Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / March 27, 1912, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, 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
S. |>' ; t V. o giraijiis *'^y nt ol Stnili^-eV ows. :sf, ;*'ji(^ Di'aijs' .•ompiete sto^s-k 'S fielc^ fence anti ►u money if^’ y©ui Imes— twa j between. rds» car lins.. "if well, nee- Je will sell! fgton* good ? and beauti^ OMP¥ rer* V. SELLARS ^RT STORE. ^INGTOK, N. G. Iries in stc^k o^er Iddfferent pateaTis U ?Aftlt fo use to order j;o see it. It Wij Never Forget. ? to scifence^ are the sociated with our early such as Bucklen's Ar- e, that mother or grand- sed to cure our bums, aids, sores, skin erup ts, sprains or bruises, ars of cures prove its; Jnrivaled for piles, corns ores. Only 25 cents at Drug Co. 1 le body’s ^ 2rs by the S “Piedmont » Will you? g ^ith us. S rsT CO. ent. orth Carolina. A Dream Now Feing Realized, Some of these days there wiU j come into the South a man herald ed by no trumpet, but with an iron jaw and determined look, ,vho will be the harbinger of a declaration that will so startle the natives that in turning a- round they will do so so quickly rhst in the words of the lament- gd Senaior Vanee, “The hind nart of their breeches will be in fiont ' What is this man of might go- jj5g to do? VVhen the farmer drives into town with his load of seed cotton to this man’s place of business he will go, and before you have time to turn around this cotton will be swished through the gin, separating the seed from the e- ■],jsive and fleecy staple. Then comes the divergence, the staple is picked up in its beautiful and soft condition and carried to the piachine that converts into thread, and on to be weaved into its many and varied pattern^ of cloth; sent then in a dozen differ ent ways to be finished in the shapes of all the habiliment thj».t adorn the human race. Simultaneously with the staple the seed is picked up and hurled on its race of disinte^tion, ground, t.TUshed, screened and separated from its identity into its varied channels of usefulness. You hear the roar of the n achin- ery as it strikes. The noise al most stuns you. But you are de termined to follow it in its mad career, and as you hear the sound of the hull parting from that part of the seed that gives the life to the plant a quiver of admiration electrifies your mind for the gen ius of the man who is creating Vi’here we wasted. On you go to see this hull bal ed and on the farmer’s wagon to be conveyed to his home to have more grinding and crushing through the digestive organs of his stock, making fat, and the waste to go back to the field as fertilizer to raise more cotton and prove the law of reciprocity. Before you can get back to che place of division of the hull the guide meets you and hurries you to another building, and you get there in time to find out the hulls have had more crushing and have been made into pulp, and you see the roll of paper on the dray go ing to the printing press that will te!l the world what marvelous things are being done in the South. You hurry back and, find out that while you are gone the “in nards” of that seed,is running a business of its own. It was pick ed up by electricity, more grind ing and crushing and hurled at a tremendous speed through a tube to a mill, where, after the oii is extracted and refined, cre ating a beautiful, pure and whole some domestic article, you hear another roar of machinery and your guide tells you that is the dro^s coming from the refiining process. Following up, you find this dross has been turned into a sanitary soap to be shipped to all parts of the world. You ask your guide if this is all, but by following him you come to activ ity in a new place: farmers’ wa gons being loaded, engines switching, cars being loaded with lertilizer to be distributed over the entire land to make more fer tility, more cotton, corn aad meat, and more wealth; all to be under one big brain, with its ram ifications managed specifically, each leading to a central head from which comes the centrifu- gal force made by the many units ihat knows no resistance. If this is a dream, have not stranger dreams come true?—W. B. Troy, in Manufacturers’ Rec ord. itaining the ghastly skull and ex i claims: Oh, hell! what have we here? A carrion death, within whose epipty eye There is a written scroll. “Against the dictates of a tender conscience and under the stress of her supposed duty the ^rl went obediently through her lines, continues the letter. Items. Crowded outlast week. Spring Graded School will close April 20th. with an entertain- Tw Everybody invited. Young People’s prayer meeting is held every Sabbath afternoon with good attendance. Mrs. P. W. Cates, and step son, Ciovas, have just returned from a visit to relatives and friends in High Point and Greensboro. Mr. George McBane who was very ill some time ago is now able to be out again. Mr. R. C. Guthrie one of our Merchants had the misfortune of loosing a horse some day's ago, Mr. S. F. McBane seems to be- improving in health. Hope that he will soon be well again. Green School boys crossed hats with Spring Graded School last Thursday the score being a tie. Mr. John Winslow is indeed a pleasant caller at Mr. G. G. Me- bane’s every Sunday night, and once in the meantime for rarity. Ask Miss Vera about it. Miss Sandra McBane was all smiles Monday morning. Mr. Amsy Ivey got lost Sunday even ing and found himself at Mr. G. G. McBanes. Mr. and Mrs. M. T, Hargrove visited at Mr.^ W. H. Guthrie’s Sgnday evening. We hope that “Jack” is going to reform we saw him carrying a Bible Sunday evening. Ask Miss Lambeth about it. Mr. M. S. Guthrie wears a broad smile, its a boy. Billie Zachary visited at W. M. Lewis’s Saturday night. Miss Mary Lambeth visited at Joseph Woody’s Friday nigh^. “This is leap year.” Ask “Bob” about hiding the lantern in Mr. Mc’s. straw stack. Our mail carrier failed to go Friday “last” on account of the swollen waters. Guess he will be delighted to see the mud clear up. Mr. Eugene Mann and family visited at Mr. C. W. Johnson’s Sunday. Miss Ruth Zachary wears a pleasant face since Goley came back. Miss Mattie Zachary seemed rather sleepy last Monday morn ing. Shakespeare “Too Profane.” (From The New York Tribune.) Protest is being made against the young girls who attend the eighth crrade of Public school 20 in Flushing, being compelled to read extracts from Shakespeare where the words shock their sen sibilities. While the boys might revel in certain paragraphs the girls held an indignation meeting and reported the matter to their parents. A letter was published yester day in a local paper in Flushing Signed “A Father,” in which the writer wanted to know if the board of education could not in certain cases “provide some harm less expletives to be used in cases of emergency.” In his letter A Father” said that the girls'in the eighth grade were reading the “Merchant of Venice” when It fell to one of a peculiarly sen sitive and refined nature to imper senate the character of the Prince of Morrocco in Act 2. Scene 7, when as the wooer of fair Portia, he chooseB the goldeDCMket,p9||- ,rv',>--'Si/-'■ov't- Mortgage Sale. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a mortgage deed executed on the i6th day of May, 1910, by J. W. Kemodle and wife, Lula V. Ker- nodle, to the Central Loan & Trust Co., and recorded in tjhe public registry of Alamance County, in Book No. 48, page 557, of Mortgage Deeds, the said Central Loan & Trust Co., will offer for sale at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash, at the Court House door in Graham, N. C., at 12 o’clock M. Monday, April 1st, 1912, the following de scribed tract of land lying and being in Alamance County, North Carolina, Burlington Township in the city of Burlington, and des cribed as follows, to wit: Adjoining the lands of J. E. Oaks, W. M. Williams, J. L. Thomas, and others and bounded as follows: Beginning at a stake J. E. Oaks comer running thence N. 58 3-4 deg. W. 3 chs. and 60 links to a stone, thence S. 50 1-4 deg. W. 2 chs. to a stone, thence S. 59 3-4 deg. E. 3 chs. and 50 links to astone.,thenceN. 43 deg. E. 2 chs. and 10 links to the beginning, containing 3-4 of an acre, more or less. This the 24th day of Fiebruary, 1912. The Central Loan & Trust Co., Mortgagee. Danger of Pine Beetle Washington, D. C., March 23, Repetition of^the enormous Io»ss- es sustained by timber owniers throughout the South last year TOcause of the destructive pine teetle may bjE> prevented this year if timber owners will simply burn the bark of the dead and dying pines from which the need les have not yet fallen, the burn ing to be done before May 1st, according to Dr. A. D. Hopkins, w^ho is in charge of the Forest Insect Investigations for the Bu reau of Entomology. “The people of the South have an opportunity to make a final effort, which if properly directed will go f?r towards controlling tWspest,” says Dr. Hopkins. The beetle is now passing the winter in the bark of the dead and dying pines from which the needles have not yet fallen. These trees shonld be cut down and the bark of the main trunks destroyed by burning before May 1st or the beetles will come out with the w^arm weather and take up their work of destruction. This object may tje accomplished without direct expense by turn ing the infested trees into cord? wood or lumber, it is essen-i tial that this cord wood be bum- : ed before May 1st and that the; slabs of the lumber with the bark' on be burned before that time. I It is only necessary to treat the! dead on dying trees from which! the needles have not yet fallen. The dead trees from which the needles have fallen have been a-, bandoned by the beetle and may be disregarded in control opera tions. ” l?’earing that the danger from pine beetle is common to the whole South, wliose interests it considers identical with theirs, the Southern Railway Company ia co-operating with the United Slates Department of Agricul ture in warning Southern timber owners of tlie threatened danger and iiow it may be avoided. Poll of Presidential Delegates. Total number of delegates 1076; necessary for a nomination, 539. Republican;—Thus far in structed for Taft: Alabama, 22; Dist of Columbia, 2; Florida. 12; Georgia 20; Iowa, 6; Michigan, 2; Oklahoma, 2; Philippines, 2; S. Carolina, 14; Tennessee, 14; Vir ginia, 20; Total, 114. Instructed for Roosevelt: Ok lahoma, 16. Uninstructed: New Mexico, 8; So. Carolina; 4; Virginia, 2; total 14, Contests: Geor^a, 2; Mis souri, 4; Oklahoipa, 2; Tennessee; 2; Virginia, 2; total, 12. Notice of Re-Sale of ^'Richmond Hill” Property. Under and bv virtue of an or der of the Superior Court of Ala mance County, made in the spec ial proceeding entitled E. S. W. Dameron, administrator of J. C. Bradsher, dec’d, plaintiff, vs J. P. Bradsher and wife* Alice Bradsh^er, R. H. Bradsher and wife, Lula Bradsher, W. J, Por- ^^terfield and wife, Fannie Porter field, by her guardian ad litem, W. I. Ward, A. R. Bradsher and wife, Sarah Brad^er, C. P. Bradsher and wife, Balkie Brad sher, Daniel R. Bradsher, Lula Bradsher, Ida E. Bradsher, Mar garet Savannah Thomas and her husband, W. 0. Thomas, Eliza Jane Burch and her husband, Robert Burch, defendants, the undersigned commissioner will, on SATURDAY, THE 6TH DAY OP APRIL 1912. at 2 o’clock P. M,, on the premi ses hereinafter described, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash the following described: Lot No. 1. A certain tract or parcel of land in Burlington Township, Alamance County, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of John Johnson, Big Falls Road, a street and others bound ed as follows: Beginning at an iron bolt on the N. side of said road, corner with said Johnson, running thence N. 74 o E. 180 ft to an iron bolt at the S. E. corner of said street into the said road; thence N. 4 1-4 o E. 150 ft to an iron bolt corner on W. side of said street; thence S. 74 o W. 180 ft to an iron bolt; thence S. 4 1-4 oW. 150 ft to the beginning, cofitaining .57 of an acre, more or less, upon which is situated a nice cottage house of several rooms. Lot No. 2. A certain tract or parcel of land lying in Burlington Township, Alamance County, North' Carolina, adjoining the lands of Daniel Roberts, the heirs of J. C. Bradsher, dec’d, and others and bounded as follows: Beginning at an iron pipe, cor ner with said Roberts and Brad- shep land: running thence N. 86 1-2 0 W. 75 feet to an iron bolt in said Roberts line; thence S. 2 1-2 o W. 96 ft. to an iron bolt; thence 90 o S. E. 87 1-2 o E. 150 ft. to an iron bolt; thence 90 o N. 2 1-2 0 E. 100 ft. to an iron bolt; thence S. 88 3-4 b W. 75 ft. to the beginning, containing .33 of an acre, more or less; upon which is situated a two-room log house. The bidding on Lot No. 1, a- bove-descrited, will start at $42,- 07, and on Lot No. 2 at $122.10. . Terro3 of Sale Cash. This M^ch 1st. 191^ E. S. W. Dameron, ComiBissioner. Time now for yAor witb the camphor balk, and-ji^” of dre». Whisk on a siMck-and-span ” On The Door Suit to pla; billiards Vaiety is pe olf Ae old ana irhisk -ART” Suit. 1^ supple-shouldereiOi, trueHiraping, figure-flexing, soft as a muffler, easy as an old shoe. Tailored orpiu’c-wooT fabrics that resist the strain and stretch of sit-down and lounge-abpiit. ‘ HIGH-ART” Spring Suits have that freedom from stiff- ness^that ease and grave and poise, whieb only the Commiaiid- er-in-Ghief of Tailbfdom cafi parallel. Come right in and aet as it the store belonged to you. ; $15.00 to $25.00 $ 7.50 to $15.00. Other makes Big line Men’s, Ladies an4 ehildrens Oxfords and Gents Furnishings. B GOODMAN. ' r. The Home Of Good Clothes. The Biggest Clothier In The Gounty. ■/V, v-g ' •• -.y,, . Write us, or call and $ee our Pianos, Organs and Sewing Machines. We deliver pianos, in our rubber tired piano wagon, right in your home in nice shape. Pianos tuned and repaired, or we will exchange for old pianos, organs or machines. Ask the following gentleman how they like our fine Player-pianos; Finley Will iamson, Wm. W. Brown, Peter R. Ireland, May & Pickett owners the “Grotto” and Jno. W. Fonville, Player Pianos $375; up^ EKis Machine & Music Buriingtpn^ N. C. Bad Spells **! suffered, during girlhood, from womanly weakness,” writes Mrs. Mollie Navy, of Walnut, N. C. “At last, I was almost bed-ridden, and had to give up. We had three doctors. All the time, I was getting worse. I had bad spells, that lasted from 7 fo 28 days. In one week, after I gave Cardui a trial, I could eat, sleep, and Joke, as well as anybody. In 8 weeks. I was well. 1 had been an invalid for 5 weary years I Cardui relieved me, wheii everything else lailed.”’ TAKE If you are weak and ailing, think what ft would mean, to you, to recover as quickly as Mrs. Navy did. jFqr more than 50 years, this purely vegetable, tonic remedy, for women, has been used by thousands of weak and ailing suffers. TTiey found It of real value in relieving their aches and pains. Why suffer longer?' A remedy that has relieved and helped so many, is ready, at the nearest drug store, for use, at once, by you. Try it, today. Write to: Ladlee’ Adrljory DtjJt., lor Sftdal iHStrtKtbm. >nd ^PXte bool duttanoota Mtdicitte Co., ChtttMHMsa, Tdn» £, “ Home Treatment ioir Womem” Mnffree. ] Sl DF UNCLAIMED LHTERS DONT BE BALD. Remaining in Post Office at Burlington, N. C. Mar. 23, 1911. Gentlemen: W. S. Allen, Lane Barham, C. D. Hawley Esq., A. L. Ingle, Willine King, W. C. Keil, P. M. Lee, Walkey Lenn, Henry Price, J. A. Stewsirt, J. T. West. Ladies: ' Miss Bessie — , Mrs. Mol lie Webster, Mrs. Ella Williams; Persons calling for any of these letters will please say “Advertis ed," and give date of advertised list. J. Zeb Waller, Post Master. Illinois legislation has become a bad joke. Hughes may have to let hitiii N«»rly Any On9 May Secure a Splendid Growth of Hair. We have a vemedy that has aided to grow hair and prevented baldness In 93 put of 100 cases where tised ac cording to diirectlons for a reasonable length of time. That mky seem like strong statemesnt—it is. and we mean to be, and no one Bhotild dd(«bt It nntil they have; put our claims to an actual' test. W''e are so certain uSexiill “93” Hair Tonic will cure dandruff, prevent baldness, stimulate the scaJi> and hair roots, stop falling hair and grow new hair, that wie personally glye our posi tive guarantee to refund evety penny paid us for *t in eve;ry Instance where It does not give entite satisfaction to the user. « Kexall “93” Hair Tonic Is as pleas- itnt to use as clear spring water. It is dellghtfuUy perfumed* does not grease or gum the hair. Two size% 50c. and of Itj, you certainly fcajfee ab risk. Sold otiit Btbi?^— ThiB Rexall Store. FKEEMAN DRUQ 'CO; I ^vertisein ATLANTA WEEKLY JOURNAL The Eiggest Newspaper in the South The r^ular price of The Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journ- al is 75 ; cents a year, if you will send us ' your order you can get Tlie State Dispatch AND THE ATLANTA SWWEEKLY JOURNAL BOTH ONE YEAR FOR ONLY Jl.SO Send Your Subscription Right away To tkis*paper—not to The Atlasta Sei»i-Weekiy jonrBal. Uncle Eara Says ‘it don’t take more’n a gill uv effoi't to git folks into a peck of trouble” and a little neglect of constipation,H biliousness, indi gestion or other liver derange ment will do the same. If ailing, take Dr. King’s New Life Piils for quick results. Easy, safe, sure, and only 25 cents at Free man Drug Co. Massachusetts ia sadly in need Of elective local ntacfamery for lOte sett^HSfiQt of fees. ^ gh sup- out « ' ' I'-'
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 27, 1912, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75