I 1 Green, Tj
ramv, MAV S. 1912.
?m? Me
-IteMn, lb. lie
Ifriiildrtcfco? 12 Vic aad lk
Quia cMekos. cask Sic to 10c
Uoft afclm. aach 19cloS9?
fliilhiM 6c to lie
Hop iUm, each 30c to 59c
&>;' Off flat ildoii. >*r 11* 14c
E* Mcj aait kitlca. per lb He
Urr atlffl, d'ged. per lb 4c to 4c
a. a P(m 91.19
a* r- 91.79
KM 9170
Oreo* hide*. k
tiMea. Be
f Hear abi? tint 2 Be
iter aithi salt 16c
F WW*
OK S.1LK I NDHl MORTTf
&XGFL
Cinter and by virtue of a power of
sate cMtained in a roort^age frecu
' Tii? y T wr dated October 10th.
IMS to V. P. I-atham. and recorded
m Ink IBS page 286 of the Registry
mt Beaufort County, which said
untzscr was to secure the bond
thovwm recited, and default having
(been made iu the payment of said
hud, 1 will sen for caah to the highYOUR
OPP
I For Profita
* r=^rr? - :
The season's latest deve:
the largest assortment of
Tlx 15c lot bow reduced to 10c tf
IVc 25c loi now reduced to 19c j
Tfee 20c lot now reduced to J 5c It
Auothec^ot Men's ai
200 Styles to Select From
, N
^^saUGHT RUNNINO
IWxlloiiie Sewing MacfcinfS
I'jisv Pa}^^p.
The Uncle Sam Watch
i Has no Equal For
K si.oo
We* B. V. I). C.itewcar tor com
K tar We have them hi union suit
and eo union.
The May Edison Rec
Call and Hear t
? | RUSS
^ THE PICTUI
(> IF YOU ARE GOING
I THE CHESA
m DAILY SERVICE U
( I MUT m* w uli
g\ taMlaabalaol
gl |
Igured Effecb
an and Laven<
15c Yd.
K. HO^V
sst bidder at the Court Houm door
In Beaufort Bounty at Washington N.
a. o> the fourth day of If ay 1912 at
IS o'clock M. the following described
tract of land:
"My Intercut consisting of 6)4
acres In Jame Lenear deecased estate
aa plotted by J as. P. Latham in
a surrey for division. It being designated
on plot as lot No. .S" Terms
"'l^bTAprl^Srd. 1912.
F. P. LATHAM.
Mortgagee.
By W. D. Grimes, attorney.
A A l.alr 4wV ,
AJ?oTtl?c la the Dally News.
NOTICE
We. the undersigned, having been
appointed by the Board of County
Comm tan loners of Beaufort County
to onsen and list property in the
Town of Washington for County taxation.
do hereby giro qotlce that we
will sit at the office of John H. Bonner.
in the Town of Washington,
from May 1st, to June 1st. from 9
A. M. to 4:30 p. m., each day (Sundays
excepted), for the purpose of
taking the tax lists and re-assessing
such property as has been increased
or diminished In value during the
past year from May 1st, 1911 to May
1st. 1912.
This 1st day of May. 1912.
W. B. WINDLEY,
J. H. BONNER.
County aseessore for the Town of
Washington.
6-1 30 dc.
Adwrtine in the Dally News.
ORTUNITY
ble Buying
?????
lopments are to be had In
hosiery at big reduction.
We also have about One Hundred
and Twenty-five more pairs of 50c
Hosiery reduced to - 25c
. _
(id Boys Sample Hats.
at One Half Regular Price.
iVf awing, the yard 12 l-2c
Boys Bloomer Pants 19c
Boys Overalls 25c
Good luck Overalls
cut full for $1.00
Mens Canvass gloves 10c
Nickel Clocks 75c
We have another
lot Plow Shoes $1.00
" USf
ords are Now on Sale
he Latest Music.
BROS.
IE FRAMERS. ^
1 NORTH TRAVEL VIA )
lPEAKE LINE ]
VCLUDING SUNDAY >
I l? mttW, the "CITY OF NOR. J
1MOTO." ere the aost ekftat f
mm Wwiitk m*6 IUIUextre. I
he? h ?ack rtxm Dellcfcma I
M ?.). ?:U ^ . (
I
w. . ruanuuc. p. h, S
r ' .,
5/ Colors
ier
"t l
Wind Storms
AND
Tornadoes
;?
will come again. Accidents
will again happen to
AUTOMOBILES.
Call up Bmgmw today and get the protection
you know you ought to have.
Wm. BRAGAW & CO.
First Insurance Agents
WASHINGTON. N. C.
L. 1
CHURCHES TURN TO PAPERS
Action of Religious Denominations a
Striking Tribute to Efficacy
of Advertising.
It is a striking tribute to the efff- ;
eacy of newspaper advertising that
one after another great forms of industry
or thought which seek to secure
the widest publicity turn to it J
as the ideal medium in securing the ,
attention of those they aim to reach.
This holds true, says the Philadelphia
Record, of those who have wares to
sell, such as merchandise, insurance
or services, but also of those who addrcBS
themselves more especially to
the emotional ?r religious nature of
men and Women. ,
It is not strange, therefore, to find
that the churches 4ipe appreciating
more and more the value of newspaper
advertising, especially in their
mission work. The United Presbyterians.
for instance, have been so impressed
by the results of a campaign
of newspaper advertising that they
have decided to continue it as a part
of their methods of raising money for
mission work.
Other denominations have taken up
the subject, one Interdenominational
official group planning to spend |50,000
within six months in newspaper
advertising. Another group of business
men interested in foreign missions
decided to devote another J60.000
to a year's propaganda of this
I phase of church work. At the same
I time, in connection with the Men and
Religion Congress in Washington next
April, a Publicity Commission, on
which are experts in newspaper adrer
using as wen as puoiiBners ano editors,
is making a scientific study of
the whole subject of the churches and
the newspapers.
What benefits the churches in the
way of publicity will help the business
man even more, for the results
arc likely to be more tangible and
direct.
Urges Advertising the Gospel.
Rev. Aquilla Webb, pastor of a
Presbyterian church of Louisville,
Ky . told the ministers attending the
Presbyterian Home Mission confer!
ettce at Kansas City the Qther day.
j that he Is a strong believer in adj
vertislng.
| "I had been having some ulfflculty
i in getting .any number of people out
! to my Sunday evening service," he
i said. "I decided to advertise.
| "With the help of the newspapers
and by preAchlug truth harnessed to
life cn live topics 1 succeeded in
packing my church every night."
Plan to Brand Advertising,
Official branding of advertisements.
I thus guaranieeing their trustworthiness.
is being considered, by the Advertising
Men's league of Nev, York,
at the suggestion of E. P. Treft of
Chicago. No details -as to how the
scheme is to be brought down to a
j practical basis have been prepared,
but the idea of some system whereby
the brand of reliability may be placed
|{ officially upon such advertising as Is
{found deserving has met with wide
I spipp-d approval from advertising
uiea.
Competition Eliminated.
} | The eleventh-hour resolution of the
Steel Trust to divest Itaelf ol a part
of Its ore holdings was a confession of
guilt. The Steel Trust dominates the
markets for billets and other baste
steel products, rallB, steol plates, tlnpl&tdr
wire, and structural Iron as
completely aa the Oil Trust dominates
the market for petroleum and Its various
derivatives. Petroleum prices are !
fixed by a few men, who meet occa-1
slcnally In a- tall buirOhn^on lower
Broadway; steel pnJCes are discussed |
and arranged aty?ary dinners. Com- j
petition baa absolutely nothing to do
with the matter;nt Is completely cllm-'
Inated.?Philadelphia Record.
Kindred Gloom a.
Says the Chinese emperor In an imperial
edict:
"I have reigned three years, and
have always acted conscientiously In
the Interests of the people. But 1
have not employe# men properly, as I
am without political skill 1 have employed
too many nobles In oflelal positions.
The people are gram Mine
yet I do not knew. Oleasters leom
ahead, but I do not see."
Of what other dUtlngntshsd head ef
mind yea?
. "2 7#.'
II
1?
PROTEST OP ITKIU4 CORPORATION
IE AMURO.
Workmen Have Not R^on Benefited,
but th? Ravaraa, by the Operstlona
of the Olant Company?
- Figures Prove It.
Mr. Qary, of tbe United State#
Steel corporation, la a wonderful buninaaa
executive, aa also Is Mr. Caraegte,
but at tlmea botb make some
axceedingly trite utterances. Subsequent
to the aolt against the corpornHon
Mr. Qary was quoted:
"If any ham results, It will fall
Rpon the stockholders and employe#,
aggregating a very large number, and
any loan, to them must be deplored."
Neither was It especially original
In Mr. Carnegie to ezpreas solicitation
for the stockholders when the
even tenor of $38 rails and 90 per
cent.of the steal trade generally was
disturbed. Professed consideration for
stockholder and amployo has kmg
been a clause In the trust's decalogue.
Hepoe the criticism of these gentle- i
men's comments as trite. Somehow
or^ other this worry over what will fa
happen to the employe vaguely re- to
rain da us of the familiar shibboleth, tc
"Let us alone," which was last expressed
by Mr. Morgan's man. Perkins,
In his Big Business speech at *
Detroit. C
uut to return to Mr. Oary, in tfie in
one sentence Quoted may be found
tbe kernel of the nation's protests
against tbe trusts and tbe tariff from (C
which they bare sprung Shifting tbe gj
blame, shifting tbe burden, shirting st
tbe loss?are'familiar enough to re-x
quire no comment. Each time tbe
tariff bas been threatened or an ef- h
fort made to enforce the Sherman ?
law. the placard?"remember tbe y
worklngman"?has been held up in
warning. It is of close kin to the
Standard Oil fines of several years ?c
go. when retail prices were raised In w
keeping with the court's sentence. It |n
ranks with the American Tobacco
company's solution of the SpanishAmerican
war tax?a reduction in the m
size of tbe packages, which size has tl
never been restored. o
And the tariff, surely, by this same
reasoning, la for the benefit of the
worklngmen?for the trusts* em- j,,
ployes especially; that Is why* the A
trusts have clung so tenaciously, to n,
the good old standpat schedules. That
the trusts themselves prospered was,
of course, merely Incidental. Now tt
comes the employe as the great suf y
ferer by trust dissolution. Tbe United y
States Steel corporation points to Its
system of profit sharing and pen- _
stoning, to Its beneficent 'treatment ~
of the thousands on its pay roll. Yet
In this connection we recall the findings
of the so-called Pittsburg' Survey,
published last May by the Russell
Sage foundation. This report
showed that from the time of the corporation's
inception the cause of
labor, organized and open, had been bj
losing; that working hours bad been |0
lengthened and that the wage increase m
boasted of bad fallen below tbe Increase
In the cost of living. The
steel trust was not organized for the ?'
benefit of its employes, Mr. Gary nob k
withstanding.?Indianapolis News. n
A Washington dispatch refers to the |C
wishes of the "southern Republicans" ^
?meaulng. of course, the little hand- ^
ful of federal office holders in the
south.
tl
Defenders of Tariff of 1909. s<
The tariff act of 1909 has been !n- J B,
restlgatcd by Eeveral competent and I ^
disinterested persons. Tbe results of
their investigations may be found In
Miss Tarbell's "Tariff in Our Own
Times," In Professor Taussig's "Tar- c
Iff History of the United States." In
Professor Conian's "Industrial History c
of the United States," and in various I ^
magazine article of Importance, In- g
eluding Prof. Willis' articles in the
Journal of Political Economy, and an
exceptionally thorough study in the a
Review of Reviews.
All of these Investigators agree that f
the revision was farcical. ^
The only defenses of the act have q
come from such sources as members q
of the ways and means committee and a
the wool trust, which prints an _
elaborate puff of schedule K In the
current Issue of the Outlook?as an
advertisement.
?S
One does not know whether to con- C
demn or praielf the Paris opera strikers.
It all depends on the opera. 1
Russia has Imprisoned a man for
writing a volume of poems. Over *
here we merely let our poets starve to
death. a
????? a
The peach crop having been killed q
twice already, we may be Justified" In a
counting* on a heavy preserving season j.
next fall. j
d
Go After It jj
i'
If there's something you o
want and lack of energy i,
holds you hack, maybe your J
fnnrl 1 n ol- c tl-? o "an nrmr" olr> C
swum v. no iijv, vuvi^J vi*jments.
E
Grajfe-Nuts
ii
POOD \
means energy to <26 thing? end
get things.
Try a dish with cream as t]
part of your breakfast and e
notice how things brighten. #
"There's a Ream" J
for v
v ' ^ -Vo-Vf r?*v 'v-*
ch<
jT
Wm TV
"The Home o! Good (3otb
laiwer California, ha ring permanentlo?t
Ita revolution, baa turned again
bull lighting aa the only aatlafac*
VT aubstltute.
The tipping evil baa readied a point
here It ahould atop. A waiter In
bicago got an belreaa; alao, another
Philadelphia.
With piicea continually eoartng be?re
long our aclentiata will have to
Ive their attention to finding a aubitute
for food.
Italy's war expense la a million dolirs
a day. To get an idea of the
oonnoue cost reduce a million dollts
to spaghetti.
The thermometers are bravely atriv)g
to become normal again and if the
eather forecasters will qnlt forecasttg,
all will be well.
One doctor who writes for the mag- !
sines says an automobile Is a tine
ding for catarrh. He doesnt say bow
rten It should be taken.
One girl married a baseball player
acanse he made so many home sobs.
11 players who make home runs do
at at once run home, however.
One large railroad has ordered that
a pencil sharpeners be discarded.
7e accept this as another Indication
Hat the world is growing better.
f?
MUST BELIEVETT
Tien Well-Known Washington People
Tell It So Plainly.
When public endorsement Is made
r a representative citizen of Waahigton
the proof is positive. You
ust believe it. Read this testilony.
Every backache sufferer,
rery man, woman or child with any
idncy trouble will And profit In the
Hiding.
J. B. Peed, E. Second St., Wash- ;
igton, N. C., says: "Backache
othered me and there were pains
cross my loins. These symptoms pf
idncy trouble showed that somoitng
must be done. The kidney
xrellons were aleo Irregular in pasage
and contained sediment. I' used
so boxes of Doan'B Kidney Pills as
Ireoted and they ontirely relieved
w n uoeq joaau snq aaaqj, era
urrnco of my complaint." ^
For sale by -all dealers. Price 50
ents. Foster-Milburn (?o., Buffalo,
few York, sole agents for the United
tates.
Remember the name?Doau's?
nd take no other.
OR FETOIUSRKESS AXD ACHING
Whether from''Malarious cop II '.on
olds or overheating, try l'tefcD
IAPUDINE. It reduce the fever
,nd relieves the achlnv Tt'o Llqtill
* NOTICE
ronrw Carolina, uBitrroRi
!OUNTr.
In th? Superior Court May Term,
912.
. T. R. Johnson,
vs.
lenrietta Johnson.
The Defendant. Henrietta Johnson,
bove named will take notice that an
ctlon as above has been commenced
r? the Superior Court of Beaufort
lounty, State of North Carolina, to
bsolve the bonds of matrimony exiting
between the Plaintiff. J. T. R.
obnsen and the Defendant. Heoritta
Johnson, and for an absolute
ivorce:
Now, therefore, let the Bald Deendant,
Henrietta Johnson take noice,
that ahe, the sdid Henrietta
ohnaon. the Defendant above named
? required to appear at May 27 term
f the Superior Court of Beaufort
iounty to be held In the Court House
i the County of Beaufort and City
f Washington, Sate of Norh CaroIna
and to answer or .demure to the
omplalnt in said action, or the
lalntiff, J. T. R. Johnson will apply
5 the Court for the relief demanded
i said complaint.
rhis 16th day of April. 1911.
GEO. A. PAUL.
Clerk Superior Court,
idword L. 8tewart, Attorney for
Iplntlff, J. T. R. Johnson,
law 4wc.
*
KXBCXTOR8 5 OTI CI
H.vtn. thla day qiialidad before
lie Clerk of the Superior Court of
eeufort County ue Executor to the
ut wHI of Claudiu Spencer, deceaed,
thla la to notify all peraonh baric
Claim, ucalost the eald eaute
o preaent the eaute for payment to
he undertime* within one year from
hi, data, or thl, notloe will be pleadd
In bar of their recovery, all perone
Indebted to eald eatate are oott
1 . I 1 ' I ' L - ill " 1
DEPARTMENT VALUES 11
We have secured by buying straight from the I
unufacturerS to us souhe of the greatest values that
e market can produce,
*iSk to see stock No. 12168 II Stock No. 12106 is a Serge I
a too with a small Stripe in jj? an extra fine weave. $8 and I (I
4.751 ?MT"' 5.75 I J
good values at $10, $5.75 II belt straps and side straps. I
ALL WE ASK IS A COMPARISON IN QUALITY
es." WINDOW DISPLAY I 4
fjos. F. TAYLOEl
Phones 12#*& 124. 120 Market St ^
Carries the Most Complete Line of 4
Family Groceries.
ALWAYS FRESK AND RELIABLE
Polite Clerks and
Quick Delivery. J
imaBOMsaHaaBBaBaMMMBMaJ M
REDUCED RAXES
Confederate Reunion ^
Macon, Georgia May. 7th-9th, via* S
ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD
**vThe Standard Railroad of the Son till
* J Jl SELLING DATES
- ?**' May 6th, 6th, 7th and 8th 1912.
FINAL LIMIT J
To reach original starting point not later than midnight of M
May 15th, 1912, unlees ticket deposited for eztenaion, by original
purchaser with Joe. Richardaon, Special Agent, No. 414 Fourth
Street, Macon Ga., not later than May 16th, and upon payment fee
of 50 centa. limit may be extended to June 5th, .1912.
For information with reference schedules, reservations, etc.,
call on local ticket agent, or address
T. C. WHITE.
General Passenger Agent, Wilmington, N. C..
engraved]
Wedding Invitations ' ;
Visiting Cards |
Correspondence
STATIONERY. i
Write f-'or Samples and Prices 11 I
7=" THE DAILY NEWS 1 4
Are InvUedJto
call and see a JOB DEPARTMENT fl
complete line < r 11 %
of samples. Water Street, Washington, N. G. (ft
| ====j 4
CYRIC THEATKfe i
TONIGHT 1
AMATEURS TONIGHT. M
r-iu * *ji\td* 1-n.vFuri^^ivi.
"alkal ike's love affair,"
Another SnakcvHlc Comedy.
"indian blood," v" <j .
A Talc of Indian Day*, y g
"lilly's lovers," - a
Another Biograph Comedy. ^
It's A Classy Comedy Bill. See It
Mallnec Saturday 3 toB P. M.
Coming, Monds^Tueadsy, WeAieaday. "THE FOUR MINSTREL
Coming, Friday, May 10th, TEMPTATIONS OF A GREAT cWy" [.
b Reals *
Coming, Friday, May^l7tfc/*DAIfTE'8 INFERNO."
J M????tM ? |