Newspapers / The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, … / Feb. 3, 1915, edition 1 / Page 3
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——=*g= 1 ! ' L O C A L A. C L. PAMKNCKR TRAIN BCHJEDGLE8: Bssthbooud. fc. R 8:23 A_ U. H*. •#. 8:48 P. M. He. 88. 11:11 p. M. Narthbeuad. He. 88. 12:61 P. M. He. It 11:41 P. M. M». U. 8:13 A.M. Mr. N. A. Townsend spent Sunday at Fayetteville. Miss Margaret Pope left yester day for Raleigh. Mr. Joe Cook, of Rocky Mount, is here bo visit relatives. . Mr. W, H. Turlington, uf Fayette *111* was bsre yesterday . Mr. George U Cannady returned yesterday from FnyetteviUs Mr. W. K. GlUtsm, of Stone Moun tain. Gt., was bare this week to visit tnan it* Mr. Frank Jordan, of Rowland, was hare this week to visit his broth er, Mr. J. W. Jordan. Mr. J. G. Layton returned Satur day from a visit to Fayetteville, Park ton and Saiesnhurg. Mrs. W. JL Ballsy, of Florence, S. Q* la hare as a guest m tha home of Mr. and Mrs W. M. Street. ’.’Mrs John M. Lee left yesterday fhr Rocky Mmat after spending sev ens! days here with relatives Mr, Oscar Warren has returned to M^eoi at Buies Creek after spending several days hare with relative*. 'Mrs. Jamas Burl**, of Four Osdu, arrived yesterday to visit bar sister, Mian Mary Warren who is very sick. Mrs W. R. Howard and Mias Nan Ms Thompson left Monday to spend several days with rotative* at Ban un una mursM juur hor hams at Raleigh after « aeearal day* hare with ret urn W. B. Strickland returned jmBardny |xa Payettarllle when ■he had been netting frieoda for eev ocddayw : Mn N. A_ Townaand and bar Httle eon kft yaateaday for Washington rtn • they are to opead aeearal daya Mn XUa Fawtar, st Florence. 8. Q-. arrived Saturday ta apaad SOCM iMm to th* City With bar fathar, Mr. ft. M. Streat. Vapr sea Lila lira Haaalhal L, God win returned Thursday to Waahing taa after spmdtog a few days bare with his family. Mr. P. P. Pap* was here yastarday aa his way to Coats from Garland what ■ ha had baan looking aftar his 1 ayaber later oats. Mine Annie Paaiaon ratoraed Mon day to bar heme at Bailey after •pending several days hare aa go as Is ad tka Minn Bailey. Mrs. Barring, sf Fayetteville, ar Hvnd Mostday sight to spend aotae time to the dty as a go set at kar siptar, Mn Jaaao B. Lea. Mr. WUliard Jackson left Monday ■ernlag far Raleigh where he la to prepare for examination baton the State Board of Pharmacy. Mias Kathrina Allan, at Oreens here, arrived Saturday to spoud oev nral days here as a guest of her sis ter. Mrs. Robert L Wsrrea. Mn Vlrgis Warren has retornad hm Greensboro wboia she had boon to attend tka wedding at her brother. Mfc Lamaal Lea, vo Mias Martha Mn Dooa Adams retornad yes terday to her heme at Beeson after gam* la tha boa of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Adams Mrs. B. 0. Town sand raturnsd yns taaday from Wilson wfaltlisr aha had I*1 to Halt rslstivaa aftar attsnd lajf tha annual missionary Boasting at Backy Mount. Mrs. KstaUs Moor* and Mias Vara Marring rotumad Monday from Backy Mount whora thsy had bsaa to •Maad tha anasal maattng of tha Wbaaaa'a Mlssiaaary BodaCy of tha Mathadlat Church. PraaMimt 0. M. TUghman and OaaUsc T. V. Smith of tha Bank of <Mpa Faar waat to Richmond ysatar day. Mr. Smith win probably ro tara today; Mr. TUghman win go tram Richmond to Norfolk In tbo ln ttrmt at his lumbar budnsao. Thar* ar* many fHands b> this ths community among whosa Baagla Mr. Thsaopaoa’s wtm apant. Thstr homo has boon In .PhfladsIpM* far amraral yaars aad **7. Thampaaa Is a natlrs af that City. Mr. Thomson it a soa af Mr. and Mrs. t. W. Thomson. H wlH bo good asms to all (seal raadtrs of ths Dispatch to know that nast wsak will mark ths ruopanbig af tha Bljoa Ihsatra. During tha ** "* or as aarpaatara hara bass buMty angagsd hi patting tha piasa la rspalr aad now thora la MttJa sct 4mm to ha aaaa at tha meant fra. Tha a*act fata af spaaing Is not taammbat that It will ba aaxt waak faring a has program far tha rpm Mg sight and It la espartad that As j*r*wt ottmdoona soar known will Those streets of this city which fall within the province of U>e Dunn Road District are sadly in need of re pair and tho town authorities hava mads a very liberal offer to tho road commission. It is that the town will provide sufficient gravel to cov er these streets If the commission will prepare tho roadways for tho ■ravel and furnish labor for iU dis tribution. Dunn ia glad to welcomo within Us borders a* a permanrut rcaidoat Mrs. Lemuel ii. Lae, nee Miss Martin Ram, lata of Greensboro, ia another column wo carry an account of the wedding which linked tha hearts and hands of this ooupio whta»e many friends in this locality fool a deep Interest in thser future happiness, hrs. Lee ia well known to Dunn and >L» Pe° Pis are ex ted big cungrauila tioas to her fortunate husband upon her happy choice. MRS. JACK LKK KNJKKTAIMS Mrs. Jack Lse entertained dalighl fully at auction Hndge on Friday af ternoon Inst in honor of her attract ive house guest. Miss Delle Davis, of -Hendersonville, N. C. Tables ware arranged in the drawing room which was redolent with hot boose flowers, putk and white beingthe col or scheme. Lovely hand painted tal ly cards, prepared by the boeteas, kept tha worse. The guest of honor was presented with a pair of white silk hose while the first prize a pair of pir.k silk hose, want to Mias Sue Smith and the second high est, a leather bound receipt list, was won by Mrs. L V, Dicks. Mrs. N. A. Townsend cut low for the conao Istoo. After the games a four coarse I an eh eon was served, the col or wheeic being earned out in the cakes and iese. Those enjoying Mrs Las’s hospi tality ware Mead amts John Fi tiger aid, N A. Townsend, Granvilla Ttlgh maa, L f. Hieka Jno P. Johnson. JAM* Thornton, J. Lloyd Wade. Kills Gold stain, and R. L. Godwin. Misses LsshaiU Yogng and But Smith. TBTjRSDAT afternoon •• BOOK CLUB MEETS Mrs. Chas. Highsmith was bootees te the Thursday afternoon Book Club from three thirty to In thirty Janaary SSth. Tha dub was called to order by the president. Tbs roil cab' being responded to with the itto of an American Art Gallery sag a masterpiece contained therein. AH^r a abort business masting, a lit •>V7 programme was rendered which cccbebd of a splendidly pre ; srjtd paper on "Roraenesqee Art' by Mrs. G. M. Tllghman A most intdresting of “The Last Sapper” pe tided by Burn end, by Mrs. N. A. Townsend. “Holy Night,” e poem reed by Mr*. L F. Hicks and two [Basic mother*—“Madame Butter fly^ by Mra. R L. Godwin and "Signs at Spring” by Mrs. J; J. Lane. After being served with a salad ?eeui eip -asrsqruiep eegos pas eernos log adjourned. Those present were Vnedamae P. S. Cooper, J. C. Clifford N, A. Townsend, E. Goldstein, G. M. TUghman. L F. Hicks, J. L Wade, J. W. Thornton, IL 0. Mattox, Jno. W. Fitxgerald, R. L. Godwin, J. W, Whitehead; with Mrs. J. J. Lane and Mrs. G D. Bain aa invited guests. BOSS-LEE A beautiful but simple home wed ding occurred last evening at 6.3d o'elocv at the residence of Mra. F. L. Boas on Guilford avenue when her daughter. Mis* Martha E. Rose on cam* the bride of L. H. Lee. Inti mate friends and relative* of the contracting parties witnessed the ceremony which was performed by Rev. B. M. Andrews, pastor of Grace Methodist Protestant church, of which the bride la a member. The home was beautifully decorat ed for the occasion with maideo hair ferns ud narcissus, making an at tractive color scheme of green and white. The Improvised altar before which the vow* were spoken was A- iV. - ..J M__ TU» brlda waa draaaed ta a gown of duch ess satin, with real lace an Hpearl trimmings. The ornaments worn by her wore a brooch of pearls and dia monds. the gift of the groom, and a paarl necklace. 8he carried a bou qaet of bride's rosea. Miss .tnna Robinson softly played Mendc1* sohn's wadding march as the bride and groom entered the pari i.*. The bride haa lived here through out her lift aad la wall and popular ly known. The grooen it a we'l known or*ton broker of Dunn, wn«re toe young couple srfll reside. Mr. and Mrs. Lae left on No. 13 for paints In Florida where they wvi remain for tea days. Guests from out of town were Mrs. Gao. Ashby and Miaa Sibyl Ashby, of Portland, Oregon j Dr. and Mrs Burton Aahby, of Mt. Airy; Mrs. Virgin Warren, of Dunn.—Greens boro News the man who cannot keep out of fTMPATHT FOR THK flMILY ha burham Sun lays: "There has barn some talk of tarn lag part of a priaonar’s earnings over ta his family hut wa do not as pect ho eee anything come of It. As a rule there ia small sympathy for the man who cannont kaap oat of prison. sympathy for the man who cannot kaap out of prison, but the question la, should aa Innocent wife sad help less children eufer because of the delta qusndea of the koaband T It haa aver been the contentioe of ; those who wanted ho stop the sale of whiskey that whisk ty waa aa evil in that it took the wages of the hue t«nd from the wife end children. Thon we got busy end passed pro Mb It ion. , If the wife and children are eoUt led to the wage at the husbam whilo he ie out of jail, why, tf ho b in jail and earning money, shoali they not get their part of it? t> course if he were to be eloclrocutei .tram would be no help, but ao lon| as the husband or father is eamini e wage, it looks like those helploei ones should receive a part of K. The theory Is that a man sent U prison to restrain himself from com milling further dopredations on so cicty. It has never been held the he simply caught and put into servi lude to enrich the Stale. Then should be some sympathy foi the unfortunate man, and a whoU lot of sympathy for lha wife and child.—Everything. The Beginning ef the End. (From "The Course of the War In December," by Frank H. Slroonds, in the American Review at Reviews.) In any general survey of the his tory of the Great War in ita fifth month, the moral rather than the military effect of the operations takes first place. For if the Ger mans attack in the opening months might fairly be likened to a forest fire sweeping inasistably forward over vast districts ever widening iu ares of destruction and mo on ting ever higher in its violence, 11 ie not less potent that, December come, there was east and west in Europe an evident slackening if the firs— growing competence oa the part at thosa whose necessity it was to limit control, extinguish the bless. Looking at the fields of operation in December, h was plain that white there had been do succeee yet ia actually extinguishing the conflagra tion, it had been limited, circum scribed, confted to the narrowest bounds since it broke out. In places it was actually flung back; at ao point eras it permitted to ravage again many of the districts which it bed swept over in the early days of August and September. in septesnoer it was Pens which had been ia danger. Ia October, in November, the German drive fer the one r sect, for Calais and Dun kirk, threatened to conquer for the Kaiser that “window an the casmel” which fer all Peo-Germaes had been the dreamt of dreams, the first step in the aeries which was to acquire for Germany bar “place tn the run." But if in November in the terrible battles of Ypraa of ftlndm, thie German advance had bean halt ed. In December it was clear that like fhe march to Parts the sweep to the chaooel had bem definitely re paired- Pram fhrttaerldnd to the North See the great German offen sive had come to a full atop, fallen deed, lost the neceesary nsmher* and force, bed rank to the level ef e mare siege operation in which the Germans were more frequently on the defensive, than the offensive and one by one tear ns and villager la Flanders, ia Artois, in Champaigns, which bad been captured in the initial drives, were regsind by al lied advances, advances measured by rods, not rails*, achieved ia days, not hours. ; For this tht explanation was to ha found rather in the east then the west, for while her western cam paign was still at a crisis Germany ad again as before the battle of the Marne, to hurry eastward troops necessary to enforce victory in Flan des to avoid the Imminent disaster Russian masses had prepared in Po land. East end west, Russian, French end British armies increased in numbers, tn effectiveness. In me terial, particularly in artillery, while Austrian resource aad military value declined still mors rapidly than be fore, and at last there teamed to be the approach of e time when German numbers and courage, German effi ciency aad akin , would no longer avail to keep the battle line* on both fronts outside her own territory. Lookiag seaward, too, the decisive defeat ef the last German fleet on ™ "*S" -eiweye inevltSDle, givsn tha superiority of tha allied navies—served to emphasise ones more how fatally the not waa being drawn about tha daman Empire It served to recall for all Americana tba circumstances of tha Confeder acy. whan—Gettysburg lost, assd the Atlantic blockade made affective —the superiority la raaonreaa and numbers at the North eras establish ed. snd the Ovll War settled dawn to a process of attrition. Than cams destruction by campaigns in which neither skill, devotion, nor valor could avail against numbers, wealth and aaa pawer. Thus for tha outsids world Decem ber seemed to mark the beginning of tba and. not In tho sense that tha ap proach of peace was measurably bat tened. not that tha prospect of a long and, terrible war eras banished, but ■Imply in tha sanae that under tha poUtleal conditions existing, while tha ranks of tha anemias remained unbroken, there eras aa longer any promise of ultimate German victory. Germany’s problem kessefortb seam ed to be one of defense not attack, of snrfcirance not conquest William n waa not to conquer Europe aa Na poleon did at Austsrllta. Germany waa not to control tho ocnttnsnt as Franca had a little more than a cen tury before. It remained to ha sssa whether tha German Emperor could hold Belgium aa Fred Brisk the .Great had held Silesia, against the oca bin od notary ttrangth at Europe, __» . ■ v.j _ *- -.. u_ Driver’s New Grocery j?|| hopes that die New Year will bring you health, happiness and I success in a fuller measure than has ever before come to you ; ] and it trusts that during the year you will find many occasion^ I an e? j*,t8tjlC<i 8^PC^i.. Pure» clean, wholesome groceries.. I ^Jln Purdie-Hooks Building. ^Telephone connection. I . _Mai Priver, Proprietor I ■ 1 MONEY LOAN ! First Mortgage On Farm Lands. SECURITY FARM LOAN ASSO CIATION, .f CHICAGO, Ntcotia tort for FARM LOANS, •% INTER EST, 6 or 10 YEARS. 8trmtj(t* conniLuioo. Call or writ, ma for full particular*. G. L SMITH, Repress* tatire COATS, N. C. FOR SALE Fire -Paaaengor Hufxibfle. with el ectric ligfcu, and (latter, lilt modal. aUghtly uaad. One Second-Hand Ford. Ona dice Farm and Driring Horoa. Ona Home and lot la Dona. Two 30 H. P. Boiler* angina* I One 15 H. P. International Gaeolene angina One 1914 8aion Boadeter. All thaaa at aacriica price, and vary eaay terra* W. H. PARRISH, COATS, N. C DR. W. L PEEBLES 63 yean old with 38 roan nperi 00(0 treating Horoeo, Moles or eay other so Inals Phene 1ML, day or night, all yoor patronago erill bo ap preciated. --" 1 — " r Thar* in two day* of tha weak apoa which aad about which I aero worry—two rare froe days, kept ae crad free from fear aad ,lon* '( J •il*di» Oma of these dayr la yesterday, with all 1U ceres aad frets, with Its paint and eahea, Ha faults, Ha mi* takaa uud blunders, has pssssd forer ar beyond tha ranch of ay recall. lava far tha beautiful wop tries, sweat and tender, that Hngsr like tha parioms of rasas In tha heart of tha day that la gone, I bars nothing te do with yesterday. It was alee; H la Ood'a Aad the ether day I da sot worry about Is tsaaorrow. To morrow, with all Its poaatblo adoar titlea. Its burdens, Ha parfle, Ha 1*1*0 promiao and poor parfermaars. Ha failures aad udatahsa, la sa far be yond ibmreach of my memory aa Mu dead sitter, yttttrhiyt Its arm win rise Hi reseats rfit-riirr or bah hid a amts of weeping it tin da Tomorrow te la Ood’a day. It wfll be mine lehart J. Burdette. • • Are safe when in our care. Under government supervision and directed by the best business men of this locality, our bank offers un surpassed facilities for safety and convenience in bank .0 b.*«.r *U«—- You —W «• ' . '* *' . j a. • I State Bank & Trust Co., I Dunn and Angier, N. C Professional Cards JCiM FadHl Gar trad* Jackaaa taacdar at 1. c Clifford, N. A. -maul. CLIFFORD A TOWNSEND ATTORN EY8-AT-LAW Darn. N. C. OOe* oe tad toor ad Pint Natioaa] Bank. Prompt attention ptvan to all badnaaa. FRANKLIN T. DU FREE ATTORNEY- AT- LAW ANGIER. N. C. 0«ea ia Oragorp Bldg. T. E DARDEN FMoriaarp Pfcpatcaa. Raigaaa aad TOR IAU OR FOR RENT Gaod four-room bourn mot D. A 8. atation Now. C. C. BvUor. FOR SALE—t-horm angina and law rt*. Con ba coarorud in U^tfiraahln* outfit. W. T. MOND8. PHOTOGRAPHS—Until Fart bar uo- * Mo* OUT Pkato*ropb Gallary win ba opan rrary Monday, Tkaraday, Friday aad Saturday. Good work yuarantaad. Kodak fisiaUn* aad Hweial angagamanta mad* for aekoal groapa. CSoady w*«tk«r food aa aay. Tow patranag* kl«kty appraciatad. W. A, GAB QUR, Pkatofrayhaf, Root Broad Btraat, Dana. N. C 1-Mltf. DAILT LEDGER DISPATCH. Tima* Diapatch and Haarat'a Sunday A aiaricau daltr»rod to aay MAW In Daaa ragulariy aad promptly. Dafliaa, 18a par waok; Sunday A mariaaa 18e par copy. Bait Watt FOB SALE—Ona Bay flaraa, aad a rubbarttrad lop buggy- Ooah or M Umo. W. R HOWARD, k-l-tt-pd. A BANK OF STRENGTH j Tkm Flnt "-“- -' Buk tec a point at otow. It'i njj.^TaS* of Thro* kondrod amt akrtj tkowaZd <k>Oaro an oropl. far tko r~ * mill I of mil dopocitc; it.-1 it m prwtomt mad cmratal, amt M to «fcr ^«toj«roteloa o^ttoMfeitod «Mtom FIRST ATIONAL BANK DUNN, . . . N.C. || *v |**<MI>IWM.....r:nnnni G. W. EDCERTON WILLIE POPE | SOUTHERN MARBLE WORKS, 1 DUNN, . . HC I
The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 3, 1915, edition 1
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