Newspapers / Washington Daily News (Washington, … / Oct. 14, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS 1TBLISHP.D KVKRY AFTfcR.VOOX * EXCEPT SUNDAYS. " ' Rnh-reJ u Mcond-elu* nutter, August S, 1909, at the poetuffice ?f X. C, Uiuler the act of March S, 18T0. ^ ? ? ? ? i SCBSCBIPTIOJI RATES: * - * . M -'Uth $ .?5 W ' ' Three Month* : 75 8u Month* 1.50 One T??r 3.00 Subscription* must be paid for in advance. _ If paper is no* ro- , ^ ceived promptly, telephone or write this office. Subscribers desiring the paper discontinued, wiH please notify this office, otherwise it will be continued at regular subscription rates. JAMES L. MAYO..... . PiiopRirToit OARL.GOERCH * tfnrron WASH I XGTONr NORTH CAROLINA, OCT. 14, 1016. The Washington Star opines that even if Mr. Hughes is not elected, he will have had the pleasure of seeing America. WHERE WILL YOU BE I There will be two attractions in the city next week: a union re vival at tin* Methodist church and a carnival at the baseball grounds. Where will von be during the week? Will you l>e joyously parading the midway with the colored popu lation of the city? Will you be rubbing elbows with people whom you would nut associate with ou the streets ( Will you be wasting your money. ? money that you need for other purposes? Will you go in to set degrading Exhibitions? "Will you show to the entire city that you prefer the cheap- amusements that you can buy for a few dimes and nickels to the salvation of your own soul and your fate in eternity ( Or. ? will you be at the revival, showing yourself interested in God's work and determined to do vour little part in making it successful ? WHERE WILL* YOU BE? MR. BICKETT'S VISIT. Beaufort county is proud of the honor of having entertained our next governor. Mr. Bickett sojourned in our midst for two days and during that time he met many of our citizens. He is a man of pleasing personality and he is going to make North] Carolina a pood governor. His speech at Aurora yesterday was one of the most convincing that has ever l>eon delivered in the county and he sent hi- hearers away with much food for thought and reflection. We will ho always glad to have Mr. Bickett visit Beaufort county and it is hoped that after he has taken the gubernatorial chair he will find time and occasion to visit the residents of this section again. HELPING ALONG THE LIBRARY. At the reeeption, which was held at the public library Thursday nip-lit. mo'-h was said regarding the present standing of that institu tion and its plans and hopes for the future. A comniitu-o will call upon the residents of Washington in the near future, a.iking them to beeome permanent contributing ineml?er3 to the library association. This money will be used in putting the li brary i?n a hr tier financial basis and making some greatly needed im provements. The library d^erves the support of every residnnt of Washington and it is to lie hoped that when the committee begin their canvas for members they will not be refused a single time. STOCK-RAISING TURNING SOUTHWARD. Much hus l>een said of Into regarding stock raisins; in this scction. Several citie* have been discussing the projcct of erecting packing plants and a general interest is being manifested in all matters per taining to the raising and marketing of stock. In a recent is*ue, the Virginian-Pilot carried an interesting article which showed the tendency of the stock grower to foresake the West and turn to the South as a more logical place in which to pursue the industry. The article reads as follows: As illustrating how stock-raisers from the West arc being attracted} to the South, the Manufacturers' Record carries, under the Jackson-' villc date line, a special dispatch announcing that Mr. Mark R. Ten nant, of Sioux City. Iowa, has recently purchased ten thousand acres of land in Dc So to County, war Fort Meyer, Florida, which he will begin at r ii"p to stock with high grade cattle. More than that, Mr. Ttnnant. is quoted as declaring that "in his estimation, Florida is destined to become the greatest cattle raising and marketing State in he Union" and that this result will be greatly accelerated by "a large influx of X?>r thorn and Western farmers who will enter the stock raising business." The advantages which Florida has to offer for stock-raising ? cheap lands and a climate which obviates the necessity and expense of stall- 1 feeding by furnishing pasturage practically the, year round ? are shared, in greater or less degree, by all the States on the South Atlan tic seabourd and the Gulf Coast. Now that the cattle tick is rapidly approaching the point of elimination, the one thing needed to insure improvement of these advantages on a constantly enlarging wale is the establishment of packing houses to afford local markets for the ^ cattle, sheep and hogs raised. Georgia and Florida have begun to fr;ve practical recognition to this fact, with the result that the live stock industry is rapidly expanding in IwtJi. North Carolina is pre paring to do like wise, and Virginia should not delay to fall in line. An up-to-date packing house at Norfolk would prove not only a profi table investment for those undertaking the enterprise, but also of great benefit to the farmers in Tidewater Virginia and F.astern Carolina. ONLY STOCKS TUMBLED. The stock market was nervous recently. So was the Chicago wheat pit and other grain pita throughout the country. The reason for, the nervousness was not very difficult to ascertain nor was it very far away. It was a German submarine ? or submarines ? close to the upper Atlantic shore. What had been done was, likely to be followed by something else and is still likely to be followed by something else, and is still likely to bo followed by something else of the same char acter. And therein lies a story that has much to do with the pres ence and permanence of our prosperity as at present constituted ? The prosperity has oome from across the Atlantife and from Ger many's enemies in the great European war. We have been ftirnish itog munitions, supplier of otheT kinds, and money in great quantities to the European allies. We have taken in exchange American secur ities and promises to pay, but the money loaned to the allies by Wall Street has been spent in American manufacturing centers and centers of trade generally. Germany has been eat off. She ^lone has had j to live within herself and upon her own resources. Naturally, the game got tiresome and Germany decided that if she must starve . ....somebody else would. starve too. She inaugurated plans for cutting off their supplies at their very base and the first effort was highly successful ? so successful that stocks and fond* ? "war babies" ? be gan to loae their speeulstive value. Even wheat lost some of its spec illative value, hut the price of bread, the price of meat, the pric* of , eggs, the price of cjothing, the price in rfiort, of or cry commodity, I ZT ; ? ? ? People know picturesque rlrtr .is rows of shade tree*! I i?B to the kiddies a < building a stress robust i makes housekeeping easier i enjoy n:cr.t In Then the honei home life more pleseam Hurrah! Hurrah!!! i - m foot ai tfa. Delightful { im . FALL ? Buoyant in WIXTKB . Enchntnlm im 8PR1NO AND PXCTTKESQUE AT At J. TlM KM. ITS Til* PLACE POft'YOVflrf HOME. SECURE THE LOT t06.\V. Of course people who consider health and sanitation and ednjfoff prefer Washington Park, and yon | will drf well to Btudy and head these advantage and be one of the many who will-baUd la Washington Park. 'Buy the lot now. Cash>or time. There will never be another property aroftnd Wsahingtcn to equal Washington Park. A. C. HATHAWAY, Owner. Mens Shoes ' . w ' - .-I' Serviceable, Stylish and Well Fitting. Shoes for the business man, the farmer or the young roan about town. You will find ihc RIGHT KIND OF A SHOE Is the only Kind Tbat We Keep. THE HUB Suskin & Berry remained firmly on the footing which war prosperity has placed it Wages also remained stationary. . ' ? The question is, if Germany with a few submarines can blockade the trade with Europoan allies that baa brought the prosperity of . which we boast, can't that very blockade be made to'operate for a re daction of the enormous cost of everything that we are eating and I wearing today? Let's hope so, for a prosperity for which we have to pay so dearly isn't such a great institution 'after all. The Town Gossip I WA8 reading. THE SATURDAY Evening PobI. LAST NIOHT. AND I came across. AN INTERESTING atory. AND THERE waa. ? A RIDDLE In U. AND IT went like thla: "WHY IS a mouae. "WHEN IT Bplna?" AND THE answer la: "THE HIGHER, the fewer." AND I studied It. ? AND DREW diagrams of It. AND TRIED to translate It INTO LATIN and It waa. A LOT of work. AND 1 weftt lb bed. AND I couldn't go to eleep. AND I dreamed of mice. OOH^LUP high In the air. AND .IT waa. TH? FIRST thing. I THOUGHT about. THIg MORNING. ANtl '#HBN I went. DOWM THE atreet. I SPRUNG It. | ON ONB of our. PROMINENT CITIZENS. ? AND 1 asked him: | "WHY 18 a mouse. ? '<W?EN IT splngT" AND HE thought. I FOR A minute or two. AND THEN he gave it up. AND I told him: "THE HIGHER, the fewer." ?AND I! laughed. AND HE laughed ?" AND HE "said: "THAT'S PRETTY fcood." * AND I left him. AJfD l looked back. AND HE waa scratching. HIS HEAD and looked. KINDER PUZZLED. 1 AND I told It. TO SEVERAL others. AND THET all laughed. AND THOUGHT. ?THAT IT waa funny. t AND IT waa. AND IT does. SOUND RATHER peculiar. AT FTR6T. BUT WHEN you see It. IN PRINT. IT IS perfectly plain. I8NT ITT * I THANK you. NOTICE. By virtue of the power of sale con tained In a certain mortgage deed,, dated April 4. 1914, and exeeuted by A. L. Edwards and Wife Annie B.. to the undersigned. I will offer for aale for cash at the court- house door In. Beaurort county, on Wednesday the flrat day of November. 191fc at IS If. the following described tract olklkkd, to- wit: Beginning lit a marked pttie In J. W. Arthur's N. line at Ldrby Dixon's 8. W. corner and running North St jK>les. then West to thwold Sand Hill Road; Chen southwardly with said road to i; W. Arthur's. N. W. corner; then Bi&t to the be|jn ning, containing ilVe seres, more or leas. Default having b$en made In payment of the debt secured by the said mortgage. * aale la to be made to aatlafy aame. This thtfSnd day W October. *1P1# M. L. Lane, Mortgagee. 0. C. Archbell, Owner of d?fbt. By W. A. Thompson. Attorney. 10-S-4wp. H| r Cottffn'fceed. $KI. Seed cotton, 4 1-4 to Te. Lint cotton, 14 1-Sc to IS 5-8c. ADVERTISE *N THE DAILY NEWS Do You Know About It? ? NOBODY KN0W8. HOW GOOD. A TtflNQ. REALLY 18. UNTIL TtfEY hare. TRIED IT. AND THAT la. THE ONLY reason. IN THE world. WHY EVERYBODY. IN THE country today. ISN'T DR IN KINO. "PBP8I-COLA." AND WHEN yon hare. TAKEN YOUR finrt fleas. IT IS a aafe bat. THAT YOU are going. TO HOLD on. TO A frood thing. AND THAT you. WIL.fi STICK to. PRP|f-OOLA." V*R. A Hp 4fO one. ou. and IF some of thoM. -*| WHO^HAVK n nir tried. PBlgPOOLA ' WOtffjD BAMPI/R It. I Hili^TOOLP noror. HB HjfrlflFIKP WITIf THAT one nam pie. would want. A BA?LK fr two. irvajfit day. AND # you hare oeror. PUT fldUR lip*. - PRpL-COLA." ?; h k Totr don't 1 WHAT YOtt h?ye mined. AND ITS too b?d. THAT YOU'VE dcllred TMM i-ono. BUT IT'S b?tt?r. I.ATE THAN never. ArtD YOU ought. . TO' TAK0 the tip.\ AND TUB nwt time. YOU FETE!, tired. AMU tnnwtr. AND WORK out. TBLX THE clerk. TO MAKES It m. "PBPW-COLA." A WD YOU'L/L Hod out. THAT EVBRYTHUtO. THAT HA8 been Mid. ABOUT IT. ] 18 TRUB. 1 THANK roa. tered and confirmed pursuant to .Chapter 90 of the Public Law. of 1918. and that summons baa Issued, returnable at the office of the Clerk of. the Superior Court of Beaufort County on the 5th day of December. 1916. Said land Is situate In Choeo vinlty and Rlchlmnd Township*. In the County of Bpaufort and 8tafe aforeaald. adjoining the lands of Si mon Moore and others, and Is de scribed a a follows, to-wit: Beginning at an Iron pipe and ey proas In the edge of Bloynte Creek, thence South ?? degree*! 10 minutes East 431? feet to a poplar and iron , pipe In Mauls Point Road; thence I with said road South <9 degrees IB (minutee West 7 00- feet, thence South | IS degree* IS minutee West 304 feet, South 3 degrees West 331 feet to an Iron pipe In the edge of said road, thence Sonth 83 degrees Bast 33 feet to a gam. thenoe 8outh fl degrees 19 minutee East 4?T feet to an Iron pipe, North 39 degrees 30 minutes East 363 feet to an Iron pipe* North 31* degree* 5 minute* Bast 3336 feet to an Iron pjpe. South 0 degree* SO minutes Eart 4783 feet to an Iron ; pipe. North 83 ftefcr*** 80 minutes Bant 3583 feet to* ah Iron pipe In the edge of Gideons Branch, thence with Gideons Branch the various Courses thereof North 63 degrees Bast 860 feet. Nbrth' tt dbtffees 45 rilnntes East 334 feet. North 61 degrees 16 minutes Bast 168 feet. North 33 de grees 45 minutes Bast 134 feet, North I 47 degree* 16 fcinntes Bart 458 feet. North 48 degree* Bart 313 feet. North 48 degrees 30 minutes Bart 163 feet. North IS d**t*e* Bart 3*7 feet. North 58 degree* Baat 311 feet. North 68 degrees 16 minutes Bast 81V feet, North 78 Bart 77 feet South 69 degTee* 30 minutee Bast of Blounta Creek, thence with said 346 feet. Sooth 33 degrees Bart 1S6 feet. North 68 degrees East 1S6 feet North 35 degrees IS minutes Eaat 138 feet. North 80 minutes Bast 800 feet, North 38 degrees 16 minutes Bast 36 feet. North S3 degrees 30 minutes East 114 feet. North 81 de gree* IS minutes East 33 Test. North 69 degree* SO minute* Bart 168 fart. North 30 minutee Bast 334 feet.' North 3 degrees 45 minutes Wert 83 feet. North S3 degrees 45 minutes Bast 138 .feet. North 66 degrees 16 minutee Bast 66 feet to Neville Creek, thenee up Neville Creek, with Its various courses thereof, 8outh. 1 ! ?reo ju minutes West 101 feet, South 14 degrees East 100 feet. South I 63 degrees 80 minutes Bast 101 feet. South 74 degrees SO minutes Bast 83 feet. South St degrees 45 minutes East 12S feet, South 84 decrees 30 minutes East 168^ feet, South 70 de grees Ease 80S feet. South 4 degrees 15 minutes West 174 feet. South 47 decrees Bast 884 feet. South 18 de grees 15 minutes West 64 feet. South 37 decrees Best 848 feet. South S3 degrees Bast 1 10 feet. South 6 de grees East 98 feet/South 51 degrees 16 minutes Bast 88 feet. South 33 degrees West 186 feet. South 6 de grees 30 minutes East 148 feet. South 73 degrees 15 minutes East 886 feet. 8outh 88 degrees Bast 178 feet. South 86 degrees Bast 188 feet. 4 {South 36 degrees 16 minute? West! 110 feet to the Old Crossing Place.1 thence South 69 degrees 45 minutes East 86 feet. North 80 degrees 46 minutes East 830 feet to an Iron pipe, South 68 degrees 15 minutes , {East 748' feet to an Iron pipe, South 73 degrees .16 minutes East 684 feet 1 , to a pine and iron pipe, thence South 68 degrees 16 minute* East 9*0 feet to an Iron pips In the edge of the Core iPoInt Road, thence South 11 lessees 16 minutes West 1940 feet to an Iron pipe In Nerllls Branch, thence Up Nevllls Branch 8outh 13 degrees West 146 feet. South 3 de grees West 374 feet, South 58 de grees 45 minutes East 160 feet, South 1 degree West 226 feet, South 40 degrees 16 minutes East 848 feet, South J 6 degrees 30 minutes West 144 feet. Bout* S3 degrees 15 min utes Bast 264 feet. 8outh 40 degrees TO minutes West 188 feet. 8outh SS degrees Bast 138 -feet. South 48 de grees Bast S6S feet. South 49 de grees 45 minutes East 838 feet. South 16 degrees 16 minutes East 164 feet. South 60 degrees Bast 856 feet, South 6 degrees 45 minutes Bast 193 feot. South 81 detrees 45 minutes Bast 139 feet, South 36 de grees East 849 feet. South 86 de grees 15 minutes East 166 feet, South 50 degrees IS minutes Bast 8*8 feet to aa Iron pipe, thenee South 74 degrees 80 minutes West 8014 feet to an Iron pipe, North 11 degree* 16 minutes Esst 1830 feet to an iron pipe. North 78 degress 46 minutes West 8*40 feet to an Iron nlpe and stump in the Rose Branch. North 78 degrees II minutes East 380 tc6t to an Iron pipe, North 6 de gree* 25 minutes Bast 1814 feet to to ?n Iron pip. at " n.r, Bnutli If WMt 1774 fMt *1 daftTMa feet to an K'Tr " If you believe In "Safety Pint," confine ~ your ?hopping to ittorefl ^ which advartiae. jOiled,' Repairt and put in th? best of shape foi the Fall Huntini ALSO GUNS FOR SALE D. R. Bicycle Shop FOR YOUR HOTA BAGA " TURNIf> & COLLARD SEED / SEE WORTHY & ETHERIDGE BUfSCRIB? TO THE DAILY NlfWB thence with said road North It de gree* 4 5 minutes East 194 feet; North 11 degrees 30 minutes East 140 feet, North 14 degrees East US feet. North 415 minutes West 847 feet, North 14 degrees 80 minutes East 162 feet* to the junction with the road leading td the Store House Landing, then the said road North IS degrees 46 minute* West 89 feet. North 86 degrees 46 minutes West 400 feet. North 70 degrees 46 min utes West 686 feet. North 79 degrees West 800 reet to an iron pipe In said road, thence floutb 30 mltlttes West 748 feet to an Iron pipe, thence Nort|? 88 degrees 16 minutes West 1668 feet to- a large crooked gum and Iron pip* in the edge of a small stream making out stream North 71 degrees 46 "minute* West 866 feet. North tt degrees 16 minutes West 200 feet, South 87 de grees 46 minutes West 117 feet to an Iron pipe In Blouijts Creek, thence North 14 degrees 46 minutes West 277 feet to an Iron pipe In Blounta Creek, thence North 89 degrees West 14 feet to Shell Point, thetaee North cJr?r"es 30 minutes West 87 f< w ? **i s 87 feet.
Washington Daily News (Washington, N.C.)
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Oct. 14, 1916, edition 1
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