Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Oct. 16, 1912, edition 1 / Page 5
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Anolhiiir Kooseveit. “*'i>>i!lii|ji ill ? 0. ffice. 90 Irn No. 4311 |5 cents DRESS ispecial new rnghty pret- ^ur miilinery 10 see our |r purchases want to be stire what's on the bottle ‘is’ in the bottle om” prescriptions with the utmost accuracy. pREEiViANI DRUG CO phone 20 \gents for Burlington, N. C, Eastman Kodak films, Huylers Candy, Rexall goods, j Van Lindlev's cut flowers. Nyall Family Remedies, C'loc^l PERSOMj^lI Don’t forget when you come to tjwn and pay us that dollar >,Tew Turnip Seeds at Burling- t.on for sale Hogs, shoats and pigs. Robert Ray, Graham, N. C. y~y George Phillips and Miss vva Pennington *kn excellent Lr.o- couple of Glencoe were Uvriei* at the Baptist parson- "oe here last Sunday afternoon. "jlev. S. L. Morgan preached aMiit ncoe to a larga congrega- ias' Sunday afternoon and bDiized nine persons into the n,emiorship of the Glencoe Rev, S. L. Morgan has accept- ^,jiaf pastorate of the First Church of Henderson N. i ' ind expects to move to N. G., some time in Vovi'tr.ber. A pulpit committee has beer, appointed by the church lere and an effort will be made to fiiii the vacancy promptly. Special y;03pel meeteing-} at the Refoi-md Church begining next Sundav evening at 7:15 special o-os) ef services will be heldthro- ug’;i u;e entire week.Rev Dogan i'Cox.^on of the late loham Gox ■iviri assist the pastor in these meetings. He will be here on Sun day night So you are invited to be at the first service. All the members and friends interested in the music are requested to m- eet at the Chnrch at 7:30 P. M. Saturday. Miss Flora Sharp of Burlingt on R.F.D.No.4 is the guest of ber brother, Mr. Luther and relatives this week. Mr, Ed Greeson of Julian. R, j No.l Gilford County spent Sund-; ay theguest of Miss Blanche Gr- | eeson. j W A.!ATED—Good ablebodied man to cut cord wood, apply to F. L. Reniger. Miss VernaCates of Oxford spe nt the guest of her pareifts Mr and Mrs J.W.Cates. Miss Bessie Zachary who has been the guest of Miss Bertha Cates and other friends left Tu esday morning for I^leigh to vi sit after which she will return to her home in Florida. Notice of Sale of Real Estate. By virtue of the power contain ed in a certain deed in trust ex ecuted to the Centeral Loan & Trust Co. Trustee on the 27th day of October, 1910, by R. L. Blackwell and wife Dora B. Blackwell, and duly registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Alamance X)oanty, N. C.. in Book No, 50, page 296 to secure the payment of a certain note therein recited, default having been made in the payment oc' said note and the holder thereon, having applied to us to make sale of the real estate therein con veyed, in accordance with the conditions in said deed in trust, we will expose to public sale to the highest bidder for each, at the Court House Door in the County of Alamance, N. C., on the 16th day of November, 1912, Saturday, at the hour of 12 o’clock, the land of conveyed in said deed in trust, to wit: A certain tract or parcel of land lying and being in Morton's Township, bounded oii tne Nortti by Robert Maynard, ou the East by T. B. Barker, on the South by J. R. Gwyn and on the West by the remainder of the Jacob Som ers estate, if ather of LaveniaTate, being the same land conveyed by will of Jacob Somers to his dau ghter, Lavenia Tate. For furth er description see will referred to and book of mortgage deeds of Alamance County, No, 50, page 296. This the 16th day of October, 1912. Central Loan & Tru%t Co., Trustee. Death of Wiiliatn Boon WilH?im Boon a prominen.t.and highly respected verteran of R. F. D. No. died Thursday Octo ber 10th at his home after an il Iness lasting only a few hours. was 66 years old. He was buried Saturday at Bethel funeral servic^8 being conducted by Rev. A. F. [sley also a veteran. The nail bearers were all veteran: J. H. Ross, J. M. Ross, J, M. Story, Benjamin Perry, J. F. Suttenand Sid Mansfi'eld. The Pioneer B^nk. Of Alamaiioe Oounty CAPITAL ANP ^UHPLU-5, $135000 83W!..U $ IT IS YOUR DUTY To make your WILL'^Don^t leave your wife and children at tlie mercy of someone unknown to you or them. If you donH appoint an executor, the Court will. An individual ex ecutor may die and your family may suffer. MAKE VS YOUR EXECUTOR Place your affairs in the han4s of trust de partment. We are a permanent organization and especially equipped for this business. WE ARE REJPoN-5]&LE-PERMANENr and we will appreciate your bus?ness, wheth- 1 11 1 Z*. As A companion piece to the composite lory portrait of Col. Roosevelt, presented in those columns yesterday, we offer to day a contrasting view of his character and achievements, this sketch eing also contributed by several hands. We think this is no more than fair. Our presentation of the Tory picture was as complete as spice would allow. . Single epi thets make but single hnes in the portrait; we did justice to the artists by grouping more than one hundred into a harmonious whole, from the delicate shading of “hypocritical and dangerous demagogue" to the robust color ing of. “neurotic," “anarchist" and “maniac" Now we purpose to hang a pendant likeness, com mending to the public a study of the two examples of portraiture. First wo shall quote ^from Dr. Lyman Abbott’s “Theodore Roosevelt Ai I See Him," in^thej current Outlook. If it be object-, ed that he is a partisan, by that] objection he acquires the samei authority as Mr. Taft, Mr. Debs and the Tory newspapers have on the other side. Answering the frequent charge that ui mar»> oJ! his public acts Roosevelt “trampled on the con stitution," Doctor Abbott cites this fact: “During his terms as governor of New York and as presiUeiu no excutive act of Mr. Rootevelt's and no legislative which he recommended has ever been decLred unconstitutional by the courts." As to peisonal traits the close associate of the “blatant demagogue" and “madman" of the Tory .press sees him thus: Mr. Roosevelt abhors that w,hich is evil. He hates with a perfect hatred impurities, meannesses, falsehoods, shams, dishonesties. He is fightit.g honest, * * * It is true that he is rash, heedless or impetuous. Present any problem to him, and he instantly sees all its coiiditions and forms his judgment, not without careful thoughout, but without the delay involved in deliberation. I have not always at first agreed with him, but wheii I have given to the problem the deliberate study which my temperament requires, I have come either to the con clusion that Mr. Roosevelt was correct or that the difference be tween us was less than I had thought. The key to his charcter is his vital interest m his fellowmen. * * * This spirit makes him the fellow of all sorts and conditions of men at once a cultivated gentle man and a thoroughgoing demo crat. It is a spirit not only of interest in his fellow-men, but of respect for them. His belief in the common people is not merely a pohtical principle; it isaiunda- mental faith. This faith makes him the reverse of opinionated or headstrong. Doctor Abbott recalls the time of Roosevelt’s decision to make this fight. We all thought ^he campaign would be ar forlorn hope. We all believed that could Mr. Roose velt remain in retirement till 1906 Progressive principles would be certain of victory. But we all agreed that he no option but to accede. * * ♦ He entered on the campaign at the call of honor, when ambition ease and personal inclinations ail combined in urg ing him to resist the call. Thirteen years of increasingly intimate acquainance with Col.- Roosevelt has steadily deepened niy affection for him personally, my esteem for his character and my admiration for his political genius and his public services. Close observation for thirteen years has failed to disclo.se to Dr. Abbott the “hypocrisy," “inde cency" and “blackguardism" in Roosevelt which are so patent to Tory critiec Let us leave him in his blindness. Let us hear testimony from other quarters'. Roosevelt is now a candidate for the presidency. He is oppos ed and denounced on the ground that he is mentally and morally unfit for that office. This is what the Washington Post, now a leading Taft organ, said when he had completed his term The foremost man jof his time passes into private life. Mr. Roosevelt’s pioneership in a hundred different ppths; his bolu attack upon long-established evils his impregnable place in his hearts of the people—these have made him an ideal model and pat tern for shoals of counterfeit “reformers" and imitators. The more Theodore Roosevelt was tested by fae and found to be pure gold the more e^ger vvere chariatantb lu imitate him. The esteem and gratitude of the American people will follow Mr. > Roosevelt to Africa, aud all pat riotic men will wish that in due time he may return and devote his remarkable ■ powers to the welfare of his country. It was of the man who is the, target of unparalleled abuse that John Hay, great secretary of state said this: Of gentle birth and breeding, yet a man of the people in the best sense; with the training of a scholar and the breezy acces sibility of the ranchman; a man of tha library and of a man of the world; a soldier and a state ment; a reader and a writer; h maker of history; one who never did and never could turn his back on a friend or an enemy. A man whose merits are so great that he could win on his merits alone, whose personality is &o engaging that you lose sight of his merits. Hear another distinguished cit izen, now an enemy of Roosevelt: No people can maintain a free government who do not in iheir hearts value the qualities which have made Theodore Roosevelt conspicous among the men of his day as a type of noble manhood. God grant that those qualities of brave, true manhood shall have honor throughout America shall be heldafor an example in every home and that the youth of generations |to come may grow up and feel that it is better than wealth or office or power to have the honesty, the purity and the courage of Theodore Roosevelt. Men say he is not safe. He is not safe for the men who wish to prosecute selfish schemes for the public’s detrimen. He is not safe for the men who wish to drag the president into a corner and make whispered arrange ments which they dare not have known to their constituents. But I say to you that he has -been as president the greatest .conserva tive force for the protection of properly and our institutions since the day of Washington, I would rather have my boys Continued on page 4. vA, TTV TTAIX ^ w large or small, and give it our most caie- full attention. STATES GOVERNMENT DEPOSITORY UNITED les and very New and Pretty Styles in Hats, Beavers, Velours, Velvet Shapes, French felts, and a Number of otfaersthai are Very attractive Our large line of school hats for girls is just what you want in styles and prices. The best $1 you have seen. Excellent values in boys liats. Hair ribbons a specialty. Ask to see the. Royal Society Embroi dery. Morrow, Bason & Green Burlington, N. C. mm mm I Coonicht I90f, it C. E. 2immermaa Cp.-.-K«. ^ ■fast Dollars pile upi on top of the other; and the habit oi saving, acquired so easily, is Con stantly stimulated by the ever in creasing effect of interest The First Cabbage, Potatoes, Applesv 'ay^ Corn, Oats, Meal, Flour, Cottonseed, * ' ■ Mealand hulls I N . .. ' • ' All kinds fruit, produce. Merchants Supply Ckii. Wholesale DistriliiitQis, Melrose, Dan Valley, and Gold Medal Floor. house I- For the Sale of Leaf Tobacco are now ready to sell your tobac' CO. We have gone to a big expense to fix for you, and now we wsrt? a part of your trade, we ha ve the interest of the market at heart and we are here to work for the benefit pf the farmer. Every pile of tobacco is under our personal care and we are here to see that you get the top market price, when n Burlington with Or without tobacco stop at the Farmers’ ware house where you will be welcome, we have one of the best warehouses ih the statCi so let us thank you in advance for what you can do for us. All tobac co, we think, is high as We ever saw, and we think now a good time to sell. Hoping to see you soon at the ]Farm- ers’ Warehouse, we are, yours to Work, P.s. Room. Good stalls and Camp ^ IT IS gK SliNBffi, SnNiUH, TIMH SUBS, UNIiaK^ IIS.
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 16, 1912, edition 1
5
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