vac.:: two TEE KINSTON FREE PRESS Thursday Evening, - August 17. i; THE DAILY FREE PRESS ' . ! (United Press Telegraphic SeporU) IL Gait Braxton. Editor and Manager Published Every Day Except Sunday by tha Kinston FrM Praia Co Ine, Kinston, K. C. ' SabMriptlM Rate PereMs fn Advasust Oa Week .$ .10 Tort Months . mm . : r il. Ooa Mootk ....... wmw on aaontaa Oat Taar .,...'..94.00 IM Communications received and not published win not b retained unlets stamps to cover postage accompany same. NEW .YORK OFFICE 38 Park Row, Mr. Ralph R. Ifulligas. in aola charge of Eaatarn Department. File at Fraa Preaa can ba seen. WESTERN OFFICE In charge of Mr. C, J. .Anderson, Marque tts Building, Chicago, where flies of The Fraa Praee caa b aaen. .. a,; . - ; Subscribers are requested to notify, by Telephone " TO, Tha Fraa Praaa of any regularity of delivery or inattention whatcomr on tha part of tha carrion. turi. If tha plana which ere now under way are carried out by the veterinarian, by which he i expects to free Pitt county by Abe Autumn of 1917, not only the cattle and pastures, but the free range will be thus benefited and the quarantine agalnat all ticlt-infested territory of . the county will be lifted, " ' i :. This is an interesting announcement to all cattle rais- era and those interested in the progress of the industry. Lenow fortunately has already eradicated ticks and had the quarantine lifted and our fanners are beginning to realize the great advantage in raising stock, which are not subject .to the ravages of the tick. The work in Pitt county will be watched with interest, and we express the hope that "all of the farmers of our, neighboring county co-operate with the government agents in getting rid of this pest. . a ' MORE CARE IN HANDLING FREIGHT. The Free Press is interested in the efforts being put forth by the modern and progressive railroad manage ments to cut down the unnecessary damage in transit to freight shipments, V ' 1 1 ' , ' 1 ' ' I In this connection the Southern Railroad recently pub- After Six P. M. subscribers art requested to call West- ii.wi a-,,., ; injWtins. that a savin in round fiem-.es hat regaird in its business for WAR WILL END NEXT YEAR, IS BELIEF OF GERMAN OFFICER; GERMANY WILL WIN, OF COURSE, THE KAISER'S MEN STILL THINK era union ana reoort Taiiure to a-at tka aner.t a n - will be sent promptly, if comolaint ia nude before Nina ' of 1270,000 was mad f. IL, without cost to subscriber. the fiscal year ending June 81, 1916. as against the pre- : Entered at the Dostoffles at Kiiston. aorth Carolina, as eedlnor vear. This is undoubtedly a rood showing, but it second-cUis matter under act of Ogress, March t, 1879. J afe t0 ,ay u couM reduced further by thankful for the neat hospital cot and By WILBUR S. FORREST,' : j (United Press Staff Correspondent) British Base - Hospital, Northern France, JulyJf21--(E,y Mai!) "The war will end ' earl in 1017. Which side will 'win? ' Germany will win, of course." ; ' ' f " - '.. A wounded; officer of the noted Prussian Guard made this assertion to the United '-Press today. The words came between -big bites -of white bread hud sandwich-like over a heavy spread of real butter and orange marmalade. The officer waa hungry. : ..With, 'about 200 . comrades he had jusi rr?rl from the scens of the big British offensive. He had been nipped in the leg by shrapnel His wound did not deter him from verbal optimism. He was greatly range guns wwe doing the aame in front At night we could crawl to shell holes and drink the water gath ered there, but it was very risky and the water did not last. .'-'r Despite his wound and the fact that, he was a prisoner, the Prussian could not conceal an air of "cockiness." "Germany will win the wair," he added, n his elow, careful English. HUSftW - DESPAMNG-;WIE After Four Yean of Discouraging Conditions, Mrs. Bullock Gar Up ia Despair. Husband Came to Rescue. WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 19, 1916 Of course, it was courteous of Mr. Hughes' campaign , manager to so alter his itinerary as to prevent a conflict In Kentucky with tha engagements of President Wilson - There- was probably method In his madness. , From the impression that we have had of the hard' f ; ..; ships alleged to have been sndureToyTncle Sam's repre sentatives, stationed on the Mexican border, we axe' nat urally inclined to thin! : that-th , Georgia toy, who re ports gain of fourteen pounds, is the exception to the rule. But we are glad that there are exceptions. ; -, last We forget; We want every man, woman and .child within seventy-five miles of Kinston to arrange to visit the metropolis of Lenoir one or evil of the four days i beginning October 24 and ending the 27th. Tha occasion will be the second annual exhibition of the great Klnston .Pair. Tha "Kum, iKum" word Is being sent broadcast and arrangements are being made for the entertainment of no less than fifty thousand people during the four days. The ahowa will be bigger and better than ever, -' ' a THE MEMORIES OF THE OLD HOME. We note from the columns of the esteemed Winston Salem Journal that Editor Santford Martin ia apending hit annual vacation at the old home, and thai reminds us that we, too, had trip like that once. We hope Brother Martin will find .the setting of the old home as he has pictured H in his mind's-eye eince leaving, and that hisTdreama of the old fireside wilt nof be rudely shaken as were ours. In our case the old home had passed into the hands of Strang aire; the front (ate needed ' . a new hinge; the weeds were high in wat waa the beau tiful lawn of the days of old; the steps to the front porch were rickety; the paint waa failingfT in flakes; rags uu yajior wvujjiou uim.ii tu uiwajui: junnvny J'roviuou for window panes; most of the aide oJLthe old barn had been pulled down and used for kindling? There were no familiar, facea. v , , , . After gazing upon these ruins our thoughts turned to the old well, from which the "bat wattf on earth" used to come,' and there we were doomed atill further dis appointment, for the wellhouse 'showed vnry distinctly the marks of time; the moaa-covered bucket was leaky and the general surroundings, were forbidding in the light of our modern knowledge of sanitation. i Some of the neighboring homes,' where fond "recollec tions took us back to the time as a barefoot boy we vis- tted and enjoyed the hospitality of the good ld days, had been turned over to tha bats and owls and we re solved to blot out, so far a we could, the new impres ions, go away never to return, and endeavor tb picture again the memories of the old home as it used to be ard not m we saw it on the return visit. TICK ERADICATION IN PITT. - j Elsewhero ki today's Prse Press will be found the no tice of the effort at tick eradication in Pitt county now being made by the United States Department of Agrlcul- the exercise of proper care. When the employes of the railroad who are entrusted with the handling of freight, learn to properly respect the "handle with care" signs; when they cease testing out the strength of those packages marked "glass," when they stop trying .to see how far their hooks will pene trate packages expressly marked "Use no hooks" and oth erwise use more common sense and precaution, not only will-the unnecessary losa to the railroads be materially lessoned, but the service to the public will be increas ingly more satisfactory. WHAT OTHERS SAY . i NOT TRIED, NOT CONVICTED, NOT PARDONED. "Columbia State; "One of the canards circulated about Governor Manning Is that he pardoned a bank clerk of Sumter who defaulted. The facts 'are that the friends of the clerk replaced the money and that the grand jury found ho true bill against him. All of this took place before Mr. Manning was inaugurated as Governor. The damning charge, however, that an employe of The State onco held an umbrella (if not parasol) over Mr. Man ning," it seems, has substantial corroboration." ,J me treatment ne was receiving, "Why-were you taken prisoner ?" he was asked. ."The British had too much artil lery for us," was the reply. "Their fire was stronger than ours and we were cut off. We had plenty of food but no water. We had to surrender." This officer spoke excellent Eng lish. He . learned it in a German school. - He was under thirty and a perfect specimen of manhood. ' "How .long have you been at the front?" he was asked. "Twenty-two months," he replied, with pride. ."I've been in Poland, Ga licia, Champagne. Verdun and I at Contalmaigon and Mametz wood. I was captured at Mametz ivood. "Pot five days my division was cut off by the British artillery fire. A trip to the rear for water was death. Long range guns were play ing streams of steel on the lines be tween us, and the rear. Shorter Catron, Ky. In an Interesting letter from this place, Mrs. Bettie Bullock writes as follows : "I suffered for four "We have the men, the guns and the ... , . . , . , - ' mr with vAm!lfitw fmihtM Bn4 (ttirfnn materials But I think it will last ' '""' ' ' 7?T another year. j this time, i couia oniy sn ap tat a utne "What about the food situation in . while, and could not walk anywhere at Germany?" ; 1 At times, I would have severe pains rwu i vtay bi"i-i, uuw, out mere , 1 ' ,, is enough to last until the harvest. Then we will have plenty.' We are not worried." :1V ' y, Discussion of the possible duration cf tho war led the wounded German 'to a denunciation of the United States. , . "You Amsricans are responsible for the long war that Germany is having," he said. "The war would have been over in a year if you" Am ericans had not sold munitions . to England." "But Germany might have bought munitions from America as well as England. Perhaps the British fleet was partly to blame." , j "Yes," was the response, ?"but we blame the United States more." Neither the Prussian officer iior his comrades had heard about the ex ploit of the German submarine Dutschland. The details interested them intensely. t ; Private Gerhard of Prussian re giment No. was just as optimistic. as his officer about the outcome of the war, but unlike the officer was willing to give hearty praise to the fighting British "Tommies." In my left side. The doctor was caned in, and his treat ment relieved me for a while, but 1 was soon confined to my bed again. After that nothing seemed to do aw any good. I had gotten so weak I could not s ana i gave up m despair. At last, my husband got me a boa, Cardui, the 'woman's tonic, and' I am. menced taking tt. Prom the very dose, I could ten it was helping me, jl can now walk two miles without tb tiring me, and am doing an my work." !.' V? n down womanly troubles, don't give up ia despair. Ti Cardui, the woman'stoclc Ithashelpee more than a million women, in lu jt years of continuous success, and sheua' surely help' you, too. Your druggist tag sold Cardui for years. He knows "what it win do.v Ask hlnu. He win recoo. mend it. J Begin taking Cardui today. . ; " Write tot Chatlaaoota Mi1dM Co- Aavlry Chtunouej lm.,' l pxal ItutrurlionM M vow ou aiuI M KL ' twwi fat Waaaa." uni la alala raMr. Horn. ' r. EXECUTORS' NOTICE. MOTHER'S LOVE WILL RESPOND. Pittsburgh Leaders . "The little advertisement in the classified columns, of the dally papers begging a mother to come home because two of her little children are cry-ceased to exhibit them to C P Ai- The lundersigned having qualified as executors of the last will and tes tament of W. W. Lawrence, deceased, this ia to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said de. ing for her. and fretting themselves sick for 'her, is the human touch that brings the world to its knees, . The note ia signed, by two other nestlings 'of the brood, which gives sharpness to the poignancy nothing else could. It is the votes of natwrs crying out to nature. "Will the mother-heart, stored with the mother-love that keeps the old world alive, hear, and, if hearing, an swer? It would seem that the mother-heart that brought life to such filial love would fly back to her nest, no mat-1 ter what the barriers. "And, somewhere that the little birds of this home nest know nothing of, is there a sad-faced and heavy-souled mother suffering dagger thrusts in her heart because she can hear those cries without ears, and see the tears on the little faces without her eyes. No doubt. Storms do not beat down, or uproot, or mortally maim the mother love. It survives all injuries, resists, the shock of all wounds! It is the deathless thing. She may harden her self for a time to listen to those cries without seeming to hear, and to blind herself to the sight of little hands stretched out to her, and the saddened eyes, but it will be only for time.; "3skma Aa rr It as1 svab tsif tut wnttitt fm Ui vi wviim ua J net J v-o w mi unit v w miutill ivi diiib VI them, her lips twitch and bum too much for the touch childish faces ajainst hers, and her arms ache too much to feel little bodies within them, to be resisted Then mother will come back and the crying and the fret tin? will be ended. She doesnt need to be told by cold type they need her and are worrying themselves sick for her. She knows that" ' . thony, Weldon, N. C, or Mrs. Sarah V. Riddick, Pajjnalee, N. C, on or before the 15tb day of August, 1917, ni this notice will be pleaded in bar sf their recovery. All persons in? dchted to said estate will iilease make immediate payment V' This the 11th day of August, 1916. MRS. SARAH V. RIDDICK, ; C P. ANTHONY, . Executor of th6 .ast'will and tes tament of. W, W. Lawrence. 8-16-law-6wks. CAROLINA RAILROAD TIME TABLE No. 1 FIRST-CLASS FREIGHT AND , PASSENGER SERVICE. ! Southbound Northbound 332 A.M. 7:29.... 7:06 7:00 6:47 f 6:40 6:30 Lv. 333 P.M: ' ..s 5:05 . .f 6:20 Hines Junction . . . . Pools . . Glenfieid. .... ,s 5:41 Suggs Siding. . . . i f 5:50 . . .Snow Hill. . iAr. 6:00 AH trains governed by the Norfolk Southern rules while using the track from Kinston to Hines Junction and subject to tiie orders bf its superin tendent :-f. WM. HAYES, Genl Supt, Kinston, N. C g: A JONES, Freight & Passenger Agent, Snow Hill. N. C. Subscribe to The Free Press. FIRST NATIOriAL BANK OF, KIIISTOli ; Capital and Surplus $160,000 t ' ' Congratulates it's farmer friends on the : t prevailing prices of Tobacco N. J. ROUSE, President DR. HENRT TULl TleevPntt' D. F. WOOTEN, Cashier J. J. BIZZELL, Ant' CaihtaT T. W. HEATH, Teller W. L. Kessedy Dr. Henry TuH J. H. Canady J. F. Taylor H. H. McCoy DIRECTORS S. H. lakr N. J. Room C. Felix Harvey David Oettinger , H. B. Moseley Subscribe to The FreePress CAR OF HORSES AND MULES JUST ARRIVED AT . " - GOPELAND BROTHERS 1 When in need of an all-round good ; horse or muie come to see us, .as we '7 nave a nice lot tor you to select just what you want Quality first class, pric es right and terms to suit purchaser. , We will save you money if you will inspect our stock before you buy. ' . ' We are also agents for the Hacfcjey and Thornhill wagons whichTare made from the best selected materials and have no equal for durability.- Try one and then you will be convincedthat they are the best. , " One hundred thousand bushels of cotton seed wanted. See us when you have any to sell, as we are in position to' handle them at the highest market price. - ! We cordially invite you to make our place of business headquarters when, in town whether you want to buy anything or not. CO PELAND BROTHERS i:mKE MESSENGER HE $ A GOOD JUDGE OE COFFEE ... v ( -ooK5 like V f) PRETTY Good r mnat Room I I THINK I'LL TffY U IT! ... MEW r a To? : J ""w' "' """ ' --. . . ... . . I. I y ' " ' " " .I :.-.'',' --.A " ' ' ,JlAWJM'ff.M'r"'. w 1 - aw at ii arxi avail v s j iff m ' s s s s . si- fry r j j s r s s j s r s i r sss,r,-s , ' VTcpfE' f V UY W ' V WK flW(T-Wl ( . C!t ,CF, IT5 I t. . -V r-f S ' V V , I IM II". f ' f I L 1 . f . fZ. f r-rt. c r -&lNT ,10 11 1 - V - k nn V I OEf) M IT ' a t It VI V Sf t Too . 6 AA.V i iiii M fi 0.