Newspapers / The Kinston Free Press … / Dec. 1, 1914, edition 1 / Page 3
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' . . ITIVQTnM nAIIV pdpp ddpco rr . n n r i "i i 'W M v II I. I il I -' 1 U U U I n L PERSONAL J WANT ADS 1 CENT A WORD EACH IN SERTION MINIMUM 15 CENTS WANTED Five Salesladies and one Salesman. Apply quick. Hirsh field Company. ll-30-2t-dly 1 - . - WANTED A Good Man to own one- half interest in a Good Brick Plant A pood chance for the right man. G. T. Eubanka, Clark, N. C. 12-l-3t-dly WANTED To rent Rooms suitable fur light housekeeping, in good lo cality; state price. P. O." Box 382, city. 12-l-2t-dly FOR RENT Two or three horse farm, uood land and house, uood chance for right man. G. H. Herring. l-L'-2tSW YOU SALE-A Gasoline Wood Saw, mounted on wheels, in good order. gee or write W. F. Hill, Newbern, N. C. ll-23-2wks-dly YOKKt' i une iurnisned room, with lights, bath and use of phone. Apply 115 W. Caswell Street. 11.23.7t.i11w STATIONERY SALE 200 Boxes of Initial Stationery, standard quail ty, at 19c, a few days only. Book Department, J. E. Hood & Co., Drug gists. 11-24-lwk-dly FOR SALE AT ONCE Brand new Snare Drum for orchestra use. Drum retails for $9.00. Will sell for $5.00 cash and throw in a new pair of .sticks. First call gets the drum. Apply to this office. ll-30-2t-dly I AM PREPARED to Re-Cover Felt Mattresses and to work over Hair Mattresses. Satisfaction guaranteed and prices right. Call at 210 East North street. L. S. Smith. 12-l-lwk-dly & SW SPECIAL NOTICE Fich lady that calls at our store will be presented with a needle case, filled with gold- eyed needles as a souvenir, as long as they last; Pianos, Player Pianos and Music. No. 107 North Queen Street. Forrest Smith. 10-9.26t.dly A WORD TO THE PUBLIC No tice All persons in the city of Kinston having baggage or freight of any description to haul, see the man who drives a pair of mules to a dou ble truck. My prices are from 15c to 50c per load, and I can pull twice as much as any other dray in town for the same money. Jesse Wiggins, Drayman, Phone 327. ll-30-5t-dly Mr. Reid Kelly of Caswell is a Kin ston visitor today. -.-a a a Mr. Owen G. Dunn of New Bern spent Monday here. k s: j: Mr. Marvin Cuthrell of Norfolk spent the day here. 1 t r Mr. T. C. Wooten left this morning for Laurange on business. a a a Mr. J. M. Hines of Greenville, was a welcome visitor in the city yester day. a a a Mr. J. J. Moore of Norfolk is a welcome business visitor in the city today. a a a Miss Minnie Grady of Greenville has been here on a short visit to friends. a a a Mrs. E. L, Brown of Greenville is visiting Mrs. T. R. Lee, on West Pey ton avenue. a a a Messrs. M. Jack Moye and Police man Edward Moye of Greenville were Kinston visitors yesterday. 5! a a Mr. Sam Abbott of LaGrange re turned home this morning after a short business trip to the city. a a a The Philathea class of Queen Street Methodist church will hold its regular monthly meeting this even ing at 7:30 o'clock, with Mrs. A. M. Baines. a a a Masters Elliott Lester and George Smith Cummings of this city have returned home from visiting their aunt, Mrs. C. G. Cummings at Mount Olive. a a a Miss Emily Gayle of Wilmington, who was the guest of Miss Nettie Kilpatrick, at The Caswell yesterday, left this morning for Grifton. a a a Miss Mamie Sanford returned to her home in Beaufort yesterday af ternoon, after a short visit in the city to Miss Margaret Davis, on East Pey. ton avenue. a a a Miss Marie Sutton has returned to Nashville, where she is teaching school, after a visit in the city to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Sut ton, on East Blount street. ON THE FIRING LIN1C tvrrw THE AUSTRIAN TROOPS (Continued from Pa ire One 4 is Lieutenant Carl Hoffman of the Eleventh Army Corps, and so hand some and big that 111 recommend him as a husband to any unmarried rirl.' 9:50 a. m. A spherical balloon, a dirigible balloon and two aeroplanes aro soaring or darting about above the bills ORIGINATORS TO THE FARMERS: KEITH'S GROUND AGRICULTURAL LIME Composed of sea product, petrified fish, clams, oysters, shells, etc., has solver the high cost of fertilizers. One-fourth price of guano, good for all crops on any soil, can be used alone or mixed with compost, cotton seed meal, or fertilizer material. Shipped loose or sacked. For prices, write B. F. Keith Company, R. F. D. No. 3, New Bern, N. C. .$100 Reward, $100 The rciul'Ti of till .nnT will ln nlcnv-d (. Ham 1 1 ;- t IliiT- is ut lv.:sf iiti (ir.'njul tiiswist iimi Kd.n.v I, tiif-n nil.' 1.. ruin in nil It: tai!i. ami thai Is tu:nnii. ll.il! l'nt::rrh Curi is Hit- only lenitive r-utv nnw known In tin' ini'd nil fnit.i'nlt.v. OiUirrh liHnif a constitution;!! OIhpiin., nn.uiriK a riuistitutlu'.iiil ttvntm.'i:t. "' Uit;inh cut is Inkcn tiiOrnMlv. aitlnt ilir.pllv hi-.11 tl. I.luoil nnil wuroiis tmrfarro of ', ,."" tiT'r litroyii,c tiM. fniimlatloi, fir in.. 1ki.uk,.. ,.ii jrivlnc llio putlrnt strrnjrti. J t.ui.i.uii; ,i. onstitiiti nml nislutlnc na hi., ut i.t ,lfJr ,u Wlrk TU. pro,,ri.ti,rs have muiii fniit, )ts (.r,tT pmnn thnt they . ,ii,1!,,n-. ii,.iiur n.r ntiy "iw that il " S"inl f r list of tratlmuiiiaU A.HroM r. j. cunrEr & co.. Toledo, o. S..I.I t,y on rirtlL'sibtS, T5c. Tate Hall's Family rills tor -onctltmrion. Booklovers to Meet Wednesday Afternoon The Booklovers' Club will meet Wednesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock with Mrs. John Weyher. a a a Home Workers This Evening. The Homeworkers of the Christian church will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock with Miss Hattie Parrott, on West Vernon avenue. saa For the Belgian Relief Fund. At the residence of Mrs. W. A. Mitchell, next Thlursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, Miss Mary Ward of New Bern, as the guest of the Round Ta ble, will talk on China, having just returned from a year's visit to the Celestial Kingdom. An admission fee of 25 cents will be charged and the public is cordially invited. The pro ceeds are for the Belgian Relief Fund. 10:00 a. m. A soldier is leaning against tne wall at the gateway of a convent, but the convent is only a heap of broken brick and stone. The Austrian soldiers have razed it be- cause it obstructed the view from the forts. The soldier has only the ruins to guard and he evidently considers his task a bore. tn.nn - n. iw..u a. m. we cross a narrow gauge railroad track laid over plowed larms. Itis an artillery railroad The cars are very small, but horses pull them more rapidly than wagons. There is a string of cars across the horizon. They are feeding the artil lery, in the hills, two miles away, with shrapnel shells. The railroad to Sanok runs through this farm and when we pass the depot of Hermano- wice we see wounded and sick men lying all about the platforms. 'They are waiting for trains which will car ry them back to the base hospitals. 10:30 a. m. The sound of firing is incessant and huge in volume. The Austrian batteries fire one gun at a time. The Russians are firing sal vos. "One, two, three, four, five, six," go the Austrian howitzers. "D-r-r-r" go the Russian pieces, all firing at one time. Before us are hills cover ing miles of territory; from hilltop to hilltop and from valley to valley the battle is raging. "How can a man paint a battle like this?" asks Adams, who has just finished a picture of the Emperor of Austria-Hungary, in seven sit tings, and who usually isn't stalled by important assignments. . 10:35 a. m. Many wounded have passed us in wagons. "Ill never paint war pictures again of men go ing into battle singing and waving their swords," said Adams. "That man with the green twisted face on that wagon, suffering from cholera, is a more tremendous picture of war than all the exploding cannon I can paint." In the midst of all the life and activ ity and movement, the man was dy ing before our eyes. There was no one to care for him. His wagon was held in the endless stream, and it must continue whether it carried on. ly a sick man or a dying man or a poisonous green corpse. 10:40 a. m. Three small deer run across the road ahead of us. There are thousands of soldiers hereabouts, all with rifles, and good meat is not any too common, but the laws against poaching are imbued in the peasantry of Europe, and those deer on the bat tlefield are probably the safest of all living things. Battles have waged on this ground for weeks and thous ands of men and horses have been killed; the hungry Russians have once held this ground, but here are the three baby deer safe and sound. (To Be Continued) OF LOW PRICES IN IllSlOi argain Loving Masses are lit Enthusiastic over our Electrifying Offerings and the Enthusiasm Is steadily on the increase as the values grow greater and greater each succeeding day, bringing forth new surprising Low Price Records on as fine a Merchandise for the Whole Family as any sold in the land. Its our Underselling System of doing business that make it possible for us to offer you High-Grade Goods for Men, Women and Children at lower prices than you imagined the goods cost us-Enor mous stocks makes it easy for you to find just the kind of Merchandise you need at a saving that means considerable to the person of moder. ate means. Come and see for yourself. Then help yourself from THE GREATEST STOCK OF BARGAINS EVER ASSEMBLED TOGETHER UNDER ONE ROOF !! Mountains of High-Grade Ready-f or-Service Clothes for Men, Women and Children. The largest stock we have ever carried, which means the greatest collection of values ever shown in this section, is placed on sale to the buying public H AMY PRICE THEY CARE TO PAY Selling Out Entire Stock at 312 North Queen Street Cohen's iBepaoimeinril: Store ' Going Out of Business !! BMMMataMBt-aaWBvmBMaa ' Ro Qnrn nnrl Cnnvmro Ynnrcolf Thnf Ynn'fA in fho Rirrht Plnrrt SOUTHERN RAILWAY Children's Practice. All children of the Christian Sun day school between the kindergarten age and fifteen years old are re quested to meet at the church at 3 o'clock Wednesday afternoon to prac tice for the Christmas entertain ment. KEEP IT HANDY FOR RHEUMATISM. No use to squirm and wince and try to wear out your rheumatism. It will wear you out instead. Apply some Sloan's Liniment. Need not rub it in just let it penetrate all through the affected parts, relieve the soreness and draw the pain. You get the ease at once and feel so much better you want to go right out and tell other sufferers about Sloan's. Get a bottle of Sloan's Liniment for 25 cents of any druggist and have it in the house against Colds, Sore and Swollen Joints, Lumbago, Sciatica and like ailments. Your money back if not satisfied, but it does give al most instant relief. Buy a bottle to day, adv. nTsPECIAL (REDUCTION SALE ; I on all of our j W a have them, in I all sizes, small, I ! medium and j large brims III t nn ... CARD OF THANKS. It will be impossible .for me to thank in person all those who were so kind to us during the recent illness and at the death and burial of my husband", but I hope that all will ac- NOTICE TO TELEPHONE USERS Schedule A of an Act passed at the second session of the Sixty-third Con gress, entitled "An Act to Increase man sieeping car, train for Wash York and all eastern and northern Premier Carrier of the South N. B.: The following schedule figures are published only as infor mation and are not guaranteed. Train No. 21. Leaves Goldsboit 6:45 a. m., for Raleigh, Durham Greensboro, Asheville and Waynes- Ville. Through, train, to Asheville, handles chair car to Waynesville. Makes connections at Greensboro for all points north and east, and at Asheville with Carolina Special for Cincinnati, Chicago and all western points. Train No. 139. Leaves Goldsboro 2:05 p. m., for Raleigh and Durham, and Greensboro. Handles through Pullman sleeping car from Paleigh to Atlanta, arrives Atlanta 5:25 a- m., making connection for New Orleans, Texas, California and all western points, also connects at Greensboro with through traino for all northern and eastern points. Train No. 131. Leaves Goldsboro 5:05 p. m., for Raleigh, Durham and Greensboro. Makes direct connec tion at Greensboro with solid Pull- the internal revenue, and for other purposes," which became effective December 1, 1914, calls for the col- lection of an Emergency War Tax cept this notice through the columns of One Cent on each Telephone Toll of The Free Press as my expression Message for which the charge of appreciation. amounts u rmeen i "i. MRS. GUILFORD S. JOHNSON. likewise on any ana au ieieKrma, points. Connects also at (Ireens- ington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New boro with through tourist sleeping car for Los Angeles and San Francisco. Train No. III. Leaves Goldsboro SEVERE PUNISHMENT Of Mrs. ChappeD, of Five Years' Standing, Relieved by Cardoi. Mt. Airy, N. C Mrs. Sarah M. Cha pell of this town, says: "I suffered five years with womanly troubles, also stomach troubles, and my punishment was more man any one could tell. I tried most every kind of medicine, but none did me any good. I read one day about Cardul. the wo- mi.1. tA.I. 4 i .1 ..:.)-i a. . i. nail a llillli., auu 1 ucuucu lu lly II. I had not taken but about six bottles until I was almost cured. It did me more ood than all the other medicines 1 had iea, pui logetner. MV InendS beratl Ustrlncr ma vuhv I looked SO well, and I told Ihrm nhntit waroui. several are now taking it." Do vou. Iadv reader, suffer from ant of the ailments due to womanly trouble, Kiirh nn hpaHarh harknrhA aJAwrh sleeplessness, and that everlastingly tired iccnngr If so. let us urev vou to eive Cardul a trial. We feel confident it will heln vnu. just as it has a million other women in the past half century. Begin faking Cardul to-dav. You won't regret it All druggists. Writ is- Chaltannoira MnriOlna fti t mAm Admonr Dept.. Chattanooga, Tenn., lor Sttiiat InMtruttimi on your case and 84 pain hook. "Horn Traatmantlor Woman." In plain wraoiwr. N.C. 1S4 Prompt Action Will Stop Your Cough the Sender or Party Accepting the When you first catch a Cold (often Reversed Call or Collect lelegram. indicated by a sneeze or cougn), To comply therewith, sucn iax on break it up at once. The idea that "It any Telephone Toll Message or Tele does not matter" often leads to sen- cram coming under this head, will be ous complications. The remedy which added to and Collected with the Reg immedaitelv and easily penetrates ular Toll Charge. the lining of the throat is the kind de- CAROLINA TELEPHONE AND which Tax Must Be Collected from Q:45 p. m., for Raleigh, Durham and manded. Dr. King's New Discovery soothes the irritation, loosens the i nhlAcrm. You feel better at once, "it seemed to reach the very spot of my Cough" is one of many honest testi monials. 50c at your Druggist, adv TELEGRAPH COMPANY fctaj indv ' fcepresi' Present f M. L, Braswell NOTICE. Notice to all who live or own real estate in the Moseley Creek drainage district? Your assessment is now due and unless same is paid on or before led him back to his post and remained iww st .t , nrooertv wfll be beside him until Be quieieo. noruy Officer Makes Coward Brave. Paris. Nothing better Illustrates the relations between French officers and privates than the following Inci dent related by A wounded soldier: One day under the peppering or. mitrailleuse flre," he said, "a soldier flehrJns: In the first rank was over- come by panic and turned to the rear.. The captain seized aim oy me arm. advertised and sold. r . . R. B. LANE, Sheriff Craven County. ll-12-30t-dly .s-iA-jl after we charged bayonet, and do yon know who led? It was the very man who wanted to fly. The captain had Inoculated Urn with his own eonr- " ' ''. -:::iJ Greensboro. Handles Pullman sleep ing car Raleigh -to Winston-Salem. Makes connection at Greensboro with through train for Atlanta and New Orleans, also makes connection for Asheville, Chattanooga, St Louis, Memphis, Birmingham and all western points. H. P. CAST, Gen. Pas'g. Agt., Washington, D. C S. H. HARDWICK, P. T. Mgr., Washington, D. C. O.F.YORK, T. P. A. Raleigh, N. C How's This? Wo affrr One Hnixlrwl Dollar Rnrart tor Ma oi catarrk that ouurat txj mrad by Hain 3atanto Cura. r. J. CHF.SFT CO. Toirto. C Wa, Um wnitntmA. taowa r. J. Utro fcr tba MM U yvara. and Mlm btm pcrlwtly koa oraMa la aU bmlmaa tranaarUoru and auannal abla to cany out anr obitraUooa made by aa arm. WaLount. Kimu fc Mjumif, Whoteanle DrunlMa, Toledo. O Mni Catarrtl rare I lak tetrrnally. eel Urretlr apea tb Motd and aiacoae Mrtacce ot tht MrrL Toatbvmlaie arat tree. Price It cetta ar UaU'l feet m IT eonaWN ROUTE OF THE "NIGHT EXPRESS" (Schedule in Effect October 4, 1914.) N. B. The following schedule fig ures published as information only, and are not guaranteed. TRAINS LEAVE KINSTON: East Bound 11:21 p.m. "Night Express," Pull man Sleeping Cars New Bern to Norfolk, folk. 7:50 a. m. Daily, for Washington and Norfolk. Con nects for all points North and West Par lor Car Service be tween New Bern and Norfolk. 4:41 p. m. Daily for Beaufort and Oriental. West Bound 5:40 a. au Daily for Goldsboro. 10:28 a.m. Daily for Goldsboro. 7:33 p.nu-Daily for Goldsboro. For complete information or re servation of Pullman Sleeping Car space, apply to W. J. Nicholson, Agent, Kinston, N. C H. S. LEARD. General Passenger Agent. ' , J. D. STACK. General Superintendent, Norfolk, Va. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KIIISTOil "If you need help to hold your COTTON, call to see us. omciRs N. J. ROUSE, Pres. DR. H. TULL, Vice Pmt&ar, D.F. WOOTEN. Cashier. J. J. BIZZELU Astl Cashier. , T. W. HEATH. Tenet. DIRECTORS. -7 W. L Kennedy David Oettfoger H. Tull tH. Canady . C. Moseley J. F. Parrott C. Felix Harvey H. E. Moseley J. F. Taylor H.H. McCoy S. R Islcr N. J. Rous MOVED! "1 We have moved into our new place of business opposite Free Press Office and are better prepaired than ever to supply your wants in PLUMBING. We are also agents for the best BH O -I . i U awning maee. special attention given 10 repair worn. E. O. MOORE & COMPANY FOR SALE OR RENT Farm about nine miles from Kinston, seventy acres, about one half cleared. ' FOR SALE Lot opposite new Graded School Building. ' , ' Two dwellings on Cheastnut Street KINSTON INSURANCE & REALTY COMPANY 110 EAST GORDON ST. C OICTINGIK, Manager. N. J. Boose, Edward M. Land Kinston, N. C .Goldsboro, N.C ROUSE & LAND ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Offices: Kinston, N. C Goldsboro, N. C. Edgerton Building. . IRA M. HARDY, M. rx. ' Physician and Surgeon Office Hours: 9 to 11; 2:80 to 6 P. M.; 7 to 9 P. II. Phones: Residence 607; Office 479. 102 West Caswell Street. . Ew. EaV NomumJ TkitNl PnaimTraalaJ. , .
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 1, 1914, edition 1
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