Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Oct. 23, 1912, edition 1 / Page 3
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■gam le W. P. ling tke :emetery, 'e or less, red soil. rust Co. ting. N. C. A 7 J ^■E BEGIN in the iSovemi>er is- a series of ii love-letters writ- T over nfry years to by on€? of our l-ie period of "61 to posterity as having Rts of arms in the Uover as he was a i authentic hisiory fmaii note that no ade: it is war, it is •u simfvly ean't af- Inside- story of the ' and containing all These letters will first to last. Fill |>u forget it. eview lER I One Dollar a Year m PRIZES [lissions to Agents. ^Particulars. Review ic. 39ti) St., New lork se in Thcl will pay. SMARTS thout pain or low far raised tnd they will will be left, the MOLE or rs in about six ving the skin $l,OObottles. >lain case, aecom senoueh remedy LES or WARTS, e GUARANTEE WART, we wiii ‘eii.^Hcola Fla. is bodys :rs by the “Piedmont r. Will you? i'ith us. 1ST CO. mt, Drth Carolina. New Fall Goods See the large arrival of new fall goods which we are receiving. Our selection is the most Complete we ever handled. Coat Suits A coat suit that will fit perfectly, and which is made of the best of goods^ made by the best of workmanship is the kind we have to show you. An inspec tion will prove our merits. Millinery, Millinery, Millinery Our milliners are kept extremely the fall season having opened with the opening of the millinery season Come in and look at these beautiful fall and winter styles. Straw Vife. V -if- WMfe Girl To Her Moiher. L B. Whitted (uriington, N. C. I imii >w> if~iai NO TROUBLE in meeting prices and tejms of any oth er firm on PIANOS Organs or Sewing Machines Because we know em all and buy the best of each class. See Our $175.00 Piano Ellis Machine & Music Co. Burlington, - - - North Carolina Don’t Suffer! ** 1 had been troubled,«little, for nearly 7 years," writes Mrs. L Fincher, in a letter from Peavy, Ala., ‘'but i was not taken down, until March, when I went to bed and had to have a doctor. He did ail he could for nie, but I got no better. 1 hurt all over, and I could not rest At last, I tried Cardui, and soon 1 began to improve. Now I am la very good hftalfh, and able to do all my housework. TAKE The Woman^Toriic You may wonder why Cardui Is so successftil, after other remedies have failed. The answer is that Cardui Is successful, because it is composed of scientific ingredients, that act curatively on the womanly system. It Is a medicine for women, and for women only. It builds, strengthens, «ad restores weak and ailing women, to health and happiness. If you suffer like Mrs. Fincher did, take Cardui. It will surely do for you, what it did for her. At all druggiste. WfUa to; Udies” Advisory Dei»t. Otettwwoga Me(fldi»» tor Special JtutnuOons. tad 64-page book, “Horn* Treatmeai for Woma, »e»t free. I« I Imperial Tailorings Co. Get Busy Public and come in to the Imperial Tailors. See their nev/ fall line of suits and overcoat^. Only Tailors who make clothes right here and guarantee to please you in every respect. We do cleaning, pressing and remodeling. On board a special train carry ing visitors to the Pennsylvania State College one day this week a straw vote brought these re sults: Roosevelt, Wilson, Tsrft, Debs, Chafin.; A clerk in the state department at Washington has uncovered a record that shows that Colonel Roosevelt has been a friend of the Bull Moose for five years. Some one aske(i the clerk a few days ago why he supposed the Colonel hit upon the words Bull Moose in a speech at Chicago. Here is the document that was produced as an answer: “It is hereby ordered Fire Is land, located approximately in latitude 61 degrees, 15 minutes north, longitude 150 degrees, 15 minutes west from Greenwich, and near the head of Cook Inlet, south of Alaska, be and the same is hereby reserved and set apart for the use of the Department of Agiiculture as a preserve and breeding ground for the Alaska JMoosCii ‘ ‘Theodore Roosevel t. ” With a record of 65 years as a Democrat, Lieut.-Col. Wm. J. Wallace of Philadelphia, has an nounced his intention to vote for Colonel Roosevelt. “i’ve been voting the Demo- craiic Ticket ever since I was 21 and I am S6 now. Roosevelt is a.h( ad of the twoold parties. He is the only real Progressive.” Asa W. Butler of Albany, Mis souri, who was until recently a Republican Elector for the second Congessional District in that state, is the fifth of the Republi can Electors to step off the ticket since the formation of the Repub lican Party. “I have abiding confidence in the ability and stability of the govern Kit'nt of, for and by the people which our sturdy old fore fathers fondly believed they were founding and I am absolutely op posed to this new scheme of governing by committees to which the Republt?an Party seems to have becorr e so strongly commit ted in this year of grace and in sufferable political folly, 1912.” Chicago, Oct. 17~-Jaclc JohfA- son, the negro heavyweight chanipion puglist, whose white wife committed suicide recently, appeared before Chief of Police MeWeeny today to explain hfs relations with Miss Lucile Cam eron, a 19 year old white girl the daughter of Mrs. F. Cameron- Falconet, of Minneapolis, for whom the police had been asked to search by the mother. In a dramatic appeaV Ml'S. Cameron-Falconet told of her failure to get her daughter away from the influence of the negro. She di'scribed her anguish when she learned last Frit ay that her daughter was a frequenter of Joohnson's cafe, her hurried trip here to tescue the girl, her in terviews with the puglist, wKo, she declares, insulted, her and flouted her plea that he give the girl up, Johnson, she said told her he could “get” any woman h^ want ed. “When I found Lucile 1 point ed out the wrong she had done. I pleaded with her. I told her I would give up everything I had in life to get her to go back; and I would go anywhere with her and shield her from criticism back home. She refused to come being apparsatiy under John son's influence. ‘ ‘Then I telephoned the puglist. He said he would send an auto mobile for me' B'riends advised me to see if I couldn’o personally get him to give up my daughter. When the automobile arrived he was in it himself although he said it would be empty. Wht n I entered tne machine I drew down the shades so as not to be seen. This nettled him. “Oh, some of the best white women in Chicago ride in this car,” is what he said to me. I begged Johnson to give my daughter up. He said he would n’t and leered in my face, ‘ ‘We rode to a home on Sherian road where Lucile was staying. She wept and told me she had gone too far to go back. Every once in a while she would walk out of the room with the negrp and talk with him. I left her undecided. Finally she came to ray hotel. We talk ed of how she could become dis entangled. I was convinced at that time that the negro had a hypnotic influence over her. “She went downstairs to use the telephone, she said, and never returned. Johnson told me he would give every dollar he has to hold her. I have appealed to the police, but they say they can do nothing, as Lucile is 19 years old." Johnson made onal^olute den ial of unduly friendly relations with Miss Cameron and that in fatuation for the Cameron girl was one of the causes of the sui cide of Mrs. Etta Duryea John son, his white wife. He declared the girl left her position as cash ier in his cafe for another position and his wife had never seen Miss Cameron. ‘Johnson denies the whole thing,” said Chief McWeeny. Another man who lives at Has- fi’ncr«nn-thp that anytbmg Wrong at Johnsons ti^ngs op nuQSon stated (place be arrested in a hur- out of 49 men in the smokmg ‘ ' A straw vote taken on board the Newark branch train of the Erie Railroad leaving Paterson at 6:30 a. m. one morning this week brought these results which were cheered when they were announc ed: Taft, 2 Wilson, 10 Roosevelt, 22 Word comes from Charles H. Hitchbom, for sixteen years treasurer of the Republican State Committee in Maine, that he has resigned and has informed his former colleagues that from now on he is going to be unhampered in his support of Colonel Roose velt. car. 22 were for Roosevelt 20 “ Wilson 2 “* Taft 5 Undecided. Miss Cameron was taken into custody by the police tonight after she had refused to leave her companions in Chicago and accompany her mother to Minn- I eapolis. She was questioned by Here are two straw votes from - Police Captain NOotbaer and later Illinois: Illinois Watch Company in Sag station for the night. She amon County, Hi Roosevelt Taft Wilson Debs Sagamon Electric Company, Roosevelt, Wilson, Taft, Debs. taken to the South Clark street was her A poll of the passengers on board the Spring Valley express of the Erie Railroad was taken a day or two ago. Voting cards were passed around and signed, with the following result: , Theodore Roosevelt William H. Taft , Woodrow Wilson Eugene V. Debs arrested ,on complaint of 230: mother but not booked. 80! After leaving Captain Noot- 70, baar's office Johnson appealed 12 before Chief of Police McWeeny. He said that Mira. Falconet had 66 communicated with him and told 29 “not to pay any attentions to her 9 daughter.’' Johnson said he as- 9 sured her “there was no cause for her to worry.” ‘ 1 learned that would tend to show that Johnson was to blame in any way for the girl's where abouts,” srid Captain Nootbaar. “I do not know what the police can do as the matter stands.” 92 30 58 2 A canvass of twenty-three vot~ ers in a railroad office at 143 Liberty street New York City, yesterday showed the following result: Roosevelt 15 Wilson. 2 Taft 4 Undecided 2 HE SENIOR PARTNER ym =&turbf|d. The little boy one of the firiii*s travcHij|f men was cnti(^y iU. i llie distracted mot^ . begged th^ her Imsband be no^edr A lj:»ng Distance Bell lelephone call located him^ but he had goile to a neighbpmg to^ to sell goods. ' . Would the Telephone people res(^ Th« Telephoo» people would try. 'Fhiy found l^m and he staited for bMM The Universal ^ellTelephone System » » nai3o>n Keht It seeks the distant pmon for you and locates U is possible. " ' V V By the way, have yon a Bell Teleph»et SOUTHERN BELL tELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY SOMETHING TO WORK FOR V-v' when yon have a home oi your own. You work for yourself then, not a landlord. Why don^t you' realize that your rent will buy a house instead of a receipt if you fto about it the right way. We shall he glad to snow you how. There is no reas on why you sh(»uldnH be living in your own house in less than a DO YOU KNOW ! You are behind on YOUR SUBSCRIPTION. Puts End To Bad Habit. Things never look bright to one with “the blues.” Ten to one the trouble is a slug^sh liver, filling the system with bilious poison, that Dr. King’s New Life Pills would expel. Try them. Let the joy of better feelings end “the, blues,” Best for stomach, liver and, kidneys. 25e. at Free man Drug Co. ,SHINGLES, SHINGLES, SHIN gles. We have just recieved a lot of fine shingles and several car 1 loads of ready finished lumbet.' See us. W. B. Linsey. ; W. E. Sharpe^ Manager I yr *■ ■;' .■» : i: s i s tne way to deseii^ the el egaj^t i^w and Winteif models we have just received. T e scientific modern methlsid of hand tailoring by which every one o£ our garm ents is mad^, as- surs you a proper fit arid workman ship rsurely equal ed and never sur passed. Gome arid have us demonstrate. Great aSsortinent of Ladies, Misses, and Child ren’s coat suits and cloaks. GOUDMAN deckman & ca Good CJoiAea
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
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Oct. 23, 1912, edition 1
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