Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / Aug. 6, 1914, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO K A Y.N HAM NEWS NOTES COVER CROP CAMPAIGN. FREE! This Week Only FREE! To each person buying one 50c. bottle of Palm Olive Shampoo, we will give free of charge, three full size cakes of Palm Olive Soap. Palm Olive Shampoo "ESSTmE from pure olive oil, it lubricates the scalp and feeds the roots of the hair and keeps the scalp sanitary and cool. Try a bottle today. The latest in toilet articles. McDonald Drug Company On the Corner 'Phone No. 26 Crops Looking Better Protracted Plans for Winter Cover Crops in Meetings Mr. Andrews Ivey In-1 North Carolina. ju red Personal. ! The Farmers' Co-operative Work, Correspondence of The Robesonian. .; conductecj jointly by the U. S. and Raynham, Aug. 3.-The crop looks , gtate Departments of Apiculture and a great, deal better this morning as , A & M .g we had a verv nice little rain here List, niirht Thf corn rron will be l i, n this State. Efforts put forth iri this somewhat short this time on account . r ing plans for winter cover crops in of no rain, pood price. Tobacco is bringing a matter the past season resulted in the adding directly of 42,300 acres of lIltT UIUL til ICU I IltTC VJIIK Will nwi iiuv' ! , j. , , 1111 F . , .1 make a strenuous effort to double the Raynham next Sunday afternoon, Au. j e-ust 9. at 4 o clock. Have not heard fc J yet who will help Rev. Mr. Bridgers carry on the meeting. stration agents are already at work on the matter. Every farmer, mer- East Carolina Teachers Training School A Stat? school to train teachers for the public schools of North Carolina. Every energy is directed to this one purpose. Tuition free to all who agree to teach. Fall term begins September 22, 1914. For catalogue and other information address, ROBT. H. WRIGHT, President GREENVILLE, North Carolina. Sorrv to report Mr Andrew Ivey chant, banker, and all who are inter. hurt. Sntnrrlav while hitchine- his mule ! ested in promoting better farming ar j up. She jerked the shafts down on : him and began to paw him before Dressing Table American Colonial Desip As pretty a piece of boudoir furni ture as one will find. See the classic Colonial scroll in the legs and mirror supports. Absolutely correct in design and the Construction is "White." In either selected Circassian walnut or mahogany. Top 20x36. Mir " ror French bevel plate glass 18x24 Lumberton Furniture Store, Undertakers I his wife. and a colored man could get I him out of the way. He can't walk any j yet. Hope he will soon be all right again. 1 The protracted meeting will start at Pleasant Grove Tuesday night af ; ter the third Sunday in this month. ' Miss Pearl Kozier of St. Pauls is i visiting Misses Kittie, Alma, and I Naomi Ivey Mrs. S. C. Stone spent j Sunday afternoon with her parents. I Miss Mary Ivey of Whiteville is vis- iting Mr. and Mrs. Stevens Herriel.- Misses Kittie Ivey and Pearl Rozier (.spent Saturday with Miss Ether Od- duns.-r-Sorry to report little Maggie Herriel very sick with malaria and whooping cough. Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Ivey and Miss Alma Ivey spent Tuesday night with Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Wodell of Richardson. Mrs. Ex ira Ivey spent last week in Lumber ton visiting. Sorry to report Mrs. Lonnie Davis on the sick list. She is not expected to live. There seems to be a lot of sickness around here ajrr;-- Mr. Robert Stone and sister, Hat- tie, and Miss Nola Britt spent Sun day evening with Miss Kitfie Ivey. Misses Estelle and Viola and Vlr. E. V. Scott spent Saturday and Sun. iav in South Carolina. asked to join in the movement. The crops advocated for this State are: rye, for very poor soils; crim son, bur and red clover; vetch, with a support crop; and grasses of various mixtures. Last year a hundred acre3 of grasses, scattered well over the State, produced an average of 5,G00 pounds of cured hay per acre, at a net profit of $31.00 per acre. This shows that we have splendid condi tions for growing all the hay and grazing crops needed in the State and some to sell. The legumes metioned are usually more profitable than grasses because they gather free expensive nitrogen from the air and store it in the soil. Farmers can get it this way much cheaper than by purchasing it. These winter growing crops are very valuable. For grazing, cutting for forage or turning under to in crease soil fertility, they are easily worth $10 per acre and often several times this amount. Often the crop that follow them is doubled in yield. Furthermore, they reduce washing and leaching and add organic matter something that practically all soils are deficient in. Every acre of cul- , . . ,, f iU'. cruus irer ymr, uie in icne winter NOTICE OF SUMMONS Moore County Land for Sale Two tracts near each other, 206 acres in one tract, 130 acres in the other tract, in Moore county, McNeill township, on South side of lower little river, four miles north of Southern Pines, lying on both sides of sand clay road leading from Southern Pines to Carthage. This land is well adapted to growing Corn, Cotton or Tobacco in fact, to growing any crops or fruits grown in North Carolina. Growth on land round-leaf, black-jack, hickory, pine and dogwood. Enough long leaf pine on part of land to provide timber for any buildings pur. chaser may want to erect. Within 100 yards of electric light plant; near Farmers Rural Tele phone system; rural mail route; 2 miles from public school, special tax district, 8months' term; 2 1-2 miles from Norfolk & Southern Railroad from Carthage to Pinehurst. No better location could be asked for. This land can be bought cheaper than any other land of same qual ity in Moore county in fact, thereis NO OTHER LAND OF AS GOOD QUALITY IN MOORE COUNTY FOR SALE. TERMS TO SUIT PURCHASER. APPLY TO T.D.McLEAN. : Carthage, N. C. Buggies ! Harness ! We want your buggy and harness trade. We are carrying a full line and have anything in Vehicles you want Would like to exchange 25 new buggies for old ones and will give good prices for old ones in exchange. We will be glad to show you our line. C. M. FULLER & SON, LUMBERTON, N. C. CAROLINA COLLEGE MAXTON'. NORTH CAROLINA. Offers the bery best in building, equipment, curriculum and teaching force. Cost of plant about $150,000.00. Most modern and satisfactory system of steam heat in every part of buildings. Electric lights, hot and cold water, baths, sanitary drinking fountains in every part of building. Fire lines and fire hose on every floor. Ample gymnasium and laboratory equipment recently installed. .Furniture new, modern and the very best. Campus of 20 acres containing a park of native oak and other forest trees. Tennis courts and basket ball. Diploma given for completion of four years' course in literary department. Two years' course in sub-collegiate department. Splendid course in Piano, Voice, Expression, Physical Culture, Art. Domestic Science, Domestic Art and Business Department. Table board $100 for the year. Room rent $20 to $25 for the year. Tuition in literary department, includ ing Latin, French and German, $50 for the year. Our rapidly growing patronage is a guarantee that parents are finding what they desire. 1914 session opens Sept. 9. For catalogue address, REV. S. E. MERCER, President. TO THE FARMERS. At a meeting of Fairmont Tobacco Board of Trade it was decided to eliminate sales on Saturday from now on. Believing this to be for the best interest of the farmer and the tobac--co trade in general. F. P. DAVIS, July 29, 1914. Sec. and Treas. Paris dispatch, July 31: Jean Leon Juares, the noted Socialist leader, was assassinated tonight while dining in a small restaurant near the Bourse. The assassin was arrested but refus ed to discloe his identity. Later, he was identified as Raoul Villain, 29 years old, and said to be the son of a clerked the civil court at Rheims. j North Carolina, Robeson County In ! the Superior Court, First Septem- I I T Klf I Ofl 1 CI III, lVl t. L. II. TOWNSEND, V3. Mary Mercer, Kittie Quick and hus band, James Quick, Susan Mercer, Nine Ross and husband, T. B. Ross, Beulah Green and husband, Green, whose first name is unknown, and all other persons interested in the land involved in this action whose names are unknown to the plaintiff. To Kittie Quic and husband, James Quick, Susan Mercer, Nina Ross and husband, T. B. Ross, Beulah Green and husband Green, whose first name is unknown, and all other persons interested in the land involved in this action whose names are un known to the plaintiff: You and each of you are hereby notified that the plaintiff has insti tuted this action for the purpose of having his title to the land herein after described declared to be in fee simple and that the defendants above named have no interest whatsover therein, either actual or contingent, and to remove a cloud therefrom, and for the purpose of debarring any oth er person whatsoever whose names are unknown to the plaintiff, and ex cluding them from any interest in said land whatsoever, which land is described as follows: In Howellsville Township, Robeson county, North Carolina, on the north side of Jacob Swamp and on the south side of the Elizabeth road, be ginning at a stake with small pnm pointers on an island, Rowland Mer- Peer's corner in A. H. Mercer's line and runs as that line N. 65 east 25 chains and 20 links to a stake in said line, W. J. Mercer's corner; thence along his line south 23 east 19 chains and 65 links to a stake by a pine stump, Joseph Mercer's corner; thence as his line and its distance south 67 west 25 chains and 20 links to a stake in Rowland Mercer's line and in a branch; thence as that line north 23 west 18 chains and 30 links to the beginning, certainly 48 acres, more or less, and being the same tract of land described in deed from W. F. Brisson and wife to L. H. Townsend, by deed recorded in Book 6-K, page 253 office of the Register of Deeds of Robeson county, North Carolina. Now, Therefore, you and each of you are hereby commanded to be and appear before the Judge of Our Su perior Court at a court to be held for the county of Robeson, said State, on the First Monday in September, 1914, it being the 7th day of Septem. ber, 1914, and answer or demur to the complaint in this action which has already been filed in the office of the Clerk of the Superior court of Robi son county, and unless you do an swer or demur to said complaint, the plaintiff will reply to the court for the relief demanded, and the same will be granted. This the 30th day of July, 1914. C. B. SKIPPER. Clerk Superior Court Robeson Coun. ty. " 7304Thrs For earache, toothache, pains, burns scalds, sore throat, try Dr. Thomas Eclectid Oil, a splendid remedy for emergencies. and one in the summer. One may be a food crop or a money crop and the other a soil improvement crop.. Lands that lie bare during the winter months often lose more plant food through leaching and washing than is uud by the crop that grows there during the summer. It behooves every farmer to p;We this matter his attention. The impor tant thing to do right now is to decide which crop or crops he will grow, pro cure good seed, and then bi ;ak his land at once to a depth of from 5 to lz incnes. I rotitauie tvps are; rarely grown on shallowly plowed ! soils. Harrow the land the same dr.y j it is broken to prevent ioss of mois ture, and so have it ready to plant j wricn the time arrive.-;. Hide is no reason why ever farm u in the State shoulu iioL p' -nt iome c'rvd on his fami .ate in August or from then till the middle of October. Those who are not acquainted with clover growing should not plant more than an acre or two the first season. Information concerning the mtter may be had by requesting it of our State and National Departments of Agriculture, our A. & M. College, or Mr. C. R. Hudson, Raleigh, N. C, who inaugurated and is pushing the matter. Where there are demon stration agents, farmers enjoy the ad vantage of aj?ersonal interview by calling on them. Mrs. A. B. McPhaul. In a moultrie, Ga., paper of recent date is a beautiful tribute to Mrs. A. B. McPhaul of Moultrie, whose recent death was mentioned in The Robeson ian. She was the wife of a brother of Dr. W. A. McPhaul of Lumberton. From this tribute the following 13 taken: "Mrs. McPhaul joined the Methodist church when she was a child and was always consistent and faithful in her Christian relations of life. In addition to these noble virtues, she possessed featuresof beauty and a gentle, musi cal voice that graciously expressed the sweet and holy light of her loving soul Through her kindness of life and the sincerity of her friendship, she made her neighbors her friends and they loved her in the likeness of her own spirit. In her home lifeher soul found its real pleasure and its crown. Every thing about her took on the likeness of her white and beautiful life. Her deft and industrious fingers filled her home wit hthe objects both useful and beautiful, beyond that, many of her friends shared gra ciously in the loving fruits of her skilled handiwork. She has vanished from us in her bodily form, but she has left us in the radiance of her im perishable and unfading goodness. May the hundreds who knew and loved her feel the lifting power of her nobie love and be inspired to imitate her goodnessas we belived she followed the Lord." Candidate Wound i ar.J lurt Had to Speak Wrhen the Urn Came. Mr. Arch Prevatt, who presides over the county jail deposes and says: The other day when the candidates were due at a certain place at 11 of the clock State Senator G. B. Mc Leod, who is a candidate for re-election, was detained on account of a breakdown and when the hour came at which he was down to hold forth to the voters on the momentous issues of the day he just had to speak, so he cornered an Indian, the only man in sight, and lit into him with a red hot campaign speech, and said his piece before the bewildered and help less, audience of one knew what was being done to him. Mr. Prevatt vows that the candidatewas wound up like a clock and had to strike when the hour came had to strike or bust. So he struck. - Subscribe to The Robesonian. Mr. Gooddresser6(kigitfiisffne &tcasefro(9lMefMrcJ)ase0 Asuooa clothes aneffimisiiDgiS' jrorn us too Before you take "that trip," come in and let us equip you for traveling. A bum bag or suit case or trunk will spoil your fun. The man with the better looking baggage gets the better treatment when traveling. There's style, quality and comfort in traveling "paraphernalia" just the same as in clothes. We can supply you with the para phernalia as well as with the furnish ings and clothes. Whatever we sell you is GOOD. OUTFITTERS Lumberton, North Carolina Doctors Like to Have Us Com pouind Their Prescriptions Because they know how careful we are about the absolute purity and freshness of our drugs, and that we never substitute or guess. THE SAME CARE THAT WE GIVE TO OUR PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT is shown in everything else we buy and sell from the quality of our Rubber Goods acd sick room Supplies to the land of Syrup we use at the soda fountain. SAFETY means satisfaction, and your satis faction means our success. McMILLAN'S The Old Reliable Drug Store The Supply House FOR THE FARMER It matters not what you need in the way of Groceries, Dry Goods, Hardware, Wagons, Buggies, farm implements, etc We can Supply Your Wants We have everything for everybody at the right prices. Call and let us show you. filcEachern, Johnson & HcGeachy Co. St Pauls, - - - - N. C S-9
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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Aug. 6, 1914, edition 1
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