Newspapers / Washington Daily News (Washington, … / May 29, 1916, edition 1 / Page 3
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ml %ry $19.00 MlliQf pvutNd hosiery to wearer; 15c an hour ?pare time. Permanent. experience unnecessary. International Mills. Ann 8t., Norrlatown, Pa. 6-io-itp. _ ? \A FOR BALE CHBAP: ONE ft TEAM &U1, one bank wsion and log cart aad one S-horee wa*on. All In food condition D. T. PERRY, Washington, N. C., R. F. D. No. ?. 9-19-1 wp. FOR BALK CHEAP: ONE OKAY horse, eeven years old. weighs 1100 lbs., sound and will work anywhere. Will make a food snake kOrse or draft horse. See me quick. C. L. C ARROW. 5-10-lwc. IF IT? E. M. F. AUTOMOBILE OR ?bow cases that you want to hoy. 1 have them. J. 8. Campbell, Jeweler. 5-19-ltc. < 1 FOR SALE: 8,000 LIGHT WOOD post; 90,000 Cypress shingles, . hand made. One No. 1H Farquhr sa* mill. All of this Is the beit that can be got. Address D. U. MARTIN. South Creek, N. C. 9-19 1tc LOOT: LADIES OPEN FACE Watch Initials "A. H." engraved on back. F)ader please return to Dally News office (or reward. , ?-ll-lwc. CALL PHONE 470 FOR PORK Chops and Pork Roast, Best Beef and Veal Cutlets. O. E. FORTIS CUB, Market, West Main 8t. 9-19-tfc. WELL PAY Be FOR COPY OF| Dally News of Jan. 6, 1915. if Business Opportunities OOIJX SILVER, COPPER AND NICK* EL. W? Plau Anything? Automobils YWmmlno. Surgical and D?nul instru ment s, Tableware, ana polish Brass Beds. Old Artidee mad* ma good a* new. Writ* prtoj?. A?enU wanted. Charlotte Fisting Worki. Charlotte. N. C. POUND A MOORS CO., CHARLOTTE, I N. Make Rubber Stamps. Notary and 1 Corporation Heals. Bend thera your or- I ten. Price* reasonable Cat slog on application. ?MBOMED CARDS? Script. Rom .n or English. No plate required. fl.SC " Order. -Wadding ssssrss^r Printing Co.. WANTED ? Tour Old HaU to Renovate M. Kirschbaum. Maker and Renovator, ef Men'e and Ladles' Hats. 10? W. Trade SC. Charlotte. N. a CHEMICAL TEBTINO? Chsmloal An- , alysls of Ores. Mineral Water*. Coals. UsbrtoaUnjc Oiks. Mill Products and 8up pUea Physical Inspection and Testing ?f City Paving Work. Including examl * - ? - - - V aa# f nations of A as halt. Cement, i pavement. Rod resent buyer or eeller for ?alee on soeolAoatien. Prank P. Drans. Otetnlst, Former U. 8. is say sr. if 8. Church St.. Charlotte N. C WANTED ? Teachers for graded and pse ehro Elections early. Write for new manueL IRiert dan's Teachers Agency. Charlotte, ELECTRIC MACHINES REPAIRED.? Motors. Generator*. Dynamos. Transform a All olaseea of work. We buy and second hand Electric Equipment. If you have ai\y for sale write us. Anna tare Winding A Ferroflx Co., CharlotU, *. C. BLUE PRINTING. ? Best quality, prompt service. Send us your rush or ders. Herman Ahaus. Chariotte Blua Printing Works. 203 W. 4th 8t, Chariot to, CoroNA TvwwrlUri for ptrinnkl rand for tra velars.. K Crmyton A Ca, Charlotte. N .C. DO YOU DO BUSINESS THROUGH THK MAILT. Unci* 8MB baa provided <?* F*roert Post. An you using It? I &a> holplnf others get this business I mm help you. 1 can opon fields of oppor tttslty you nover thought of. Writ* rns Hi ZJstoii Moor*. Specialist In Adver ting, Chariot ts. N. C. NOT1CB or flALK. ? By virtu* of an order of tho Clerk ?f the Superior Court of Beaufort County la * special proceeding be fore him pending, entitled P. M Beet, administrator of J. R. Beat dooaased. against Annie P. Beet and ether*, heirs at law of the eald J. B. Best, which Is hereby referred to. ffce said administrator will tell at public auction for cash to the high est bidder at the court house door at Beaufort County, at noon, on tho ?th day of June, 191t, two certain lots or parcels of land situated - In Richland Township. Beaufort Coun ty, described as follows: (1) Known as the Gainer tract, bounded on the west by the lands of L. D. Nftdyette. on the south by C. R. Flowers, on the e*st by 8taton Holland and on the north by Phillips If" contain In* 50 acree, more or Bounded on the south by 'the road, on the weet by th* f John Lane, on the north by wford Canal, and on the east by C. O. Bonner, contslnlng 11 acres, more or less. Said lands will be offered together aod IB parcels and the best bid win IIWIEH 1 1 HIES lie WIFE ti ? 11 mm ft# THE MBKHT Of ?,!? T t " " (By United Press) Atlanta, Ga .. May 39 ? Triad and acquitted in Texas oa the charge of murdering the two daughters of Mrs. John W. Nelms, of Atlanta. Lawyer Victor E. Innes aod hie wife, Id* May tnnee, went to trial here today for robbing one of the girls of 98,897. Mrs. Nelms' two pretty young daughters disappeared In June, 1914 and hare never been found. "1 am etUl convinced," said Mrs ^felms today, "that my girls are dead and thst Innse knows how they died and Is responsible for It; but the Texse Jury acquitted him and we can only try him for larceny." Lots Nelms was married to Walter Dannla and lived here. In 1918 she went to Carson, Nevada, and em ployed Innes to get her a divorce. Prom the first meeting of Lots and Innes, according to Mrs. Nelms, dat ed the beginning of the alleged swindling, Inslnoere promises of marriage and similar events which led to the slleged murders. Beatrice Nelms. the other lost daughter, dlsappeare after she fol lowed her sister Lois to Texas In 1914 to wean her way from Innes. The only person to whom Lola talked much about hor affairs waa J. P. Weathers, a local real estate man, who will be the .principal wit ness for the mother of the two lost girls. One of the things Weathers Is expected to testify that Lois told him. Is that she and Innes were to be married and, after a honeymoon In India, would return to this coun try to establish In Salt Lake City a new religious cult, of which they were to be the Joint leaders. Weathers asserts that Mrs. Dennis often consulted him about the "in vestments" which Innes was suppos ed to be making for her, with the money In question. Weathers says Mrs. Dennis told him that she bad sent Innes money to buy a lot In Salt Lake City, and ranches In Mon tana and in Sonora. Mexico. On the occasion of a vlsK by In nes and his wife to Atlanta in May, before the disappearance of the glrla in June, Weathers declares Mrs. Dennis introduced him to "Mrs. Margaret Mima, sunt of Mr. Innes." Weathera in the presence of numer ous newapaper men, IdentiQed Mrs Innea as the woman Introduced aa Mrs. Mima. He alao Identified In nea as the man who met Mrs. Lola Dennla aeveral times In AtlanU. Weathera aaya he read a number of Innes' letters to Mrs. Dennla. both on the subject of their religious cult* and the investment scheme. Mrs. Nelms declares Innes had Mrs. Den nis return every letter to him so be could destroy It. and Mrs. Dennis, her mother, asserts, blindly and Im plicitly followed the lawyer's in structions. Mrs. Nelms declares her daughter was madly Infatuated with Innes. snd she entrusted him with practic ally all of the money left l^er by her father, the late Sheriff John W. Nelms, about 814,000 In all. The mother of the missing glrla declares thst In June 1918, Lois be gan to send money to Innes. She told .her, Mra. Nelms says, that she was to be married to Innes. Mrs. Nelms snd her son Marshall hsve found ten receipts, either from a tolpgraph or express company, for sums of money it Is alleged Mrs. Dennis sent Innes; also copies of messages alleged to have passed be tween the two. Statements made by Innes indi cate he will deny any communica tion with Mrs. Dennis after he se cured her divorce for her. and that he will assert she did not leave here to meet him In Texas or anywhere else. Mrs. Innes will assert she never posed as Mrs. Margaret Nlms EQUATOR 80 PAR AWAY, KIM HAVE MAY POLE WIXOINQ MONTH LATE . 4 (By United Press) Larlmore, N. D., May H.?Two thousand Grand Forks county chil dren today participated In a mon ?ter May Pole winding. kite Oylnf contest, volleyball and baseball tournaments and May frolic. Because of Lartmore's distance from tbe equator, this celebration, held la eome warmer oltmate*,on May t, was a month late. ? POR RKPRESRNTATIVB. 1*> the rxaseiuaUc Voters of Bwoftm Oositj! I hereby aanoanoe myself a can didate for RepreeeataflTa for Beaj fort County la the ant General Assembly (abject to the action of the Democrats primaries If aomlaated aad elected 1 shsil ?ndeator to mortt the ceoftdeace thus reposed Is ma. Rsspccttally, P H. JOHNSON. N " and feu never known lire. DennU. The beginning of the trial of tfee Inneeas mark* tfee e&nax of a fight against them begun by lira. Nelmi and her eon Mara hair Immediately after the disappearance of her daughters. Tfee Inneaee were ar rested In Portland, Oregon, and ox trad I c ted to Texas, where they were tried In Sao Antonio on a charge of murdering the Nelms sisters. The state was unable to prove the girls are dead, and the case was thrown out of court. While the murder case was pend ing nine inAtetments chaglng misap propriation &f funds from Mrs. Den nis were returned here, and the fight to extradite the Innesee to Georgia began when the Texas case was dis missed. On technical grounds In*'1 nee carried the case to the Supreme x court of the United Stiies, staving off extradlction more than a year, j His final card In the fight against' extradictlon was the plea to the I governor of Texas that he had re-j celved threatening letters from Oeor-;j gla and feared that he would fall' vlctrtns of mob violence If extradit ed. This plea did not avail. i I CONGRESS OF rnniTpnnmrne rnul I bnUWLnD LflCKPOBT I.!. ? (B j United Press) Lock port. N. Y.. Ma/ 29. ? To do for New York ana tne But what or ganization has done (or Southern California organ** growers and Ore gon apple men. and to lay the foun dation for the standardisation. grad ing, packing and markotlng of Western New York'a famous apples and peachee. the Farmers' Congress will be heft in Lock port June 1, 1. and 3. Several thousand farmers are expected. Parades will be featured. The 74th Reflmsnt of Buffalo wtU iU|t i ahMt tettk Bat the msln purpose of the <m?gr? 1* to organ ise t he (?rmtn end guard against iaothtf such as last, when millions picked bacaaae the grower* did not know now to dispose of them. Qovernor Chnrlee 8. Whitman will be a speaker at the Congreee. Former United Statee Senator Theo dore Barton of Ohio also will be thsre. Whitman and Barton will ?peek June tnd. The country's lead Ins authorities on the subject of fruit zrd marketing cooperation will attend, Including Grosrenor Dawe, organlfer of the Southern Commer cial Congreas, State Commissioner vf j Agriculture Charles 8. Wilson, W. I H. Jordan. P. 6. Welsh of the New ' York Central, J. S. T. Bush. Presi dent of uie Eastern Produce and Prult Exchange and Marc W. Cole. It ly hoped to organise the farmers of Niagara County into small co-op erative units. J. 1JBOH WOOD i$J JAMCS W. OOLB n ?!> IW *t? larfc OoNM IrrtMf J. LEON WOOD & CO. BANKERS AND BROKERS ?tqokt. Bonds. Cotton. Grain and Provision*. Tt P1?m? Stmt, Carp?nt?r Balldln#. Ylorfolk. Tn Prtrsto ?tr?? to Nov York Rtoek lieb*&c?. Uhlm^o Bo?r4 rrmfl* *nd oth?r flannel*! ??nt?r?. CORRESPONDBNCB MBPJCTFUkLT flOLIBITBB. loTMtmeit and marginal tooonnta clr?n oarafal attantloa. "TRIFLES MAKE PERVEC TION, BUT PERFECTION IS NO TRIFLE." Wo are not so boastful as to tl&la perfection. but wo do claim t# five to the details of our baslnoafsmcb close sad uodlvlded attention -as to spell S-JJ-C-C-E-8-a (or you aT veil u oursslrea B ank of W ashington Washington, N. C GOOD CRYSTAL ICE ICECREAM AND CONES Fresh Strawberry Cream Today CRYSTAL ICE COMPANV Phone 83. Washington. N. I AN XOUNCEM EXT. I hereby announce myself a can- ; dtdate for renomlnation for (he of-' flee of Clerk of the Recorder's Court I for Washington. Long Acre and Chocowlnlty township*, and ank all of the Democratic voter* to come out on June 3rd and Rive me their support. Respectfully. ELBERT G. WESTON. 5-10 Why Y ou Should Own a Maxwell Comfort Appearance Service Low First-Cost Low After-Cost First, became it is a comfortable riding car. Plenty of room for five people: deep, soft cushions; springs made of the best spring steel, scientifically beat-treated, accurately suspended and balanced. You w31 always be comfortable in a Maxwell. Second, betMwe the Maxwell is a trim, smart, good-looking car. Many makers of heavy, high priced cars, as you know, have copied the general Boot, the shape of the body and hood of the MaxwelL This is more of a compliment than an infringement. Tbird, became the Maxwell, being a product of thirteen years evolution, is so designed and manufactured that it gives unfailing, consistent and and satisfying service to thousands of owners. Maxwell cars are made of the best materials that money and brains can buy ? and they are made right. You can get out of any car only what is put into it Fourth, because you get everything in a Maxwell that you can get in any car and you get it for less money. The answer to this is that the Maxwell is a light car and it is built in enormous quantities. The Maxwell Co. is one of the three largest pro ducers of high grade motor cars in the world. Fifth, because the Maxwell will give you more miles per dollar than any car built. We say this without hesitation or doubt. It is our honest belief and we are wifing to prove it by Maxwell owners, by comparison with any other car or by any other way you suggest or prefer. The Maxwell will please you. We know it will. Let us arrange for a dem onstration and well take the responsibility of satisfying you completely. T oaring Cm- $655 Roadster $635 , ' J. a B. DETROIT C. L. CARROW Main Street - - Washington, N. C. . June Payments if Desired,
Washington Daily News (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 29, 1916, edition 1
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