Subscribers desiring the paper dis continued will pl?u? notify this office OA date of aspiration, otherwise. It will bo coa tin nod at regular iub*r- ' tion rataa until notice to stop la re Tolved. If yon do not get Tfce Dally New promptly telephone or write the man ager, and the complaint wlH receive Immediate attention. It la our deeire to please you. Partlee leavinu town should not .all to let the News follow them daily with the news of Washington freah and criap. it win prove a valuable companion^ reading to you like a let ter ffoB home. Those at the aea ahore pt mountains will find The News s most welcome and intereet lng visitor. All articles sent to T^e News for publication must be signed by the writer, otherwise they will not b published. MONDAY. JI NE 12, 1U11. CONSIDERATION OF OTHERS i In the busy rush of this more or losa selfish world there Is perhaps no one thing that Is more generally noticeable than the utter lack of consideration for others that are mat on every band. No character is wholly estimable in which there Is not found an un selfish and courteous conmderati- n of othefa, and yet It is doubtful If an observer passes a day without seeing in the ordinary dally routine case af ter case of perfect disregard of the Indispensable characteristics of the Innate gentleman or gentlewoman. The Washington Post cite* a rath . er unusual case as follows | "A young man living In a flat in New York was very 111. The doctors said he had heart trouble and recom mended rest and quietness. The 10 year-old-daughter of Fireman John Roth, however, insisted on practic ing on the piano. The family of the tick young man explained the situa tion to Roth, and begged that he ?top his daughter's constant practic ing, but the playing went on. Fin ally, Roth was arrested, and the mag istrate ordered that the piano be kept closed for a month in order to give the nerves of the sick man a chance to recuperate from the long strgln. The closing of the piano, however, was ordered too late. The sick man died, the doctors saying tl.at his end was certainly hastened, and J perhaps actualyl brought about, by | strumming of the little glr*. "It Is a grave question as to Justi what one's legal fights arc in this world. The persons who talk most about their legal right* are apt to become nuisances. There seems to be no doubt that the daughter of the fireman was well within her rights In playing the piano. Likewise there is no douhl that the person who persists in remaining on the end seat of a summer rat is well within hi* rights. So i* :he man who cannot carry an air. and yet persists in whistling discordantly all day long. "A little consideration for the feel-( ing of others goes a long way to ward preserving general contentment and preventing the friction that in variable follows a strirt Insistence on one's rights and on ob'a.ning exact Justice In a world where, 1' every-j body had his exact due. no more and no less, fewer human beings would be at large." ? Ledges Dispatch. The Memphis Commer lal Appeal ?ays the first Jackass "a me to this country on the Mayflower. Could he return today It would take him an other lifetime to count Ma progeny ? Virginian Pilot. Five thousand bottles of seized whiskey have been thrown Into the French Broad river. So far. how ever, nobody haa suggested teat Nor folk go to that stream for r. new wa ter supply. ? Pilot A St. Louis man Is suing 3 widow for one hundred thousand dollars ? for refusal to fulfil] a promise to marry him. The widow will have chosen the better part, even If she has to pay the full amount asked for. The statement that there are thir ty senators down for speeches on re ciprocity suggests that Its up to some body to call the prevloji quest Inn and cut off debates. ? Richmond News Leader. It would be a good Idea to make them ail speak at onee? It might raise the roof ? or dome?'-' Uc capftol, bat It would mto tiro. ? VtrOalra Pilot . in. 1^??? ?o fcavt thaj to sir* t'l wit !? Uways an It to batter Is fcfrrov I momm h?*? taft. A ,Uk hat. Ilk. charity, coven > multitude of sin*. Hare you ever noticed how other people waste time? Tou never beard of salary. seeking the man, did you? ^ No man la really old until he haa lost his prejudice. '? clever Jeater Is one who never Jokes with his wife. It Is s wlae worm that turns no of tener than it haa to. Some men look ahead much better than they no ahead. An artistic failure la almoet as rare sb a perfect success. My idea of a liar la a man who says he la glad he la bald. ?las. that even the artificial roee should hare Its thorns! The people who throw stonoe usual ly Ure in glass houeea. ? woman never feels fat when she can call it embonpoint. There la no grave deep enough in which to b\uj the past It takes a poet mortem to bring out eome men's good qualities. ? fault Is never so offensive as whs? H Is eome body else's. -Nohody believes the truth until he hsi found It out for hlmeelf. T%e.,waj to BM7 Street runs light through Hard WoA ?venue. to de*de which ahe shell rich sinner or a poor eatnt It is sometiiAee only a step from the ridiculous to the subfhne. There are some people to whom it la not courteous to he polite. Some men sire so shrewd that no body can believe them honest. It Is not what you give, but the way you give it. that makes the gift ? woman generally gains her point, unless It Is the point of a Joke. Some self made men look aa though they forgot to sandpaper the Job. The man who suffers from dyspep sia never dlea of a broken heart. Self-love Is the only romance that enters Into the average man's life. There Is a kind of fellow who would like to be kicked by a millionaire. Many people are busy mortgaging the future In order to acquire a past Wisdom Is more to be deelred than riches ? and a good deal eaaler to get Some people shake your hand as though they wanted to shake you. To the paying guest at the board ing house, home Is where the haah ts. Literature Is the kind of printed matter that ooly posterity will read. A woman can get more by her weak ness than a man can by his strength. If there Is anybody who deserves sympathy it is the girl who ia trying It hurts less to he cheated by a rogue than by a pillar of the church. Why is It that the other fellow s errors slways seem so funny to us? Considering bow good everybody saye he is, this Is a dreadfully wicked old world. A woman's Idea of fame is to refuse to let her name be mentioned In the newspapers. Time flies, youth flies; money flies ? and boarding-house flies are the worst of all. With the average girl, father's front porch is merely a short cut to hub by's kitchen. You would never suspect some peo. pie of being mean If they dldo? try to conceal it. Divorce represents a man's efforts to get out of the fire and back Into the frying pan. Just because a man Is chicken breasted it is no sign tftht he is chicken -heart ad. f Th? funniest part of U is #at the men who make fools ef themselves sgpiu u> enjoy it Wh? -m it that a Man fti hjs prime always thinks himself ybucgVfr than a woman In here? Some diseases are less f*t:l to the patient than to the pflppW* "<*ho hews io,llv? with Miii. imetl man where true wouldn't even touafe her hoart You may forget the man who helped you. bu< jrtxi will always remember kthe one who hindered. + It is s wise roan who enly what he ?an set. and a hteky one who gets only what he wants. You never know how popular you can be. until you have the only tele phone gn the neighborhood. _>#** Man# a man has asked a ginto share nts lot in die hope that her father would build tbem a house oo k A clever man never believes a wo man wh?n she tells him her age. And a cleverer man aiwayn believes her. Even the most conservative of men doesn't mean all he says when fee hits his thumb with the tack hae?ner. It Is a supremely honest girl who sends hack the engagement ring eyjry Ujne ahe quarrels with her best fel low. No matter how contemptible he may be. a woman always likes to think her husband isn't nearly as bad as he would hsve been if he hadn't msrrled her. Pemeveranre sometimes wins a wr> "Our colleges should teach the| writing 0f poetry," says the Colum bia State. Good Lord, fellver us.? | Virginian Pilot. Hicks' C APTT DINE Cures Sick Head* ache I Also Nsrvous Headache. Travellers Headsche snd achss from ilrip. 8to? sch Troubles or Female Ucublet. Try OmdlM ? if? liquid ? ?n?cu Immediately. Bold bjr dnnw, , ** ... ' Hew h? 0mm do n. We maj or nu not be m ntimu. Kant nation, but If we ware minded to bookie right down to It there would be silver dollars rolling along the sidewalks and porterhouse steaks left over from every dinner table. Oonr ooatt&ll battens* oost milllone of dollars s year. All neckties could be worn a month longer. Two quarts of milk can be watered to make four. A return to rag carpets would save a billion dollars a year. A little shower hurts no one, and yet we buy millions of dollars' worth of umbrellas. A beef bone .will yield soup seven different times. ' \ No man ever has a knMe In his pocket when asked for It, and yet we spend $10,000,000 a year for cutlery. Potatoes can be mashed with a brick, abB yet the Jam mere cost the country $4,000,000 a year. ? J Americans Hip waiters and servants to the tune of $6,000,000 a year. All this could go towa.*ds raising turnips. A tick stuffed wth straw makes bed that kings have slept on. . J If all the potato peellngrf now thrown away were made into taspbet^ ry jam we conk! do away '.with a thousand poor bouse*. By sitting with bed quilts around us we could reduoe the fuel bin one half. Folks gat along without forks uc to the year 16*5 and vere happy. Two raw turnips wffl fill a man up , lust as much as a $10 dinner at Del monioo'a Heels are a superfluity on boats and shoes, and yet they cost us W>, 000,000 a year. An old coat for a pillow would sad) us $6,000,000 a year in geeee feathers. A man looks at ills watch bnt once in the *we%ty-four hours, and yet the annual sales are $#30,000,000 per an num Laoe %?ca Development to M?v It is conous to know th%t lace, now almoet the unique possession of wo men, o*res its cievotepment tf not Us actual existence- to men. When lace was belm? slowly ewotvei Arm drawn work tbft Popes sad grvJt prelates of the Cburoh used it on their altar vt3tH?'ntj^ ariB robes, fostered uid uncourng# its production and {AM large ouou for K. Later lace h^nme go absolmo es sentlal a? masculine attire in nttta, in llajs, in sashes, in garters, and evep-slf b decoration af the shoetop. Under tbo Stuarts the collection of laces became a passion of the court, and noblemen were as frequently Oown for their posse?ion of rafo laoe ae for collections of valuable paintings and gems. ? 6ootamaa. J? he on Pap*. < 'When narold proposed to j Mftd Maud, "I /told him to gol ask papa." But you don't i said Manila ?Of course not. Bot_I dokso k>/e to play little >o?e Butl do 4 so i turns fnta a t Wtfen a man returns Mb a visit to his folks, his wife looks st him as much as to sajf "What have they been doing to poison your mind against me NOW?'* ] 911. in In the Superior j & Co., against Co., a Corp. ? Summons for relief. ^ State of North Caro\*aa The the Sheriff of Beaufort Coun comraanded to Lumber Company. named within your county, to the Judge of oourt to be Beaufort at Waafcftscto* N. C., Monday atte^ Ike let Mon March, it beln^ the 29th day May, ltll. and answer the com plaint, which will be deposited In the offlne of the Clerk of the Supertoi Court of aald county within the flrat three day of aald term, and let the said defendant take notice, tnat If It fall to answer the complain within the time required by law, the plain tiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Hereof fall not, and of thia sum mons make doe return. Given under my hand and seal of said court this 19th day of May, 1911 (Signed) GEO A. PAUL, C. 8. C. NOTICE. IS FURTHER GIVEN That in the said action W. W. Hook er, of Aurora, N. 6., was appointed receiver of Standard Lumber Com pany, and all creditors of the s?ill Company are hereby notified to prA-1 sent their clalma to such receiver, i duly verified, on or before the 28th day of June, 1911, tfe required by the order of court, heretofore made In said cause, or be barred of recov-. ery. % . . * This 29ttf day., of May, 1811. W. W. HOOKER. Receiver Standard Lumber Company &r29 4w. Notice of Sale Under Deed of Tract. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained In a certain deed of trust executed on the 10th day of June, 1910, by and between , S. " T. Nicholson and wife Annie E. Nich olson, to Junius O. Grimes, trustee, which said instrument Is recorded In teb office of register of deeds -of Beau fort county, in book 161, page '401, which Is hereby referred to (the gran tors In said instrument having de faulted in the payment of the indebt edness secured therein), the under signed trustees, will sell to the high est bidder for rash at the courthouse door In Beaufort county on Monday, the third day of July, 1911, at 12 o'clock M., the following described rea] estate, to-wlt: Certain pieces or tracts of land lying and being (n Beaufort county and State of North Carolina, Washington 'township, and described and defined as iollows: 19 lots In NlcholsoBTllle, ril: Lot* 109, 111,111, 1S2. 113, 1 14, 161, 164, If 6, 166, 169. 174. 178. 111. 19*, 194, 191, 201, 106. sa shown ttf plat made by It T. Bonner of a rfter! mat! Actually buy tntrlght tfca tlO? OUewr Tyiwwr.tef tof S?Tantean-C?ta-a-Day? Yaa, air ? that', the propoaltlooon tlx new cii-.ie, the Standard VMhle Writer. " ? !? W? not only Invite too ? we am you ? to take ?)n atut at -i BnUMMMMDv Purehaae P*n. J TMa Plaa waa ?atiaa4 tor tw ttne&t ot the man* tt.VL.Mnuv who ?n ratlni.nuUw ot 4 In MlUni Jou'nn Ollrar Typewriter w# mat* jtf.t mrt* mm huf w?y. A ?mall 0Mh mw?l brtnys the mathlm .re ??) tnU/ wait while jon pay at t?a rate ot Snaal a^a-Crate-n-'ar "? ~\ES?K, ?iSS.'S-SK."-, *%t -one* are Infinitesimal. The pnbllo has justified our confidence in an Impressive manner that today we are Just as glad to hook orders on the "Ppnny Plan" as we a*o Cor all cash In advance. SWIFTEST, 8TBONOE8T, SIMPLEST $100 T*rFWn?TKlt The speed of the Oliver sets a pace that has never yet cee"n y-r ed. lu strength and endu ance are ^ch that It eerve* >o i effic iently for a lifetime. No other machine In the no ? ?\*?e .,io- ?.rep with the simplicity, for wife do away with hundr*?'lF , t ,. -r on other standard typewriters. The first crude model r f tt>e i: tar T writer waa built from an old wash-boiler and t??e t -ne ?? ;?>?-??? prlnt-ehop. The machine waa a curious lobkln* > ???? the principles embodied in Its design were destined S revolt t "ni^ the typewriter world, _? ? ? '? 1 / ;',v] rHfcr MODEL Ma 8 wm WORLD'S APPUUtt ThlB model has captivated the public by tU wealth of exclusive features which save time and effort, add scores of n*w uses and give tremendous gains In efficiency. The new "coat of tnsil" pro tects important working parts " from dost, gives sdded sirmtfih and stability. The Disappearing Indicator shows exact printing pclat and ducks wlren type strikee the paper. The Vertical and. HorlsontaJ Line-Ruling Device la a wonderful convenience. The Automatic Tabulator and the Line-Ruler are Twin Devices. Each supplements and completes the other, in tabulating. Invoicing The Balance Shifting Mechanism the Automatic Paper Pingers, and all kinds of statlstlcsl work, the Paper Register, the Back Spacer and other innovations pot the finishing touch of perfection to this Incomparable writin* machine. You get all these immensely valuable Improvements, \r tht?tt add - tional cost, when yon boy the Oliver Typewriter for Seventeen -Cent, a-day! ' SEND FOR BOOK AlfD M17*CENTS-A-DAX" OFFER %'OWJ We have told yon, very briefly about the Machine and the Plan.' Free Books, giving Stalls In full, are yours for the asking, if you are. a salarlsd worksr, the use of the Oliver Typewriter wtll Increa*e your afflclency end force you to the front. It has helped thousands to better salaries and more lmpo;tant positions. If you are In bus iness for yonrsslf, moke the Oliver your silent partner and.lt will do its fnli share towards the development and success of your en terprise. Whether >oa wish to take advantages of the. 8even|pen CentS-a-Day Offer or not, you should have a copy of the Oliver Rook apd become . better acquainted With the typewriter that has tnsde Itself indispensable to the business world ?and broken all .records ;ln sales. If you owa "any old typewrmr/',jre WU! accept It in l'?u i of the fttit payment on the Oliver Typewriter. , ? Tour machine Is ready for immediate delivery. Address, all com munications to ' Sales Department OLIVER TYPEWRITER <&? Oliver Typewriter Duildlag, Chicago. ? ' known as' the "Race Track," contain ing twenty-nine (19) acres. (Since the execution of this deed of trust tbe "Race Track" property hai been di vided lnt,o lots and certain of said lots hare been conveyed to O. Rumley on Jnne l*th, 1910,' which Is record ed In hook 181. page 421. of Beau Thli the 19th day o< May. 1911 ? JUNIUS D. OR I MBS, ' - 3^ ?? " V Trustee. tho highest bidder, at loon, on June I?th, 1811, *11 or that lot or parcel of land situated In that part of the city at Waahlngtan. Norta Carolina, known as "McNalr Town" ami hem* designated aa lot number eighty-one, lying on the Norl* aide or Jlaln at., and being the aame con vo/ed to Ju lia JK. Bright by John O. Blount, by 1?M arlei' Ucy l?th, I >37. di:'? recorded In aald register's office in hook 96, page 570, which Is hereby referred to;, and conveyed by R. o. Brown aad wife to Catharine- I,. Blount, by deed dated Ma? 3d. 1SH8, duly recorded In aald register's oft1' In Book page BU. and atWr warda conveyed by aald Catharine U Blount and husband ta H. R. Bright/ by doed dated July lit, Itl' : recorded In said reglster'a 0IT-- ' book 76. page ago, all ct ?hle'' -? ? I hereby referred to; sarlA* ami ceptlng thereout that certain ^hereof conveyed by 1?I<1 H. it end wire to S iltn U. 11 i n by deed dated February 13 l$f5, and duly rui i je.i ht raid later'! ?office In tre>. t.i. p, z , whleh l? die* re'T.e,; Nicholson Hotel Building U> Catjr bu rMcb?d the Oif i?ln? ? pollc# ?hul*up.