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.... .. . t . i---t ' I T7 tttt MTTT(T(rV " TIIEWEAT!:ZI7: ) I Shower tontght; fair f mil! If yupeity worded seta people thanking a boot July bargains ' 11 i 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 i i i. PUBLISHED EWERY KFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDRY. VOL. V, NO. 77. KENSTON, N. a, SATDBDAY, JUNE 28. 1902. PEI0E TWO OENT& 1 I I I I I 1 1 I I F AILV TIIIELY TOPICS Ho owned be was guilty but the teeti mony of the witnesses did not establish the fact and ol onm m be was not found guilty he was removed according to the old msxfm. ITEUS FROII THE . HATIONAl CAPITOL i EDITORIAL AND OTHERWISE V - o t Crisp Current Comment on the News Bits of Ftm and Sentiment in' Both Prose and Verse 6 i o o o Howdy! Back again! And glad of It. ' , It le pleasant to hear that Timely Topics haa been missed. ''' ' 1 The temperature Is almost as high the price oLbeef or hard ' coal -- , What Is so hot as these last June days? Not what Is so rare?" as Lowell sings. we're trying away in triple-neat rays UD! tor to soar on eagle wtngei "Whether we look or whether we listen" , We hear and see things siszle and glis ten, i .. .;?.'. - "Every clod feels a stir of might." , And the heat within swelters and tow ers. Every head feel a trlflle light And wo hope and pray for cooling snowers. ' . , 'T was' a pretty poem, James, you writ; The subject, "June' is a lovely one, Bat last now It don't seem to fit The verse sems sadly out of taoe. So we have altered your lines somewhat And rise to remark that it's deuoedly not! Dr. Samuel Parr was once p reaching in the parish of another minister and, as was his habit, used very learned language. Tbe rector afterwards said to him, "They could not understand you.' "Nonsense," said Dr. Parr, "I am tti' there was nothing In my sermon which, they could aotcomprebend." VWell, said the rector, "I will call one of them and see If be un d 'i-stands tbe meaning of the word 'fel t itv.'" So ha called in labnrlnor men Is It contempt of court to call the In- ftnd atd. "John: ean von tell me what is ; juration against the beef trust a bull .fight? "i . , " . ' 7 ; - : The fellow who wants to make a fool of hts neighbor generally practices first ' upon himself. The poor man has little to lose except , bis appetite, and he sometimes wishes he could lose that. yv::. Never wish a thing done,bnt do it. Men are generarly like wagons they rattle : awfully when there Is nothing In them. " vtijM' " ' . We all rejoice In the prospect of King Ed ward's recovery. He won the heart joi the,worJJ.by ending the Boer war,, . Tbe man who speaks disparagingly of tbe town In which he lives la cousin to the fellow who speaks disrespectfully of bis mother. " , , A good many people who find no fault with perfectly nude statues shiver with horror when compelled to face the naked truth. A Stevens Point boy Is happy. 'He wallowed a cartridge the other day, . , and now they dare not spank him for fear of an explosion. The Chicago man who spanked his neighbor's boy by ray of diversion, learned from the court that almost any other amusement costs less. ' ' ' Klnston Is at the wrong end of tbe tri ang'ein the little base ball league, buttbe lads haven't, got on to the pull together principle yet. They will soon be In tbe running. Whoever looks for a friend without Imperfections will never And what he eeKS. vve love ourselves witn all our faults, be they few or riiauy, small or great, and we ought to love onr friend in like manner. aw nutaii u jtiuiiai iv nuwo tuestrea la pursuit of something borne along by the same current will And himself, Indeed, move forward; bat uuless helajshlehand on the oar, aud increifs his speed by bio own labor, must always be at tbd same dlutauce from the otjict which be is fo lowicg. ' ' ' - TLfs is the season of the yar when tb- your t collt'e graduates goew borne with I'd --"pEkin, wonJerinsf how tbe world i It) pet s'on without L'm, and t.-Lr..' vl of t!s father and mother who t:v-J wlat r &n J eniuwer to t;ive Liai en say v ecnt onr boy to ct:l-!; and t': :y lava f r.t i:s 1 t'.'i c :f. tbe of- the meanlngof felicity r" "Well, I don't know, fir," eaid John, "but I believe it is " inn part of the inside of a pig." Moral: Ue words people understand. , f' WOBTH REMEMBEBINO. : That celery engenders sleep. : - - That asparagus purges the blood. That tomatoes act directly on livr. ' 'vf:y:f$jh$H Snite"! That onions are a preventive, and tentlmes a cure, for malarial fever.' That spinach and dandelion leaves are excellent for the kidneys, That poultry should not be eaten until twelve or fourteen hours after It is That onions, garlic,, leeks, olives, and shallots stimulate the circulation, in crease the sU v and gastric juice and promote digestion, . That peas and beans are tbe most nutritious of vegetables, containing much carbon as wheat and double tbe amount of muscle-forming food. . . That a small pinch of carbonate of soda in the water preserves the color of vegetables and lessens the unpleasant odor of cabbage and onions when cook ing. ' - JCaetera Carolima Leamie. ., A large and ever-changing crowd watched the baseball bulletin yesterday and observed with interest that ' tie Klneton boys bad evidently struck their gait and were giving the Tarboro boys who trimmed them so badly here earlier in tbe week arun for their money. Seven innings without a ran means some pretty work, and It Is alt the more creditable to tbe Ktnstoniaa fielders that nine hits re sulted in only one run. The Klnston battery was Green and Hicks and for Tarboro Patch and Higgiu. Patch he'd the visitors dowu to three hi In. Kins ton made three errors and Tarboro two. Score 1 to 0. Tarboro......... WilB'V) Kinstxn STANDING OP TBK CLUHS. Wod. Lost. ... 3 O ... I ... 1 1 4 P. C. ! l.no'V .fiOO ' .2i M "Uncle Joe". Cannon was" cnalrman of tbe select committee which bad In tharge the refurnishing of representa tives haiL Among tbe other things promise the members for this session kas an elaborate system of ventilation by which cold air con:d be forced up .through a serfes of ducts so as to re uuce the temperature of the ball and make It comfortable in hot weather, rrhe members have been waiting for the cold air, but so far none has been ffeltv The temperature in the house Is tbe same as in the senate and in tbe corridors of tbe capltol. Congressman Watson walked orer to Mr. Cannon one afternoon when there were more members in tbe restaurant than there were in the bouse. Tbe Incllanlan's collar was melted, and bis face was beaded with perspiration. 'Uncle Joe.," be asked seriously "where Is that cold air we voted bioncy for last session v ; ; v , .'.."Yes, where is It?" echoed Mr. Can nou as be mechanically mopped bit forehead with his handkerchief. "I told those darned fools on the commit tee that I was not In favor of baying anything I could not see, but they were bound to do ItJV Representative Lacey of. Iowa is a cherry picker, or . was when a boy. This does not apply to political cher ries, but to tbe real things. , - "In my native state we used to go out from school to gather cherries,", said Mr. Lacey during a debate on the floor. Once 1 remember wondering why the teacher took along an ax, I soon found out It was to cut the trees down, so that we could pick the cherries easily: I am sure there are. lots of members here who. have had a similar experi ence." The lowan's illustration was to show tbe reckless destruction of trees of all kinds. . He Insisted that men were in clined to regard trees as their enemies. That came from the pioneer idea of subduing the forests as they had to subdue the savages. In these days be Insisted that trees were civilized, as well as men, and that the fact should be recognized., -:,vw, ; . ciitJfii. T Teat Pneamatlo Tnbee. .' ; Representative Greene of Massachu setts has introduced a bill for. the In stallatlon of a pneumatic tube service between the capltol and the govern ment printing office. There Is a belief at the capltol that If the pneumatic tube service is to be Inaugurated here in Washington for purposes of demon stration it could better be done be tween the capltol and the government printing office than between any other two points in the city. The amount of manuscript and other copy passing be tween the buildings daily is enormous, requiring constant messenger service. Threatened Boreott Won. The rich Senator Clark wants to nut up a flat building In Washington's most aristocratic and exclusive spot on Du pont circle, next to the Lelters' and a couple of doors from the new marble palace of R. W. Patterson of the Chi cago Tribune and only, a few steps from the new home of the Wadsworths. All kinds of excitement! Indignation meetings to protest at the tmimdence of these new rich and to devise wavs and means to block bim! So be was told he would be given the "double cross" in a social way if be did It Not a dinner of his would they go to, not a dance would their daughters attend, not a card would their footmen leave at bis door, and all their friends In so far as they could be persuaded would stick"; up their noses and say cuttine things about the senator from Monta na. The threat Was good. The site is still vncsw.t The architect was told to t-all off his plans. y W. T. .A..U. , NEW AUD OLD Items of Interest tor Kale and Feisal3 W. U. DKAKD'jHCAR. ' EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL- ,. - ASSOCIAXIOJM. . Two men who will b prominent iu the deliberation of the National Educational aMilx'iv eon, which will bold it forty-fimt aunuul conventioii ia Minneapolis July 7-11. are . K lieardsliear, the pmident, aad YVilliom T, fitirri, eouuniuioner ui educatiou of the L"iutJ oiai en. opeoiai ratea nave oeen niaa dj au rauroad and mort et tb 4ronuaat Aunnwi Hyitura ut pmaagvgj wui oe preaeni. 'v'ir.:'- ... ,' ' Judg P. D. Wins n. ' ' Jasoh, June 23, 1002 ." Mir. Editor: I sw there Is ranch being said by the yariou friends of the many candidates for tbe hundreds of offices Jn the stare.'and wbiW I have nothing to say against any of them, I would like to add my weight and endorse every word I have bard said In favor of Judge-Prf VtfnVton. If the people of the second dtrlut fall to nominate him they will Ml to do their duty to the state. WhhV there may be Others squally trot In the district they have got to be tried, while J nags Winston has been tried and the harness fits him and he1 fits the harness perfectly. - He has given entire satletac; tlon wherever be ha held court. I an otietbat believes men are not made to f l tbe various position of life but are born, a d Jurtgs Winston was born W leader an 1 a judge. If you will give tb state sixteen Judges with the calibre of Judge Winston yon will save to tbe state and tax payers thousands of dollars In not having so many special terms of courts and will add hundreds of dollar to tbe school funds In fines, etc. ; I have served many courts as foreman of tbf urand Jury, and ran truthfully say, never listened to a more able charge than wa delivered by Judge Winston at our last term of Greene county court and the business was dispatched with great car and speed. I bops the good people of the second district will recognize while they have the nominating power they are nominating a Judge for the state, and tbe people outetde of the district have equal right In a good judge, as they and he will hold fifteen courts out of that district to every one In It. Then we say give us Winston again and If he falls we will help you bear the responsibility, but If you take the burden upon yourselve and fall, tbe responsibility rests upon you. Yours to serve, - . L. J. H-'MxwBORit. TUB cnrjitCHKS, Services will be held.Jn the following cnurcnes tomorrow, to Men everybody IN 10VlteO - . f; m f.'f- f SefvSsfrjrnhignll'tivTiiJg, u.'kiK.a a j ffjfT..u L.Ar . jt re jsa 1 . oiuijwc ui mvzwum wnw3w. fetLuaiaij VT.A Purely Personal q Items About People Who Come and Go o o e c. I h ... I " 'k Mh Cora Lee went to LaQrange to day. - -1 -.s-:;-: :; ;;r-"- .v-r-. f MUetotuu-y BaQttat Church. No servicee in the morning. Sevvb eM hieht e.t 8:1 5 o'clock. Sndivchrol at 9:80 a m. , ,Klr$ U.i2:80D.m. , , B.4U. 8:80 p.m. srbyterlaB) Cbnrcb. No "'vices. gandasohoql at .9:80 a. m. Free Will Bapttrt Chorch. Services' both morning and evening. ' 8unday school at 4 p. m. . 1 . Chriatlaa Chareb. Then will b no Drvarhlnar e.r '11 o clock tomorrow, as th paatnr 1 at fending the nnmn at Armenia. TW oa tor will rvmrn In time to ureeh att ls-it on "Tbs Hidden A'ord." Text: ' Tie word have I hid in nv LearttbaI nigiit ritit sin against tnoH." ,. Sunday 8 bool at 9:30 a. m. Methodist Church. rervces notn morniug and evening as regular time. - " , . 8uudoy rVhool at 9:80. FEMININE CHAT. ' Charlotte Crabtree, otherwise Lot sm," Is living Quietly In New York and la said to be contemplating mar rlage, . Miss Hetty P. Watt celebrated th fiftieth anniversary of service as a schoolteacher In the Medford (Mass.) schools on June 10. ; Miss Isabella Dunn, an Englishwo man In Constantinople, has turned Mo hammedan, previous to becoming the' second wife of a Turkish officer. ' Mrs. Sarah. E. Howell of Atlanta went crazy over religion, talked about It almost Incessantly for sixty-eight hours on a stretch and then died of ex haustion. ' 1 ' , . The Countess of Warwick in writ ing a history of Warwick castle and its ewners from Saxon and Norman times to the close of the reign of Queen Victoria. Fannie Crosby, bow eighty-nine years of age and blind, but still work ing, . haa written mora than 8,000 hymns. She has recently written ber first music, her previous work bavins been confined to tbe words. Mrs, John Stranoch has given a cony of the New Testament in Chinese to the Princeton Theological seminary. It is a lacsimue or tne one recently nre- ented to the empress dowager of Chi na and is probably the only one of Its kind In America. '".Miss Maud Dennlson of Chicago Is a IJutrness maker and an expert in the business. In which she has been en gaged for four yearn - She Is the only woman holding membership in an or ganization composed of leather work ers on horse goods and numbering. 10,- 000 members. Mrs." Helen Mark n In ton, widow of John W. Hlnton, In her will, filed at Chicago recently, gives the Chicago Protet;int tltiHitv For the Aged 10,- 000. the Fli-Ht nantlst church S5.000 and the .Milwaukee- Orphan asylum $0,)0;i. Ci'lu. remainder . of an estate valued t $ 1 70.000 toes to relatives. ORAINOERS. Jane 26. Mr. D. W.- Hamilton has our deepest sympathy in the los of his kind anil loving wife. Ada, who died yeeterdav af ternoon about 5 o'clock of typhoid tevtr. n leaves a nueoana and- two enlHrw. and a host of relatives and friends. It I- very sad to have ber taken so young, bnt we must rememDer "104 ooetb all thlrg well," and try to meet ber In a brighter I 1 . . , iadq wner tnere is no sorrow. Mesnrs. Leon Jones. Henry Johnson and Mise Ola Johnson, Lola Jones and Addle tangston were guests at Mr. B. F Jones' Sunday afternoon. ' CURTAINCALLS. Louise Montague will pass tbe sum- tnn- tit Far HocUatvay. nowiirtl Kyle will star again hex t eum:i 1 1 "N.-sthan Hale," ' J;u-(v'i I.!.; is at bis summer resi- dc:xt at V.'atcb III1L R. I. Rioliie .l:ig'a Biuglng is one of tbe features vt "Tbe Defender.", Hauls Williams will remain the Roger BroM." leading lady for next season. Miss Mabelle Oilman wiQ spend tbe greater part of tbe summer in London and Paris. Eugene Cowles, it is announced, is to devote his entire next season to the concert stage. John J. Farrell stars next season in revivals ; of "The Cattle King" and "Tbe Bandit King." ..' , Nixon & Zimmerman have engaged Miriam Lawrence to sing tbe role of Mrs. Hopping in support of Francis , Wilson In "The Toreador" next sea son. . Privilcgo Licenso Tax Due July 1st. The Board of Aldermen haa WWd - licenee tax for the flecal rear 1 902-1 1)0:1 for the privilege of carrying on the hnef I ns. trade, nceunatlon or Drofesfon. t r J.I- il . . 1 w mm. uomg tne act namea, as iouows: 1 Anei!one - - Bicrcle D-e'en : . . Bar Booma ' Barber Shops, each chair, ill Pouter. - - . Billiard Tables CROWN POINTS. .King Oscar II. of Sweden and Nor way has asked admission as a member of the Astronomical Society of France. King Alexander of Servia is reported to have said that be still hopes for an heir, but if disappointed will adopt a child as tbe Servian crown . u:n: 1 Tr l 1 x . Mis Q-aee Hem'Og Went tO GoldsborO ' Barbecue Dealers - . ' today. Rev W. H. Frost, of New Bern, came this morning. , " ' L'!f" Elnora Ormond, of Durban), came yes'erday to visit at Mr. Y.T. Ormond'. Mary Wooten, of Wilmington cemejfsterday to visit at Mr. T. C, I Wooten's. IL'!r Lena Pandford who has been visit ing at lir. J. F, Paris' went to Eureka this morning. ) j L're. n. C. T. Teebles and M!fs Nannie I. Frizzeile returned yesterday from Bos ton, I'aes.' ' l'-r. P.. 8. IIay and dacghter.llles Eai- rJ.o, c f fU r-n, who bad been v!..!:'.- at Z'.r. Ceo. B. Webb's, returned borne Itl'.i u,orL'.r. ' J. T. Ta'on, who tad been srper- "-t,e- ' a ci t erew t arco .-r 1 room eft' 9 A. T. Corrx-y re- : I i 3 Putt;.! t'. 'aniprr.'rj. Beet Bottlers I irCtlteB ... -. " . tf Sideshow " : , rosr. ... . . . .. ... frays, one-horne, Dray, rare-horae, . - , . ' Uea'ers 10 Putols, etc . . KahibrMonl . . . Fatms; Saloon and Pfatir-ant. . Hotels . . .. . Poarding Houses . ' . . . Home or Mule Dealers - . Hurksters . . . . . Ice Dealers - . . . l.aun-nes .... livery Stables ' . . Photoemphars 3 . . - . . ' . f Flying Horses . ... Opera Houses . . . . Halls for public hire . . Frreet Scales . . . . . Wood and Coal Dealers Peddlers . . Transient Traders, ec. . Itinerant Onticiann. Palmier. .. Junk Iralers . . . . reen lirncers . . . Feather kesovators . Merchants - . - . . ' Ptific Trn,fers . . -h and Otnter Dealers . . f'i1 atrons, one hore. . . ! v f ns, more thaa one hone, 1 1 ..... I . . . . ( sMie IMer - ... "oj 1 I young $ to o prince. I ' "The German empress, who has al ways taken great Interest In ecclesias tical matters In Prussia and has been the promoter of church building In tbe capital as well aa In the provinces, is "patroness of no fewer than thirty four churches. The finest collection of Russian sa bles in the world Is owned by the dowager empress of Russia. The lining of one of her coats cost $30,000. She dresses In black and devotes much of her time to works of charity. . POINTS OF LAW. An unincorporated church society is held, in Stewart versus White (Ala.i. G5 L. R. A. 211. to be incapable of a quiring title by adverse possession. A contract by a man to support a wo man who is about to marry his sen lt cuse the son falls to do so Is held, la Wright versus Wright (la.), C3 L. n. A. EGL not to be contrary to public oolicv. - -r and Pia Hookers . otU:n Y All i -houses -uses - The Finest Faf ria mala by bnmaa tVC.l h co - with the liaicr cf r 9 to- tuis tena.r ajftuLr- have gr!i-ir- pnine. c! i. i i ' r I. ta t-s above ' 9 f 9 t '9 d " 7, i-Jj 1, IS, : t 1 :i era ev. 1- 1 ' ' ', t 3 J I f t' 9 ' i r -3 - j B 1 , J ft i, C3 L I .1
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
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June 28, 1902, edition 1
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