Newspapers / Salisbury Evening Post (Salisbury, … / May 13, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Salisbury Evening Post (Salisbury, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE TWO. SALISBURY EVENING POST SALISBURY, N. G, MAY 13, 1916. OlD ENGLISH PAGEANT 1200 Players in Costume STATE NORMAL COLLEGE If weather condidions prevent performance May 20th, It will be given Monday, May 22nd; The Most Elaborate Performance Ever Presented in the South THE PAGEANT INCLUDES ' . . ': :. REPRESENTING S 1 1 A K ESP E .4 K'4 MOST IMPOST ANT CHARACTERS. GRAND PARADE INCLUDING 420( PLAYERS IN COSTUMES, MANY BEAUTIFUL FLOATS, JESTEItS, CLOWNS. ETC. SHAKESPEAREAN BLEAUX m OPERETTA Grand Assembly and Crowning of May Queen on Curry Court. COMING IN OF SPRING. GIVEN BY 300 CHILDREN. OLD ENGLISH P MAY POLE DANCES (l EEN ELIZABETH AND HER COfKT ROBIN HOOD EAS ANTS IN MAY DAY REVF' MINSTRELS.ETC, ETC . WCKS, ST. CfEHliL. A ) THE DRAGON AS YOU Lih:: IT HIE AND CRY AFTER CUPID Mid-Summer Nights Dream Place State formal College. Time 2 P. M. May 20th. General Admission $1,50. Children under 12, $1.00. Mrs. Son A. ri. ma niintnn Plaet, K a n a tf City, Mo.: "I bad 1 cold in tne mm. I mod Itnroa. TCii wD plcwwd with tha result. L?S.,l2JK?,..n, tlcna Trade Mcrk V. 8. P.twt Office PE-RU-NA" Mr. William . Penny, 1IB1 Park Aw., Springfield, Ohio: "Was troubled with ca tarrh of the head, cot., tliroat and (toiuach. I ato greatly nllevod by tenia." Coughs, Colds. Stomach Troubles ancL Catarrh Relieved. No Reincdyv can Conipeto with Peruna The Heady-to-take A PAGEANT AIM WILLIAMS. AT CHINA GROVE. Rcpublica.t Nominee for Congress in This District Opens Bow an Cam-' paign for Hia Party. . : 1 There waa a political meeting at Chin Grove Friday night at -which II. S. Williams, Esq., of Concord, the Republican' nominee for Congress in j . this district, waa tht, cn:er attrac tion. 'The speaking: took place in the , t 1 !l lit It ! puouc scnooi ouucung ana u is re jwrted that a large crowd was out, among this number 'being several Salisbury leaders of the party. A band was on hand to liven things up. "This was really the operant of the campaign by the Republicans in this county, and from now on these meet ings will increase in frequency. As before stated, the . Republicans' are expected to wage a vigorous cam paign in Rowan and this is apparent by the early start made. Engineers there next Tuesday. This dmpntration will include and con nect New York, Philadelphia, Atlan, ta, Boston, San Francisco and other cities. EDITOR BEASLEY COMING. MR. RAY GLOVER'S WORK. The Doctor I understand you caught a burglar in your store last night. The Druggist Yew; the fel low said he was all run down, and wanted to take something for it. . Salisbury Boy Making Good With American Telegraph and Telephone and Telegraph CompanyNow at Knoxritre, Temt. -. .- : Mr. Ray Glover, son of Mr, and Mrs, John M. Glover, of this city, is making' good as an electrician with the American Telephone and Tele graph Company, and who has been station ei at A&anta for some time, 'but it now making his headquarters in Knoxville, Tenn. At present he is In Evansville, Ind., and his father has just received a letter from him in which he says he is there assisting in the installation ot a repeater for . the long distance telephone demon stration which his company wall give the American Institute of Electrical j Monroe Man Will Come to Salisbury on the 29th to Deliver the Address Before the Graduating Class of the Salisbury Schools. Mr. Roland F. Boaaley, editor of the Monroe Journal, will deliver the closing address at the city schools on the 29th of May. Superintendent Allen is in receipt of a message from Mr. Beasley say ing he will be very glad to come to Salisbury on this occasion and de liver the address before the graduat ing class of the school. Mr. Beasley is one of the deepest thinkers of the state. He is a news paper man of experience, a splendid tal'ker and has been prominent in state affairs for some years. The schools are fortunate in securing him and our people shoulJ not fail to hear him. The man who realizes his own weeikness adds to his strength. If Hair's Your Pride Use Herpicide -1' r ft THE LATEST f IMoucltic PIPING ROCK Shield Bow & Batwing i j For the New Collar A GREAT HIT. Made of Crepe Material in a variety of fancy and plain colon. , 5dD(D The Nw Thing Firsts IT State's Leading Clothiers. 7T m Nil it P $ V.WaDaceSons . . . i Interesting Event to be Staged in Connection With the Annual Com mencement on May 20th When the Vice President Comes. Greensboro, May 12. The great est feature of the State Normal col lege commencement this year will be the huge pageant which will be given on the opening day. May 20. The ! presence as the chief speaker of the commencement of Hon. Thomas R. Mil-shall, vice president of the Unit ed States, will be another great drawing card. The commencement promises to draw well upon the state for attendance. The college has reached in its quarter of a century a position in the life of the state which affords a record of collegiate achieve ments, having a student body of young women TOO strong, whereas the largest institution for the higher education of men in North Carolina was more than a century arriving at so significant a student body. The graduates this year are repre sentative of every section. It is pe culiarly noticeable how distinctively North Carolinian are the addresses of not only the graduating class but the entire student body. The pageant referred to is model lei on the old English May presenta tions. There will be about 1,200 ac tors in the various dramas and other events of the day. The staging for this tremendous n)ow wiil cover many acres of ground, the campus proper of the college being used and the Peaibody park, a great adjoining meadow and woodland beting also cirafted for the outaoor theatrical purposes of this occasion. The train ing of the students and others who will take part m the pageant has been in progress now far months and the costs, great as It is, has been whipped into shape so that every thing is in readiness for the 20th. This will not be the first occasion of the presentation of the State Nor mal college pageant. It was given four years ago and is designed to be a quadrenial feature or the college life of regrar rennaissance. Tiie first presentation drew a great gath ering of people from all parts of the state and the pageant was heralded as the greatest of its kind ever pre sented in the South and equal if not superior to anything of Its kind giv en in the country. This year the program is fuller and more varied. Several new features of interest have been added. Chief among tbtse new features is the Shakespearean portion of the plans which has been added to the two Shakeapearan plays wntch were formerly presented. This Innovation is due to the fact that this year is the tercentenary of Shakespeare and that consequently a revival of interest in his work exists. The program of the pageant will include the "Hue and Cry After Cupid' by Jonaon, "A Midsummer Night'f Dream," "As You Like It," "King George and the Dragon," "Robin Hood," from lines written especially for the pageant. May pole dances, the Morris dances. and other folk scenes artistic and beautiful. The parade in chief will be before "Queen Elisabeth and her court." The pageant will befria at 2 o'clock on May 20. The speech by Vice President Mar shall will be celivered at 10:30 on Tweeday, May 23, commnecement day. The diplomas will alee be awarded on that day. The annual sermon to the graduates will be delivered" Sunday, May 21, by Rev. X M. Watson, of Chattanooga, Tenn. In addition to! the pageant on Saturday, there will be an alumnae rally that night. At 8:r!0 o'clock Sunday nlgnt, in Pea body park, the annual address to the Y. W. C. A. will be made by Rev. W. T. D. Moss, of the Presbyterian j churcr of Chapel Hill. Monday will be observed as alum- l nae and senior class day. RESOLUTION OPPOSES FRATERNAL ORDEKS McADENSVILLE DEFEATS SPENCER IN THE TENTH. j Spencer, May 12. In playing off a tie of 6 to G, at the end of the ninth : inning, Spencer was defeated by Mc j Adensville by a score of 11 to 6. This ! was the sixteenth game for Spencer ! this season, and the third time she ' had been defeated. I For the first time the locals real- izel they had met their match, the visiting team being composed of strong players from several of the teams at McAdensville, Dallas, Gas tonia and other places. Both teams played fine 'ball up to the end of the ninth and tied. In the tenth Spencer made several costly errors which brought four runs and victory to the visitors. Concord, May 12. Disapproval of the ordaining of a minister who is a I member of a fraternal orier was ex I pressed in resolutions submitted to j the North Carolina Lutheran Synod : at today's session of the convention : here. The resolution held that the' . Church provides for the" social and spiritual wants of men. j The resolution, which was adopted t by a large vote, was considered a ; long step toward the morning of the ! Tennessee and North Carolina Syn- ois into one body as the Tennessee Synod always has insisted on this provision. i The resolution was embodied in a ! report submitted by a joint commit tee of the Tennessee and North Car olina Synods, which is considering the proposed merger. I Ichabed What makes you so infer- nally tHn? Jacques Worry, old i chap, worry. Ichabed What on earth are you worrying about ? Jacques Getting thin. Judge. SPECIAL MEMORIAL SiiRVICES. Sons and Daughters of Liberty of Salisbury to Honor Their Dead With Appropriate Ceremonies. The two Salisbury Councils, Sons and Daughters of Liberty, of Salis bury, representing a membership close on to 500, will hold special memorial services on tne afternoon of Sunday, May 21st, the same to take place in the auditorium of the Communlity Building, and to which the public is invited. This is an an nual accosion with the members of this fraternity and is to pay honor to their dead. The memorial address will he deliv ered by Rev. L. W. BlacTcwelder, of High Point, one of the briigt young members of the order, and State President J. C. Kesler, of Salisbury, 'will preside. It is expected that a number of visitors from trie aeveral councils in Rowan county, outside of Salisbury, will be present at this service. "Drink to me only fith thine eyes," quoted the romantic maiden. "All right. Here's looking at you," re plied the practical youth. SAVES DAUGHTER Advice of Mother no Doubt Pre vents Dasgnter'i Untimely End. Ready, Ky. " I was not able to dr anything for nearly six months," write; Mrs. Laura Bratcher, ot this place, "and was down in bed for three months. I cannot tell you how I suffered with my head, and with nervousness and womanly irouDies. Our family doctor told my husband he couia.ooi uo me any gooa, ana ne naa to give it up. We tried another doctor, bui oc ota not neip roe. At last, my mother advised me to fake Cardui, the woman's tonic I thought it was no use tor i was nearly aeaa ana nothing seemed to do me any good. But rooic eievcn ootues, ana now i am a Die to do all of my work and my own wasning. I think Cardui is the best medicine in (he world. My weight has increased, sad I look the picture ot health, M ; U you suffer from any of the same firs peculiar to women, get a bottle of Cardui today. Delay is dangerous. We know It win help you, for it has helped so many thousands of other weak womea ia the past 50 years. , At aU druggists. . rww Cfaaflanaera MMm Oo, U4it Idrnorr Dpt . Cbattanoeca, Twin., far ShcM toiMiw ffK CM and M-aa book. Horn, tiaatmal tot W w." io plain wratmar. H.C IU Richmond Virginia's elegant new and largest Fireproof Hotel. In the heart of the city. European Plan $1-50 and upwards Wno for booklet and rates 1 itH i No Greater Luxury in Summer Than old water on tap. How insipid and warm the "city" water becomes from the very outset of summer. What greater convenience could there be than e good, cold drink whenever you want it. That's what it means to have an AUTOMATIC REFRIGERATOR With the same ice that cools the food, the contents of its built- in water cooler is kept delightfully cold. It's h wonderful refrig erator. See the Auto matic before you buy. f(5(TfM:tl The R. W. Norman Co. OTEL CUMBERLAND NEW YORK, Broadway a 54th St. Broadway Cars from Grand Central Depot 7th Ave. Citq from Pennsylvania Station NEW and FIREPROOF Strictly Firit-Clas3 Rates Reasonable Roots with Adjoining Bath $1.50 up Raonu with Prrntte Bath $2.00 p Suites 34.00 up Special Rataw (or Fcnuanent Giwute Ten Minutes Walk to Forty Thei'.r-s HARRY P. STIMSON VvtacAy villi Hotel laipciitl for Dco'ilct (Mi iV . Yotk I ' yiadtu- aeTKJ Thtcutheal SPECIAL SUMMKR BATES FOR SOUTHERN FAMILIES. r ARE YOU SATISFIED WITH YOVR A UTOMOBILE TIRES ? HAVE YOU EVER THOROUGHLY INVESTIGATED THE Goodyear OVER-SIZED CASING? WE OFFER YOU THE OPPORTUNITY. OUR STOCK IS LARGE ON ALL SIZES, BOTH IN FABRICS AND CORDS. YOU WILL BE SATISFIED IF YOU PURCHASE Goodyear UP-TO-DATE AND RELIABLE REPAIR CASINGS, NO MATTER HOW v BApLY DAMAGED; TUBES, ETC. WE WILL CALL AND GET YOUR WORK AND WHEN FINISHED, RETURN.' v THE ROUZER GARAGE CO. Phone 224
Salisbury Evening Post (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 13, 1916, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75