THE DUNN D
VOL. IV
Dunn, N. C, April IS, 1917
pp—p«-» — ' • m ■ __
SOUTHERN 10 w(*?.N NEW
Acr: cov
Chattanooga Venn., April lhi.li. -
An Argentine agency v.l'Ji head
ouartan at But-no. AI r.-a will be
opened on May 1.1 h !.. ;hv Southern
f Milo ay iSpIrs »• .H. . o’llie A
Chio liailro; .1 jr ■ r • • -i.
titl Southern mrvrj.htt■.•?««. ;n r;
* *nd their I'nlr hi foreign mark
it», particular!/ thou.- o: heath Am
e ri c«.
It. II. AcV«»ipan. fcruv.N rhiof
ek-rls In the South /me'-'irun A/vney
ft Ctli'il till'.-.*.*, hbe. i*. r.ii il n.
A ,'t:, i;,r A a .. .i.. . tA, ,> „„
icclmI with the i'.. .I.i: ■ rr.e.'icun
Agency yme it* cetrbl.-urmnl in
April. 19II,. am' it fell 'lonlited to
. *-l«l Southern maiiufrti-ii*i*».*a, con
t-'mplatins' reproat nation In Argen
tina. The South American Agency
will be pled to forward to Me. Ar!s
ermau any iV|Ui i ta for lut irm.f.n"
in regnva to Ar c ■'tine mnrlrti, uurh
service io to rendered without
chare e.
RiiCBT Or RTiC-'-UTIGNS COM
MITTEE A?».i.‘ iTl> be C1TI
c .NS ME.r.TiN«a OF 1 HE
TOWN OF DUNK, A» iUL
S. 1917.
K'uilring lii.it sintionn, town* ami
comma.III..-, tm’.ii either stand or
fall up.-n lh-oe jiiP.uoe toward the
Vai-ping of tiu Law, both t i-il and
mc r..and tar.t :»< • ••ir.'nu’iity ri -■
higher it.* ov*- l- ..t ,1‘V tr,
foitcmfnt. your committor togs ,o
submit some suggestion. along Lite
line of l-aw cnfifcerocdl In thj Jug
of Dunn.
Evtrv citiacn in ihi* tnst v,ho u
not blinded by prejudice io the
higher and 1u-.it th ugs for msn*
Mod; whose vision hf. rot been
warped by ho. OW’I ..elii-li desire:
can see dsllv. u*tr law* kroa.cn
snd trampled under fuel. TSe total
nonobservance of Low rus to be
gaining ground with each passing
day. and it is time for the ritisenthip
to rise up in its manhood and de
mand of those in sathority that the
l-nvc l,o erfo.c.d. If officers will
nut enforce the l-l:*. oldie s.nli
r-ent skoaid b- so „*’*c-1 th. t lb};
will be compelled to ruure from
places of trust that they now (SI!.
No community should have IU hand*
bed by officers vihn wiak at crimr
ftcc.-i nr. public scrvsnlr. answer
able to the cifirenii, those r.hn pay
the taxes. A. y cr.mrxunily i li.rye
ly wnnt its, officers make it, alo»<c
the liner which vre ere discus.inn.
The citiwent elect the oilicers, there
fore the citiicos in rr-por.viblc for
cimoiunr.x. rh> !;» rg trie it be-,
knaives Ha, us citit. na, tai ex..ft our I
nghic end dc.-nr.nd of our otr.ee n
tile bittern.ent of toitlilions.
Vi.v’ut; th.- -mi.-cn.erc'.-sent of
l-aw in .»ifnt. your committer wor.ld
rwi'i • ifully cuhmit the following
v -ulutij:;*, for rsj ccneidcaation of
e mass meeting of thr cltt*e..lflip of
the town, said rws-e meeting to be
li-id r.l the Opera House at sock. «
rut* and time an max be doomed
proper by this Citizens Meeting:
Tirol whereas, the officer* of th»
Town of Zinnia r.re nejsUgoht in the
tllsciutrgp of their duties and do not
tafopre the IxtiVV, *wr the c'tiscnsi
y.f alts. T, ear— , f Ihs.nw > -_I . # I
the Hoard of Conmmionfrs tbe fol
lowing:
1. That the Search and St'iurt
Act I'c enforced o/i all prc-niicv
"•“•re llici j a /, u‘i.n u> believe that
the uerspan-s of Mid promisee arc
tolling or oanulacturing intoxicat
ing liquor t.
!!■ Vin-t the u>« of vnlfrar, pm
fnne smi obscene laflgt]*vm on the
“'-rut* and in p-blit e.lr.cc* l>u stop
pad and that those multy of such be
punished to the extent „f the Law.
2. 7nat <>..> ,.*w against emelty
to nnimahj ho ntrictly enforced and1
the! violators of said Law be paniah
ed to tha extent of the Lntr.
•*. That all lin; stores be closed
on the itsbbath nod allowed to rail
medicine only
It. Tbat rJl csfe* and restaurant*
bo tie*. (I on the Pi.bhjlth except at
*nca! hour* as proscribed by Law.
8* That all garages bo closed on
the Salihuth, tiie mb* of gasoline and
nutomnMIc part* and the repairing
of automobile* ho prohibited and a
penally provided for thooe committ
ing these acta.
7. Thnt the I.nw gu.t.ruing the
rneod of autumobtlea bo rigidly en
lorcsd and thr-t all unnecessary
indues, su-h us uutomebile horns
und whistles, i nln.U.led to scare
.'iims end worry lHo sick, be ab*o
intely forbidden, and tbit a penally
K protidod for violators of this
Law.
8. Tliut, ful the safety of pedee
t-aini autrmoBiHrt and persons drlr
"ng teams, drivnra of all eUmes of
voblchls# bo forced to keep to right.
I’liat they turn corneyn on (b« squur -;
wad at a sneer* rat on ceding tvu
miles por hour.
T. Thnt tha practice of card play
:tr and whiskey drinking ;n the
sfanirqml Building be abolished.
10. Thu' tho Stale Vagrancy
laser he rr.fnriad. •
11. That tho offlerrs be required
. to use every means possible to hasp
lowri anil immoral women, both whits
i and colored, out of our town.
13. That, fur sanitary reasons.
] the merchants be required to cloan
up In front of thrir places of busi
J now every night or as often as neces
sary to keep the sidewalks and gut
}- ;s free of paper, peelings and
trash. That they also keep the back
into clean.
It. That mil Tasters be not al
lowed to tear old paper off bill boards
and setter sama on the streets.
H. That skating on streets and
j‘til .'walks be forbidden, and the law
•• eti-st inline of bicycles on side
walks be enforced.
if*. That wo, the citizens of
Tuan, interested in the moral, spir
itual and physical welfare of the peo
ple of Dunn end the surrounding
i-otnmonlty, end making our town a
‘ ■-an and wholesome place to Hve
hr. stand firmly ami squarely behind
these resolutions until someth ng is
done to correct the .rvlls that exist
at present.
Respectfully submitted,
R. S. FREEMAN, ijhairman
J. P. PITTMAN
• J. V.' rilRDIni
April o. i Jl /.
After (tic resolution* had been ad
npli d the following paper waa raad
by Mr. T. V. Smith.
Ur Chalmmn, Ladlaa and Gentle
men :
On account of the fact that I will
hi out of town at the time of the
Mam Meeting called for Monday
evening April Oth. I take this method
of bringing to your attention a mat
ter, that to my mind, la of as much
importance to the riaing genarstioi.
a» any subject that will be discaaaeo
in this meeting.
An a member of the rvsolations
.'oimailiee appointed to draw up the
resolutions that have been presented
for your approval this evening, it
wan in my mind to incorporate in
ilvue resolutions a recommendation
for a Curfew Law. Owing to the
fact that this is a subject that would
h~ exceedingly difficult to legislate
epon, and the fact that it really is
s matter that ennrrms the individual
parent most, I feel that the proper
way to handle the subject would be
*•» try to awaken the parents of the
children of Dunn to the dangers rhst
lie in wsit for them
MMMMI
A groat many of the children of
Dunn, of sll ages, hoys and girls
cun bo teen at almost any time be
tween the hours of two in the after
noon and cloven o’clock nt night, on
the streets, by twos and threes and
•li larger crowds, unattended by
yrowa People, drinking in the dirt
and ftt.n as spread by the foul ton
gues of the older boys, who have no
occupation except that of hanging on
tile corners, and in worse places, tell
ing their dirty joicoa and enticing
the younger ones into all sorts of
meanness and devilment.
In my work ns Scoutmaster | en
deavor to hold op to my boys tbs
highest ideals sad tn tench them to
di> things that lead to a higher and
nobler life, but t And sometimes that
after we have had a meeting that,
instead of going to their homes,
■'rant of them loiter around until
*•*» —w wwn nu/rc uevi|.
recnt in un« hoar than I can counter
net in n dozen meeting*. Parent*
T think ii lot of your boy* or 1 would
not Uko np my fame trying to help
them, and I wish 1 had every boy
in the town of Dunn in my organiza
tion. Surely you think mono of your
boy than I do. Won’t you waka up
to the fact that by allowing your
children to loaf about on the ztreeu
and other place* that yoa know abso
lutely nothing about, you are doing
that child a grave injustice. When
the Sun roe* down you shut up the
chicken* and aoc that your stable
door is locked on your stock. How
shout your boy? Do you know
where lie is?
You may say that this i* a matter
that doe* not concern me but I be.
Have when you think about tho mat
tar seriously you will not criticise me
for “butting in.” It is not the proper
thing for any on* to criticise a condi
tion that exists without suggesting
a remedy. Tho remedy is staaple. If
every parent will keep hi« or her
child at home at these late hours and
givo that child something to occupy
its time then that child cannot nay
some other child is (here and I want
to go too. Friends it is too late to
lock the ddor after your boras boo
been stolon and it will not do nay
good to ery after your boy has guns
to tho devil. Tho logical thing to do
» to do all you can to keep him from
going to the bud.
I trust that ao one win take of
fense at what I have said but that
each and everyone will give me rrsdit
for tbs beet of motives and that all
will do what they can to chrystalls*
inihlie sentiment against the evil that
has called forth thin letter sad that
w* may be permitted to ttvu to nee
»U of our boys and girls grow up
to be good and true men and women,
who will do their duty as God give*
them light Ie let k.
Sincerely, ,
H. 8. FREEMAN
LOWEST CONDITION FOR
WHEAT EVER RECORDED
Effect* ef America Fereeer. te
BrfaM, Crop I. Wee Time Need De
fee ted by the Weather.
Washington, April 7.—Effort, of
American farmer* to briny thi. year's
winter wheat crop to record produc
tion for war tin. needs apparently
have tain defeated by nvtrt wrath
*r conditions, and a crop .f only
430,000,000 bushel, is oxpeetod. In
forecasting that total today th' de
partment of agriculture ana' . ivrsd
that tha average condition of the
crop April 1 was tha lowest sver
recorded on that date.
The production estimate was based
on th* aaeamptlon of average aban
donment of arrange and average In
fluence. on tha crop between now
and harvest time.
Production of rye thi. y.ir prom
IMS to eetablixh a record with 80,
000,000 btah.la as forecast from
April 1 conditions Farm an In th.
rye-growing stats, increased their
acreage by 740,000 acres last aa
tumn forecasting a demand for that
cereal and higher prices because of
the war.
Prom present indication, th. com
bined winter wheat and rye harvest
will be 400,000,000 bushels, comper
cd with S28.127.000 boxhols for those
two crop, last year.
Winter wheat waa town last au
tumn on 40,090,000 acres, close to
the largest acreage *n record. In
.ufftclemt enow covering during the
Winur and dry and windy weather
IfllWvyJ HUP)) a/ Ik. smm
Math of the abandoned acreage
will be planted to con in the south
ern part of the belt and ta spring
wheat in the northern portions.
Prevailing high price* for wheat are
expected to spar farmer* to place a
larger acreage an dvr spring wheat,
and ofteials took for a record crop of
that cereal.
Last year 481,744.000 bushel* of
wheat wero berviwted and 67S>47,
000 boa be la were prudaeed in 1815
Condition on April I, waa 63.4 per
cent of a normal, compared with
7B.J last year, 88.8 in 1815 and $88.2
the 10-year average. The condition
dec reared 22.8 potato from Decem
ber 1 to April 1, compared with an
average decline of four point* in
■WMM8W(»*u4£«-!.
important growing etatoa on April
1 wae:
Ohio. 80; Indiana, 85; Illinot*, 60;
Mimlouri, «2; Nebraska, 35; ir.i
45; Oklahoma, 74.
A5 CHAMPION OF HUMANITY
la Thet hole Thie lUpabUe Eater*
Thla War af Civilisation, Declarer
Dr. Alderman.
Wihnlngtoa Star, April 0.
Standing in the pulpit of tho Pi ret
Presbyterian church last night, Dr.
Edwin A. Alderman, president of the
university of Virginia, at the con
elusion of a brilliant address on "De
mocracy and Patriotism,” at the cen
tennial anniversary celebration,
■truck the keynote #f America's
feelings ia tMs hour of solemn crisis
whan he declared:
"And I believe that I ran declare
amuica
Mp country, Ik of that.
Hwcot land of liberty,
Of thee I ■lag:
Land where my father, died.
Land of the pilgrim.' prido,
Prom every mountain aide
Let freedom ring!
My native country. theo.
Land of the aehk free
Thy naaae I lave;
I love thy roefee and rllU,
My heart wtty rapture thrilk
Thy wood. en4 templed hi Ik
Ukt that £eve.
Let nouc »wi the breexe,
And ring froij aB the treee.
Sweet freedom', eong;
Let mortal t j|in awake,
let all that ^eaftha partake.
Let roeka Huh dk.ee break.
The eound peokpg.
Our father*. Bed! to Thee,
Author of liberty,
To Thee w* Mag;
Long may our knd b. bright
With frmdoaB holy light;
Protect a. byVkj might,
Great God,'oor King!
OAK GROVE ITEMS
The farmer, nreei.d Oak Grove
are making gi^at program with
their 1917 cropg
Wa are glad fc note that Mr. J.
A. Moore k Improving from a ecrl
ous spell of
A Sunday Befcoel wna orgnniaed
-V uoage. uam Dsnosy, Apru J,
for the convent Ac* and bonefit af
the people la t%s community.
modal. Ail tb* poo pie —Tmtd to
enjoy the exegrisss except a few
of the neighboring boy* who bad
b**n drinking tAo much booic. Their
eonrtuct wai vary unbecoming gentle
men. The law* of Harnett county
along this line should be batter en
forced.
Messrs. Samuel Pleasant, Lonnie
Barefoot and Herman Smith were la
Krwton Grove Sunday.
before Cod in this. His temple, that
it is a* the champion of humanity
that this republic that wi love, long
patient under stern aggressions, en
ters with stern purposes this war
of rlvtUtation. Ko greed of empire
ot lost of conquests, er fashion of
glory or dominion moves us to this
rolemn adventure. but rather the
conviction that submission to injust
ice devitalises nations, and that tha
Anal peace of menklad mast be the
WESLEY CLASSES DOING CEXA1
WORK
M«tka4lit Bibb- F«4ar«tiw Caefar
M>o» FflUd With Spirituality ax
The Method lata of thto city wW
attended the Weoby Bibb Cbaa
Federation at Rocky Mount which
continued from Tuceday until Thure
day of bet weak, returned flUod with
renewed t nth u* tew* and conacioaa
of the great work that the Federa
tion to doing, fulfllUng to a far great
er degree the moat aanguiae expec
ts tio»i of Uwae who coaceiecd and
promoted the organlsatioa a Uttie
mare than a year ago at Fayette
riUe.
The conference wia largely attand
ed and attracted prominent Method
tou from oat of the State. There
waa great epirltuality and enthato
mae in the meeting.
Mr. J. M. Way. Dfvfbenal Field
■ecrutary for the Atlantic DMebn,
Dr. C. D. Bulla, of NaahefSa, Tann.,
tup. rln Undent of the Weatey Bible
Cta“ department, and Err. W. E.
Shelton, Field Secretary of the Wae
tern North CaroUna Confereace,
t®«k part la the program. Other
prominent epeakere were Prof. E.
C. Brooke, of Trinity CoUege; Cal.
John P. Be non, gee. f. g, L©Tf
Dr. W. P. Few, preaident of Trinity
College; Mr*. B. B. John. Bar. Bred
ehaw, end Bee. H. E. Spence, held
eecretary.
In Capt. W. H. Newell, of Rocky
Moont, a* preaideat, and Mr. R. R.
Friaea, of Raleigh, a* eecretary, far
two most meaioua and efficient officers
but both declined re election on the
grounds that tha honors should bo
l»eMd along to other.. The new
ottccre elected are aa follows:
Dr. W. P. pew, president.
B. B. Adams and Itov. J. M. Orm
and. vice-preeidenta.
D. H. Dixon, secretary.
Miss Myrtle Muse, treasurer.
Rxeendva Committee, i. A. Long.
C. R. IMgh. D. H. Rood. C» E.
WeaLberby, *. L Prince. Rev. A. 1.
Ormand, Dr. M. Bolton. Ber. M. T.
riper and Capt. W. U. Newell.
Tha place and time of next meet
ing is left with the exorotive rom
mlttoe—Sunday's News and Ob
server.
capable of eggi essivs SO,"leagutd
in democratic covenant for the aaacr
tloo of universal justice. May God.
therefore, widen the frontiers of
Democracy throughout tha world,
and lead Ilia people throagh free
dom into lasting peace."
FOOD WASTE OF ABOUT 700
MILLION DOLLARS.
“For partial Immediate relief, e-v
cep individual and community should
consider earnestly the matter of food
conservation and the limitation of
waste. Aa a nation we seem tc K' e
a disdain of economisin'*. many
homes there is a stronr f.,-.* ne that
it ie ‘only decent* to provide more
food than will be eaten and that
•t la demeaning to nv’on closely.
The experts of the Department of
Agriculture report to nse that the
dietary studies made by them paint
to an annual food wart* of aboal
$700,000,000. Of cairras. tha waau
In famill** of vary limited atoaaa u
•Hgbt, bat la the' famllim of moder
ate and ample —tut tit* wMta b
contidacabk. Even If ibo estimate
wan reduced by half, tbo watte
would Min be enormous.
“The fool wait* in til* boos*.
balA the crp--ru au-rt, moils in
W* maaauro from bad preparation
and bad coo king, from Vpropvr car*
cad hand ,rt< and, in wail-to-do
famliUs from tr'ving ar. undue
number of centred and an oror-abun
daat (apply ai.l failing to save ami
utilize <bc fa«d not cunaomod d>
an instance #f improper baud ng,
it la dtoeevarad that in tka prepara
tion of potatoes 20 par cent of the
odibl* portion in many rear* i* dis
tardod." Secretary af Agriculture,
March S, 1917.
FLY TIME HEflE. SWATTING IN
Cka-1u— TW Starves Boot Pvo
voottoa lor Early Flies.
, "Not only fly time it bar*, but tha
ffiaa themselves.” aaya tba State
Board of Health, "and anises these
Snt arrival* arc mat with puattara,
tiapa and other mass* or extinction,
there win be million* to ewat next
•oak or in a few more warm days
Now is decidedly the right time to
«•*,” aaya the Board, "when
they can bo counted on tbo flngan
and not when they become countless
horde*. Swatter* gM individual flica.
then* that earn* early aad toy y*T.
aad those that aOp in at tha'acrccpad
doors, but awatmre ar* uoelrea where
there ar* a* acraana and wbers than
ar* ne efforts made to tight flies."
"By far tha boat naans of fighting
eariy fllaa aad preventing than from
coming and Maying,” empfcaiice the
Board ia cleanliness that ah»U.
cleanliness that ia starvation to tha
*»• What ia som slimes passable and
Harmless in tha way of filth er lack
of claanliaam in cold weather be
come* dan ye roue and intolerable ia
hot weather. Ia other words, filth
of any kind is decidedly mar* fihhy
and da narrow in summer »>«— in
winter. One of the first Ihmigtos
of the earafnl housewife on the first
warm day ia, what Is theca about
the house that may be food far files.
She knows that whatever becomes a
feeding place for flies became* also
I a hemltag pton. -wad that ha ere
attracted only where there is some
thing to eat.
"Get out your fly matters and
dm them now.", is the advice of the
Board. "If yon haven't good one*
left over from last year, bay now
one* now and don’t wait till your
boose is fall of Dies to bo reminded
that you barest any. The Beat step
is to clean sp and keep so perfectly
clean that when files com they will
cither starve or refuse to tarry."
COATS SCHOOL BONDS ELEC
TION IN COUBT
Uticattem Between Mn. K. L Ed
w,r^ Bash Oear leaeraece
Bailey.
w .mi
In chambom ywterday Judge Al
bert L. Cm beard two cases tovolv.
1 ing two exceedingly pretty points In
law. The firm ease tbs* engaged bis
attention was the Cents graded
school election on the question of
issuing $15,000 to bonds. Thar*
•er* 1SS registered The vote for
bonds wa* 65 ami against bonds Sf.
Us Were stricken ffess the ntiitrm
tko hooks. With these evusns
was a majority for the bonds,
wtthmit this cram* the bends woald
base bean defeated. After the oight
had been challenged for not having
gold thair pell Us those men went
oad paid their poll tan and came
back U vote. R Is claimed by the
representatives af the CoeU school
dieti let that after their names were
•trai from the books they could
■•t legally get their names hack
the hooka mad vote. Tha opposition,
however, claims that they had a right
U vote and tha emaurua should not
have stood. Mason. J. c. CKflord.
/. B. Baggett and L. L. Levinson
represented the Coats graded school
district, and Messrs. Charles Bom and
H. E. Norris, npresented the op
ponante at tha hearing before Judre
Oas. There was quite a delegation
bars from dm school district
Tha other case was K. E. Edwards
against the Jefferson Standard Life
Insurance Company and Tha Tartu
«m Commercial Bank of Benson. A
•*,•00 aaaatty pulley Is involved.
The bank elates a Hen on the policy
fa» aa allsged indebtedness uf II,OM
•f the late W. J. Edwmads. Tb*
bank holds an amignmont af tbo
goBey, signed by Mr. Edward, and
tha widow. Owing to tbs wording
af the assignment of the policy the
•Mow claims aba is not raspsnrlhl
aer liable far tha indebtedness. The
Insurance company admits Ha liaVV.
Ity and la simply holding up payment
peadinff tha dispute and litigation
between the bank and Mrs. Edwards
M». J. C. Clifford represented the
bnnk and Mr. K. B. Hoyle, the
*M®W—B«n4ny*g News sad Ob
server.
I . BEAU THE DUNK DISPATCH
w ■■ m—WWW—M
MAYOR TURMACE'S PROCLAMA
TION
latter >»n to m apart esrtate dips
and weeks la tka cities and town* of
car State to to known as “Oaaa-tp
Wastes. ** Tto niton is a good oua
•ad should appall to ovary cRbra.
Theta Clean-op days aad wank* go
far toward making for tha rnmmsiil
ty totter bn.U by rsasovtng the
caaao rather than battling with tto
disease. Therefor* 1 Issue tha* proc
laasatlon, colling span every ediica
in Dunn to lain In aa effort to risen
*p Dunn during the weak togtaaiig
April the 1(0.
I do hereby mt apart this week as
“Clcna-lIp Week for the town at
Ounu and call upon every Man We
■aa aad Child to giv* aid in whit
ever way they caa to make it a see
east.
J We TURNAGC, Major.
! Now that Ms Mayer has art adds
the weak beginning April IS as
“Clean-Up" week, we fa* eure that
every rititea wants to —»v- Dana
a cleaner and mors beantiful tows,
•e leu every one do bettor ttoa their
best work slang saeb lines. We may
systematise oar mark.
SUNDAY—Wa trust ear preacher*
will give eeaad advice aa to hew u
keep physically and morally clean.
MONDAY—FIM PREVENTIVE
DAY. Let menboat* p—aw al rob*
huh of paper, ash*-* ate. from upper
hallways and piaster rooms. If yes
have a vacant let en which you tore
tvoc ur. trap, tear K down aad mor*
to a piece of security.
f«t the houro-keeper clean base,
•none, and attics of any rabbi*,
(rrensy .ags ee waste paper. 60 p«r
cent cf fires start ia rubbish piles.
TUESDAY — CLEAN HOUSE
DAY'. In gcaerul house cleaning—
store* •* wll aa mlimaa.'
merchants may have window* amt
simlva* washed, even tha rtrohta fa
front ot your business where p*e
[*H> do sot hesitate to (pit aright
•toed a good cleaning.
And now that cold winter has
melted ln:o balmy apriag, let tha
housewives air and can tha harass,
claan carpet* aad scrub everythin*.
Tb« health of yoar family will ha
'tottered.
WEDNESDAY — YARD DAY.
The merchants may remove old rer
ead remove aO mbbish from hack
yards. Pat everything to order in
back yard, and yon will think bat
ter ef yourself and mors of your
business
In the Home yard, all rubbish may
be moved, lawns eat, flowers plant
ed, fences, gates and sidewalks to
paired. lie sure to move any old
useless and unsightly building. Open
/pwees and fresh air in bettor.
THURSDAY—PAINT Up DAY.
Paint up inside aad outside. While
wash blind fences and oat-hottssa—
You have no idea bow mock a little
white-wash help*.
FRIDAY—TLY. MOSQUITO AND
RAT DAY. Lets gat ahead of the
Ay this year aad screen everywhere
ngminst him. See that there are no
places whore water win stand and
breed Ales aad mosquito— got lid
of rats, they ars not large bet they
may cest yea yoar home or place tf
business some day.
SATURDAY—VACANT LOT DAY
—Now. here's where the children caa
do good work. Get you a burlap or
large bag and a sharp stick aad fkfc
ap all paper from strata, Tamm
lota, etc. tee if you cant make year
ward the clean—t la town.
Tbe Weaiaa • Club CmuMm
Committee of inspection.
Mayor—Mr. J. W. Turn a**
Chief ef Police—Mr. N. B. Bam.
Chief of Plrommi Ml H. C. Me
Neill
Health Officer—Dr. Warren.
Hoy Stoats leader—Mr. fl. S.
Freemen
Publicity Cematttem
Met damn T. V. Smith, Lynch, W.
II. Newberry, Beams.
Fisa.c. f—rmlttee
Meodamcs Stephens. A. L Newberry,
J. K. Crockett. If. A. Lee.
Cse—iltls. BeawtHyteg PaUfc
Places.
| Me*James Coltrane, Batter and Ssip
I os.
I Committee Ceepesatlea ef Mereh
aata
I Meadrmes E. P. Young, Ed Smith,
; Holliday.
C—aritt«e~—Kemeeel ef W**4e sad
RobMeh
ViridtBN Prlmroee, Hodges, ft. U.
Peartal) and . Thornton.
Prof. Lockhart aad hie eo-workers.
Not»*e Coe,,rema WaM* aad ftah
Ea»j. what pea eon yotmetf and
’.hon put all ether wart* la bee er
Irurroll er rak* It ta a pile as **«
: the carts may aile better Mm# la
I r-mevmg it. Dea*t umpltla If the
.cart fail* to haal away year trash
| when you As re failadt* do yowr part.
I hereby aanoonce myaaif a eaa
didate for mayor to succeed myself
i subject jn the sotiea *f the *»—trra
i tic primary.
i. W. TURN A Oft.
The Film of the Hour
THOMAS DIXON’S MIGHTY MESSAGE
OF WARNING
THE FALL OF A NATION
Sequel to
THE BIRTH OF A NATION
IN SEVEN TREMENDOUS PARTS
_ _ . ___ • |
• *
An Awe Inspiring Vision of the Terrific Powers of
Annihilation, which America may be forced to meet n,
the Struggle for a place in the Son.
WHITE WAY THEATRE, Dunn, N-C.
Thursday, April 19, Matinee and Night
| 4
Matinee: 300 o’clock..At night, 1st show 7:00; 2nd
show 8*40; 3rd show 10:25. ,
I »
————^____ * m