-
IP
FBIBAY, OCTQB£B M, ttlfc ^
Hi£ TWICB-A-WI^ MSTPATCU; BtWUNtiTON. M. C.
SEVEN FAGS.
CHURCH DttECTORTi
EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
Hus Clivdli •( TW» H«»t Ceiitf*rt!W.
Dm JteTeread J«M Benncn GiUMc,
Servieea Every Su,nd*y, U:00 A. M.
and 7:90 P. M.
Bdy Gommnnipn; First Sunday, 11:00
A, M., Third Sunday, 7:30 A, M,
Boly tnd.Sainfs’ Dayi, 10:00 A. II.
Snadty School 9:30^ M.
The puUk U coidwUy itiyitad.
All Pew* Free. Ve*Wl Chair.
‘ THE METBODIST PBOlBSrANT
CBCTBCH. /
&Mt Davit Stnefc
Bev. Gwtg* L> Corry, Psrtor.
Presehitig Serriees every StUMhy at
lliM A. M., «nd 8:00 P. M.
Ptmyer MeetlnK> Wedacadty 8:00 P.
M.
LadiM’ Aid And His^oti«ry SoeietifM.
every Uondsy afternoon after Firat
S4ftiday in each month.
Chriitian Endeavor Society maeta at
7:00 Every Sunday Evenin|r
Sunday School, 9:30 'A. K. M. A
CoUe, Superintendent.
Good Baraca and Riilathea Clanaa.
You are Invited to attend aU thaae
services.
•ArnST CBVBOB.
Bev. M. W. Bock, Paitac.
S«Dd»y Wwabip. 11:00 A. M., awl
8.00 P.M.
Sunday Sehp«I at 9.30 A. M- J. a
Vornon, Sujterinteoid^
Praia* and Prayer Servie«a, VadM»
day at 8:00 P. M.
Christian Culture Clau, Satlnday •
jt:00 P. ML
Church ConfarcsG*, Wadnaaday be
fore First Sttnday of eadi pm>^
7:30 P. 11.
Obaarvanea of Lord's Sup^,
Sunday in ea^ meitth.
Woatan’t Uniou, First Monday of e*c*
MoBth, S:SO P. tL
FBONT STREEl M. E. CHUKCB,
sovm
llACEDONLl LUTHEBAM
CHUBCH,
Front Street.
Rev. t. S. Brown, Pastor.
burning Service 11:00 A. M.
Vespers 8:00 P. M.
Services every Sunday except the
morning ot tliird Sunday.
Suoday School, 9:45 A. M, Prof. J. 3
^cbertson, Supt.
Teachers' Meeting Wedncsduy 8-.0U
P. M. (Pastor’s Study).
Womin's Missionary Society. Fir»;
Thursday, Monthly, 3^:iJ0 P. M.
. L. C. B. Society, Second ThursSaj
Montiiiy, 8:00 P. M,
Voung People’s Meeting, Second Sun
day at 3 P. M
CHRlSriA.N CHURCH.
Corner I'hureb and Davis Streets.
Rev, A. B. Kendall. D. !)., Pastor.
Preaching every Sunday 11:00 A. 1C.
and 8:00 P. M.
Suf.day School, 9:45 A. 11. John K.
Foster, Superintendent.
Senior, Intermediate and Junior En
deavor Societies meet for worship
every Sunday evening at 7:00 P. M..
Mid-Week Prayer and Social Service,
every Wednesday at 8:00 P. M.
Woman's Home and Foreign Mission
ary Society meets on Monday aftur
the first Sunday in each month.
Mrs. Ada A. Teague, Pres.
Ladies' Aid Society meets on Mond-
day after the second Sunday in eacli
\)) mcntj], at 8:00 P. M. Mrs. W. R.
S«Ilars, Prca.
A cordial is^tatian eztaodad te all.
A Cauureh Homa for Viiitora asd for
Straofara.
ttcv. 0. H. little Pastar.
reace to thOM who enter.
Blessings to these who go.
£^eaching every Sunday, 11:00 A
M.'and 8:00 P. M.
Sacrament of the Lord's Supptf with
offering for Church charities, F>rat
Sunday in each month.
Sunday School, every Sunday, 9:30
A. M.
Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, 8.00 P,
M.
Board of Stewards meet on Monday,
- 8:00 P. M., after Fourth Sunday of
each month.
Woman’s Missionary Society meets
4:00 P. M., on Monday, after !•'
and 3rd Sundays.
Parsonage, next door to Church, Front
Street.
Pastor’s Telephone, No. 168.
Ring—^^Talk—Hang Up—"Busy-”
HOCUTT MEMORIAL BAP’nST
CHURCH. WEST BURLING
TON, N. C.
Preacliiiig Second and Fourth Sundays,
Morning and Night.
Fraycr Meeting Evciy Wednesday
Night at 7:H0,
Aid Society Tuesday Night After
Fourth .Sunday, Mrs. G. D, Smith,
President.
Suiuii'.y School Every Sunday at 0;'>()
A. M.. W. M. Willsams, Supt.
most cordial welcome is extended
you to attend all our Meetings, We
want you to foe! at home in our Eot-
'vices.
JAS. W. BOSE, Pastor,
Graham, N. C.
REFOKMEO CHURCH,
Corner Front and .\ndetson Streets.
Rev. D. C. Cos.
WXBB AVENUE M. E. CHURCH
SOUTH.
£ev. B. C. Durham, Pastor.
Preaching evsry first Sunday at 11:0#
A. M., and 8:00 P. M. Second Sun
day at 8:00 F, Xi
Biwday Sehool afarj Smday 4t U.-M
A. M.
A. M. H. F. Moora, SnpaiinUwl**
a»f*^fccds WeleoMa.
Sunday School every Sabbath st
9:45 A. M.
Preaching every First and Third Sab
bath at 11:00 A. M., and 8:00 P. M.
Mid-Week Service every Wednesday,
8:00 P. M.
Everyone Welcome.
Parsonage Comer Front and Trol-
Hcurer Streets.
PRERnVTERIAN CHUBCH.
Rev. Hooald Mclver, Pastor.
Services every Sunday at 11:00 A. M
an4 8:00 P. M.
Siinday School at 9:4& A. M. B. K
Sallars, SupaitoUBds«t.
Pm7«r Maatiar, WtdMOiiliy at 8:00
P. M.
tha ia eoriiaay iurM to att
You Are Judged
by the Appear
ance of Your
Letter
If your stationery is up to
the minute, with type the
proper size and ».eatly dis
played, your communication
will command attention.
That is the Kind of
Stationery That Our
Job Office urns
Oat
SAW MISS CAVELL BEFOBE HER
death.
Britich Chaplain Tells of LmA Min
utes of Nurse Prior Executioa.
London, Oct. . 22.—-The British
foreign office this evening made public
tile report of the |5«v. H. Si T. Cahan,
the British chaplain in Brussels, who
visited Miss Edith Cavell just before
her execution and a letter from Brand
Whitlock, the American Minister to
Belgium, to Waiter Hines Page, the
American Ami>&ssador in London. In
his letter Mr. . Whitlock says he re
quested that the body of Miss Cavell
tie. delivered to the school for nurses
of which she was the directress, his
reque^ being referred to the ministry
of w^r in Berlin.
Thi Rev. .Mr. Gahan in his report
said:
"On Monday evening, the! 11th of
October, I was admitted by a spccial
piassport from the German authorities
to the prison of St. Gilles-, where Miss
Edith Cavell had been confined for
ten weeks. The final sentence bad
kicen givep early that afternoon.
“To my astonishment and relief, I
found my friend perfectly caJrn ahd
resigned but this qould not lessen the
iehderiiess and intensity of feeling on
either part during that list interview
of alinosv an hour.
“Her fiist words to me were upon
a matter concerning herself person
ally but the solemn assevertion which
acconipahied them was made express
ly in the light of God and eternity.
She ihc!’ added that she wished ail her
friends to know that she ‘.Wilingly
gave her life for her country and
said:
■'I have no fear nor shrinking. I
have death so often that it h
not strange or fearful to me. She
further said:,
‘■I iliank God Ivr this ten weeks -jf
quiet before the end. My life ha.-i al
ways I'een hurried and full of difficul-
■^ij.5' xhis time the lest has been a
Si'cat m.-vcy. They have all been very
kind -ic lii;rc ' But this I would
y;^y a.s I d-j in view of (ioa
ar,d eteniity: 1 realize that pairiolisni
i.‘! not OMOUjih. 1 must liave no hatre.l
or liitteri'.Bss towards any one.'
We parcook'of Holy Communitiyi;
tOfvelher and .-.he received the so.«p«!
of tnii-.ol;,'.io,-, with all hov
-it ih^. closi- nT the liliie .-..er-
vii'i.' 1 l:ei^aa to repeal
LcDsiae had no ripwt t^day either
from Ambastadpr Page or American
Minister Whitlock on the execution of
Miss ^ith Cavell, tlie British nurse,
by German military : authorities ai
Brus^ls.
So far as the Washington govei’n-
ment is concerned, the case appears
closed, every diplomatic effort appa
rently )Mving been exhausted previou.s
to the execution.
Called. Great Martyr.
The Hague, Oct. 22 (via London.)—
Indignant over the execution in Srus-
sels of Miss Eidith Cavell, an Eng
lish nurse, the Nieuwe Courant calls
her “one of the gi-eat martyrs of cen
turies,” but recognizes the fact that
by sheltering her own countrymen,
who were enemies of Germany, she
comniitted a punishable crime.
“But the. execution was inhuinan,”
the paper declares, “the Germans ap
parently desired to give a tsrroriaing
example which, hpwever, only around
embitterment and strengthened the
Opinion in neutral countries that Ger
many is ruling Belgium with unneces^
sary cruelty and harshness.”
THE ROSE OF GETHSEMA.N’E.
Beneath the ancient olive trees ^
In f!ad Gethsemane,
May still be seen the- very spot
Of Jesus’ agony.
The ground that drank that bloody
sweat
Distilling from His Brow,
Brought forth a flovv'er there’s none
the like
From Eden until now.
All Heaven’s beauties in it bloom,
Its petal.^; never fade,
.\ni they vfho piuck one fragrant leaf.
Of death r.re ne’er afraid.
.\nd if thou seek for very love
DOES SEMM LONG TIME.
ECLIPSE HEPOKTEO SEES OFF
BER.MUDA COAST.
Philadelphia, Oct. 22.—What local
shipping nien believe to be the auxil
iary yawl Eclipse, upon which six of
the German ofRcers interned on-the
Kronprinz Wilhelm at Norfolk, are
said to have made their escape, was
sighted last Sunday about 7? miles
northeast of Bermuda by the Italian
steamship Labor which arrived here
today from Genoa.
In a report to the Hydrographic of
fice Captain Monzaii of the Labor said
that be had sighted an overturned
white vessel in latitude 33.20 north,
longitude 64,23 west, which answered
in every wty the description of . the
£>lipse. The Italian diip pas^d ihe
al>andoned craft at a distance of about
six miles and as there was no signs of
life about her, Captain Monzaii pro
ceeded to Norfolk.
He had not heard of the escape of
the Germans and did not make a re
port at the Virginia port. Shiping
circles advance the theory here that
the Eclipse either was capsized and
its occupants drowned or else the
German oMcers abandoned her when
they were picked up by a frieiidly
ship.
One evening Smith Jitneyed to the
suburbs to call on his friend Jones
and while they were sitting on the
veranda enjoying their .after-dinner
ragweed, large volumes >af music
broke loose in the adjHcent bunga
low.
“Some mUisic,” commented Smith,
glancing through the fireflies in the -
scenery beyond, “who might the per
former be?”
“It is my neighb.pr Greati,” answer
ed Jianes. ‘‘And would you believe
that he plays by ear alone?”
‘‘I would not,” was the prompt re*
•joiner of Smith. “I Can easily ima-
gihe that he liiight make that much,
noise by using both hands and feet
and an axe, but you can’t make nie
believe that he does it by banging the
side of his head bn the keys. '
Some men can’t even blame cirga-
rettes for their failure to make good.
It usually costs the man who is
elected to office a lot pf money'to con
vince his opponent that he was the
people’s choice.
Too many men take as their guide
-.vine today and soda water tomorrow.
There is more shafn-pain in wine than
most men are willing to believe.
To an outsider it appears ttiat the
anti-saloon league has .much to lose
and nothing to gain by injecting the
issue into state politics at this time.
In the coming election it is not
supposed that the democrats will lose
any time in pointing with pride to the
savings made in the running expenses
of the government.
A HATEFUL JOB.
Pat and Mike were crossing the
river pn a ferryboat. They weri
■watching intently a big dredginij
barge, that was sending its manunoth
scoops under the water and bringing
up tons of mud.
■ “Pat," says Mike, “wouldn’t yez
loike to be worliin’ over there on that
mud-c'.igger ? ”
‘•Yis,” says Pat. “but, beeoi-ra;
O’id hate tp want ot the the fellows
under the water that’s filling' up thiin
I shovc>;s.”—Liverpool Pat.
(Philadelphia Publk' Ledget',)
.-V school teacher who had been tell
ing a cluss of .-imall pupils the story
of the discovery of .America by Co-
!umbi;s, ended it with:
‘■-And all tlii.s haiipened more than
■ii.iO ywirs ’
■V little boy, with eye.-, wide open
the words I with wonder, said, ui'ti'r a moni.;;;l
iiMrW
‘-L' :}ioi.ight;
•■(in, my, vhat a memory you have
Koi:"
{ El.liBR.VTE BIRTHDAY OK CEIt-
■M.AN E.M PRESS.
w!ili mi',’ :'.iui slic joined S'.)l'i.l\
ill the end.
"Vi'i; sat nuieliy laUiiijf until it was
time for me to ^u. Shu -,;avo m.;
parting message for relatives i-:;d
fricndB. She spoke of her soul’s need
at the momeiiL aiid she received the
assusuuce o\ God's words as only .^Se.vport News, Va., Oct. "il,—The
Christian caa du. j ;ifty-seventh birthday anniversary of
“Then 1 said sood-'nye, and she ■ Knij-ress Auguste Victoria of Ger-
•sinile.i and said ‘We sluill meet ajyai/i.’j was celebrali.‘d witli a rei-cpiion
Uermaj! militiuy chaplain was!on i.oiud the interned llerman criii.s'.r
with her at the end and afterH-ard | Pronpi inz Wilhelm and Prinz Eitel
gave her a Christian burial. He told ' i" riedrich this afternoon and cvcnin)r.
me: ; tiei-niKii rcsident.s from thi.; city ;inil
wa.s brave and liiight to the ! •section gathered or. tlio ships by in
last. .She professed her Christian ■.itation of Commanders Thierichea.s
faith and .said she was glad to die Thierfc-lder of the Eitel .ind Wii
for iier coutiLry. She died like t
fteroine.”
.Vfr. Whitlock, in inclosing the letter
he -.vrote to Baron Von Der Lancken,
the German (Governor, at the request
of President Faider, of the court of
appeals in Brussels and the president
of the Belgian school for nurses, ask
ing that Miss Caveil’s body be deliver
ed to the school for nurses, of which
she was the directress, says:
“I have not received a written reply
to my note to Baron Lancken on the
subject, but he came to see me yester
day afternoon and stated that the
body had been interred near the prison
of St. Gillen, where the execution
took place, and that under the regu
lations governing such cases it was
immpossible to exhume the body
without written permission from the
Minister of War at Berlin.
“He added that he had no authority
to ask for perm.ission to exhume the
body, but that immediately upon the
return of tlie governor general he
'ivou'c! :'-’r;;;:t ta lalre tha r.'.r.t.tr
up
“I shall hope to be able to tell you
th::t v, o l5a . j ::t least beer, able to
, •h:-'! s!;'al’ ccr.'i:c."
So Official Keport.
helm, respectively. .411 -Austrian and
Gernmn ship.i in Hamvjton Roads flew
flags to indicate the event. German
flags u-ere also flown from ships of
the United States Xavy at the Norfolk
Xav-j’ Yard.
Telephone to Glazier
“T \y FSH you would get a i.:'r to cnne
J[ up and set that pane of the chil
dren broke yesterday. 1 he liouse is as
cold as a barn,'’ said the surburban house
wife, as her husband was about to go to
business.
■‘Haven’t time this mornini;, ’ replied her hus
band. “Just look in the Telephone Directory—
you’ll find several there. Give the order to the
one who s:iys he viil send a man right up.”
V Its the man with the telephone who gets the
hurry cr3ers every time.
'F/icfi you telephone—smite
SOVTHERM EELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
M
Htn^ag>311£3isari
:lt..::^SSSSBSKa
Where one marries for money,
Cupid steps out and cupidity steps'
in. ;
JtST KtDS.
.4n eastern school principal recalls
half a dozen “stock school jokes,” ■
which he declares, are undoubtedly j
known to every man or woman past i
thirty-eight, j
For instance: ;
The Tennessee boy who de.scribed;
a volcano as a “mountain where the
world Isusts through.”
The boy who described a museum'
as a “dead circus.” [
And “there’s a great ni«ny donkeys ;
in theological gardens."' j
A ilcscribed in histories asi
a.er i ■ bo fuared,” j
T.-,e ii.y who writes: “My teacher'
■ ...le; n-!£ w;.l; her despot.”
■‘Vdu seem tc be better fed than
ufrht ■’ said ti): teacher to the fat
t ey. “'i es. msm ' ays be, "but you
:simsMK
You Need a Tordc
There are times in every wor.isii’s life when she
heeds a tonic to help her over the hard places.
When that time comes to you, you know what tonic
to take—Cardui, the woman’s tonic. Cardui is com
posed of purely vegetable ingredients, which act
gently, yet surely, on ihe weakened womanly organs,
and helps builo tl'Cm back to strength and liealth.
It has bencfitcf tlioiisands and thousands of weak,
ailing women in its past half century of
success, and it will do the same for you.
You can’t maks a mistake in taking
Tiie iroman’s Tonic
A’ir-s >. -• " i Wilson, R. F. IX No. 4, Alma, Ark.,
says; "1 Cai cJui is the greatest medicine on eartli,
for v/o-.n.'n. Before 1 began to take Cardui, I was
so \v-c Kid '.lervous, ir.a had iuch awful dtiiy
spells iSMi a poor appetite. Now I feel as well and
as strong as I ever did, and can eat most anything.”
Begin faking Cardui today. Sold by al! dealers.
Has Helped Thousaads.
Washington, Oct.. 22.—Secretary *** ^ m!y»e:.,'
mi