Newspapers / Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, … / Jan. 12, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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3' . 4 VOL. VI. KENANSVILLE, DUPLIN COUNtYffN.IC;, JAHUARY-lS, 1911. NO f 22. THE i r - it .jj; V For, Two "Weeks, I beginning rjaritiary 16th, - "We will' sell the following articles at greatly.reducedprioein order to make room for our SPRING and SUMMER STOCK. . Winter Shoes reduced to 10 per cent above cost.; $5.00 Rugs $4.25, others in propor tion. $9.00 Trunks $7.50, others in proportion. Calicos. 5 cents and 6 cents. - Percale 9J centsl Ladies 25 cents collars 19 cents; 15 cents to 10 cents." Jabots reduced from 25 cents to 15 cents; 15 cents to 10 cents. BestrWork Shirts, former price 50 cents r now 40;ents.''- Good 50 cents Dress Shirts 40 cents.1 During the two.wcets we will offer Bargains in all Lines ' - Thanking yon 'for:past favors and soliciting a continuiance .of ' - Very fesDectfully yours, - . N - V "i N Warsaw, n V' We solicit the support Men and all others. We1 are now prepared to Work at regular prices. ; Jo U) Bob I Our Printers are up-to-date in the State. Send us your orders for Stationery and get Good Service and Prompt Attention. Letter Heads, Noe Heads, Statements, Envelopes, etc, gotten up in good Style and Quality. Eastern Carolina News When ordering give PLAO instructions. FaUed in Health "My mother died six years ago," writes .Miss Rutlr Ward, of Jerseyville, 111., "and left me - to care- for six gChildren. I had never een strong; and this, with the shock her death, was too much forme. ' "I failed in' health. I was tired: all "the time and did not want to go anywhere, nor care for -company. I had the headache all the time -and such bearing-down pains. "A very dear friend advised me to -take Cardui, as it .had done her so much good, so " I commenced to use it land now I am in good health." . - CA Take J 44 The Woman's Tonic Women's pains are relieved or prevented and women's strength, is quickly restored, by Cardui, the . woman's tonic. : - You yourself know best if -you need it, or not ' If you do need it, do not delay but, commence to use It at once. Every day of delay, only lets you slide further .down the hilL " - - ; - v Don't wait, then, but begin to take Cardui today, for its use, no matter how prolonged, cannot harm you and will J. surely do you good. , , - ' Write to: Ladles' Advltoty Dept. Chttttnoofa Medtdne Co-Chattaiioon. tot Special Inttntcttom. and4-pse book. STORK - OIT . QUALITY. Work or Mercnants, isnsmess print all kinds of Job and are unsurpassed WB "Home Titatment lor Womefl." teat fctfc - - 1J your. patronage, we are, - ' N. . O. N. J. MINORITY WILL SUPPORT REPUBLICAN Voles Unanimously to Stand by Man Selected by Caucus, All hopes of Republican support for former J Senator James Smith in his fight for. the United States senatorshlp from New Jersey :were raashed In At lantic caty when members of the New Jersey state assembly -voted to sup port unanimously the candidate select ed by the Bepubllean aueus to be held at Trenton Tuesday morning. Al though no open ' encouiagement was given to supporters of former Govern or " Stokes, who was named by pop ular vote -at the recent primaries as Fthe Republican nominee for the Unit ed -States senate, it is - believed that party managers have decided to sup port Stokes rather than openly shatter the party platform, of last year, which declared In favor of the. popular pri mary. . :s; . - Fifteen out of the-eighteen members of the Eepublican minority of the com ing assenibly were present t the con ference. Utmost secrecy was observed by the members of the lower house during their conference. Starts War on Smith. Governor Elect Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey appeared before a tumul tuous gathering of nearly 3,000 Demo? crats in Jersey City and declared him self against the party machine as rep resented in the leadership of James Smith, - Jr., candidate for , the United States' senate against Martins, who was the choice of the. party in the state primaries. In a stirring address, which lasted: nearly an hour, Dr. Wil son told the Democratic voters that New Jersey is facing a grave political crisis and that upon the decision of the legislature in choosing . a United States senator-will restvthe fate of a A principle that is vital to good govern ment. At one stage of his address the gov ernor elect turned to Mr. Martine. who sat Just behind Mm, and appealed to him not to withdraw from the race for the senatorshlp. ' ..'..-. This appeal raised a shout of ap proval from the crowd, and It cheered the sentiment to the eeho. It cheered also when Mr. Martine told them later that he was in the race to-win. OSCAR STRAUS RESIGNS. Ambassador to Turkey Severs Connee tion With Diplomatio Corps. x Oscar Solomon Straus of New York, ex-secretary of commerce and labor and for more than a year and a hall American ambassador to Turkey, has resigned his post - at Constantinople. It had been known for some time that OSCAR S. STRAUS. Mr. Straus Intended to sever his conr nectlon with ' the diplomatic service. Early in' November he received leave of absence, and for -the ; past 'two months he has been in New York. William W. Rockhill, -the present American ambassador t to . Russia, is likely to succeed him, although this Is by nd means certain, as- several names are. under consideration. The announcement -of the- appointment .of a successor is expected shortly. , ? Many awTeating burrs and complaia ing of lifers bread. ; "? - 1 ISEHATOR ELKIMS OF : WEST VIRGINIA DEAD Former Secretary uf War: Had Been 13 For Several Months, ' Senator Stephen Elklns-ot West "Vir ginia died at his home In Washington. " Sndden collapse following a , long , Ill ness caused death. The end was not unexpected, for the senator, had been sinking for - Hours, v At his ; bedside were Mrs. : Elklns, his .two .sons, his daughter. Miss Katherine Elkins, and H. U Davis, his father-in-law. Hc-Elkins had -been sick for several months.-! He was unable to attend the sessions' of congress when It convened early in Tecejnbef -and-nad been con fined to his home practically , all -the fall. ". Every . effort 'had, been, made to 1 bring him back to.Jiealthi bnt-lt was unavailing, and during the last lew v I mm SENATOR ELKUM3 0 AND HOME WHERE' HE DIED.. days septic poisoning 4s understood to have developed and this probably caused the end. ; ; Senator Elkins was a Republican, and succeeded Johnson W. Camden to the senate in 1894. --He" Was unani mously re-elected In 1901 and 1907, his term of office expiring in 1913. In 1891 he was appointed secretary of war and' served untH -the dose of President Harrison's administration. Senator Elkins was born in Perry county, O., Sept. 26, 1841, and was ac counted one of. the very richest men in. the senate. He founded the -town of Elkins, W. Va., and was largely inter ested in coal, timber'and railroads. Senator Elkins was regarded as one of the regular leaders of the senate! He was chairman of" the committee on interstate commerce. - Senator Elkins first entered polities in New Mexico as a member- of the legislative assembly in 1864. He held the offices of territorial district attor ney, attorney general of the territory and district attorney of ' the United States for the territory. He went to congress first Jn the Forty-third congress and while abroad was renominated and elected to the .Forty-fourth congress as a delegate from the territory of New Mexico and was made a member of the Republican national committee. Governor Glasscock of West Virginia has announced : that he will appoint Davis Elkins to succeed the late Sena tor Elkins, his father.. The -young man will have only two days to serve, as his term will expire with the meet ing of the legislature Wednesday. Elkins Death Bad For Republicans. The-death of Senator Stephen K Elkins of West Virginia brings the Re publican majority In the senate In the next congress down to eight The West Virginia legislature Went Democratic in the last election, retiring Nathan Bav Scott. RepubUcan. The death of Senator. Elkins means that West Vir ginia will be represented by two De mocrats after March 4. CANNON SPORTS A COB PIPE. A 5 Present From Champ Clark, Who Comes From Where They Make 'Em. Uncle Joe Cannon strutted around the house with a corncob pipe held tightly between his lips'.,; The pipe was presented by Champ Clark, who comes from Pike county," Mo., -Jlie cob pipe center of the United "States. As Uncle Joe is In the habit of smoking cigars, his appearance with a corncob excited more or, less comment by friends. " ; "Up to the time X was thirty years old I smoked a pipe," Uncle Joe said. "Then I took to" the cigar habit." Several of Uncle .Joe's friends as sured him "that the aroma from the corncob was much more pleasant than that from the long black cigars he smokes. ' . t . , REBELS HAVE LOST HEART. ; Desert Guerrero and .Allow Mexican Treops to Capture lt. According to dispatches received by the Mexican minister of war, the city of Guerrero has been captured by the government troops without opposition from the rebels. Not a shot was fired. When the rebels found they were unable to stop General Navarro before he arrived at Guerrero they deserted the town and took to the mountains. The minister of - war declares that the backbone of the rebellion - is bro ien. It will take some time to round 3D the bandits, but no further con- rierted effort from them is feared. DEATH IN ROARING FIRE may not result from the work of fire bugs, but often severe burns are caus ed that make a quick need for Buck len's Arnica Salve, the quickest, surest cure for. burns, wounds, bruises, boils, - Tt subdues inflammation.: ,. It kills pain. It soothes . .and ' -heals, Drives off skin erupjions, ulcers or plies. Only 25c. at all-druggists.' , NAmnn in ftver eood enouehto!dio- tate the terms of real rgoodness to another. GALLAGHER SENT UP FOR TOELVi YEARS Man Who ' Shot Gaynor Convict 'etfUt Assaait.on Edwards.. . Jame J. Gallagher, who snot Mayor Gaynor.i wa conylcfed of assault on V Big' Bifi' Jldwards Jnj court in Jersey City and sentenced to twelve years at hard .lab4r In (jae( state prison, -"and thence ntfUl the eost of prosecution is paid js -The - Jury , was out -.less - than half aa hour;. - Gallagher sat at a table cjose by his counsel, Alexander Simpson, and seem ed to' akeiittle Interest In the pro ceedlngs. J- He occasionally conversed with Mr. Simpson,- but . most of the tJme he sat' quiet and seemingly un conscious. T i Assistant Prosecutor Ylckers In open ing for r-the state said that the state will, show thaf Gallagher intended to kill Mayor Gaynor." Three employees of the steamship J were the first witnesses and told of Gallagher's inquiries as to the presence of Mayor .Gaynor on board.- . v "Big Bill" Edwards then .took the 1 stand and. told, of the assault on him self, which repeated the famlliar story of the shooting' of Mayor-GaynorOtb-er witnesses told hpw Gallagher had admitted the .shooting. With this the state rested. - ' Mr. -Simpson asked a dismissal of the charge on the ground that no In tent on" Gallagher's part to klll Ed wards had been shown. With this th defense rested. . Justice ; Swayze delivered" a short charge to the Jury. , He said that the jury might find' a verdict 'fit assault with intent to kill or of assault with out intent, to ; kilL- ; The Jury quickly found a verdict of atrocious assault. I reiurDii i omieuu Hiueu dwuitui of New Haven is gov- 'if NEWS HAPPEN1HGS. BOW 'ofter takins the oath, of office at the state capital,. The oath was administered at a Joint ses sion of the members f the senate and house of representatives in the hall of the latter in the presence of a brilliant assemblage, which witnessed the inau guration of -the first Democratic gov ernor the state has had in sixteen years. . j . . The naval demonstration aeainst the Atlantic coast by-the returning north Atlantic squadrpny under- command of Rear Admiral Seaton Schroeder, has been defeated-"nby;the defending fleet, eemmasded by Rear Admiral S. v A. Stantoa, in the opinion, of. the naval authorities. . They learned that the "enemy" had been discovered and lo cated .off the. coast. Rear Admiral Schroeder, with sixteen battleships? sailed from Europe ten days ago for Guantanamo, with orders to threaten the Atlantic coast ; on the way, the game being to get as close to the coast as possible without, being discovered. The criminal libel suit begun at the instigation of President Roosevelt against the Press Publishing company, publishers of the New York. World, has been ended In the supreme court of the United states. Chief Justice White read an opinion, In which all of the associate Justices .concurred, af firming the Judgment of the , United States: district court for the southern district' of. New York quashing , the indictment returned against the com- J pany. The decision effectually disposes of the. case against the World. -4- . For the first time a newspaper was delivered to Its subscribers by aero plane. .Af ter a spectacular departure from Los. Angeles, Cal., Didier Masson In his biplane Pegasus carried 500 cop ies of the Times to Pomona and San Bernardino, sixty miles away in an air line: Masson .also carried letters from the local chamber of ; commerce to officers of the Merchants', associa tion of , Pomofta and the chamber of commerce at San Bernardino. . - - H, M. Edwards, president judge of the courts of Lackawanna county, Pa., and a Jurist of- nearly thirty years' j experience has been interviewed ai Seranton upon the remarks of Judge Neff of Cleveland that "high prices, coupled wfth some incomes, are- re sponsible for so many divorces in-this country , t Judge Edwards said Ms ob servations are that hasty and impru- flent marriages!, are responsible for di vorce cases inour courts. f- William Ellis Corey, president of the United States Steel -corporation since the resignation of Charles M. Schwab, the first president, seven years ago. tendered his. formal resignation at a regular meeting fef the finance com mittee in New York. To all intents and purposes the resignation nas been accepted. It will come formally before the board of directors at their regular quarterly meeting Jan. 25. They will accept it. x . t. Ohio Democrats are to form Wood row Wilson clubs to boom the New Jersey man for 1912, according to Wil liam A. Brudroe of Dayton. The wing f the party- known as the Hanley-trinley-Garber machine . Is angry with Governor Harmon. They declare that Ills secret opposition brought about t -he choice of Attlee Pomerene for I United States senator instead of Ed ivard W. Hanley. ' At a caucus -of the New Jersey - Dem ocratic state senators in the office of f'enator Harry V. Osborne In Newark Senator. Osborne was chosen as minor ity leader, Senator Cornish of Warren tiounty as president and.Senator Silzer of Middlesex county , as president pro tem. The United States senatorshlp was discussed, but none of those pres- OLD SOLDIER TORTURED. "For .'years : 1 - suffered unspeakable torture from Indigestion, constipation and liver, trouble," wrote A, Kr Smith, a war veteran at Erie, Pa., , "but Dr. King's New - Life Pills : fixed me all rlgtft " They're simply : great.";; Try them for any stomach, liver or kidney trouble. Only 25c. at all druggists. - Don't ' live on hopes of sliding into Jheaventest you find that the skids run I"1? other;!way" ' " ent- atr th meeting would tell what was Bald. . - ' AtJee Pomerene of Canton,. O.,. attor ney and lieutenant governor elect, has been -nominated for the United States senate to succeed Charles Dick by the Joint Democratic: caucus' of-the-Ohio legislature. Pomerene received forty five votes, the exact number required for the nomination. "V 'J CRIMES - -AND' Twenty-twow Indict ments were returned hv. ttifl orand 1nrv j In CA.SU AUTI ES, connectioh ; with ; the Los Angeles (CaL) Times explosion on Oct 1, but names were not made pub lic. All Indictments charge murder, or connection with the crime that caused the death of twenty-one employees of the Times. ' It is understood that the men who beught dynamite in Frisco as well as a number of Frisco labor leaders wh6 went there and incited lo cal unions to: engage- in a general strike are among those Indicted. . r Thirteen lives, are believed to Jhave been lost In a wreck in ,the Northern Pacific yards at Cheney, Wash. Ten or more persons were Injured. The North Coast: Limited struck the rear of a Burlington passenger train which was taking a side track. Three, coaches were wrecked. Five bodies have been recovered.---. The engineer of the North Coast train applied the brakes when he saw the danger,- but was unable-to get his train under control bef ore tt crashed into the rear of the Burllng ton. . . -. '- ' - Albert M. Judson,. formerly a mem ber of the stock exchange . firm of Judson & Judson of New York, which failed Dec. IT last, killed himself In the J. Hood Wright hospital. He fired one JtraUet Into his head and died al most instantaneously. He was fifty five yearsv old. Physicians in the hos pital had been talking to him only a few. -minutes before he shot himself . Several of his .business friends said that since the failure of bis firm he had seemed, depressed. Former State Senator C. O. Temple ton of Tyrone, Pa., self confessed forger -and embezzler, has been sen tenced to as indefinite term, o J three to twelve years in the Western peni tentiary. Hls Iron nerve that had stood him good when; robbing scores of wid ows and orphaSs who reposed trust in hlnffthe last ten years left him. He brot(e down completely and wept, beg ging for mercy -in the courtroom. J. Charles A. Hughes, twenty-two years old, an'jrt student, of New York, who took twenty-one grains of morphine, is dead. " Letters in his pockets show his sweetheart refused to marry , him arid there was "no use in living." -In a letter found In his pocket it said that Lydia had received his offer of mar riage, but that she did not love, him from her heart and therefore could not accept t..ii-..r;.'Vv- ifJz?': Unable 4o keep awake; Josepji Seilg man, a baker in. New; York, fell asleep at the sWe of the machine where he was mixing bread. iBig steel knives re volve in the bread mixing machine; As he dozed his hand fell into the ma chine. The whirling blades severed it at the wrist. He jumped up with a scream and lost, his balance, falling face, down against the knives. Six deaths have occurred and many residents of Telfener, Tex., are ill as a result of ..eating oread made from flour which a chemist analyzed and found to -contain arsenic. , How the poison got into the flour, . which was bought at the village grocery from an open barrel, has not been determined. w. . The dredge which is JL I,f working about the OF OUR wrect of the, Maine .NEIGHBORS, outside of Havana harbor brought up the first fragments of human remains from the wreck. These consisted of two ribs and sev eral finger bones. It also brought up a quantity. of coal some distance from the wreck, which suggests perhaps an Yternfll exnlosion. A number of shells for the minor battery have been raised. - ' Advices from the City of Mexico an neunce the resignation of General Don Manuel Gonzalez Cozio, minister of war. following a long conference at which - the displeasure of President Diaz was expressed at the poor show Ine the army is making in suppress- Itio- 'the revolution. President Diaz said the recent disturbances seriously reflect upon the army and that there should never have been anything more than a routing of the rebels. Another v landslide has been reported from the Gulebra .cut on tne ranama canal. This time more than half a million cubic yards of earth slipped from the. side of .'the 'overhanging mountains. The slide isbelieved to have been moving slowly - down the mountalnjf or more than two years, and the men at work In the main canal had a narrow escape with their lives. -Peru has agreed to submit its bound ary dispute with Ecuador to The Hague tribunal. This is in compliance with the suggestion in the joint note recently presented to the two republics by the United States, . Brazil ana Ar gentina as mediators.' . The officers'of the Japanese training Rnuadron. consisting of. the cruisers Kasasai and Asama, under Rear Ad miral Rokuro Yashiro, are at Panama for a few days to inspect the isthmus and canal zone. , -Battling -Nelson has - made the prediction AFFAIRS. ; that witnin a year there will be a new champion of the lightweight class. "And," said Nelson, "with all daer respect to one WoIgast and also Moran, I want to go on rec ord as saying that the. new champion's name will be B. Nelson. " Although Nelson lost his title-to Wolgast after forty rounds of tough milling on Feb- - SOLVES A GOOD MYSTERY. "I want to thank you -from the hot-. torn of my heart," wrote C. B. Rader, of Loulsburg, W. Va., "for the wonder ful double benefit I got from Electric Bitters, in curing me of both a severe case of stomach trouble and of rheu matism, from which I had been an al most helpless sufferer for ten. years. It suited my case as though: made just for meA' For dyspepsia, indigestion, jaundice and to-rid the system of kid ney poisons- that cause rheumatism, Electric - Bitters has no ' equaL - Try them. Every bottle is. guaranteed to satisfy. Only 60c. at all druggists. -'--:. 22 of last year and only in November last was beaten, by Owen Moran In eleven rounds, be refuses to believe he' was actually licked on either occasion The national baseball commission at its' meeting In Cincinnati passed a rule prohibiting ' the world's champions from , playing any games after win ning the world's championship. The commission was led to take this action following . the: ; sorry showing of the Philadelphia - Athletics in Cuba. ;- The commission, however,' does not intend to interfere in the playing of games and barnstorming" tours of other teams, but-all will be notified that they must put regular teams In the field and not to make a farce of the national game. Frank GotcTi, champion heavyweight wrestler of the world, has resigned his title in favor of Yousef Mahmout and said he would back Mahmout against Hackenschmidt fop $20,000, -part:' of which be posted. . The announcement was made by - Farmer" - Burns from the ring in which Hackenschmldt and Jess Westergaard were - preparing to Hwrestle. ' Burns stated that $1,000 had already been deposited by Gotch and that the remainder would be posted at any time the ' challenge was ac-r cepted. . - Bob "Douglas, 2:04, the great trotting stallion, ( Is to go : to Austria. John Splan, the veteran reinsman, now a resident of JLexingtonKy.,. went to Boston, visited the Johnson - farm, looked thegray stallion over,; then made an offer' for the horse, which D. N. C. Hyams of Ponkapoag could not refuse. The price is not made public, but It is known to be in the nelghbor bood of $20,000. f DEATHS OF NOTED PEOPLE; - Commodore Alexander MeCrackln, U. S. N., retired, died at ' his home in San v Francis co, after a short ilmess resulting from a nervous breakdown. - He was sixty years old. Commodore MeCrackln; wbb born in Pennsylvania and enlisted In the volunteer navy in 1863. f He served for a year in the Mississippi squadron on board the Red Rover and the Gen eral Price. Shortly before the war with Spain he was executive officer of the Marietta, and in November, 1898, he was ordered to the Monadnock in the Philippines. The commodore re ceived the degree of LL. B. from Har vard university In .1885. : Justice Edward ,B. 4Whitney of the New York, supreme court died at his summer home .at Cornwall, Conn., of double pneumonia. He was appointed by Governor White late, in December to succeed the "late Justice Charles W. Dayton.: At the time Governor White named, .him he was already on the su preme bench through appointment; by Governor Hughes, taking the. place of Judge Gildersleeve, resigned,' but would have retired on Jan. 1 as a re-, suit of defeat at the polls in Novem ber. " ' v , : Word has been received at Jackson ville, Fla., to the effect that Lucien Lyne, the well known American jockey. Is dead in Germany. When riding for J. A. Drake ! he won the American Derby at Chicago with Wyeth and -In the same year won the Futurity at Sheepshead bay with the same owner s Savable. Lyne also-won another Fu turity with Sydney Pagefs Hamburg neue. ,. Dr. Alexander R. Byerly, seventy- nine years old, a member for fifty-two years of the faculty of theMillersville state normal school and a leading edu cator .,. of Pennsylvania, died at ; his home in Lancaster, Pa. His death was hastened by grief over his wife's, re cent death. - Cardinal Francesco Sagna, prefect of the congregation of the -index expur- gatorius at Rome, died from heart dis ease.. He was born -hi 1836 and cre ated a cardinal in 1894. A young Monagesque party has been formed in Paris, the 'members of which declare they FOREIGN NOTES OF INTEREST. will not accept the new constitution of Monaco,, which was promulgated last Saturday. There, are reports tnat a revolution Is being engineered either by the owners of the gambling casino at JMonite Carlo against the (Prince of Monaco or by the prince as a buffer against the casino. ' No anxiety is expressed . In . uerman shipping circles concerning : the out-, come of the suit instituted by the Unit ed States government to close Ameri can ports to the vessels of the thirteen defendant transatlantic steamship companies comprising the Atlantic conference. In a , statement Issued from the offices of the Hamburg-American Hne it is explained that the suit Is welcomed with- confidence that the Sherman act, J under which the action is brought, will be declared Inapplicable to foreign, companies. - A violent earthquake 4Id much dam age and resulted in loss, of many Uves In :various points of Russian -aurKes-tan. . Many -buildings' were destroyed, and there were a large .-number of fatalities. Great fissures opened : In the ground. Virtually alt'stores and residences at Vyemy, , capital of the territory of Semlryechensk, were de stroyed or damaged. The city has a population of 23,000. -: The - Peking correspondent - of the London Daily ; Mail Bays that as no satisfactory progress -is being made In the informal negotiations between China arid the United States with the view to an understanding, it is believ ed in Peking that China is about to approach Germany, hoping to secure an ally. - . ' " Fifteen persona were killed and for ty or fifty others Injured in the wreck of a' passenger, train nearCathcart Cape Colony, South Africa. The train, which was loaded with;- holiday mak ers ! from East London left ' the rails and, turning over, rolled down an em bankment . -"... ' - Great Cement Demand. - - Two years ago there was an over production of 100 per cent, staring ce ment manufacturers . in. the . face, as the estimated capacity of. the plants at that" time was 100,000,000 barrels per year and - the J consumption' only 50,000,000. Present conditions Indicate a consummation of 75,000,000 barrels this year. This Increased demand. coupled with the fact that large East ern manufacturers for two.years haye sold large quantities South and , West at unprofitable figures," has caused the advance. Life Insurance. The best business men and farmers carry life insurance, because their mon ey is safely investled and again their lives are protected in case of death. It makes young men save their earnings" for after years,-, for the i rainy days f and for a large estate that in this way is created by a smaller cost than any other way. The Mutual Life, of New York, is , the oldest and strongest ' in ; America. Get In the best possible com-j pany when you do Insure. . See Hines . the-agent, at Kenansville, who rep-. 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., - Keep the. wolf from tha door. , Prepare for old age. . -J. Be independent in- life. - . , ; ; Save a part of your earnings. THE MUTUAL LIFE . INSURANCE . COMPANY OF NEW YORK, ' D. S. HEMES. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF rHEBANK OF ROSE HILL at . Rose Hill, - in the State of North Carolina, at the close of business November 10, 1910. Resources. , , :. Loans and discounts. ....,.$ 65,244.09 ' Banking Houses, $4,000.00; Furniture ' and Fixtures. $851.50 Due from Banks and- Bank ers ; . .. . Cash items. ....... .,. . . . . Gold coin. ... . . . .......... . Silver coin, including all mi nor coin currency. National bank notes . and .4,851.60 ,309,31 1,579.65 1,106.00 468.36 other U. S. notes..... .2,536.00 Total .........:...:,$ 78,994. 91 Liabilities. Capital stock. $ 10,000.00 Undivided profits, less cur- - rent expenses and taxes i ' paid : . . . . . . 2,116.02 27.00 33,588.78;. 16,208.19 16,973.73 Dividends unpaid. Deposits subject to check. . Demand certificates of de posit , Savings deposits , . . Cashier's checks outstand ing .r: 1 81.19 Total .$78,994191. State of - North Carolina, Ceunty f .. Duplin, as: , I, W. B. Soutberland, Cashier of the " above-named nank. o solemnly swear that the above--statement Is true :to"-.&, the best of my; knowledge and belief. : WB, SOUTHERLAND, , . . Cashier. - -Correct Attest: ' , " i W. H. F0SSELL, 1 " J. C. MALLARD, " W. D. HENDERSON, " -' e Directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me, ' this 15th day of November, 1910. J. F. BLIZZARD, - ' Notary Pubjic. My commission expires November 4,.v 1912. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF- the. Bank of Warsaw, at Warsaw, in the State of North ' Car o- :-: Una, at the close of business, Nov. 10, , 1910. -Resources. - Loans and discounts...... 65,307.00 Overdrafts secured ........ .. 5,288 . 23 , : . Banking Houses, Furniture and Fixtures. . ..... ...... 2,500.00 , Demand loans. . ........ 13,831.91 Due from Banks and Bank ers ...i. ........ Gold coin....... ..f.... Silver coin, including all; mi nor coin currency, ....... National bank notes and other U. S. notes. . . . . . . . . .9,97i; nil 477.50 , 422.28 4,533.00 . Total .$ 99,331.83 Liabilities. Capital stock paid in. ...... $ J.0,000. 00 Surplus fund 10,000,00 Undivided profits,; less cur- . rent expenses and .taxes ' ' paid t" 734.89 Time certificates of deposit 20,652.55 Deposits subject to check..' 54,303.27 Due to Banks and Bankers 1,693 .38 Cashier's . Checks outstand- , , tag . 1,622.74 Accrued interest due deposi- -; tora . ; 425.00 Total .., $. 99,331.83 . Carolina, - County of State f North ' Duplin, ss: " -: : 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. V - H. F. PEIRCE, Cashier. . Correct Attest: - -' '; L. P. BEST,; ' - SE. HINES, . ' H. L. STEVENS, - - Directors - - Subscribed and sworn to before me. this 18th day of November, 1910. - . ' - . J. H FONVTELLE, Notary Public Myr commission expires April 1, 1911.' ' Many Imagine they are traveling on the gospel train who are only- arguing over the tune card. Jm" " . Some people treat the sermon, as a table d'hote dinner 'plcklng ; out the things that will not agree with them, v Ei BBTiiS CO UGHl IE AK2 ALLTHaSTArCD lUTRStUS I GUARANTEED SATSFACTOtX ) ' i - 'v. ; j
Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 12, 1911, edition 1
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