Newspapers / The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, … / Sept. 22, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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I p \ JUt L. HJ8JUU POP*. PabUahar. Dm, N. C, Waytnhar tt. What Amrka Kaafc Tha Wil Straat fa— 1. a daily •a—rtal payar ad Maw York, had ia aaght u aaka paayla thiak. Thia y*pa» la a ngraaaatatln of tha • radyiaaa payar. Han la what it ■M|i What Amrka aaada aaan thaa^ yrtaa. aad law tart*, aad a Mayer whaa* cny. aad a marrhaat mrtna. •■d a »aw aary. ia a nvtral of pla *P—tha khad aathar aad lathar aaad •a kmm platy that aaaatad It grad haata taa U atay for daily family yrayar Mai |miXui right la tha adddfc ad kanaal; that quit •aid wart a half rhoar aarty Than day Bight, aa m ta gat tha china UM Nnetp mammy w pay tta mhury. tad prayed far awatty la aacrat far tha aal ration a< tha Hah aaa who lanhad with aeara SB Md akoniiu Life* li^MTifir TWa what mm aaad now to eloaa thin country of tha Blth af graft. wmd af uni patty aad hl»; af wor th* ad ftaa haaaaa and Mg lamb ■»d high aMm apd grand aodal fuartliaa. What b thb thing ara war Ml yiag hot a rain repetition mt whd daaayad oatiana fell wba deww aad wmahlpad Jaat before <*«**• Ughta waat out? Band the Mmary of Base la decay and yea will Sad laxary there that caald lay a Mg daBar turn aar httb dough aa« that leaks aa large to aa. Great wealth never aaada a a> tftss HbiUMial SOT IkMorabk. Thom b nothing no earth that look. 1 It wiU gat your cog. “GAMBLING* OP TWO SOST8 Wa fall this bit ad aapbat advice tfaaa Dbpaioh. *• ! ~ far a year at laaat; Say, Mr. Parser, it b post aa aaay teyabptli mate far yaur aattaa aa b b te gat 9 math AS yea haea to do U ta ■at tha prba aad bold antU yoa with tha prim bed arc next April Hew bag! Haw loagt Tha prim ad aattaa, or anything dm, b fill rail if la tha bag run dffly md aelety by haw aaay pao >h want to hay aad haw saay have to all. Tha aaa hays at tha lewaat palm ha has to pay: tha other eaib at tha Mghaat prba ha aaa gat, aad that b ahaat tha hadd aad toll cd tha aaloas hat sear true doctrtna of a aas he! da cotton, dom he taw? Nat at ail. Ha Ma sarfcin It “ Indulging la Amm to tab* tba price to haad. be «to ha BUKVBI aad SEASON8 llwt totor the tow af (apply and da ta fact, exactly what the to eettoa ftt he bay* or **Us . drtonry. Bat to to* a Mttaa fxrawr that, if ha daa* ttto aad toad, ha «aa at aay certain priaa tor Ms pridart, la w wily to act toe part ad a Upator oa the fa ta h* generally toaaa la a^waral H«aM to too right. z tor ad.' to < exchange comments ON SPECIAL EDITION A Merttortas Publics ties. Tbs Dunn DU patch has issued a MM and well edited twenty.four PM* “Herne Publicity Edition.- The work shows enterprise and public spirit and aa abiding faith in the fistur* possibilities of Dunn and the lunOuDulog country. Such puhll estlona ars of grant benefit to the property owners and the people gen erally, and yet they are eeidem ap preciated at their true value any mere than is the home paper in its daily or weakly routine at work for the people. Than la no branch of business which receives as much “cussing” as does the newspaper business, and getternOy the sorriest fallows in a community ars the loudest to their expressions at disapproval; and yet if the Dews paper should be token out of the community, the commun ity would fall ns flat aa a pancake. . i*s, wo say, good people. When journals like the Dunn Dis patch endeavor to help their com munitiee, (and of course to inciden tally help themselves), give them all the encouragement and all the PATRONAGE you can. Oas thing can be easily noted: you cannot keep, water above Its level; neither can a newspaper be any abler or more en terprising than the community in which it is' printed. A alow, Isay community either makes a slow, la ay newspaper or i in others the life oot of what woold otherwise be a pre greed vs journal.— Fayetteville Observer. , A Wander Pram tha Woods The town—(city, it you please)—I of Dean, North Carolina, la leas' than thirty year* from tha begmn-l big of a railway “stop." Wa remember vividly when the depot and the one etore stared each other ia the face, with a mole some where ia the background because it wee still train-ally, with a parson ia top-boots loaning in ehanctaristte1 attitude against the porch ia front at I the pomoAca to inquire for the mail that aevsr came. Thcma and a faw bales of cotton stored along a short side-track made the Dunn of the days when in 1884 the “Short Cut”, of the Atlantic Coast Line waa posh ed through from Fayetteville to Wilson. Today Duma is n lively dtp In em bryo. a very large town with equip ment of substantial hanks, business house* and manufacturing estab lishments, adorned with beautiful hemes sad Inhabited by a sturdy poo pis at whom the majority have lived and prospered in their own echisi sweat and vteseu- -- All this sad were about Dunn and Harnett County, including the thriv ing towns at Daks, Angler and Ul Uagton, Is eat forth in a twenty four page “Home Publicity Edition' of The Dunn Dispatch. The paper is cleanly printed, pro fusely Illustrated and carries a wealth of detail concerning the truly remarkable appearance of a dty from the woods witbla tha space of a generation. What Dunn has ac complished has been the rule in a measure throughout the State, but* Ite demonstrated development is re markably exceptional. Of all earn est* of its continued growth and prosperity none is more convincing than its poseeseisn of s paper at tha vigor and enterprise at The Dis patch.—Tiraee, Raleigh. The Dunn Dispatch came out last week with a well-illustrated special heme publicity edition which makea s meet creditable showing for Dunn and Harnett County— Lam barton Robesonlan. The Dunn Dispatch Issued whn| It called a /‘Hems Publicity Edition” tha post weak, la this edition the history of Dana and tha county of Harnett to most admirably told and tha pictures ef streets, buildings •ad Individuals five one the Impres •ion that tha Dispatch to edited bi me ef the garden spots of the State. Una. the hems ef tha paper, to a new town but one of the moot pro gressive in the Bute. The Dis patch to a predust ef that profrse live spirit and its enterprise hi fett ht» together this information to cer tainty commendable. — Sampson Democrat. Such newspaper achievements ns he Duns Dispatch spatial edition, pahltohed last wash cannot bo too Pifhly snmmsndnd. Conceived in a ipirit af prepress, aad assented by odefattfabla labor aad persevere ate « is na effort that justices the po nton ef power is the community rhlth the newspaper may haM. The of Dim aad the meaty ef >la»Mtt cm welt take pride ia this MgnMeaat display af themselves rhtoh the Dispatch has laid before be gase af Ike Stated Harnett Se th# Dew Dtopetsh semes to the sru with a spire did edition derated e "boose publicity ' The estsrprte ■* town ef Dana aad the rich seen f of Harnett wifMay pebHrtty ef he Ued the* is ml rule tad te brio* Md to^la drswtof the peepis The f ih> outside world—Charlotte ( l,lrr,r A a* . . Program At Dam. Dean la a North Carolina town which in Itself la aa Mn to tha pro*rse* beta* made by this State. We remember the struggling start of tho place and tho growth which haa «m in a very few years is Proof that it U going to continue on its forward movement. Nothing has shown thia more plainly than tho Homs Publicity Edition of tho Dunn Dispatch, la that edition Editor L Boshes Pope has set ost what has been accom pUahed at Dunn and tha record Is a wonderful story of progress. The fact that such an excellent special edition consisting of twenty-four page* with many Mu. Undone, has been issued from the plant of Ita pa per shows that Duna is fortunate in having a newspaper which is so wen equipped, and which so splen didly tells of tbs many advantage* of the town. The Dunn Dispatch imnn the highest congratulations on tho *x oallsnco of its Homs Publicity Edi tion, which shows that Dunn utilise* opportunities. A progressive com munity and *• progressive paper are ombinstions which art certain to win.—News and Observer. Last week's issue of the Dunn Dispatch was a “Hama Publicity E^Uoik" It was unusually well gotten up, eri was aa advertise ment for Dunn that will bo worth much to that growing town. Inci dentally it showed commendable en terprise in the Dispatch.—Balelgh Christian Advocate. Seed Cora Selection Day. Tho Pane Demonstration worker* have (elected Saturday. October Mh, ** » special day oa which to sal set seed corn. This ia an Important! mattar. Although since Demonstra tion Work, was started Mean years age, ths average yield of corn in the State has inereessd from 14 to 20 bushels per one, yet the State Is •till buying a great dnal of com, thus showing wo •tiU need to in-! mane our yields per acre. One of the easiest ways of doing this ia by improving our seed corn by selec tion from year to year. It Is as aasy mattar to increase yields from 6 to 10 buskois per aero aa good land by suth selections hi a four year's test of varieties by tho North Carolina Experiment Station, there waa an average difference of IS 1-2 bushels per aero bat ween the high est sad lowest yielding varieties. On good land an meres ss of 21 *y-‘ per aero haa boon made by Improved strains over scrub aaad In thk Stats. tW visur tff asHr*lMMBh~Wm com ia vary simple, so every farmer *oold gjve tho matter due attention by going to tho eon Sold or oood patch before com la harraetad. Ss lections should bo made from the boat and most prolific stalks. The sulk should bo large, flattiah and big enough to stand up during a storm, and should have tong, brood leaves bet should not bo too toll. Tho stalk should bear two or pioro sort. Tho seed should not bo obtained from stalks grown aa very rich land or under exceptionally good condi tion. But from stalks grown on land of average fertility, uader av erage condition* which produce more than the stalks around thsm, thus showing aa inherited tendency to ward a higher yield. The ears should sot bo too high oa tho stalk —about 2 1-2 foot being the best Height. Whan this corn is selected tha woavlls should bo gotten oat, and is should than ha placed where It srtU ha abaolutaly dry through tho win tar. Moistera materially injure* tha vitality of aeed corn. This U tha first part af tha selection. Dur ing tha long winter nights or Vainy days of winter the man and boys on tha farm ean got into this seed corn, •buck it and than atttaioato tha un daairuble sare This part of tha ao lactloa will be given attention later. This mattar has tha andorsamant of Governor Lock* Craig, stoner of Agricaltnra Graham, Stats Superintendent Joyner, PraaMant of Farmer*' Unions, Alexander scanty superintendents af education and other leading ettbana of tha Stata. Mow lot farmers do thair daty In this mattar, rally ta tha lead aalaa tion bnainws, and thus make a long Stride forward growing in tha guu all the ram needed sad heaping our mo**oy ,t bnma ■itanslun Farm News, Where Your M as gaits s* Com From Filing complaints agalaat tha mmipillB, wsbwIIIs madly swat Uag and ribbing elbows and ankle*, baa baan about tho ehtaf tapir ad rare blows In. Qthsru say they rams in tha big rafam a wash ar two ■go. White asbady knows, a few, however, have theta —ifirtsnr A sorvoy af tha hams premise* ■•old mors than tikaly daw ap tha ■—go He mystery. It la tros tha raseat rains had 'nsisShlwg ta do ■Mh It. Thay fitted tho gwttar and tastes the drain* that dsn't drain —hhowiaa all tho tin .cm ton. Weeds and vines might1 in mi to for coud tarnation fat riving them sheltering place* dur •ig the day. Bat if nil the above containers of sitae had been kept empty during nd after the raina, there would not •w bo such a mosquito rage. And te this nadarstood that it does not ' mpiire mere than one or two tin ana, or a bucket, or an improper drain, to prodoee enough moeqtn toee to annoy a heuaahold for a •** What probably played an Impor tant part in the recent mosquito spi dedle wee the'fact that it followed the height at vacation season. Whole families move away and homer clos ed- Vessels in which water collect ed were probably left out and these became unmoiaated and continuous breeding plaeee tor mosquitoes. Since the mosquito la hatched and already busy .at Us nightly trade, these suggestions may or may not be timely warning*, according to the season, whether it W wet or dry, or, hoc or cold. But they should be aufleient te d4g op the mytery and as a hint to the wise next summer. —State Health Bulletin. Jaf HeipfuL A group of firis eat atound a bright fire. It was the half hour before Um oodboua call, "Lights out," would silanes th* merry vci caa. They ware discussing ideals i what they would rather here, do,1 pad be In lift*' Nannatte wasted plenty of car riage* and se*aaU at ber bidding —doar, pretty Tianaotte, whose cur-, ly head was already full of th* gay doings which. In her limited vocabu lary. spelled “Life." Hath was not eo particular about ■ money, but she was planning to be an artist, and paint picture* which would rival modern artists. Dorothy maaLat to writ* books. She had al raeeived excellent on her themes, end felt sure that If she sank into any ordinary career a great writer would be spoiled. Th* girt whs looked dreamily in to the fire bad been silent daring the gay chatter. '■ "Tb* return^ are all in except from tb* fourth ward." prodded Nanette, giving the long braids of th* silent on* a playful twist "1 have been listening to yon all, aad thinking," was the reply. I am not pretty, and I cannot hop* to be a hallo; 1 am not Intellectual or gift ed, and can’t hope to write books or paint pictures. t So while th* r*s; of you are filling your lofty ate tiensj win hunt mo sopt* quiet cor Mr had Just t% ft be 'helpful." vista of aspired to be reaped lift's best many, I out In the school*, but the helper must drink at a deeper fount Io the school of love, unselfishness end sympathy, the helper mast (striculate, and on ly in 'the larger schools of experi ence are the sobtlast lessons learn ed. It seem* such e simple thint in say, "I will be helpful"; yet ad >pt this as your creed, go out with wide open ayes, and see what Infinite vl«-| tas stretch before you. Too never noticed before bow /many people help—not necessarily money Help it hand help, though thee* hav > mani fold osas, but th* help which cnr-c* from simple brother lines* nn I rea diness to "land a hand."—Ex. A Prayer. “Backward, turn backward, Ob, Time la thy flight, give us a girl whoaa shirts arc not tight; give as a girl whose charms, many or few, are not exposed by too much peeks boo; give os a girl, no matter whei age, who wont as# the street for a vaudeville stage; give os a girl nut toe shapely la view; drees in fkirts that tha sun east shins through."— Selected. JUty Jlagte “I'll give s nickel for a kiss,' Bald Cholly to a pretty miss, “Bkidool" she cried; “you stingy rue#, “You’re looking for e jitney hues. —Dart,. NOTICE OP LAND 8ALE UNDER MORTGAGE By virtue of the powers and aa therity contained is a certain snort gage deed aassutod by Neeby Burns sad wife. Many $ Baras, to the urv denigneo, which, lb sf record In Book 110, page *07, Registry of Harnett eowaty, tha foOswiag reel estate will be sold at public eaction, [M Will / UU Nm. 14 ni II in tiM wb h vision sf Mrs. R. A. Harper prop erty, as per tha survey made by V. D. Bluish, • CMI Engineer, as •hewn by a cartels men registered h the eAoe sf ths Registry sf Mar sett county Ip Boob 100, pegs MO, rf a reuse to which said map Is here by mads far further description, and Ming ths asms piece where Neeby mi Hasp I. Burns now reside. Ties* sf sals, Monday, October 10 1*1*. It o'clock M. Place «f sale, A. C. U Depot, K N C. Terms of sale. Cash. This Btottmbn 0th, 101*. n« DUNN COM A SUPPLY CO. The Bank of Coats WANTS your business—it merits your confi dence and guarantees absolute safety. It is not the largest--size doesn’t always mean the most service, the g e*. : t safety nor a higher degree or stability; these essentials are entirely dependent upon the men who manage a bank, and the Bank of Coats is excellendy equipped in men. No bank has a better directorate than the board which Deludes P. S. Cooper, P. F. Pope, ' I. T. Coats. N. T. Patterson, H. A. Matthews, S. W. Oldham, a j r /r • i * H. C. Roberts And for officials no better men are wanted than P. S. Cooper* President; J. T. Coats, Vice-President; and N. T. Patterson, Cashier. 1 ■—* Lies Not So Much In Its Capitalization' As In Its Ability To Manage __ Judiciously. Good management is strength, and the best guage to Strength is the sum carried upon a bank’s books as surplus and undivided profits; and that item on our books is more than three times our capital stock. I Our statement to the corporation commission June 23rd i showed capitalization, deposits end surplus as follows: Capital stock.$ 10,000.00 1 Surplus and Undivided Profits 30,594.68 Deposits. 112,740.72 I A 305 per cent surplus is a great deal more than a large i majority of banks can show and it carries the stamp of efficiency in all departments The Bank of Harnett has the strongest directorate of any bank in Noith Carolina. It is under the supervision of men who loom large in the financial life of the nation, state and community, and offers to you every convenience allowed un- j) der its principle of "Safety First." j ^ Per Cent Interest Is All We Ever Charged • I ! —We Solicit Your Business—
The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1915, edition 1
2
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