Newspapers / Washington Daily News (Washington, … / Aug. 21, 1916, edition 1 / Page 3
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WHW TOC HRMATHE AND MAT city street duat think what It U. t-:i-ltc. WE HAVE A GIUSD aiLmiON of Dlamonda from 1 caret to 1^ cv?t: blua. white and perfect. Come awl (In ua a look. Now la the time. Don't ?nt it oC too long, bora. Stewart oa Market atreet. i-it-He. m rmsoi ma* ova am ill. tomcblle without lareetlag one cent, for Lnforamtlon addreea Auto care Dally Newa, Waahlngton. N.C. t-l?-dh. AN AUTOMOBILE FRKK: FOR In formation addreea Auto, care the Dally Newt, Waahlngton. N. a l-lt-db. ? WB ARE RECEIVING NEW JEW* dry all the time, alao plenty of weddlafftreaenta. ' Don't' forget. Stewart'a Jewetry store. r-iMu. DO roc WANT AM AUTOMOBIlf without eeat to youT Write Aato, care Dally Newa. Waahlngton, N.C. (?1Mb. 9 1 FOR SALE: STANHOPE CARRIAGE la food condition. Price reason able. Address Stanhope, care ' of Dally Newa. 7-81-tfe. POR BATJir DRY WOOD OUT Short length*.**. R. Fowle ft Son's mill. FOR RRNTi -HOUSE ON SECOND street between Reepees and Van Norden, now occupied by Mr. N. Henry- Moore. See F. H. Rollins. t-17-Stc. GOOD IRISH ^POTATOES WHOLE SALE CHEAP AT H. B. MAWS. t-19-Stp. . FOR RENT: THREE ADJOINING rooms, aultable for offices, living rooms, or light housekeeping. Is bnsineee districts Address 'Rooms,' ?care of Dally News. t- J-eod-tfe. Whiskers and Corsets. Petieace ? i see that the Srst' baby born In Lorraine, 0? will receive from merrbsnts of the town gifts including s theater phae for life snd cornets or barber service for life, as the caae may be. Patrice ? It would be awful If the baby ahoald cling to the coreets and decide to let the whiskers grow, NOTICE AND SUMMONS. North Carolina, Beaufort County. In the Superior Court ? Before the Clerk. J. M. Hod see ?. Charles Chencey, Jim Cbancey, Jim Simuiona, W. H. Standi, O. B. Wynn. Jim Boyd, Jordan Cbancey, W. R. Lipscomb, Frank Judsoo, and others. To All To Whom It May Concern: The defendants above named, and all other 'parties v|U take notice that a petition haa this day been filed In the office of the Clerk of the Super ior Court of Beaufort County by the petitioner, J. M. Hodges, wherein the petitioner claims to own In fee simple, free and clear of all Hens and Incumbrances of all kinds a cer tain tract err parcel of land situate In Washington Township. Beaufort County. North Carolina, which Is particularly described as follows, to wn: Beginning at a cement monument pi seed In the ground at the Old Grossing Place across . Cbancey Branch; then with the cart road South 71 West 1.17% chains; thence North 86% West 1.7S chains; thence North 69 West 8.81 chslns; thence Nerth 55 % West 8.90 chains to an Iron pipe; thence North 68% West 8.76 chains to a cement monument; thence North 60% West IS. 85 chains to a cement monument; thence -South ? 8% West 8.68 chains to a cement monument; thence South 81% Bast 86.96 fchalns to an Iron pipe la the run of the Chancey Branch; thence with the run of the said branch North 78 Fast 4 chains; thence North 70 Bast 8.81 chains; thence Nerth 87 Bast 8.87% chains; thence North 67% Bast 8 chains; thence North1 5% Bast 1.96 Chains; thence North1 48% Bast 9.16 chains; thenee North 18% Bast 1 chain; thenee North 10 West 8.60 chains; thence North 6% Fast 1.18% chains ;thenee North 88% West 6-1 0 chains; thence North 14% Bast 8.90 chains to the beginning; containing 48 acres. Said cause la returnable before the naderstgned Clerk of the Super ior Court at his office In Washing ton. N. C., on Tuesday. September IS, 1918, at ten o'clock A. M All persons Interested In said land or In any land adjoining thereto are hereby notified to be snd appear at said time and assert say rlslm or Interest they may have la said land and notice la further given that the decree of registration of said Isnd will be binding upon all pemons. whether herein expressly aamsd or not This the 10th day of July, 1918. OW O. A. PAUL. MM* SEW TURK WHITE SIMS 1 KM THMUCH SISTEM ? I FOB SEGURlNe IICIIMS Girls Found it Hard to Resist Wiles of Yushe Botwin and His Many Helpers (BfW. A. DAVEXJMRT) New York, Aug. SI. ? Yushe Bot win tu a unit In a system that traffics in women. There are at least 100 Tushes tn Greater New York. If they tmr tie' iruth. the 1.000 school girle who. in the last ton years, hare been trapped and sold into man's blackest bondage, are for ever gone, if they tell the truth, the 10.000 girl-children of the Bast Side and Harlem who have been cast into hell by Yushe and his brethren are as lost as though dead. "My system will get any girl," sneered Yushe. "The younger they are the easier our work. My system can get aay lonely dissatisfied girl. The Story Of Eleanor. We'll desert Yushe t9r a few hun dred words. We'll tell you the story of Eleanor. By all the laws of environment, in-i fluence and family tradition. Eleanor should, today, be a happy little wife mother tucked away in some pleasant uptown flat. Eleanor came from Butterdale, a little town with a Main street, up in the apple belt of New York State. She had graduated from the High School and after taking a correspon dence course in library work and secretaryship. came to New York city to work in the brokerage office of Kinship, Kennett ft Cohen. * She lived in One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street with her moth er's cousin. She was a pretty regular attendant at 8t. Judo's church, and by the oddest coincidence, one Sun day morning, met there a good-look- . Ing young chap who had met George Fallows. George was back In But terdale. in the bank, and doing well. Of course there was, nothing serious st all between Eleanor and George. She, with a queer little blush, said' so herself. 8o, naturally, there; couldn't have been. George was Just! a very, very sweet boy, that was all. For some reason best known , to Eleanor, George had been the sub ject of considerable of her conversa- ' tions with a nice girl she had met ' two or three months back In a mov- J Ing picture show on Broadway, a block from home. She was a dear j girl, and Eleanor was glad to knowi her. Eleanor eventually prevailed | upon Ernestine to come to St. Jude's. It was with Ernestine she was the Sunday morning she met this goo looking young chap. He dressed quite as well as young Ben Kinship. And ] Ben, who had come Into his father's brokerage offices with all his Yale ' ways and means, was Just about the ideal, in manners and lookB, of little! Eleanor's dreams. The stranger's* name was Tom, and he knew Ernes tine. Spoke of Acquaintance. "Butterdale?" laughed Tom. so, that Eleanor might not be unaware of the fact that his teeth were beau tiful. "Butterdale? I was up there' a few weeks ago. Had some business in the bank there, and while waiting for the drafts to arrive from ew i York had luncheon and dinner with 1 a corking chap named Fallows? i George Fallows. Know him?" Well, well, well! The fall waned. The winter passed, j Spring came, and Eleanor had learn ed the fox-trot, the Ingredients of a Russian stinger, the names of six head waiters and the unimportance of being in earnest. Somehow she hadn't considered it a calamity when she and eight other girls were given two weeks' pay* and told that busi ness didn't wsrrant Kinship, Kennett ft Cohen in retaining them longer. George, somehow, had gone the way of many erstwhile Idols and Tom had shown very definitely that a pre ferred Eleanor to Ernestine. Ernes tine. like St. Jude's. had dropped out of her world of things. And? but what's the use? She still wrote home every week. One night, in* a table d'hote place fa the West Forties, Tom asked Elea nor to marry him. She was happier than ever before. Of course, for the time being, she would say nothing to her folks about It. Tom had busl s reasons. What were they? What does It mstter? Forgot His Promise. Well. Tom seemed to forget that promise. 8he sought to remind him several times, but the words seemed to choke her. She loved htm as no body in all the world had loved. She was jure of it And he loved her? Of course, he did. Onee she grew faint when she allowed herself to question his love. He was too noble, too good, too clean to lease her now. She was sll Tom's, and glad of it. It was In February that Eleanor disappeared. She had been ill ? al most Insane. A doctor ? a friend of Tom s? shook htfl head. He could do nothlB r Bfce talked of suicide, and , Tom had laughed. \ That wwk Eleanor's mother's cou sin asked the police to search for her. The newsappers took up the hue and cry. j The police found her. ? detective found her three months later in For ty-fourth street and hauled her tt? the Night Court for Women. The timid little laugh was gone. Her halr{ was no longer brown, but almost flaxen. Her Cheeks were too red. jHer eyes were too bright. Her lips were deep carmine. | The Magistrate sent her to the IB land for three months. Also he de livered a solemn lecture fn which he called her a menace and asked her whether sheer sham didn't overcome her. "Ah. go to hell." sneered Eleanor. The next morning Tom appealed to the boss of his district. Times were too hard for "a fellow to lose his meal ticket like that." "Well." sneered Ernestine, when Tom had ceased his plaint to her, "You wise guys will fall for the rube wrens. They go craty when they start." SOUTH AMERICA IS STRONG Hi PROTEST OVER BLACKLIST By CHARLES P7 STEW ART (Cnlted Press Staff Comwitondeiit) Buenos Aires. Argentine, Aug. 21. ? South Americans resent the Brit Ish blacklint as much as the United States does. There Is today pro nounced ill feeling between the Bue nos Aires Commercial and Corn Ex changes and the British government. Early In the war the authorities in London began Issuing lists of German concerns in foreign coun tries, Argentina Included, with which Englishmen In the same countries were forbidden to have business re lations. These lists have been added to from time to time. The two big Buenos Aires exchanges took official notice of this situation to the extent of recognizing that the British and German interests in question could not meet on a common footing. This was an embarrassment to the Ger mans and a convenience to the Eng lish, inasmuch as it obviated com plications In transactions which in termediately or incidentally involved Argentine and numerous othor for eign houses In transactions It might have been difficult, otherwise to have identified as of a distinctly Anglo Geramn character. In the last few weeks, however, the British government has observed that companies of friendly alien ori gin frequently do buBlnens, on one side with German and on the other with BrltlBh companies. An order was accordingly issued from London placing all such establishments on the blacklist. The Buenos Aires Commercial and Corn Exchanges have gone formally on record as roeognizing no such mandate. The result will be prac tically to nullify the British black list In Argentina, except in the caBes of the British houses that are dis posed to respect it voluntarily. Even the ones in this latter class can hard ily respect their government's order without ruining their business, as [they have now no longer any guaran tee that they will not be trading In directly with Germans. PEPPERED HIS BED, SAYS MAN ASKING DIVORCE Toungstown. Ohio. Aug. II. ? The charge that his wife vented her spite on him by scattering cayenne pepper' in his bed is one of the allegations In a divorce petition filed by David L. Lodwick against Jennie Lodwick. Other attentions wh'ch Lodwick claims his wife showed him during their marital career of eight years were a blow on the head from a hatchet, a dash of aeld In the face and a practice of burning his shoes and clothing. He declares she locked him out of the house, and later ctiaed his arrets when he eut bis #ay through the screen door. Figure the probable cost or g advertising cam pal** through which you can tell that property ? and the VALUH to you of . that BCBfCimW TO THJB DAILY JOIWS mmanm HUM SHOE OMR; 60 ouzr I obio (By United Prewl Columbus. O.. Aug. II. ? More married Oh loans than single odm go crazy, according to Actios Superin tendent W una ma of the Columbus State hospital today- In the annual report he has Just issued. Williams' figures show that of ths <01 persons admitted d urine the year 144 were married, 119 single. divorced. SO widowed and ? separated worn "puraiir OffflS IH WEST TODAY (By United Press) Salt Lake City. Utah. Aug II.? A western J*lattal>ttrg opened with 600 Rocky MountalQ rookies in khaki on the broad Ft. Douglas' parade ground near here today. "* Over the nearby hills and Id camp the 600 will be drilled in the art of warfare for the next month. Bankers, cowboys, clerks, merchants and professional men are among the number. Three of the Coast Artillery com panies from Southern California points form the skeleton of the en campment. Infantry fighting will be the principal study, but instruction also will be given in other branches of array service. All the 600 volunteers had (heir traveling expenses psfd by the gov ernment. When the camp ends Sep tember 16th the men will turn In their equipment and receive SB of the $15 each advanced to the gov ?rnment for expense*. "KEEP COOL, CURE CORNS/' MOnO OF THE BAREFOOT CLUB Sucrsmento, Cal., Aug 21. ? Hark ing back to the day* when man ? ? oamed carelessly acrons green pas- ! tures unshackled by costly footwear. j when cool, solid comfort met the ? ?laked foot at every step, and when 1 .-orns and bunions were unheard of. j .'our prominent 8acramenianb navel .ormcd what Is to be known a? the I Sacramento Barefoot League The requirements of the league j are these: No member must be too modest to display hla bare feet. He must be willing to step into his neighbor's house in his bare feet and walk across hla neighbor's hard wood floorh as nonchalantly as though he were Pithecanthropus In the Jungles. Despite serious objection to the league on the part of the better halves In some of the homes, (ho or ganisation has grown and Ip now reaching out for rongenlsl spirits. "Keep cool and be comfortable, and cure your corns,"' Is the slogan of the league. WHEN YOU HAVE A COLD Give it attention, avoid exposure, he regular snd careful of your diet, also commence taking Dr. King'? New Discovery. It contains Pine Tar, Antiseptic Oils snd Balsams. Is slightly laxative Dr. King's New Discovery eases your coughs, soother your throat and bronchial tubes, checks your cold, starts to clear your head. In a short time you know your cold 16 better. Its the standard family cough syrup in use over 40 years. Get a bottle at once. Keep it In the house as s cold Insurance Sotd at your druggist. TOUR CLASSIFIED "AD" should simplify the tenant-seeking task for you. NOT! OK OF sAfcjft. North Csrolina ? Beaufort County. Superior Court ? Before the CJerk. R. R. Wilkinson. Admr. J. C. Ed wards, Deed. vs. L. H. Edwards. C. H. Edwards. An nie Keech, Jsck Keech, John Ed wards. Sylvester Edwards, and Mary Edwards. Under and by virtue of power of sale given to me by a decree of the Superior Court of Beau Tort County, In tnq, above entitled action. I will Belli at public auction, for cosh, l>e fore the Oourt l'ouse door of Beau fort County, North CLarollns. st 12 Noon. OA the 1st day of September. 1916. the following described real estate, vli: Situated In the 8tAte of North Carolina. County of Beaufort and In Bath Township, being that part of the William Edwarda land that wait willed to James C^rbin Edwards by his last will and (fbta&ient. Which lr recorded in the Clerk's Ofllce of said county in Book of Wills No. 8. pag? 268 ; being one-third part of the William Edwards Home Plantation allpted to the said James Corbln Ed Wards In the division of the same with Floyd Harrison Sdwards. Charles Hsnry Edwards and himself, being the land on which James Cor bin Edwards lived at the time of hlf death; excepting, however, the dow er estate of Nannie V. Edwards oh the said land, as allottet to her by decree of Court Hi this proeeedlirr to which reference Is mtde for le scrlptlon of the said dowet This July tBth. lilt. *. *. WILKINSON Admr. of J. C. Edwards. b**eas*d Harry McMutlan. Ally. T-M-4w?, MFTEBEUT KINDS Of P1P? Day Ha* Uii hM IIm TW. Wae But 0n? ?tyle ef That v * Article In Um. Up to about U mn mo haod traa wae aeed eatlrely (or making pipe; for nriow r?uom ?teel had sot been sucoaaafully welded, ud aa the quantities BMdtd war* comparatively small there waa no trou ble la supplying the demand. ura the Engineering Magasine. With aa la creaalng uaa of pipe, how ever. tba die- 1 covery that ataal ooald ba welded when ureatad properly, and tba discovery of | cheeper* aad better procaaaaa of iaak- ! lac tbia material. eaueed It to ba am- 1 ploy ad mora aad mora. and?two alaaaaa | of plpa appeared oa tba market ? Iron ' and ataal. WUb maay manufacturers In tba field different gradaa of theee appaarad. aad now tbara ara a number of such fradaa; la fact tbara la a a ranch difference batwaaa soma of tba iwrougbt-tren plpaa aa tbara la between , It and tba ataela, aad tbara la a cor responding disparity brtween tba lat ter. All of tbla baa tended to In creaaa tba oonfuelon, and lnaamucb aa any aaw material la liable to ba looked upon with suspicion. It la per hapa only natural tbat there should haTe arlaen much lack of agreement retarding the length of life which iron pipe, aa contrasted with that made from steal, might ba expected to gtra. NICKEL WILL REPLACE PAPER Metal Iwbetttute, Aocording to Edlaon. Will Reduoe Sulk and Weight of Booka. Edison Is not alarmed by the papar acare; be foreaees tha day when nickel will be substituted for paper In books, remarka London Anawara. He esti mates that a sheet of nickel one twenty-thouaandth of an Inch thick Is cheaper, mora flexible and more dur able than an ordinary sheet of note paper The weight would not be great, ei ther. for a nickel book, containing 40,<v*o pages, would only weigh one pound, and only be two tncbee thick The Japaneaa are wonderful paper manufacturer, paper being put to far more uses in Japan than in Europe, i and they cultivate a certain mulberry oaler solely for the uae of Ita bark In paper manufacture Wood pulp Is not by any means the sole paper material, for at tha Paris exhibition of 1889 sixty webs, or rolls.' of paper were displayed, each roll be ing made from a different fiber. Books, too. have seeu the light, produced from I several hundred leaves of different f!b?r. The pity la, though, that tbeae dis coveries are either too costly for pro duttlon or that the substances are un obtainable in Europe. Pralae French Writer's Work. Rene Benjamin, ballad aa the new French Kipling, waa born In Paris 30 years ago. He has worked for the nuwnpapers and contributed u> the maguzincs and reviews. The book which has given him such a high place In literature is "Oaapard," a novel, which is spoken of by the French as the one literary masterpiece of the war. The author oomea from an In teresting family, being the grandson of the engraver, Ernest Hue. who died recently; the son of Ernest Benjamin, a novelist eat off before his prime, who was a member of the executive committee of the Sodete dee Gens de > Lett res, and the nephew of the emi nent veterinarian, Henri Benjamin. | who is one of the hundred members of the Academle de Medeclne. Here- ' toforo none of his writings attracted any large share of attention. Slate of North Carolina, Beaufort County. In the Superior Court. Albemarle Farm*. Inc., Vs. John L. Roper Lumber Company, a corporation. J. A. Wilkinson, S W. i Wilkinson. F. A. Fogley and Yaughan, 6. L. Schoonmaker. A. L ! .Butner. W. H. Boweo and Pantego Farms Co. i To Whom It May f'oncorn: The parties above named and all other pemons interested, will take' notice that on the 19th day of June, | 1916, the above named petitioner filed a petition In tho office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Beau fort County to have the title to cer tain lands therein described regis tered and confirmed pursuant to I Chapter 90 of the Public Laws of 1913. and that summons has bnen ' ismed returnable at the office of the. O-k of the Superior Court of Beau fort County on the 26th day of Aug- ; list. 1916 S?id land is situate In Long Acre and Pantego Towniihlp?. In the County of Beaufort, and ad joins the land* of John L. Roper Lumber Company, S. L Schoonma ker. F A. Fogley. Vaughan. A I,. Butner, J A and S. W Wil kinson, W. H. Bowen and Pantego Farms Company, and is particularly described as follows, to-wlt: Beginning at the Intersection of the Panteg6 Canal and the Cross Canal leading from the Intercepting Canal, and running with the center of aald Pantego Canal North 4 9 deg. 10 mln. West 5856 feet, and North 48 (leg RO min Went 10.829 feet; thence North 40 deg 25 mln East 2640 feet to an iron marker, pawing an iron marker 40 feet from said Canai; thence South 48 deg 67 min Rant 16,686 feet to the center of the Cross Canal, passing an Iron marker at 16,646 feet; thence with the cen ter of said Canal South 40 dec. 2fi mln. West 26f0 feet to the begin- ' nlng: Containing 1011.21 acres, andj shown on a plot hereto attached, showing tha metes and bounds Uiere of, with corners marked by perma bent markers of Iron driven into the ground. Notice la Farther Given that upon the return of tha auaamona all mat ters will ha referred to the *xam Jner of Title*, and tbat petitioner will seek to bate T>ecree of Regis tration entered which will bar al) persons from claiming Any Interest la tba lan da herein deacrfbad Thia tba lttb day ef /ana. 1?1? QSO. A. PAUL, Cler* Superior Coffl of Baa q fort Cn. I MM** Don't Admit even to yourself that you cannot mt? money *a*kly? you brand youmelf aa a FAILURE If you do. Instead, ?tart a Sarin*" Account *t our Saving* Department and TRY to deposit weekly, once you get in terested. you wiU become a SUCCE88 instead of a FAILURE! 4 per cent (merest allowed. Bank of W ashing ton Washington, N. C. FREE Yes Absolutely FREE Call and Let us Tell You How to Gel a Set of Old Colonial Chinaware ABSOLUTELY FREE B. W. Bergeron & Son. PHONE 37. A Car Flannagan Buggies JUST RECEIVED Fairbanks-Morse Engines and Wood Farm Machinery WASHINGTON HORSE EXCHANGE CO. B. L. Susman. Pres. WASHINGTON D.C. OPPOSITE CAPITOL ud UNION STATION Akatlatolr N*w mm4 Strictly H?4?n Renowned for iU High Service and Low Rates. EUROPEAN PLAN Ro?B pm ikj $ 1 .50 without bath tad ap ROCID f*r i?y $2.00 with bath a4 if All Rooms Outaado Booklet lot tlx **kiog W T. KNIGHT. M?uc? Daily News Classified Ads Brmy Quick Results Wanted ? A Name Beaufort Farm Co. will Pay $15 First Prize, $10 Second Prize and $5 Third Prize For the best name for its suburban proper! , now being developed. Names to be ei losed in sealed envelopes and ad dressed to W. T. HUDNELL A disinterested committee will be ap pointed to award the prizes for ihe three best names. No name ending in "Park" or ' Heights" is wanted and the name selected must not have more than two words and all suggestions must be in be fore SEPTEMBER I, 1916. "CRYSTAL" Bring your tobacco to (he Washington market Take back with you some Crystal Ice or Crystal Ice Cream. It will cheer up and refresh the folks at home. CRYSTAL \CE ( OMPANV Phone 83. Washington, N. C. ?? > R"S W<W>I> IAMKH W. OOWi MMnlMTN New York <on?.n RirhangO. J. LEON WOOD & CO BANKERS AND BROKERS 8tor!|t?. Bond*. Cotton. Oralo and Protlalona. 7* Plum* Carpontar Balling. Norfolk. Va. Prfrato wlro? to Now York Stock Bichaog*. Chicago Board Trada and othor financial cottlora. CORRRBPONDBNC* *WgPBCTTUl,LY SOLICITED. lavMtmaat Mi marginal lunaaf glvan oarafal attontlon.
Washington Daily News (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 21, 1916, edition 1
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