Newspapers / The Kinston Free Press … / Nov. 22, 1915, edition 1 / Page 3
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H I I THE KINSTON FREE PRESS r' Trr a r ouuer. j. neaa 01 nogs, transplant- I . .. . ... '. . u I ft WANT-ADS y SESTIOM - . On, cent wor eaehjneer. thm, role" order" With cash and Insertion to be ta onecnUT RATES Consecutive Insertions i. whrn AecomDuiei VM 1 Insertion .V.1 wor f Insertion.,.,. ww 1 insertion... ,?.i.4e word i TnLrtkna...;...6e ft word Insertion!. 12c a word Fodder. 12 head of Hon, Transplant er one 2-horse Wagon, Cart, Buggy, pise Harrow and other farming im plements. TermsCash. Eldridge Heath. ll-17-3t-Dly6SW WANTED to Rent a small house. Address X, care Free Press. ll-22-2t-DIy PodtlTeIy"ifo1ki .Kept '"j Where These Raten Apply. Z Dr. S. 0,. Vaughan, who has had 20 yers experience in the optical busi ness, is now in our employ. He will examine eyes free, and fit glasses at a reasonable price. Phone 125-L. ll-9-lmo. LYNCH JEWELRY CO. Many repair jobs which we form erly had to send to the factory are now done right here, thus insuring promptitude in the execution of or ders. Phone 126-L. 11-9-lmo. LYNCH JEWELRY CO. (Vrfee CUTLOWERp for Thanks jiving( See Stainback at Mars ton'lr Richard " Patrick at Barrett, I BaWeldVy - v U-20-8t-D We have now in your employ three 'wteB and jewelry repairers, one op tician and" two engravers. AH work doM without delay. hbne 125-L. li-Mmft LYNCH JEWELRY CO. FOS SALEUyJ.house and lot: (80i ?u 806 Tf.'TJueen street Terms to nit purchaser Apply W. H. Nor lria,Grecnvilljjy C, 10-10-lDly-tf Mr. S. T. Abbott, expert engrax- Lr and jewelry repairer, a native of I-noir county, which he left twenty- taree years agonal iccePted a P08'"1 tioo with us. TTiohe 125-L. 11-J-lmo. LYNCH JEWELRY CO. EYES EXAMINED -Glasses Fitted, it reasonable prices. We correct utfgmatism, which causes headaohes. Hewborn Jewelry Co., now located Inert to Stephenson's. Phone 417-J. H-15-lwk-Dly : . AUCTION, SALE At my farm, near Pink Hill, on Tuesday. November 30, at lffo'clock a. m. I will sell, at wctioni'pair of Mules, 1 Horse, 30 hrrels"Cvrn, 2,000 pounds' Hay" and FOR A SQUARE DEAL, , and the protection of all honest buyers and sellers the Blue List Subscribers protected against beats. We want a young man to represent us in this lo cals. W:ll jyyHm well for his spare time. Address The Blue List, Crisfield, Md. ll-22-7t-Dly TIMBER LANDS for sale in blocks from one to thirty-million. Twenty-five farms for sale from twenty five to ten thousand acres. This is property I have had from two to ten years. Cash or partial payments. J. W. Stewart, New Bern. N. C. ll-23-3t-Dly SOCIAL And PERSONAL Miss Dora Miller spent with relatives in ,poldsboro. Sunday EVERYTHING IN CORRECT MILLINERY. ALSO SHIRTWAISTS Chamberlain & Braxton Caswell Building Mrs. J. H. Bell spent the week-end in LaCrange. Judge Frank Daniels of Goldsboro was a well known visitor in the city Saturday. Miss Hattie Parrot has gone to Raleigh to attend the Teachers' As sembly this week. Miss Mary Armistead of Danville, Va., has returned home after a visit to Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Martin. Mayor and Mrs. Fred I. Sutton, whose marriage occurred week before last in Greensboro, are in Bermuda, according to a letter had by relatives here. They are expected home about December 1. Mrs. Sutton was Miss Annie Fry, prominent in society of the Gate City. Captain J. R. Bryan, who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. Gait Brax ton, on East King street, for the past several days, left this morning for Chapel Hill, to visit Professor and Mrs. J. B. Bullitt. Mrs. Bull! Captain Bryan's daughter. He ex pects to go from there to Fort Mor gan, Alabama, to visk his son, Dr. Will iam Bryan of the U. S. Quar antine service. Reviewers to Meet. The Reviewers will meet Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock with Mrs. H. E. Moseley. Round Table Meeting. Mrs. W. A. Mitchell will enter tain the Round Table Tuesday after noon at 3:30 o'clock. Japanese Art Sale Thursday The Japanese art sale to be con ducted by ladies of the CaswerT "Street Methodist church in W. C. Fields' of fice, on Queen street, will be com menced Tuesday afternoon. The stock is large and varied, including many novelties suitable for Christmas gifts. Entertains in Honor of Prospective Bride. j The following, from the Greenville Reflector, will be of interest in Kiu ston: Mrs. C. S. Carr was hostess to a number of friends Friday afternoon in honor of Miss Lillian Carr, whose marriage to Mr. Hunter Fleming, of Kinston, will take place next week. The house was attractively decorated with cut flowers, American Beauty roses and chrysanthemums forming a conspicuous part of the decorations. Tables were arranged for auction bridge and rook. Small work bask ets were given for the first progres sion and accessories for the baskets were given for the other progres sions. The honoree was presented a lovely silk work bag and the visitor's prize also a work bag, was given to Miss Gretehen Taylor of Greensboro. After the games, the cards were re moved and attractive lunch sets in keeping with the autumn season were arranged ott the tables and' an ele gant two-course luncheon was serv ed." : Present Program Exceeds Hobson's and Gardner's. (Continued from First Page) REV. F. S. L0YE WILL STAY IN THE OLD NORTH STATE 7. The Regular, Orderly, Normal Program: At the last session of Congress (this year) the President, the Secre tary of the Navy, Admiral Fletcher and other Naval Commanders, and the Democrats in Congress opposed the program of the Hobsons. Gard ners and other jingoes (much smaller than the present proposed program). The policy of the Administration was summed up before the Naval Com mittee in the words of the Secretary of the Navy. "It would be most un wise for us to act today in any par ticular, as we would not have acted if there was no war. My theory is that our country ought to be carrying on its regular orderly, normal pro gram as to the navy. With our poli cies and our American ideas I think the policy recommended fn my report and adopted by the last session of Congress (and recommended at the last session) is the steady, develop ment that is needed. It meets tho needs of the country." The 'Demo crats supported that policy. It was enacted into law. This same policy, as I have heretofore shown, is mak ing our navy bigger, stronger and more efficient than ever before 4he strongest in the world, except that of great Britain. It is my undoubting conviction, that it is most unwise and dangerous at this time, especially , under the present . circumstances, to abandon that policy and adopt the big. enorm ous, revolutionary program proposed. Non-Partisan Matter for Each Individual Former Pastor of Queen Street Meth odist Church Was Heard by Large Number of His Former Congrega tion Sunday From Brazil. Rev. F. S. Love, former pastor of Queen Street Methodist church here, who has recently returned after a two-years' stay in Brazil, will remain in North Carolina, he told a Free Press representative this morning. The climate in the Brazilian town near Rio, in which he was located, is debilitating to say the least." Then, a change in. the administration of the Methodist College there in which he was professor of psychology and English made it rather difficult for him to serve with satisfaction to him self. . Mr. Love will apply to the Method ist conference at Wilmington in De cember for a charge in North Car olina. He will, of course, get a good pastorate, since he is one of the best known men - in tho conference. He preached to a large congregation in Queen Street church Sunday. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR I A 8. Why My Opposition to the Pro gram as an Individual and Not as Majority Leader. This is not a party or partisan question. The President so declares. Everybody knows it is not. It is one for each individual member to de cide as as his vote for himself. The majority members of the Ways and Msans Committee, In the first in ilance, make up the Committee as signments of the House. I am chair man of the committee, which carries with it the position of majority lead er. I shall not use such position in influencing in any way any member on the question. Those who oppose , my position and those who endorse it will be treated alike as to their as- j signments to committees and as to all other matters which I, as such chair man and leader, and the members of the House, individually or collective ly, are concerned. 1 Pays Respects to New York Herald. 9. The Attacks by the New York Herald: This paper (whose owner, years ago, disdaining the fellowship of Am ericans, abandoned his native coun try to live amid the high life of Par is, and who, by cable from Paris, dictates its policy) has been fighting the Democratic Party nearly twenty years. This is the same paper which only a few months ago, to show its disgust of and contempt for Pres ident Wilson, while with the consum mate statesmanship he was steering the country safely through its great est crisis, loudly exclaimed: "Oh, for a Roosevelt in the White House!" The purported interview by its Washington corespondent with me, published in its issue of November 10th, parts of which have been pub lished in every issue since, is a pure fabrication, a deliberate falsehood, manufactured 'in the Herald's New York offices for the purpose of form ing a basis for its succeeding at tacks and sensational stories. No such interview ever occurred. I nev er saw or spoke to its correspondent before its publication. After reading it in the Herald, I saw and asked its Washington correspondent if he sent such an interview to the Herald. He said he had not and knew nothing of it until he saw it published in the Herald. I never made a reference in the remotest way to any one in Wash ington or elsewhere as to the "senti ment in my district," or as to "the folks back nome." It knew, too, or could have known, as its Washington correspondent knew, that I did not "return to my district because of its exposures of the sentiment in my dis trict." I returned the day I intended to return when three days before I went to Washington. CLAUDE KITCHIN. You Find At I . '-V ' 1 " I Saleeby's Candy Kitchen Fancy Florida grape fruit S. 7 1-2C PIECE. $2.50 BOX Florida oranges IS, 20C DOZ.. 2.25 BOX Fancy Winesap Apples 40C PECK SALEEBY'S CANDY G II Phone 556 403 N. Queen Street Dr. Albert D. Parrot Physician and Surgeon Kinston, N. C. Office fBack if Hood't Drug Stoie JOSEPH DAWSON, Attorney at Law, Practices Wherever Service U Desired K. K. Wooten's Format Oflc. LUNSFORD ABBOTT, D. O, Osteopathic PhyricU Upstairs, Next Door to Dixie, Phone S63-J. - HIGHEST AWARD GOLD MEDAL AT SAM FRANCISCO EXPOSITION psdal Exhibit and Sale Great Majestic Ranges THE RANGE WITH A REPUTATION $8.00 Set of Ware Free With Each Range Sold This Week Nov. 22 U Nov. 27 j .. ' . Si! llll : MflJE5Tir--MEVER-BURri-COWER-5TEnmEl7-tlAlEMDER-nMD-bRfllMEI? wpiq v v. m m PF rv IKON hlflRHLEIZEIV MEHLE : W OZ-natOPPERTEn-KETTLE- 14 OZ JILL-TOPPER JCOFf EE-P9T- HEAVY- IWWBLEIZED'Pl'MMnS PAN LrlW&E-riEVER-BURn-lUIREiy fcRIPPIMG-Pflll: 2 ?rarUL I1EVEB BlRtVUIRE&-DMPPM5 Pr1N3- :-5mHLL-&RIP-Pr1l15- CJ1M-rlL50BE- U5E&-fl5' ROAJTER' IRiillillii;!lilHllilll!ill!ll!llll!IHI1llll;ll. UIyKw ik ' ' ill miz ra mm . ( . .. . . MAJESTIC BANGES are made of malleable and charcoal iron, are unbreakable, save fuel, and with proper '- vtnVin loaf, a lifnf.iwQ rnnHp wHK fSr wit.Hniit Iflors EVERY USER IS A BOOSTER. ASK THOSE WHO OWN THEM. SeeTI -eGoodRansresat TM THM H '7 q) --,. "rurmture ot Quality." QU
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
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Nov. 22, 1915, edition 1
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