Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Sept. 25, 1912, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 ’ fain ! W. P. ing the metery, ! or less, red soil. rust Co. / ng, ■, N. C. M. i>i c t- 7 ?v-f>- ) esight wouM ildren’s eyes iter in their atch the kid- gn of pain, blurring, or R HOW SMALL, brin? amine them. It ' misery, and you nave the exact stat& of yoor lEN, S STORE, N. C. NDSEY IBER Ity. ington RC me body lers by the Piedmont ;y. Will you? || with us. JSTCO. ^ ment. North Carolina. | ) I Roosevelt^ 276; Wils^jn, 144 Taft, 20 Reading, Pa., Sept; 19:--in a straw vote taken on the eoniing presidential election at a leauin'g hotf’! here today the result was: Roosevelt, 2;6; WihQn;., 144'? Yai’t, 20, and Debs, 15. FOR Fiae bred, two-year-old COLT APPLY TO J. A. Nicholson, R. F. D.No. Mebane, N. C. ■ Indors iiiOrepn. PoVtlaLTid, Ol’e,, Sept. -19. — Con^ gres^r.ian,. A. W.' Lafferty, nomir natedj)y the Repubiiip'in p^ty for feongresfe ifroni' the S'ecniid Oregon district, \Ws giVen the/iin- dorseiaent of the Progressive party today. LOST OR STOLEN; Bicycle belonging to Mr. G. |[v ^tur€nce Cates was left in front of Barlin- gtonDrug, Co., Thursday noon. The wheel is an Iver-Johns*^/ Black frame and rim with wine colored, }.>erson seat, sprin^^ lo\^’er Set I spring broken and fas tened wiih wire. Initials C. H. C. cut on frame near f ron t wheel. Xiiberal reward will be paid ior return. MOLES and WARTS Removed with MQLESOFF/ without pain^^r danger, no matter how lajrge, or how far rjused about the surface of the skin. And they will never return, and no triice or scar will be Mi. MOLESUFF is applied directly to the MOLL or WART, which entirely disappears in abouc t.ix days, idiling the germ and leaving the sKia smooth and natural. MOLESOFF is put up only in $l,00bottles. Each bottle is neatly packed in a plain case, accom panied by full directions, and contains enoueh remedy to remove eight or len ordinary MOLES or WARTS. We sell MOLESOFF under a positive GUARANTEE if it fails 10 remove your MOLE or WART, wei will' promptly refund the dollar^ JJi.-stributiii,”' 0 nipany Deyt, Pensacola iur, .11 ia. Imperial Tailoring Co. Get Busy Public and come in to thfe Imperial Tailors, See their new fall line of suits and overcoat*?. Only Tailors who make clothes right here and guarantee to please you in every respect.. ' Christian 'SeotiiBient Keeps It .■ Down—■ - Pl^«sideiit Harper To Students. _6,'N.- 'C. ■ Septeihber 16, 1912, , i This morning at the first re gular Chapel Service since the hoirible tragedy at Chapel Hill, President Harper expressed deep regret for the unforttinate oc curence and sympathy for th'e University and the bereaved and isorrowing friends of the, dead and the l^zers and for the hazers and, the hazers themselves. “Buf", Continued President Harper,, ‘ ‘no ambunt of sympathy for those affected by this tragedy should darken our yiaion of the reaVissues involved. Hazing is wrong:, not because young Band ia dead, but because it strikena at one of the.primal constituents of igentility.' A gentleman will not enjoy himself at the expense of another. College nien should never engage in any sort of fun* making in which all the partici pant cannot enter with relish and equally enjoy. * ■^Tt is no excuse for the hazers to say that the death of young Rand accidental. It was accidental in the sense that it was not piremeditated, but it was not accident,aJ in the sense that young Rand was to blame for it. He was forced into the circumstances that led to his death. No citizen has the right to force another to do'anything, save Lydue process of law. '"i he way to stop hazing is to putijii the hearts of the hazers a nigher prinicple. The gospel of Christ, the golden rule, lived in individual hearts, will put an end to it. If the sentiment, the spirit of our L.uil6ges shall become es sentially Christian «re shall see an end ot hazing. _ Hazing can not thrive in a Christian atmosp here and that is why it has never got foot-bail at Elon,' where every student regards every other as his bruLhci'i’* THE 'S' We do cleaning, pressing and remodeling. With the elaborate looking and specially desifned posters and lithographs of SuEi Broters*- Big Shows, seen p .. the local bill boards arid dead walls announcing their appearance here on Thurs day, October 10. there are many to receive tiie old contention that the tende4 ^show harma a in what it takes away from li. The ^pier considers that isthan^^^ show brings, to say nothing of the show dollars behin^iiff thie naturepf 'ffeeS bills, licens4 fees and other forms q£ :i^q claims, the voiume of fun ipdlSe-^ light bequeathered to the amsiief- mentlovmg element of ciijze#; ship . biihi^ i!is in debt to , tht showijii^n. ,;-W -,■ I' We despise tbei cynidii ^wling that is provok^ by the oceasidba'j invasion of folks who earn their living by exeirising iheir talents of making the wori^i happier. The. n^h w^h^^ the patroiptism is Himself a, very poor pattern of the virtue tha;t ‘i he preaches. The Sun Brother’s Shows are making thmr twentieth annual tour, and they are bring ing this Reason the greatest amusement effort of their long managerial carrieer. There is a greater collection of wild bea^tp, trained animal novelties ano many star European and Ameri can perfdrmers. The show gives two complete' and unabriclged ' pei forniajrc■ s daily, in fair or rainy weaciiei, at 2and 8 p. m, On tlie mon.mg^ of show day and on the exiiibi- tion grounds,-directly in the front of the" main extrance, will be .pieaehted upion ' a niagnirlceiK scale a Series of “thniiei ” iree exhibitions. "\A- ■ -i*! The Case of LaFollette. TEACHER Wanted.—The school committee of Shoffner’s, school vtill meet in the near future to decide uppn a teacher for the scno »i. Any one desiring to make appncation should address syme t i ^ r, jci. L. shoffner, Bur lington N. C., K. F. p. 10: OcL l-2"3"4^ The management is every effort to make this year of the quarter of a Centurjr of Fair’s in Alamance Coun have secured some of the attractions that it is be clean Everything will high plain. are best free to get. on a and U Sll at a t Don’ll forget the date. Wednesday, Oct. 2nd Gonfetefate vetarans day. Free admission and dinner to all veterans.' Clay idols crack. Among the Progressives of note, Who, since the orgahifzation of the party bn a national scaled haye not con nected themselves 'with it, no case is more regretable, and irom some points of view, more pathe tic ti an that of Robert M. L^ol ictit of Wiscos^sin. ' * His present course, bitter and vindictive toward the* new pstfty, affoids unfortunate proof that his career, excellent enough up lo a certain time, had in its im- impulses more of tne personal equation than to regard for the general welfare. ^ A feehng cif sympathy and re gret was manifested through the country oin the occasion of the Senator’s; loss of self-control in his Philadelphia sp^ch, which feeling has very generally, chang ed 10 one of surprise and dis- countenance. His present atti tude is that of a disappointed man; bne who, failing haiserably in his a^nbition,, appwently for gets that gen^r^ principles are at stake in this campaign, that they are of tremendous and oyer- topping iiaportance as compared with the political welfare of the individual, and that, statespien and politicians, like other men in other fields, must ^subordinate their own desires to circumatan- ces and the needs of the occasion. Mr. LaFollette Has failed under the test. , As a matter of simple fact. Senator LaFollette b^an to over estimate himself atah’early date; he imagined himseli a popular idol with the people of the entire country, when, in reality, ‘his popularity and his force was con fined largely to, hjs own state. He is' npt of the growth from which comes presidential timber. Locallyi'he had done well, ac complishing many desirable things, but in a national way, his influence was almost impercepti ble. Yet this man dreamed of a I presidential nomination; that de nied him, he exhibited, nothing of vvhat is popularly called “the sporting spirit.” He did. not ac- ct'pt defeat gracefully. On the' conirary, he has turned venom- oufly upon'the great new parLy: seeking to nmKeposdibie’thepoli- ■tieni y.v!£G«eratioa of i.ho count.t.-y, aiui; do i\u’ a* he eaii proauco-r;> i-iuts. jH strivir;g ,to-harn.pei- lita. iiiauon in its p’a^-rrjsa.' Ua I lortvmacoiy ft. r Mr, . LaFoIlei,i;e, ^ ! the aninius-ot hiii couise' id wx) ' widely uitderaiood. .He cannofe. injure the Progressive ^afty. The enveaomed assaults ot a dis- .appointed man lack effective ness, because of their very na ture. They are-lost in a great, national campaign. LaFollette’s day is of the past. , ' • srijd'we-Ojip^ ' ^glnis' in' Distance BeU :Telepb^e» die ciuci (It ■thfe',pj^ralipn:5arr^^ Tie i ww tfred ■■ -y- ■1: abUity, of the t^luvei^ %idgi| tiraeirad'«pa£e; ' ^ By the way; lat* ^ t ^IfTREiN l^EUL. TEIl^BCiNE AND on to for one our contestanfs. bk'rt received of MissQpri nitres and mides^ All young and gooi workm.: Famer^^ if yp need a go>d Kv.- Jesse Tickle, Burliii^t^ N.C A New York fugitive threw dollar bills over his shoulder, but the pursuing policemen did riot stop. Perhaps the bills were too small. . . ' m b,e '^vitiiciEt a k fruit in at tfe.. rare Mine-■III' M 5^:; A W..E. Sha^e, Mi^ager
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
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Sept. 25, 1912, edition 1
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