Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Feb. 24, 1914, edition 1 / Page 2
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
WEAK. W£ABY WOMEN |.^an t|u CmBM of D«Uy WoM SB4 E>d Tkem. When the back aches and throbs, When the housework is tenure. When night brings no flfcst nor «leep. When urinary disorders set in, A Wi>ter Ctm^ A stubbero, uwoyiiiK, ^prwnnt; cou|^ hangs on, racka the body aad weaicens the inu£s, siiu sruu iwua to serious results. The first doee of Dr. King’s New Discovery gives re lief, Henry D. Sanders, of Vaven- di»>., Vt., was threatened with co.-- sumption, after having pneumonia He writes: “Dr. EinK's New ’)iE'‘.overj’ Women's lot Is a weary one. j ^ . Doan’s Kidney Pills are for weak fcr kidneys. Have proved their tainiy the best of all isiedicir.es fc: coughs, colds or lun^ trouble.” Ccor for children’s coughj. Money brcK if not satisfied. Price 50 c. and Jl.OO At all druggists.—H. E. Bucklen i Co.. Philadelphia or St. Louis. worth in Burl ington. This is one Burlingtpn woman’s tear tiZDony. I Mrs. S. L. Malone, Anthony Street, | Burlingtoa, N. G.. says: “I was ne^-v | _ _ ~ «us and diizy and my back was pain-; . L'nclaimed Letters, ful. i also had pains over my kidneys • The following letters remain in the and i felt tired all the time, men / postoffice in Burlington, N. C.., Feb. heard about Doan's Kidney Pills, I 1-i. 19H, uncalled for; got some from the Freeman Drug Co. Persons callir.g for any of the above They removed the trouble.’' iettirs will please say “.■idvertused' for sale by all dealers. Price 50: ?ive ihe date of advertised list, cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, | F* I.* WILLX.\MSON P. M-. ^^ew York, sole. agei'.ts for the United, j - ^ ~ ; Keel Miserable. R. M. JETTON “NOT OUtttY." States. Eemembef the tafce no other. name—DoaJi’s—:i:iJ Harrible Blotches of Eczema. Q-jjckly eared by Dr. Hobson’s Ec zema Ointment- C. P. Caldwell, of New Orleans. La., writes; “My doctor adviseJ me to try Dr. Hobson’s Ec zema Salve.’ I used three boxes of oir.tmci'.t and three cakes of Dr. Hob son’s Dermal Zcnia Soap. Tod;iy 1 have not a spot anywhere on ray body and can say I am cured.” It wui do thes ame for you. Its soothing, heal- lug, antiseptic action will rid you of all skin humors, blackheads, piropies. Eczema blotches, red unsightly sore.-:, and leaves skin clean and healthy. Get a box today. Guaranteed. .\11 Druggists, ,50c., or by mail. Pfeiffer Chemical Co., Philadelphia or St. Louis. j Out of soi-t-s, depressed, pciii in the I back—Electric Bitters renews your health and strength. A guaranteed Liver and Kidney remedy. Money back if not satisfied. It completely cured Robert Madsan, of West Burl- ir.gton, Iowa, who suffered months. x\fter four doctors gav“ him up, he took Electric Bitters and is now a well ma*i. Get a bottle today; it will do the same for you. Keep in the house for all liver and kidney com plaints. Perfectly sate and depend able. Its results will surprise you. 50c. and $1.00. H. Bneklen & Co., Philadelphia or St. Loais. When a Mule Bites. A north Mississippi man was bit ten by a muie yesterday. When a mule begins to bite it is a sure sign tliaf he has rheumatism in his hind k-g and can’t use them.—New Or leans Picayune. (Continued from Page Three.) The question of force thst wss rea sonably necessary must be viewed from the standpoint of the man who was in peril, “the roan who knew that the more powerful invader had attempted to disgrace his wife.” REASONABLE BEUEF. ' In Wew of ail the circumstances, argued the la^vyer, no rea^nable be ing on tho face of God’s earth could come to any other conclusion than that Jetton’s belief in the necesMty for shooting was a rea.sonable ohe, and finding this to be a fact, it be comes the duty of the jury under the law, to return a verdict of not guilty. Judge Osborne concluded his speech at eivactly 3 o’clock and was foliow- eci immediately by Mr. J. D. McCaU. for the persecution. MR. .McGALL SPEAKS.. "You have be?i asked by gentle- rf.en distingruished i;: tlieir profes sion.” said -Mr. McCai!, “to trample the law of North Csrolina under your feet. Will vou do it; purely because yuu bciieve there is a public seiiti- meiit in favor of turning a criminal liiOse? I say, gentlemen of the jury, that that is tlie law of the niob, that is the law of the ouilaw, that is the same law and the same mob th:i put to death the %vor!J’s Redeem'; hearly 2.000 years aiio." this giving occssitMt far poiatad humorous remarks about pMSMt-day styles and their power to coupd even . .l«wv»r« tn .mva. them on the street-ii. “The shadow was hbt on the win dow,’ he exclaimed later. was on this man’s diseased mind.” Had ne seen the embrace through ; the open window, it would have been ' different, said Mr. McCall, but as it w:id. Hr. Jetton, .with the leay of : panther, bursts into the room, and i without an instant’s warning, like a | wild man, shoots down the visitor like | a dog. The lawyer said he did not t doubt that Mr. Jetton is a man of high character, and that his family is respected, but the fact that one is a man of high character doesn’t jus tify him in shooting another man and gettir.g off with the costs. ' In lurid language Mr. McCall de scribed the attack on Mrs. Jetton ac- ccrdir.g- to her testimony, emphasiz- i:ig the fuct that no outcry was made !‘t'.ause of the hand over her mouth. “That's the iirst woman the Lord ever made whose mouth was stopped j l,y a man,” exclaim^ Mr. McCall, j "eitlier in season or wt of season.” j In the ne'-'ve-racinng moments ijf- I ter the shooting, snid the lawyer, Jet- ■ ton said nothing about a fight, such j an idea had never entered his head. I But now they put the defense, on one ^sjn and and ask for an acquittal on j the other. “They realize that the at the {‘invasion’ docs not constitute a de- HEIEVEIM HEEI I ffllEm Mt - ME CBOVE'S The Oid Standard Grove’s Tasteless chill Toaic is Equail; Valuable as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver, Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and BtiiSds up the ^hole System, For Grown People and Children,; Vou Iebow vhat you ar« taking when you take GrDve’s Tasteless chill Toaic »ta tSut lortaola is prmt^ on every !.abel t^howmf; that it contains the\vel!kao’7?2 tonic properties of n«d Hi.)',’. It is as strong; as the strongest bitte toaic an4 ia ia Ta.^tcless Fonu; It has tio equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever Weakness, geiaeral debility ati'i loss ot appetite. Gives Hfc auil vigor to N'lrstn? Mothers Pale, Sickly ChiMrL*’2. Removes Bu:ou5tics5 tvithout purging 7;tlitfves cervous depression anl low spirits. Arouv'i^ tlie !Iver to action ant rtirifiestlsebiood. A True Tonic Sure Appetizer. A Complete Strengthener • n tatuUy should he without it. (Ui.ii-antecd by your I.’nii'r'sst 'Ve mrqn it. T-H‘E Saw liis shadow, and are to have forty days of wiatex. This will require heavy feeding. When in tbe market for anything in the feed !ii0j we are headquarters, Com, Oits, Bran, C. S. Hulls and meal, s’lipslaff. Red d g. Alfalfa, Timo- t iy, Oats and chver and soja bean ly. Melrose and Dan Valley [ :} iir, Sugar, Coffee and fuii line ^ c inlies Merchant Supply Company, N. One $1.00 k Wiii bhng ihe wice- A'Week Dispatch to yotr uoor twice-a- week twelve iiidQ& rie was asonisKed, ne said, at the j’invasion' docs not constitute a attor:;eys who with penitential tears ifense and so they fling that into the asked the jury to disregard the law-jury box as a matter of sentiment, of North Carolina, in behalf of some-! ask for acquittal on the grrounds of thinft higher and more .sacred. The j se!f-d^ense and expect to >vin it be- first statute for the government of-cause public sentiment favors his go- nian was written by God. ling free. With demonstration of divine ^w-1 Doctor Wooten, even as his soul er, said Mr. McCall, giving a vivid [was climbing the embattled walls of picture of the lightnii^ that leaped | Heaven, sent back the message, “i'm about the summit of Sinai when God: innocent," to go ringing down the wrote in letters of astral fire “the law! years, and preached a short sermon, they have asked you to override, [ before he passed away. As he lay 'thou shalt not kill.’ ” | there gasping our his dying breath “Is it a light thing to take human | he said: “She wa.- showing me her life? Oh, 1 know^, after a man has new dress”—and there lay the new been killed its easy for connsel to; dress, a final vindicEtion of his dying argue that he's gone, that his body! declaration. wanders beneath the clouds and can [ Mrs. Jetton's alleged exclamation, never come back. You are apt to I ‘ Don’t push me on my new drei.s,'’ forget the fact that a human life has was given sarcastic treatment, to been taken, that a tragedy has been j which Mr. Cansler later replied in a enacted." fashion equally scathing. He pictured in the peaceful town I „10SE SHADOWS. Davidson, the widow and the] ... | daughter whose heart is burned in the I shadows alembric of sorrow because some-j®” window, It's an instance of the body imagined that her father had, being? cast the wrong way.” done wix»njj. ! “The Slate of North Carolina doe.s NECESSITY FOR LAW. | want a man li^e’^s unless he is Was the ancient writer rig'ht when j case they adnr.it that he suid “where there is no law^jFier*^ ■ killed this and the burden i,> no liberty? Can it be true that this i Justitication: luw jjrew cut of the stnsyality of -videnco sho-v3 that t'ot o7iIy wa^ tho court of' Charies If. Every lavv!^^'^ innocent and that there nev- vuiter from Ha!-^ to Eattlo and Ruffin! provocation for his ^ccur- aud Pearso in N^orth Carolina has, “Ur that pistol with intent to use it. ht-'M that when i* man kills a man for j boldly that you may iF.vadinp his home, the latter fact re-! relyase him, but the red cros.^ o^‘ d.iccs it to rnansiaug^htt'f and man-1 iri written on his brow, and there slaughter only, I know one State remain «ntil God shall oail where Hoats the Stars and Stripes I ffive an account of the decus v.here that Jaw has never been >«- pealed hy juries.” Mr. McCall quoted from Judi^e Ruf fin to the efi^ect that killinj? by a wi*on^ed husband would be ju&til^* able, if a capital felony were about to be committed, but that » due re gard for human aife i*estralns ftirther relaxation of the doctrine th^%i cne m&R may not take the life of another. Tric common law is comnended well, by wisdom as a protection apainst passion which promptv'? one to take the law i« His own hands. WOMAN INNOCENT. ^lad it has been provt'n that this lady ia a lady of good character.'" s.nid Mr. McCall. “I argue to you that there never was any ground for :iny suspicion that she wo.s ever any- thine elso but a good woman. ^‘What was there,” he asked, “in the onduct of Doctor Wootei^ t.o lead fhis man t-o be?iove that there was nnything wrotjg between Ooct'u* Wooten and his wife? Not a single living witness comes into the court room and swears that they were ever 3^*n together. The e\idence is that ,hcy wont in and out of each other's homes ad libitum- Do you mean to , ay that a man with a diseased im- ’ igination inflamed by jealousy, can ' ee shadows on a -Mndow shade-~and shadows only and then slay his fel-' low man with impunity? , “She had never told him anything '\bout previous visits, or about the 183. Do fov know why? Because hey never happened. Do you ieve tKere is power enough sn earth T hell to prevent your wife from elling you if man came into lome and 704^ Improper proposaifi I'" done in the body.” MR. CANSLER SPEAKS. After an intemissit>n of n>x !«»«- uies, Mr E. T, Cansler opened up his heavy artillery for the d»*fendata. Momentous issues were involved, he said, because the defendant if con victed aa charged must pay the pen- Bity with his life. hecs.use the spec- ial counsel for the prosecution had attacked by innuendo the :haractei of hi.^, wife In attempting to .show discrepan cies ia the testimony of Mr, and Mrs Jetton as given on Saturday and oj the following Friday, the counsel hac tak^n it for granted that the Menog vapher*s notes were absolutely cor rect^ whereas he had admitted that i- W'ds, thci fir^t court case he had eve: reported, that he was ‘*nisty** in thi art. Several admitted errors of nanv and at least one of fact were cited ‘’‘WhaL right have Mr. Stewart, Mi McRae and Mr. McCuIl to f.ay whis the State of North CaroUna deman^ds They are here by virtue of somebody’ money, and, ! say it with all respec for them, seeking the blood of my cli ent. There sits the only man (poini ing to the .sclicst-nr) who has a rign to say what the State of North Car olina demands*” Mr, Cansler bitterly attacked th attitude of the private counsel tc ward Mrs. Jetton, Affirming thei belief in her purity, he said, they ye continued io intiixsate the contrary by indirect innuendos. "It doesn' take much courage to do thAt 8OT of thing inside & court room, but s takes more courage to do it outsid .a court room than r tldok they h&v got,** |£t. Canalier .^mit^d .tl^t Bntem The Reliable flons^oic I There is sdways need for a good lantern around the home— in the yard* in the cellar, in the attic— wherever a lainp is inconvenient or unsafe. The RAYO is id^ for home use. It gives a (dear, t«%ht %ht—like sunlight on tap. It is stFongf, durably compact; handy. Doesn’t Utak. Doesn’t sn^ke. Easy to light and rewtck. Will last for years A?!c for the RAYO. At dealers everywhere STANDARD OIL COMPANY Wa^nsion. D. C. Va. Vau OufcrlGttc. N. C. Ovbt*fc«ton. W. Vb. ChArlMitos'^. S. C- Subscribe Now For The Atlanta Journal Daily^ Sunday Semh Weekly Leryest OreulatioR South of Saliimore BY MAIL Daily 8c unday $7. Daily only per anriutn 5. Sunday only 2 Semi-weekly I AO the News! Ail the Time!! Worth More Than it Costs” '> her? sever br«at3wd a but ih jar; aciuast appeals to CTmpa&j.fo: usband's eiur.. ^ uronld tuiTe fip^v^ wuKbttr. Doetoi '■ WcsieiMdtoi>ld;lwi>».thoa|^t of them, be laid. PBBOicTS THs oi:tcc >»a "I’m npt inieiEg to uk yyj for ,5 ■un as£d% for a^d Jt knovi, tfest my ifaik .oat tht- eoort hou^. tbIjt tnM upon him b;r prt^iu eq^»aae^ bu Ibis «rif» wS) go wH2i ])i«B wKii r CContiap^ oa P»g« Snwn-) the anas of the tii s ritrht to protect ms and iroald aye told him that h« mu is -rsSii® wijfe.a h^on! . Oibofliv tm 'l£t t^t W00^» ^ ~ «i4a,of & SQxpidoias.* 'id Mr. IfeCs^l, and pdt^ fw id -«cnds^ Ska keeps on Vr. IfeC;^ ^ h« kit«ir tixs .lad b«tn diaecjawd aad d«o ito Lots of farmers declare their telephone servicts is worth more lisan it costs. !• W. Harris, a well- known farmer living near Choccolocco, Aiiu, wfrites: *‘£ had occasloti ta caii ouf doctor not two hours after my telephone was cdnoected with your exchange. My mother, who is very said, leil down the door steps and btoke her arm, snt I called the doctor. He was at nay house before I could have gone to his residence, as he has aa aatomobile. “We .would not be without our tetephoce for more than it costs aad appsedaite the assistaaca yoa rendered u#.’* Our free booklet tells how you may phone servicc on your farm at small cost. Write tor it today. A postal will do, FARBSPU* ONB 0fi?ARTMENT AND tCOMFANir AviAsrv^GA,^ , T~r-T jptraMedoa. U eartainly aa op- Hwcvevsa, sh®’» up to Soet«B ’ntaoaezipt. Wathii(8trai. D. C., ?**>. inaster d«B«n! i^eson toda? *.«ei tpi Te^ to l^k.oy» the poiiti»tt f\dsL H* baa. ,^er«d tiie fgor- aiwthip of (Hat Stai* wnd a plan te ' res him for the Unitad Statas 8«a> , ..
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 24, 1914, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75