Newspapers / Creedmoor Times-News (Creedmoor, N.C.) / June 9, 1915, edition 1 / Page 1
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Hi4A an i NCSPEPCgtrrr cr.iacnn ffispAfen j devoted' to the ExncuriDiNGF sound DbcTomwE in'oehalp 0i7cG00DG0V2nr.:EfiT. VOLUME 3 JMUMtJiLK vy;;'ltir CREEDMOOR. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY JUNElQ 1915 ? ONEDO 1 1 .. to BICKETT DENIES TUAT I BE IS WING CANDIDATE . . a -r.,-r, JTF Ml Ot I; His tto Out FacttdnsIn'rhc PartIuf M&tih X&cSSBAO Attorrtey eGllrS ifl.icSetl was seen in bis office on Saturday evening.. He 5 hadVJust, xetuxned from MecfcunDurg anu uniorLqojan- ties, wnere ne naa Toeen spenaing- several days, r JJpqo Jeing askefd about the gubernatpril situation Mr. BickeVt said taV he Was deeply gratified at thefgehejo6& support he was receiy ijng im every section, 6J the State. He then added that h would like to give out the following signed interview: "I deplore the persistent efforts made by 'sundry individuals to per petuate factional lines in the De mocratic party? tpn accpuntx)f'the fiurdpeinjwar blid i 1 idhSr Have r sen which the Republican organiza tion is seeking to" con vert 4 n to poli tical ca pi tal . It is pjbu'kfg 1 04 into ithe minds of the people the in sidious suggestionthtiihe Demo cratic party is in some lague wiy responsible for the conditions ibrought on .byjthe most colossal war in the word's history. In the iface of this movement it behooves all go4 thorf jusficeK whofareaf l,qipble?oJ apprecipf hrigafallfclpiet straight frbM KQ44tiflblPaHpni.a peri flous4bbQrit(3burJ alespifal m ifereneeiyiarlllto nhcofors? 1 - "I want to say with all-the em; miaaiioi for-, Governor -Ivam- noi Tunning'athechdmbidn 'or expo I nentdf ifiV wlSgfStiotf 9yivis16n of the PempcraJjc, party, but my hope and reliance is to wipe out alLj -laetloieaTiiftesweta together every 3 idis(nfaile'nent' in the ' party aod'presen.t a u ni ted ; f r o n t 10 t h e common foe. -Thatloe is even now girding himself for the coming con flict. As surely as the sun rises unityr leads straight to victory ; as surely as the sun sets, division spells disaster. In this crucial hour I call on every Democrat in North Caro lina' to harken to' the immortal words of the immortal Aycock 'The Doones are in the" valfeyT Iprajryoui gentlemen train your euns a little lower." News and Observer June 7. HALEiGBsr::pnuG- GlSKTnOAD TERM I. A Shade Appeals From A Six Months' Sentence Far Violation of Liqu6r La vv Mi DrrtA- Shade, a negio drug gist 6t EasfcsHaYg siftt fis sentenceu " to tiie iia(is lor six months yesterday by Judge Daniels on a prea'of guilty to Hie charge 01 vio!iittgf:ihie - liquur- law-of tin- Jstatcj. ;.lt;was ine celeDratca case of theWot water bottles a;id in hand ing down the sentence Judge Dan iels affirineogthe, judgment ote lower courtT V V Col. J. C.-fLHari-is defended onaae yesterday atterpoon in cpjirt and made a Fengthyind eloquent aDDeal for his client-1 4 1 yc uuutcu iiiai -iMvpijr,, es timable son of yours uagijXtJ9f city court is usually about right on such cases and lam inclined to he-i lieve that he is particularlyiigfitf about this one, said Judge. Daniels to Col, Harris. The Jatteumed a bit and finally appealed frornthe. sentence, and the bond was .AVei at $2,000. ,. .-". .mm.--- According to the testimony, -Bob Lewis was arrested at the Union Station as -pis stepped ofi! hetVairt with auit case; loaded Sown with not water bottes filled wim-whiskey and with kmar&hVkMli&& iiJIMW as a candidatei For .the Pembcratic no ditioii.i) On biJpersdfi'bhadf WthkWJ Ju1?6?iheff police mileage pobkim?diFif AtSbadeiturdavTnorftmff-mdde ahoih'er peared. tnaifwstediThis fa.ct Lewis jvasactipgy inn the: roatterfor Shade Jed tdt thtf search of ? Shades estaMfSbment aifd his'arrest.Rat perfume. No one has been able tor Somethin'Strrfrigebashappened 1 own,;ux; reter,, Urescn,v 01 Hid constants uisipruauuc! ud. aiii.u oi.;gravyaru touuci i.,wc, wusfc wac&ultiiiln; Thesv.tree:. gives- the name pf 'Mexico.-? When inlit remains for Guilford 'county to fnrtU rfn.Ar.xw.-J'1 ,.- kAinrt nf the spr.tibn' trieofiiceVs' I nrnviA tht crpiifi for the theft of a JUDGE STIGMA FKI l!fS Ti ' ii rir rpmvtvi i - - . ... QERNETHll Is 1To WipSrders that Rcfcoia Rcferri 2 9 - i - olicitor Subsequent -t "5 jf !3 j . r j . '. ti .1'. iu iusci7ras liter Daugnam MHfF Be Expunged. New Bern, June 4 Judge George ,W. Connor, yesterday afternoon pf'act 1 cAl ly" cleared Soli ci t or Ch a r I es L. Aberqeth'y from any stigma plac- iP9hiiii by , , Judge rank, Cari ter during the wrangle that the two "had hflNew Bern bve? the Baithau cajse jwhep he declared that :ail re cords Referring to the'solicitor sub sequerhtd the - retords after the Baugham case should be expunged The final chapter of this famous case came tip yesterday when solic itor Abernethy through fiis counsel, N. J. Rouse, of Kinston, argued beore Judge jCo.nnor to have. Judge Gartlr'sfrecbrdstbn the record book M Waven Suifdrior dburt expunged of anything detrimental to the per sonal and official acts of the solicit-! or. Afr. Rouse rehearsed the whole case, , went into detail as to the con4 fiduahef f-thse agins Bauhg am charged with raanslaughter an 1 showed wjjerej tjise; continuances were in proper accordance with the law and were under the circum-i stances necessary ... a lunfhls! dedsion Judge Connor stated He fotfncl that all negotiations leading fihlP the continuance of ih4 tasetwerel fin accordance with thi usual meuroa ana cnac uie solicitor was justified in the way that he handled that part of the oroceed-! trslw (Incciusf6n hestated tliaf heiwouW ake the entire matter unf decSnsideTation'' look 'ovet the court,ireottl,s the findings of the legislative investigating committee and eQtYthJai9fifdtogsr-ber, enf tered upon the minutes of Jthe courts LITTLE GIRL BAPTISED TWENTY ONE TIMES Had Been "Admonished" That She Would Be Healed Of Affliction. . .Kinston, Juue 3. Ruth Marsh liuni, a very pretty child between 11 and 12 years of age, came here Tuesday from liei home about five miles on the north side of Snow Hill on a most remarkable mis fiou, thelittlegirl had a 'vision she tl e cl a red, and was kept awake all night by the presence of the spirit of her lath rwhp (lied in a hospital some weeks'ago. . The spirit admonished hertrf' be baptis tl 1 wenrtiT.one tiiues hi: order to be oiifodf ibeldurted of a'phV'sical ail 11 lent which had afilictedlher for years. She plainly saw the" depart ed parent in heaven", she said, aiftl was with liun'foi hours. By the manifold bapusirl, she was informed she would-be relieved of her afrlic tipn , on her i2th birthclay Rev. Jenkins, a Holiness minister, in the presence of a small party,',, immers ed the little girl twentyl one times xj tne water ot JNeuse jiver at rar rott bridge. The little girl was the guest ofelatiyes here for the Say, and in the Afternoon surprised a party by picking yp a Bible, open Ing i tfcarelesslyi and reading whole fchatntetsl With the dexteritv of an u;fl person, with flawness pro ' nunciatipo and punctuation. She returnedihome confident that on a 3a irinext October when she will be a rotund dozen years old. she will become a physically normal as well ajfbeantitul littte girl. If faith can Ceal she will probably have her de- MAIAUISINTO COURT: .HAND t r 1 ' ird-rrtKrbl in d trffersV 0 f th e cli v apd as a resill ofl activity more than at dozen job the-, al leged dispen-sofs-of "booze have been entangled in th'S mesfies jaf the r'law; ) Patrol manipPuWasVparticuTarlylu in his searchjfoc aiman, for .wjiem he had a-warrant; He and a" brother 1 6'fitcer-weVt.lnf q;one of the sect Inps of the town that onaccount; of:; its saw two 'men coming down ' the' I ff ftt f behind a THE HUSTLER I am the guy called printer's ink; I put hard times lupoa the blink n -V My facelislack aslEfebus-- ButFnvaliyiShusil I make men' rich ;whpnce Vere poor- Ym on the jobl I anvior siire Iet lyork f or he labng man And help to fill his dinner can; Laid girls who must rn their feed i I atf the friend 61 all $n heed. , I sell all things from pihi to guns, '4.Intcargoes''bf:tenthousdtbns. I'm on the job both rniht'ahd day : Away from, work I never stay. I am UA 1" "O K" anciIt And I take a vacation-nit, I serve, the small as well as thfe great (See Business Office fomyl rate.) I am the guy that brin the dough Just try me and you'll fihd it sow - 66 LOVE'S FAIR IAX5 ' ' - -ten;., He who loves, only plays a part, In the wondrous play called "Love," He who feels these human fires, Encamps withbeaxtties aboye. When first he faces the glitn'ring lights, His soul stirs calm yet faint; While 'mid his heart's most musical slrain Steals new fellings quiet and quaint. Quietly and quaintly Jiis heart applauds, With music's rhymetrical sweetness; Calmly and faintly his soul echoes Thru the portals of' love in meekness. Loving and tender, his prompter's reminder, Of his deficiency in. Love's Fair Play; But, more tender and caressingthis souls rejoinder As musically it cries, 4,0, stay!" "0, stay!" The music is tender and pleading. While the soul in unison asserts, "The world is not thy judge, O, actor, Only seeks thy bliss to avert." With hope anew, and heatt made glad, The actor bows gracefully low; ul thank thee, O, soul, and heart o' mine, 'Tis a benediction Irom Heav'n, I know. K ore wilder and sweete, the music's strain From the soul's immaculate haven; With my rid anthems of beauty and bliss, And the glory of love and Heaven; Chime by chime, and strain by strain, The music plays on forever; Part by part,Jthe play' proceeds. 'Till the reaper of time doth sevrr. 3 building and waited to -see who the men were. -When the couple arriv ed the policemenrfound one of - the men, Tieiir y George, carrying a gal lon of . blockade whiskey; in each hand. He was promptly put under arrest for violating the quart law. TOIIBSTOrJES STOLEFi FROM PL. AS ANT GARDEN GHAVE; .'. ... - i ? .-. t Occasionally one .hears or reads of ghouls entering, a cemetery ? and robbing"a grave of a dead body or stealing iewelry;- from - a recently buried corpse, but in all. the history tombstone two of them, m tact. L m 1' 1 ' (j ' -1,. ' in the cemetery at Pleasant Garden thatiformery ;was marked by tneat s to nes at h e0 h ead an d , f 00 1 . 1 1 1 a t now has nothing to designate, the name - of the person sleeping be neath'the sodl v It is said tlie "stones were rein oyed in the -night time'fe- cently and either destroyed or se- creteuV ; One report has.it that they were carried a wav toa secluded spb and .DuneU'Lv:i."; ttt ' ; :1 Naturally the strange occurrence has created more or less talk in the comrauhiiy There is a pretty well defined. idea as to . why the stones were removed and ;wno directed tne work of removal. r v: - x. 'v : s x ; f-- nf'thAthnVembers of.the iamilv were left unmolested. Greensbora P"H" ' DID NOT VAIT FOR POLICE FBOMIEIH IIQ:.IE T07fl Pinkie Perkins and Clarence Purgason .of Reidsville, Es- , cape From.Jaii in Cihcin- i , nati, Ohio. Cincinnati, June 3. Two Reids ' ville, North Carolina youths Tiukic , Perkins, and Clarence Purgason, aged 1 5 years, late today made the ' most sensational escape from prison made in many .years here. Chief ; Probation Officer Crouse and hi ' 1 I r . i men anu a squau oi.city aetectives j have so.ar failed to locate or cap- Ju.v. v k.ivapv.u a ci- ins and Pureason wore' onlv the t j flimsiest shirts and trousers and the exposure to the cold rain tonight is expected to cause them to give themselves up by morning. Reidsville officeas are on their way here with warrants for their ar rest on Reidsville charges. The lads were captured here recently in the city, .railroad yards aud upon, registering at central police station a telegram to the Ueidsville police was sent and word came back to hold the pair. The boys by dint of hard work for a day or two succeed ed in prying off a jail door, at the juvenile prison.-and escaped by jumping from a window nearly 30 feet from, to? ;'groUii(L How they accomplished this cau only be sur mised, for they madei 4a clean get away, though, bloalstains indicate that either one or both were severe ly injured. The police believe that the runiways came yirect, from Charlotte to Cincinnati, , when they were first captured. The Reids ville officers were notified tonight pf the, boy s'.dajri ng; escape-lJ i COWBOYS CROSS THE BORDER INTO MEXICO ' ' Ten of Them Level Guns at Mexican Colonel and Re lease Two Boys Mexi can Troops Look On. Nogales, Ariz.,June6. A posse of ten American cowboys and miners rode eight miles across the border into Santa Cruz, Sonora, this afternoon, levelled iheir guns at the colonel commanding the g.ir risot while 1 soWfiers looked on 'and obtained the release of two I American boys kidnaped early to day by three of the soldiers on the Arizona ..ide of the border. The colonel gave up his two 17 year-oUl prisoners, George Vaughn sou of a storekeeper at Duquesne and Henry Chang, son of a Chinese American citizen of Washington Camp, Ariz., without demur and the posse rode triumphantly back 'to tne United States. Santa Cruz is garrisoned by forces of Jose Maytorena, the Villa gov ernor of Sonora. Washington Cump, where the Mexican captured the loys and Duquesne are border settlements 25 miles east of here. What was expected to be gained by the kidnaping of the boys was not ascertained. O. K. Franklin, a miner, report ed the kidnaping. He saw the three Mexican soldies, mounted, near the border driving the boys, who were on foot ahead of them at the point of revolvers. The boys hand were tied. Army officers were notified as was Sheriff .W. R. McKnieht, who promptly started out from here wifh a posse. Meantime cowboys and miners from Duquesne had taken the trail with the announced inten tion, which they proceeded to carry out of going into Sonora to res cue the boys. W. C. Robinson an amateur avi ator, of Griunell, Iowa, was tuning up his monoplane in afield near Dr. Somers office when the doctor re ceived a telephone call to attend a man terribly injured in a 5 runaway !ti i; miles southeast -of , town. Kob: ipson .volunteered to take the doc, I tor to the scene in, hi' monoplane. . Somers accepted and tfte 1 1 miles were covcreu in bix, minuses, or ai ( the rate ofiio miles an our. , ; ; v., VYounevet'cah tell. Many a gtrj WIl a, muddy complexion ha a I ' - ' .- uicai iuii3bibuv.w .. Flattery will sometimes make friends, but it's a poor preservative if you. v.-a::t to keep. them. DIG;PnOFiTIRTC:iATO:v Chapel" Hill, June"s.The cann ingclublvork In North .Carolina and the particular .achieremcnt of the champion. winning girl of the Alamance county clubare exnlo ted in rThe Country Gentleman- ihit week. The department' of Far mer of Tomorrcw of that excel lent agricultural journal carriet the story. Here tt is: When a fourteen year old ffirl invests $24.47 in the cultivation of one tenth of an acre of tomatoes and realizes that single investment $148.23 in profits, there's a ugge tipn of unusuil intelligence and thrift! The case in point if that of Mary Rice McCulloch. of Alamance County. North Carolina's champion lor 1014. Her yield was tttt pound of tomatoes and the canned 171 1 pounds. Here i her own story: , 1 he Stone and Earliana tomato seeds were ordered by the club early in February, The season was wet and my seed were not sown untit March. I put them into a tobacco plant bed covered with canvas. 1 transplanted my plants on May 4, and again on May 14 I replanted them. My garden was an oblong plot 33 feet by 13a feet. The soil was a grayish loam. It had been sown to crimson clover the ptewediug fall. The land was broken wirh a two horse plow on May 8. Then t was har. owed three times with k section harrow. I watered and set my plants on June 1. Many of them died. I watered aud replanted twice again. At last plowing the ground was covet ed; with rich dtrr. I did not prune or stake my plants My plot was mulched with vtraw. 1 killed the cut worms and tobacco worms. 1 gathered my tomatoes in tubs and buckeis and hauled them to the house. 1 rf grading, all the large and small ones were put in scpaiate boxes. 1 grew no other vegetables 011 my one-tenth acre, 1 did roost of in v cannine at home. All mv preserving was done ui home. The meaning of the club emblem 'to make the best better,' is work ing toward perfection. 1 almost knew nothing about canning when 1 joined the club Have learned many things about fruits and vege tables. 1 used the reciprn rrcoui- lllfMlilpf I liv th 1 I lit lr nli Imit chow-chow, jellres and grape nuce. 1 his was my hrt year 111 the club aud 1 enjoyed the work ver) much. Hecause of what Mary Mcculloch and the other canning club girls in her county have done Alamance claims a record for good prcluccd in 1914 by-girls. The county in vested $1771 25, and from that ex penditure produced canned good to the value of $7039.65. The number ol ontaiier was 55,165." Leslies )'eckly of New Voik City, the most widely read illustrat ed weekly in the United Stales, carries a photograph of 1-alla R - lit Fleming and Kthel Gardner ol t. e Wilson high school, champion win ners in the Debating Union ol North Carolina. The photograph appears in the department of "Tro pic Talked About" in Leslie's tf May 27. The caption heading is "Best Debaters in Carolina." The picture and brief item concerning thp' achievment were submitted ' by S: R. Winters of the State Univei sity. SAFTEY HATCHES. Much has been 'said and written as to the loss of life and property caused by matches, and Commissio ner Young says that for several years he has endeavored to have a law passed regulating the, use and sale of matches in'this State. He siys that the last - Legislature en acted what it known4 a the - "Uni form Match ihll." litis law has already been adopted , in several ' Slates, covering the handling, storage, and use of matches, and will prevent' the use 'of common matches after January 11916. The going into effect" oflhe law was made January i, 1916,' in order that dealers in the state may have an opportunljT to - get-rid of the matches oh hand, such ai arc not allowed to be sold under the new law. Commissioner Young as it will be well for the dealers in the State to bear this in tniM in uoilr ing ofT their pre: cut ftoc r.nj Ci:j trr ct ! '' " f1 r : " explain the phencrr.o r, oh, TIvjv
Creedmoor Times-News (Creedmoor, N.C.)
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June 9, 1915, edition 1
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