Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / May 31, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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THIS GREENSBORO PATRIOT. MA, ai. wwiwi. , - x Don't Swallow Potfatio Bugs lUWom with Pawns : (Breeini Get it at ardner's 0 o EL E. Wall Go, Machinists and Oil Engine Experts Let us prove to you that our automobile work, engine and general repairing receive strict personal attention. PRICES MODERATE WORK GUARANTEED We have some second hand steam and gasoline engines to be had at a bargain. 513 S. Eugene St. Phone 121 CLYMER'S OLD STAND 2,785 Acres Tes, we actually own and control two thousand, seven hundred and ihty-fiVe acres of land in Guilford county. This land is all for sale, and In liny sized tracts wanted and on any reasonable terms. The prices range from $18.00 to $100.00 per acre. . Doubtless we could close our office and hold this land five years and make more money than to cell it now. But we are in the real es- tate business and prefer to keep buying and selling. So if you want farm a good farm and at the right price, see us. Brown Real Estate Co. Funcr Building North Elm Street PANAMA-CALIFORNIA EXPOSITION SAN DIEGO, CAL. PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. VARIABLE ROUTE TOURS AND REDUCED ROUND-TRIP FARES VIA NORFOLK & WESTERN RAILWAY March 1 to November 30, 1015. Very Liberal Stop-Over Privileges. All information upon application to W. B. BEVXLL, W. C. -SAUNDERS, Pass. Traffic Mgr. Gen. Pa. A. Roanoke, Va. A. lu BROOKS, O. L. SAPP S. CLAY WILLIAMS rooks, Sapp & Williams Attorneys-At-Law GREENSBORO, N. C. In Dixie Insurance Building (BUenn Brown Attorney-at-Law 610 BANNER BUILDING, Greensboro, N. O. DR. J. W.TAYLOR, Fitting Glasses a Specialty. Examinations Without "Drops" RELIEF OR NO PAY Omse, Fifth FW filmr Dfe DHrj niyi Watch the date on your label. CAHHIHG SCHOOL THIS WBL . ' i' 1 - WlOi BE HELD- AT THE STATE NORMAL COLLEGE FOR WOOLEN OP STATE. The canning school to be conduct ed at the State Normal and Indus-, trial College this week for the bene fit of the women of North Carolina will open this evening and continue through Friday afternoon. The school, which is to be a distinct fea ture of the organized work for wo men in this state, will be in charge of Mrs. Jane McKimmon, of Raleigh, who is well known as the head of the girls' club work in North Carolina. The school will open this evening at 8 o'clock with an address of wel- come by Dr. J. I. Foust, president of the State Normal and Industrial Col lege. This will be followed by an ad- dress by O. B. Martin, a special agent of the United States department of agriculture. Mr. Martin will speak again to morrow morning at 9.30 o'clock on "Development of Girls' Clubs in Home Demonstration Work." Mrs. Jane McKimmon will speak on "Bacteria and Beans." From 11 o'clock until after 1 o'clock there will be lessons in canning string beans and tomatoes, given on the campus of the college. The instruc tors will be Mesdames McKimmon, Capehart, Miller, Lamb, Peterson, and Misses Guseman, Scott, Evans, Leach, Hewichs, Bradford, Avery and Long. Mr. Anderson will close this study with a demonstration in making and using Bordeaux mixture. In the afternoon, following the talk on the "Value of Record Books and Reports," by Miss Cresswell, there will be greetings from agents of three states Virginia, West Vir ginia and Kentucky. The speakers will be the state agents of woman's work in these states Misses Agnew and Guseman and Mrs. Woolcott. "Marketing," will be the subject of Mr. W. R. Camp, of the division of markets of the North Carolina ex periment station and the department of agriculture. Mr. Bradford will talk on "Marketing Through the Grocer." "County Marketing Cam paigns" will be led in discussion by Mrs. Morris, Miss Vines, Mrs. Lamb and Mrs. Peterson. Mrs. J. G. Boy lin will talk on "What the Trade Ex pects." Mrs. Henley will talk on "Packing Eggs and Butter for Mar ket." Following it, there will be "Lessons in Jelly Making," by Dr. Straughn, and in preserving in the laboratory by Miss Powell. At the same time, on the campus, will take place lessons in canning in tin. "How I Reached the County Peo ple" will be the subject of Mrs. Hen ley. Then will follow demonstra tions in grape juice making by Mes dames Lamb and Peterson. Mrs. Capehart will then outline "Pro grams for Club Meetings," while Miss Powell and Dr. Straughn will j give lessons in packing in glass and Pn jellies and preserves. Wednesday vafternoon Misses Cresswell and Powell will lead in a discussion of "Home Conveniences." Mrs- Miller will talk on "County Parades, the Cap and the Apron." There will follow five minute reports on county work by Miss Henricks, Mrs. Peterson, Mrs. Plummer, Miss Arey, Miss Robinson, Mr. Key, Miss Graham, Mrs. Busbee and Miss Long. "What a Home Economics Club Course Would Mean to the County Agent and the Club Girl" will be the subject of Miss Jamison for Wednes day afternoon. Then will follow a talk on judging exhibits by Miss Cresswell. The afternoon's exercises will close with a series of five-min ute reports by Miss Estelle Smith, Miss Albertson, Miss Julian, Mrs. Newell, Mrs. Griffin, Miss Ethel Kel ly and Mrs. Covington. Dr. Hudson will make another ad dress Wednesday evening, giving practical suggestions for the work. Mrs. McKimmon will follow with a lecture on "The Moral, Cultural, and Financial Value of a Commercial Standard." Mr. O. B. Martin will make the feature address of Thursday evening on the subject of "Bird's-Eve View ol Girl's Club Work With Lantern Slides." On Friday morning Mrs. Bayne will talk on "Social Life in the Com munity." She will be followed by Mrs. McKimmon. who will talk nn How to Make an Attractive Fair Exhibit." Then will come lesson in canning sweet Spanish peppers, by Miss Cresswell; lesson in jelly mak ing by Dr. Straughn; lesson in catsup making by Mrs. McKimmon. The program for the final session on Friday afternoon takes in: Giving a Public Demonstration Miss Evans. Visits of the Field Agents Miss Scott. The Itinerary of the Field Agent Miss Leach. Co-operation of Club Girls Miss Jennie Whitaker. Five minute reports of county club work Miss Bell, Mrs. Clarke, Mrs. Early, Miss McLawhorne, Miss Neece. MOST EFFECTIVE cXIPIJFT. . . ALWAYS -BEGINS AT HOME. New York' Has Just .waked up in a state of great surprise oyer -the dis covery that it is not altogether a moral town, and that there are places on Broadway and other thorough fares which are not exactly schools of virtue. The big burgh up Manhat tan way does not differ in this re- . spect from other large places. It is more vicious only because it is larg er, and because its size gives vice and crime more opportunity. Possi bly the community conscience, or at least its consciousness, dwindles with increase of size. At all events, New York's periodical awakenings to its. moral state would be amusing, did they not represent the tragic ! problem that seems to be attached to all "great centers of humanity. i What is chiefly interesting about ! its recent spasm is that a 19-year-old j girl, Eugenia Kelly, is the cause of its heart-searching. As a New York sensation her story has already been : told in every town in America. The wretched little culprit, whom her mother haled before the police court, is of respectable family and J a million-dollar heiress, but she had ' discovered the aluring resorts which I official New York knew nothing about, and became so much fascinat I ed by the society she met there that it was necessary to rescue her from herself by legal processes. All sorts of investigations are to be started and all sorts of reforms inaugurated as a result of Eugenia's naughtiness; and we shall doubtless have many solemn reports from uplifting com mittees of moral organizations pro posing infallible preventives and remedies for the conditions . which enticed the foolish and wayward Eu genia. These efforts are all proper in their way and will doubtless do good. But, as a rule, Eugenias are not made on Broadway, but in badly or dered homes and by weak and silly fathers and mothers. Sometimes the best training fails to prevent these catastrophes, but, speaking generally, the groundwork for them is laid in the family circle. Great is the modern uplift and great and noble are many of the up lifters. But the best and most effec tive uplift of all is that which begins at home with the father and mother. An ounce of training and a single slipper administered early in the game are worth a ton of judicial ad monition and a thousand social cru saders. Baltimore Sun. 94 Trained Xurses Licensed. The 94 trained nurses who took the examination before the state board of examiners at Wilmington last week made a record that is probably not duplicated in any pro fession in the state, all passing the examination with creditable marks. In addition to the 94 who. passed the state board, a number were re- ceived by reciprocity. In the exami nation Miss Pauline Robinson, of Charlotte, made the best percentage, 9 8.75, while Miss Ruth Wicker, of High Point, won second honor with an average of 96.25. The following young ladies from Greensboro were among the nurses licensed: Misses Mary S. Horry, Vivian G. Estes and Crystal Worden! Choir and Minister. There had been friction between the choir and the minister for some time past, but so far the singers had more than held th VTAX. 11U W U ever, one Sunday morning the minis- l! fan nftsN , M i-ci, ttuci listening io tne singing of the usual anthem, announced in a i loud, clear voice, "My text this morn ing will be 'Now, when the uproar has ceased.' " For a moment the members of the choir looked crestfallen. They felt that the parson had scored for once. Then, in the softest of whispers, they decided to make a slight alteration in the musical program, and when the sermon was concluded, the or gan pealed forth, .and the choir tri umphantly sang, "Now it is high time to wake- from sleep." Ice Cream Supper at Brightwood. TllP T.Ofl'o nY.rx J? o v,uapci cuiiierence com mittee will give an ice cream supper at the Brightwood school house Fri day evening, June 4, beginning at 8 o'clock, provided the weather per mit. Should the weather be unfav orable, it will be given Saturday evening at the same hour. Those in charge will put forth every effort to make the occasion a pleasant one and the public is cordially invited to attend. "Slowed Up" at Middle Age. The hard working kidenys seem to require aid sooner than other inter nal organs. At middle age many men and women feel twinges of rheuma tism, have swollen or aching joints and are distressed" with sleep dis turbing bladder ailments. Foley Kidney Puis are safe, prompt and can be depended on to give relief. Conyerr & Sykes. ajY Subscribe to The Patriot. SITFFRAGETTE PREDICTS rA WAR Gfa THE SEXES, Women are on the point of rebel lion, declares Mrs. Crystal Eastman Benedict. They demand; says she, "federal action prohibiting the pres ent Indefensible disfranchisement on the ground of sex' A time of bit terness between men .and women will come, she predicts, and that will take years to heal. Grant the fran chise by congressional action; and ail this distressing unhappiness will be avoided. Mrs. Benedict, we take it, is one of those persons who want what they want when they want it. B,ut she errs if she thinks that all of her sex want what she wants. The women of the far West desire the franchise and have obtained it. The women of the middle West want it and are get ting it. A few years more, and there will be equal suffrage in all the West ern and Northern states up to the Appalachian divide. Of the East, we" cannot be so certain. But in the South the equal suffrage movement, where it" flourishes at all, seems to be confined to the halls in' whiph the suffragists hold their meetings. There yet lacks a sign that it inter ests the Southern women in the mass. What forces will be commanded for this rebellion with which Mrs. Benedict threatens us? They, will not come from the West, the middle West or the South. The East will have to supply 'the patriots, that is certain. And it will be that section which must supply the field of bat tle. There are people in this corner of the country who so dislike the East that they could look forward to that time of travail with impatience. Toledo Blade. Many Americans in Italy. Although the effect of Italy's en trance into the European war on American citizens in that country has not yet become apparent in the state department's activities, a Washington dispatch says officials expect -that there will be a consider able exodus of Americans in connec tion with which a rush to work may develop. Department officials are unable to estimate how many Americans there are in Italy, but the number is large, many of whom, it is said, in antici pation of the breach between Italy and Austria, applied to the depart ment for documents establishing their American citizenship. Most of them are art students and tourists. 51 Jl iBSffiMBt . h If ovi ore twble with dyspepsia you probably W that Ibeire is nothing rrjote aggravating and distrem iDiilif: thfe time and .v--; - .. . - t j you can t q what y ti crave, j--. '. ; 1 Wha is r eeded is a digestive stimulant. Something to ticlpthe digestiyefluids do their work. For this work we reconirnend Dike's Dyspepsia Tablets. ' There is nothing "quite so positive a digestive he'lo' VTixi. . They really work wonders with your system giving you an increased appetite and a dieest ion as good as the best In Two Sizes 25 and 50 cents CONYEKSr & SYKES, Druggists The Home of "Sy-Go" the Better Ice Cream. L. M. Ammen Co., Funeral Directors and Em balmers, have moved from their former location at 600 South Elm street to new quarters across the street at 607 South Elm, next to Lowe's grocery store. We have added to our business a department of Picture Framing and solicit the patronage of the public. IL. M. AMMEN & CO. t)ay Phone 488 607 South F. E. TIPTON, Subscribe to . -A - . '.: . I-."'- . ' . ' ' L I i . - ...... C1 s J I f w DOES ALL ANY STOVE . . CAN DO .... In perfect ease and comfort a large dinner can be cooked on one of these ranges in less time than a small lunch on a coal or wood stove. The cost for fuel, too, is much less with a BON-AMI WICK BLUE FLAME kerosene oil COOKING RANGE The burners are six inches in diameter. This extra large size gives the biggest flame possible and the greatest heat. The blue enamel-d chimneys are made short and set close to the top. Flame strikes directly on cooking utensils just where you want it. Does not throw heat into kitchen. Can be had with one, two, three or four burners, with or without oven. nn I u I ml I - la A. TABLETS Vwhri vnn 5 . U Night Phone 1521 Sim. Street. note Monuments, Mausoleums, and Headstones. New marble yard corner North Elm and Gaston. ' Seventeen years actual experi ence guarantee artistic lettering and carving. Corner N. Elm and Gaston Sts. The Patriot
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
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May 31, 1915, edition 1
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