Newspapers / The Kinston Free Press … / Jan. 24, 1918, edition 1 / Page 3
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1918 THE SmSTOIf FREE . PRESS $ ft WADS ONE CENT A WORD EACH INSERTION One cent a word each insertion iiiilt' order is rcnmpnier'wlth rash and insertions are to be given in consecutive issues of I he paper. ( RATES: inly When Accompanied Dy Cash I Insertion le a word ; Insertions 2c a word Inxertions 3c a word 7 Insertions .. .... 4c a word 12 Insertions 6c a word 2-" Insertions .... ..12c a word tity-of peas for gale. Farmtri wanting peas will do wall to corre spond with me at once. K. S. Sut ton, LaGrange, N. C. Dly & Sw 12-3 tf. for Kent Two cottages on East St, at head of King. Dly 2-20 tf j'or Rent Two 4 -room houses on (jk-nwood Ave. Apply to Henry French. Dly 1-23 to 25 for Sale Ford Runabout.. A-l con dition. 111(5 model. Inquire Le 0;i Hotel. Dly 1-21 to 1-23 for Rent Front room furnished, with bath, apply Box 344. Ply 1-9 to for car hire phone W. II. Murphy. LTiT-J. Sunday phone 217-J. Good Dly l-Z tf. Lot Two mules, one bay and one white 'both mams. Eflgar Howard, Deep Run, R. F. D. Dly 1-21 to 1-23 Wanted Two or three light-housekeeping rooms. Best references. J. W. Bell. Kinston Garape. Dly 1-24 to 31 Wanted Boy for assistant in office, who hns had up to ninth or tenth grade schooling, to work with good prospects of promotion. lAddress "Honesty" care Free Press. Dly 1-24 tf. Swamp-Root For Kidney Ailments There is only one medicine that really stands out pre-eminent as a medicine for curable ailments of the kidneys, liuar and bladder. Dr. Kilfjr's Swamp-Root stands the highesfTor the reason that it has proven to be just the remedy need ed in thousands upon thousands of distressing cases. Swamp-Root, a physician's prescription for special diseases, makes friends quickly lie cause its mild and immediate effect is soon realized in most cases. 1: is a gentle, nealing vegetable com pound . Mart treatment at once. Sold at all drug stores in bottles of two siz es, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this Keat preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binir- hamton, N. Y., for a sample ibot tle. When writing be sur'i and mention the Kinston Daily Free Press.. sdv. Fifty Thousand Dollars to Loan, five yea s' time, amounts $3,000 or more. First mortgage either farm cr city real estate. R. C. Strong. Dly D-2i tf . For Sale Maxwell Roadster, slight ly used, in A-l condition. Fully equipped, new extra tire. W. K., postoffiee box 54.1, Kinston. Dly 1-23, 24, 25 We have onion sets, garden peas, cabbage, kale, turnip, radish and tomato seed for early, planting. E. B. Marston Drug Co. Dly 1-10 to 21; Sw 1-12 to 2-13. Wanted Old False Teeth; don't matter ' if trbkeri. I pay $2 to $15 per set. Send by parcel post and receive check by return mail. F. Terl, 403 N. Wolfe St., Baltimore, Md. Dly "1-4 to 2-4 RHEUMATISM For Sale Horse and buggy, cheap. Have bought a car and have no use for horse. J. B. Browning 116 E. King St. Phone 231-J. Dly 1-17 tf. For Rent 2 rooms suitable for light housekeeping. Apply 104 W. Cas well St Dr. Ira M. Hardy. Dly 1-18 tf. Wanted at once One 4 or 5 room house with modern conveniences, must be in good location. Heath, care of Copeland Bros. Dly 1-22, 23, 24 Peas for Sale I have a limited quan- Physician Relieves a Genuine Rem edy for the Disease Has Been Found. Rheuma, the wonderful rheuma tism remedy sold by J. E. Hood & Co., and all druggists, gives quicker and more fisting relief than other remedies costing many times as much. Rheuma passes the deadly poison ous secretions into the bowels and kidneys, from which they are quick ly thrown off in a natural, healthy way. Read what a reputable physician says about Rheuma: "I have made a most careful investigation of the formula employed in the manufacture of Rheuma, and I heartily recom mend it as a remedy for all forms of rheumatism. I find Rheuma far in advance- of the methods generally employed in the treatment of rheu matism, and altogether -different in composition from the remedies us ually prescribed." Dr. M. C. Lyons. This should give any sufferer from rheumatism confidence to try Rheu ma. adv. NOTICE. Having qualified as administrat or of the estate of Mrs. Margaret E. Coward, deceased, late of Lenoir County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate f said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Ayden, N. C, on or before the 9th day of January, 1319, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to the said estate will please make immedi ate payment. W. J. COWARD, Ayden, N. C Administration of Mrs. Margaret E. Coward, deceased. This 9th day of January, 1918. We Still Have Some AttractiveValuesm HATS, SUITS, DRESSES; and SHIRTS. '3 . . i- . . , ... CHAMBERLAIN & BRAXTON PHONE 234 After You Have Seen Our Catalog, You Can Then Decide If You Have Been Paying Too Much For your Gift Things J Our Catalog is valuable to you in many ways but chief ly in the fact that with it in your home you can make comparisons about the prices of things you want with assurance that our qualities are just as fine as can be purchased, and anything illustrated or shown is exactly as represented. Then again, it's a safeguard against your paying more for something than what it is actually worth. ': ' Write for it it'a free and in a week it will be ready. uUGale-Greenwood Co., Inc. NORFOLK, "largest Jewelers south- VIRGINIA. W t Sl Vidrolat an J EJuon 'Diamond tic Phonograph Social and Persorql Mrs. George Tull is visiting rel atives at Greensboro. Rev. and Mrs. John H. Griffith have gone to New Bern for a short stay. Miss Hattie Jervis of Asheville was here Thursday en io;ite to Con tentnea School, where she will teach. Mr. O. F, McCrary, district farm demonstration 'agent for the tide water district, formerly located here, was a Kinston visitor Wednesday, Prof. Joseph Kinsey, superintend ent of the County Schools, is able to leave his home. He has been ill since before the holidays. PAGBvTHREKf UNDER THE CAMOUFLAGE. (Continued from page one) the copy before it was ailed. London, Nov. 21 (By Mail) Had our regular Wednesday session with Ambassador Page in his big pleas ant room at the embassy. "Well, boys, I don't know what I can tell you," began the ambassador in his customary genial way. Then he proceeded to demonstrate in his equally customary way that he knew right well what he couldn't tell us. The ambassador is the sort you wouldn't mind having for your own personal grandfather, but you'd hate to have your newspaper career de pend on him. He-has made ne-wa- lcssness a subject of private research When the weekly demonstration was complete to the satisfaction of all, we turned to the never ending topic of the censorship. Last Saturday the U. S. destroy er sank a German submarine, which she had found fervently shell ing a British merchantman. The episode had various thrilling side lights and formed, we thought, just the sort of story to stir American FACE the FACTS LET ua face the facts. The war situation is critical. Unless the Allies fight as they never yet have fought, defeat threatens. Hungry men cannot fight at their best; nor hungry nations. France, England, and Italy are going hungry unless we feed them. Wheat Savings They must have wheat. It is the best food to fight on. It is the easiest to ship. We alone can spare it to them. By saving just a little less than a quarter of what we ate last year we can support those who are fighting our battles. And we can do it without stinting ourselves. We have only to substitute another food just as good. The Corn of Plenty Corn is that food. There's a surplus of it. Providence has been generous in the hour of our need. It has cjiven us corn in such bounty as was never known before. Tons of corn. Train loads of corn. Five hundred million bushels over and above our regular needs. All we have to do is to learn to appreciate it. Was ever patriotic duty made so easy? And so clear? America's Own Food Corn! It is the true American food. The Indians, hardiest of races, lived on it, Our forefathers adopted the diet and conquered a continent. For a great section of our country it has blong een thje staff of life. How well the South fought on it, history tells. Now it can help America win a world war. Learn Something- Corn ! It isn't one food. It's a dozen. It's a cefreal. It's a vegetable. It's a bread. It's a dessert. It's nutritious; more food value in it, dollar for dollar, than meat or eggs or most other vegetables. Ifs good to eat; how good you don't know until you've had corn-bread properly cooked. Best of all, it's plentiful and it's patriotic. Corn's Infinite Variety How much do you know about corn? About how good it is? About the many delicious ways of cooking it? And what you miss by not knowing more about it? Here are a few of its uses: There are at least fifty ways to use corn meal to make good dishes for dinner, supper, lunch or break fast. Here are some suggestions : DESSERTS Corn-meal molasses cake. Apple corn'bread. Dumplings. Gingerbread. Fruit gems. HOT BREADS Boston brown bread. Hoecake. Muffins. Biscuits. Griddle cakes. ' Waffles. HEARTY DISHES Corn-meal croquettes. Corn-meal fish balls. Meat and corn-meal dumplings. Italian polenta. Tamales. The recipes are in Farmers' Bulletin 565, "Corn Meal as a Food and Ways of Using It," free from the Department of Agriculture. i k i-JJfJflffffffPf'fr ' W WWWW iff JUST KIDS Summer Needs Br ki Csrlet --" J ITS A PRETTY BI& hole 'aint ir ronnrT iS? 'M DO YOH THINK ITS TOO Bl(x TO WEAR NEHr" t T 1 i cvjess she s TOO BiGc ' OLE nsN. FELLERS AINT SO Parti c1 l ar But girls an wiriiN tS FuSVf f'BOuT 6ATHIN 'SUITS- I SEEM BcAUTirui. new unta PER A QUARTER - GREET NREO W ALL cbLORS! f I 1 sunnth -v . ' "jOS WTERNAnowAL cartoSm CO. ,,. , . " blood. Censor killed It. The ambassador was very sym pathetic. Agreed that the publica tion of the new mitrht be a real ser vice at home.; that too much mys tery alwt the doings of our fleet mitrht have a b.id effect; that it was unfortunate that most of the truth ful colorful pictures of the war could not le reflected in the newspapers, remarking that future historians mijrht find themselves limited to the dry unenliprhteninir official reports. The New York Times man was rather bitter. "The upshot of the censorship policy," he declared, "is that most of the correspondents are writing humorous stuff. People at hme are apt to get the impression that either this isn't a serious war or that we are a lot of ghouls who can't see anything but fun in the; whole terrible business." The ambassador was sympathetic genuinely, without quest-ion but he didn't commit himself to the opin ion that the censorship is entirely misguided . ,..J It . '; The Family Lamp A Hnyo lamp flocxls the room v with thotul'iil radiance ; gives brightness without glare; rarely fliekers or iliires. RAYO LAMPS ; are ensr to Ink r rare of no bother- some filigree decoration to catch tlirt and make them hanl to keep clean. Artistic design makes them an orn.imi'iit to any room. They hit e.isv to re-wick. You dou remove either chimney or shade to light them. V Talked with Admiral Hall at the Admiralty. He waa so enthusiastic over yesterday s lug advance toward Canrbrai that he couldn't get his mind on the navy. They talk abo'it the jealousy between the navy and the army, but the admiral was so proud of the work of the tanks that he insisted on referring to their commander as "the admiral." We tried our kick ?wout the ie- stroyer incident on him. "Did you think of this?" he ask ed. We hadnt. "This" w;s a phase of anti-u-boat warfare so re mote from the 'a fight that the connection (between the two never would have occurred to anybody not responsible for the whole campaign. We had to agree that the story real- y shouldn't he told for a few (lays yet. "What I J can't understand," said the admiral, "is why your sailors thought it necessary to save any German lives." "Isn't that the British practice?" omeone asked. "Yes," he answered with a grin, but ' you shouldn't emulate our weaknesses." Need a New Flag at Courthouse and This Man Wants to Get It ,1. B. Leonard wants the County to supply a new flag for the Court house green. Few citizens will dis agree with him in the criticism he expresses in the following letter to The Free Press: "Dear Ed.: "Have you seen say, can you see the Star Spangled Banner that so proudly flies over the-Courthouse lawn? Were I given to using viol ent language I would call it disgrace ful. The color is all gone out of the flag. So are the stars. The stripes are on the bum. I would handle that remnant of the ensign of the Na tion's greatness and true democracy as tenderly as I would a ba.by, 'but I would bum or otherwise dispose of it as the conventions prescribe. The nrmy and navy burn their old flags except where some peculiar sentiment attaches to them, as regimental standards and colors. They don't ex pect one flag to hist forever. "I propose a $50 lag to be pur chased by popular subscription. I will give $5 if the other $45 is rais ed. Let the school children raise a fund. Let the -women's organizations contribute. "If what is left of a flag that still hangs from the pole at the Court house stays there much longer it will be as unreliable as the Courthouse clock is at some seasons. One won't be able to tell whether it represents the United States or the W. C. T. U. Let's replace it. "J. B. LEONARD," For Sale We will issue for sale Jan uary 1st Fifty Thousand Dollars of 7 per cent, non-taxable Preferred Stock, interest payable semi-annually. Chesterfield Manufacturing Co., J. F. Taylor, President and Treasurer. Dly & Sw 12-26 tf. CALL 49 8 For General Plumbing and - Stove Repairs E. L. nhcdoG I, i , . ' . clean. Artistic design makes them 1 .',! j ';vtAS5flJ,' an ornament to any room. They I '.CfJiY ;,.,'''- Viv.-v are easy to re-wick. You don't 1 "S,. X'!i r'f'S remove either chimney or shade to '&L'd -.fjffk light them. ,V,1 '" ',-! '' v ? ! ' V . i V -J'-t""5! - Ask for them by name. If your r.jv,V-fc --V"' 'H dealer does not carry them write $ i The use uf Aladdin Security Oil'- )di : !"? " t f I :' guarantees best result frutu lamps, ' ,.rr I' '"Sf- stoves and h.-alirs. ""' tH f ft!F9 -1 ' v ' STANDARD OIL COMPANY I i V nV I IT' ' - ' BAI.l IMUHti, MD. , :'f 11 ni.'i- -uSa V .limi-n. U. C. Charlotte, N. C. ; I I ,0'7. I CH5V IWIo.k. V.. ClMrlrMM, W. V. I 'i !; UT j -rf yT J ''chmo"'- v- ch.ri..io. s. c & The Grand Theatre TODAY MME PETROVAi "MORE TRUTH THAN POETRY" Metro Feature . ' , - FRIDAY W, fsyHl .'7-Ki - $ v- -rfSWt . r TOHDk. .fiy .'"4 J: 1 I 1 1 1 I I (Scldvvn Pictures preceni mid l2r eyas and Hqi" smite in. . 4 Edqar Selwyn's Fonous Staqe Success Nearly Married THE STORY OF AN ALMOST BRIBE AND ANOT-QUITE BRIDEGROOM THE STORY OF A ROAD-HOUSE WHERE THEY SERVE NOTHING BUT CHICKEN I I 1 SATURDAY FATTY ARBUCKLE PAY IY0UR TAXES! The taxpayers of the County have been very slow this year in paying their State and County Taxes and the State Treasurer is urgently insisting that we push the collection of taxes and remit. 4 rLEASE GIVE THIS MATTER PROMPT ATTENTION. A. W. TAYLull SH jift LenoHCcunty Jl
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
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Jan. 24, 1918, edition 1
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