^ * '
! 7T~~~
P'raitt:1
' Jsmss
MR HACKNEY 1NIERVIEWED 1
In an interview with llr. George
N Hackney yesterday he states that the
prices of dairy foods are soaring
very day and that there la no profit
at all In the milk business at the
- present prices; that It appears that 4
the people of Washington do nit 1
appreciate the fact that at a ooet of S
between twelve and fifteen thousand c
dollars he has given to Washington c
v dairy second to nohe in the south,, *
which is acknowlelged J>y the State
Agricultural department to be -the 1
best equipped in North Carolina, not 1
excepting the . Vanderbllt dairy _ at, 1
Blltmore. Every modern appliance
which money can purchase has been d
Installed, in this dairy; every cow a
in the herd has been tuberculin test* f
ed; every bottle is sterilised in the b
dairy; no human hand touches the 1
milk, for the cows are nriiked by the t
Sharpies Mechanical Milker, ac- v
knowledged to be the. best mode to
anj me dairy is screened through- *
out snd the workmen wear absolute- d
ly clean white dnck suits and rubber
glttves, lu order to keep the cows'
bag end udders from being contam '
lnated In any way. Ai soon as the ,
mllk^ Is taken fropi the oow. It U
V cooled In a standard areator, then
bottled and sealed. After the re
quired amount to meet the demandr
of the retail trade is bottled all th?
remaining milk is then run through
the steam separator and the crqan
Is then bottled for that trade, th A.".
skimmed milk being fed to younf
calves. If there is any surplus ol
cream left on hand it Is put In the
electric butter churn and made lnt ?
butter.
A plant of this kind means an
enormous outlay of money and was
established by Mr Harkney not as (
an investment but through civic
pride, hoping that it would prove a
( benefit to the Citizens; especially to
f young battler who suffer so greatly'
unknown -to anyone through the
fact that they are fed with tuberculin
and contaminated milk coming
from cows. In fllth^ stalls x where
flies have possibly been allowed to
play and bathe In it for some time
On account-of the-fact that our clt
have not patronized this dairy
as they should,, preferring to buy
contaminated .ttftT&'rpt a less -price
from cowb which, probably have
never been tested for tuberoiilln
germs, Tl has been a losing proposition
tq Mr. Hackney He states, be- <
ginning Monday, Deccmbj?.lS, that
the prices of his dairy products will
.be an follows: 1 pint t>f milk 6c'; 1
quart of milk, 12c, 9 quarts or IS
pints Dt U11IK, A ftf>OK or o&
quarts for fC.00;* cream 30c per
pint, 00c per quart; batter. 45c per
sold on credit, cash in advance will
hound. None of the products will be
be required of all customers. In order
to ret a line on iwhat hie trade
will be they are offering books of
66 quarts tickets or forty pint tickets
for $6. If any one desires books
of this kind they can mall ehefcq to
Mr. Geprge Hackney, Jr., for the
amount desired and a coupon book
will be mailed to the customer. As,
stated before thig dairy was established
through civic pride and should
be liberally patronized by the citizens.
Mr. Hackney states that at ]Lhe
beginning he issued a great many
coupon ticket books on credit and at
this time a great many of these accounts
stand unooliected. On acL.
count of this the terms in the future
j>fr will be cash in advance to every one.
?
You should see our attractive
Christmas line of men's neckwear at
20c and OOc. All the latest novelties
in velvet and silk four-in-hands in
rich colors, and excellent values, at
the prloe. J. K. HOYT. i
H '. . 1 I
I Aallgloue Foaling In Railway Guide. i
; Although tha proTlaton "D/ V." haa i
inarar figured on railway time tablea. J
a cloee examination of Bradahaw re- I
veela a traoa at atrong reltgiona foaling.
On tha cover tha montha arc r? i
tarred to hy thalr namarala?'let mo." tor
January, "lnd ma" tor February ,
and ao on. .
Bradahaw aa a Quaker objected to '
taking tha namea of tha montha CRM i
heathen emperore and dattlng, and thla |
. prejudice haa beam perpetuated alnoe j
tha drat laana of the Uma table ear- .
5 "A - 1 amtytwo year a ago?From tha London i
Lfjjjk fjipBfff j ,: .
I OIMAM OtOTHBB OUtAUBB I
than nay other , cleaner eleane <
tham clean. Wrlghfe , , ,
, ll-1-toah.'rl ,
'*yz
K,^. ->V. -i; \)y% : ?yK f.,
' eK \ ;.
" i
I - tvx
- ^==
i.iim ta |
ti nits
~ribute to Memory of Late Sidney
Porter Who Won Honor
in Literary World.
Wednesday afternoon. December
. twenty -ladles met at the resilence
of Miss LI da T, Hodman for
he purpose of ' completing the or
anlsation of a new literary and solal
club. As a tribute to the metary
of the lata. Sidney Porter, a
forth Carolinian who wdh honor
nd distinction in the literary world,
t was unanimously decided to name
he new organisation the "0. Henry
look Club." . j
It goes without saying that many
ellghtful and profitable afternoons
re In store for the clnb. That the ?
rue O. Henry spirit, with Its genial
umor. Its healthful rlalon and brllancy
of intellect, majr prevail In all ^
ie works of the club Is the earnest Q
lBh of the promoters. d
There will-be ataother meeting at ?
he home of Mlstr Rodman on Thurs- cj
ay afternoon next at 8.30 o'clock. 11
o
. r<
HIT BAN ON "MOSQUITOES" %
This 8tory Should Convince 8keptlcs ^
as to 8l*o and Ferocity of the T
New Jersey 8pecle?. ^
A struggling young artist in New ?
fork who, last summer, felt 111 and f,
leepondent, decided that if he were
o accomplish anything during the '
oping winter, he must have a vacalofl
in the country. Accordingly, he
epaired to a New Jersey resort in
he hope of being able to obtain reluced
rates.
"Well," said the old chap, who ran $
he place, "I can't see why I should >tJ
ake you for less money than the
there; hut I tell you what 1'U do.
fou paint me a nice, fancy picture a
>f the hotel and grounds, and I'll fire n
r<m a month's board."
The young artist set cheerfully c
LbovU the task. In ja short while be a
lubmitted for his host's approval a| v
ilghly idealized plcturo of the little j r
ioubo and its grounds. To one of j t(
he outbuildings he had added a dove-! j,
?te, round which several birds, which j t,
he discerning -eye might have seen j
vere doves, were hovering. I n
The landlord didn't think mnch of j 0
his effort. "The picture as a whole," | ?
aid he, ."ain't half bad, bnt I can't j e
itand for these mosquitoes. You must jj
>alnt them out, or the bargain's off.
They're calculated to scare folks off
nstead of attraction' them here"?
llustratod Sunday Magazine. *
I d
? i"
rhoca Used In the Alps Are 8elected c
for Strength, Reliability and 8
Lightness. , c
The rope tised by Alpine climbers is t>f
special manufacture, combining ma *1
'ar as possible the different qualities 8
>f strength, flexibility and lightness. 8
Three qualities are In general use, *
>efng made from Sisal, Italian and h
flanlla hemps respectively, and oec* c
ilonally, when'cost Is not a considera- 0
Jon, of silk. The latter, though very
Ight and strong, ip not so durable *s
he others. That which finds most fa
ror among British monntalneoern 'la c
mown as Buckingham's Alpine rope. 1
:t is made of the beat Manila hemp. p
In the year 1804 a committee of the "
Uplne club made teata upon a numbei h
>f ropbs suitable for mountaineering, k
the tth> that were approved one 1<
vas made of Italian hemp and the 1)
>ther of Manila. They both had s t
breaking strain of two tons and sua
aiaed the weight of a 170-pound man o
ifter falling from a height of ten feet f<
Non-mountaineers have sometimes d
considered this Insufficient, but It la ii
ilghly problematical whether the hu
nanv anatomy could survive the sudlen
compression ef a thin rope aria
ng from any greater fall.?Fry's Mag- f<
ixlne. r
?? n
False Teeth an Italian Invention- ^
No doubt the statement 9f a firm of ?
manufacturers that they sell oyer 12, ?
^W.WWW ASl*t> ? /?*?. f? WW |
rounded, since everyone use# them *
Lheee days. It sedma, bowevdr, to recan
to memory the fact that the 'use .
3f artificial teeth Is Just a little over
% hundred yean old.
The first tfuceessful maker was Qtueleyenaelo
Fonxi, aj). ItfilaB dentist
who started practice In. .Paris la 17ff,
ud. thanks to his skillful treatment "
yt Lucieu Bonaparte, soon made hia J
way. After years Of experiment he ?
discovered die substance from which "
artificial teeth are ftill made, and re
wired the (old raedel of the French ?
Academy of Science. One of the eerlt et
peroone fitted with telee teeth wu ?
the emprete of Ktteele. After WeterMo
IMna mtnmna to London, end ?
then to Medrtd. Where Mrdlnend m ?
>f Speln. rewarded Mm with e yearly
peneton of e thoueaag dncnW tor ? ,,
let of Mine teeth. b
' " usmassnp^11-"\ i,'* s j|
?? 1?
1 - - 1
7 WASHING TO >
L. _
mmmam
lie Big Song Hit "Come to Me
at the I
No Affidavits with This Story.
?I I av IUO /BiU gUCB, IU U1UOlate
the intelligence of the collie, telle
f onp which was possessed with the
eslre to take his naps on a bed in a
srtaln room. Each time his' master
lught him on the bed he would pun-j
h him. 80 effectual was this that the ]
>Ilie could often be found In that
>om, to be sure, but sleeping lnno
antly In some corner on the floor,
uspectlag him, his master put his
sad on the bed one day andfflndlng
warm, he punished the collie again,
he following day, missing the deg.
s tiptoed up the stairs to the samo
>om and entering stealthily hel
lund the collie standing *?lth his |
1 re pawn on the bed blowing on the|
>ot where he had been lying, to
i>ol it off?Pram Elizabeth Golduith's
"Toby, the Story of a Dog."
Favors Putting Gravity to Work. I
**It is only a question of tlme,"j
Idactically began the professor, "un*,
1 gravity la put to work pumping]
ater to irrigate arid lands and per-!
Arming other tasks. It will do'the
rork now done by many men and a
mltitude of horsee, and?' "Good
otlon!" mordaciouBly snapped, the
lid-Codger. "There is witbogt doubt
nough gravity loafing around In this
iclnlty in the course of a year to
each from hero to the moon. I refer
> the deep, portly gravity that lives
l comfort because the rest of us mi#
ike unctlouH turgidity for great wlv
pm. This goes for the average states
lah, the organizer of new fraterna
rdets, the gentleman who inflict lyct
m courses on us,' and that solemn
mpty son-in-law of mine, dad-bun
lm! **
Cellar Danger.
The legislature of the stafe""of Mis
ourl some time ago passed a law un
er which the basement living room
% now passing qu$ of exUUwoe.?lias
been observed^ that a home in th?
ellarage. whatever it may be foi
ome kinds of vegetables, greatly in
reases the death rate Among the chil
ren" who are compelled to occupy
hem. There are some such "homes"
aJndlanapplLa._ThBre are also places
.here children?not of the public
choola?are taught -In basements
rhero the air is not pure and where
onest daylight gives place to aftifilal
light which must needs injure the
yeaight of the pupils.
Wanted a Change.
"John." said Mrs. Hutterton, as the
lock struck eleven, "did you lock
he kitchen door?" "Yes." "And
ut the cat out of doors?"'' "Yes!"
And set the rubber tree Inside the
iall?" "Yes!!" "Well, I want the
Jtchen door left unlocked so that the
i?man can get In early In the morntig.
I told him I'd leave the key on
he window sill. And you'd better
hut thfe cat In the basement to clear
ut the mice. And It's warm enough
t>r the robber tree to. stand out of
oofs tonight. There's a shower c?rung
up that will do It good."
EcHpse for TouHst Morgan.
Jaoob Junk of Downs has claims on
?me, exclusive or nia naxne. Mr. Junk
eceutly returned from a visit In cerlany
on'the steamer Potsdam, one of
he vessels which vent to the rescue
f the burning Vcjlturno and picked nil
lnety of the crew and paasengerSr It
? to i?e hoped that this vtll silence
he puerile hid for notoriety being
mda by W. T. Morgan. Mr. Morgan
ame home from Europe claiming to
aue witnessed the rescue In mldocean
f the crew of a water-logged fourmater.?Kansas
City ,S^ar. ,
Not Pleasant for' Dog.
- Too were shooting this morning?"
sked Smith. "Yes. I had to hill my
Og,". answered Jones. "Was be
sad?" asked Smith. *" rWsB." said
ones, "be "didn't seem any too well
leased."?Livingston Laaoa
OVT RAiL TO WStifStBVAN' '-i.
' TAOK iv
f bit batt-prlo mtuinsrr ule
t T. K. Hoyt'i Hi lllMhr.
if trimm*4 h*U. All ibtpM ul
-lmmlnca, will to At Hi b?ll forNT
prtMB, .
,r if*1*: t, -X*rys- ? v- V -V
- t
PyBMi1'! 1 1
DM!
mlr tontsi: t aoi "Vk'adiiaadtjr. No c
c.. ^L'tsuATiPxea-sooN. i
?Sflr'' ' 35
" in the Big l aughing Song Pis
few The iter, Wednesday, Dect
CHAMBER OS COMMERCE <
There will be a meeting of
the Chamber of Commerce at
their S-ooms in the Baugham
buitding this evening at eight
o'clock. Thia ia the regular
monthly meeting i(nd every
member is urged to attend as *
buaineaa of importance ia sched
uled to be transacted. All Inter
ested citizens not mekibers are *
cordially Invited. '
SOME REMARKS ON INCOMES
Pertinent Juet Now When the 8ubjed
la a Matter of General
. PlKunlnn ,,
Incomes are now being taxed. It Is
therefore, desirable that something
should be known about them. An in
come la anything which ?yon can no
live upon expressed in terms of law
fHi money. Lawful money, la anything
which will be accepted by the mom
bars of a state legislature^ y^poUc
captain, or your -ffrewnSr wen
created for two purposes; to lie aboui
I and to live beyond. Many people wfii
I will not have to pay any are complain
Ing to their friends and neighbors
I about the way they are oppressed b]
tM Income tax. This is one of thoa*
l&tural phenomena which no sclenlis
oas been able to explain.
Incomes vary in size* according tt
how many people have worked for yoi
in the past or are working for you ai
present No income is without honci
somewhere, except in the family it ii
vainly attempting to support. Here 1
I fa rur.lllv Roonlaoil 1?mvU-J J
I ? ? ?/ ?"U luuacu uurtl
| upon.
An income tax is an effort on th?
part of the fOTgnnnut to make yo;
; feel that you are wealthy. Arso t<
I support the government in its mat:
i business in life, namely, living beyont
j its income.
J The government, which receives i
; larger income than any one else
ceeds might go toward rellering mil
Uonaires in distress.
Every income is known by the coxa
pany It keeps.?Life.
Most Attractive Characteristic.
What women most admire in a man
says Mary Boazman in the Strand, it
self-control, to be the master of him
self and incidentally of the situation
In consequence the ill-tempered, hec
toring husband la detested. The bully
wnq la cruel to hla wife and children
outrages his own dignity more thai
he harts them, and thlB la the on<
offense for which a woman will neve;
forgive him. Women are also as sua
ceptiblo as men to flattery, and th?
spiteful man who indulges in sllghtlni
remarks about the sex In general L
usually no favorite with It, which ma:
account for his falling.
To Help Girls to Work.
Miss Florence Jackson, a forme:
member of the faculty of the Welles
ley college, and director of the ap
pointment bureau of the Boston Worn
an'a .Educational union, has beei
named as a nonresident vocational ad
vlser of the seniors of the college. Thi
graduate council will consider the mai
^ter of the kind of the work the girl
can do, and Miss Jackson will advlsi
wkh them. Boglnnlng with the fresh
man class, Miss Jackson will help dl
rect her courses of study if she show
.ability 111 .certain directions. ,
Record Shipbuilding Year.
All previous shipbuilding records 01
the Clyde. Scotland, were Burpesee
. in the nine, months that ended wit;
last September; 193 vaeaals of OMI
tons were launched.
wrmsn Trolley Line*.
f* M 40U the troAej lines of Ores
Britain carried more than 8.000,000,00
passengers. This trafflo was carrie
on 1.641 miles of track and in lea
than 18.600 esarm. Significant also i
the ta?t that whereas la 1600 ther
ware 17/100 homes employed la hattl
lag street car*. Is 1011 thste wera on*
1-400. ; ^
? - iahIBM
1
)A1L\
)Ln tempw iky. ,
KCE1U3EH 9, 1911.
?. ,i.
R v
" 9 y,
"Seven Hours in New York,''
mber 10.
HE WAS HUNGRY, POOR BOY
Nov* Mother*, n. V-. Tfcl-I. u.
Deserved Being Called Coualn
to an Anaconda?
"Now see hero, Percy," said Mr#.
Packer to her rod of a dozen Bummers,
"when I went out this afternoon
I left seven large doughnuts in
the pantry, and now there are only
three. What do you know about
that?"
"Well, a fellow Is always hungry
when he cornea home from school.
"I also left half of a good-sized
chocolate cake and a dozen cookies In
the eake box. Now there are only six
cookies and about a third of the cake
left. Do you know anything about
that?"
"Well, a fellow wants something to
- eat when he has been pegging away
In school all afternoon, doesn't he?"
"I also loft eight cranberry tarts
I and a large* mince pie in the pantry.
Now there are five of the tarts and a
I good quarter of the pie is gone, llave
you anything to say about that?"
( "Well, I was hungry when I got
home from school, and I "
> "I had Jane make a nice dessert of
s Tady-flngerS and whipped cream tor
t dinner tonight, and about a fourth of
>1 It Is gone, together with a lot of the
! white meat of a chicken I had saved
?I* for a salad. Of course, you don't
r. know anything about that?"
ij "There's plenty of the stuff left for
c! dessert, and there wasn't hardly any I
I of the chicken anyhow."
> "But there was a lot of honey left.
II when I went away this afternoon, and 1
t| it Isn't here now, and half of the cof-1
rj fee cake I was saving for brer'*.?t*t|
it is gone, and someone has opener, iju-.t,
t Jar of orange marmalade I was saving
i' for company. Have you anything to!
I say about that?"
jI "Well. I tell you I wan hungry, and'
i! I Wanted a little something to eat, and
> so I "
i "And so you opened that glass ^of:
1 extra choice currant Jam and ate up j
nearly a whole pa-kage of those little:
I afternoon "teas, and drank half a pint'
,1 of cream, and most of the pound of
raisins and all-the nuta I left here at'
. noon are gone. Hungry? My aoul
and body! Percy Packer, are you ;
r *llrst cousin to an anaconda? Hungry?
j I should say sol I honestly bellevo !
that you are hollow clear Into the.
ground!"?Puck.
' For External Use Only.
Mrs. Wheeler, a fashionable society
woman, sent for her physician one
!] morning.
"Itoctor," she said, "I want you to,
' give me a prescription which will cure j
^ me of a most irritating trouble."
The doctor bowed and waited for (
her to go on.
"About eleven o'clock every eve"
aing," continued Mrs. Wheeler, "I am
overcome with a feeling of sleepful_
nees, no matter where I* am?at the
opera, at a dinner party, wherever I
may be, this dreadful sensation comes
over me"
"Oh, I can give you a prescription
r that will prevent it from overcoming
h you ever again," Bald the doctor.
? Mrs. Wheeler was radiant, but when
h she looked at the slip of paper the
a doctor gave her, her face clouded. He
j, Jud written:
9 "Bed from ten at night till^ seven the
next morning. Repeat dose once In
B twenty-four hours, whenever symp-i
g to ma recur."
g - Win? ad Llblt-jm.
The old houae between the Tiber
and the Piazza Navona at Rome are
shortly to be pulled down, and with
. them an- Interesting old landmark?
j the Osterla del Oreo, situated at the
tj corner of the Via del Orao and the
q Via Santa Lucia, writes an Italian
correspondent. This houae once gave
shelter to princes and poeta?among
the latter Dante and Goethe?and was
t at one time the moat fashionable hoe
0 telry in Rome. It was particularly
ft popular because (he pride of a room?
> some 10 oenta?In the fuuileeuth ee?
tnry eomprised wtae *d libitum. while
ha Other l*ha the refreshments . ta
V which masts wore enticed free of
' ~i_ ' -
v.-.
7 NE\
DR. HABOY
J MB
YBT6Y BOARD
KLNSTON REGISTERS KICK
Tho board uateea of the North J
I Carol In" v i ,'or the Feeble-miud-1
Ir'Vlyi* * "'e ??ce of llie Institution
.lie city Wednesday afternoon
* .oout 5 o'clock. Eleven of the
I twelve members of the board were
present, together with Hon. J. Y.
iJoyner. state superintendent of public
instruction, who is ex-ofHcio chair
| man of the board.
A strong delegation of citizens of
iKlnston appeared before the board
immediately after the trustees arrived
at the school, and were granted
an audience. Jhey presented a
resolution from the chamber of commerce
urging the reappointment o
Dr. Ira M. Hardy, the present superintendent.
Mr.* J P. Taylor and Hon.
N. J. Rouse lauded the achievement
of Dr. Hardy in bringing the institution
to its present state with the
means In hand. Gtated that Kinston'e
interest th see school was in no small
measure that of the people's Interest
in the "father of the school," a native
and a man known to the people
to be so far as efficiency is concerned.
The speakers let It be known,
in phrases pettily put and gracefully
revealing the true sentiment of the
community toward the governor'r
action in falling to give the city a
single representative on the board of
trustees, that Kins ton did not desire
to be so entirely Ignored in the mat
ter; that $17,000 of local money is
tied up in the site giren br ttie mu- .
niclpality for the school, and that
only the reelection of the Incumbent
to that re may have a fair trial in
the now departure for the establishment
of which he labored so zealously,
would be satisfactory to the citizens.
When the city's representatives
had been heard The "trustees went
into regular order of business. The
superintendent's report was referred
to tlie executive committee, who
went over the school today for verification
of the report.
At 9 o'clock the hoard went into
executive session. Then began a
wpto?l;ut:ve of a (series of
pyroteshnh s ranging m violence
from little, -disconnected bits of eloquence.
to the shaking of fists R.mged
on opposite sides in :? controvert
tvhicli Chairman Jorncr bluntly toldi
the trustees was,nothing less than anj
'effort to depose Dr. Hardy, and that
tl.ey should "come into the open" In .
lhe matter, were: For the Incumbent.
Hon. W. A. Thompson. Aurora. u.
J. It. Raggett. Llllingtnn; I)r. W. it.
Dixon, Ayden: 6ol. A. C. Davis
Goldsboro. Against Hardy, the three
executive committeemen ? t'liasT
Dewey, Goldsboro; Dr. A. A. Kent.
Lenoir, and Hon. J. D < IJoushall.
Raleigh?and Hon. A. B. Justice.
Charlotte; Rev. D' X. Cavlness.
Warrenton; R. E. Austin, Es j.. Albemarle.
and Lr.L. B. McRrayer.
Asheville. Dr D. X. Cartwright, of
Ryde county, who introduced the bill
for the school in the state senate,
and a Hardy patron It is believed,
was too 111 to be present. Thompson,
who Introduced the hill in the house,
warmly defended the superintendent.
No one known all that went on
in the meeting save those who participated.
but a good bit of the procedure
that is known develops the
tact that Mr. Austin even Introduced
a resolution to close up the institution.
declare the office of superintendent
open, discharge all employes
and put the Institution into the
hands of the'executive committee.
The deliberation of this resolution
required three hours, during which
time the trustees favoring Hardy
made daring assertions concerning
the motive which caused their opponents
to demand such extreme meas<urea
as closing down the school and
the caustic remark by Mr. Joyner
was made'
It had been generally believed that
Dr. L. B. McBrayer, personal friend
of Governor Oralg. would be selected
to succeed Dr. Hardy. If such was
the intention of the anti Hardy trustees,
the action was blocked by one
little technicality The: provides
. that no member of the board of
| trustees shall be elected to the superI
lntendency under It'months from.
I mission. Dr. McBrayer is a trustee.
t|be dstiof the expiration of his qom-.
^he doctor*booted the idea of Klaxon's
clttseas moddlinfc tn the mattar.
They have no more right than
' The motion we# made to depone
f ' : * . n J- ...
... .. -V. , . /
-'- rltt'wfr' afrifr4T'?ViA--r '
BPSEST- .
1 ' ' '
T
% - _>_j,
Discourse Heard, by a JH
Congregation SundajH
at Episcopal Church. H
By order or the Nal^J
elation for the Preventlo^H
miosis, Sunday ?j| (jyH
which our ministers wer<T??^M
' to preach on this subject.
Through a mistake
not receive this request. axt^H
two were out of town, so th^|
mons will be expected later.^H
church N.
plea for
of disease of body and soul.
ha his text the story of the w^H
who lay sick of a fever who
healed bv th*? ????b -*
.... ?VI lue
Physician. He made a comp^H
between the white plague whk^H
nually kills 200.000 people in^f
United States and the more al^|
disease of sin?which kills not c^H |
the body but the soul. The |
against both disease^ must go |
together for the laws of God are I
laws of health.
WM. 8RACAW 4 CO. ^ I
AREJODAt MOVING >J1
The Arm of William firagaw
Co. are today moving to their new
quarters ip li.iil.Hng .H> I
West Slain street They will occupy
one-half of the building next to Dr.
P. A. Nicholson's otljce and Mr' H.
T. Latham will occupy the remaining
portion as a book anil stationary /iS^H
store. C , / -Aj^B
WE HAVE A BPKCIAL LINK OF %
IIOVH HAND M ADM SHOES 9
we would like for you to see. They . 9
ate shoes tltat will ..tar.' the hardest wear
and give.,il.e U-t of comfort f??8i
biack.. gun :.ivtul. !n button or
the superintendent and pv.t the insti- 8
tut ion's bui"!n?sti into ?k. h,-.ad.-> ol
i!i<- chairman of t.,-- i-vnutive coinluitteo''But
hT... it ,hthut
thcai tor trustee-' i>\|??n?-e?. to bo
bi.uii? <1 and no u'.ii' t 1 nn
dep the Htatulc to sign voucl.tr> save 'i?B|
the Kuperintonili'u! |jfl
, The iilea original d a trustee 'IB
about this time to f.uvr :li? board
appoint a "superintendent pro tcni."r. . . - 7?
Hut the Hardy *!?-?- nse was a vt-ritaliie
clieval de-/ri*>* Fy t!iis time. It
was a thorny path that the opposition
wag treading. They learned tb^t
there was no provision for a 'supei^ 1
intendent pro tern . " rfw
The upsliot of the matt r is that
Dr Hardy had to be r. tallied in office
until February 17. when he may bo
dismissed or retained. Od?> turn of
the affair is as likely as another, but
not until Kinston has made known
Its views at length, it is believed.
The wrangle over the superintendency
is one of the political sensations
of the year in North Carolina, or
promises to be before it is closed.
Interest here Wednesday night was
feverish. Citizens grouped at public
places awaited some word from the
feeble-minded school and animatedly * J
discussed the generally accredited
rumor that powers backed by the
States cmer executive would try Co.
dethrone the man made popular by
his activities in behalf of the state's
most pitiable suhjects?the mentally
indigent children. There was no misttaking
the sentiment of the people. i?|
The general verdict of the street
throngs was that the removal of Dr.
Hardy before he had had an opportunlty
to try the administrating of
the school whjcfc lias, come out of hie
life's hobby.in the.interest of human . '^SjB
lty would be a .vast, injustice to hiriv. _ _
?I?lnstoa Free Press. ^ " hxK
TDQUSEDtt PDkSSEL (It 3-2c Jfc.
.iqV Seats free. Wright's.
.. . . ' 12-9-tuetfrI
COTTON MARKET. . * J*- '' .. "'iH
. Seed cotton, $t.M. 1 MgS
Ult cotton, li 1-tf. "(i, . |
' Cotton nocd. $31.00 .per ton.
TRY OCR NBW IORKB UMS
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