Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Sept. 10, 1913, edition 1 / Page 3
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Tar Jumbo Bananas Pure Wheat Bran Best Grade Shipstuff Best Bread Meal Best Patent Flour Best Straight Flour Best Timothy Hay White Clipped Oats Horse and Mule Feed Sucrene Dairy Feed B;st Table Salt Best Chicken Feed Table Irish Potatoes Granulated Sugar ‘ all-Mason Fruit Jars Jelly glasses jar rubbers, all kinds candy, chewing gnm. '^uear House molasses, pure apple vinegar, and Beet Pulp the best dairy feed on earth. MERCHANTS’ SUPPLY CO. ii 4i 44 a n ii (I ii For The Atlanta Journal Daily, Sunday $c Semi- Weekly Circulation Soutli of Baltimore Largest BY MAIL U——B—MBBittHff Wi'rri whi—a—? A Remington I Daily & Sunday $7.00 per annum Daily only 5.00 Sunday only 2.00 Semi-weekly 1.00 All the News! All the Time!! Plus VjsiWe Wriima and AiidmB Typewriter ) Here is the machine which will do everytliing that any typewntter has ever done; whjch will writs straightaway or tabulate, in one.or many- oolumns; which. will, do any tabiUair work, however intricate, with the speed of ordinary writing; Which will write and add, and add when it writes, in one column Of as many columns as the pafKr will hold; Which will subtract as easily as it adds, in «I1 or any columns where adding is done; , . Which is a complete biUinfe tabulating, adding and subtracting machine—all in one; Which is also a complete atiditing machine—accurate itself and exacting accuracy from thoss who use it, which will dstcct errors and prwffnif errors as well; ■ . W'hich establishes a new «tandard of tiine Mid labor saving m every variety of combined writing and adding work. Re m i ngto n Adding and Subtracting Typewriter (Wahl AdHing Mechenism) Remingrton Typewriter Company 610E.MoiDSt.,li:E!)Mii.Va. J. D. & L B. Whitted The Aimnal Summer Qearance Sale of Ladies suits, White goods, Emby, I’is- sue, Silks, Shirt waists, Straw hats, Ladies trim hats and shapes. All of these goods are from our ovra stock, offered the first time, today, at Greatly Reduced Prices. The values in this clearance sale are such as should invite immediate purchases. The gar ments are qualities that no one will hes-. itate over before purchasing, there is no need for tMs, as every one is from our own stock—nothing better. le Store for Values J. D. S L B. Farms (.wAhv 1S3 acre red land farm 1-2 mile South of Mebane. 100 acre red land farm 2 miles South of Mebane. 200 acre red land farm 2 miles West of Mebane. 240 acre gray tobacco land farm 10 miles North of Mebane« N. C. 41 acre red land farm between Mebane and Swep- sonville, N, C. 126 acre gray land farm 1 mile of Elon College. 80 acre gray land farm at Glen Raven, N. C. 191 acre gray land farm at Glen Raven, on the macadam road. If you want a good farm, write or caO on the Central Loan & Trust Co. W. W. Brown, Manager Burlington, - - North Carolina I- '‘ti.;'' v WKENEVER HOB EO A EEBEMl TflmC ■ M teOVE’S The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic is Equally Valiiable as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver, Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System, For Grown People and Children, Yon know what yon are taking when you take Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic as the formula is printed on every label showing that it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININES and IRON. It is as strong as the strongest bitter tonic and is ii^ Tasteless Form. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills an,d Fever, Weakness, general debility and loss of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. Removes Biliqusness, without purging. Relieves nervous depression and low spirits. AronseS" the liver -to action, and purines the blood. A True Tonic and Sure Appetizer. A Complete Strengthener. No faxoily ^onld be without it. Ooaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it, 50c. h iirck Of Alltel Tha^ Is Hmtied Away. , Co^tic()Ok, Quebec, Sept, 3 —Harry K. Thaw priced ; oat of the Shebrooke jail on a >:writ of habeas cor^s obtairied by a coupe of William Triiyesi Jerome, enjoyed thi^e bf liberty this afternoon and then was seized by the Dominion immigra tion authorities and hustled by automobile to this little town where tonight he e^c^ the floor in the immighitioh detention room. ' Tomorrow morning a special board of injury will s0 in his case and by night he may be thrust across the Vermont bor der as an undesirable alien. It wasgeneraly predicted tonight that before many hours Thaw would be back in the Matteawan asylum from which h6 escaped Sunday August 17. The beginning of the end of Thaw’s refuge in Canada came with dramatic swiftness ' A writ of habeas corpus sued out last Saturday at the direction of Jerome, with John Boudreau, chief of police pi this, village as petitioner was sustained by Matthew Hutchirison, Superior judge of this district at Stf Fran cis, sitting in chambers at Sher brooke. Stolid, p. Hid, numb* Thaw sat not five feet from the judge as he read thfe decision. When in the very last paragraph the court declared him a free man, Thaw seemed to crumple up on the lounge where he sat. A cigar stump fell from his left hand and from hiis right flutter ed two gay bits of ribbon a child had given him. , But he did not rise. W. K. McKeown, of bis counsel, leaned over and patting him on the shoulder, wHs>ered. Thaw rai sed his big, staring eyes and stood up. Immigration officers moved near him and then Thaw beg slowly to mov6 to the door. At the threshold Assistant Superin tendent Eoberson, of the immi gration Bureau, said simply: “Come with i^s, Mr. Thaw.” And without a word, except horse goodbye to the reporters. Thaw obeyed. A few minutes later a gray roadster streaked away from, the courthouse. In the back seat was Thaw, H had nit feyen beenjjiVen tjjiiie pack his scanty belongings anc ;^olumiLoas correspohdeht’eMh his cell. In an hour he was i^fere in Coatieook guarded in th^ det ention room by two; stalwar Porninioh police None bat coun sel was allowed id see him. I The 23 mile tripovfer was with Out special incident. Thaw ex pressed no suprise^ evinced nt grief. Behind him trailed his aefeted lawyers. i Thirty-fIve tt'dtiohs |iliye join ed in appro vitig the i^enera) con- yention^ designed to prevent traffic in habit forming drugai, according to the rep^ of Dr. Hamilton Wright who, with Loyd Bryce, Ameirican minister at the Hague, represented the United States at the recent in* nernational opium conferences (leld at the Hague. It is for congress to say, says the Flint ournal, whether or not the a€> ion of our representatives mak* ing this country one of the thir- ty-five signatories to the agree ment shall be ratified. How great has been the spread of the opiuin habit was only sur mised up to the time of the rec ent conference. , It developed here that while the vice had aj most enslaved the whole people of China, its tentacles ha^ve been :‘astehed upon, a very large por- don of the movement, such af las been proposed, would prac- iicaily abote the evil, and undou- setedly congress will consent to this couptry participating ia isuch a movement. Not .to do so would be retrogressive. ’ '1‘he ac tion taken by the thirty-five nations is a new evidence of the uplifting tendency of modem civiliza,tion and a recognition of, modern ci vilization and a recog nition of the fact that nations at men roalize their duties to hun>- anity,—Battle Creek Enquirer* Corn Croip Damaged. The Fiifst Soap. Who invented soap? Accord ing to Pliny, soap was an inven tion Of the Gkuls, who used it for giving a bright hue to the hair. He also states that it was enipioyed by the Germans both as a medidnal and as a cleans ing agent, t wo kinds being used' hard and soft. There is reason to believe that it was introduced into Germany by the Romanai, though on this point there i* . some difference of opinioit. . Homer tells us in the “Odyss eythat Naiisicaa, daughter of Alcinous, king of the Peaecian?^ and her attendants washed clo thes by ; treading upon them • with their feet in pits of water* . so that apparently she and heir servants were unacquaantei with the use of soap. - The fact that soap ; was obtain- ; able ;by boiling together .oily, or .a'ty substances ana alifcais was ^ know n at t.n ekirly period 6t‘ his- ’ tory, fiut it must be bofii'e in mind that the substance’-inferr ed in. the Old Testament • and translated “soap” . (Jeremiah U 22j ’‘For though thou ■ wasfe thee withniter-pi opierly, natrioni- soda- and take thee much ^oap, '* and Malachi iv, 2, i : “For he ii ’ like a refiner's fire and like Durham, Sept. 3. —Durham has been all day in the grip o the worU rain and windstorm ihat it has experienced in jears and a great deal o^f damage has been done to crops> The >ind has also damaged some o: the buildings in the city. J large number of treas have been blown down and some o the telephone wires have been displaced. Following a nig-ht that was clear, the rain began to fall this morning before 5 o'clock 4nd, accompanied by heavy wind, has falleh steadily for the past eight hours. All of the cheeks and streams of the com munity are over their banks, and the crop of lowland corn if flooded and badly damaged b> the water. The tobacco farmers of Dur ham County have saved the greater part of their crop, for hiost of them had completed their (Cutting Monday and Tues day and this crop was in barns. However theso farmers have suffered almost a complete loss of their crop, for they have tak en all their help during the past Woods Turnip Seed by Weight And Ice Cream While You Wait at Burlington Drug Co, The Dispatch Only $L00 Per Yr. or 6 MoDths 50c. two weeks to get the tobacco^ cut, and very little of the com and fodder had been taken care of- ' ' ' ■■ , While the lowland corn has been Washed by the water ifi streams, the cOrn planted On the hills has been bloWn arid terribly cut up by the wind. Hardly a a stalk in the county was stand ing this afternooin. That part of the fodder which had been pulled had not been taken in, and this \vas damaged j by the rain, The fodder still on the stalk has been split into I'shreds. Some of it, will -be har- I vested, but the dam^fge is g^eat, and the indications are that ! Durham County farmerg, or at ! least some of them, will have to ! buy roughage for the coming ^Winter. Culler’s ^ soap”) refer to the alkali itself and not to the sub stances prepared fromioily Dod- ies and these alkaline matters. The French word for soap (savon) is supposed to have been drived from the fact Of its hav ing been manufactured at Savo na, near Genoa. The manufacture of soap, be gan in London in 15154, before which time it^aij supplied tar Bristol at a penny per pound. A duty was imposed on soap 1721, but after several reductione was totally repealed in 1853. London Jbuinai. Seventeen-inning Gaoie was Playi- ed at Ulwrty. Liberty, Aug. 13.—In one of the fastest games ever witnessed on the local diamond the fast West End team, Greensboro defeated Liberty by the score of 5 to 1 alter 17 innings of hard and fast play Saturday. Biloro, West End’s classy southpaw, had the Liberty men at his mercy throughout the entire game, be* ing credited with 16 strikeouts. InthelSth in*>ihg, after twxj were out, C. Bowman drew four balls, stole second and bcoi eo , first run of the game oi; long single to left. Liberty tied the score in their half of the lSth. In'the 17th three hits, two error* and a wild throw enabled West End tO'score four runs. This is the second game that Liberty has l(»t this season. Batteries: West End, Bilbro and Lamb; Liberty, Hobson and Langley. LIST OriiNCLAIMED LETTERS in- Post office at C ; Aug. 30, im Remainin: Burlington,‘ G'ENfiEMSiiif’: Ladies:-^;"'; ^ Perabh^'^Uing fof any of thes€ letters will pltiase say “Adver tised,” and give date of adver^ tised list. I F. L* Williamson, P. M; , *■ iiiii
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1913, edition 1
3
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