Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Oct. 26, 1915, edition 1 / Page 4
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fP^^PiPSi • .'^ !•/" • -c ' . ' a-, -- ..'-y nmm-i-iwi deal; »nd while we have assertecl rij^its, we have been also to perform duties and exereise privileges of sut- ^Miiihi a £tct7 Taeadar aad FiMst '■■■■'■ By SIk Stite Piibiisluiic C*., cor and helpfulnesa which shpuld serve N. C. ! to demonstrate our desire to make the of friendship Ofbe. First FImt. Waller BuiUtBg. offices TelepiMM N«k 265. So^eeriptitm, One DoUsr per payable m iftrsMe; AU coBMiuiikatSoM ia i«tttd t« tfitfcer aeiw itewa «r fcttifM HMt- t«ii ikwM be ttitvml: to th* Staie patck PehlWNt 42b., 114. w»t t* iadiTMwt w«awite with the pa- Att.VMwii iMm AUm it tafwtaBce lijr^tbe .wsSter, 4t th* MnMMiidaBts. 1 cMaiaiaaiea- luat be tiAed Sttbuei&elM wOl take wMice th«t m («r mbaeri^imi f«r The SUt« ' 1 will be hotwred at thi* «Aee it ia noaibefed witti stMiipcd Eiitei^ aa seeond-^laiM iaatter Maj lA, 1908, at the pomt blBee at BsrUnfton, Korth Carohna, iiadcr the . Act of (^gresK of Ma^ S, 1S79. IXVITATION TO ATTEND. Committee' Meeting in Raleigh on Xovejniwr 17th. A meeting of the Republican Exe cutive Committee is called at Baleigh on Wednesday, November Ivth at 2 F. M. , The purpose of this meeting is t'j co.isider the calling of a Sta,te Con vention and such other raattei-s as ore rendered necessary by the new Legalized Primary Law, All Anti-Democratic voters ajid all who expect to oppose Democracy in the State in the coming election are most cordially invited to attend this meeting and participate in its delibci- ations. An object of the meeting is to dis cuss the poUtical situa,tion in the State generally and to form a more perfect union of the various political elements that are Anti-Democraiic. Th* Cotnmlttee most earnestly seeks the aid and advice of every one who will labor for a return of the nation to the principles of protection that haVe so greatly blessed our people in the past and is their best hope for the fvktrir«. With National victory practically assured we wirii to pat this State in- ,tp the progressive column and Return t3 efficient and economical govem- ment. Without reference to how you voted in the last election, we desire 'your presence and ,the benefit of your counsel and ask you to join us in ^mmon cause against a common enemy. Come and bring your friends with jrou. Respectively, FKANK A. UNNEY, Ch’m. THANKSGIVING DAY PROCLAM.V- TION OF PRESIDENT WOOD- KOW WILSON. Washington, Oct. 21.—President Wilson in a |>rociamation designating Shursaay, November 25 as Thanks giving Day, called attention to the fact that the United States has been at peace while most of Europe has lieen at war. “We have been able to assert our rights and the rights of mankind with out breach of friemUiip wiiJh the great nations with whom we have had to deal,” said the president. The text follows: “It_ has long been the honored custom of oar people to turn in the fruitful autumns of the year in praise and thanksgiving to Almighty God • for His many blessings and mercies - to US as a nation. The year that is now drawing to a close since we last observed our day of national thanks giving has been, while a year of dis cipline because of the mighty forces of war and of changes which have disturbed the world, also a year of special blessing for us. Aosther Year of Peace VOneh- sftfed Us. ; “Another year of pe:'.e has been ‘Vouchsafed as; another year in which not only to take thought of our duty t» otirselves and to mankind hnt also to adjnst ourselves to the man^ re- ilponsibUities thrust upon us by a war ‘which' : tlM wholi ^ £nm]>e, '%e'M^’'been*M>le to ai# ami oDr richtv^Stf^^nkind withoi4 of frieadaiiip ^ grmt the means of truly disinterested and unselfish ser- “Our ability to serve all who could avail themselves of pur service in the {Aidst of cnsises has been increai^dj 1y a gradious Providence, by more nd, more abundant criifts; our ample ^hancial resources have enabled us |o steady inarlce^ of -the i^rld iiifi facilitate necessary movement of commerce which war mighr othierwise haVe rendered impossible; and our people have come more and inore io a sober realization of the part they have -been called upOn to play in a time when air the world is shidten by unparalleled distresses and disasters. ‘‘The extraordinary circumstances of such a time have done much to quicken our national consciousness and deepen and confirm our confidence Iii the principle of peace and freedom by which we liave always sought to be guided. Out of darkness and per plexities have come firmer counsels off policy and clearer perceptions of the essential -welfare of the nation. We have prospex'ed while other people Were at -wax', but our prosperity has been vouchsafed us, we believe, only that might the tetter perfovrci the functions which war rendered it im possible for them to perform. *'Xow, therefore.. I, Woodiow Wil son, president of the United States of America, do hereby designate Thurs day, the twenty-fifth of November ne.'it, as a day of thanksgiving and prayer, and invite the people through out the land to cease from their wont ed occupations and in their several homes and places of worship render thanks to A Imighty God. “In witness whereof I have here unto set my hand and caused the sea! of the United States 10 be affixed. “Done at the City of Washington this twentietii day of October in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fifteen and of the inde pendence of the United States of America the one hundred and fortieth. By the President; WOODROW WILSON." aOBERT LANSING, Secretary of State. 'gk&BCE KBlECiS AWSBT OF- ip'EK OF CYPRUS TO AID SW* BfA; BBrriSH WARSHiP^ BOMQARD BUbLAR POR'f; RUSSIANS TAJtE IjSm s^mAn$ Bwlgat'isii Array Advances South of StiiuttiM, SerbisoA, F^^rced Back— Teutons Repulsed on Eaatera Front —King Co^antiMe** Rcfm^ t» Accept ConeeSsiaBS of Entoite Pow ers Believed Definitei Bat Eakirfed. Allied Force at Salaailti is Expect ed to Alter Attttvde. LET US GtVE THANKS. President Wilson’s Thanksgiving proclamation is in his best style. He has appearsd to be in excellent .'pirits lately attd his buoyant feeling is re jected decorously in his summons to the people of the United States to give thanks. The President has personal reasons for thankfulness. He has not for more than a half a year had Cci’sresson his hands, 6 body which has a disturbiiig ir.fluence on Presidents generally. Mexico, which kept him waiting and watching so long without results, is at last in a condition which, at least, promises some truce to its capacity for chronic irritation. The disastrous effects of the Wilson tariff which were rapidly bringing it into great disrepute were obscured and in large part avoided by the check on imports caused by the Eiiropean war. The country remains at peace and the President had had rather the best cf it in his long debate with the Imperial Government of Germany on the con London, Oct. 22.—The Gi^k gov- mcnt has inforined the quadruple, en tente powers that; it does not. see its way clear at present to accept the proposals, including session of Cyprus and other cpncessions. qffecied in re turn for Greek militr-ry co-opcralion with Serbia. . While Greece’s refuel of the offe is definite so far as the present is concerned, it is felt by London com mentators that a materiel strengthen ing of the entente allii^ contingent ::t Salontki would have a material in fluence upon the attitude even of the Greek government. It is also believed by observers here that Greece cannot persist in her present ambiguous posi tion and that public opinion which is generally understood to favor the en tente allies, jirobably will exercise its influencB, U. S. MILITARY ATTACHE TO GO ,WAl»i}r«S ASS F«l«t«b Bt TO 8EKBUN FRONT. BR1T1.SH SHELL BULGARS. London, Oct. 22.—The British Medi terranean squadron today bombarded the Bulgarian port of Dedeaghatcii, in the .Aegean sea, according to a tele gram from Sofia, received by Reuter’s Telegram Company by way of Am sterdam. Athens, via London, Oct. 22.—It Is officially announced that a bombard ment of the Sulgarinn co«st from Dedeaghatch to Porto Lbgoe, a dis tance of 38 miles, was begun by the Allied fleet yesterday. Sofia, Oct. 23.—(via London)-7-No damage wCb done by the bombard ment of t)edeaghatch by the allied fleet. r» U. S. DYESTUFF3 TO BE GUARD ED AFTER CLOSE OF WAR IN EUROPE. nr. E. E. Pratt, Chief of Bureau for Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Oatlines Adminiatiratkan’s Plan to Safeguard .\meiiccn Prodacta gainst Competition Froai Abroad, New York, Oct, 22.—Administratio.i plans for the protection of th« new dyestuff industry, and other American entei-prises from a disastrous ■^ooj foreign competition at the close of the European war were outlined here to night by Dr, E. E. Pratt, Chief of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, in a speech before the Society cf Chemical Industry, The problem has been thoroughly considered. Dr. Pratt said, by the De partment of Commerce and the Fed eral Trade Commission and the pre sent plan is to deal with it through anti-trust legislation making ruinous underselling by foreign concerns punishable as unfair competition. The tariff quePtion, he declared, “can be left out of the discussion.” The histx>ry of the dye-stuff in duct of German submarines. The opin- O’". Pi'at't, said made it certain ions seems to be unanimous that Pres- j n®* American industry would ident Wilson ■will be the unopposed | deluged at the close of the war by nominee of his party for re-election, j® p™e cutting campangn on the part The shadow of mourning which a lit- j European manafaciturers. He cited tie Ume ago hung over the White method employed by House has disappeared and the sound j German chemic.al makers to hold of coming marriage bells can be hear l, I foreign markets and to present the ‘wia' All these things must beget a spirit of thankfulness i'li the President’s bos om which apparently is reflected in his proclamation. d-sveliDpments of other dye-stuff indus tries, “There is one serious obstacle in the way of the confident and determini Berlin, Oct, 22.—Lieuteaant-Colonel Joseph E. Kuhn, military jtttMhe ot Ameriif'.n' emba,4say here, will leave Saturday night for the Serbian front in coiripatty with the military attches of the other neutral coiuiiries stationed in Berlin. The oSeers ‘Will irhake their headquarters in Belgrade, from, which , city trips to the various fronts will be made. ' 'lieutenant^Colcnel Kuhn has just returned from a two month’s, stay at the western ^and headquarters, where he was -preiwnted. to Emperor William last Sunday, The mp^ror chatted with the American officer for ten Mnutes and evince particul‘jr interest when he learned that Lieu- tenant-Colohel Kiihn belonged to the engineer division of the Americain army. SON-IN-LAW SHOT TO DEATH IN HOME BY WIFE’S FATHER’ Prominent Carthage Doctor iii Killed as Culmination of Domestic Troubles Parent Forces Door on Woman’s Request Slaj’er, Who is County Coroner, i.'S Freed by Jury's Verdict of Juatio- able Homicide: Victim Was Intoxi cated at Time of Tragedy That Shocks Town; Dies in Five Minutes, Carthage, Oct, 24.—One of the most deplori'^ilc trajr'>dies in the history of this town occurred here Saturday night at 11 o’clocic, when James V. Lr.rkin shot and instantly liiiied his son-in-l^w. Dr. D. Fred Watson, after the later had forced an enti'ance into the Larkin home. This sensational affair is the culmination of a long series of strained domestic relations which have on several occasions, when Dr. Watson was intoxicated, came near a fatal crisis. RUB-MY-TISM WiU cure Rheoigattem, N««* Headaches Crampi, Colic Spmi»iBnuMt. (^tt, Biffni, Old &ret. Tetter. font-Wonn, Ec* kema, etc. Aadaeptiv AMijrae. .Mnd iMmwUroMsUBctiiUr. 26e' TW'O MEXICANS KILLED BY S. BORDER TROOPS. U, Brownsville, Texas, Oct. 2Z.—A detachment of the Sixth Cavalry late today 5red an and killed two supposed Mexican bandits who were crossini; the Rio Grande at the Snn Pedro ranch, 12 miles up the river from Brownsville, Both were armed. The bodiei^ were not recovered. Lieuten ant T. H. Van Nr.tta of Troop L„ Sixth . Cavalry, was in conimand «f the detachment. nuBters Tued as WAIT PAINT. waiters. Paint Jr AUDUBON SOCIETY. Svediciilly A4> BbAi aad ' ■■ ^ Game warteas and' Stete AudubosL the approa^. f^ opting of:tine hunting ^son, having posted in euQ{t spicnous arid public places lai^e-pl^^ car# giving in n cj^ise manner ulf bir^and the iffeiider against the taw« of jlorft''Ca^im‘'«nd:':>tlM’.rUnite^ St^s. Eact^ear‘tite 4K#i»boi^ soc^y iitereases its^brts_trti|>rrti birds, and he offender against the lava, made to enable the. work of the iocllty to become more thorough and efficient is sure to suffer if caugbt. . To give .every one a chame to be come familiar with, the laws, the so ciety has ^prepared little booklets which may be obtained from the lo«al game garden who in Or«ensboro, is Deputy W. J, Weatheriy. The open season on most game birds starts with the first of November and the season for shooting some .species is shorter than the season on others. All this information is given In the little booklets, the plaiards ^'ving a m-ore general resume Of; the laws. These large cards,, which were being po.sted yestei-day, read as follows: “Warningl Gatiie birds under the Laws of North Carolina and the Unit ed States are composed oiily of loons, grebes, swans, geese, brant, ducks, rails, coots, marsh bensi gallinules, plovers, shofe and sui’f birds, snipe, woodcock, sandpipers, yellowJeg^, wild turkey, grouse, pheasant, quail and dove. These may be killed during the open season only. “It is unlawful under the laws of North Carolina and he United States to kill any other birds at any Ume, excepting English sparrows,, oi^, hawks, crows, blaekbi^, riec birds and jackda'Ws, or to destiofy tikefr nests and eggs, • ' ^ The penalty for killing prot«ct3cl birds is; Federal law, tlOO fine or 90 days imprisonment; state law, $60 fine Or .50 days imprisonment, and fl fine Or 10 days imprisonment for each egg or nest destroyed. “Non-resident hunters must obtain a huntin;g license from the clerk of the Superior court before hunting ‘n this state, “Violations of those laws as well as requests for injform^vtion reg«rdin:g laws or birds and game should be ad dressed to the State Audubon society, Raleigh, which will be glad to co operate with persai-.s. in the counties ur.der it? jurisdiction to have the laws enfoi'^sd.” That hist piirag!-aph could have Ktate-i that iiiiy game warden would supply the needed information, as that is a part of the guardians of the feathered ones duty. The inform ation should be well worth seeking, if ’an explanation that really explains if given as to what and why some of those birds mentioned as ga.me are,— Greensboro Daily News. Viil5 LtilSi There are painters and which am I going lo (ii‘? wait? Which is better? How much am I worth with my property ■waitinc? How much if 1 paint? Will my house be worth move or le..s if I paint. j re y u billious, dizzy and listless" Say it costs S2 a gallon De^^.3e-I 3^. Kings New Life Pills taken .-*t wouldn^t pamt any other—and $3 |50 or |60 a 10-gallon job. The money is g^r.e. Is it in the I easily. Moreover Is it fill in the house? }A CLOGGED SYSTEM NEEDS AT: j TENTIOX. upon constipation ant! j starts the boweis moving naturally and houss kt acts without griping’. Neglect of a clogged system Suppose I were selling; what .should Lftct. leads to most serious compHea- I get for that house fresh-painted and tions. Poisonous matters and a body TAKE ygyKUE frci^ th'S )iV ALifc;OVER ihg game> “Aleppo” Model $5.00 A Good Appearance is a big asset in ^ busing world. Neaily dressed and correctly shod you’ve go.t a big start on the other feiiows. Old-fashioned, shabby shoes, like old-time the- ones, are better discard ed. For style, distinc,tive- ness and durability, you mu.^t see our new models in WALK-OVER shoes. *3.50 TO $5.00 THE HOLT GATES CO, 324 Mnin -1. UNCLAIMED LETTERS, The following ]«tterv remain in poatoffiee at Burlinirton, N. C., nn- claimed by the person t« whom ad- dresiKl October 26, 1915: Mrs. Annie Allen. Mrs, Jamie Bj*rs, Mrs. J. L. Qjble. Mrs, Daisy Coosn. Grace Henderson. Vera Jagues. C, n. Purtifell. .^nnie Ivey. Lora Sard. E. D. A, Abernathy. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs, Mrs. l-Hra. Mr. Mr. William Scott, Persons calling for any of these let ters will please say “Advfrtised” aad give date of advertised list. O, F. CBOWSON, Postmaster. A woman’s idea of a hidsous gofnt one that isn't in .‘rtyle. After a man is married he seldom bu^s a hanmiock _bailt for two. what should I get for it needing paint? I wonder why men paint before sell ing! DEVOE sells it. poorly functioning need immediate attention. If you wish to wake up tomoi-row morhing happy in mmd and entirely satisfied, start your treatment tonight. 25c. a bottle. ‘A man whose motive for action is his wages, does a bad piece of! work.” SERBIANS FORCED BACK. The country, too has direct cause {development of a coal-tar dye stuff ii for thankfulness that it is stin American soil,” said Dr, m pei ce vdth all the world and instead of feeling- the hardship of war is en joying -some of the material benefits which the business of 'war creates. The President rehearses in -detail the ^different grounds for national tbanks- fgiving. Let na all gire' thanks. Soma wneem are least aadatttoaC mat Pratt, “and that difficnlty is the pos sibility, no rather the " certawity, that upon the resumption of normal in ternational conditions; European manufacturers will endeavor by boy- catt, underselling ar.^ otii^ methods of competition, to win back this I able : new «a^'stNlEcMi^ iaiicietiSt, i pat out of bauaM a Fiih and Oysters Everyday. The Lin Haven oysten are the finest oyster ia the world. : l aro located at the Globe cafe under Mayor’s Hali. Gross , . Phon« ,y Berlin, Oct, 22.—By wireless to Sayvill*.—Bulgarian troops have ad vanced south -of Strumisa and have driVeii the forces opposing them across the Vardar river, it was of ficially announced today by German army headquartore. No. 606 MAtAHOkor-ei ; PhFe oriht Amm wflt ; 1 Ukea Um* m a toaie die Fc««r 15«ra. ,tt aci» cm cIm iCMMBci sod.^>cs nniH.\M lUsiXEKS SCHOOL. Endorsed b.s^ State Board of Educattot'. Graduates in demand. Write to-day for catalog. Mrs. Walter L. I^ednunn, PriaciapAl Durham, N. C. COUGHS THAT ARB STOPPED* Careful "people sii*''ihat. they ar/ stopped. Dr. Kind’s New Discovery is a remedy of tried meril;. It has held its own on the inaiket for 46 years. Tootli and old age lastify 'to its mtd healine- qnalities, Pbeamonia and lun^ troubles ari& ot- tel^lAj(^ii|riiijlli^^Areatment. Dr. ■ h|Mduac coathe Mi relieves la gnppe T^KK}^ieie«^ ifcner imek if it faili^ i
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 26, 1915, edition 1
4
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