Newspapers / Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, … / March 16, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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..t. r...... :ir v.-. '-.., ........ -. l -;.' .V'. ' . ', , . - - .. .. ::- - ' J- . J- MI VOL. VI. KEIfANSVILLEr5 DUPLIN iCOUNTY,? N-: C.,- MARCH : 16V 1911. 'N0.-31. 1 " 1 1 t I, . , , , i , i -, . i i .fi l l -,-, - uT-iZ-.e.TVUAr.-S-r. Lets .Help toD EnIap"ge:Yonp: BaniAccbunt T&i0 Yeai1.; - Whats the use of running nccouots all over tryf-: - " "As long as you do you will never get head. 1 ; - s and when you do PAY-CASH, go to the Store, that does a STRICTLY CASH business, then you know you are not paying for the goods the other feilow,iailed to pay. for.'' A Prosperous New Year The Key to the Door of Today's Opportunity is A Bank We thank our friends good will, and offer our years. JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER GAR LOAD OF American Fence L. 1 1 TTM mf Will U1C UU( r the Dollars You, no doubt, are aware that steel wire, with the best of galvanizing, has the "tension curve and hinge joint, which, when pressure is brought against the Fence, it. is possible to force the stay out of alignment, and without breaking it Also notice, between bars stays are perfectly straight and when pressure is removed the entire stay, from top to bottom, springs back to its original position. ' J. C HORNB, - CALYPSO FLOUR are now prepared to resume business, and to meet the demands of the trade for GOOD HOME MADE FLOUR, GRAHAM FLOUR, and CORN MEAL.. Prompt attention will be given those, who bring Wheat and Corn from a distance, so that but one trip wilLhave to be made. -I WILL BUY WHEAT. MIDDLINGS AND BRAN FOR SALE. hope to merit the patronage of all by giving the best atten tion to all. . IV. PATTEM, Calypso, n. G. Have You Tried Tt ? . There is a-bottle of Crdiii waiting for -you at the-; drug store. Have you fried it?' y . , If not, we urge you to do so, before your troubles have obtained such a hold on you, that nothing -wU .dnve them out, - - Even now. it may be nearly too late-, But toy it any, how. If anything caa helri you, Cardui wilLIt has helped? in thousands of cases, where - other medicines had been .i tried in vain, Why should it not do the same for you? . r The Woman's Tonic "My daughter, Octava, would have beett fa her wave today, had it not beenfor that fine medicine, .Carduv. writes Mrs. Laura Lawrence, of Drennon Springs, Ky. : "Nothing I tried helped my daughter, until she had -taken Cardui I had sent for i the doctor; when r thought -H of your medicine and -got a" $1 bottle, h When she(Jiaa :j taken four doses she became aU fight- A 'often recommeno, Cardui to my friends." . - ; 1 : -' VJ Your druggist -sells Cardui wiili M Instructions ibf os oumeootue. Write to: Ladler Advisory Dept-Chattanooga Mam C&ChmBOOtZ?tmm' for Special InttneOmt, and M-pace book, "Home Treatment for Woaea." tent fraa, , We don't claim to give .you more articles for a dollar than others give you but we do claim to give vou better values. . QUALITY -i the thing that counts -in the long run and WE HAVE IT. Every day e have people to tell us they are glad some one has opened ' ,XA. FIRST-CLASS STOKE IN WARSAW.'? ; This la very encouraging- nd we s are-doing all we can to keep theia pleased. . - , : - We have everything in Men's and Children' FURNISHINGS. and are espe - cialiv atrang; in the SUOE line. . See our line of Oxfords, Pumps and Shoes, they're S WELL.,; Heie is a cut of one of our 'Dorothy Dodd" Shoes. , ; Be sure to take look at our "-Walk-Over." Stylea.T" ' , . - . H AZLETT BROS. GO., - "THE STORE OF QUALITY. W A K S A W, 1ST . t for their patronage services for the coming M. McD. WILLIAMS, Cashier Bank of Faison. ymraA TpfipcpTlnllnrrf this Fence is made of hard stiff - Magnolia, N. C. and FEED MILLS, mm THE PASTOR. The preacher called Man of - God more than fifty times in the Bible. God's" man working qr God's glory in bringing.- in - the kingdom "of our Gcd here on earth. The . pastor Is God's Teacher and Leader in tae church. : The enterprise of the Kingdom is the greatest on: arth greater than any combination- of railroad systems, any; earthly" government greater even than . the Peace Movement among' the nations.- This is really the Divine movement for peace. Hence the pas tor Is God's Appointed Teacher and Leader. . ' ' The pastor' should teach missions In his sermons, in the songs he se- Jects, In his conversation. Missions should shine forth In all that he does. . The pastor should' Lead in prayer for missions, in the study of missions, In planning for missions, in giving for missions. ' He is God's leader. . To do his work well, the pastor must be informed! He must be deep ly interested! He must ne inspiring! He must Be courageous, earnestly presenting the work of the Kingdom to -the uttermost parts of the" earth, fearing-'no deacon, no person of earth, no .devil of -hell. When God wished to make Joshua a mighty leader He toid him over and over again to be strong and of; good courage. Ho cow ard can be a great leader. The "pastor -who has" deep convic tions, and Is well jnformed in refer ence to God's work, and is not afraid to teach and lead his people, will be God's shepherd Indeed, and also God's soldier of the Cross. The true pastor is the shepherd of the flock, and not the pet lamb." MAKING A PRACTICE OF LOVE. Because we love our dear ones is not. a good reason for wounding them freely, , Yet we actually seem to make It -so In much of our -dally life. Some one has said keenly: "Any one can be courteous to a stranger." It is easy to be "careful for the feeling of those about J whom we care little. Should Tre not do as- much - for those who are dearest to us? : There is na greater cruelty than to count upon our Jove's "tiding over" the effect of impatience,;" discourtesy, harsh criti cism, iand .aU . the unloving, stinging darts 'that - most of ns reserve for home use. - There is no better way of loving and proving our love than by using at home all the courtesies, attentions,-: cheerlness, sunshine, and "better side" of our natures - that most of us reserve for company use. For love that takes these things for granted is either counterfeit or peril ously near death. S. S. Times. - Ninety Perish In Fire. Ninety persons, many .of .them chil dren, were burned to death, and forty others Injured in a fire that destroyed a moving picture theater at Bologoie, Russia, a small place In the southern part of Novgorod province, on the Nikoli .railroad. . The flames .-started while- the ex hlbition'was in progress and quickly spread- through - the building cutting off every avenue of escape. .- FutUe .- attempts at rescue -- were made toy "those who happened to' be close to the exist when jtae fire start ed, and. by those from the outside, but the fury - of - the flames drove them back' before they could. reach the shrieking victims; who in their efforts to get out of the building fought des perately among, themselves. Find Body of Man Tied to Wild Horse. The First ' United 'States cavalry, f with a pack" train, found on the desert 150 miles: east: of Yuma. Ariz., the mummified body of a man attached J.0 a wild iorse's tail by.alasso. ., - The lariat had beenv bound to the man s -wrists. The-soldiers shot the. horse and when they arrived in Yuma notified $he coroner. It ia evident that the : man was tied by enemies, who then set the stallion free, allowing the animal to drag the victim to death. . -'. ' West Virginia Must Pay.1 The sum lot; $7,12,607 was held by the- supreme '.-court of the United States5 to be the-proportion of $33,000,r 000 old 'Virginia atai debt hlch West Virginia is ander obUgationa to bear. The court left the inal. determina tion of the matter,1 including the ques tion - pf Interest, to th vgtatesto be flecided by isonference. 4 - - ; Love, enlarges the- limits of life. TROOPSfLlAYCROSS MEXICAN BORDER. Kintit and HeYEnllr CaYElry fist 3f is " The Ninth and Eleventh cavalry at 1 ort Tsam ' Houston, 'rex: are tor-ae i preparea wiinm two or uiree nsja o iJinAn tct -thai horrtft of MptIp. . nroft? ably to Laredo, on the Rie Grande.; No official statement of this- report baa come from- General WiUlanC Pf Carter In-command of "the division. General Garter has not made a atate- hnent of any- kind ' to other than v'hta' aids and subordinate officers. The offi cers vets these - two cavalry ' regiments know that they are tcTbe prepared -to more on an hour's notice, and they 1911, by American Press AssociaUfy. DIAZ AND HIS FAMILY "know . that adequate ; preparation against their instant moving Jjas ben made. , iNews of the -preparedness of tfrese i v 1 '4- two cavalry regiments : f or-Immediate''? $575,000 Imposed upon them at the service at Laredo or beyond has sifted through all the officers messes fahBe entire branches of the service rffl)re- s en ted on the big camp field 4- 6am Houston. Coupled with coawienti upon this very definite' bit of tnfoiiSna.i ton there is a. general .belief thattbe throwing of the cavah armi)the nearest railroad point on the border is ta be but . prelude . to genetalt ad vanee.on the part of all the dlvi?bn. From colonel to econd lleutenantthe report has been humming and -gaiher tog strengtlr that -with: the arrivaTIj'are, and havingno money "to pay her General -Wood, chief of staff, from Washington, definite orders for the moving of all the troops that will be then assembled at Fort Sam Houston will soon follow. It may be-said that an accepted belief prevails among the. higher officers oi all- branches of the service that an intervention-: in - Mexico similar to that which occurred in Cuba Is on the cards; that an American army will occupy the country south of the United States until such time as Diaz is made more stable in - his- government or .succes sor shall be chosen by election. STARTS FIGHT ON BAILEY. Congressman Randall Aspires to Tex an's Seat In the Senate and Ra " open Old Political Feud. The formal announcement by Con gressman Choice B. Randall of Sher man; Tex., as a candidate for United States senator against Senator . Bailey has caused a stir In state political cir cles. The anti-Bailey organization will accept Mr. Randall as . its candi date, it is reported, and it was this as surance that indueed him to make tils announcement at this. time. Mr. Randall has been -bitterly op posed to Mr. Bailey politically for sev-r era! years. He i well known . to ' the people of the state, and it is claimed by his friends that he Is about as for mldable an opponent ofthe junior sen- ) ator as could have been selected. ITALIAN COUNTS IN A DUEL. Murder of Countess Trigona Cans Noblemen to Fall Out. . Count F. di Bruno and . Count Bas tonl fought a duel with swords in the garden of a secluded villa on the -oat-skirts of Florence. The encounter was the result of revelations .teade . by Count Bastonl concerning Lieutenant Paterno, who recently murdered, the Countess Giula Trigona.di Sant Ella and who was a close friend of Count di Bruno; . . In the second assault Bastonl was wounded In the scalp, whereupon: the antagonists announced that their hon or was appeased,' and the men . kissed and embraced. RUEF IN A PRISON- CELL Former Boas of 8an" Francisco Begins His Sentence. . .. Having exhausted every - legal re source. In a three, year struggle to s-i cape the -penitentiary, Abraham Ruef, former political leader of San Fran- L cisco, Is in San .Quentin prison serving a fourteen 'year -term for the bribery of supervisors during the regime of Mayor Eugene F. Schmltz. AS a final concession Ruef was re moved from the jail to the ferryboat In a taxlcnb Instead of In tbe regular van. - 1 , ' 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 "lor Buck len's Arnica flalve,the -quickest, surest cure for burns,' wounds, bruises, hoils, sores.- It -subdues -inflammation. " Xt ldlla tpainr r Jt : soothes - and . iwals. Drives-off skin ernptions,vleers! or plies. -'Only 25c, at all druggists. . "."Honey ."-and morals can go together until money, becomes independent and morals become .ashamed ofthe com pany they are keeping, ' c- " ""r ' 110 LAWS TO HURT BUSINESS WILL PASS - j:4- Oemocrats Making afe'! Plans tZ: For Extra Session, :. - Democratic Pleaders in Was hington who are engaged in framing up : the preliminaries for action by the-bouse . of representatives for. the coming ex-' lii, hijwoi n,n,w wii . - and industrial world need not fear dis-; tni4t.'nr b- T0mu n i,HiattA tprbance- as a result of legislation at the extrnnrftinarv session. . 1 The Democratic leaders "will Brge only a -course" of nctldu' which ; will give some guarantee" of carrying out t the pledges upon which the party won' success at -the polls 7ln the last elec tion, but' without making' an onslaught upon industry of general business. 4 It Is -' practically assured how that the - Democrats at the coming -session wHlvnot content themselves with ac tion upon t the reciprocity bill " alone, but will - seek to? obtain' reductions in at least -a few " of Tthe popular sched ules, .-particularly-. woolens -or r-cotton manufactures. But . this, - the -leaders say will be undertaken In a spirit of moderation and keeping-in mind al ways the desire not to wreck- any in dustry.' or hurt -any considerable num ber of American laborers. - They - realize that the only hope of the Republican party for 1912 is based upon the expectation that Democratic tariff revision will unsettle business and deal a blow to prosperity. - n c Ai b b a i Archibald W. Butt, ""T" " aid to President Taft, WfcW will soon discard - his HAPPEN INGS. tttie of captain 5 for that of major; ..Captain Butt has taken the . last iofk the examinations for the higher "graders It- Is -expected that a recess- appointment" of Captain Butt will be made by the president. Green- and -John Gaynor have more 1 than rOOO.OOO anleoe bidden awav-: the United States government Is de termined that - they shall pay " the fine time of their conviction or never ob- tain their freedom to enjoy their sav- toga; The two prisoners have made every; preparation to leave thesprison for good. -. They have served- then sentence and nave only to take the pauper's oath-to be free. The goyern- ment will either oppose the taking of .this oath- or will: let them take it audT then have them arrested and held : under heavy hond-for perjury. I - Determined to go -txr-Kansas City,: where 4he husband and,.two children i way, JMrs. Caroline Johnson of West Berkeley was caught by a deputy mar shal at San "Pablo station riding on the brake "beam of the Sacramento val ley train. : She wasvattired In . male clothes, add it was only at the jail' that her sex was discovered. She was """ ieu uays ior vagrancy. mrs. Hiona- nenry fliann, xnuxy-iour years old, who testified thatTshe was hypnotized -by Sidney Denning and made to steal horses and who was convicted of grafid-larceny, was sen tenced by Judge Humphrey in Long Island; City, n-Y.,- to not less than four-years and not more1 than nine years in Auburn prison. ' The cover of the -forward turret of the battleship Maine in Havana har bor is raised for the first time. ' It weighs twenty tons and is twenty-one feet in diameter. .-The great piece of Iron is -un warped, although the . 300 heavy bolts- that held it in place are sheared in half, as though it had been done with a sharp knife. Prince Regent Lultpold's"' ninetieth birthday is being celebrated through out Bavaria as a hollday.- The regent, who is -very popular, is in good health and went xn foot through the'streets looking at the decorations hung in His honor. Congratulatory telegrams came from " all the members of the royal family. The Rev.' Henry Homer Washburn, who lor 'twenty-three years' has-been rector of the Oyster Bay Episcopal churchy attended by ColoneLand Mrs. "Theodore Roosevelt, has banded his resignation to "the vestry. Ill healfch was given -as the reason in the letter.. Ther steamships' Jefferson and Ala meda? sailed for southeastern v Alaska with all accommodations taken. The stampede to Alaska is due to the desire of miners and prospectors to get into the interior "before' the snow ; trails be come Impassable. - Major General Frederick :D. Grant, commanding the. department of the east, has been selected as military aid on the staff of John Hays Hammond, the special ambassador to represent President Taft at the - coronation of King George V. William M.,Qulnn, a Hobart college BiUUcUi, .uaa uuioucu a. dctcu uaa fast which he undertook as an experi ment His only nourishment was wa ter. Qulnn lost twenty pounds during the. experiment. A"ragr Increase approximating 10 per cent has been granted to engi neers, " firemen,' trainmen and conduct ors of the Wabash In a settlement of a wage controversy. , . : " -:. : :: Despite -the fact that CRIMES . i his twelve-vear-old son . "AND...--..-.. i!aav lost three .toes on CASUALTIES. right and two"on the left foot with a probability of los lng both feet, due to exposure,. William Jennings, a mountaineer living In .the Ramapo Hills near Mahwah, N. J., re- ' 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 100,00000 barrels pec fe&r -and the ' consumptidn . only 50,000,000. Present conditions Indicate a consummation -of :75",d00,000- barrels this year. This' increased demafid, coupled with the : factual large East ern manufacturers for two years have sold large quantities South and West at unprofitable figures,- has caused-the advance " ; -. v " "-, - -1 - - fused to -call a doctors The child was rescued ..by. Agent Trainer of the Ber- gen County Children's jsociety of Hack ensack , and Constable . Bdward Hlcka , and. is now resting In the Hackensack nospitaL ' 1 , - v As a boy was' passing through 'the" Campbell estate . he saw two; little red mittens protruding from a hole -in -the Ice covering a -large pond. He sum moned -help, and the body of John Hanek, four years old, was taken from the water. . La ter a neighbor, remem bered seeing , another little boy- with John, and a party. went back to-the pond, and the body,of John Gadzels; five years old. was found, -.."- l; Amelia . J. Leonard,-. -alias. .Emily those. - who died, under her care,-was ,j,t, , -.. - . . , . . indicted, by the grand jury In Boston uc f1?"" T Dua""t " " greeny oi .several 1 thousands of dollars worth of goods. The -owners -are said to be Mary J. Lockwood -of the - Hotel - Brunswick, one of her patients, - and ; Annie J. Pecker of Mount Vernon street. ' " :v -. For the murder of Thomas A. Lan dregan, a wealthy shoe-manufacturer of Lynn, and Patrolmau James . Q. Carroll of that city in a bold daylight robbery on a- busy street Wassil Ivan go wskl, .twenty-two years old." and Andrei Ipseu. nineteen, were electro cuted -at the Charlestown state prison. James Smith, a -fourteen-year-old boy, of Johnson City,, Tenn., shot and possibly; fatally wounded: his teacher. Professor ,T. C. Gray of the Johnson' City public school, and committed sui cide. He was found dead in a barn and is supposed to have used chloroJ form. He was under $5,000 bond. . . Willard N. Jones, a wealthy business man of Portland, Ore., will have to serve four months in Jail and pay a $12,000 fine for his alleged complicity in homestead land frauds In the north west President Taft before leaving7 for his southern trip refused to pardon him. . : ; Four times Mrs. Sarah E. Ash bell of Hartford, -Conn., tried unsuccessfully to: kfll-herself, and on -her fifth trial Bhe was BuccessfuL She tried" hang ing, and her husband sat np all night to" keep watch over her. While he iu. aaangm. cmei oi tne irreneu mm- "mission ai fez, was aiuea ac Wie 1111a, Morocco, by the son of the Moor lsh minister of warobecause he had. caused- the execution of two native soldiers. - v - Bxbert S.v Brown', a broker, of -Brook-line, -'Mass., was arrested toNew York on a charge: of forging the name of George. Otis Draper to a note .for $5,000. ' . ' Doc Massey, a "negro, killed a negro deputy sheriff and seven members of a family in Hart county, caped. ' -k ' The f greatest "l wres- orvr. i m tllng match of the dec- ArrAins. -ide' is ' being arrang ed in Chicago. George Hackensmidt, the "Russian Lton," and Stanislaus. Zbysto, the Polish giant, are eager for a contest on the mat; and their respec tive managers, Jack Curley and Jack Herman, wiU decide on the conditions to govern the bout. The matchmakers wI11 stipulate a contest to a finish, best two falls out of three, the date of the: struggle to be decided upon' later. Ad "Wolgast, lightweight champion. Is on his way to Los Angeles to train for a twenty-five - round bout with George Memsic -during the-first, week of AprlL: After the fight he -expects to go to New York to fight Paekey McFarland at the Fairmont Athletic club, but Tom O'Ronrke ' has wired that Freddie Welsh hr ready to meet him, and as. a- bout between these two men has-been pending for some time the-champion may have to alter his plans. Fred Welsh, the -English lightweight Wells in a twenty round bout In Lon don, is coming over snoroy ro taae part In five contests at the- National Sporting club in New York.- " Manager Tom G'Rourke cabled ; transportation to Welshr after receiving word from; the- Britisher that he had decided to accept the invitation. His' first match here will be with the winner "Of the Pal Moore-Sammy Smith contest j Friday night. ," Members of the National: Sporting club of New Ydrk 'probably will -see an extraordinary exhibition of ting science tonight when the Philadelphia lightweights, ral - Moore and - Young Sammy -1 Smith meet in a ' ten . round bout. - The weight conditions call for 134 pounds. " Packey McFarland is in -New York training for his ten round go with Owen Moran at the Fairmont Athletic club next Tuesday night. - - priRPiGN General weyler . has . J ' asked to be relieved of --the aost of captain INTEREST, . .generai 0f Catalonia, as he wishes to be in Madrid in the event of the fall of the Canalejas min istry over the quarrel with the Vati can. " If such a contingency arises King ; Alfonso.-" if is understood, will ask Weyler to form a. new government, as the situation will demand - vigorous handling to - keep ' the revolutionary forces under. The Pall Mall Gazette, says it under stands a strong movement is on foot to restore King Manuel to the throne of Portugal; The supporters of the movement hope" to effect the. restora tion peacefully, but in any event are determined to make the attempt when they consider: the moment ripe to be gin. , It -Is possible, the paper says, that nothing will happen untii-after the election in" Portugal next'month, out there are signs that a political vol-f-ano may burst forth at any moment. Premier - Minis rad the ministerial SOLVES A GOOD MYSTERY. "I -want to thank y6u. from the bot tom of my heart," wrote C, B. Rader, of Louisburg, W. Va., "for the;wonder fnl double benefit I got from -Electric Bitters, ln curing me of botb-a severe case t)f stomach trouble and of rheu matism,, from which I had ieen an al most helpless sufferer for tep , years. It suited my case as though made just for me."v- For dyspepsia, ; indigestion, jaundice and to rid the system of kid ney poisons that cause rheumatism, Electric Bitters "nas" no equaL Jry them. - Every bottle is guaranteed to satisfy; OnQ' 50c. at all druggists. - declaration In the eh.mlrr of 'deputies tn Parts, and its -ooserva tire tone as-J tonished the . Socialistsv and extremte radicals, - who had Jbeen : expected to support the new government. .: These members interrupted with -jeering -the reference in the -manifesto . to the church and the schools, it is impossi ble to- determine? the ; precise strength of the ministry In the chamber until there is a test vote. - Word . has been received In Paris that communication between Fea and Tangier has been cut and -that the French. German and. English couriers' between the two cities have been cap tured and robbed. - The telegraph also carries the. information that revolting tribesmen have surrounded Fez and that ; the uprising is' growing. " The German cruiser Eber has been ordered t ..H;. -nrt i nt nt - r - : any hour. : The police of . Bart have arrested a student named Giuseppe Conti on- a charge of attempting to -obtain copies of the plans of the fortifications, which he Intended to sell to an Austrian spy named Bau. The later was arrested, and'-' plans and compromising3 doctt- "ments were found In his house. He says he is a naturalized American and that his name is Dean. -. - . A heavily armed anarchist, Ventura Carboneil, arrested nt the railway sta tion in 'Alcazar de San Juan, Spain, just before the arrival of King Alfonso, committed suicide in jail by hanging. .His suicide convinces the police that he was commissioned to kill the king and feared tbe vengeance of his Cam- mora comrades over his failure. Empress Auguste Victoria is at Kiel to assist in nursing Prince Adelbert, who Is 111 with appendicitis. The em peror -is expected soon. Dr. Knoke, naval staff surgeon, who Js In charge of the case, says the prince's illness is progressing normally. , The police of the village of Sonnlo, Italy, have arrested Agostino Desano tis, who has confessed to the murder of Constantino Rlmondi last August at Austin, Pa. " ". : . : 0EATH8 1- Gage Pratt, Demo n ,- cratic member of con- obb7b ress from the Eighth PEOPLE, r district of New Jersey from 1907 to 1009, is dead at Newark. N. J . : -.: He was vice president of the Mutual . JBenefit Life Insurance com pany of Newark. Rear Admiral John C. Fremont, com mandant at the Charlestown navy .yard, for more than a-year, dropped dead at the commandant's house In the navy yard while talking with-bis wife and daughter. Death was due to heart disease. He was born In San Francisco April "19. 1849. " His father was General John F. Fremont, first presidential candidate of the Repub lican party and known as "the Path finder" on account of his explorations In' the west. . His- mother was -Jessie Benton da ughter of ; "Old Bulilon Benton, -senator from Missouri tmrt In timate friend of President Jacksonr t . Curtis Guild. Sr., father of: former -Governor Curtis Guild, died "at bis res; ldence in Boston, aged -' elgbty-four. Although Mr." Guild met with a street accident in 1897 which caused his re tirement - from active- life, his health remained fairly good up to within a short time ago. when he began to fail. Right Rev. John Anthony Forest, bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of San Antonio, Is dead at the Santa Rosa Infirmary: He was seventy-three years old: -He came to the United States from "France in 1863 and In that year was ordained to the priesthood in New Orleans. Miss Clara Randall Davis of Wash ington Is dead at the home of her sis ter, Mrs. Joseph Pulitzer, in New ; York. She was sixty-six years dldq Miss Davis was the daughter of Mr.; and Mrs. William Worthington Davis of Washington and a cousin of Jeffer son Davis. William Webster, said to be the old est landscape gardener and horticul turist in this country, is dead in Roch ester, at. the age of ninety-four years. .Webster,, who designed some of Amer ica's most noted beauty spots, came to America from England in J828. Mrs. Margaret Daly Chanfrau,"widow of Henry Trenchard Chanfrau. who played Kit in the 'Arkansas Traveler,' la dead atL6ng Branch, N. J.. from heart failure. Mrs. Chanfrau was the daughter of the late Philip Daly. She was forty years old. Twenty-five cases of cholera; with twenty one deaths: la (be rec- NEWS OFOUR NEIGHBORS. ord of- disease in Honolulu. The steamer Sierra sailed for San Francisco, but It Is not expect ed her passengers wOl be -quarantined, as all cabin passengers were under medical -surveillance, while, steerage passengers had been quarantined for five days before sailing. - - " Advices have been received: In the City of Mexico of an outbreak In. Yu catan, near-the border of Quintana Roo. Three to wns-rPelo, -"Temax anoj Yaxacab have been captured and rob bed. It is "reported that all, the local officials of . the towns' were killed by the rebels. It is believed that the ma rauding parties were made up largely of Maya Indians, who took advantage of the. absence of tbe government forces. -" Admiral Klngsmill and Commandei Roper of the Canadian navy will leave Ottawa for a visit to-Washington and Annapolis. - They are" going to inspect the United States Naval college and get ideas for tbe new Canadian Naval college recently: established at Halifax. - The state health department of Tex as has been-advised by its inspectors tn Mexico that yellow fever has made Its appearance In that country. A strin gent quarantine will be established by the state against the infected places. . OLD SOLDIER TORTURED. ' ; "For years :i sunerea 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 jfor any stomach, liver or kldney-r trouble, c Only 25c. at all druggists. - Honestly one" man in one life time- can accumulate $100,000 r all over this-1 amount looks very suspicious.'. ; -'."All whohave trulylbved, be it for only a day," carry-within their breats Life; Insurance; . :T.S ':-:S -mmii'mmm--',r jJ''T - 'fr t ---- . . --y v - .v tv- i- -- .-. . -. -.-.-,7 .. - ..--t-;-.-' i- --..- - - 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-deatbi It,' makes young men savetheir earnings : for - after years,, .for , the, rain 'days " -" . and for a large estate that-ba. this way '"--"-is created by a smaller cost than"ViTiv :.-V-, other way.. The Mutual Life, of New' xorK, is the oldest and strongest in America. Get In the best possible conv, pany when yon do Insure, .See HInes1 the agent, at Kenansvllle.vwho rep- 'i 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: t . - - Keep the wolf from the door. " - - Prepare for old age. . .Be Independent In life. Save a part of your earnings. ' " THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE ' COMPANY OF NEW YORK, ' ' - D. S, HINES. ," REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF J rHEBIHKjOFROSEHILL at Rose Hill, In the State of North -Carolina, at the . clese of bufiiness January 7, 1911. Resources." .-- . Loans and discounts. 62,831.85 Banking Houses, $4,000.00; ' ' Furniture and Fixtures, ' 4,851. 60 : 5.610.04 . 673.64, :f 971.00 529.42 Due from Banks and Bank- - ers ...:.'... . Cash items . . . . . . . , . Gold coin . :, . . . Silver coin, including all mi- nor coin currency .'. .. National bank . notes and other U. S. notes. , ...... 3.57500 Total . 78,942145 ' : ; : Liabilities. Capital Btock.... :.i 10.000 Inn Undivided profits, less cur - rent expenses and taxes. - -paid . . ;V;. . . ....: . . ? 2,03277 Dividends unpaid........... 222.00 Depdsits subject to check:. 29,365.25 Demand certificates of de-. , posit . ... . . . . 16.516 95 Savings deposits .... ...... 20,677 . 71 T .. -" : Cashier's checks f outstand- .C - . . ing " . . .-......,...'........';. l27.77,":---.r"'':-f. "irJr-t-lr ' "?"r "- ' -'. y'x. Total l:... .. .... 78,942.45- 'V; I" ' r"n vroiina, Aunty - eTV'u:':H tDno1ln2:"f-- '"-3"--"'.-..... :5:-v-: , ,.-..'.:V:-if"r',A: " Ir W; B. Souiierland,' Cashier of the . i-r above-named bank, do solemnly swear that , the-above.!statenient:::.ls - tnietolStjp the best of my knowledge and belief: 5 ' -.-jy fsyUTHERLAND,: vrsf . .-.' ' Cashier. Correot Attest: '.. ' :?fS. 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, ' :, '; : 7 Notary PubUc; REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF. The Bank of Varsaw, at Warsaw, in the State of North Caro lina, at - the close of . business Jan. 7, : 1911. - .. Resources. ." ,: ';. Loans and discounts.... .... 64,225753 Overdrafts secured. ....... 727.90" Banking Houses, Furniture - , . ? ; and Fixtures . , . ... . ... - 2,500 .00 ! Demand loans . . . : . ; . . . . . . Due .from Banks and Bank ers . . . . . -.. . . . . ; . . . . . Gold coin . . . : . . ; , ... . , Silver coin. Including all mi nor coin currency; ; .' , . . . . v National , - bank - notes and other U. S. notes. ....... 3,172.00 Total ...... ... ...... t 80,015.12 v:-'":."'r--;': -...:- viaoiiuies. - . , Capital stock paid In , .;? 10,000.00 Surplus fund... ...-". 10,000.00 Undivided profits, . less.cur- j-,&ir?4 ::. rent.,. expenses. land ikll'MMh paid . ; :j. ,-;v,:;"'' ; 1,482.23 - Time certificates- of deposit 20,270 . 54 Deposits sabject.to check 37,598 ill i Due Ranks and Bankers.: 181.10 r. - ; Cashier's Checks outstand-' Accrued interest due deposi tors . ............ . 83.14 400.00 Total . . .-t.- ... $ 80,015: 12 State of North Duplin, ss: Carolina, County of I, H. F.Peirce, Cashier bf the abovef named bank, do solemnly, swear that - the .aboy statement is true to the ' .' I best of my knowledge and belief.-: --'"; -:'-i.-:.ir''- " - H. F.:PEmCE,-CasMer:;aft: . Correct Attestr-& ' " . S. E. HINES. - . : . .' - - j T- TT T.',BTMVIi!1w":&'.:';t-.fi Subscribed and sworn to before me, '"; this 13th day of January, 1911.: . ; , ' .' - - J.'H.'-FONyjELLB.;.f ' :'S Notary-Publlclt: My commission expires ; April .L &i&r&&?; and eu aETKi.y r:os 50ai.oo AI9AU.TH!?0ATAfe'D lUHG TROUBLES GOXMAriO&j77SFACTOty' a James m. parott, m. d. . - ' - -x---f' i -f . KINSTON, N. C - - Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose " and Throat Diseases, and General Sur- gery.- ."" Offlce Hours r 2r 30 to 5:30 p. m. Sundays by appointment. V :vf-:..i :".': v;T'-- ; ::?V!-k: ::.. V.v-ef;-',''HJ1,:- 5,144,72 r: :-',, .:'.n 477.50 v: ' - ' - 3-t- . -f'rf' iT'i . " 822,31;f :.:t: i::--r- ..' - r,s -?"a.Tr?-'-
Eastern Carolina News (Kenansville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 16, 1911, edition 1
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