Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / May 1, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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if-' r3 4 1 Slil ; a ; ii VOL. XIV. Statement of CITIZENS BANK, FEBRUARY 14TH, 1908. RESOURCES LIABILITIES Loans and Discounts $358,116.86 Capital Stock paid in, $100,000.00 Overdrafts. 2,952.39 Surplus and Profits, 51,546.76 Stocks and Bonds, &,B1.25 Due t Banks, 11.214.16 Banking House and Fixtures, 10,732.73 . . ' t.l Insurance department, 3,127.33 Cashier sCh'ks Outstanding, 743.52 OahonHandandCash Items, 40,848.93 Deposits, 428,942.72 Due from Banks, 11,201.61 ' $592,447.16 Total, $592,447.16 We ask you to Examine the financial statement of thia Bank found above. If your patron are and influence have, in any decree, cuntributed to the success of our business. WE THANK YOU FOR IT. If, as yet, you are not a patrons, let this be your invitation to become one. The standing1 and responsibility of the men who constitute our Board of Directors are a guaratee of careful, judicious management. DIRECTORS. . ' i Ja. H. Brodi. D. T. Cooper. Jno. D. Cooper, S. P. Cooper, MItsH DorMT. Geo. B. Harris, F. K. Harris, W. A. Hunt, J. B. Owen, W. S. Parker, PROFESSIONAL CARDS. CHAS. E. FOSTER, LITTLETON, N. C. Civil Engineer and Surveyor. R. R. Road, Park, Timber, Town, CUt and Farm Work quickly done and accurately planned and 1 a lAXVkfJ Jf" platUd Farm work solicited. Dr. EC- N. AValters. Surgeon Dentist, Warrenton, North Carolina. ome opposite court home In Fleming arris Building. rhsnes: Office. Mo. at; RaUtcnca. Ko. 66 Dr. Hob. S. Booth, Warrenton, North Carolina. OfSee Fhone 69. " Hesldenee rhoneWS-4 13-Um Dr. W. Taylor, Surgeon Dentist, Kendera any services included in the practice of Dentintry. Crown and bridgt work, porcelain inlay, and cast fillings according to the methods of to-day. Office 'Phone 2. 27 6m Residence " 34. Dr P. J. Macon, Physician & Surgeon, Warrenton. North Carolina. Calls promptly attended to. Office opposite court house. DR CHARLES H. PEETE. Consultation by Appointment. Ttiephon Connection. B. B. WILLIAMS, Attorney - at - Law, Warrenton, N. C. S. G. DANIEL, Attorney at Law, LITTLETON, N. -C. Practices in all the courts of the State. Money to loan on real estate. Reference Bank of Littleton. Will be in Warrenton every first Monday. M. J. Hawkixs, Ridge way, N. C. T. W. Bicrarr, Loaiaburg, N. C. HAWKINS & BICKETT, Attorneys at Law. B. G. Greek. H. A. Boyd. GREEN & BOYD,' Attorneys at Law, "Warrenton, North Carolina. Eggs for Hatching! j. . At Raleigh, Asheville and Munroe in Competition with the country best the affords. My Barred Plymouth Rocks, White and Golnen Wyandottes, were among the winners. They excel for laying and growing quick, strong' broilers as "well as for exhibition. I guarantee a fair hatch. John. H. Fleming, Warren Plains, N. C. .f. p.No. 1. the Condition Henderson, N. C. J. H. Parham, W. W. Rowland, J. P. Taylor. Samuel Watkins, A. C. Zollicoffer, Special Notice! When you need anything in the Call on your Town Jeweler You can rest assured that he will always treat you right. I carry in stock a nice line of watches, clocks and jewelry, and I never misrepresent anything I sell. Let me know what you want. I make a specialty of fine Watch Repairing, and guarantee every job. Thanking the public in ad vance for their patronage, I am, Respectfully yours, T. A. Shear in JEWELER, Warrenton, N. C. Trustee's Sale of Real Estate. By virtue of the power and authority conferred upon me by a certain Deed of Trunt executed to me by Haywood Cheek and Henrietta Cheek, his wife, on the 11th. day of January 1904, and duly registered in the office of the Register of Deeds of Warren county, North Carolina, in Book 68, Page 558, I will, at the request of the owners of the unpaid bonds secured in said Deed of Trust, sell at Public auction, on Tuesday, the 12th. day of May 1903 at 12 o'clock M., at the court house door in the town of Warrenton, in Warren county, to the highest bidder for cash, all of that certain tract or parcel of land, lying and being in the county of Warren, State of North Carolina, and bounded as follows, viz: Beginning at a stone on the side of an old path near the Macon road, thence S. 18 E. 2,019 feet with Cunning ham's and Bronson's line to a stone, Bronson's corner, thence N; 88 1-2 W. 1,473 feet with Bronson's new tract to a stone, thence N. 1 1-4 E. 1,917 feet with Battle's line to a stone in an old road, thence S. 87 1-4 F. 810 feet with old Person line (along old road) to the bec-innin?. containing 50 acres, more or less and being a part of the land described as lot No. o, in the par tition of the lands of the late .1. B. Kommerville. This the 10th. day of April 1908. M. J. Hawkins, T. Polk, Att'y. . Trustee. Notice of Summons! Rosa Powell, PUT. ) In Superior Court vs V Willis Powell. Dft. ) June Term 1909. The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Su perior Court of Warren OQunty by the plaintiff against the defendant to se. cure an absolute divorce. -fvuu us defendant will further take notice that he is hereby required to appear at the next term of the Superior Court of said Warren county, State of North Carolina, to be held m warrenton, North Carolina, on tne mira luvuuny in June, A. D.t 19C8, the same being the loth, of said rooptb, and answer or demur to the complaint filed in said action, or the said plaintiff will apply to said Court for the relief demanded in said complaint. I This the 11th. day of April, 1908. J. R. ROD WELL, JOHN H. KERR, Plaintilt's Attorney. State of North Carolina, Warren County. ) In the Superior Court. Hugh Brandt, Plaintiff. ) Margaret Brandt, Defendant) The Defendant above named win take notice tha ian action enuiieu t above has been commenced in me ou perior Court of said Warren county for the purpose of having the bonds of matrimony between the said Plaintiff and Defendant dissolved; and the said Defendant will further tase nuuuu she is required to appear ai n Term of the superior ouui , Z- a Warren county, to oene-u uu tuc Monday in Jwpe, 1908, at the court S it m SouWte Warrenton, N, c?AnAwer or- demur tpfe nlaint in saiu apviuu, vv -"i- Em to the court for the relief demanded in aft !d P?"P:tfk This the 7th. day of April 1908. Clerk Superior Court, T. POLK, Att y. WANTED! To sell yo i the next Wagon or Buggy you . ant. W. R 0YD & CO. WARRENTON, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1908. Love's Dwelling-Place., Now hast thou come to set within my soul Like lamps, the gleaming moments of delight; So, still in darkness, may I seek aright The way that leadeth to thy heart, -my goal. And lo! the bai-ge of life, past rock and shoal, A crimson petal floats across the night, Yet ever onward tossed to glorious light. Come thou whose lips shall kiss and make me whole, I know thou dwellest in some secret land, " JLear one, divinely guarded and at peace And wilt thou bring this dawn upon the sea. My eyes are straining for the sun kissed sand, Where, like a joyous bird, I may re lease My love and land and in thine arms be free. Archer M. Huntington, is the May Everybody's. Say Things that Please. Saying things that please is just as easy as speaking: words that cut and wound, and it is very much more useful. Hurting peo- pie's feelings is not likely to do them any good, nor you either. If you have the unhappy faculty of always touching on the sensi- tive spot of the person with whom you are conversing, study tact, with as much devotion as f all your future success depended on acquiring it, as, indeed, may be the case. Young People's Weekly. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup is best for women tend children. Its mild ao tiou and pleasimt ti&td makes it pi-operable to violedt purgatives, pnch as pi'ls. tablet?, etc;. Get theb iokIet and a sample of Oiiuoat Hunter Drugstore. 0INE ITEMS. Farmers are quite busy plant ing corn and preparing cotton and tobacco land. A large acre age will be planted in canteloupes this season and we are looking for low prices. Mr. J. L. Burchitt has built a store house opposite his residence and has put in a stock of goods. We have to report several cases j of mumps hereabout. j Misses Pauline and Alma Pas- j chall, of L. F. C, spent Easter at home. Mr. Nat Williams who has been out West since Christmas re turned home Saturday. Mr. Horace P. May field, of Brighton, S. C, spent Easter with relatives and friends here. Mr. R. P. Harton, Sr., left re cently to spend a few days with his son, Mr. R. P. Hai'ton, Jr., and his daughter, Mrs. G. W. Hendrick, in Raleigh. He will also visit his brother, Mr. W. P. Harton at Apex. Mr. John A. Meeder and family of Council, N. C, are home for some time, possibly all the sum mer. Valued Same as Gold. 15. G. Stewart, n merchant of Cedar View, Miss.. Bay p.; "I tell my custom sis w hen they buy r bos of Kiug's New Life Pills -they get the worth of that much gold iu weight, if afflicted with coustiptttiou, raaluiia or bilious uefis." Sold nndej guarantee at O. A. Thomas drag store. 25 j. . CREEK ITEMS. .:' Didn't we have a lovely Easter Sunday. We are sorry to report Mr. Thomas Benson quite sick, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Allen visited here recently. Mrs. John W. Allen spent last week at Mr. S. J. Clark's, Rebecca Watson, a colored wo man caught a carp in the creek near here a few days ago weigh ing 9 lbs. and 4 ounces. This is not a "fish story," but a fish truth. The fish was weighed in the store here. Miss Eva Davis and sister spent several days here recently. The Record stated not long since that, "The trees are leav ing." This is certainly true of the pines in this community, Ruth. CASTORS A er JnfastS ana vauareu. The Kind You Have Bears Signature of PERSONAL LIBERTY. It Means the Right to Do Unhin dered By. Another Those Things Which Will Not Work Injuries to Others. There are various meanings to the word ' 'Liberty . ' ' The defini tion of the anarchist is the right to do anything you please.' But to the law-abiding, right thinking man, this is not liberty, but license. If this is the right defi nition of the teum, and if this be the inalienable possession of every man, then all law is wrong and the anarchist is within his just defence of ' 'liberty .V.. when he makes war to the death upon any and all government. The broad est meaning that any sensible man in this State will give to the word "liberty," will be ''the right to do unhindered by another those things which will not work injury to others. " No man has a right to do that which will injure ; others No man has a right to j break women's heart, to corrupt men, to degrade children, to make himself or another a charge upon ;the community a pauper, a criminal, an insane man. And j when a State comes to see that a ! business is doing these very iuings.ana worse, rcnas tnengnt it is its duty, to say that that business shall stop. This is good common sense nd it is the law of the land according to the de cision of the highest court of the land the Supreme Court of the United States. If a man lived absolutely alone, it might possibly be his right to do what he pleased; . but that in stant that he became one of two or nore residents of a commu nity, when he becomes related,to another, his liberty must be measured by the large right of the community. A man may not even commit suicide, though it might bea blessing to others for him to do so. He might think that his comfort and health de- mandthat he stop wearing clothes but lie will not be permitted, to ao so. He may not throw his gar bage into his own front yard. He may not take the air when he is getting well of the small pox i though his physician may so ad vise, except within such strict limits as may seem safe to the authorities. No man liveth to himself. -We have neighbors, children, wives and sisters- brcther-souls whohave rights as dear as ours. Our true liberty cannot make void their true lib erty. Apply this test to the lib erty to sell whiskey. How about the liberty of xur women their right to life, and the pursuit of hapiiness? A son's hand only a a few days ago was bathed in his mother's blood! A husband drives his wife from her home while he beats the head of their infant upon the floor. A wife writes pleading to her family physician to do something to pro tect her and her little ones from the husband and father. These and a thousand other like crimes against the peace, and the very life of the best of our people lie at the door of the saloon. Fire has as much right to glut its fury upon the walls of our homes; pestilence as much right to feed itself full upon the bodies of our loved ones; the brute lust of the fiend as much right to satiate it self upon the purity of our daught ers, as this business has to grow rich by corrupting men, brutal izing husbands fathers, defiling women and destroying minds, bodies and souls. 'God pity men. whose ideas of holy liberty de mands such a price. He who votes to destroy the saloon casts no vote against lib erty. Rather, he makes the greatest possible cpntribufion to liberty, Our ancestors who hurl ed defiance in the face of a foreign tyrant, our fathers who stood for four long and bloody years against what they thought to he an attack upon the liberty of the State, were no more lighting for i liberty, the dearest and best lib erty of the people, than taoe who are seeking to drive from tbe throne the vilest of all tyrants the most heartless of all oppres- surs, tne siuoon. ne corrupts government: he vitiates t.hehalint?; A. I 1 TT . i I he levies unjust taxes far beyond the power of the people to pay; he casts husbands and fathers into prison; he takes the food out o children's mouths; he drags wives and daughters down to feed his lusts; he feasts and fat tens on the bodies and souls of his subjects. And yet his min ions have the audacity to use the sacred name of. Liberty in de tence of his corrupt reign. O, Liberty! what crimes have been committed in thy name. Laurin burg Exchange. . Republicans Alarmed. : News comes from Washington, that the Republican leaders are trembling for Republican success in the coming Presidential Cam paign. They realize that the rob ber tarriff on steel rails that en ables the Steel Trust to sell rails abroad at several dollars per ton less than at home, is ,a handicap to railroad building, for - which the -Republican party is strictly responsible. The idea of pro tecting a great trust against foreign competition, when it is underselling foreigners on their own soil, is so foolish and so in iquitous, that common-sense Re publicans, as well as Democrats, are sorely tired of it, and the idea of the Republicans, who have had 11 years of power to re form the tariff, going into the c c . . . ' campaign, promising itr' as a fruit of their next triumph, if they can get it. They will re form it upwards if any way. Still further the Republican press like all others, .is fighting mad about the high robber tariff on pulp, wiiich enables the paper trust to rob them unmercifully. These indeed be unhappy times for the G. O. P. elephant. The worm is going to turn. From our Washington Correspondent. The Ww-rld's Bast Climate is not ealiivlv free fioui disease, ou the high e!er;tions fevers prevail, while on the lower levels niislsiria is eucouutered t a greater or less exteut, aeconttuar to altitude. To overcome climate affec tions, hissitnde, malaria,. jiuinlic, biliousness', fnvr and agu. aud gen eral debiiifc.v, the most effective rcuiedj is Electric Bitteis, tha great aitr'rutivi' and bloutl purifier; the antidote for evtiiy form ot bodily weakness, uerv onsuess, find iusomuia. Sold utidei pu uiiutee at O. A. Thora is drug store. Pnoe 50o. In the American national flag there are now forty-five stars three rows of seven each and four of six. On July -4th the new flag containing the forty-six stars will be substituted. The order by the war department to the ef fect has recently been issued. tThe arrangement of the stars on the new flag will be in six rows, with seven in the second and fifth and eight in the othersthat is, eight in the top, bottom and two middle rows and seven in the next to top and next to bottom rows, this will make more symmetrical arrangement and a prettier field for the flag.- Wil. Messenger. More News from the New Enatian-d Tf nny one Las nuy doubt as to the virtue of loleys Kiduey (Jure, they need oulv to refer to Mr. Aivm H. Stiinpsou, of Wiliimsutic, Jouu., ho, after almost losing hope of reoo-.-iry, en aooouut at the failure of so many reinediefs finally tried Foley's Kidney Cure, which he says was "just the thiug" for him, as lour bottles cured him corMjMetely. He is uow eutirel well stud free from all th suffering iu oidrtnt to ucute kidney trouble bold by fluuter Drug Co. The Forty-eighth Annual State Fair of North Carolina will be held at Raleigh, C, October 1347 At times whon you don't feel just right, whon you have a bad tomcb, take something right away that will assist digestion; net tomethiug that stimulate for a time; hut something that will positively ao the very weak mat the stomach persornqs nurter ormn vry aud normal conditions, pomethiug that will make the food djgest. lo do this vou must take a natural diges'autlike Kodol For Dyspepsia, Kodo. is a na tural digestantr and contains the sama will digest more than 6,i)vi gruitjs o good food. It is sure (a Rff jrd prompt relief; it digests wnacyoa eat and is pleasant to take. Sold by Hunter Drug Qumpuny. LCC get tazdiate relief frca DEFENDS RIVER. jyjr R ' Vaughan Replies to I ' a Circular Letter Issued Last Week. VaughanN. C, Apr. 22, n r ' T-i -f- j i '08. iviK. jiiDiToii: i see tnat sev eral crentleman' have arotten cmt j and circulated a circular letter, 1 severely criticising River town- ship on account of the number of j votes she claims in the County j Convention, and making some serious charges against her peo- ; pie, especially those in authority. I am not a citizen of River town ship nor am I in a position to say whether or not she is entitled to the 16 votes she claims, but I know that they have been allowed for several years and that they can not be taken from her until after the coming Gubernatorial elect ion and this circular in calculat ed not only to disrupt party or ganization, but to cause a split that will bring joy to our political opponents, the Republicans, and if I read between the lines cor rectly then the object of this fac tion is to split and have two Con ventions. I know that after this election that River's representation will be reduced and ours (Judkins) will be increased corresponding ly, as River has a part of our votes which was occasioned by a cut off from us, throwing those in Judkins, near Littlelon to River for convenience and as that part has again been restored to Judkin's.. After this election the vote will have to be adjusted. I am extremely sorry that there should be such bitter antagonism between any two sections of our beloved county. The principal is wrong and will not tend to rectify matters, but to widen the breach. I am not a candidate for any office, and my sole object in writ- idg this letter is to try to set matters straight, and to insist that we not do the very thing that the Republicans would rejoice over more than anything else. We in Judkins are justly en titled to six votes in the Conven tion and have been for four years but in order to accommodate our friends living near the voting pre cinct at Littleton we have with out'coraplaining allowed River to keep them. We hope this time, however, to have the matter pro perly adjusted and without a split or any hard feelings. Our cause is a common one and for the sake of peace and har mony, jE hope that all factions will come together and amically settle their differences and name a ticket that will meet with the general approval of the whole county and without having con sulted them I am confident that our friends in River will give us what we are entitlled to. I have not written this letter at the invitation of - any one, nor have I consulted any one about it, and my sole object I repeat is: to promote harmony and good feel ing which I believe is our only salvation. W. R. Vaughan. It Reached the Spot. Mr. E. Humphrey, who owns a large geneval rtoro t Omega, O., and is pres ident of the Adams County Telephone (Jo , as wetl as of the Home Telephone Co., of Pike couuty, Ot, says of Dr. King's New Discovery: "II saved my life once. At least I think it did. , It seemed to reash the Bpot the very seat of ray cough, wheu evarthing else failed." Dr. King's New Discove ry not ouly reaches the cough spot; il hsalu the sore spots and the weak spots in throat, lungs and chst, Sold under guaraute at O. A. Thomas drug store, 5oo. and SI. 00 Trial bottle freo. Every fellow that warms up toward you and treats you nice is not necessarily a candidate, but when a fellow that seldom ever dees more than speak as he passes shows undue courtesies, you do not have to wait long before he tells you that his friends have about persuaded him to enter the race for some office. Durham Recorder, Mis. S. Joyce, 183 Sullivan St., Claremont, N." H., writes: "About a year ago I bought two bottles of Foley's Kidney Cur?. It cured me of a se vere case of Kidney trouble of several years' r taudiog. It certainly is a grand good medseiue, and I heartily recom mend it," Sold by Hunter Drug Co. NO. 8. The Advance of Prohibition. There is no halt in the steady and victorious march of temper ance reform. Elections were held in Michigan, Illinois and Nebraska last Wednesday. At sunrise-that day Michigan had only one dry county; when the sun set it had ten. At sunrise that day Illinois had six dry 'counties; at sunset it had twenty six 1,500 saloons voted out of business in one day. In Nebraska two-thirds of the towns went dry. Moreover, a National anti-jug law now seems surely on the way. The Senate will now pass a bill prohibiting express com panies from acting as agents of whiskey houses, and it is pointed out that when the States forbid the "storage, consumption and use" of liquors except for pur poses allowed by the statue, a National anti-jug law can then be seriously considered. Progres sive Farmer. j RIDCrEWAY ITEMS. The berry vineyards around here are beginning to look beauti ful. Miss Helen Moore, of L. P. C, spent Easter at home. Our Sunday-school had a pic nic at Urowders oond Easter Monday, and all who were pres ent seemed to enjoy the occasion. Mr. Charlie Mustin and Miss Mary J. King, both of Warren. county, were married at the resi dence of Mr. Nat Allen Sunday April 19th. at 2 o'clock, Rev. Mr. Walters officiating. We hope the happy couple a long and prosper ous live. Master Wm. Waverly Hicks visited his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Stainback last week. A Californian's Luck. uTTl 1 I l 1 . lus uicKH'BB uaj oi niy nte wps when I bought a box of Baoklnn'H Ar nica Salve;" wiiteaOhiuloslF. Buduhn, of Tracy, California. Two 25o. boxes cured me of an annoy iny ease of ltah ing p'iles, which had troubled me for years and that yielded to nj other treatment " Sold uuder guarantee al C. A. Thomas drug store. MARHADUKE JOTTINGS. Mr. Robert L. Duke who has been visiting his parents, was re called and left for Miami, Fla., last Saturday. Messrs. Howard and Mark Duke accompanied him to Raleigh where they were joined by Mr. T. M. Duke. There the quartette, who were boys to gether, and had been parted for six years, were united once more and spent a very pleasant day to-' gether. Mr. and Mrs. John Powell visit ed their daughter, Mrs. J. L. Aslton, of Essex, Sunday. Mrs. F. M. Duke is visiting her mother, Mrs. T. A. Cheek, of Inez, this week. Mr. M. T. Duke whishes to catch the high prices paid' for early cotton next fall. So he planted some last week. We are going to invite ourselves to dine at the county home soon, to eat some of those nice cabbage. No Name. Everything taken iuto the stomach should be digested iully within a cer tiiin time. When you feel that your stoniacii is not in good order, that the food you have eateu is not being di gested, t ko a good, natural digestunt that will do tha work the- digstivo juices are not doing, Tne best remedy known to day for all Ptomach troubles. s Kodol, which is guaranteed to givo prompt relief. It is a natural digestunt; it dgests what you eat, it is pleasant to take anil is sold here by Hunter Drue Company. The A. & M. College at Raleigh will conduct a Teachers' Institute or Training School for Teachers, from May 4th. to May 16th. Especial instrution will be given in Agriculture, Nature Study and School Gardens. Admission will be confined to teachers who are interested in this subject. Not more than fifty can be ac commodated. Public School studies reviewed. No tuition, no fees. Board, $2.50 per week Lodging, $1, Teachers desiring may remain four weeks. Address Prof. F.L. Stevens, Superintend ent "May School," A. & M. Col lege, West Raleigh, N. C. The truble will moet cough remedies is that they constipate. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup acts gently but promptly on the bowels aud at the same time it Ktops the cough by soothing the throat ?nd lung irritation. Chi'dreOx like it. Sold by Hunter Dcug Co l -5 ( ' i" "l IS"' if! m h i in 4 I i -., In 1. 1 II- 1 J !. V ii til t .. ( i r U M IS H n. n : j i- 5 i- f.?i is $! i ilfc.'i 'f 1 1 I Ii! 1 ;. t i ( r it
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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May 1, 1908, edition 1
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