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.77 V' 'V' ! I I I ' I 1 i I 1 I I i 1 1 1 1 1 U i 1 1 EYirj Ccci Id , , f , RESSo T i A" W '!! I I J. la a stepping ktone to T wtalth. ' : PUBLISHED, EVERY HFTpRNOON EXCEPT SUNDRY, KINSTON, N. G, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6 1002. PRICE TWO OENTS a ji y -e Daely . Free 0LW10RTH; STATE ' Mim, gossip ODD 1KD IITERESTIKGr H&PPEKIHGS. .1 Oak Ridgn Beatea at Km Ball. Chapel Hill, Oct. 4. Being uubu to withstand h terrible onslaughts and the magnificent Interference, Oak Ridge Institute was easily s worsted this5 alters noon bjf the University of North Carolina In 15 and J.0 minute balnea by the de cisive spore of. 35 to 0,; thi first touch down being made In 35 seconds, the Oak Ridge boya played a slow, lifeless game aid only had possession of the ball twice daring the first half and then to be ' lost on downs aa Carolina's line of human de - fense proved impregnable. ' Carolina played a last, snappy, furious, terrible , game a game that brought forth vocl . ferous applause from the student body New ion, Foustj, McNeill, Allen, Ingle, and Berkley were easily the stars of the game and deserve special mention. New BathnM Winston Journal: The proposed new railroad fiom Gulf, Chatham county, . through High Point, with Greensboro or Winston as prospective stopping places, has already, been placed . on the latest railroad maps, as a railroad In course of construction, but this city ' fs where ends,1 The route .fa, from Gulf through High Point Is very hopeful of getting the new proposed line, and It fa under stood that Greensboro Is making strenn- r: ous efforts to eurelt. f)f Paaaaotank Convenfloa. , - ', . Elizabeth City, Oct: :4. The1 Demoi crattc county convention : met; today to Indorse the action of Monday's primaries Much interest was manifested In the leg islative fight, as It was a battle royal be tween whiskey and antl-wblskey force, Prof W. M. Hlnton, a prominent educa tor, was declared the nominee, which was a victory for the temperance faction. ticket. He received a majority of only one of the popular vote. . ; ' Illiterate Voter r v There are 21 ,300,000 , Inhabitants of the United States of votimr aaw and 2,300,000 of them, or about 11 per cent. were returned on the last census as tllft rate--a tvery large proportion for country In which the opportunities for education are universal The high rate of Illiteracy In the United States Is due largely to the colored inhabitants. There art 2,300,000 of them over 21 years of aga and of these 1,075,000 are Illiterate 46 percent. ' 1 ' '. , A. C. L. Relief Department. Raletgh,' N. C. October 4. Insurance Commissioner Young has licensed the re lief department of the Atlantic Coast Line railway to do business. He says there are forty-two life and eighty Are insurance companies now doing business in North Carolina, about the same number of four years ago. Newport News Beneficial as sociation Is doing business unlawfully in the State and he has , Issued circulars, , warning officers to watch out' for its agents. v ?-;,.;i;-..' . " Killed bf Grape Seed..' Wilmington, Oct 4. Alex, Inman, son of C. A. Inman, of Asbepole, Robeson county, died at the bosplt&l here today of appendicitis. His Illness was brought on by eating a large quantity of, scup- pernong grapes, seeds and all, a week ago. His condition was too critical- to permit an operation when he was brought here yesterday.- He was just of Ashevllle Gaiette; pr. G. W, Beed's office at Biltmore Is the pioneer la this state in establishing a system of weather bureau signals by means of different col ored flags carried by the rural free de livery carriers to lndicats the condition of the weather for the following day. New Bern Journal : The A. &, N. C. Eallroad company is building at Its shop in this city, two passenger cars, which will be seventy f,, t ia length and will be fiu'sued cp ia the 1 .test and most Improved style. I . -er. r cars have heretofore been bonght abroad and tL!s tu"J!r of them att-tnebytbecocj r.-y will I f -! er':r-"-.e t3 tec I. 1'. j I w t c. -b ever f j 'a i parts wrseiblL'.ted at the Journal r ye-it.'r! sy mon.:rby L'r. 11. L. C Ii:cr cr i i i f'.r c "' ? c f t' e er 1 was la X'zi t i PENi CHISEL" AND BftUSH. , Fifty year ago nenrik Ibsen wai n clerk In a drugstore. 1 - -. y Xenbach, the- most-famous of Ger man painters, is of bumble origin. ' Joseph M. Didusck of Baltimore lias completed a, marble bust of Mendels sohn to be offered as prize at the saengerfest of 1903 at' Baltimore for chorus competition. ' ' "Allen French,' the noted 'American writer, who spent years wandering about this country , and Europe iu search of health,, is now a. "slave to exercise,; playing golf early and lata.,, General Lew Wallace .has the "most luxurious and ideal author's f den"' of any, American writer. , It is erected, on bis lawn aud at a cost which Juoat peo ple would consider quite a fortune. In shape it resembles an oriental mosque, and the Interior is . one large room, handsomely furnished and decorated. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL. . Oscar: GorrelJ of the University of Oregon has been elected instructor of English "In the Tung Wen Institute at Amoy, China. ,..,'---. The national board of education of Great Britain now requires that nature study shall be taken as one Of the sub jects of examination in rural schools, : Professor Olsen of the University of Wisconsin is at present In Copenhagen. He has been conducting researches in. the languages spoken in Scandlna via.--: Professor Kuno.Fiteher of the Uni versity, of i Heidelberg remarked to the students of his Class the Other day that be had reached . bia . seventy-eighth birthday and had taught more than a hundred' semesters without havtna ever been 111 or aked for leave of ab sence on any other grounds, RIVER AND LAKE! 1 Prismatic lake, in the Tellowntone National park, is the- largest body of hot water in the world. ' ' ; - ' The 'Arkansas; river is' 2.10 mile's long, but at various points In ita'cours Is very thin for its length.- y The' wirl(l has six lakes' morn thiin 20.0()d square mlles.'-HiP Caspian l the largest of these and Lake Huron the smallest The Dctrctt river Is theoiith-t of the greatest IwJIes of frvHh water In the world, aggregating K2.(KH.) square miles of lake siirfuce.' whlcli In tore, drain 12a,000 Kiuari- DJilPK of- lund. ,' ; , s Hew a Cla Emboaeed Leather.' Embossed leather can, be cleaned with turptutlve appllea rwun a son cloth.; TWa. removes tae siains ous sllehtlT, stiffens . the - leather,.- which must be made pliable again by rubbing briskly with crude oil Use a very lit tle oil and go over he piece with one of the clean cloths Upon wnicn no oa has been put, as care must be takeu to get all the surface grease.on to pre vent soiling the clothes. H a ve bii rejji tered? If nor, why not? " Xatnral Anxiety Mothers regard approaching winter with uneasiness, children take .cold so easily. No diesaws costs more little lives than croupe. It s attack is so sudden tnat tne suBurer is often beyond Human aid before the doctor arrives. Suchcasesyield read ily to One Minute Cough Cure. Liquifies the mucus, allajs inflammation, removes danger. Absolutely safe. Acts im me dially. Cures coughs, coldi grip, bronchi tis, all throat and lung trouble. F. -fi. MeMahom, Hampton, Ga.: "A bad cold rendered me voiceless just before an ora torical eonteet. I intended to withdraw but took One Minute Cough Cure. It re stored my voice In time to win the medal. J. E.Hood." , THE WEELiTTLES IN CAIRO.' fl'i,! YV A FniAL EFFORT ; TO EliD STRIKE , , ' ft i ; i' , .' s PRESIDENT UD ADYISORS DISCDSS IT How President Eitcbell lets on It Re- ! maLios'tol be Seen. f, - r y Washington, Oct,'; 4. A, final effort, with hope of success, Is to be made to etad the coal strike. It has been discussed by the president and soma of bis advisors today, aa J, while the Idea Is : still In an nnqompletsd state and the final result still uncertain, yet it offers a method which now seems to be the ouly solution of the problem. The suggestion Is made that President Mitchell, of the United Mine workers, may be able to' have the men now on strike return to work In order to avert the Impending disaster which a fuel famine will cause and that at as early a dau i as possible there shall be a X complete Investigation - by - the National legislature, and by the State legislatnret Pennsylvania, Into the an thracite coal situation with a view of bringing before the publio the facts and conditions of the miners, with a view to legislation or1 recommendations for re- j llevlng the conditions of the miners In! the near future. While it Is not abso lutely possible to guarantee such an lc veetlgation there Is little doubt that- recommendations by the president and the executive of Pennsylvania would be promptly acted -upon- by congress" and the Pennsylvania legislature; Just how President Mitchell wl" this sugges tion can not be stated,' but it is known that he and others fully realised that after the statements by the presidents of t the coal roads yesterday, there la little - hope of securing any adjustment with the operators by which the people of the country may be supplied with coal. It is expected that President Mitchell will confer with his- as 'dates, and If they can determine that the miiw workers may be fully as much benefitted ; by the course suggested as by continuing the Strike, and causing .the widespread suf fering which is sure ti. follow the dead lock, It Is expected that iwgotUtions will be opened with a vie to carr ing out the new proposition. Mu h will depend upon the way tl miiwra view thepropo- sition and whether they ihiiik it will cause a loss of prestige to the union from which It cannot recover. - - Now, please, don't forget to register. The Worst Form Multitudes are singing the pralaes of Ko dol. the new discovery which is makingso many sick people well and weak people strong by digesting wnat iney eau, oy cleansing and sweetening the stomach and by transforming their food into, the kind of Dure, rich red blood that makes you feal good all over, Mrs. Cranflll, of Troy, I. T.. writes: For anumberofyears J was troubled witnanaigesuon and oys- DeDsia which orrew into the worst form. Finally I was induced to use Kodol and after using four bottle I am entirely cured I heartily recommend Kodol to all suf ferers from indigestion and dyspepsia. Take a dose after meals. It digests wbat you eat. J. L. Hood. -,. Mftivhandlse Envelopes have been added to the materials carried In stock by I hi Fees Pbbss Job Printing Department. -fr' - THE YOUNG-PULITZER MURDER CASE. ; 1 The murder of Mrs. Joaenh P. Pulitzer, of New York, by William Hooper Young, a grandson of Driehara Young, bus attracted more attention than any similar crime recently committed in tlii is country. Yonng prompt thbota to their astuteness in hunting down v.'Ha Go Better. A very recalcitrant debtor ; - .. Becelved a calorifled lebtbr.' ! '. 'Twaa from hla physician, . i Who said, "I am wician tou'd pay ine for curing; your tebtor." .' Baltlmora American. . v.. The Cltarm Lost. Tie Shall we get a caddyf She We might as well. The links are so crowded there's no chance to ao anything but play golf. Boston Her ald. Fairyland. ! ' A bashful young fellow from Md. : . Remarked to a fair one:-'Oh, Dd. A kies on your brow? 1 Well, he did, anyhow, ' And he vowed 'twas a rare bit from Fdl" . . Baltimore News. . ' Nerved Cp. Gladys That poor young Snoblelgb . actually dared to kiss met . What could ne nave oeeq tninkiug or? ... Ethel His debts probably. Town Topics. -. Aatama Cheer. . The autumn rhymes which bards un fold - Art often tommyrot; v It la either, as a rule, too cold . Or else it's far too hot. -Life. Practical View. ; -. , ..'. Novice They tell me a man can't go Into politics and remain honest Old Stager Yes, be can. But It Isn't necessary. Ohio State Journal. . ' It la t Smile. Three little rules we all should keep To make life happy and bright ; Smile in the morning, smile at noon, And keep on smiling at night! i , , St. Nicholas. ; Sb Knew the Symptome. - He If I had never been In love be fore, how would I have known what ailed me? , She I would have told you. Judge. Knocked Hint Oat. The old man growled about the bread And remarked 'twas heavy, rather; Then mother threw it at his bead; And the blow almost killed father. Chicago News. .- Speed Lavwsw Redd Have you an ordinance against fast driving In your town? Greene Yes. but not on the - golf links. Youkers Statesman. The Caaa.1 TMasr. X abot an arrow into the air; ' . It fell to earth, I knew not where. Until a neighbor set up a howl , Because I'd killed a favorite fowl. . . . Ohio State Journal. Ill Gotten Gala. , , " .Handout Harry J)at man's got a million dollars. I wisht I wuz bim.. Tiepass Teddy I don't He made his money selling soap. A September SemtlmeBt. Z shall not mourn the June time -Nor yet the amiling May, - I'd rather have an oyster . Than a rosebud any day. ; Washington Star. He Grew -Crwsty. First Ant How was the picnic? ' Second Ant Never saw such a crush In my life! Some one sat down on the pie. Smart Set , - ' Sack Dlffiag Ii HirrewlsK. " Ye bores who nudge our ribs, f attend! He's nothing but a prig Who thinks to cultivate a friend -' By giving him a dig. TrylBs to I xplala the Aeeldeat. E!a:!.T's rv'.o get Elewed, didn't itr "I daa't 1 " v whether it was th EUtO or r."-CIeveIacd flail t s3 Aatbrerite. 'irl won, y f - -. i a 1 1 apnrehenaioa ia taken by the polio aa a onmiaai. iPureiy Personal Items About People Who Come and fro Mr. J. R Cameron returned to Raletgh this morning. , Mr, A. A. Slagle went to Emporia, Ya. Sunday morning. ' Miss Llsxle Hargrave, went to Wilson Saturday to visit , - ' Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Walls went to Wit- son, Saturday night Col, Barry Skinner took the cars here Saturday nUbt fur lUWign. Dr. Willitm Edwards returned from Lonlaburg, Saturday afternoon. Mrs. T. P. Ashf rd and little children cams from New Bern Sunday morning. Mr. S. P. Job.. .son, left for Baltimore this morning to purchase stock for his store. . Mrs. M. R. Moore, of Norfolk, Va., came Saturday night to join br husband at this place. ' Judge O. H. Allen, left Saturday night for Bladen county to preside at court there this week. ' Mr. Joseph Hunter, of Raleigh, came Saturday afternoon to vlst bis sister, Mrs. J. H. Parham. ' Hon. Lee . 8. Overman, of Salisbury, spent last night in Kinston, and left this morning for Greenville. Messrs. Smith and Gardiner, of Gold boro, who had been visiting friends here, returned home Saturday night . . . Mr. Charlie Malpass,' of Goldsboro, spent yesterday in this city - with his friend, Mr. James Dawson, Miss Mary Scott Monroe, of Goldsboro, who had been visiting Miss Mamie Hines, returned to her home last night. ' - Mrs. Lillian F. Perry returned from La- Grange this morning, where she had been to visit a sick brother, who la bet ter now, ' Mrs. E. J. Becton, of Jones county, left Saturday night for New York City, to visit her sons who are in business la that city.- Mrs. Becton was accompanied as far as Goldsboro by her son, Mr. W. B. Becton. . The Lady Giraffe. Itba lady giraffe for . the ballroom .' 1 ' dressed ' A" w c In the latest decollete style. When a dashing young beau. The pood looking dodo. ; Stepped up to ber side with a smile. "My dear His Giraffe," said he, with a ' bow.-1' '. . Tou're the fairest of maids at the ball. And yet if your neck Should grow longer a speck Tou would need to wear nothing at all." -Puck. : - . i; : ii i in ' '' Ia tae Daya te Ceat, The quick puff, puff, puff of an auto mobile was beard In the back alley. And then a plaintive, long drawn out voice pealed through the air: "Ra-a-a-a-ags 'n ole l-unT' Chicago Tribune. . lader False Colore. "And you say he was no true son of Kentucky?" "No, sahl The pa pah says he died of watah on the brain. He was an lm postah, sabr' Chicago Record-Herald. Tarlons Roatea. Eome men take the poison route, Vhilo some Jump In the lake. And others get a gun anj ehoot. And some gas treatment take, Fy c'.r-irett-s eome get them hence, Homo pi the thin ice slide, AYhiie ot:i,rs go to more expense Anl t.iha aa auto r''!e. -: : ::ral IT I. FRESH FACTS 111 A FEW IMS ITEMS OF IITEREST TO EYERTBODT Twa of Dickens' novels, "Oliver Twist" end ,A .Tale of Two Cities,' are running as serials la Parisian dally papers. There are forty-seven typewriter fac tories' reported to the census bureau," with an annual product worth about $7,000,000. Russia will send her Siberian ex hibit to the world's fair at St.' Louis through the agency of the East Chi nese railroad. Thlrty-lght miles an hour was the mean speed attained by the new tur bine destroyer Velox during ber pre liminary run at sea. A woman In Ne wca stle-on-Tyne, a sufferer from lupus for thirty years, . Is said to have been cured by the ap plication of the X rays. - Farmers and fruit growers of Cali fornia are saving samples of this year's crops for exhibition In the California sections at the world's fair of 1904. The' ascent of the Wildstrubel has been eaBler for Alpine tourists by the erection of a chalet at an altitude of 0.750 feet by Herr IUldebrand of Dres den. Experiments In Dublin recently dem onstrated to the satisfaction of the ' experimenters that bacteria could be carried a great distance by the wind despite a heavy rainfall By literally chasing it on to a sand bank some Dee fishermen recently cap- , tured a royal sturgeon weighing over 200 pounds and measuring 8 feet 3 inches la length and 4 feet in girth. A meeting of the Women's Union of the Church of England Temperance society deplored the lot of the 100,000 women employed In drinking bars and urged that barmaids be done away with. , : - ' , - , . - : The census shows that there are sixty-five sewing machine factories in the country, whose annual output is worth $21,000,000. The business has multi plied thlrteenf old In the last forty , years. j - A new material for table pads has recently been placed upon the market It Is made of asbestus cloth woven so soft that It cannot Injure the most highly polished table, and It Is abso lutely heat proof. One hundred years of age and totally blind, Catharine Sin-lsa has just been released from an Austrian jail, where she bad been imprisoned for selling poison to a woman who wanted to murder her husband. -'. The Interior department has started a free telegraph school under the aus pices of the insular telegraph) service at San Juan, Porto Rico. The school -has twenty-five pupils, all girls, who will be fitted for becoming operators In the island. The famous mosque of Sultan Has san at Cairo Is to be completely re paired, i The sum of $200,000 necessary for the purpose has been furnished, and a first installment has been paid to the committee for the preservation of the monuments in Cairo. M. J. Thoulet has investigated the constitution of the ocean bed aud finds ' . that the more deeply it Is penetrated the less the proportion of slime and the less calcareous matter, ; On the other hand, the proportion of sand and pure chij'8 Increases with the depth. What undoubtedly ia 1 the largest known tree In the world has been dis covered on the government reservation far up in the Sierras In Fresno county, CaL Six feet from the ground It took a , line 1M feet 8 iucbes long to encircle the tree, making It over fifty-one fett In diameter.- , .-. . Tintoretto's great masterpiece, 'Tar- adise, In the Ducal palace at Venice. ... suffered but slightly from the fall of the St. Mark's campanile. A little - careful work by the clever Italian re storers and the great painting will be, it is said. In as good condition as be fore the nearby bell tower collapsed. Whereas light of various kinds is be ing advocated for the cure of various -germ diseases. Dr. A. F. King of New York holds that light aggravates ma larial fever and that by keeping the patient in a dark room the disease can be made less virulent bright light evl- dently being favorable to the growth of the germs. The London Express notes that Deb- mark was ruled by three generations within the period of one week not long " sgo. On a Friday Prince Christian, son . of the crown prince, was the regent; on the next day the crown prince as sumed the sway, and on the following Thursday Denmark was again ruled by the king. . Eggs consumed in England durlngthe past twelve months would, it is com puted, fill upward of 40.000 railway trucks. Of these only oue-thlrd were English, and In consequeuce an enor mous sura of money was sent out of the country that might have tunm kfpt t home had those engaged lo rural In dustries boon alive to their orportup.i tles. ,
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 6, 1902, edition 1
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