Newspapers / The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, … / Sept. 22, 1915, edition 1 / Page 3
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LOCAL A. C. L. PASSENCEB TWAIN SCHEDULES: Southbound. No. 22. 6:28 A. M. Nn. 29. 2:42 P. M. No. S3 11:0* p. u. Northbound. Me 22. 11:63 P. M. No. S3. 11:29 P. 1C Nu. 24. I 4:22 A.M. Mr. Mom Barefoot was a buni nana visitor in Fnysttavills Monday. Mr. P. 8. Cooper bos returned from m business trip to Wilmington. Mayor J. W. Tuning* was a busi ness visitor in FayettrvUle yester day. Miss Bthel Beilcy has rsturosd from a visit to ralstives at Smith ftelA Mr. Glenn Pops, of Clayton, is spanding s few daya here with mis time. Mr. Byron Kord is on a business trip this week to his old borne at Worm* ton. Mr. Horace Bonum, of Smithflcld, spent Saturday morning in the city with friends. Mr. Will Turlington, of Fsyetto vtllo, was a buslnses visitor on our streou this week. Mr. Lara. Las, of the Arm of J. R Ballanea A Company, was in Rich Monday on bun ness. Mr. Darling Jones, of Raleigh, U spending s few days here with hit • father, Mr. Ed. Jones Mias Ethel Hooks left today for Concord where she will visit rets-' Uvea for severs! weeks Your attention la called to the statement of the Stale Bank and Trust company In this issue. Mr. and Horace Baucom arrived Saturday and will spend several days here with relatives end friends Mr. Ia*«i Lee, of Greenville, re turned home yesterday after spend lag a few days bare with relatives Dr. and Mrs. I. F. Hicks and Mrs.: N. A. Townsend returned Friday' from a short visit to Richmond. Ve Mr. and Mrs. Willie Strickland returned Monday from a several weeks visit to relatives in Johnston county. Mias Lillie Johnson returnod Mon day night from a several week’s visit to relatives at SmllhAeld arul Clayton. The Moore Electric Shoe Repair ing Company la a new enterprise which wOl open for basin see la Dunn about October lfctk. lev. Bay!us Cade filled the pulpit at the First Baptist church Sunday morning and evening. He preached two excellent sermon*. Mieses Pearl and Blanch G ran tham left Friday for Abingdon, Va.,1 where they will resume their studies at Martha Washington College. Mrs. R. A. Chambliss, after spend ing several day* hare th* guest of Mr. E. H. Wilson, returned Mon day to her home at Franklin, Va. Mr. Ellis Goldstein and daughter, Rosalie, returned Monday monfng from Goldsboro, where they spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives. Mr. T. R. Hood returnod yester day to his home at Smithfleld. hav ing spent a short while here with his daughter, Mrs. W. E. Columns Messrs. Eugene Lee and Ernest Jeffreys went down to Fayetteville Tueday night to see "The Yellow Ticket” which eras the attraction at the U Fayette Theatre. Dunn Methodist church, le in Lill lagtoa this week where he ie ssslrt lsf the pastor of the church there in a revival. The meeting began Monday night * Mr. J. T. Sutton, who spent the summer at his home in Dunn, has goo* to La Orange where ha has accepted a position with the Senti naL HU friends bare wish for him much ■ across Ie his new home. The Dunn tobacco market remains strong and those who sail their to bacco bare gut satisfactory price* Both houses. are working hard for butinaae and neither spare* aay ef fort to maka the tobacco placed 'on their floors bring good prices. Mis# Bessie Johnson arrived Non morning and has accepted a posi tion as saleslady with Johnson Brothers She ha* flwd several year* asperkmo* in the work and will be a valuable addition to the excellent sales force of this pro gressive Dunn Ana. In the write-up of Butler Brothers published in our special edition two weeks ago, it was stated that Jasac Butler was the Junior member af th* Arm. We were in error in this statement as Mr. Marion Butler bo cassia sol# owner of the busbisos months ego, having acquired hll brother's Interest. The asrw plate glee* front, which th* Bernes A Holliday Company is putting in their main building, maka* the store a great deal mors attract** and gives them better light and service. They not only have tit* large* retail hardware business In this section of the State but th* meant Improvements mads !■ thsdr mala stores gives to than the beat arranged and most service. Mr. J. K. Boyd, uf Fayetteville, u In the city today on business. Mr*. U H. 1j»t hen returned from a visit to relatives et Greensboro. Mr. C. W. Stallings was a busi ness visitor yesterday in Fayette ville. Mrs. J. W. Fitagarald is spending several days with relatives in Phila delphia. Attorney Ed. 8. Aboil, ol Smith Held, was here yesterday on legal buiiaaaa. Mr. W. C. Woodall, prominent business man of Benson, was a visi tor her* today. Mias A ns is Hood, of Selma, was here Tuesday the guest of her sister Mra. G. T. Noel. Mr. Mack Johnson, of LHliagton, has accepted a position with U. Fleishman A Bro. Mies Marion Hood returned Mon day morning from Selma where ah* spent Sunday with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Thornton ora spending the weak at Mra. Thorn ton's old home at Farmvllle, Vs. Mn. E. W. Myers, who has been •pending several days here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L VsJe. has returned to her home at East Bend. Mr. T. V. Smith is having the residence repaired which ha recently purchased from Mr. V. L. Stephens. He Is adding more rooms and mak ing other Improvements which win make it flrat-clasa In every respect. The Booster Club Chautauqua will be the attraction in Dunn the first four days In October. It will be ex cellent an Instructive amusement for all the people of Dunn and those within a radius of tan milos of the city. Mrs. Frank Wade who waa taken to the llighsmith Hospital in Fayetteville leal week, ia reported aa improving slowly Her condition ia better but it well be several days yet before she will be able to return home. Mr. W. R. Howard la moving the frame store building, recently pur chased from M seers. Maaeenglll end Marks, from its present location in front of the Central Hardware Com pany to e lot Jest outside the East Main street gate. Mr. Paul Jones leaves tomorrow for Alabama which state be will make his home. He goes home with hie unde, Mr. C. B. Matthews, who has t>ean spending the peat several weeks with relatives in Harnett end Cumberland rountiea. Dunn la preparing to entertain a large crowd of visitors on the first four days in October. Those will be Chautauqua days and the nature ef the program will furnish amuse ment and entertainment for all. Prepare to take it In. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Jones and children attended the reunion at the home of Mr. Blackmaa Matthews In Cumberland county yesterday. Mr. Matthews is 76 years old. All hia children and all the grandchildren except one, ware pres ant on this oc casion. The prices paid for tobacco on The Dunn market seem to satisfy tboaa who sell beta. A great sight of tobacco waa not made around Dunn this year, but those who did grow a patch of the weed are glad that they did so. Prices ere good aod the farmers are latuiftod. The First National Bank of Dunn, has arranged through the Federal Raserva Bank, of Richmond, to ex tend its customers loans .on cotton it the rate of 6 per cent per annum, provided they have it stored in the warehouse at Dunn. For particu lars sea their ad In this edition. The First National Bank la mov ing this sreek into thair new forty thousand dollar building on tbs cor. ner of Wilson and Broad atrsets This new home of the First Nation al la ana of the prettiest bank build ings In the State. It is located it the heart of the city and at thii time ia our only skyscraper. Mr. T. H. Herring, of Sampeor county, was in town Monday anil was tailing a Dispatch man about I Owin calves being bom to one of hii cows last week. lie said both the reive, were of normal siae and doinj well. The mother of the two calvei ie an eeceptionatly large cww weighing about one thousand pound and is of the Jersey and Devoi breed. Mr. Herring has had i great deal of experience breed in | cattle, bat says this is the first tin* in hit career that the expected pro dieetioa was doubled. Mr. AngeUh Standll, who livei about five miles northwest of Dunn died a few days ego at the age o seventy years. He sree a teecoaefu farmer and had accumulated oonsid ersble property. Upon examination of an eid chjpt which had served a an ornament In the hoove for a nam her of years, friends found an oli box _ which contained $3,472 18 li money, ami Judging from appoar anco It had lain there a number o years. No ens knew that the evosi ey was secreted there, although i was supposed he was in possessio of several thousand dollars In cur renoy. Mr. C. H. Tripp eras ap pointed administrator and Irnwve dlately deposited the money in i bank and it is again in eirrulston. The regular annual aveeting e the Stockholders of the Bank of TJ1 llngton ms held In the odteo* c the bank Monday. The affairs u tha hank were feund te be in creel I cot condition under the efflcrcn management of Cashier H. T Spears. Notwithstanding ths strain I ml financial conditions of the past year a aassi-annnal dividend of ! per cent was declared and *600 pi or cel to tho surplus fund. Wj douoi | if any bank of equal capital in No»-t» I Carolina can surpass this wi/wing — Harnett Uuportar. Saturday of tbs Chautauqua. | -- j Saturday, October 2nd will ba l'armor's Institute Day of the Chau Luuqua. Congressman U. L Gud wln has secured an export farm demonstrator from Washington, D, C., who will address tho pooplo at HI o'clock Saturday morning and there will also bo present two ex porta from the Stats Agricultural department at Raleigh. Mr. God win will also address the farmers and it 1s earnestly requested that aa many as possible bo present «nd avail themselves of thi- opportunity to hoar modem farming discussed in an shio manner. _ Duns's Cotton Market At tho does of business Tuesday there had boon sold on tho Dunn market 1241 bales of cotton of this season's production. Mr. W. S. Jackson, the new weigher, says most of this cotton sold above Un cant* per pound. Ths farmers are rush ing cotton to markot „» fast ar. they coo get it ginned and all seam to be pleased with the present prices. They are paying their debts cheer fully and the supply man, who car ried moot of their customers over last winter say they are not having any trouhla collecting. All the peo ple are optimistic an business is booming. [ ' IWU of a Good Man. Mr. J. T. MrCurqundalr, aged 7* yeara and a prominent and well-Lo dn farmer of Cumberland, diotl at hia home in Carver's Creek town •hip at 1H0 o'clock Thursday night from a stroke of apoplexy, lie eai stricken while gathering vegetables in hia garden alout six o'eloek Thursday evening and fell to the ground unconscious, and after Iming to his bed died that night. Mr. Mrlorquodale wat very highly esteemed in hia community^ and wherever be waa known, for hr waa a high toned, Christian gentle man, a r.'ood eitlaen, a land neighbor and a devoted husband and father. ■ He was an alder «f the Presbyter ian ehorth and a Mason Hec^eed ia survived by nine chil dren, aa follows A. C. MrCorquc - dale of Klaalmee, Fla, J D. Met.or quodale, of Com bar I and county, Mra. 1. W. Carmoq. if Mra. W. N. Baevaa, of Cumberland county. Mra. 1. B. Norder-.. of Har nett county, Mi>s Jennie Hubbard McCorquodale, of Cumberland coun ty, Mima Spicy McCorquodale. of I Fayetteville, A. il„ MrCarquodale, of 1-atta, S. C„ and DougUaa Mc , Corquodale of Cumberland county.< Tha funeral eervicea trill be held tomorrow (Sunday) morning at 10 o'clock in China Grova Church, Har nett county. The procession win leave the MrCorqooda.e residence In Carver's Creek townihip at 8 o'clock —Fayetteville Observer. C. E. Papa Bark Fram Carolina Me tar Trip. All tha way from Dunn, North Carolina, since a waak ago yeattr day ia tha record of Photographer C. E. Pope, who arrived In Taylor-; vtHe at 1:80 o'clock Una afternoon. With Mr. Pope area hia aon, Ed ward, and hia brother, Worth of Dunn. Mr. Pope found the road* uniformly good and he found the. I Pennaylvania pikes (splendid, thol beat going of the trip, in fart I The photographer has bora gon I Juat two months.—Taylorvilla, (III | Courier, 14th. Book* end Banks sad Township Government. Books and Banks and Township Government—theve, ,f | am not mis taken, are t^ three things that made Now England rich and power ful—Books representing education, Banka representing the saving bab I Township Government heir* democracy incarnate of the gcnui-ui Jeffersonian type. It baas toon "prooed inter me" i ^or A long time, as Uncle Remus would aay, both from study and ob servation, that them throe things really explain New England’s greet nasa; and the Idea fixed Itself even • more firmly |n my mind the other I w**k when I went up to Amherst, Massachusetts, to make the closing addrees at ,the annual State Confer 1 enee on Bara) Organisation. Because MassechnsetU has bean ■ a leader In education, a preeminent leader ia thrift, and has set tbe ‘ worW *n example in local self gov ’ emmanl: because of them threw thing* tbs has become and ha* long • been rich and powerful, ns 1 have said, oven without natural advantag es. There w*s * hosstlulnena shout • It that 1 didn’t Him, but I hail to ac ] knowledge n my heart that he waa tailing the Lord’s truth—In the 1 main—when * prominent New Eng lander said to me: "In natural r* r source* the Booth has os hasten at ■ terly beyond comparison infinitely f richer In soils, climate, minea, and f general roetroroos—hut our section • has hasten yours simply by tbe MWTKN!!—GOOD. TIMES. ARE bare awl if you doubt *UU R. G. Taylor'! _ ■tori this t,*ek. Iu chock a block with mei'i clothing. Women'* clothing, Mto**, Hiy gco»|j,_ millinery, and a great pro fudon of all finery for fall and ofnler wear. And better lUU hi i ilogan ii down with high pri ce*. , THE MOOSE ELECTHIC BHOF, Repairing Co. will open for b twi ne!* in Dunn about Oitobar lGlh. It will ha modem in every rarr-xt. , Siva your order*. ATTENTION GIRLS H—THE GEB tnim triad and coo Id not gat RurU, R. O. Taylor triad and ha* capture^ a dainty Preach hat for every pntiy woman and girl tnj thl* acclion. and ai oionl hi* pri-i cai are about half what other*' gat for them and they are iclhi-i; like hot cakei RIGHT NOW. E. CAK1.YI.K WEST Attorney and CtuntflUT at Low Firel National Bank Building Duo a, N. C J. C. Clifford N. A. Townaend. CLIFFORD 4 TOWNSEND i ATTORNEY S-ATLAW Odea on ted floor <4 FI rat National Bank. Prompt attention gfron to all boainaan. FRANKLIN T. DUTHEE ATTORNEY- AT- LAW Odea in (Irorory Bldg. ANOIKK. N. C T. K. DARDEN Vat.'rlaary Pkyaicaa. Sargaon and Deadai. PIIONEB: KAY. NO-JMI. Night. No 2.1 i Dunr. N. C. Uiaa Emilia Cart rod a Jaakoaai teatbar of Piami. Ilarmaay and Theory Telephone )U. thrift and enterpr - , Of coarae, the protwUve tariff baa helped commercial New Eng land at the expense ef the agricul tural South, and New England wi<« fortunately free from the ravage] of war that ao long handicapped i.-.r Southern coontr,. but in apite of theoa thing* our greater natural re source* ought to hav*senabled Ua to heal New England anyhow. Bat wa haven’t In fact, In* teed of beat ing her, w» have hardly mere than half caught up with her.- -Clarence Poe. All I nr Ideal. The American liner New York we* recently bound for Liverpool W. J. Roberta woe captain. There »»• a largo laeicnger Met, becnuac moat Amorlrarie now take pa range under the American flag. F.rei vary wealthy Americana, who. Iak< lbe riak of oompromleing themaelrei aorlnlly, do thle. A eufcmartne wni elghtod. It ccold eaaily bora do ati eyed the raesal but It did aot cm undertake ta make a eearek for pan elblo rent reband, far the ooaaooondai of tho eubmorine regarded (ho Atari and Strip** for ■ moment, and tarn ad away. We quote from a city new* story in the New York World: •'Cnj»t. Roberta said the submarine woak*. have been in a perfect poei twn to have Inoncftcd a torpedo at the liner, and there would have bean TO escaping had it been fired. He isid the big L-boal behaved splen didly anil teemed to bo under per fect control.'* The commander of the undersea boat could not hav* shown for his own flag more reepect than was dis closed for tho Stars and Stripes. He did not fll-e a torpedo. He did not try to run the New York into some furoign port, tie did not saerch tho vessel for some kind of reservist* Ha did not command Captain Rob erta to exhibit hit paper*. Ralph Pel riser, the World's rec ord*, was among tho passenger*. He waa sot harmed, lie was not even inconvenienced. His slumbers were not broken, if he ora* asleep. Rul PiiHtaer's newspaper is trying te drag thia country into war bo ra as* (Jarman commander* will not give immunity tn ammunition trans port*. flying the o*gt of baHecr ent nailoaa.- Qrrerehoro Near*. The Problem *f Cot tea Tara Not only doe* tho Southern cotton farmer lose millions at dollar* an nually aa a remit of the lark of ays tem 1b Rrsdlng his cotton, on evil right at Mi own doors, bit M is also the victim of a colossal inter national conspiracy in the letter of cotton taro. Practically every Bum mer for tan years Tha Progressiva Parmer ties called attention to this evil, bat U still continues. Ruope akes most of oar rotten "op, and nafarally Axes the price of cotton. Now Europe boys cotten en the hade o| « per cant taro. That la to say, on aaeh BOO pound hale of cotton she sesames that the bea ting and tteo will weigh f par east I or thirty pounds. In other wards, Europe bays a 600 poaud bale of cotton en tre assumption that aha will pat only 470 pounds af Hat Bat as a matter of fact the Btathara fanners does not pat on thirty pounds of bowing and ties, and as ho gives tha buyer more tint cotton than ha pays for. And while K has I wan denied by soma, am behave it la pretty wall aatabliahad that M vicre do not put on the fog • par cent af tare, although not all owing the farmer te do Pragiho ■Hr* Paiatai. TM *k**t*r to a Mid af pray. Whidt-Sto* akaat at atght, Abamt tkr— aightha at H to b*ak. A Omm OU Agto ' Ob* at tk* Mat MwarkaU* -it to» tk* fttate to Dr. H O. HM. pa* Mastoai. DwBr HIM ia batoMM M *»4 M r*ar* at aga, to aOD date* actfcr* partaral aarrtoa, aad M* a*r . rnnaa art aaU ta to •• fMk ad *>*ywt aa *to* a mm lad tk* *~ttar Uataaai ta Mai whk »wki Mr* Mrtk* Wad* Hfgf. ai r*t*wharg. Ta, arm kaM laat «a*k m a Mart Ttoto ta kw par—** Mr. m4 Mr* M. U Wait. • *1 * h • ' -'• V CITY HALL INN. Corner Cumberland and Wilton Streets. Thoroughly renovated, and under new manage* ment. Nice Rooms,Good Board, by the day, week or month. S. H. Etheirdge, Prop. Dunn, N. C. % «•» I V The First National Bank of Dunn, N. C. ♦ Has Arranged through the Federal Reserve Bank f of Richmond, Va. to extend its customers loans f at the rate of six per cent per annum on cotton when ♦ stored with the Dunn Waarehouse Company of % Dunn, N. C. The receipt for any such cotton ? * so stored to be used as collateral for such loans. ; ♦ gj: -«* - * I THE BUSINESS MAN’S BANK! f Shrewd buainaa* men my that a man’* banking cennectioe ka tha btR factor in hi* bturner* ancccaa. Think of ail tha ruererrfu], well managed beainaa* hnt-tt yoa know In «-«y instance you will And their finance* handled by a •oreeaafal. well managed hank. I>Rwf of Duna'a eonAdenca in the State Bank A Treat Company ia .. fact that auecoaafal baainaaa boueea maintain connection* hare. *• . * r * • >'r • • -• . K . ir
The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1915, edition 1
3
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