T -J- , ' . 'V-' MS , PAGE TWO EDITORIAL THE KINSTON FREE PRESS MONDAY, DECEMBER 18. 191ft JIIE DAILY FREE PRESS ' S f Waited Press Telegraphic Reports) : ' H, CALT BRAITON. Editor and Mansgst PuMiak4 Eriy Day Except Sunday by ths Kinston Fret f.?? 5-'.- 'sV'v'1' Piw Ca., lac, Kinston, N. C. DaWnipUaa Rates Payable la Advanes: Oaa Wk .It Ona Month 81 v Taraa IfaaUu $1.00 Six Months 2 00 Ona Ysar H-00 Katarad at tha poitofflca at Kinston, North Carolina, a "t-dass mattsr undar act of Congress. March 8, 1879 WlW "TORK OFFICE 38 Var Row, Mr. Ralph" R alalHfan, in aoia charge af Eastern Department F'iles . af Tm Frea Press can be aaen. WESTERN OFFICE In charge of Mr. C. J. Anderson Maroetta Building, Chicago, where Glee of Tha Fret Press eaa ba asm. Baaaeribari ara requested to notify, by Telephone 76 Tba Free Praia af any irregularity of delivery or inat Untion whatsoever on the part of the carriers. Altar fiix P. M. subscribers are requested to call West ara Union and report failure to get the paper. A cop) will a sent promptly, if complaint is made before Nim 9. IL witheut cost ta subscriber. SATURDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 18, 1916 Americans generally will take little pride in the fact that their fellow-countrymen have been detected in vio lating the neutrality laws by aiding and abetting Mexi can revolutionists and the activity oi the Department of Justice in bringing such culprits to taw will unquestion ably "be approved by the large majority of the people of this country. The fellow, who sells his honor and jeop ardizes his nation's interest for paltry mercenary gain, deserves no consideration but the limit of the law. Tha FTea Press joins 'with the other papers In the state in expressing sympathy for its esteemed contempo rary, the Charlotte Observer, which suffered damage by fire Saturday morning. The fact that the plant was not entirely destroyed and because plans, which had nlrcaly been inaugurated for removal to another building, were well under way, the discomfort of our contemporary is not so serious as it might have ibeen, and The Free Press ie glad that the accounts indicate that the rehabilitation will be quickly consummated. In the meantime the Ob server is printing from ita afternoon con temporary 'a plant, and with the usual spirit of courage manifested by papers, which suffer fire loss, did not miss an vsue. Editor Johnson of Charity and Children, who by the way, missed the profitable meetings of the State Pres? Association at Chapel Hill a week or two ago, haa been ironically calling attention to the fact that the Newspa per Institute failed to settle the high cost of print paper. In thta connection his attention is directed to the stir that Brother Varner has made in Washington as repre sentative of the North Carolina press. He has carried the fight directly to the Department of Justice and ha been able to make such a showing us to command the attention of the Attorney General and an independent in vestigation has been started. Brother Vamcr gathered much of his data and inspiration for the drive aguinv.t the paper trust at the Chapel Hill meeting. A QUART A MINUTE. The Free Press is glad to learn that the Anti-Saloon League of North Carolina plana to present, for the con sideration of the General Assembly, laws which will be shorn of evasive possibilities and which, if enacted, will in reality give to North Carolina the title of a dry state. The present situation ia disgraceful. Gallon upon gal lon of the vile stuff is being poured into Kinston now in anticipation of a falsely conceived Christmas celebration. About fix hundred packages, The Free Press learns, were distributed from the local express office Saturday. One REVENUES SHOT MAN FREIGHT WRECK IN FIGHT AT STILL HANDICAPS TRAFFIC ON THE COAST LINE Revenue ofVers pushing through this city late Satuiday said that in u iai.1 on a b'-i; still in Craven coun ty Thursday, in which a pitched bat tle between moonshiners and the re enuers occurre I, one of the law- bieakera was shot. He is believed to F'n-' have been badly wnun led. His com- A fro wrecks a minute for the office hours maintained by the company The city authorities would do well to station one of the ' panions, fleeing, carried him off. The still is believed to have done a tre- police officers at the express office this week to gather evidence and see what portion of the shipment is goinjr into the hands of the known blind tigers and people of bad character. According to Superintendent Davis of the Anti-Saloon League, the laws, which are contemplated for the forth coming Legislature, will positively limit the amount of liquor permissible and the for-personal-use racket, which has been so badly overworked under the quart law, will be blocked. Unquestionably new laws and more drastic ones, fr-m which the loopholes have been taken, are needed, but there is in Kinston an opportunity for law enforcement under the present statutes. This, the week before Christ mas, gives perhaps the best opportunity In all the year for a demonstration of law enforcement. Let every trood citizen in Kinston co-operate to that end. THE LITTLE THINGS IN LIFE. It is the little things in life that count most. It tikes the nickels to make the dollars and because the major ity of mankind don't appreciate the necessity of con serving the supply of nickels the quantity of dollars available to the average man is limited. The man who takes advantage of the opportunities for small service is after all the one, who qualifies for doin? the hrcer work, which is certain to present itself sooner or later. Many a man has failed to make his life count for very much because he has overlooked the opportunities at hand in his vain effort to discover a task which he feels was large enough for his abilities, which unfortunately may have been exaggerated in his own estimation. The little kindly deeds of life make living worth while, weld the ties of friendship more closely, and remove the stinr of love's sacrifice. The little things in life count most because it is with them that the large majority of man kind deals. The opportunity to handle the large problems and participate in the large benefits is given to but very few. As the Christmas season approaches, the opportunity for utilizing the little things in carrying gladness to the hearts of friends, loved ones and those, who are without friends and without the where-with-al to provide for themselves, are manifold. In the words of the poet, it is not so much the gift as the giver and the spirit thai prompts. One of the most expensive to ever o.cur on the local line of the Atlantic Coast Line Railro-id was cleared late Sunday after handicap- traffic for more than 24 hours. ht train in charge of Conductor G.ov.r Andrews and Engineer JacK S ..'.riders piled up in almost indescri fl!e fasaiori a short distance from Pnrmale on the run between here and VVtldon. Saturday afternoon. Derail ment of a coal car caused the trouble; nine car-, most of them containing r.:erchandise, left the track. They sat at all angles on and off the track. The body of one enr jumped a ditch on one side of the track, leaving the trucks on the other side of the rails. FREDERICK CASE.0 -r WM comi,1;'te,y Siu. j Trainmen say it was remarkable that no one was injured. Had it Superior Court Tor the December jn weather, wllcu a part one-week criminal term came to a Qf ciy .,encrany ride 0n the - lose late Saturday night after mak-; Mrt0,f s!)me of them wouu stain ing the week a very full one and hav-1 ha.(, lWn ki!e:, or injured. All imr continued mucn or tne business . . , , . . u;.u ;n tbp nail'.-, iwi ; rjt;i it u iw ... mendous business. Nine boats came to a nearby landing while the officers were in the vicinity. Deputy Col lector I. M. Tull of this city was among the raiders. COURT PUTS IN BUSY WEEK; NOT GUILTY. on the big docket to the January term. The jury in the case of Uingham Rouse, charged with the murder of Walter Dudley, a fellow guard at the cab o:' the caboose. ' The damage to contents of the cars alone was several thousand dollars, ' according to estimates from trainmen. Engineer Saunders, say members o: Lenoir county convict camp., spent j tpfa crew is one of the safest- half ti day in deliberating, finally rendering a verdict of not guilty. Sherman Frederick, a LaGrange ne gro put on trial for his life Satur day, charged with criminal assault on enginemcn on the road. The train was making comparatively slow speed a? the time. PassengeT trains had to he detoured. a girl of his own race, was cleared. LAriN. AMERICAN COMMERCE And It begins to look very much like we are going to have a dry Capital, Quite appropriate, too, that the great of government of a nation, the majority of which has already outlawed "John Barleycorn," should exile him also. LAND SALE BY MORTGAGE Under an i by virtue of the power Moseley'j line 1" 1" feet to a stake, thence N. 21 degrees and 38 minutes W. 1 81) 1-2 feet to a stake, thence contained in that certain mortgage N. f9 degrees and 52 minutes W. 1.115 deed made to the undersigned, the First National Bank of Kinston, N. C, by R. A. Wooten and wife, Em ma Wooten, on March 2nd, 1014, which mortgage appears of record in Lenoir county in Book 47, at page 249, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness secur ed by said mortgage, the undersign ed First National Bank will on De cember 20th, 11M6. t about U n'- ciock ot., at tne cou-tnousc iioor m Kinston, N. C. offer for .Hale to the highest bidder for cash the following described ttnet of land, which is that mentianed in said mortgage dee I, and is more particularly described as follows: Beginning at a stake on the weit edge of the Kinston and Srow TM! road near a tenant house on ,T . H. Mexvl-orn's land and runs N. 4.'? K. with Mrs. L. I.. I'arrott and W. O. feet to a stake, thence N. 40 1-4 W. ir.:!.'I 1-2 feet to a stake, thence 7u W . 72! feet to a stake in the east edge of said tm d, thence with said road its various courses S. 2 1-4 E. feet S. IIS 1 -l K. 7t feet S. ZZ 1-1 E. 12li:t f. et S. 110 1-2 E. 1557 feet S. 27 K. K 0 feet S. 2'-i 1-2 E4 IM" feet to the ' eginning, containing 17H and 72 1-10 acres, more or less, an. I being the lands conveyed to It. A. Wooten by Mines Bros. Lumber (vmpany, except 'ibout HO acres here tofore sold to Mis. R. A. Wooten by R. A. Wooten. This November 17, liUfi. TDK FIRST NATIONAL BANK, f'y I. F. Wooten, Cashier. $11.45 Excursion tf HavaHa. Thursday, Drce ither 21. For the Christ mas and New Year ; The case, according to Solicitor Shaw, was quickly changed into a "circus" from a capital affair. Bad reputa tion of the negres-s was proven. The sentence to six months impos ed on Marcellus Sutton, a well-to-do planter convicted of retailing, was changed to a fine of $400. Roads and jail sentences passed out by Judge Devin Saturday includ ed: Ed. West, bigamy, 12 months. Mo-sen Taylor and Haywood Move, hrceny, 12 months each. Henry Green, burglary, 12 months, with leave to hire out. John Davis, for gery, 12 months. USING THE PANAMA CANAL Holiday excursion to Cuba, the At lantic Coast Line will sell excursion tlokets from Kinston to Havana, in cluding meals and berths on steam ships, at the fare and on the date named above, limited returning un til January 7, 1917. Fares will apply via Jacksonville; thence via East Coast and the "Over S?a Railroad," or via West Coast of Florida, thiew Pert Tampa, but not g;ng via one route and returning via the other, and tickets wiil bo good to stop over at all stations en route, either on the going or return trip or both. Proportionate fares from nearly every other point in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina Chil dren half fare. Fr schedules, reservations on 1 trains and ships, and interesting lit- erature oh Cuba, apply to the under mined, who will procure It for you promptly. D. J. WARD, Ticket Agent Kinston. N. C. HORSEFLESH POPULAR WITH THE BELGIAN'S. London. Dec. 18. In London's Bel gian quarter, entirely in the posses sion of Belgian refugees, horse flesh today is selling at 12 cents a pound for steaks, ten cents per pound for norse sausage and 14 cents pound for smoked horse flesh. Washington, Pec. 18. Forty-two vessels of Latin-American registry passed through the Panama Canal during the fiscal year 1014-10, accord in;: to figures of the Panama Canal Rec d available today. Of those. 4 were Peruvian, 3 Hun !u:ian, 1, Nicaraguan, "3 Chilean and I Panamanian. These figures do not mean that each vessel enumerated .vas a different one. WEEKLY WEATHER FORECAST. per Issued by the U. S. Weather Bu re:.i:, Washington, D. C, for the veek beginning Sunday, December 17, i:mi;. For South Atlantic and East Gulf Statos: Generally fair weather will prevail during the week except for unsettled with probably rains about Thursday. Temperatures will be low during the first half of the week The latter half will be warmer. FIRST Ml BANK OF 1SI0I Capital and Surplus $160,000 The depositors of this bank now outnumber by more thau one and one half times the population of Kinston under the census of 1890. The deposits of this bank now exceed by more than ten times all the bank deposits ef the entire county of Lenoir, Including Kinston and LaGrange, ia the year 1890. The above attest the growth of Kmston and the business interests of this aection, as also tho confidence of the public In this Institution. N. J. ROUSE, President D. F. WOOTEN, Cashier. DR. HENRY TULL, Vice-Prest J. J. BIZZELL, Asst. Cashier T. W. HEATH, Teller W. L. Kennedy Dr. Henry Tvll J. H. Canady DIRECTORS: F. Taylor H. McCoy H. Isler, C. Fell Harvey, David Oettinger, H. E. Moseley CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR EXCURSION FARES Between All Points on the Atlantic Coast Line The Standard Railroad of the South. : Also to practically every point in the Southeast, including Washington, Cincin natti, St. Louis, Memphis and New Or leans. Tickets will be sold DECEMBER 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25 Limited returning to reach original starting point by or before Wednesday, January 10th, 1917. For schedules, Pullman reservations and any further information desired call on D. J. WARD, Ticket Agent, Kinston, N. C. CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY 1916 -1917 EXCURSION FARES VIA Norfolk Southern Convenient Schedules PULLMAN SLEEPING and PARLOR CAR SERVICE Tickets on sale December 20 to 25, 1916, inclusive. Final return limit January 10, 1917. Complete information furnished by any Norfolk Southern Ticket Agent. H. S. LEARD, General Passenger Agent. WILL YOU HELP ME? I Am a Carrier of The Daily Free Press, and Working For Some Valuable Christmas Prizes to be Given Me By The : : : : FREE PRESS COMPANY And ifJYou Will Pay Your Subscrip tion Up, or in Advance or Give Me a New Subscriber, It WillHelp Me More Than You Can Ever Know I Have Served You Through The Year. Now Will You Help Me? Yours Always To Serve, YOUR CARRIER I f MIKE T"E MES SEMGER 1 WETAiu STrfft CH TtJe HNDtE IT WITH Cf)ffBl c. 1 f 7 W4 X WHY Pc N'T YtH Move TH' Retail Tof?E UP Herb? . F,UL GUY IF HARP luck wtiz Gcco Luck IP ' Pi FOL'R. LfY CLOVER N. J. Rouse.' I I ' . I ; 1 SURE WE WOULD ALL DO THAT ' T 1 MM -HE DruLH'TLY) 'T , ' ru. GiVE You EITHER . ( VEU.- 'f A ( RVN INIc ME YITH 1 tolHE 0U06EI ( TEN PAYS OfZ f UuTrl" SAME ) ) THAT Tffc;cK- TEN Poi-tS! ( Td YoO I'LL C j.ry,TB., . j HiiaL " ' yr : "" , ' , .T-, " - . - ; ,' -