Newspapers / The New Bernian (New … / Jan. 9, 1909, edition 1 / Page 5
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5 v1 to. - v ( T ', V i 4 r ( . v' Si -it rr. - Loo Forward - to the Rett Year-'-tcill you help yourself ' to make the moat of it by making this - bank u SiUntParpter in your finances. 1 . Credit at this bank, attired by carry- - ing a checking or a savings account here is valuable to you: To" make money or to - save it you need this Bank. 2 ' yWe are ready to help you make 1909 a banner year. Jtill You Be With Vs? ' ' OHO. B. PENDLETON, Cukier. JJ4S. B. BLADES, Praldeat, T. A.- GREEN.. Vif-rmMBt, WM. B. BLADES, Vlce-prcs. NT S ft. J ' t " ! t HOME APPROVAL Buy of us, take your purchase home, if you then change your mind, bring the article back in good condition, and we'll refund your money, or exchange for other goods. We're here to please not to "drive" hard bargains. BRADHAM DRUG CO. Comer of Pollock and Middle Streets pmoiMtEmoh Of People Comnt mi Going Sea ; on Traiiu and Elsewhere . Mr. Ceo Jones went down to Hawks Siding this moraine on a short bus iness trip. ', . Mr. J. B. Cooper, ot Norfolk, Va., who has been in the city on business left this morning on the Coast Line train for Wilmington, N. C, on a bus iness trip and to visit his brother. Mr. J. M. Howard returned home this morning, after a short business' trip out of the city, in the interest of E. H. & J. A. Meadows Co. Mr. Carl Armstrong left this morn ing on the New Bern and Norfolk train for Washington, N. C. Mr. Ralph Gray returned home last night from Washington, N. C. Mr. W. 8. McGregor, of Goldsboro, district manager for the Singer Sew ing Machine Company, was In the city last night on business for the com pany, and left this morning, return ing home. Mr. E. H. Lane, of Cove City, left this morning on the east bound Nor folk and Southern train, returning home after afew days visit in the city with relatives and friends. Dr. N. H. Street returned home this morning from Clarks, where he has been on a Bhort professional visit. Mr. J. E. O'Donnell, ot Raleigh, N. C, spent last evening in the city, on business, and left this morning on the weBt bound Norfolk and Southern train, returning home. IVIU ntW yet prompt- b bowels, cleanses enna acts Ivontl the svstem effectually, assists one in overcoming rintiitual constipation permanently. To get its beneficial effects buy the wenuine. Manufactured by the CALIFORNIA JiG Sirup Co. 80LB Br" LIAOINC DRUGGISTS - 604 p-BOTTLC The Greatest Money-Raising Sale at Sam Yoffie s Store ' x At Sacrifice Prices THESE prices are the lowest JteVerf known or talked about. Tliey are so lowas to reach the highest or lowest. Do not fail to call at this sale. - jMiiMMoffie. fON-tHE-CORNER CHUKCH SERVICES. Religious services will be held to morrow (Sunday) In the following named churches: St. Paul's Catholic Church Mass and sermon at 10:30 a. m. Sunday School at 3 p. m.; and Vespers, ben ediction at 4 p. m. Rev. Father Sta pleton will officiate. Centenary Methodist Church At 10:30 a. m. Fellowship service; 11 a. m. regular preaching; 3. p. m. Sunday School; and at 7:30 p. m. preaching by the pastor, Dr. R. C. Beaman. Christian Church Hancock St. Claude C. Jones, pastor. Sunday ser vices: 11 a. m., preaching; 2 p. m. Ju nior Builders; 3 p. m. Sunday School; 7:30 p. m. preaching. Sermon sub ject: "The Baptism of the Holy Spir it." Prayer meeting Thursday at 7.30 p. m. First Church of Christ, Scientist Sunday services: 10:30 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Subject: "Sacrament", 2 Cor 9:12. Sunday school 12 m. Wednes day evening testimony service 7:30 p. m. All are cordially Invited. Services at First Baptist Church tomorrow: preaching at 11 a. ni. and 7:30 p. m. by the pastor, Rev. C. L. Greaves. Subject for the morning ser vice: "Relation of Belief and Confes sion to Assurance." Subject at night: "Up From a Pit." Sunday School at 3 p. m. The pastor will be glad to welcome you at these services. Services at Christ Church: Holy Communion 7:45 a. m.; morning pray er and sermon 11 a. m.; evening pray er and sermon 7:30 p. m. Sunday School at 3:30 p. m. Bible Class con ducted by the Rector at the Sunday- School hour. WHAT .IS A TOIL CBOM Department of igrkiltan's Expbta. tlea ( "Fall Normal." New York Journal of Commerce. As many of the reports of the 8tr ttscician of the Department of Agricul ture are based upon a comparison with the "full normal," it is a matter of the greatest importance that there " 'should be a clear understanding of what the term really means. To begin with a normal condition is .not an average condition, but a condi tion above the average, giving promise jof more than an average crop Furthermore, a full normal condition I does not indicate a perfect crop, or a crop fiat is or promises to be the (very largest in quantity and the very best in quality that the region reported upon may be considered capable of producing. The full normal indicates something less than this, and thus comes between the average and the possible maximum, being greater than the former and less than the latter. The full normal may be described a condition of perfect healthfulness, unimpaired by drouth, and with such White Sox's ritclier Anxious to Take growth and development as may reas on the Champion. lonably be looked for under these fav- By H'ire to The Sun. orable conditions. As stated in the in- Chicago, Jan. 9. Baseball may sup- structions to correspondents, it does ly th? next challenger for the heavy- hot represent a crop of extrar -dinary weight puglistic championship of the character, such as may be produced here aad there by the snerial effnrt The one to issue the deft is none 0f some highlv skilled famer with other than Frank Smith, pitcher of the abundant means, or such as may be iVllite SOX. lerown nn n hit nf lanrf nf ovIrannIL Frank came to Chicago today to Larv fprtllltv r .v coh d ,,. k if im- could get backing in his new grow quite extensively once in a doz- proposHicm. It did not take him long en vear8 in .. hnt io vtrQr. dinarily favorable to the crop to be raised. A full normal crop, in short. is neither deficient on the one hand nor extraordinarily heavy on the oth er. While a full normal condition is but rarely reported for the entire corn. wheat, cotton or other crop area, at the same time or in the same year, its local occurrence is by no means un common, and whenever it is found to exist it should be indicated by the number 100. Sometimes a favorable season for IP"""" -iu SMITH MAY FKJHT JOHXSON. to Unci 11. Secretary Charles Freder icks idmouneed he would back the piann-inover pitcher in a bout with .'ack Johnson to the sum of $10,000. Just to show that he was a real iijanager. and not a mere novice at the Lusiiuss, Fredericks said the $10,000 offer was open for Johnson's accept ance. Pitcher Smith is enthusiastic over the plan to get into a ring bat tle. ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AfaetabtertaHrfonErAs. simUatirfi tePbodanrlRpftta tingbeSinmadBaulBowtsar moDirioMCketruri ness and testxontalns netor Opium .Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC. BmfASmd' AUftUlt-jttmlmi cfism: For Infants tnd Children. The Kind You I! Always Bought 1 ' - Bears Signature ai3 Wit: Apafect Remedy for0tmsfl(B- Hon . Sour Stomach.Dlarrrai WorraswrralsKms.reverisit ness anil Loss OF SlXEP- IteSimfe Signature of NEW YORK-. the . v: iVV Exact Copy of Wrapper. In -USB-1 For Over II Thirty Years Hi GASTOIilH ; purine stlie blood cures the cause builds you up. 3IOI!K TO LIVE LIKE JESUS. Impure blood runs you down- makes you an easy victim for organic Llantmg is followed by a favorable diseases. Burdock's Blood Bitters ., ... A depreciations by insects, the result be i.ng a full normal condition. At other times the full normal may be main tained by conditions that are excep tionally favorable in one or more par- Movement Started at Cleveland, Ohio, ticulars counter balancing conditions Spreads to Other Localities. hhat are unfavorable in other particu- By Wire to The Sun. lars. Thus a crop may have had such Cleveland, Ohio, Jan. 9. Attempts 'an unusually good start that it may to follow in the footsteps of Jesus 1)ass without injury through a period Christ, in emulgation of the movement 0f drouth that would otherwise have in this city, in which already more proved disastrous to it, or its more than 11,000 people have been pledged. tnan ordinary vigor and potentiality are to be made in other cities of the may fullv offset some 8,lght inj-urv United States and Canada. .. frnm insect . ii. rrice, me young law siuueni Tha p,,n ,.,.,! ommmmummnmmmmmm mtmmmmtmmommmmnmo WE wish our Customers a Happy and Prosperous J)Jew Year. STOCK BKOKEES SUSPENDED. Thei-e'may be other Companies "just as good." bat ! I . there is no Company better than the .... WvvT.V??. -i'J he State Mutual Lire Insurance Co :y:OFIWSTOtiN;.C.:- -n 3 Cheers' and Directors are personally, known to ; j : am waos names are a Bumraeni ffw 7 C. -t:3 of honcsty;W,'conservatkm iivS :rs attractive policies at .fair pre- ;r:'3,'ar.i tttractive' contracts to f;;;'- ; ; ::'. :a ii to protect your : , jr. r love J crr3.. Discipline Enforced in Case Connect d With Coster Failure. By Wire to The Sua. mew xorK, Jan. . irollowin? an in vestigation Into the connection he'weon members of the New York Stock E change and the firm of CosU.r, Knajip & Co., which failed some weeks ago, the stock exchange today suspended Arthur E. Grannis from membership in the exchange for three years. Mr. Grannis was formerly a member oi the firm ot Grannis & Lawrence, which dissolved after the Coster, Knapp & Co. failure, and he had since been trading as an Individual. The governors of the exchange an nounced that the suspension was due to "violation of the just and equitable principles of trade." The Coster-Knapp firm was accused of bucketing orders, and it was charged that Grannis did business for them. ; The stock exchange members of the firm of Marshall, Bpader ft Co. were recently suspended from the exchange for a reason similar to that given in this case.;- .vho slarted the movement here, to- announced that he was being wanjped wilh inquiries from all over he eountry and from Canadian towni is 10 1 he methods employed here. "The movement will spread allover he country, 1 believe," said Mr. Price today. "Our Cleveland societies re port growth, and say the members are keeping the pledge, at no matter what cost. We, all of us, probably find it dilheull al times to live just as we think .Jesus would, but we are not crying ;uits." You know as well as any one when you need something to regulate your not being every where the same, in determining how near the conditions of any giver, crop is to it. correspondents will usually find it an advantage to have a definite idea of what yield per acre would con stitute a full inormal crop in their re spective districts that Is, bow many bushels, pounds, or tons per acre of a particular crop would be produced in a season that was distinctly but not exceptionally favorable. In a region where .10 bushels of corn may be taken as the full normal yield, condition of !)0 would give a prospect of a crop of bushels, and 80 a crop of 24 bushels. If 40 bushels be considered the full Cutler-Blades Hardware Co. mama Fire Insurance Real Ettate-r New Bern Building & Loan Assn. May happiness and prosperity ac company you during this holiday sea son, and throughout the New Year. W. G. BOYD, Elks Temple Telephone 400 PLOT TO DETHRONE KING. food distresses you, your kidneys Inormal yield, ao tor 10 percent less pain, take ilollister's Rocky Mountain than the full normal) would indicate Tea. It a' vays relieves. 35 cents, Tea a crop of 36 bushels, SO one of bush- or Tablets. els and 70 one of 28 bushels. For the reason that the full normal represented by 100, does not Indicate a perfect or the largest possible crop, t. i 11.. i.. - . J l rr-t Machinations of Foes Revealed to 11 may wc Mni ,it a KnnriNot condition may be so exceptionally rav- Tiv falile tn Thp Sun oraoie as io promise a crop mat win v . .... . Lisbon, Jan. 3. During a banquet exceed the full normal, and it win ac given by officers of the army in this cordlngly be-expressed by 1C5, or what- city last night, at which King Manuel ever other figures may seem warran was present, a lieutenant publicly ted by the facts 105 representing 5 warned his majesty that a plot to de- per cent above the full normal; 110, 10 111 rone hit.) was in course of prepara tion. The oflicer declared further that the king was surrounded by spies and traitors. Extra guards are on duty around the royal palace today. per cent, and so forth. New Bern Fruit Co. Wholesale dealers in Fruits, Produce Hay, Grain and Feed, Flour, Lard, Cheese, Cakes, Crackers, Candies of all kinds; Cigars and Cigarettes, Chewing, and Smoking Tobacco. Pig Feet and Tripe, Sweet and Sour Pickles; Canned Meats and Vegetables; K. & K. and T. C. K. Apples.' 0TXBHOS ATTACKS LOBBYISTS. Warier, of Michigan, Says, In Message That They 8hil4 be Finished. By Wlrs to TM Bww''i''..'-' . Lknstiif. MIchf Jan. 9. Governor Warner. In his message to the. legls laturt todays says that jrofesalonal lobby tots hould be banished, and says , ''Over-capltalliatlon and stock wa tering manipulations' by" corporations ta tn evil which disasterouslr affects the general publku The railroad com panies have been the greatest offend' ers In this respect .'-".V To the end that the public may be proii.eted all Idsues of Btorfcg and t i f i "A " crvli r lions Is I'roud of Her Juil Record. New York Press. Pleading guilty to a charge of petty larceny, Mary Wilson, 69 years old, of 225 East 125th street, known for the Troops Formed of Foreigners. I last 20 years to the police as the London Chronicle. "Queen of the Shoplifters," was re- The foreign legion Is composed of manded for sentence by Judge Mul .... i a very heterogeneous lot, wno nave i queen in general sessions. For a long found Europe too hot for them, and period the woman was in Jail most of it is a curious thing that the German the time. Her record v as read In element seems to predominate in this court yesterday, and showed in 1882 French force. Most of these Germans gt,e was sent to prison for six months, are deserters from their own army, hn 1883 for one year, In 1884 for five though in the Legion they soon And I months, in the same year for four- thai it is even worse than an ordinary teen months In Philadelphia, in 1887 case of "out of the frying pan into for eght months here, in 1892 for the fire." The legion is now almost eighteen months In New Haven, Cann. the only survival from the days when m jggs for f0Ur years and nine kings and governments accepted the months here, and in 1899 for two years service of oreign troops, unless ,ln- an(i Bix months in Newark. deed another instance of the same ghe told Judge Mulqueen that when kind is furnished by th Popes pres- her Newark sentence expired she ent Swiss Guard, though this Is com-lat0nped stealing from stores, but dur posed of men of first rate cnaracter. mg th ia8t Chistmas holidays, she The Garde Ecossalse "of the kings Li gne went d0wntii to do ome France was another good example or honest buying and the passion for those alien mercenaries. The Boots shoplifting overcame her. She stole a hundred in number who formed I articles ot various kinds and was for centuries' the bodyguard of the! caught, she seemed proud of the Fyenoh kings, had their modern coua-l faot that her picture and history are terpart in, tne xamous ueni uarae., contained In former Inspector Byrnes' who sentinelled, the juiieries under) book on criminals. Nappleon.jp !' ; ' . t .. . Corned Hams 14c Lb Vinegar 8c a qt. or 30c gallon. Granulated Sugar 5 l-2c per lb. 4 lb. Bucket Cottolene, 47c. Blue Labia Ketchup 23c. Libby's Tripe, 18c can. Maraschino Cherries, 23c bottle. v Then fa io excuse for your seadlnd at ( town to get your Printing and Qffleo Sippllofc - Ion csa gi t nnythlng you ne In sn efflcs from (iiVS'X G. BUKN, 9 Craven SU CASTOR I A ; ; lor lafuot tnd Children. ; Tis Rfci Yon Bavs AL":;$ t: H. Phone 174. ARMSTRONG, NEW BERN, KC '- ;s .it' m: . ?'A' '. - OUR LONC SUITS! I In sanitary plumbing It expert workmanship. Nothing takea. ; ; for granted, skill born of long...i- experience and the will to give y;;; : ii every client the ronest worth ot V ';' .i'hls money. Never took ."cheap. v j ,v; Job in our history rather do lt'! . . ii: Ai' for nothing, i But we do yeturn i ! . v; (;V value tot ' money charge you nothing tor an estimate.1 , , 2N Cz rrs th nre of 1
The New Bernian (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 9, 1909, edition 1
5
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