Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / Sept. 24, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE BOBONIAl?, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1917 fc6E two Ml;- L I!) !i ill ;i'i,i 11 HI: : . MEMORIES OF OD ... BETHEL CONGREGATION (By SNYDER) "Written for The Robesonian. Some personages of the old Beth el congregation as I knew them many years ago. I have no data to go by, nly my boyish recollections, which are being dimmed as the years roll round. , , . , The two McLauchlm- brothers were elders when I first began to take note. Billy McDairmid, the father of the two former editors of The Robesonian, was also a prom iHr. I would like so much 1tiau; Vl? fi-PSt . CldArS. 1 010111 -fcxtow urltil I began the&S note - t r ii j . a I was anticipates a sKetcn SUMMARY OF THURS- x DAY'S WAR NEWS THINGS SEEN AND British Begin New Drive Along 8- Mile Front (By The Robesonian's local reporter while on and off his beat) Take no charge9! Move poisons from liver and bowels at once A British drive along a front of Where Did the Blood Come From? 8 miles between the Ypres-Commes wh re did the blood come from? and the Ypres-Staden railways was wnere , , . ftarted at dawn Thursday morning. A certain young Lumberman was At nightfall the British command- ( riding a bicycle one day recently a-d er reported the occupation of im-!when he got 0ff the bicycle both ISMT" 2,000 the Ws dothes and the bicycle had bod infliction of heavy casualties on the spattered on them. The young man Germans. - was very much puzzled about the Ieavy artillery preparation for matter and asked the reporter to ex days had been going 0n and exten-j th blood came sive rams in anticipation oi not com-' Children simply will not take an i menaous miantry assault anu wile",-'" j .. f i t emntv their bow- tesJthe British left their trenches thej'ply with the request and the young ?hePy padSf i Oi.were preceded by row upon row ot man is. still wondering--where the',.' ts sluggish and stomach dis- LOOK AT A CHILD'S TONGUE WHEN CROSS, FEVERISH AND SICK Mothers can rest easy after giving "California Syrup of Figs," because in a few hours all the clogged-up waste, sour bile and fermenting food gently moves -out of the bowels, "-ard you have a well, playful child again. Children simolv will not takfi the wie I mieht have gotten into an man lines to a greater depth than nitnmnhile ard visited some of her,on any previous occasion, M V V V - w. a most intelligent members and found not nil this' data karri 'uult.a Vip. tiiimp of John Purcpll, who was one of her prom- their storming operations, i line") . 110 , t u Ir.TOTi tnnnr blood came from. Concrete V.riflre.la of vsafliitt6 a'uns. Mn.de More Money and Will Save barbed wirP entanglements andi "I made more money this year off ordered. Whvri crnss. fevprUh, restless, see Tt'if tongue is coated, then give this ?f delicious "fruit laxative". Children barbed wire entangiemen uW x maue "u cj JW1 , ipve it -md it can not cause injury, marshy. grourf faced the Bn sh m my farm than I nave ever ail your -fitlfe tint! vA vuiuf Ji a J3vr- -ache, bad breatu, ;le '"'inside cleans- church. He was from thC Mt. reuer, sreacmy, gmag should always be"" the first neighborhood and was said to nave laid aown m ine pia" w. aUi;u: ' ux. iaxxweio "j- . - --p dir ctions for hlon the .wealthiest pew-holder in for the first day 0f penetratmg th.e-in.ake more money on their larms chifdrpn of a 11 aSs and for toe Aurch. I don't know how much German lines in places for a mile this year than they ever made in . bi, childre "f eSeaacniab10(l! he contributed to the preacher's sal- or so. . one year.beore, but how many will u- -P oa eacn ary, but as the usual amount was The unofficial report from Field save it, is the question. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. oKnnf I e -T3DO5P he eave about Marshal Haig characterizes the re- - . , e a . 1 5 1 ka f IS although I P don't know, as he suit of the lay's battle as a eat Reck'ess. Auto DrWing O.iJ Creek Ask yuJ Sdt ration or being rath er success and Associated Press, oad ' o f Cah forn a SyrP of nn rM iiii ri.u i i u -i 1 1 1 1. 1 1 1 u m i i v i t-.fi i " " "C " J tSS merber7whn If s Qy iuS 'cut down many of the'er the other day.; The farmer con- 50Va Xa 1 V Tack mule to birrieis and the Britsh went forward tinued, "I. am eomg to save that, "larrnoea, stoma "i a JA A; s&. a" the objectives! money, too." fhe a hundred,, remember, a ntle s vour 6am a cotton warehouse? W3EN you store a ton of old style cottonseed hulls you give space to almost 500 pounds of lint and all the extra bulk that the lint causes. When you store a ton of TRAOC MARK rloaefisted: and besides, he was the .pastor's sort-in-law. . ' Next on my list is Angus Gilchrist, who lived just over, the river in the then Richmond county. He was the brother of the late lawyer Gilchrist. He was a fine man and exerted con siderable influence in his commun ity. The next on my list is Alexander Purcell, father of T. E. Purcell and grandfather of Wilton McLean. He -was said t0 have been progressive and liberal in his dealings with his church. His brother Arch PurceH, I think, was a member, but took lit tale interest in its management. Alex. Graham, a fine man and neighbor, took little interest in it. He only attended church twice a year. I next come to the two Archibald McEacherns, father and son, and as 1 am rather close kin to them, I'd rather reserve my opinion to a la" er period. Angus' McBryde was a regular member of the church, a.vd was a mighty good Democrat and neigh bor. 2. JJT 1 J. 4. i-1 4?v - clare that if ' the British maintain ing complaint . ir0m people Uivfrng , "V, tt7 1 CTX ?moii the positions to which they have on the Creek road, which is a part 1 p Company We make no small advanced, "they will have accqm- of the Wilmington-Charlotte high-: er size- Hand back with contempt plished one of the most remarkable way, about folks driving automobiles j any other lig syrup. land most important Achievements So fast by their homes and killing ( in recent months." (their chickens xand even endangering Uncle Sam is Some Buyer of Food Strong German forces had been the lives of their children. One far-j Concord Times, assembled for the purpose of hold- mer recently told the reporter that This war has miadb Unj:le Sam ing back the British troops in this he was going to sejl his farm ancl j t bu of food . all th tremendous bombardment which had move away from the good road.! . x- i. -u been going 0n daily, several times Just after talking with the farmer, country. The statement has been reaching drum-fire intensity, pres- the reporter , had occasion to travel made that the board bill of our sol- aged a determined effort to break over the road and saw chickens ly- diers jS $800,000 a day. According through, and the German resistance ing m the road dead as a result of t th best rts will soon hav nature. j farmer said he had already ordered two million men nnder.armsv and it Peking-dispatches say that the a stop watch and was going to have costs lorty cents a day to leed tnem. Chinese government is willing to folks "pulled" who break the speed It must be remembered, too, that send 300,000 troops to France if the limit while passing his place. tmtente powers approve. A TokiOi dispatch says Japan has been sound-1 Will Shoot to Kill these men, who were former produc ers, are now only consumers. Mr ed on this proposition and there are! It is a fact that people living in Charles Lathrbp Pack, president of indications that Japan will not op- the rural districts of Robeson are be- pose such action ing imposed upon by reckless auto drivers. A man was telling the re porter that some of the women in the National Food Garden Commis- These figures give but an idea of the rieed of food conservation on the part of the individual at this time. The National Emergency sion, gives these facts which will be DEVELOPMENTS IN KING ' norter that some of the women in 0 mucn interest MURDER 'iMYSTERY his gtction had armed themselves wi "I am told that the 'reserve stock Attornev Phil C. McDuffiA nf At- his section had armed themselves of foodstuffs at each camp is $125, lanta. whn renrocenfpH Mrs. Anno with ernns and were ffoin tn shoot. 000 and there are 33 camps in the Now these are the people who at-.. Robinson, mother f Mrs. Mauris Cshoot tn kiln neoDle who run over country today." That means that. tended the church when I was a boy. "a. King, who was mysteriously kill- their chickens and do not stop to food valued at $4,125,000 is taken up aoove me were several oi me ed near Concord 0n the evening of pay for them. This man does not out of the regular channels of trade lurrie lamiiy, who were memoers, August 29, served notice 0n the banks live on the Creek road, either. also Daniel Love, father of Robt. A. of Concord Thursday that Gaston! Love, an old associate of my boy- Bullock Means, former business man-1 Payng Old Accounts . hOOd and a royal-hearted fellow. All flrer for Mro. TCino- nnH witli it. Thia is a fnr nnvino- old nr have passed over the river. the night she was shnt. had been counts. Merchants, have told the re-! Food Garden Commission urges ev JN.ext comes Lauchhn McJNem, enjoined by an order of Federal porter about collecting accounts that ery Soldfer of the Soil to '"at once tw v -n u VvT ' t a m !Judge Jydf at Greensboro, from were so old they almost felt like the! promote himselt to a Colonel of Con McNeill, the tather of Judge Mc- transferring any funds of the King men who paid the accounts were' servation and store and can foo V?111'. Vt? afterwards became an estate. it had'been learned that a giving them the money without re-!as never before. e J Ai-ii ellt y:-ii i draft for $5'000 had been drawn ceiving anything for it. Of cdurse! "Germany reports that its war gar- ' t. e I t tnrough a Concord bank on a bank those merchants live in the tobacco dens produce more this year than sawmill, and who came to church 0f New York city by Mrs. Julie section. j any year since the war started. This regularly once a year. 1 means, wife of Gaston Means. Judge . "Shows ,the value of experience. We C3f i Fmem J1?1 Boyd Thursdav made Mrs. Julie' A Germany n have had one year's experience and nitujiue, j.awie oi xom iuioyue. xie Means and Afton Means, the latter When the barefooted and bare- have raised $50,000,000 worth of Tifl .ain 01 superior intellect ara a brother of Gaston, parties to the headed preacher visited Lumberton ' prcduce in our war gardens. Next iic uiuitii ftuiieieu a great iu& restraining order issued a few davs Thursday one old darkey, after tak- year we will 'do even better. We o n Jl!v f e as before. Another Concord bank was ing a good lo0k at the preacher, was will then have more war gardens llPtFRZ ftr , that a draft had been heard to remark "I'll jes bet he's a and the average product of elch will .vZ. i 7i T. ..;7j 6 . "awn through it for something Germany". be larger. "Housewives of this coun Hpnrv MpNeill and hi! hrntr i"e than ?3'000 and was ordered to. : - try this year have preserved and Arch ll lit Th hold fundS th mieht come in-J ADVERTISE in THE ROBESONIAM ' canned at least .460,0007000 jars of irWS? m New!- AnStheT oung minister from thai gLS? C MT A P wuose momer was a iviciauren irom. hi-mhom (nAaA -e "n I" Laurinburg. I can't recall either of their initials. You see, Mr. Editor, I have under-1 g' " R3 iB eAS!K taken a bigger job than I first in- Zl AC nliSl8 marry her tfi'rst husband, Edward CALOMEL IS MERCURY, IT SICKENS ! CLEAN LIVER AND BOWELS GENTLY ttZ!&J3V& MSSf'tf' 0-.-X-. a Day, If Yiur LWer is S,ug,ish o far nc. Pnnnv .roL- rwi 11 1 iceiveu. Tiniormation mat tne SLJaV&I t0.: couple met by annointment last vam' ilhould "keeep STwhiSfl0 very much gLSJSl SSL" several bijob is too big. besides, rw?T?S.HSg If" "ZX&l this point in Connection with the "in-! h! Ton feel lazy, dizzy and all pated Take Dod son's Liver Tone" or Bowels Consti- Your liver is slug- beyond. So. fnr. tV,n 1 uu 1001 to PC" Please eACUAP 11 i,; i. 1. J. , - . . me. which migut nave Deen mter- , .ferred with by her marriage. SICK WIFE'S STORY SUR- i Copper prices were fixed Thursday The following te, uror?S SS at ?3 t2, cents a Pound, about three bertontArsfness8 S? wtfel iTZLZ met' iercd from dyspepsia and constipa- lSAr lion for years. Although she diet You're Bilious! quiry as to whether there was a plot knocked out. Your head is dull, your on foot to obtain Mrs. King's for- tongue is coated; breath bad; stomach sour and bowels constipated. But don't take salivating calomel. It makes you sick, you may lose a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. 1 m uon i or years. vitn0ugn She d;.t- effective foVfour ?X TiUlolnel crashes into sour bile like buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc.. as' mv? Wc b,i L " 'u., uu cramp. mixon in Adier-i-ka relieved her IN- 'i" t " iV- e"LI1. I ?i. BOTH large and small intestines it : ,t5 ;e , copper irom , iucest, gentlest liver and bow 1. vauig ywu ever experienced jus take "a spoonful of harmless Dodson'! you want to enjoy the stantly. Because Adler-i-ka empt RDTH 1 nro-o nTA cmoll i4--4-:A relieves ANY CASE constipation, torf. spec- el cleansing you ever experienced just sour stomach or gas and prevents MtmonrH.iHc. T. Vmo TTTr,T"tr,aT lham uros., druggists. j , ri.c kidneys A t JDes 1 Dodson's Liver Tot;a mw HULLS X LINTLESS you give space to 2000 pounds of real roughage, free from lint, compact, concentrated, solid. Buckeye Hulls save half your storage space or enable you to carry twice as much roughage. Other Advantages 2000 pounds of roughage value Better assimilation of other food. to the ton -not 1500. No trash or dust. Priced much less per ton. . Sacked easy to handle. Every pound goes farther. Mix well with other forage. ' Mr. John Wicker, Forest, Mist., says: j that his first experience in feeding Buckeye Hulls was unsatisfactory as he fed them improperly. He now soaks the hulls over night, then feeds them and has very satisfactory results. Mr. Wicker states that these hulls are more economical than the old style hulls and thinks that they go almost twice as far as the old style hulls at a considerably less cost to begin with. To secure the best results and to develop the ensilage odor, wet the hulls thoroughly twelve hours before feeding. It is easy to do this by wetting them down night and morning for the next feeding. If at any time this cannot be done, wet down at least thirty minutes, If you prefer to feed the hulls dry, use only half as much by bulk as of old style hulls. Book of Mixed Feeds Free Gives the right formula for every combination of feeds used in the South. Tells how much to feed for maintenance, for milk, for fat tening, for work. Describes Buckeye. Hulls and gives directions for using them properly. Send for your copy to the nearest mill. Dept. k The Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. Dept. r Atlanta Birmingham Greenwood Little Rack Afmn. SeJma Augusta Charlotte Jackson Macon vegetables and fruits. Next year profiting by their experience of this year they will can, I believe, mil lions more, and more, will be need ed, for I wish to emphasize now the fact that there will be a greater de mand for food exportation next year than there has- ever been before, and we must fill this demand." RUB-rulV-TOSNi Will cure your Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used in ernally and externally. Price 25c- sonal money-back guarantee, that each spoonful will cleanse your sluggish liver better than a dose of nasty calo mel and that it won't make you sick. Dodson's Liver Tone is a real liver medicine. You'll know it next mnrn, ing because you will wake up feeling nfine your liver will be workinsr: vour headache and dizziness gone, vour stomach will be sweet and your bow els regular You will feel like work ing; youH be cheerful; full of vigor and ambition. Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely vegtetjable, therefore "harmless and cannot salivate. Give it to your chil ! uren. annons oi people are using Dodson's Liver Tone instead of dan gerous calomel now. Your druggist will tell you that the sale of- Calomel is almost stopped entirely here. lock Bros. Auto Livery Double dailyservice between Lumberton and Fairmont M SCHEDULE Leave Passenger Station 'Li; ' i 10:15 a. m. Leave Lorraine Hotel 8:30 a. m. 6 P- m- 6:30 p. m. Round trip $1 or 50 cents one way. - Repair Work & Auto Supplies Phones 321-221-55 LUMBERTON, N. C. FIFTEENTH SERIES Robesoo Building & Loan Association NOW QPEN DO NOT PUT OFF UNTIL TOMORROW What you ought to do today. Take stock in this Series and begin to plant that NEW HOME that YOU have wanted so long. Build your home with rent money. INFORMATION CHEERFULLY FURNISHED C. V. BROWN, Secretary. ' i f HEUO UNCLE I TY'RC HA W OVER v ; - How's Tne J L r i AIM't KlftTiii . a Viil-ru r- . IN THE CVJL UAB HACK IM m A.l T-. . . 1 PLAV COHPARGD INFLICT ! , in iHi Vi ClF TTPWCtnn' . .1 an wesuKe 0I SOrte TAU,FiruT1.M tu. TnA.,n " . .vett with y0U I i;'UU rOLKS S THAT 1 VA i I rs.. . ... ' p)f? . j I KNOW y'-&i BOOT THG vajas A BOV To TACH os A800T IT INI school. ! TV 111 I ' t If f-l hi riie-i did hpv uin i , , - - T'i'i . . . t oti vou DONlT eOH KHOVO IN VilUAT r. 0 , , CCNGRAL PHIL VCGRWeV i.IAc W.. . 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The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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Sept. 24, 1917, edition 1
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