Newspapers / Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, … / Jan. 19, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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' : th e iiiiiii; iiKlElfe imm. 1 . -,., i- i .. - . .. , , . . ir t ; . i " " y"' 1 " i : ' , L " ' ' 3 in l"J"" ,.',. ;' "' , . I. i n . ... i ' , .- " . 11 - VOL. KENANSVILLE, DOPJUN COUNTY,nIicC., JANUARY 19, 1911. NO. 23. 1 Please Remim ""'rillv Warsaw, WATCH OUR WINDOWS SATURDAYS FOR BARGAINS. A Prosperous The Key to the Door of To-day's Opportunity is A Bank: Account Wfe thank our friends good will, and offer our years. j' MYPS0 FLOUR and FEED MILLS, A T? CALT-PSO, XT, O-, are cow prepared to resume business, and to meet the demands of tjie trade for GOOD HOME , GRAHAM FLOUR, and CORN MEAL. Prompt attention will be given those who bring Wheat and Corn from a distance, so that but one trip will have to be made. I WILL BUY WHEAT. MIDDLINGS AND BRAN FOR SALE. Jr tlTI hope to merit the patronage of all by giving the best atten tion to all. W. PATTEN, Calypso, Ti. G. JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER CAR LOAD OF American Fence 4 land the Hop and 3 the Dollars You, no doubt, are aware that this Fence is made of hard, stiff steel wire, with the best of galvanizing, has the tension curve and hine joint, which, when pressure is brought against the Fence, it is possible to force the stay out of alignment, and without breaking it. Alft notice, between bars stays are perfectly straight and when pressure is removed the entire stay, from top to bottom, springs back t3 its original position. J". C HORNB, - - Failed in Health "My mother died six years ago," writes Miss Ruth Ward, of Jerseyville, 111., and left me to care for six , children. I had never been strong; and this, with the shock of her death, was too much for me. "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 rto.take Cardui,-as It had done her so much good, so I commenced to use it and now I am in good health." Take J44 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 irrou need it, or not If you do need it, do not delays but commence to use it at once. Every day of delay, only lets you slide further down the hill. . Don't wait, then, but begin to take Cardui today, for Its use, no matter how prolonged, cannot harm you and will surely do you good. Write tot Ladies' Advisory Dept Chtttnooa Medicine Co.'Chattanooca, Ttaaw for Special Iasiraetiora, and M-pate book, Treatment lor Womea,w .seat tr- If it's of Good Quality We have it. If it isn't You don't want it. STORB OF QUALITY," New Year for their patronage and services for the coming M. McD. WILLIAMS, Cashier Bank of Faison. MADE FLOUR, Magnolia, N. G. CARDUI N: O SENATOR STEPHENSON CHARGED WITH BRIBERY CoranfflBe Wants to Oust Wis consin Man From Seat United States Senator Isaac Stephen son is charged with a number of viola tions of the laws of Wisconsin. Th charge is made in a lengthy statement filed with Governor F. E. McGovern by the 1909 state senate committe6 which investigated the primary cam paign and election of Senator Stephen son. The committee recommends that a copy of the report be submitted to the United States senate and that body i investigate Mr. Stephenson's election. It Is charged that he violated the law which prohibits any one from con tributing money to assist candidates for the legislature who reside outside of the district in which the contributor resides; that Tie gave a sum of money to a supporter of McGovern for Unit ed States senator, sucli supporter aft erward switching to Stephenson, and that he paid large sums of money to others which was afterward used by them to Induce other persons to assist In procuring his election. The report In part: On the whole record, therefore, Stephenson is charged with knowledge of the manner in which his campaign was being conducted and the purposes . for which money was being disbursed. The findings of the committee are that the nomination in the primary and the election to the United States senate by the legislature of Isaac Stephenson of Wisconsin is null and void on account of attempted bribery and corrupt practices by himself and by his campaign managers, agents and workers and of violations of the laws of Wisconsin defining and punishing offenses against the elective franchise. When Senator Stephenson was in formed of the charges filed with the governor of Wisconsin he said the ma jority Of the committee which inves tigated his election filed its reiort two years ago and that there was no mi nority report at that time. He said that there was a minority of the com mittee opposed to him, however, and that he supjosed that it was now mak ing a report. LARGEST WARSHIP LAUNCHED Miss Mary Macon Was the Sponsor For the Arkansas. Splashed with the traditional bottle of champagne, the battleship Arkan sas, the largest warship in the world, was launched from the yards of the New York Shipbuilding company at Photo by American Press Association MISS MACON AND ARKANSAS. Camden?- N. ; J. Miss. Mary MacosC daughter of -Representative Robert B. Macon of Helena, Ark., was the spon sor for the ship. There was one unusual feature to the launching, ' the absence of an of ficial delegation representing the state government of-Arkansas. It has al ways been the custom for the governor of the state for which a ship has been named to head the launching party or to be represented by some one official ly designated by him. The average man Is a cheerful giver when asked for advice. fill I" . Y j f ' 'fo-'- - YiT " 1 1 f ' -w" r ' " I M frjpy SENATORIAL: FIGHT IS WAGED TONIGHT. FMs of Sheelian ami Shep ard Are Confident. The New Yprk Democratic joint cau cus of senators and assemblymen- to elect a . United States senator to suc ceed Cnauncey M.'Depew will meet in the assembly chamber at Albany to night, Immediately after a short session- of the senate and the assembly- The friends of Edward F. Shepard declare that this caucus may last until early tomorrow morning. - The friends of William M. Sheehan gave it as their opinon that the work of the joint caucus would not last more than two hours. - . There are 114 Democratic legislators twenty-nine senators and eighty-five assemblymen. The followers of Mr. ! Sheehan express the deep conviction i that Mr.' Shepard will not have- more than nine- Democratic senators and i thirty-five -assemblymen. Btlt, ' then, the-names of Martin W. Littleton, D. Cady Herrick, Supreme Coujt Justice James W. Gerard and Alton B. Parker are to go before the caucus. The Shepard people insist that the votes of Littleton, Herrick, Gerard and Parker, together with those for Shep ard, will prevent the naming of Shee han on the first ballot. Then, too, Wil liam R. Hearts is to have two votes, one senator and one - assemblyman, elected by the Independence league. It Is to be a free for all race. Governor Dix, Thomas Mott Os borne, William Church Osborne and Charles F. Murphy went into confer ence. at thexecutive mansion late last night. The conference broke up at 10 o'clock tills morning. After leav ing the executive mansion at the close of the conference Thomas Mott Os borne said: "If Shepard was not elected up to tonight he is elected now." GENERAL R P"""C chairman of the New news York state Republics HAPPENINGS. v. c. . nnnit hia intpnrtnn f rPRicnini? that I uv v o o position at a meeting of the state com- rr,m PniiPd for .Tn 21 in a letter to Sarrmel & Koenig, former secretary of I state. A copy of the letter was sent to all members, of the committee. At the meeting on Jan. 21, to be held in the state headquarters in New York, the matter of Mr. Prentice's successor will be taken up.-, Commander William S. Sims, com manding the battleship Minnesota, will be reprimanded publicly for his alleged indiscreet "last drop of blood" speech made .in London Dec. 3 last when the officers and men-of the fleet were entertained by the lord mayor of London. The statement In which Com mander Sims promised Great Britain the last drop of American blood was telegraphed to German . newspapers and, together with the failure of the fleet to visit Germany, was made the basis for a wave of comment in the German press. The disease known as Infantile paralysis, which gradually spread over the whole state of New York during 1910, is being investigated by the state department of health. The disease ap peared in practically every county in the state and caused about fifty deaths. State Commissioner of Health Porter has secured the aid of the federal gov ernment in this Investigation, and Sur geon W. H. Frost of Washington has4have ber caSe drag on. been detailed to mate a report on tne outbreak. The news that Wu Ting Fang, for mer minister to the United States, is to cut off his cue Jan. 30 and that Chi nese merchants in San Francisco will follow his example is affecting the hu man hair market, according to reports In New York. Augustus H. Skillin, receiver in bankruptcy of Louis Levus sone, manufacturer of human hair goods, said that the hair market had been affected by the reports. It was learned In Concord, N. H., that Dewltt C. Howe, attorney for George W. Glover, has filed with the clerk of the superior court, a petition in equity, setting forthhls claim that Mrs. Eddy's will was illegal, and pray ing for a construction- thereof. Also asking that Henry M. Baker be en joined from paying out. any money on account of the estate until legal ques tions are settled. A bill which will legalize the so called "unwritten- law" if it is enacted by the Missouri legislature has been Introduced in the house by. John G. Holmes of Phelps county. The measure gives a husband the right to slay the destroyer of . his home Practically every member of the family Is Includ ed In the list of those whose honor must be held Inviolate. Senator Robinson has prepared a bill to be introduced in the Kansast legis lature which will provide a fine of not less than $600 for any adult person who tells a child that there is no such person as Santa Clans. , It is the great est tragedy of childhood to scatter such an illusion, Senator Robinson says. President Taft has asked congress in a special message for further legisla tion to control the purchase and sale of opium, morphine, cocaine and other habit forming drugs , In the United States and possessions. The president suggests several changes in the opium exclusion act of Feb., 9, 1909. Bills have been Introduced in the Washington" legislature abolishing the death penalty for murder and treason and providing for the commission form of government for the state. . 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 leh's Arnica Salve, the quickest, surest cure for burns, -wounds, bruises, boilsr sores. It subdues inflammation. It kills pain. It soothes and heals. Drives off! skin eruptions," ulcers - or plies; Only 25c at all druggists. Ignorance gives greater freedom in utterance than, inspiration, and is . of ten mistaken for it Blackened and charred though it was, with- J r CASUAUTUES. jjttle tablecloth burned away, ; themlniature tea table that five-yearlj Marion , Yarwood bad set for the supper, of. the china doll was still standing neatly set withi its bits of tups and saucers when the firemen burst through the locked doors of the Yarwood home in New York. Lying on the. floorbeside the little table bad ly burned were' little Marlon and her mother,;! Shild died few houra Llatet, and tii mother's death followed closely. ;: ' - : Marcu.3 lolen and. Joseph Vincent, employed 14 the' JBalley Knitting mills at FortPlaii, 'N. YM were chaffing each j other when : Vincent, : the .more power ful man, grabbed Molen, wrapped a-i shirt around his neck lifted him to bis back albd carried him around the shop. Molen struggled hard for a time to free himself. .: .When l he', became passive Vincent dropped him to the floor, ex pecting that; Molen would arise and continue th play, but Molen lay quiet and helplesg, and has since been in that . condition despite efforts of doc- tors td. aWse him and is dangerously near - deatSS Besides being all but strangled Stolen seems to have injured his tieck Tsome.wayt although it is neither bruken nor dislocated, Benjamin J Cramp, a' member of a famous family pf Philadelphia ship builder's, was found unconscious in the bathroom at his residence and died two nours lkter ,of ..gas poisoning. He was found by Mrsr Cramp on her re turn home from a visit to the home of a friend. Smelling gas as she entered the front door, Mrs. Cramp, com menced an investigation. Finding the bathroom door locked, she forced open the door. Mr. Cramp was seated on a chair, with his pipe and a magazine close beside him. The bathroom was filled witb gas, which had escaped from an open jet Michael ; Iielangie, a contract miner, and Jamep Carney, a shift boss in the Bell and 'Diamond mine at Butte, Mont., were killed by timber gas aris ing from a fire that broke out under ground in the Modoc mine, an adjoin ing and coi neetmg mine. Twelve other men were overcome but were revived. Belangie, who was a Spanish war vet eran, lost his life while rescuing other men. He succeeded in placing two un conscious pump men on the cage and sending them to the surface, when he collaPse and died lit. "I 3 A TT . e" W1LU "uuucyr xxeurj , against whom they had a grievance, George Major and Sam Whitfield wrecked a train on the Central of Georgia railway at Sylvania, Ga., at Christmas time. Engineer Clark and his fireman were . killed and property destroyed Valued it $100,000, but Con ductor Henry, whose death was sought, escaped uninjured. . Thirty loaded freight cars were Durned. Major and Whitfield were arrested-by railroad de tectives and have confessed. Miss Mary G. Crossman of Hunting ten N. jT-T a Cornell co-ed, was In jured by an explosion in the chemical laboratory in Morse halL She had been performing an experiment. By a mistake she poured a wrong chemical substance into a glass tube which al Ijeady. contained other chemicals. The fusion of the two caused the explo sion. The tube was shattered, and a good many pieces of glass lodged in Miss Crossman's face and neck. Mrs. Caroline B. Martin, indicted for the murder of her daughter, Ocey Snead, whose body was found in a bathtub in a vacant house at East Orange, N. J., pleaded non vult to manslaughter. She created a sensa tion in the Newark court, declaring that everybody was against her and that she would sooner "go to the elec tric chair ten thousand times" than She will be sentenced Saturday. Henry Roger Whitmore, sixty-eight years old, former assistant secretary of the St. Louis Merchants' exchange. leaped from the eighth floor of the Maequette hotel in St. Louis. Death was Instantaneous. He left a note in his room in the hotel saying: "The doctor says I will be utterly helpless and bedridden the rest of my life. I prefer death." One man was fatally and another dangerously burned in the basement of an apartment In New York when a partially nnea Darrei or a preparation of coal tar became ignited. 8 PORTING i- Tex Rlckard admits that he would stage AFFAIRS. another battle between Jeffries and Johnson soTn. He will go to JiOS Angeles In an endeavor to get Jeffries' signature to a contract. Rick ard said he would offer a purse of $60,000, but that -there would be no bonuses. He will try to stake the bat tle in Utah and failing in that will go to Nevada. He declined to state his further plans at this time. Philly. McGovern whipped Young O'Leary, the east side bantamweight, in a fast and exciting ten round bout at the Brooklyn Beach Athletic club In South Brooklyn. It was O'Leary's first appearance in the . ring in several months, and his lay off did not appear to have done him any good.. He started off well enough, but after the third round O'Leary's .. blows lacked suffi cient steam to bother Philly to any extent O'Leary depended mainly up on a straight left jab, which, though it sent McGovern's head back at times, failed to do any real damage. Sam Langford received the decision over Joe Jeannette of New York at the end of the twelve rdund bout at the Arniory Athletic association in Bos ton. The men have met six times be fore, Langford getting two decisions. Jeannette one, two were no decisions and the other a draw, but Jeannette did not . receive such severe punish ment in them all that was handed to him in this last bout In every round SOLVES A GOOD MYSTERY. "1 want to thank you from "the bot tom of my heart," wrote C. B. Rader, of Louisburg, 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 anal most helpless sufferer for ten years. It suited my case as though made just for me.". 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 50c at all druggists. CRIMEA' . AND v - Langford punched his opponent around the ring, forcing Jeannette to cover up to save- himself. Jack Gleason, Tex Rickard's partnei in the promotion of the Reno flght, is angling for a Johnson-Kaufman: fight ta be decided in England during coro nation week -next June. H. Frazee let it be known that he had made a bid of $50,000 for a battle between the cham pion and California's "white man's hope" and that Gleason was to be his partner. DEATHS WHUa111 H- Browne, .. who Constructed one OF NOTED of . flrst electri(, PEOPLE.- railways in this coun try, -died of ephithelioma, superinduc ed by exhaustion, after an illness ol five months at his residence in New York. Mr. Browne was born in Troy in 1849. As early as 1888 he built the electric railway in Richmond, Va., which was one of the first in the Unit ed States. . Following this he became associated with the WestiQghouse in- teres ts and was made general man ager of the United Electric company. Former Senator Owen Cassidy died at his home at Montour Falls, three miles from Watklns, N. Y. Senator Cassidy voted against the first Hughes anti-race track legislation. It became known later that half an hour before the call for the vote In the senate he had received a telegram from Wash ington, signed J. Sloat Fassett. United States Senator Charles J. Hughes, junior senator from Colorado, died at his home in Denver after a long illness. Death was due to a gen eral breakdown. Mr. Hughes was a Democrat and was born in Missouri j Feb. 16, 1853. He ' was educated in ! Missouri and studied law at the uni versity of that state. The late Senator Quay's Implacable foe in southern Pennsylvania, Alexan der Stewart, brother of Supreme Court Justice John Stewart, died in Cham bersburg, Pa., aged sixty-eight years. He had been a Republican state sen ator, county, chairman and insurgent leader in Franklin county for forty years. Robert Davis, Democratic leader ol Hudson county and collector of Jersey City, is dead at his home in that city. Mr. Davis had been sick for more than a year, and only two days ago it was believed he was better and would re cover. He Is said to have had cancel of the stomach and septic poisoning set in. Former Congressman Constantine J. Erdman, author of the Erdman na tional arbitration act, died at his home in Allegheny, Pa., aged sixty-three years. When he entered "congress in 1893 he drafted the bill for the preven tion of strikes and settlement of laboi disputes that bears his name. FOREIGN A vIsit Dy e Duk6 .,nTCO d'Abruzzi, Incognito, to notes, of DnJted states be INTEREST. fore end of tbfl present, social season is one of the ru mors which has reached Washington from Roman court cixclesr The duke' visit incognito would enable him to pass the time according to his personal wishes and would, prevent his being lionized in a way that would exclude the participation of Miss Katharine Elklns, who Is now in mourning for her father. Antonio Jose Almeida, minister of the interior of Portugal, resigned. His resignation followed an unsuccessful attempt which he made to settle a strike of the railroad employees. The strike movement has been on foot for some months, and the government had been endeavoring to arrange aplan for meeting such an emergency. The walkout of the railroad men was fol lowed by a strike of the store clerks in Lisbon, who quit work on the ground that the authorities had failed to bring about the promised reduction of their hours of labor. In consequences of disturbances which attended the Mahommedan fes- , tival of Mohurrum the police forbade! ! a procession that was to nave Deen , ! held in Bombay, India. A mob stoned the police and rioted generally. Many inoffensive' persons were injured Troops were summoned and they fired a volley at the rioters, killing eleven and wounding fourteen. A piece of wood, with a section of j canvas attached, has been found on the beach near Ostend, Belgium. It is supposed to have been part of the aeroplane used by Cecil Grace on his ill fated attempt to cross the English channel. - news telegram was re J w j ceived by the govern OF OUR ment of Ecuador from NEIGHBORS. Secretary of State Knox In which he asks that govern ment to furnish adequate protection for the property of the Salango Ex port company, an American "concern operating fiber concessions in the province of Manabi. In a telegram to the department the representatives of the company said their property liad been threatened and the lives of its employees had been jeopardized, by the armed resistance of Ecuadorians to a survey authorized by the Ecuador government A cablegram from Nicaragua re ports that President Estrada has is sued a . proclamation restoring com-' plete religious liberty in the republic and especially , the reopening of Prot estant schools closed by President Ze laya eight years ago. Most of these schools were under charge of the Mo ravian missionaries (German Protes tants). The schools- were closed by Zelaya on the ground that they were disseminating ideas contrary to his government Virginia Fabregas, the greatest Mexican actress, has brought suit foi divorce from her husband, Francisco Cardenar, on statutory grounds, in the City of .Mexico. OLD SOLDIER TORTURED. "For years I suffered unspeakable torture from indigestion, constipation and liver trouble," wrote A. K. Smith, a war veteran at Erie, Pa., "but Dr. King's New Life Pills fixed me all right. They're simply great" Try them for any stomach, liver or kidney trouble. Only 25c. af all druggists. A girl becomes conceited about the time she has her first beau. " The - man :who tells all he knows doesn't make the world any wiser. - 3 NEGROES LYNCHED BY KENTUCKY MOB Two Shot as They Try to Es cape; Other Is Hanged. A mob of only twenty" masked men visited the jail at Shelbyville, Ky., and lynched three negroes who were in the jail. Two were held on the charge of attacking white women, and the third had been convicted of murdering an old negro woman. . Before visiting the jail the mob raid ed a blacksmith shop and took a sledgehammer, a bolUcutter and vari-4 ous other tools. They went to the jail and demanded the keys. Jailer Thomp son surrendered the keys without re sistance. The men entered the jail and cut the bolts which held the doors of the cage that held the prisoners. The three negroes Eugene Marshall, who had been sentenced to be hanged for the murder of an old negro wo man;" Wade Patterson and James West, charged with attacking white girls were hurried to a railroad bridge. The ropes which held Patterson and West broke, and the two ran into the woods to escape. The members of the mob fired on them, and both fell dead. There was no excitement in the streets, and not a person could be found who knew that a lynching took place. The town was not aroused. The coroner will hold an inquest, but it is believed the case will not be pushed. VAN DYKE QUIT FOR GOOD, Was Not Wanted, Says Princeton Pro 1 feasor, on Second Resignation. ' Dr. Henry Van Dyke's recent de cision to sever relations with Prince ton university of Princeton, N. J., as Murray professor of English litera ture, which has been the subject of PROFESSOR VAN DYKE. conjecture among his friends, was in part explained by himself. He resign- ed because he felt he was not wanted, and, much as he liked the work, he Chose to break with associates who failed so far in respect for him as to deny him a voice in faculty affairs. Three years ago he became so re - sentful of this treatment that he ten - dered his resignation, but was induced a i . j i j . . m. i a ; t I , . 1. 1Ieved, he has withdrawn for good. CO wmiuraw j.c iuih uiuw, il i " - SKELETON ENDS MYSTERY. Bones Found In Old Trunk In Indiana Believed to Be Those of Man Who Disappeared Long Ago. The disappearance of Eugene Wood mansee in 1867 from Noblesville, Ind., on the day he was to be married, is believed -to "be solved by the finding of an old trunk with parts of nis body In it, in what was an old road house at the time.. The excavation under the house was made as the result of find ing human bones just under' the sur face a few days ago.' In digging un der the old house a spade struck the lid of a trunk. When the lid was broken off the skeleton was found. Woodmansee went to Noblesville to marry Sarah Virt, and after reaching the city he arranged the details. His motherland father had gone with him from their Illinois home tobe present at the wedding. He was never seen after leaving the minister In the street. The young man had a large sum of money on his person, and it Is believed that he was murdered. TAFT NOW A PEDESTRIAN. Forsakes Automobile to Enjoy Walk ing About Capital. Washington, Jan. 16. President Taft has forsaken the big White House au tomobile that can make its .sixty miles an hour any day for the leisurely joys jf walks about the . capital. Almost every afternoon, rain,. or shine, the president, with' Secretary-Norton or Captain -Butt and two secret serv ice men, has left the White House, just after luncheon and has spent several hours in the parks and on the city streets. 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 consumption only ,50,000,000. Present conditions indicate a consummation of 75,000,000 barrels this year. This increased demand, coupled wjth the fact thaT large East ern manufacturers for two' years liave sold- large quantities South and West at unprofitable figures, has caused the advance. jj i BPPJ& K. Mi I i -v I f J 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 other way. The Mutual Life, of New York, is the oldest and strongest in America. Get in the best possible com pany, when you do insure. See Hines the agent, at Kenansville, who rep- resents, the strongest Company of anyv;. ' 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 the door. Prepare for old age. Be independent Jn life. Save a part of your earnings. THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK, D. S. HINES. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF ME BANK OF ROSE HILL at RoseHIlL in the State of North Carolina, at the close of business January 7, 1911. Resources. Loans and discounts .'..;...$ 62,831 . 85 Banking Houses, $4,000.00; 'Furniture and Fixtures, $851.50 4,851.60 Due from Banks and Bank- . ers 5,610.04 Cash items 573.64 Gold coin 971.00 Silver coin, including all mi nor coin currency 529.42. National bank notes and other U. S. notes 3,575.00 Total '.$ 78,942.45 Liabilities. Capital stock $10,000.00 Undivided profits, less cur rent expenses and taxes paid 2,032.77 Dividends unpaid 222.00 Deposits subject to check. ; 29,365.25 Demand., certificates of de posit 16,516.95 Savings deposits . . 20,677 . 71 Cashier's checks outstand ing 127.77 Total $ 78,942.45 State of North Carolina, County of Duplin, as: I, W. B. Southerland, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. W. B. SOUTHERLAND, x " " r - Cashier. Correct Attest: W. H. FUSSELL, W. D. HENDERSON, J. C. MALLARD, Directors. - Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 13th day of January, 1911 I. P. ALDERMAN, Notary Public. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF . The Bank of Warsaw. at Warsaw, In the State of North Caro- Jina- at tne close of business Jan. 7, Resources. Loans and discounts ..$ 64,225.53 Overdrafts secured 727 . 90 Banking Houses, Furniture j and Fixtures 2,500.00 .Demand loans 2,945.16 jDue from Banks and Bank j ers 5 144 72 ........... ......... , ;Ool,j coin ' 477-t?0 Silver coin, lncludinVll mi nor coin currency.. ...... 822 .31 National bank notes and other U. S.. notes... 3,172.00 Total : $80,015.12 Liabilities. Capital stock paid in. ..... .$ 10,000.00 Surplus fund... 10,000.00 Undivided profits, less cur rent expenses and taxes paid 1,482.23 Time certificates of deposit 20,270.54 Deposits subject to check . . Due Banks and Bankers Cashier's Checks outstand ing Accrued interest due deposi tors j 37,598.11 181.10 83.14 400.00 Total . ' $80,015.12 State'of North Carolina County of Duplin, 68 : I, H. F. Peirce, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly-swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. H. F. PEIRCE, Cashier. 1 Correct Attest: S. E. HINES, H. L. STEVENS, L. P. BEST, Directors. - Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 13th day of January, 1911. . - J. H. FONYIELLE, : Notary Public. My commission expires April 1, 1911. OUCHS 0cC 50a$IXJO . ITWAl bothi free AMAllTfiROATAW) LUHG TROUBLES GUARANTEED SATTSFACTOiY' Off ATOVEV &rUVDC0. JAMES M. PAROTT, M. KINSTON, N. C. .Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Diseases, and General Sur gery .. '";V-. Office Hours: 2:30 to 5:30 p.. m. Sundays by appointment.1 - 1 1 II
Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, N.C.)
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Jan. 19, 1911, edition 1
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