Newspapers / Washington Daily News (Washington, … / Nov. 6, 1915, edition 1 / Page 3
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XcUDUn; ?"??? MTUC Be RR ?hoot. Halt Prlc?. W. I Rhodoi WAJVTSD TO Btrr FARM ISO TO ? ictm, mu?l!y cleirod. Loo*-, tion ud prloe DMt be "right. Ad. dreaa A. B. Bobauwaker, Pctera bnrg, V*., general delivery 11-4-Tho-Bat-Moa. WW-PACIAOI CONTAINING HH" aid eurreaey. Liberal re w ard will k? paid 1* r*ur*ed f. EATEN A Ul-tfa F#lt BALE, GOOD GENTLE HtME Haraeea Barry amd Btanhope. A u. dumat. IMItft PKMI MEATS AND OYSTERS delivered la any part M the city. ?. T. PHELPS, Markat atra*t. IX -4 -ft p. FOE BALE OR RENT ? LOWTEER ho o#?. Wa?hlngtoa Park. Naw. aodarn aotTanleaeae, alaatrlc light*, water, aewerage, vtaam heat, alaaflDf forth, can parlor. Apply Harrta Hardware Ce U-l-twe. OTSTBRB DEL1TEJUEE; BTEBL INO'B FIBB HO USB lMI-tk EX7NTEHB TAKE KOTIEE, ?VKl for rani J. b. PHILLIP lB-S-tfe. VOn BALE CHEAP A 0AE1LLAC, aatomoblle, la Aral elaaa eondl ttoa. II job want a aheap auto aee me at 6. L GARROW. l#-IO-lwe. {Rm Next Beat Thing To Tb? Flu? Foreat For Col da la ? Dr. Bell's Plne-Tar-Honay. which goes to the very root of cold trou ble*. It clean the throat and give* relief from that clogced and stuffed fee'.lng. The plnee have ever been the frleod of man In driving away eolds. Moreover, the pine-honey Quailtlea are peculiarly effective In lighting children's colds. Remem ber that a cold broken at the start greatly removes ths possibility of eompllcations. 25c. QOES BROKE ON HONEYMOON Mlshapa to Auto Put Bridal Pair In Financial Straits on Tour Through Iowa. Muscatine, la. ? To be owner of s targe seven-paaaenger touring car, wltn which you embarked upon your honeymoon, and yet be forced to apply to a welfare society for lodging foi J the night, would be embarrasatng tc most bridegrooms, but It didn't take any of the Joy out of life for George Garrett of Elkhart, Ind., and his bride, who roached here en route to Sey mour, la. A aeries of mishaps drained Gar rett a purse, and upon his arrival here be waa forced to "bock" bis extra suit to buy gasoline and, with hla wife waa boarded at a local hostelry at the expense of a local charity body. RUNS FARM WITHOUT HORSE Wiaconsln Man Demonetratee That Thla la the Age of Power. Marinette, Wis. ? Eighty acre* of land cleared and cultivated without a horse setting foot on the place Is the record made by W. C. Wyckoff, a for mer Bloomlngton (111.) farmer, who located at Crlvlts. In Marinette coun ty, last year. His farm waa entirely raw land In the spring of 1914. Wyckoff says this la the age of pow er. He has an 11-ton tractor, and whether the task la clearing land, lev eling. plowing, disking, harrowing or harvesting, the tractor furnishes the power. When he goes to town Wyck off drives an auto. CROCHET CRAZE SEIZES CITY Needle Slips Keep 8urgeons Busy Treating Injured Plngere Prinoeton, Ind. j Princeton Ind. ? This city has for eeveral weeks been In the throes of the orechet erase. Many women can hardly put dowq their crocheting long enoug^ to get the meals and attend to ithe housework. Burgeons eay that It Is becoming serious. . Hardly a day paeees but the sur? geons hare to treat from one to three I women or girl* who hare Jabbed the [points of crochet noedlee into their jflngars or hand a in many Instances (the broken pieoea have to be out out * ?yti? ) Every Home Need* a Faithful Congh and Gold Remedy When seasons change and colds appear ? when you Srst detect a cold after sitting next to one who has ?neesed, then It Is that a tried end tested remedy should be faithfully need. "1 never wrote a testimonial before, but, 1 know positively that for myself and family, Dr. Mag's New Discovery i* the beet cough remedy we ever u?d aad wg have trt?4 hi." ?o? ui li oo. SHORT ITEMS FROM\ Neighboring Cities. Alto Meeting at New Bern. New Bern ? Some very interesting instruction will be given the teach ers of Craven county when they gather In New Bern on Saturday | morning to hold their first meeting of the present term. Prof. L. C. Brogden, of Raklgh, will make the principal address of the day and County Superintendent 8. M. Brinson hopes that every teacher will be on hsnd to hear this. Moonlight School at Currituck. Bl?b?h City ? Reports from fcur Ituck couoty this week statp that he Moonlight School work in that ounty has begun with excellent co >peratlon of teachers and others In terested in the work. These schools - rill bo taught throughout Novem-j oer, some at the school buildings' iad some In private homes. Shooting Soaaon for Burke. Ellz^fcrth City ? The shooting sea ion for ducks and geese opened Monday and hundreds of gunners took to the marches aod waters of Eastern North Carolina sounds to ry their skill. The weather was too vmrm for any great showing of )!rds, but many gunners got good bags and expressed themselvee as being very well esttsfled consider 'ng the earllneBs of the season and the condition of tbe weather. A good! kill of hedheada and geeao was re-j SUFFRAGE IN HOLLAND Will Be One of the Principal Ihhuc* Contemplated In Constitutional Reforms of that Country. The. Ha_gue, Not. 6. ? Universal woman suffrage is included among the constitutional reforms which, it was announced today, the Nether lands government 1b contemplating. Provision la also proposed for| ?lection of members of the second parliamentary chamber on the baBis both of provincial representation and local proportions. The government also announced] bills ratifying the peace treaty with the United States and an arbitration treaty with-China. NOEVL SCHEME FOR MURDER .lilted Girl Planned to Shoot Man at Hallowe'en Celebration. IM (.'on signed to Bel evne. New York, Nov. G. ? Mrs. Mary Walker, $160 a week designer for an exclusive 5th ave. modiste, was detained at Bellevue hospital last night for observation after confess ing a unique p'.an for killing Wil liam Cross of Norwalk, Conn., who she said had ceascd paying atten tions to her. Mrs. Walker, according to the po lice, bought a rifle and a revolver and an Indian costume. Including a wig. She told her sister she planned going to Norwalk, don the Indian costume and Bhoot Cross while ap parently pointing a gun at him in fun at a Halloween masquerade. A PRINCE OF SPAIN I Prlnoe Jaime, the aecond eon of the , king and queen of Spain. accompn nled by the Counteas del Puerto, en- 1 Joying a atroll at the Sardlnero In Han taader. a famous watering place on tho Bay of Biscay, where the Spaolah royal family la spending their aum mar vacation Piinca Jaime la aeren yeara old, navlng been born June 23rd. ltOt Splinter In Nose C auaatf Death Praano. CaL? Horace Y. Tanner, a mountaineer, died recently from lock Jaw caused by a little splinter which rt a 0to Ms bom. It was removed by ?nothtr funoher bat Tftiuw tfml &oo* yoUoalaf _ ported at Poplar Branch Monday night. ^ Many Joined Association. Klnaton ? The Credit Men's Asso ciation, recently organised here. 1c having excellent lock la Improving [Credit conditions. It wee said-today. About 40 business and profession*; men are now members- ^ Several oth ers are expected to- Join tonight. HypnollM fkir? fir*?uvlRe. Grwnvlllo -A croud ?. of people flocked In front of Cart ?nd Atkins Hardware vto re -yesterday evening to witness the pabMc '^exhtbftlofc ' of Fayesoux, who waa to put a man to sleep and then the maq was to sleet lor twenty-four hours! \Vhile the crowd watched, Payssoux. Blade a few passes In front-of the man's fact spoke a few words aid he was a sleep. Next he -piWed * bat ,ln: through both his upper and lower lips snd one through his 'tVroat. The man Is to skep until . tonight ai soven o'clock whon he will be taken to the White theatre' and awakened Hauling Much Rock. New Bern ? The Norfolk Soutberr Railway Company is transporting through New Bern, from N?y?reoc to Morehead City, -an average of 2C| carloads of rock each day. the. same being used in Lb? construction 'of1 the breakwater at t"be Harbor ol | Refuge being built at Cape Lookout ! ANGRY PAPA SHOOTSSFOUR 1 Unapproved Dausbtcr'e Choice of n| II unhand; Killed Him and Two ' Others and Wound* a Fourth. Winnsboro, Tex., Nov. "6\ ? Perry! Morris, well-to-do farmer, who dl* j approved his daughter's choice of t 'lutband. went to the home oif hi: I -on-ln-law, J. P. Sheets, shot afid Killed hlui and seriously wounded c fon of Sheets by hts former wife. Then Morris went to the home o* C. J. Maddox, killed Maddox and hi' wife, and returned home, where li | killed himself, llorrls believed th Maddoxes had encouraged his daug: ter's marriage. ADMITS SHE RILLED CHILD Woman In Wilson Says She Tool Life of Little One Who Was Born Ycwterdaj. (By Eastern Press) Wilson, Nov. 6.? -The dlscoverj of a dead infant In the garden Ir the rear of a house on East Nash street jaf yesterday afternoon led tc an Investigation. Sudle Bryant, llv ing In the house, confessed, It Is al legod. to being the mother of the child, saying that the child was born Wednesday night. Th" head of 'the Infant was crushed and after ' th? examination of the body by a physl clan who said the child was killed after the birth, the woman admitted that she had killed the Infant. She Is und r guard until she becomes able to be taken to jail. Facts Are \ Stubborn i leading food authorities ? McCann, Goudlsa, Allyn and others ? unite In attesting the fact that white flour foods lack certain mineral salts essential for life and health. Theif, el ement* ar* thrown out With the hran to make the flour white. TheJ'oatum Cereal Co., Ltd. at Battte Creek, Mich , swings wide Its factory doore that visitors may w e with their own eyes, that whole wheat and barley, retaining these all important nutritive elements, sre used In making GrapeNuts FOOD Delicious to taste, eaell7 digestible, and well-balanced In food value, Grape-Nuts Is a wonderful rebuf.der of the physical and mental faculties. "There's a Rewon" ?old br Orsom. VESUVIUS IS IN ERUPTION VUU?w Are ThreatraeO by Fly win* S trauma ot Lava. People Are Pleeteg to Sal<*j . Home, Not. 6.? Mount Vesuvius It lo violent eruption. Several vil laL'ei arc threatened by the advanc ing lava streams. Panic-etrlcken, ihe-'people are fleeing from the towns and vineyards in the mountain's vi-l clnity. The roade are filled with fugitives oarrylng their hour hold effects. The local officla'a have requested troops to aid the refugees and prevent' ootlng. The whole country surrounding' ? he volcano Is mantled under a thick! eating of ashes. I0TED FOR SMALL THINGS* .*1 > . Ireat Men Not Alw()s Herein Mem ory on Account of Deeds of Conaequcnce. It Is sa'.d that the duke of Welling on once "chaffed" Lord Brougham a a man who at one time bade fair o go down to future ages as a famous dvocate of law reform and popular ducatloh, but who, after all, would we his renown In the name cf the -chicle which had received his name Brougham retorted by saying to the 1uke that his name, which premised 9 descend to afteMimes as the hero f a hundred battlee and the liberator f Europe, wae to survive as tho ap pellation of a certain kind of boots he story le a good one. whether true >r mythical, and suggest* to u* Rome ??f the strange ways in which men be ome famous. One peroon aoqulren celebrity by ila giant intellect, as Webster or Cal ?.oun; another, .by his djtarf stature, .8 Count' Borowaltki, or Tom Thumb. There are great men who are known o fsme hardly less by their physical jr mora) eccentricities than by their ntellectual might. Buch was the ;ase with Lord Brougham, who was ong associated in men's minds with he queer twist of hie nose, on which Punch hung io many conceits; and ,crd Peterborough, who, walking "rom the market with a fowl under one :rm and a cabbage under the other, ;ulte threw Into the shade Lord Pe erborough, the hero of Almanza. The same woe the case with the ?real duke of Marlborough, whoso aggllnga with the Bath chairmen and :cts of petty avarice were talked of jtig after the conqueror at Blenheim ,nd Malplaquet was forgotten. Subscribe to Dally News TOOK $64,000 FROM "RUBE" ?vwport News Man l? Fleeced Out of Large Amount In a Wire Tapping (iamcu ' Chicago. Noy. 6.. ? Prlvat$ 4 detec Ivee are trailing three confidence ien who recently separated W. P. Ultnqiell of Newport News, Va?from ??G4;000 by a fake wire tapping ame. . The RAYO LAMP SAVES TROUBLE YOU don't have to spend the greatrr part of your time cleaning it ? and won dering why it won't burn. The Rayo is simple in construction and in design. It lights without removing the shade and gives the best sort of light ? the kind that won't hurt your eyes. Rayo lamps are an prnamenf to any home. They require very little attention ? yet always add to the attractive ness of the room. The Rayo is the symbol of efficiency ? economy ? convenience. Use Aladdin Security on or Diamond White I Oil to obtain best results in Oil Stoves, Lamps and Heaters . The Rayo is only one of our many products that brine com fort and economy to the farm. Ask for them by name. * Matchless Liquid Gloss Standard Hand Separator Oil Standa> d Household Lubricant Parowax Eureka Harness Oil Mica Axle Grease If your dealer does not carry these, write to our nearest station STANDARD OIL COMPANY liN?w BALTIMORE Wxhmiion. D. C. Charloiu, N. C. Norlilk. Char etloD. W. V?, Kicnrnond. V?, Cfcarleitoo. S. C. Your Umbrella Should Be Meoded In fair weather. Too Late when it'# raining. Insurance should be taken before the fire. Too late after the fire starta. Wm. Bragaw & Company, First Insurance Agents, Washington, N. C It's Time to Have Your Winter Suit Made I have made Suits for some of the most par ticular people n Washington. Let m?t make one (or you. Perfect style and. fit, or your mone\ back. GEO. ARAMOONIE 131 E- Main Street. Washington, N. C. Ladies and en's CwfCom Tailor. Altering, Cleaning and Pressing Done to Satisfy You. The 0. K. Line Cast Cook STOVES AND RANGES Am the moat fcatlafaotorr '.inc oa uarket today Square Oven, in?ft durabl? fr? back ever put in a ttov#. larga roomy fire box, aluminum lined ?ton door find over!* up-to-date fea ture We carry a most complete line ranging Jr. pr:c# from 97.00 to $26.00. 0. K. Oft St Range *"J5.00 to 83U.OO -the rtOTe with a high record McKeel-Richardson Hardware Company WASHINGTON, N. C. 500 TO 1000 People every twenty-four hours stop and take a look at pictures In jour show-window. Pictures cer tainly do attract attention. We are gola* to. in a few days, band a little I Jmlrrow down In one of the window* i fro nobody can be disappointed BAKER'S STUDIO. A WONDERFUL ANTISEPTIC. Germs and Jnf'cl'.on aggravate' allmenta and retard totaling. Stop ?hat Infection at once. Kill lb*' crmii and get rid of th? poisons For this purpose a tr'.ng> application of Sloan's Liniment not only kills ' :hc pain but destroys tho germ? | Tkji? n utralizc-a i^fcctioc and g:ve? nature assistance liy overcoming < ongr^iioo at. J v,r?! & chance for tbc !r f>e and i.r>r:r.al P. .* of tbtr blood. Sloan> l.iu.iocni !? an tmer Konc T doctor and s-1ic?u*(S be V?{.* constantly on ):a:.il 2Sc, &("? 'J -j *1.00 pi f- fonta:na tlx tlmo an much a* the 25c. SMALL FARMS, TOBACCO LANDS NO. .1. 40 acre*, with f> acres in cultivation, 10 wiles fro* Washington, N. C., 2 miles from wW.i hounds rnd ebjirch. Niee 4-roeia oottago, buildings oost $606* ?fiee shapo. lies good. A grew bargain n' $J?f.O, payable $35# cask, aid balar.ee $160 a year. NO. 2. 17 fcoros, with 7 acre* fn cultivation, in ibe i?wn of Royal, Reaufort County, wirhin K?0 yards of the Washington k Vandomere Railroad depot. It haa f dwelling houses o,ost about $1200. in po od condition. There fr' ia a 200-foot flowing artesian well cost $150. Very fiee light gray Mil, with clay subsoil, very rich fertile land. Adjoining lands same soil, farms, sold for $10ft an acre. Psrtj we pnreVssed fr*w. had $l$Q'i in this pln'-e. A groat bargain at $1350, payable $350 rash and balance $2B$ a year. NO. 3, 1 aer*s all in cultivation, ZV2 miles from the City of Waahiagtftn. *n the Ujt road in the County, most progressive neighborhood and most highly improved farm*. Has pretty road front, nil Ipvi-1 bind, Hirlit. prav soil, and" lies in nice shape. Church and school house and highly improved farm* around it. A? fine .i pioce of trucking Jan<| a* ?" in this County. TTas over $1200 in improvements and huildingv The bnildii%- =i r?;j?F?-.| in a beautiful grove all nicely painted, etc. The finest plaee for small trucking farm, pen! try r.r daininp nr-ar r ho City of Washington and th* only place of its kind in the ( ennfry Priro $1750 payable $350 <-asl> and balance * J.'.O a year. NO. 4. 50 acres with 18 acroc in cultivation, ten milci from Washington, 2*/& mil*-* from WuIIh Watts fttution, Norfolk Southern Railroad, good roar! front. Light pray soil, clav subsoil. Jjtiildingt and i mprov -monts roat $40?. Good land, good location. Priro $1450, payable $250 cash, with $250 a year. NO. ft. 70 acres, 16 acres in cultivation, 2% -miles from Washington, light gray soil, fine -oba.-'-o Innd. butldings and improvements cost $500. Price $2250, payable $750 rash and balance $250 a year. NO. C. 40 acrcs, with 8 acree in cultivation, adjoining No. 1, 10 miles from Washitirfon. nil new buildings nice shape, coat over $1800. Biggest bargain in the County at $1750, payable $250 cash and $:?r.O n year. NO. T. 112 acres, 18 acres in cultivation, light soil, near the town of Ynatesvillo, $?00 in improvement, now houae, looks attractive, in pretty grove and great bargain at $12.50 an aore, payable $250 rush and $250 a v^nr. Fine growth of young timber. NO. 8. 55 acres with 15 arroe in cultivation, aix miloa from Washington. Imildinpo and improvements worth $300, light gray soil, fine tobaooo land, prico $1375, payable $375 cash and balance $250 n var. IV e have direr fifty small farms antl if none of the?s tuif you, us can show you anything (hat you vcinf at the right price , if you will come here at any time. Writs us. FOR SALE IN BEAUFORT COUNTY Washington Beaufort Land Company /NO, E. COREY.
Washington Daily News (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 6, 1915, edition 1
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