Newspapers / The Kinston Free Press … / Nov. 13, 1917, edition 1 / Page 5
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.;; , ; ., ,, i TtTESDATTNOVEMBbttl3ri917- tir-- PACE FIVE NEGLECTED COLDS ARE DANGEROUS Play Sf! Prevent Serious Hlnes By Promptly Administering Dr. Bella Pine-Tar-Honey. Dogs Loose on Streets Will Be Taken Up and Killed After 72 Honrs Prompt use of Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey docs Tfibr than break up your cough. It may be the "ounce of prevention" that eaves you danger ous sickness. Doctors declare the common cold one of the serious di seases, with, results like pneumonia and tuberculosis which cause a large portion of human mortality. For years Dr Dell's Pine-Tar-Honey has been remarkably success ful with coughs, colas, gnppe, croup and ' hjftat,j;hest or bronchial troubles. Time has proved its heal ing bftlrasjwjy , soothe and relieve irritation breathing will be easier, while )its antiseptic properties kill the germs which caused infection and are retarding recovery: Children like it. .. ." That ''putting off treatment" is dangerous. At the first sign of a daugh, start taking Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. Tear this ad. out and take it to your druggist with 25c and he will D-ive vou the. genuine Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Hney. The City authorities shut down on the etray dog nuisance Tuesday. Mayor Sutton issued positive in structions to the police to round up every canine running at large, and designated a special man to chase and capture the critturs. The mad dog scare of the past few weeks was the cause. ' ' Every dog found out of his owner's jurisdiction and to be within that jurisdiction Ion the streets it must be leashed will be impounded three days. If impoundment costs are not paid at the end of that period the cur will be croaked. WHAT BILLY SUNDAY SAYS. adv. CALL 498 For General Plumbing and Stove Repairs RE. L. Rhodes In one of his meetings at Boston the noted evangelist said, "I believe that every disease can be cured by some weed if we can only discover it. There is not an ailment that Qjc' hasn't somewhere an herb growing that will cure that ailment." The choice medicinal herbs which will cure women's ailments were dis covered more than forty years ago. and have been doing their beneficient work for half a century. Lydia E. Pinkham combined them in .nven ient form in her famous Vegetable Compound, which is to be found in the drug stores where every ailirjr woman may conveniently tret it at small cost. It does the work! adv Auction Sale. On the 23rd day of November, at J. J. Moore & Co.'s home, Kinston, II. F. D. 5, we wil! offer for sale at auction all corn and other farm produce, farming imple ments; one horse one colt, one mule, one buggy, one surry and one cart J. J. Moore & Oo. R. F. D. 5, Kinston Sw 11-7, 10, 14, 17 PHONE 684 216 HUNTER BLDC Insurance of All Kinds Real Estate and Rent Collectors The Insurance Service Agency, Inc. 'sZrDUNN, Pre. J. H. WHITE, Sec'y -Car of Nice Horses and (Tlules at LaRoque's Stables Stock bought direct from the farms of Illinois and Indiana. Good serviceable animals. Some well matched teams. Heavy farm horses and mules. Come to see me. I can save you money. D.S.BARRUS We Want To Show You OUR EMERSON MOWERS AND RAKES WEQCAN2CONVINCE YOUgTHAT WE CAN I? CSELL YOU A BETTER MOWER FOR LESS S MONEY. GIVE US A CHANCE. B.W.Cana(ly & Son Kaiser Invited to Take a Squint at What We're Doing (From the weekly bulletin of the Trade and Technical section, Food Administration) Food saving is now showing tang ible results. From the time last Spring when economy wa? first urged upon the American public until our crops were harvested results were largely a i matter of faith, for there was no definite way to tell how much fbod had been saved for our Allies. But now the shipments have begun going abroad, and through the Win ter, by tabulating weekly totals of exports, we shall be able to measure that part of our loaf and roast ac tully with our Allies. More than that, the first definite request of the Food .Administration for 10,000 tons of sugar, to be ship ped to France, was met immediately without protest by the Eastern con suming public. The effect of with drawing that quantity of sugar from Eastern markets during the period of scarcity, while Western beet sugar is moving east, was marked. Grocers' stacks and the hotel and household supplies were decreased to a point where the need for care in the use of sugar was brought home to every person. This practical accomplishment is proof that democracy can do what the Germans told Ambassador Gerard was impossible organize fcr war service. German autocracy is cordially in vited to watch other results cf American food eaving along the eame lines this Winter. BRUCE CARRA WAY'S TALL FLAGPOLE IS DEDICATED. (Continued from page four) sembled thousands of th?ir j.r'vilcge to protect and revere tho flap- which symbolized so many bleJsing-? that they have 'for a Ion? nic enjayei. Upon the conclusion of Dr. Newlin's introductory and dedicatory remaiks, Chaplain W. W. Morton of the Three Hundred and Twenty-seccnd Infantry offered the" dedicatory prayer, while those present bowed, with heads bar ed. Then the color sergeant was called for, and the crowd parted as the man who carried the flag, escort ed by an attendant on each side, made his way toward the base of the piole, where the standard was soon attached to the ropes. Lieut. Car raway, without further ceremony, began to raise the flag and in a short time the whole impressive affair had been concluded. s "The names tcf all the officers at Camp Jackson were placed in a met al receptacle that fitted into a hol low in the concrete base. A marble slab, upon which is carved the dedi cation, was cemented over the top of the metal repository. The inscript ion is: "Camp Jackson Dedicated to the Soldiers of America. November 1, 1917. "Among the guests il Major Gen eral Bailey on this (occasion were Lieutenant Commander Basil Hwosh inski of the Russian navy and (other representatives of the Russian gov ernment, Major Stanley Washburn, U. S. A., who is accompanying the Russian party; Edwin W. Robertson, George L. Baker, H. S. Kealhofer and other prtominent citizens of Colum bia. "The pole, which rises to the height of 153 feet," la made of two unusually fine pieces of straight tim ber that came from the plantation of Mr. Campbell, whose home is in Richland County, about ten miles from Columbia. The splicing of the two pieces was quite a skillful bit of work. The pole is set in a heavy concrete base, and is further secur ed by eight guy wires that are em bedded in four concrete , anchors. The whole cantonment is proud of the splendid staff from which Old Ctfory floats, and Lieutenant Car- raway has been the recipient of many sincere Congratulations for his splendid gift to the Eighty-first Di vision and Camp Jackson." t i. gagiajgpgajapaHinHHH ' - Heavier Trucks "-J Spend More Gas Hauling Themselves than the Maxwell uses at Peak Load (Dan The lowest priced one-ton truck in the world $985. And a truck, mind you not a delivery wagon built for trucking. Truck strength and truck length. We use more brains than metal in its construction made it right to get it light. Not a superfluous pound not a missing excellence. - You buy lasting power not bulk. Designed for hard loads and tough roads. Sold with the same guarantee" as $5,000 truckslare. r , ' . 2,400 dogged, spunky, agile pounds, and built to carry more than that 365 days in the year and 24 hours to the day. A work glutton and a tire miser. A 16-mile run with every gallon. 10-foot loading space. The same type of worm drive that $5,000 trucks have hitherto featured as their own. ... . Pays its way from day to dayv KINSTON GARAGE, Inc. Phone 414 . am FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KINSTON was asked by the United States Treasury Department to sell $104,000 worth of Liberty Loan bonds. It sold nearly $125,000 worths - It is proud of tho fact and extends its grateful acknowledg ment to its friends and congratulates them upon their wise invest-ment. CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND UNDIVIDED PROFITS "$175,000 &Jf N. J. ROUSE, President D F. WOOTEN, Cashier DR. HENRY TULL, Vlee-Prest J. J. BIZZELL, Asst. Cashier W. B. HARVEY, Teller W. L. Kennedy Dr. Henry Tail J. H. Canady DIRECTORS J. F. Taylor II. H. McCoy S. H. Isler N. J. Roasa C Felix Harrey David Oettfnger EL E. Moseley Protect Your Money by Depositing it with The National Bank of Kinston Capital and Surplus Over &TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS' You Are Also Protected by The FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM of WtilchThe Bank IsaMember 'STRONGEST BANK IN THE COUNTY" I - v : - . : - i - - " - . - I - , - as ' - i I."."'" . ... . . . -snl Sides, Coal til - s. . . r , , . t i iMiWM TnrwV- MTT: 'Tn'T' T-r--""- - s0S loss s Hate for' Ton siStfie Rite Price '-COM f
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
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Nov. 13, 1917, edition 1
5
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