cotton seed. Meal and hulls Flour, Meal and shipstuff An ad in The State Dispatch ^ill pay. Try one and see. /■ } Gu aro'sielij qj suffei^ing from any of the troubles peculiar to womeii, don’t delay—take Car- that ^veii-knpwB and successful remedy for wok] men. Thousands of womeii have used been benefited.- not youl Don,^t 1'; ke chances. . Ght Oardui, the old,, i^Mable, c4:J:-i2d| I'remedyv womeii.; of ages, i ^. ■; It Will J 4Q ALE&DINGfiOARDIN&SGHOOL lor 250 StadiBti.v.'Xatikbliili*^ 1884. PrepBMi for OoU«(6. Satinaig.Ttftcbisg, orforLifi. Baaltli, 01u,ract6ruil anblp. Wid* patrn»s«, VERTaBABOHAXIEBATIB ]G»cb Btndant ncaivn par* ■ouftl atuntloa. UfUy «ndarM4, (IioeBtioa ii mu SncBafem, W. C.) tax BMmtlfal C»t»logm, •te.. Midrwia th« W. T. WHITSETT, PH. D. WHITSRTT. NORTH CAHdMMJI ITrs. Lnzania Morgan, SneiedviUe, T'enn,, writes: ' ®JV)r ten years I STifiered with t^e- turn of life, aqd tried many lem^ies j 'without'relief. Ijaimall over my body and:ati^^ I could j not; sit xip. At laai: I toc>!fc Cardui aiid now I can do my housework., j I have told many ladies about Gardui and recommend it tp til sick 1 ■womm.” ' Tiy it.:■ V ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ AT Ali DEtfG STORES For Results, advertise in The State Dispatch. It will iT wwm, STATiONARY, . .■ . ‘ . wm, MIUIES. ](E CRFM til Fm, CMI W IB. ^
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 4, 1912, edition 1
5
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