The
5
KINSTON, N. C.
Kinstox . Publishing Co.
. OWNER.
OKFICEJW AND WKECTOBS,
V. 8. IIKRBKRT,
President and Treasurer.
JESSE II. HERBERT,
Vitt President.
. M. HARRINGTON,
Secretary.
' DIUECTORS.
J. r.Trto. Plato Collins,
ChahlisP. HAKTir, A. ElWtTilK,
W. D. Pollock, Loyrr Hiott.
B. W. CAor. Dal F. Wootin,
Dr. J. M. Paott, J; W. Oraiwhiii, -O.
H. Allik, D. Oin-moin, -
Dr. T. K. Paulknsr, W. O. Joke,
O. P. Fleming, E. P. Cox,
Dr. H. D. Harpir. K. J. Routs,
J. E. Hood. Dr. F. A. Whitakir,
S. H, Abbott. ' J. B. Cumminos,
4, A. MoDambl.
UERBEBT
BROS. A HARRINGTON.
' PUBLISHERS. '
W. 8. 1IKIIUERT,
Manager.
F. M. HAHUIXaTOS,
Manas-inff Editor.
JKftME Jf. HEItBEBT,
City Editor.'
Entarad at tha Postofflce m taeond clan milter.
PKICB a CENTS.
r. I
rKKSS. . . , - ,
1 ' Uncle Sam: "This hot weather doesn't affect my bualneea any." T
' ' Cleveland Plain Dealer. f
ISOURELL & HcCOY,
CESS,
WHOLESALE GUCCI
have moved to new quarters on
Gordon Street, Nos. 108 and iro
All orders filled , correctly and
OR. W. R. JONES,
a
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON,
KINSTOlf, H, C. '
Residence and office
Loope', Blount street.
at Mrs. Kate
I..Lll.J.II...ll.l..llll..MAl.MJ..ll...lA.J ,1.I..l,I,....L,. .I,i. l.,-J..J.t,..,.l,il w,li.,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES;
Dally One Wwk, by Carrier, .
One Month, , '.' .
Three Months, . . . .
Twelve Months. . . , .
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES.
For Chief Justice of the Supreire
, WALTER CLARET,
of Wake.
, Kor Associate Justice of the Supreme I
1 Court from the East,
, HENRT GROVES CONNOR,
of Wilson.
For Associate Justice of the Supreme I
Court from the West, - '
plait v. walker, a
f ' of Mecklenburg.
For Corporation Commissioner,
, EUGENE C. J3EDDINGFIELD,
of Wake.
For Superintendent of Public Instruction,
JAMES T. JOYNER,
of Guilford.'-
For Senators from the Eighth Senatorial
District,
DR. JOHN A. POLLOCK,
' of Lenoir,
THOS. D. WARREN, .
of Jones. -
For Congress from Second Congressional
District,
CLAUDE KITCHIN,
of Halifax.
There are Indications that Rusela Is
becoming uneasy concerning her naval
position in the far east The Sviet of
8t Petersburg publishes a noteworthy
article in which' It declares that the
Russian squadron in the Pacific ocean
' Is completely at the mercy of Japan on
i account of the difficulty which the
Russian ships would experience in
that part of the world In recoallng and
reprovislonlng. 'i ll Moreover, it snys,
there would be many obstacles even
to their carrying out many necessary
repairs, inasmuch as the, docks at Vla
divostok and 'Port Arthur are IrisuB-
clently equipped for the purpose. The
Russian vessels. It remarks, are obliged
to winter in Japanese ports, as4 Vladi
vostok la almost inaccessible during
the cold months, while t FwHArthur
there is not sufficient accommodation.
Moreover, there , is not a sufficient
depth of water In the inner basin, and
the outer basin, . which is somewhat
larger, is dangerously exposed to ev
ery wind. . The Svlet also foresees the
danger of the ships of the Russian fleet
being blockaded by , the Japanese In
Vladivostok and Port Arthur In time
of war. The article concludes by say
ing that, in view of these many and
sinister possibilities, Jt is absolutely
necessary that Russia should obtain a
fresh point d'oppul on the Pacific coast,
and for this purpose Masanpho, In
Korea, would satisfy all requirements.
It does not seem to have occurred to
the writer that this was one of the
plans which the Anglo-Japanese treaty
was designed to defeat
nttecappuig nas receivea a severe
shock In Arkansas.. A mob was ad
vancing on the bouse of a man' who
. bad received ' a tip that It was the
laudable Intention of the gang to kill
him and blow up his property with
dynamite. One of the mob was carry-
leg dynamite in his pocket The pro
spective victim of the whltecappera
fired one shot at the advancing crowd,
but that oue was enough. The bullet hit
the stick of dynamite, and they haven't
found enough of the man who Was car
rying it to form the basis for a funeral.
Besides, nine other men were seriously
hurt ; . -
The Conflict
Of the Raxes
By JAMES BRYCE. Author of AThe American ,
Commonwealth"
'ri""ii'"rii""irHr
l'PHii'iin"'fi'iiHHMiin)iftH'Riir"lnl"l'l'tttTn
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Bftt
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ADVERTISINO RATES ON APPLICATION.
KINSTON, IT. C July 34. 1909.
Court
HERE ARE CASES IN WHICH THE EXCLUSION Or"
THE BACKWARD RACE SEEMS JUSTIFIED IN THE
INTERE8T8 ; OF HUMANITY AT LARGE BY THE
CONSIDERATION THAT TO ADMIT IT WOULD IN
VOLVE MORE OP L088 TO THE HIGHER RACE
THAN OF GAIN TO. THE LOWER.
Where the races coexist a blend may have good
results where physical aspect and structure approximate, brj. inter
marriage between whites and negroes is not to be promoted. The
negro race itself prefers development on its own lines, and the future
of mankind demands that some races should be maintained at the
highest level of efficiency. The question arises how to reduce the
friction incident to the contact of an advanced and a backward race.
LEGALLY THE BACKWARD RACE SHOULD RE
CEIVE ALL SUCH PRIVATE CIVIL RIGHTS AS IT CAS
USE FOR ITS OWN BENEFIT, BUT POLITICALLY THE
BACKWARD RACE MAY .BE REALLY UNFIT TO EX
ERCISE POLITICAL POWER. The negroes in the southern
'states were not fit for the suffrage, and several state constitutions
have been so altered as practically to exclude the vast majority of
the negro voters. . - -
THE GENERAL OPINION OF DISPA8SI0NATE MEN HAS COME
TO DEEM THE ACTION TAKEN IN 1870 A MISTAKE.
As for the social relations of such two races, one must have lived
among a weaker race to realize the kind of irritation which its defects
produce in those who deal with it IT NEEDS SOMETHING
MORE THAN THE VIRTUE OF A PHILOSOPHER IT
NEEDS THE TENDERNESS OF A SAINT TO PRESERVE
THE SAME COURTESY AND RESPECT TOWARD THE
MEMBERS OF A BACKWARD RACE AS ARE- NATU
RALLY EXTENDED TO EQUALS. .
The human body contains a complete
sewerage system In which poisonous
and disease producing refuse Is con
stantly gathering and Jeopardising the
health. The same rule which applies
to municipal sanitation will also apply promptly.
wr personal sanitation, sua me aanger
of disease may be forestalled by flush
ing out this pewerage system with an
excess of water, says G. T. Palmer,
M. D., in Good Housekeeping. ; Just
as truly as the gathering of filth from
the city, in the "sewerage veins", en
dangers the lives of. the Inhabitants,
so the poisons generated by the bodily
metabolism, collected in the excretory
organs, will jeopardize the lives of the
millions of Inhabitants of the body
the living cells. : Every action of mus
cle or of nerve is accompanied by the
destruction of cells which If not elim
inated will accumulate like clinkers.
Aside from the mere "choking of the
flues" we must bear in. mind that the
body is constantly generating poisons
which if eliminated freely will do no
harm, but which If retained will be
prouueure oi aisea.se. ; sucn a poison ri r U " .t- n
Is uric acid, which is charged Justly I IIC ITIUC UI MIC CyC...
witn causing rneumansm, gout con
stant headaches, dizziness and a train
of other symptoms, and it must be
seen that if the accumulation of refuse
is the cause of such conditions the log
ical means of cure is Its elimination.
Other "products of metabolism" create
their own types of disease, and all may
be prevented by the free use of water.
A beginning of kidney trouble lies
In the fact that people, especially wo
men, do not drink enough water. They
pour down tumblers of ice water as an
accompaniment to a meal, but that Is
worse than no water, the chill prevent
ing digestion .and indigestion being an
indirect promoter of kidney disease. A
tumbler of water sipped in the morn
ing Immediately on rising and another
at night are recommended by physi
cians. Try to drink as little water as
possible with meals, but take a glass
ful half an hour to an hour before eat
ing. This rule persisted in day after
day, month after month, the complex
ion will Improve and the general health
likewise. Water drunk with 'meals
snouia oe sippea as weii as laaen spar
ingly. '
PORTER GGODVin
Contractors and
Builders
GOLDSBORO, . N. C.
Estimates furnished on
all classes of .buildings.
ROUSE&ORMOND,B V L U hU
A WrtttUTilffl. A fT AW I . " . .
- KINSTOlf. N, C.
WIUsiaeikwwhaitlMiravTkaianikdMd. 1UO DWJIO WUltU WW
Ona inlilf of lha iia caa aw h nap A mil .-
is among the sins of the
flesh of which we are all
warned , but the lover of
. fiae China hopes it doesn't
mean her, for she does
want to indulge a bit in "
this feast of beauty. Our ;
lines of Ihina and G7ass .
ware sre complete.
IIF3. 11. Lli & Broj
i now positively for rent.
Jn the ' mean ime what
I stock remains will be sold
at any reasonable offer.
DAN QUMERLY.
America Leads In
the Money Markets
By Senator CHAUNCEY M. DEPCW of New York v
THE GREATEST MONEY
A marine engineer of Rochester,
England, has patented a new system
for , steering twin screw steamships.
His device, as described by the Scien
tific American, consists of a special
throttle valve attached to each, set of
engines, the ' valves being connected
by means of bell cranks and linkwork
to a tiller.
When the tiller la resting centrally,
aa equal supply of steam enters each
engine, but directly the tiller is de
viated from its central position in ei
ther direction the throttle valve fitted
to one set of engines reduces the sup
ply of steam, so that the propeller ac
tuated by that particular engine re
volves more slowly, the rotary motion
of the crew diminishing according to
the degree to which the tiller is moved
over.
7 LISTEN!
Beef, Pork, Mutton
Sausage, Etc.
Phone
EW YORK IS FAST BECOMING
CENTER OF THE WORLD.
Because of England's merchant marine, London has
the advantage of us as a center of exchange, but we
hope to remedy that as soon as we obtain our own
S- " . '''' 1 . 1 . 1 . . 1 l i . ,-.- "i:1. .WVar.MM AW : Hrlilw
marine. Jbngiana acsnowieageu our muuvmrif ouiuciuo 4 uc
she came to the United States to float her war loan. THE TALK
ABOUT, MORGAN INJURING THE UNITED STATES IN
THE EYES OF EUROPE BY HIS JbiaN AJnUial uuura
IS UNFOUNDED. Among the people who want to know Morgan
are all the Europeans who have anything to sell, for patriotism will ca ted the goats."
never prevent Europeans from selling in the best markets. EURO
PEANS PAY A TRIBUTE TO . AMERICAN FINANCIAL
AND COMMERCIAL GENIUS BY THEIR HASTE TO EN
TER AMERICAN COMBINATIONS, AND JiUKUrAjyi
COMMERCIAL INSTITUTIONS ARE EAGER FOR AMER
ICAN 4 DOMINATION. . - "
A Heallr Indlsreatlkl TUi(,
. Of Interest to goats, boys and other
omnlvora will be the
contained in a letter
Dyer of Kew -from a' veterinary sur
geon of Australia; "It may Interest
you," he says, "to know that the hairy
linings of 'the fruit of the sweetbrier
(Rosa rublglnosa) caused the death of
a number of goats here by forming
hairy masses which eventually com
pletely stopped up the Intestines. The
goats were put on the land with the
idea that they would eat down the
briers and ultimately eradicate them,
but the briers came out best and eradl-
J DO YOU WHAT r 50OF THAT
J UU VUVAWOM - UUU .- Ut
? FLaha JP. De NMA4I X 8taDle and Fancy Gro-
nuts them on. -f wnoo wj wo
t where right here
UKJ XUU ViVNll 4-I n gk m ft ff fl
lators ? t n h rlil A.
T I SIS SB SB IB . aw.
We make them. Sky lights X j
too, water works. We are
T firadntiartora fnr alt PT.TTHTR. -f
iim .: n va vjTUiicAAUK. I .. - -
Pump, Galvanized and Cop. ff J sw viij.
per Work of all descriptions. US your Orders,
treat yon right. i ; wuuiituiiwwiiwi,
KINSTON, N. (J
MOORE & PA11UOTT. t
in.U.U..lA J' I MAW
..t uuruuuiiib u. uiuui o
Transportation Co.
Steamship Lines
Norfolk to
lioston and ProTidence,
Daily service to New England.
Vmlolif Vi an AnA tmit Mr and
ne zouowing- uemi ' " .X M Unatph ;
to w J Thlselton- N"w York, via Norfolk, Va. 20.50 ai8Patcn' , '
Boston, plana., via Norfolk, Va.,... 25.50 surpassed, i
Summer Excursion Rates.
June 1st to Sept. 80th round trip.'
Kinston to:
Washington, N. C. .............
Newport News. Old Point, Ocean
View and Virginia Beach, Va,... 7.50
Washington, D. C, via Norfolk,.... 12.50
Baltimore, Md., via Norfolk, Va.,.. ia.50
8.50
Bates to New York, Philadelphia,
Providence and Boston Inclnde meals and
state rooms on steamer.
: te5Rates to any point furnished on
application.
t C. T. MEACHA&f, Agent
VAHTED
Yon to write us for prices on Fire
proof Safes. Burglar Proof Safes.
1 . .... - I . "...
Consul General Richard Guenther 1 lluc uil r
3
The army uniform board, which has
been in session in Washington for sev
eral months, has recommended that
blue be discontinued except on dress
occasions s the color of the American
soldier's clothes and that khaki green
suits be substituted. And must we
elso dispense with that Btlrring and
jatrlotic old song about "the boys In
Hue?' -
The crutch is a poor substitute for legs, ' and affords a verv
inconvenient and tiresome mode of locomotion there is no more
pathetic sight than a person slowly and painfully moving along the
street supported by these artificial limbs. ;
When Rheumatism settles in the bones and muscles of the legs,
it is safe to predict that the victim will eventually become helpless
and crutch-bound. The corrosive, irritating matter that is deposited
in the joints and muscles causes the most iut mse pain, the knees
and ankles swell, and when the natural oils and fluids that lubricate
these parts are completely destroyed the joints become locked and
the muscles drawn and stiff, and crutches a necessity.
The acid poisons that produce rheumatic pains form in the blood, and are
distributed through the system, and lodged in the arms, shoulders, hands,
back and feet, or other parts of the body resulting often in total disability.
A permanent cure of Rheumatism can he enected only by a complete cleans
ing of the bloodv and no other remedy so surely accomplishes this as S. S. S.
It neutralizes the acid effects, purifies and invigorates the stagnant blood,
mm. A ilia rri I aai'aIa. " fr A r il.lAfrul
by the new rich blood, and relief comes to the CiT
pain -racked sufferer. S, S. S. leaves no morbid, VJN
irritntinor matt4r in tfj riliwl tnrwinit n-id rtrrxliice fc I
another attack, but expels every atom of it 1 ora
the system. S. S. S. is a purely vegetable remedy, and docs, not impair
the digestion or general health like alkali or potash remedies.
Write for our special free book on Rheumatism, and if any medical
advice or other information is wanted, our physicians will gladly furnish
it without charge. - THE SV'IFT fC:F13 C3 ATLANTA, EA.
writes from Frankfurt: Artificial clay,
according to German papers, is receiv
ing increased attention abroad.' This
ceramic novelty, which is used for the
manufacture of artificial stone, tiles,
gutters, etc.r fs composed of sand,
chalk, cement, liquid glue and petro
leum. The substances are mixed in
certain quantities, and a claylike mass
results, which can be formed at pleas
ure and acquires an excellent degree
of -hardness by being subjected to heat
Boxes, etc. We will save ; you
money.
O. B. Barnes Safe Co.,
Box 22, Qreensboro, N, C
R. H. WRIGHT. Agent,
N rfolk, Va.
W. P. TURNER. G. P. A.
C. S. HOSKINS, G. F. A.
T. C. WHITNEY, -
ad V. P. and T. M
General OBce, Baxtimohb, Md.
Caw to Keep Fat Corses
Hava'tka axlat refitted to i Sota
and your buggy will ma light. ,
Ca to Please Tenr Wife- ,
Bay bar a SINGER. . " '
81. G. K00CC,
Oppouta Court Houm. . ,
)R. C. L. PRIDGEN,
?JJYSICIAN and SURGEON,
KINSTON, W. C.
Tha Lanamar of Lettara.
Two-thirds of all the letters which
pass through the postofflces of the
world are written by and sent to people
who speak English, says Bradstreet's.
There are substantially 500,000,000 per
sons speaking colloquially one or other
of the ten or twelve chief modern lan
guages, and of these, about 23 per cent,
or 125,000,000 persons, .speak English.
About 90,000,000 speak Russian, 75,
000,000 German, 55,000,000 French, 45,-
000.000 Spanish, 85,000,000 Italian and
12,000,000 Portuguese.
With lieu Typ
parOfflne with Dr. Jno.
next to Hood's drua: store.
A. Polloe
and Machinery, larg varietr
and sto k of Papers and cor
petent w rkmen, . "
THE FREE PRESS.
is prepared to do all of youi
Job Printing ia neat and
. artistic style.
Kcw Metal Iareated.
Considerable attention has been giv
en to a new metal which is not a com
pound, but simply a molecular modifi
cation of aluminium similar to that
which makes steel from iron. It is
failed evabrite, i9 as bright as silver
snd as stiff as steel. It Is absolutely
unoxidizable and cheaper than brass.
When testel, it was found to be equal
to every claim. The engineers recom
mend that erabrite be substituted for
nickel and corr(,r in telephone acd t.l
erarh apparatus.
J1. V. SIAIFON,
Arc!
- 1
mai:i crr:c2, ket;
Ccr 't C9 cnt'l r
W a--
C.
'. c.
t'
-CATIGFllGTIO;!-
My cust mers are hiing satisfied
with the choice Staple and Fancy
Grocer 'es I am offtring. I want
other customers to appreciate tlie
good thlcgs I sell.
Try an Order Tc y
for your satisfaction t - - -
These who Hud an i r 1 ' r 1 it ia
aaytl!rjlselle- " j c . at:I if
tlcy willowy t -! ! C 2 CZz-'Ay.
171 v--t - ; - cf yc-r ft.
rens'