Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Nov. 2, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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TH& IWtCK-A-^ MSrVAICKs BtmUNGVtN. M. €. TUESDAY, NOVEMBBK % Ittt. Do You Pay Cash ? I If you do, you don’t wa«t to pay for the bad (lehts of otners, wheayou trade with us. You do n>t have to pay the dend beats’bills. Look iat these prices; Green Coffee 121-2 Roa$ti«l Coffee 15 Arb. Coffee 20 Comp. Lard 11 Fat Backs 12 1-2 All kinds of Candy and Cakes. Fruits and Produce. GIVE US A CALL. Read It! See It! THE WHITE HOUSE fiftlDE. JAMES WORKMAN, M>na(«r. Spring Street - - - - ^ear Fost Office. Wsshinirton, Oct, 23,^Twice i^oce presidents of tho Unit^sd SUkteft have Uten unto tfeq«elves vrive. while i" ’ toiutionrto their high office. It is safe to say that Woodrow Wilson and winsome Edith Galt will follow neitlter of the two precedents seti President John Tyler evidently dis trusted his public. Two year* sftci- the death, wf his first' wife in 1S44, he came to New York and while the peo ple were still under the impression i , ning with the secretary of state, a' number of equisite white muslin brothers nin for her. I These dinners are necessarily limited costumes. Mr$, Galt is a woman of manifold to a small circle. Violets were her favodte corsa^ interests. Her home is full of gw)d But there will be at least foar for- bouquet until she retiirned fn>m Cor- books, which share with har music th« mal evening receptions - at tlie white nish. - Since then she has often ap- loo^ winter evening^. She is fond of house between January 1 and Shrove peared with a bunch of orchids and it. the.theatre, She drives her own elec' Tuesday. It is estimated here that is now realised that the^ are from trie automobile about Wastiington. the new Mrs Wilson will be hostess the white house Mnservatccies, iritere Sh« plays a fair ^me of tennis and to at lea^ eight thouwnd persons the at the present moment six thousand. her golf has improved rapidly under to at leat ei,gth thousand persons the chrysanthemoins of white and ffild Mr^ Wilsm’s tuition. She pcoved ait l are being pushed to quick blossoin ard«nt basiball “fan” at one of. the H n>ming winter. Popnet mistresMs of the white house have «lso given eveuine muiti-.^ “re. are hi^/1 ^«n walking about Washingto.n, this contest at his fisncM’s ejymsscd pri:^. As Mrs. Galt is *n excellent,serge wish. ■ white house lady’s pleas- reeent world series gMg*s and it is ' said that the presidemt arnuited to se* ADVANCE WINTER STYLES j fof street, infbrnial ^etnoon affairs 6t chinch, easily reproduced at home with little expense from the New December ' >:Ca!l .'.i'aitenis i !io i;e\v f.ishiorvs for V. inic-r beaulifuliy illus- One h un dred : :i^e; f authentic fashion i.'itorinalioii—advance . isliirp. news—what is I- )ripci for all occasions— i.i I'iic n:;\¥ Winter McCall Book of Fashions ^ (ff Vnfer Quartrrfy) NOW ON SALE K«w I'fttUrti No. W« \are fhimiot fttsf VKtnef bcw Hii({ attractirt dcslgBC. n authority on advance styles. Profusely iHut- tialed in colot. pianist and has a melodious vsice, jacket decorated in Mr»; Galt has ^ devoted bmetf to singing the old Mnsrs whi«h the p^s-I iK^iUe silk tvald. her.ov/n amusement hy any nuMUts* ident lO'fes, wi^ gr^t beauty, it is white kid low ^oes, white liilk hosiery She is active In St, l^omaa £|Haco* probable ihot these musicales will be * swi) black velvet hat* pal church whe^ she iras for som^ continued. The president's umnarried' * woman of ab$ut forty years tim« chairmiin of the rector’s aid so- daught«a*2 Mi^ Margaret Wilson, also Galt is strikingly handsome. She ciety* Besides .oth^ local charities has a fine voice,. has dark eyes antd wavy dark hair, she has done much w;ork for tii4 The swond Mrs* Wilson is an at^ splendid teeth, a .]>each bloom com- mountain whites of ths south, ah ac* thathis wedding to Miss Julia ; tractive dresser and she may bell set plexion and regular features. It is tivity in which the flrgt Mrs. Wilson rscr, of Ne« lork was seieral w^ks L fashion for women of her age. *^hen she smiles, however, that she is was also a leader. Mrs. Galt's efforts off, they learned suddenly gjnce she put away her mourning sev. >‘resistible. have always been most uaoblirusive, chief executive had led his bride : o | the altar ill the church of the Ascen sion. It was almost an efcpement. There was i similar lack of warningr, though not quite so extreme, when President Cleveland maiT:ied Frances select^ soft greys or combinations of white and black. For her afternoon and evening gpwn material she has jac'ispted crepe de chine and for street , I wear serge veloure de laine and boa Folsom, probably the most beautiful . of all the bi'ides of the white h>use, .! .t * I wnile she was the guest of Miss in 1886. The engagement was lished two weeks before the day whe:i eral yeairs ago, Mrs. Galt has usually Her exceedingly warm, sympathtic and incidentally, the sweet- . heart of Miss Wilson’s widowed the ceremony actually tooK place; but Karlakenden house. Cor- Ntw Fcdifft Fr»*k Nn. «W1. Ob* uT til* new Decembtr , 4nl«n». Girl looks like m Oasis in the Desert And never was Oasis more wetoome to sun-baked tnMtal. The cooling air of the mooo^ tains, the vigor of the ocean's wave, the contentment of the valley—an these are brought to work.'wearied, heat-bothered in street, home and office by PEPSIGola m I Brttdog, Invigorating, lefrMhing— Drop ir. »t the fountain—then *nd a'‘come-back"th»tm»l!*syon yooH toon* what wa f«el tike WORK. It gives you whAt Put up in bottles, too, at your you wsnt when yoa want it. grocer's. Far All ThinU—Pepai-Cota Pepsi-Coia Bottling Works L. M. SQUIRES. Proprietor, Phone 435 glfSLlNGTON, N. C. Plies cured In 6 to 14 Dfty» V«t\r dniKKist trill n^fand «non«y U OUniVHNT i«i}s to cure any of Itctfmc, ■* - - PUesln6tol4d^ BliadrBleediaff or ProtradtM Piles In 6tol^ &nt ei'^cs £««« 4sd 8«ct. A sensitive woman is a growing plant, every hard rain beats the-n down. I the day and the hour were not an nounced until about forty-eight hJurs I before the airival of the bride-elect and her mother in the capital. They had just come from several months in Europe. The guests at the Cleveland wetl- ding number fewer than forty. The only officials present were the cabinet and the president's private secretary. The scene was set in the blue room. Xo foreign diplomatists were invit ed and the gifts came chiefly from the members of the president’s cabinet i and the relatives of the bride and bridegroom. Those in a>nfidence of Mrs. Gait here believe she will arrange every thing for a line, old Virginia wedding, not an unwieldly affair, but na the other hand nothing hurried or ill-con- sidered. Those who have visited the Galt home in Pennsylvania avenue agree ihat the future "first lady of the land” is a queen of hostesses and a marvel ij{ forethought and graceful tact. Her mother, who lives with her and is h i favorite of Mr. Wilson, is also tn adept at the little things vhich make functions a pleasuirable success in stead ! jf a bore. All in all Washington society has learned of the president’!! coming nwtr- riage witli a feeling akin to relief. The capital is a distinctly less lively and gs.y affair with no white house social season to set the pace. With Mrs. Galt at the head of the president’s establishment Washing ton’s great hostesses will breathe easier. She has never figured large on the society pages of the newspa pers hut she has a large ciscle of friends and these agree she can be de pended upon as a worthy successor to a long line of gracious presidents’ wives. All Washington winter functions are arranged so as not to interfere ■with white house engagements. For this reaso'.i no other invitations can go out until the white house schedule is kijown. The president and his wife always open the series of state ban quets each season with the cabinet dinner, usually held about December l.>. This is followed by the diplo matic dinner, the supreme court din ner and the speaker’s dinner. Nntil the dates of these are knovrn no hos tess dares tij arrange for a dinner of her own. The cabinet officers enteiain the president and others in turn, begin- nish, N. H„ last summer, Mrs, Galt was .seen usually in white tailored skii-ts and blouses for morning and either white chiffon or white silk in the evening. She also appeared in nature make thsse who have the To Drivft Oat Malaria honor of entering her home immedi-;^,^, ^IlSfdird^l^ ately at ease and she has the faculty TAST8USS ebill TONXC. Yo« know of the great French d»”>es of causing those conveying mth her to feel they; and Iron is i, tasteless iotm. have never before been so brilliant. ? s^SeT^’eeSS i The president is mt a poor man,' : — but it is probable that Mrs. Galt will Some of us who thought Germany bring him a fortune greater than his would liot last three months do not own. Her husband is understood to ^ now know exactly what i> think of have left her about $250,000. As her expenses have never been large, this has been increased considerably. She owns the century-old it. “Man as he thinks he is, and what Galt jewelry Jhe does is the result of the sum total store in Waskingtnn which two of her 'of this thought.” WHY PAY MORE? When You Can Buy For Less. A large part of the high cost of living is caused by not knowing where to trade, those who pay casli are entitled to the LOWJ-S T PRICES. WE ARE HEADQUART- ERS FOR LOW PRICE; When you trade with us yo« La) \O l have tn pay tionie uiic tise's dehts, We buy in car lots tor CASH, arid iherefcrc can save you money. We cairy a fulj line of Corn. Oats. C. S. Huils and Meal, Red i.»cg, Shipstuff, Swvet Feed. Dairy Feed, Lar 1 iMeat. Sugar, Coffee, Onions. Potatoes, Fresh Bread Meal .All kinds of Gooi FLitir, both S raight and Patent, Candies, Tobacco, ('igars, and Chewing Gums, Sait, Bran and Hay. COME TO SEE US! MERCHANTS SUPPLY CO. Burlington and Graham, N. C Millers’ Agents for Melrose and Dan Valley Flour and Feed. i“YOUR PEACE OF MIND”: depends upon freedom from worry—If you invest those half worked or idle dollars in PIEDMONT FIRST MORTGAGE GOLD BO^DS. which pay SIX CENT payable semi-annually—you will have no WORRY-and FOREVER ‘your PEACE OF MIND.” T FIEDMOMT TRUST COMPANY. BURUNCTON,N,c -■/ POOR
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 2, 1915, edition 1
2
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