WANT ADS l CENT A WORD EAC J$f. MINIMUM 15 CENTS Beard wanted in Prirate Family by voune man. Address C. T. care this office. 6-20 3t dly For Rent Good Offices and rooms, Whitaker Building. See D. V. Dix on & Sons. 7-31d tf First Class Tailoring, pressing and cleaning. Call Carolina Pressing Club, Phone 528. 7-30, tf. For Rent Brick .Store .on .North street, adjdning Simmons' stable. Possession given September 1. 8-20-61 dly Colored man or woman under fifty .wanted. No experience needed, 1SO.OO a month. Write quick. ' Box A-409, Cincinnati, Ohio. 8-23- It dly LCst Large white, shaggy poodle, black spot on 3ide of head. Name, "Prince." Return and get reward. Miss Nan Smith. 8-22-ltdly Fcr Sale Large wood building, sit uated on corner Queen and Northl streets, and known as Webb build-ii-.y. Will tell reasonable. See J. E. Hudson. . 8-21-tf., dly Wanted To grade your tobacco prices reasonable, strictly good work, place at foot of Parrott's bridge, known as Smith's Stables. For further particulars see John W. Smith. 8-11 4 w sw St dly 2 wks. Framing of Pictures. Why you should carry your pictures to W. M. Co ble to be framed: First, he has all kinds of moldings; second, because he knows how to harmonize the frame . to suit the pictures he keeps only the best white French glass to go on. them. 8-21-2t a w 2w-dly Dancing Lessons Mr. Charles Wil liams of Norfolk, Va., will be ' in Kinston next week to open a dancing school, teaching the one step, hesita tion and nil other latest dances. All desiring to take his private lessons in their homes or with class in even ings, address application to box 191, Kinston, N. C. . 8-20-3t dly NOT 1CE0F "ADMINISTRATION". Having heretofore qualified as ad ministrator, c. t. a., of Kate Brown, deceased, late of Lenoir county, North Carolina, this is to. notify all personb having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned cn or before the 25th day of August, 1915, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of "their re covery. All persons indebted to the -said estate will please make immedi ate payment. ; A. C. BROWN, Administrator, c. t. a., of Kate Brown, deceased. August 19, 1914. LOFTIN & DAWSON, Attorneys. 8-19, 26; 9-2, 9, 1G-23 dly DOVER AND SOUTH RAILROAD BOUND Schedule of Trains Carrying Passen fiers. Effective Sunday, February 8, 1914. South Bound Trains. STATIONS '.' ' :i 7 ft P.M. A. M. Lv Dover 4:45 4.45 Lv Ftoya 5;00 ' 5:02 Lv Taylors 5)4 - 5:06 Lv Phillips 5:13 57 Lv Wimsatt 5:22 5:28 Lv Comfort . 5:42 '5:49 Lv Petersburg 6:00 6d0 Aj RichJands 6:05 6.15 North Bound Trains STATIONS . 6 - 8 A.M A. M. ' 7:55 ' Ax Dover Ax Foys Ax Taylors Ax Pbillipg Ax Wimsatt Ax Comfort .1 Ax Petersburg Lt Richlands 7.55 7:38 I'M 753 7 12 6:51 6:30 6.25 7:40 736 727 7:18 7:00 6:40 6-35 Trains run daily except Sunday. N. S. RICHARDSON. iUUfcLARDSON. General Managers CHICHESTER S PILLS i t . . f $ 4.:'-.And, J PER SO N A I Mrs. C. W. Blanchard spent Fri day in' New Bern. ... Mr. T. H. Britt and family have re turned from a visit in Ayden. Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Boney are at Wrightsville Beach for a short stay. V Mr. Bonnie Bloom of Bayonne, N. J., is here on a visit with relatives. Mr. B. J. Thompson of Winston- Salem is a "Kinston visitor today. Mrs. K. T. Bullard of Martin coun ty, is visiting friends in the city. Miss Katherine Stadiem of Greens boro, is here on a visit to relatives. Jjiss Neva Padnck has returned after spending a pleasant week at the seashore. Misses Pauline Barfield and Sadie Ross of Durham, who have been the g-uesti- ot Mrs. Kay Lrocm far a few days, returned home this mornirg. Missf Julia B. Hooker entertained Monday night at her home in Hook- erton in honor of Miss Gertrude ones of Kinston, and other guests. Mrs. W. A . Pierce and little daugh ter, Miss Martha, who have been vis iting Mrs. D. T. Edwards at Srua- hurst. returned to their home in Wtl- don this morning. MRS. FRANK H ASK INS DEAD. Mrs. Kate Haskins, wife of Mr. Frank M. Haskins, died Thursday af ternoon, at her home pn East Cas well street, as the result of a stroke cf paralysis suffered several years ago. She was sixty-five years of age, and well known throughout the city. Mrs. Haskins was a woman of es timable character and a devout Chris tian. She was a Miss Casper of Jones county before marriage, and was extensively connected in that sec tion. Sons and daughters surviving are Mr. Art. Haskins of Enid, Okla.; Messrs. Emmett, Oscar, Marion and Archie Haskins, all of this county, and Mrs. Augustus Moseley of near Airy Grove. JAMES RINGGOLD DEAD. New Bern. Aug. 22.--James Ring gold,'" aged seventy-two years, died in Fairview Hospital here, and was! buried at Beach Grove today. Mr,' Ringgold succumbed to injuries re ceived when thrown cut of a buggy that was struck by an automobile several weeks ago. . The collision was declared to be an accident. James Baugham, a wealthy youth of Wash ington, drove the machine. Mr. Ringgold was a prominent citizen of the Beach Grove neighborhood. ACCUSED BY STEPDAUGHTER. Salisbury, Aug. 21. James S. Hartsell, a farmer of the Woodleaf section, and about forty-five years of age, was bound to Superior Court from the County Court on the. charge on his step-daughter, Ethel Horah, who is probably sixteen years old, Accordintr to the girl's story, the man's criminal relations with her be gan about five years ago, but fear of him prevented her telling her moth er until recently, when a physician was called to her. FINANCIAL SITUATION SHOWS IMPROVEMENT. New York. Auar. 22. Except for the Stock Exchange and the foreign exchange situation, where the dead lock remains unbroken, there is In creasing evidence that the domestic raneial situation is moving into smoother waters. Financial institutions throughout the country are releasing funds with more freedom than was deemed pos sible a week ago and the mercantile world is heartened by a broader in quiry from commercial paper. In the money market today some loans were renewed at 6 per cent., but the pre vailing rate was nearer 7 per cent. Infection and Insect Bites Dangerous. : flosquitoes, flies and other insects, which' breed quiclily in garbage pails, pends of stagnant water, bams, musty olaees. etc. are earners of disease. Every, time they bite you, they inject poison into your, aysteia from which some dread disease may result. Get hrtttle of Slan's Liniment It is is antiseptic and a few drops will neu tralize the infection' caused by infect j bite3 of rosty. nails. Sloan's Liniment disinfects Cuta, Bruises: and Sores. You cannot afford to be wiihoat it w your home. . Money tack if not sstis- d. Only 25c at your Druf gist - I SUNDAY SERVICES IN KINSTONS CHURCHES I Program for the Day' Worship, Where Members, Friends and Vis iters in the City are Welcome. BAPTIST. First Baptist church. Servrcea in Graded School Auditorium. Sunday school at 9:15 a. m. Preaching at 11a. m. and 8:15 p. m., by the paa tor. Caswell Street Mission Sunday school 3:15 p. in. Caswell Mills Mission Sunda school 3:15 p. m. Everybody cordially inv.-ted to at tend all the services. CHRISTIAN Gordon Street Christian church. At 9:45, meeting of all departments of the Bible school in auditorium of Sunday school for .short union ser vice, r rom 10 to 12, unified program of Sunday school in departments and of preaching. Sermon by C,. W, Howard. At 7:35, Christian Endeavi or. At 8:15, preaching by C. W. Howard. CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST. ; First Church, of Christ, "Scientist. Service at 11 a. m. Sunday school at 10. Wednesday evening testimonii meeting at 8. Sunday evening sei vices discontinued during July and August. Heading room in church eih rice open daily from 2 until 5 p. m EPISCOPAL. Christ Episcopal church. Sunday school at 4 o'clock. Services at C p. m. St. Mary's Episcopal church. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Service t 11 a. m. No evening service METHODIST. Queen Street Methodist church. Sunday school at 9:30, preaching at 11 o'clock and at S.15 by the pastor. Caswell St. M. E. church Sunday scnool, j. r. iirietz, superin tendent. Preaching at 11 and 8:15 by Rev. J. M. Wright, the pastor. PRESBYTERIAN Atkinson Memorial Presbyterian church Sunday school, 9:45. Preach- ng by the pastor at 8:15 p. m. No morning preaching service, as the pastor will be at Cobb's Mill for a service at 11 a. m. BIG DOCKET AWAITS JUDGE FRANK DANIELS Superior Court will be convened here Monday with one of the largest dockets in the history of Lenoir coun ty. There are 220 cases. This num ber has been surpassed at only one previous term of the court, when there were 240 cases docketed. The term being formerly one week, it is not expected that the docket will be cleared, especially as there are 1 number cf intricate cases, which in elude bigamy, abandonment, seouc tion, etc ., that will take considerable time to try. Annie McGee, for mur der, and John Perjy, for first degree burglary, will be capital defendants, Judge Frank Daniels, brother to the Secretary of the Navy, will preside, PICKANINNY IN TOILS FOR VARIOUS CRIMES, Johnny Brown, about ten years of age, and so diminutive that if he starts on a job within his profession he can clip through a hole made by che removal of a single pane of glass, is in the county jail here because the authorities don't know what else to do with him, and his father has ask ed that he be confined. Johnny is the most adroit thief the colored race in Kinston has ever produced, the po lice say. ' They allege that he has stolen $200 worth of goods in a few months' time, including three bicy cles. H9 entered a colored hotel, a grocery, a drug store, the Kinston Iron and Mantel Works' plant and other places. Charles Dunn, the ne gro banker and business man, was the accuser of the little burglar in police court. Johnny Brown's shrewd ness availed him little, although he made. an assertion which surprised the court, that the colored financier had it "in for him," and was prose cuting him -to "get him out of the way." Judge Daniels in Superior Court, will be asked to have the lit tle criminal committed to a reform atory. ;..( BETTER THAN SPANKING SonU: doc not curt children of bedwetUng. Therm i k coratutioml eaua for thi trouble. Mrt M. Summary Box W, Notre Dune, lnd., 0 Mndfrte to anr mother ber euocessful borne treetmentwttb full bwtructton. Send no money but writ her today rour children trouble ro die wtf. Dost blame the child, the chance arS tean' help it THi treatment abo cures adukeand aged people' troubled with urine difflcultie by day 5 or 6 doses of 638 will break any cas cf Fever or Chills. Price, 25 rents. . (Adv.) WAR EXCITEMENT fjf M mm 1 J J T-V .. ..1 T S A - -rf x BOON T THE SMALL: BOY Slepless in New York Enable Him to Procure Numerous f Free Rides. ? No matter what else can be said In regard to the new stepless cars now in operation cn Hroadway, they are ferTainly a boon to the small boy who depends on riding free, says the New York Times. - ' i The advent of the pay-as you-enter ! car and the euccoss of the idea of j placing a tin guard over the rear ' bumper, thus frustrating the efforts of those bent on obtaining free rides by sitting on the bumper, have done much to obviate all chances of riding on surface cars without paying the necessary nickel. Tho small hoy, as Usual, suffered most fro:.i those Inven tions. It goes without sa"!n that it was cot an Intentional act on tho part of the company providing means for the small bey to ride free. The boy waits for a crowded car at corner where he notices some one el3e waiting. When tha person crowds into the car the boy fellows, unknown to the conductor. The boy makes sure to hide himself behind the fcrm of an adult. The conductor on his eyrie falls to notice the boy, and after the car ha3 run cn for a number of blocks the conductor cannot be positive the boy failed to deposit his nickel in tbe box. AIR AFFECTED BY SOUND Ventilation and Acoustics of Publlo Places 8eem General Matter of Controversy. The effect of ventilation on the acoustics of public halls has been a subject of investigation. Architects have found that currents or layers of air of different density interfere seri ously with the passage of sound, but that a mass of moving air if homo geneous may have little influence. Heaters In front of the stage give es pecial trouble. A book by C. Oarnier mentions a new Paris theater in which air is ad mitted near the footlights, forming a kind of curtain between actors and spectators, and much interference re sults, the sound from the stage being weak, while that from the orchestra is intense. In another theater with ventilation by heated air passed across tbe stage into the auditorium there was Im provement In the acoustic qualities when the ventilating apparatus was working. Another Inquirer concludes that ven tilation can have only slight influence in improving acoustics, that parallel layers of air may be particularly harm ful, and that a single column of uni formly heated ascending air will affect sound very slightly. " By the Professor. Professor Jones and Mrs. Jones were both of the type colloquially known as strawberry blonds. In ac cordance with the immemorial custom of professors' families on small sal aries at this particular southern col lege, the Jones family grew apace. Mary, the first, was born, and her hair came perilously near to being cerise. The twins lost to Mary in respect of red hair by just a shade. Johnny, the next bade fair at three months to make Mary seem a neutral color. Now, Mrs, Jones longed for just one black haired one. When the learned pro fessor of xdogy from the scientific de partment dropped In for supper, Mrs.' Jones almost tearfully propounded to him a question. " "O, doctor," she asked, "do you think it mnst always be hereditary?" The doctor looked from the aureoles of Professor and Mrs. Jones to the successive four alarms ot fire-red hair on the little Joneses. "Not so much that," he assured her at last, "as redhedltary.n ' Putting Them "In Right" A Canadian who had been on a pleasure Jaunt to New York tells of an Incident of Gotham's amusement life. He went to the Carnegie lyceum. It's a big place with several different entertainments going on at the same Urns In various parts of the building. On this particular day they had mov ing pictures of Victor Hugo's "Les Miserables" on the ground floor and an orchestra concert upstairs. High brow music-lovers and patrons of the movies would have got all mixed up Jn locking for their reflective places IN AUSTRIAN CAPITAL 1 f4 9 fit - u1 ot entertainment if JtTaThot ;been for a big-voiced negro porter who stood at the stairs to announce in stentorian tones: "Dla way to de Symphony concert. Less Mtserubble downstairs." A CONFESSION Hopes Her Statement, Made Public, wi'J Help Other Women. Hines, Ala. "1 must confess", says Mrs. Euln Mae Rcid, of this place, "thai ! Cardui, the woman's tonic, has done me i a great deal of good. , Before J commenced using Cardui, 1 , would spit up everything I ate. I had 8 i tired, sleepy feeling all the time, and "was i irregular. 1 could hardly drag arcur.J, ! and would have severe headaches con- i tinuously. j Since taking Csrdul, I have entirely quit spitting up what 1 eat. Everything seems to uigesi an ripnt, ana i nave gained 10 pounds in weij;hl." If you are a viclim of any of the numer ous ills so common to your sex, it is wrong to sulier. For half a century, Cardui has been re lieving just such ills, as is proven by the thousands of letters, similar to the'above, which pour into our office, year by year. Cardui is successful because it is com posed of ingrediems which act specifically on the womanly constitution, and helps build the weakened organs tack to health and strength. Cardui has helped others, and will help you, too. Get a bottle today. You won't regret it Your druggist sells it. Write to ! Chatlanoon Medicine Co.. Udlec' Ad v!orv Dept., Chutnig. Tenn.. for Slvntil Jn utructumi on your case rd M-paee bunk, "Horn ' 1 luuaent for Women, tent la pieip wrapper, NCJU0 SUBSCRIBE TO THE FREE TRESS ft vw run FIRST SHPIEV1ENT Of Oih Pounds TURNIP. RUTA BAGA, RAPE AND GERMAN CLOVER Just Received. illarsfon's Drug Store. Oak Ridge Institute Sixtird $nmi lumm mm NEW S3S.SW ALCMNl BUILDING ' s IX buildings, 350 acres in campus, shower baths, gymnasium. ' Over past thirty years. Prepares for College, for Business, for Life. Students study under teachers, at night, in study halt Fall season opens September 16th," . Terms reasonable. Write for illustrated catalogue. Address OAK RIDGE INSTITUTE :: ' oak ridge, n. c- -little ton College- pnmmu (ckool for (ik uxi young mn t-tU wnn Imiim SaptoniMt 16. 1914. For catalogue, kddrM J. M. RHODES, Lit leton, N. C IRA M. HA ROY. M. D. , Physician and urgeo ,n . .102 W. Caswell St. ' . Residence 309 West Lenoir St 'Phone 507. TatrniIiorne industry' JOB PRINTING are Equipped to Handle Your Orders for High Grade Job. Printing. Order! Carefully aeJ rWptiy Eietnfe We Make the Beat Grade LETTER HEADS. WEDDING INVITATIONS. CARDS FOR ALL PURPOSES. CIRCULARS. LARGE AND SMALL, ENVELOPES, POSTERS. We have Connection with' Engraven and Blank Book Makere which en able ua to Promptly Handle Ordera for Engraving and all kinds of Blank Book Making. Kinston Free Press Co. Incorporated s Publishers and Job Printers Anything in Printing" LUNG DISEASE! jiiiri iuui iii uui lauuiy liuu uiru of consumption I was taken with a frightful cough and lung treble, but my life was saved andl gained HI pounds through using DR. KING'S NEW DISCOVERY HV. R. rattersou, Wellington, Tex. eniE BOe endft.OQ AT SU. DRUGGISTS. 'Wife-. PtSi:- Kii ww . ' 1 m k . a athletic fields, and farm. Steam heat. 200 boarding students annually for the

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