Newspapers / Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, … / Jan. 5, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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8 r nnoimcement ! S v- ; - -' ' We have recently opened a select line of ' , . Ladios, Gentlcmens and Childrons Furnishings, ' ' r ' .at WARSAW in the "New Brick Building oppositejthe Baiik , : - ; Oiir1: Stock rim JBntirely ""w : and Uptb'Date. ..We have comedo Warsaw ta: stay and to do all we can to build up the Town and com munityv: - We are going to qarry only the BEST GOODS and.we solicit a share-of the patronage of the people of Duplin, Sampson and any adjoining county. We have decided to do a STRICTLY CASH BUSINESS, and every customer shall be treated with courtesy, an? alL alike. .We are not strangers to the people of this com--jnunity, jentirely having - lived in the county several years,-and we are well known to- WVcordially invite the Public to call'on us and irtspecfour Stock. JABBED IN EYE WITH - UMBRELLA, HE DIES. Man Struck on Resenting Being Called a Fakir. ; George D. Kreigh, a -Pullman cat conductor running on the " iPennsyt-. vanla railroad and " living in Jersey City, unintentionally jabbed William ZK Mellervey, a piano salesman"? Jer sey City, in the left eye with thefer-. rule of an umbrella in .that city, In flicting a i wound from, which Mellervey died at the City hospital an-hour later. The conductor was locked up' on a . . .r.ViilK'v.f ko&igb- saitflliat as he and a mend "Thanking yojuin advance for your kind patronage and wishing you a Happy and Prosperous New Year, we are H AZLETT BROS. CO. j Job Work Bon! T, ROOSEVELT AND PINCHOT ATTACKED, masks, but Kobble recognized one of . manded the reason. .Then all three at them 'and described him to the police, j tacked him beating him over the head Later: they were arrested in a saloon where they were spending thir loot. -' " A snow plow on the Lehigh Valley railroad en route from Cortland - to Camden -Jbroke loose from the locomo tive' south of Canastota, near Utica, N' Y4 and ran awaydown the steep grade to the center of' the village. , At .one of the street crossings it Jumped Mhe-track and, picking -up John Janos, a flagman, landed him sixty-flve feet awayr causing almost Instant death. The -folow next demolished the flag man's shanty and then burled Its "nose fifteen: feet into the embankment along i the -West Shore tracks. - Carlo Peanbianco, a : contracting teamsterof Fairview, N. J., was shot and Wiled at the moment the new year was- being welcomed" as he stood on his back porch after having "fired throe .shots from a revolver as his little part iriVrbe general demonstration. "Either thia -Jnan has been assassinated or he .was the victim of some careless per- were standing on the sidewalks MeHeJ;, Vy omft airing pnrl -nsteftd--fOf 10"centS. saying he had no money and was anx ious to get to Newark. His friend gave him a dime and Kreigh stopped a trol did not J the 1 son who- discharged a revolver in cel ebratingthe arrival 6f the new year," CoronerJTracy said. -' '- . A wild train of coal cars and an ac- rcommodation passenger, train collided dropped , the coin, and fcreigh charged him with being a fakir. - - Mellervey. pretended to be indignant and. led Kreigh-to believe that he was going to assault him. Krelgh says he Wirew op his umbrella with the Inten tton of warding off the blow and Mel lervey suddenly dropped in a heap. Chesapeake .and Ohio ' railroad near Lexington, Ky., killing six men. The and shoulders with bamboo sticks. An appeal to the police brought about the arrest of two of his assailants. v A passenger -carrying . monoplane, with Aviator Laffon and M. Paula, fell 250 feet on a round trip, flight from Paris to Brussels. x Both men were so badly hurt that they died soon after. Laffon had set out to win the $30,000 prize offered by the Auto mobile Club of France for a round trip to the Belgian capital within thirty-six hours. The disaster took place Bhortly after the machine left the aero drome at Issy. ; . : Dec. 28 was the second anniversary of the earthquake in Calabria and Sic ily. : Religious-services were held in Reggio dl Calabria. The graves of numerous victims and the , ruins of buildings In which many dead remain had wreaths and candles placed "en them.- In Messina the bishop blessed the dead. There were many pathetic" scenes. Afterward the bishop laid the foundation, stone of a monument to the victims. The balloon Hildebrandt, which as cended at Schmargeadorf, a short dis tance from Berlin, last Thursday with four passengers who intended making a forty-eight hour trip, has not yet been reported. The balloon when last DIX TAKES OATH AS NEW YORK'S GOVERNOR Inaugural Parade Witnessed by Many From All Over State. GENERAL NEWS MasXan Protests Against Fraud Charge In Cunningham Claims; In a long letter submitted to Presi dent Taft in answer to charges of fraud made by Gifford Pinchot and his brother Amos in relation to the Cun ningham coal claims, Falcon Joslia, president of the Tanana Valley Rail road company of Alaska, arraigns Mr. Pinchot and makes a bitter attack on former President Roosevelt. The Lorimer case con tinues to be the liveliest- mihleet that is like-' HAPPENINGS. jy to engage the atten tion of the seriate after the holidays. It is certain that the senator from HU- engine, and -the , train was turning a sharp curve when It met the loose cars. There was not time for the men to jump. They were crushed to death. Anna Volinsky, the woman who was committed to the Manhattan State hospital on Ward's island, New York, about a month ago, after she threat ened to take the life of Jacob. H. Schiff, was found hanging by a slen der rope from a hook In the clothes room at the hospital. A nurse discov ered here She called a physician, but nois will be confronted with formjda-1 Miss Volinsky was alreadyjtead. Mr. Joslin characterizes Mr. Pinchot as a "self appointed champion" and j its solvency had been restored by a ble opposition. A number of Repub licans who have not been classed as Insurgents will be arrayed in opposi tion to any report which holds that Senator Lorimer owns his title to a seat by valid right Lawrence O. Murray, comptroller of the currency at Washington, has Issued an order to all national bank examiners instructing them to " insist that every national bank keep a set of books from which the examiners can determine its exact condition. The reason for this order is that it recently became neessary to force a national bank into voluntary liquidation after Thomas Scadden, thirtyflve years old, of Port Murray, N. J., was killed and four others fatally injured while men were riding on the pilot of theseen was headed In the direction of the-Baltic, and it is tne jjeiiei in avia tion circles that the airmen probably came to grief In that sea. , . Edmond JFhery, the French econo mist, figures that the maintenance of Europe's armed peace footing in the last twenty-five years cost 145,000,000, 000 francs, approximately $29,000,000, 000,' which involved an increase in, the public debt of the European states of from 105,000,000,000. to 151,000,000,000 francs. John Alden .Dix of Thomson was In augurated as governor of the state ot New York at Albany A parade in which every branch of the state mili tia was represented and which also In cluded several Democratic organiza tions made brilliant the first part of the program, which thousands enjoy-1 ed.' The city was fuj of distinguished visitors from every section of the state who had journeyed to Albany to see the first Democrat In sixteen years ele vated to the ofllce of chief executive .The deep roar of nineteen guns fired by the First battery field artillery N. G. N. Y., Captain John F. Ryan commandng,announced the fact that Life Insurance. , 'The best business men and farmers carry life insurance because their mon- ; ey is safely invested and again their . lives are protected in case of death. It makes young men save their earnings for after years, for the . rainy days and for a large estate that in this way - is created by a smaller cost than any York, is the oldest and strongest in v America. Get In the best possible com- -. pany when you dq insure, See Hinea ' the agent, at Kenansville, who rep- . t resents the strongest Company of any - kind in the world. ., Men- and women . -should insure while-they can and at ' a lower rate than will ever be offered again., " , . - v' " -Keep the wolf from the door, . Prepare for old age. - - Be independent in life..: W;, v Save a part of your earnings. THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE. COMPANY OF NEW YORK, . D. S. HINES. , eon dti wr The members of the AcciiDe Natfonal BasebaUcom Ar FAIRS, miaaion, with the schedule committees of the National We solicit tlie support of Merchants, Business Men and all others. Colonel Roosevelt as the "former im perial occupant of the White House." He says that as one of the" 30,000 citi zens of Alaska he-wishes to protest against -Mr. Pinchot's charge that the Cunningham claims were fraudulently filed and if approved will work to the detriment of Alaska. Mr.. Joslin says that Mr. Roosevelt vetoed one act of congress relating to Alaskan coal lands by" a mere order upon the advice and approval of Mr. Pinchot This .was the act of '1904, which Mr. -Roosevelt had approved pre viously. Two years later," Mr. Joslin says, fMr..JPnchot roncluded ' that'Tf" wfis not a good law. He did not apply to congress' to amend or repeal it, but went directly to the imperial occupant of the White House, and Mr. Roosevelt Nov. 12, 1906. issued an order suspend ing it. He not only suspended it as to future applications, but suspended the rights of those already Initiated under It. Was there ever a more despotic use of executive power in this nation?" We are now prepared to print all kinds of Job Work at re gnlar prices. at work on the tower of Sts. Philip j and American- leagues, will meet in and James' Roman Catholic, church in ' Cincinnati for their annual conf er Phliipsburg, N. J. The men were on ences. The schedule committees are an elevator on which lumber was be- ready to work In harmony. . Each ing piled when thejwheel over which ! schedule will caU for 154 games with cable runs eave way and the men three western and eastern trips. It BELIEVE KISS KILLED HEft Poison Communicated to Lips From Poisoned Gum Which Love Was : . Chewing Woman Suspected. Our Printers are up-to-date and are. unsurpassed in the State. , Send us your orders for Stationery and get Good Service and Prompt Attention. - .. Letter Heads, Note Heads, Statements, EnvelopeS! etc., gotten up in good Style and .Quality. Eastern Carolina News k3e$ IV: AN VILB) JV. C. When ordering give I'LAIX instructions Fatted in Health not wantrto gonyher nor. ndoWn pains, the headache all toeme and as t "A very dear ni commenced to use it had done hv. so much goodso I commen , and now l am in juw UH"- . , 1 enicjdvres3 -p You youreelftaow besUf if you do need iV do nrt del g slide further it at once. , Every day of delay, only . down the hilL . . to t Cardui today, forite Don't wait, then,.but ben wk and wul use, no matter how prolonged, cannw surely do you goou. , -- ctattwoca, t, Iati Dept. CMnimw - woaea," Wfc wrue w: umuxw , i, -Home Sptcml Instructions, uaiww "w- tor Treatment In the white satin fcridal robes that she was to have worn at her wedding, Miss Grace Elosser is lying in her coffin at the home of her parents in Cumberland, Md., and in the darkened parlors of another home in the village of Keyser, W. Va., twenty-three miles away, reposed the body of Charles Kdward Twigg. who was to have ha hnidpfirroom. and In the UCCU WAV ' Months of the young' man and woman if0 nna of the strangest, most bizarre Doison mysteries ever known There is now no doubt that it was a double murder, and it is suspected that a Jealous woman rival was tne poi soner, carrying out her plot In a most I ernftr waV. - ... The mystery began witn me ui covery of the pretty girl and her fiance sitting together, hand in hand, on a sofa in the parlor of their home wh dead. So swift, so instantanta- neous had been the action of the poi son upon them that they sat as if in life. The strange Ukelihood is being con sidered by the authorities that the .hnff mm : the voune man was VUC T, : - phewine contained the deadly cyanide. that the young man with the gum in his mouth had leaned forward to kiss his sweetheart and that tne Kiss com munlcated the poison to her ups. CLEVER THIEVES GET FOOLED. Poison Every Dog In New JerseTown - to Prevent Thern Giving Alarm, Kt Fail to Get Loot. A band of desperate thieves who had poisoned nearly every dog in Edge water Park, tf. J., broke into the rail road station, blew open the postoffice safe and made, an attack upon Strick land McKay, a' wealthy resident. -After all their precautions and dar ing work the robbers didn't get much booty. - They 'were frightened ofT by citizens' aroused from sleep, by the noise of the explosion. . : All the dogs, except perhaps one or two, were poisoned a couple of nights before. This caused a scare and all the townspeople put ..extra locks on their doors and additional blinds on windows which were Insecure as a consequence.- Everybody thought of robbers because the dogs nave oeen re lied upon heretofore . to warn their owners when strangers prowl around at night. -v 'i- The station agent of the .railroad had been on the alert,-and. he left very lit tle' money in : the f station where the thieves might lay bands, on it. What little there .was was takers contribution from the directors, Mrs. Anna Oliphant, a well known resident of White House,4N. J., has organized a society, whose objects are to work for better conditions and bel ter salaries for women schoolteachers. The organization, which is known ?as the Schoolteachers Belief society. Is to conduct a campaign to bring abont a national ruling so "that women school teachers in New Jersey and elsewhere" can wed and still retain their posi tions. A billiard table is being set up-in that particular chamber of the - White HduacTmade famous daring the Jooge vett t-J admlnlstratigii-." -"wrestling. matchasr-iitirjftsu exhibitions and mov ing pictures of wolf strangling', and train robberies, . Willie Hoppe, cham pion billiardist of the world, wHl call at the White. House and arrange a schedule for several exhibitions for the benefit of Mr. Taft and his friends. It is hoped at the navy department in Washington that the Atlantic bat tleship fleet, which left the British channel Dec. 30 to return to America as an "enemy," will be located by the opposing fleet before it reaches mid ocean. The theoretical safety of the Atlantic coast against unexpected naval attack depends upon the fleet being located before it is dangerously near. About a thousand Lehigh Valley rail road engineers will receive a substan tial increase in wages as the result of conference between a committee representing the railroaders and Gen ral Manager Maguire held at South Bethlehem, Pa. The new scale will go into effect Jan. 1, and the average increase in wages will be 6 per cent. Happy new year" were the first words of seven-year-old Victor Wald ron, son of Dr. Louis V. Waldron of Yonkers, N. Y., after a silence or seventy-seven days. The boy's skull was fractured on Oct 16 last, and he had been in a state of coma for forty days. The boy gradually regained the use pf his faculties. Wlliiam F. Sheehan in a letter to Mayor Louis F. Fuhrmann of Buffalo announced his candidacy for United States senator to succeed Chauncey M. Depew. dropped ninety-feet. Miss- Sadie M-- Peck, aged fifty-one, daughter . of the late Rev. Luther Peck, t one time pastor of the Adams Avenue Methodist Episcopal church in Scranton, Pa., was found on the floor of the kitchen at her home with her throat cut. She had taken tier own life with an ordinary kitchen knife. Despondency due to ill health caused her to take her life. With the thermometer registering 18 degrees below zero in Butte, Mont., and ten miles south of the town 35 below, James McDonald, an old man, died as a result of exposure. The coro ner wasaiso notified of anT unknown prospector being found frozen to death sixteen miles south of Butte. DEATHS OF NOTED A. Homer Byington of Norwalk, Conn., well known as a Journalist has been decided to begin the rival championship races April 12. The national baseball conimission is meeting in Cincinnati today. It is pre dicted that the Eastern league and the American association will be turned down in response" to their joint de mand for a higher classification. These big minor leagues have grown so rap idly that the commission and the two major leagues regard them with ap prehension. It Is feared that if they are permitted to break away it will be a difficult task to keep them in subjec tion and that in due time they will summon up enough courage to Invade major league territory."- "I will fight Wolgast in America, not in England," remarked Owen Moran in Pittsburg in discussing the chance which he has of meeting the fhnmnion lisrhtweicht. "1 want to meet him here meet : him "and beat him right in front of thepeople whom r-cwfi-c. awd &n fotimnte-frtftTidlre-rt-T he be- . Five children were CHiMfc burned to death when AND the home of John CASUALTIES, ark Savage, In Min er's Miils. near Wilkesbarre, Pa., was burned. The father and mother were awakened by the shouts of the neigh bors and got out safely. The excited parents tried to explain to the firemen that the five children were asleep on a second floor, but could not speax Eng lish and male themselves understood. Then the father, tried to rusff Into the room to rescue the children, but was 4iHirnn honk hadlv burned by the flames.-, - After attending a moving picture fcpater where they said a wild west em holdup scene was snown, tnrea young men, , who gave the names of William Kilpatnck, .tr aui eweu. auu Adolph Swen, of Elizabeth, N. J., de cided to Imitate the picture bandits. They lay in wait for Wflllam Kobble, and, pouncing on .him, they took his waUet containing two twenty-dollar bills. They then took his watch and left him battered and bleeding on the load. They wore : handkerchiefs as of President Lincoln, -died at the home of his- son, . Mr. Stewart, W.r Byington, In Flushing, N. Y. Mr, Byington had been a journalist all his life until ap pointed in 1897 by President McKin- ley . to the post of United States consul at Naples, where he remained twelve years. Benn Pitman, known throughout the world for his activity In the develop ment of the systenT of phonography which bears bis name, a man of marked artistic talent and attainment, died in Cincinnati. While Benn Pit man always credited the Invention of phonography to his older brother, Sir Isaac Pitman, there is no doubt but that he is the preserver of the original system and the father of shorthand writing in America "'John W. Ellis, a banker. well known In the financial world of a generation ago, died at his home in New York in his ninety-fourth year. He was in strumental in organizing the national banking system and when Grant was elected president had the offer of the secretaryship of the treasury, which he declined. Mr. Ellis was bom in Williamsburg, O. Captain Joseph S. Eastman, one of Mrs. Eddy's original students, one of the twelve founders of the Mother church and for twenty-five years a Christian Science healenj died at his home in Somerville, Mass-. His widow says that her husband's death was due largely to the recent death of Mrs. Eddy. , Reginald Frank Doherty, one of the greatest tennis players in the world, died at his home in London. He and his brother, H. L. Doherty, held the title of world's champions in the doubles. came champion," continued the Eng llshman. Replying to the published challenge from Frank Gotch to meet any wres tler in the world for a $20,000 side bet and the best purse -obtainable, winner to take all, J. H. Herman, manager of Zbysko, accepts in his behalf. The only stipulation is that the side bet be $10,000 a side instead of the $20,000 suggested by Gotch, It Is learned on excellent authority in Boston that Abe Attell, the feather weight champion of America, has de clined an offer to go abroad and meet Freddy Welsh, the lightweight cham Dion of Great Britain. Attell claims he can get just as much money in this country. II - x v 4 '-3 VIS i II" m. Vff Si p t a ; 1910, by American Press Association GOVERNOR JOHN A. DIX. Governor Dix had been inaugurated and that his administration had begun.. The program in the assembly cham ber was opened with a prayer by the Right Rev. Bishop William Crosswell Doane, Episcopal bishop of the diocese of Albany. ' When all had been seated the band played "Hail to the Chief," ana tne man who defeated Henry L. stimson last November entered, followed by bis military -atafLi, , He. , was.JBresented with a Bible by Secretary of State Lazansky and took the oath to uphold the constitution. When, he had ceased speaking the first gun of the nineteen which were to be fired .in his honor broke tbeirtilinessrof the chamber.Its echo was followed by a rousing cheer from the treet beneath, where thou sands of people were waiting for the signal. - - ' - FoIlo"wine the inauguration liovernor Dix held an -informal reception in the executive champ REPORT OF .THE CONDITION OF rHE BANK OF ROSE HILL- at Rose HilX-lnVthe S tate of Norths Carolina, at the close of business November 10, 1910. ' Resources. v ; Loans and discounts. ......$ 65,244.09 Banking Houses, $4,000.00; ' . Furniture and Fixtures, $851.50 ......I.. . . , . . . . . 4,851.60 Due from Banks and Bank- , - era ......... . ..- 3,109.31 Cash items. ....... . . . . : 179.65 Gold coin. .....j...,....., 1,106.00 Silver coin, including all ml- .' nor coin currency...:..;.. . ' 468.36 National bank notes and other U. S. notes .' , 2,536 .00 Total , . . . . . . . . . .,!......$ 78,994 . 91 Lfabllltlea. . Capital stock. . ... . . . .. ... .$ 10,000. 00 Undivided profits, less cur rent .expenses and taxes paid ' . . ; '. . . ....... . . . . Dividends unpaid .......... Deposits subject to check.. Demand : certificates of de 'v posit . . ... .. . ...... Savings deposits . .': . : -. . . . . Cashier's - checks outstand- - mm ' f 2,116.02 27.00 33,688.78 16,208.19 16,973.73 81.19v CANT KEEP OUT-BAD ALIENS, Commissioner Says Immigration Laws Will Be Changed and Stop Chi nese Coming Through Canada. Total .'; .77., .$78,994.91: Stale of North Caroling Ceunty f ' ? Duplin, : :' . ; L W. B. Southerland, Cashier of the . above-named bank, do solemnly wear': that the above statement., is. true to ' the best, of my knowledge and belief. W. BV SOUTHERLAND, ' , 1 "'; ;- . I .' . Cashier. Correct Attest: . " v . W. H, FUSSELL,. ., - v. J. C. MALLARD; , -.-,W.-;;D3fHENDERS - Subscribed: and sworn to. oefor mer this 15th day of Novemter,-.1910. -.'-J, -' ?w; 'J 'F. BLIZZARD.-'Wa . NoUry Public. My commission expires November 4, -f 1912. FOREIGN NOTES OF INTEREST. THE BURDEN BEARER. It has been announced in Berlin that Andrew Carnegie Jias establish ed a . hero fund for Germany similar to those instituted bv him in the United States, England and France, r The fund, whlchuls $1, 250.000. is under the patronage of the kaiser, who has appointed a commis sion of twelve to administer . it. ; -jrne purpose of the fund is stated to be the amelioration or. nnanciai aistress which may be caused by--heroic en deavors to save human life either In the person of the heroes themselves or those dependent upon tnem. - Adolph A; Williamson, United States vice consul at Darien, Japan, was as nnitAd hv the" Japanese and a Chi nese -in the fish market there. ; It is supposed that he was-mistaken for a Russian, as he was ordered to . leave. Mr. Williamson, who speaks Japanese fluently, said that he wonld o hiifc d- OLD SOLDIER TORTURED. k The little sharp vexations, . t And the briars that catch and fret Why not take all to the Helper, rr Who has never failed us yet? . -TeU him about the heartache, . And- tell him the longings, too; Tell him the baffled purpose When we scarce know what to-jdo; Then, leaving all our weaknesses . v- With the one divinely strong, ; r ' Forget that we bore the burden. c ., And carry away the song. . -..-i,: , Phillips Brooks. NEWS Japanese spies have 7 been active In the last fow months " in the NEIGHBORS. Philippines, according to a statement made in Washington by Ignado Villamor, attorney general for the Philippines. "On my way to this country I stopped in Japan, and while there I talked with a number of Japanese army officers," Villamor said. One of them told me ne had no aouDt that Japan could take the Philippines at any time." Announcement is made .in Ottawa of an important Canadian bank merger which will he made effective imme diately after the next meeting of the shareholders of the umtea jumpira bank to be held In Toronto in a few days. The banks "to be merged are the United Empire bank and the Un ion Bank of Canada, and the proposed merger has already been approved by both boards of directors. A revolution has started In Hondu ras. Fightings is going on . along the Honduran-Nicaraguan border twenty miles below Cape Graclas,. Nicaragua. The forces are being led, according to wireless reports, by General Lee Christmas, who was to have met. 1,600 men, many of them Americans, on the Nicaraguan' border with forty days provisions. ' '-V.Thomas P.- Moffatt, United States consul at Managua,; has reported to the state department that General Juan J. Estrada was unanimously i.t1 nresident and Adolfo Diaz vice president of Nicaragua by, the assem- blv. Upon receipt: 01 iu uenr. dent Taft sent a telegram to irresweuL Rstrada congratulating him. .. Y Tnn Bieloucich, the Peruvian avla- .r who is on his way from JBTance 10 Peru to ojen a school of aviation, has sailed for Callao. He took several aeroplanes with him. . He intends to return to Panama in marcu auu xtibition flights. "For years I suffered unspeakable torture from indigestion, constipation and-liver trouble,', wrote A. K. Smith, a war veteran at Erie, Pa "but Dr. Kinjfs New Life Pills fixed me all rlehfc They're, simply great." Try them for any stomach, liver or kidney trouble. - Only 25c. at all druggists. ' Don't 'Imagine yourself a saint ' by looking at the average man like an old gentleman rebuking a hoy for climbing trees. - That there will "be changes proposed at the next session of congress which will remedy the present defects of the Immigration and exclusion laws, is a statement made, by Daniel J. Keefe,' United States commissioner general of Immigration. "As the immigration laws now ex ist," he said, "it is an Impossibility to keep undesirable aliens, especially Asi atics, from the United States. Defects In ''the Chinese exclusion law are re sponsible. Many Chinese land in Can ada after depositing a $ouu neaa tax Canada gets the $500, but In a great many Instances the United States gets the Chinese. "I am of the opinion that the Immi gration authorities should be given the power to decide the right or any alien seeking admission to the United States to land. -, . ". . - : . CELEBRATES1! 17TH BIRTHDAY Woman Remembers Giving Hot Soup to Napoleon's Men. A rosy cheeked old woman believed to have lived .117 years, had a birth day party at the home of the Daugh ters of Jacob, In New York, where she lived for the last seven, years. She is Esther avis, ; the oldest in the home. She shook ner neaa wnen she was asked to Join the dancing. It was not because she did not lack the spirit but seven years ago an express wagon: ran over-her right' leg, and since then until now she has been un able to walk unassisted. Several of the committee of five the youngest Is a hundred years shuffled a nttie: on the floor just-to show that tney suii coul dance a tittle. : Born In the town 01 xagosiov, pro vince of Soovalk, Russia, Mrs. Davis says she can rememoer giving uoi soud to Naooleon'a retreating army. "And I was quite a big girl tnen," sae says. . - - ' - .,- ..: ... ' - Guerrillas Slay an American. a detachment of United States regu lar- trooiMB returned to Manila: after twenty days guerrilla warfare in .the province of Mindanao, uuriug iue v erations iheyv recognized the head ;of an American which had been held for. two "years as a trophy by Salv.dore, a notorious Luzon bandit. The latter Is now under sentence of death for fifty murders which he conf essed to having committed. , - REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF The Bank df War saw) at Warsaw, in the State Of North Caro lina, at the close of business, Nov. 10, 1910. ' . Resourcef. 65,307.00 2,288.23 Loans and discounts. . Overdrafts secured. .. Banking Houses, -Furniture . and Fixtures.. 2,600.00 Demand loans 13,831.91 Due from Banks and Bank-: ers 9,971. 9i Gold coin....... 477.50 Silver coin, including all mi nor coin currency. ....... 422 .28 National . bank notes and other U. S. notes . . 4,533.00 SOLVES A GOOD MYSTERY. "I want to thank you from the bot tom of my heart," wrote C. B. Rader, of Tuisbure. W. Va.. "for the wonder ful double benefit I got from Electric ratters, in curing me of both a severe case of stomach trouble and of rheu matism, from which I had been an ai rnnst helnless sufferer for ten years It suited my case as though made1 just fnr ma."-. For dyspepsia, indigestion, jaundiceand to rid the system of kid n Tinlsons that icause rheumatism, Electric Bitters has no equal... Try them.' Every bottle Is guaranteed to satisfy. - Only 50c. at all druggists. Total ............ .! . . . $ 99,331 .83 - Liabilities. r Capital stock -paid in ....... $ 10,000 . 00 Surplus fund. .... i . . . i .". . . 10,000.00 Undivided profits, Jess cur rent, expenses and . taxes . .. paid f.. : ,.734 .89 Time certificates of deposit 20,652.55 Deposits subject to check: : 64,303 .27 Due to Banks and Bankers 1,693.38 Cashier's Checks outstand-. -Jo- '1.B22.74 Accrued'lnferest due deposi- - tors J" - ;4Zf.o Total . .$99,331.83 'County of State of North. Carolina,' Duplin, -I, H. F. Peirce, Cashier of the above named bank do solemnly swear that ? the above statement Is true to the , best of my knowledge and belief. H. F. PEIRCE, Cashier. Correct Attest: S. E. HINES, .H. L.' STEVENS, Directors. : Subscribed dnd sworn to before me. tola isui uay ui inuvBiiio, ,s J. H. FONVH5LLE, ' . - - Notary Public. ". My commission expires April 1, 1911.. Many imagine they are traveling on the gospeT train who are only arguing over the time card. finma iwnnln treat the sermon as a table d'hote dinner, picking out-the things yiat will not agree with them.L .;; DEATH IN ROARING FIRE may not result from the work of fire bugs, but often severe burns are caus aiI that, make a auickneed for Buck- len's Arnica Salve, the quickest, surest for tiurns. wounds, bruises; boils, sores. It subdues ; inflammation. . It kills Dain. v It soothes and heals. Drives off skin eruptions,: ulcers or plies. ' Only 25c at all druggists. . No man ever followed a great ideal without getting a hard Job on, .his hands, - ' - mum ! ROUGHS rMlict508tiL00 UgjjAHTa5CATAlUr,aTR0UriES
Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 5, 1911, edition 1
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