Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / Oct. 1, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
ti;;u joii IsUkltC-ra IS. Published In Two "bk-ctions, , cverj Tuesday and i nday nt Ko. 4S J'ullock Street. ' E. 3. LAND PR1N UNO COMPANY PKOrHlKTOES. ESTABLISHED 1878. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Two Months ....$ .20 "Three Months.. 25 Six Months.....,J. .50 Twelve Months... ... ; 1.C0 C ; Only In advance. Advertising rates furnished upen application at the office, or upon in quiry by mail. Fntcred at the Postoffice, New Bern, N. C, as second-class matter. Hiram Johnson, Roosevelt's running mate, is said to be a born fighter. It is a fine thing that he is. There's a fight on. New Jersey is still progressive. The Wilson candidate for tl.c Senate won in the Democratic primaries Tuesday by a sweeping majority. There is no such thing as an equi noctial storm, says the U. S. Weather Bureau. But that is not final as wit ness how often the bureau slips up on the weather. Colonel Roosevelt says there is no vilol difference between the Republi can and the Democratic parties. That is to say for the Colonel's purposes there is none. With him anything to make a point. you don't want to forget the middle! man. The middle man is much abused! but there is competition in his line of business just as there is in most other Unci and that should operateto hold his profits down to a reasonable amount. This isacomplexcivilizationand middle men, it seems to us ,are necessarily a cog in the wheel, , t ' SPEAKS HIS MIND. ; Governor Wilson is Like - Wil iam Jennings Bryn --he speaks what, he thinks no matter what effect his utter ances may have on his. prospects. . He believes in the initiative and referen dum although some of his supporters- like the New York World are very much opposed to that innovation. A time serving man would say nothing about views calculated to estrange some of his followers, but Wilson is not of that 1 kind. In a speech at New Haven Wednesday he boldly reaffirmed his ' bel'ef in the doctrine of the initiative, the referendum and the recall. He is, however, opposed to the recall of judges. INFANT MORTALITY. According to statistics submitted to the International Hygienic Cohgress, of 55, 000,000 babies born into the world annually, fifteen million, or over afourthof the whole number, die before, they are a year old. In every community, right here in1 New Bern, and everywhere c!s, in fants and older children, too, for that matter, scmctinies die when the proper nursing and more especially with the proper preventive and precau tionery measures their lives might have been spared. The ignorance of parents is often to blame and more often the trouble is the provcrty of the parents. Mfiro frliirnt-ir.n rinrl a tnnrp pn it- - I able distribution of the wealth of the country will, in proportion as they arc attained, reduce the needless de.iths of children. "Showing Here that Jeff Is a ' Finan cier of the Highest Type", one of Fisher's, recent , inimitable creations,"- confirms our fears. ? '. It is like this: Mutt hires Jeff to carry a trunk up eight Sights of stairs and agrees to pay him a quarter for the service. When Jeff gets the trunk up, Mutt tenders him fifteen cents, observ ing as he does so, "Fifteen cents is all I can give you; times are too hard". Whereupon , Jeff ,: in a huff carries the trunk back down stairs. Fisher's philosophy, we gather from the head he gives the incident, is that if Jeff had been area! financier he would have accepted the fifteen cents rather than lose the whole thing. : But there are things more imoprtant than refus ing to let fifteen cents get away from you and one of, them is to let it be known that you object to being trod on and that you wont stand for it if there is' any possible way to get around it. Jeff may not be much of a financier but he is not lacking in spirit. And as we have already intimated .preserv ing one's self respect is more impor tant than, losing fifteen cents. Sup pose the fathers had taken the view of the problem up to them for solution that Jeff's creator would have had Jeff take! Why. there would have been no Declaration of Independence, no Boston tea party and no Revolutionary War and we would all hands still be paying tribute to the British crown. Yes, sir, Jeff in the emergency described was the right man in the right place, for the demand was not for financier ing but for spunk. MEAII WiLSOII TO SWEEP COUUTRY A woman's idea of a rival is another woman who tries to have better clothes than hers. ' - -. It was in the interest of the South, Col. Kor.rvclt raid Friday in New Orleans that hecame into the Southland. Why, certainly. Whoever heard of Mr. Roosevelt doing anything in the interest of himself? "Root's work seen in New York platform", says a headline. Root is the big man of the Republican party. It is a pity that a man ofhis ability should always be on the side of the in terests as opposed to the people. William Jennings Bryan doesn't con cede a single State to cither Taft or Roosevelt. Wilson and Marshall will carry every State in the Union, he pre dicts. There's nothing like being hope ful and there is real ground for Mr. Bryan's hopefulness this time. The President and the next President met and exchanged civilities in Boston Thursday. 1 he next President was thoughtful and considerate of the feel ings of his predecessor-to-be and Mr. Taft showed no-ill feeling-whatever. Both men observed a proper regard for the dignity of their position. Senator Root is said to have risen to a dramatic height at Saratoga in declaring that the Republican party would outlive the short lives of its traducers. Rut he needn't think that he is the only "heavy" in the cast. His language is tolerably certain to cause the Colonel to get a little dramatic himself, or mayhap it will be melodramatic. The straight Republicans of New York State have nominated Job. E. Hedges for Governor. He will divide the Republican vote of New York with Oscar S. Straus, the Progressive candidate. If the Democrats nomi nate any sort of a vote-getter, he ought to be able to win the election. But if they name a Murphy ized Democrat, the chances are that the always large independent vote in the State will center on Straus or Hedges and aecom- MANVS. SYSTEM. The trouble is not always with the system. When things go wrong in an enterprise, public or private, blame is often laid on the system and one hears the remark, "Oh well, a new system is what is needed and the best results will never be had until the system is changed." . But more often than not the trouble is with the man rather than the system. A new tax-gatherer has been in office in Virginia of late. He had the same system to work with that his prede cessors in office had, but we find the Rich mond Journal saying,' 'This year's recei pts far exceed those of any other year in the history of the Common wealth". A "live one" can take almost any kind of a system and get some pretty large-sized results. RULING IS ALL RIGHT. The Wilmington Star thinks the Democratic Executive Committee did exactly the right thing in passing a resolution denying the right to vote in the Senatorial primary to all who do not vote the full Democratic ticket. "Who's making this nomination, any how Democrats or nondescripts? "the Star pertinently inquires. It is claimed that the ruling is too rigid and that it will cost the ticket many votes and maybe it will cost the party the votes of the few that have a standing grouch, but that will be all. Any solution of the problem will be unsatisfactory to some, but we believe that the solution that the committee hit upon will be found more satisfactory in the long run than any other would have been found to be. A less rigid construction of the rules would have been to let down the hart to almost anybody who wanted to have a voice in naming the Senator and that would be unjust not alone to the can didate or candidates who might have a preponderance of strength outside the party but also to the rank and file of the party who feel, and rightly so, that this is their fight. NEWSPAPER PUBLICITY. There is much difference of opinion among newspaper editors as to the justice of the new postal law requiring newspapers to make known the facts as to who is "putting up" for them and other information which in an ordinary business -is regarded as private. A newspaper is a quasi-public in stitution although it might be said in passing in some communities the cit izens who ordinarily pass as publics' spirited citizens give it indifferent support and encouragement. However that may be, the source of th9 publics information is necessarily more or less of a public matter and a nindiviiTual or a corporation undertaking to run a newspaper assumes a responsibility as a public servant which cannot be shirked. And viewing the matter from the point of view of the public we believe that the public has the right to know much about the internal affairs of the paper, such details for instance as who is financing it, what is paid matter and what is'nt. The papers as a rule are not going to give this information unless they are forced to. As to the power which shall compel them to give it, we rather agree with the New York World that it should be the individual States rather than the United States through its postoffice laws. As to wherein a newspaper is different from other business enter prises the World's reasons arc interest ing: "Newspapers are not private enter prises. They are agencies of government often more powerful than the regularly established agencies of government They hold great privileges and great franchises, and their responsibility should extend far beyond the printed word. The public is therefore entitled to all reasonable information as to their opera on and control." ; FIRE PREVENTION DAY. The Journal lends its heartiest en dorsement in favor of a thorough ob servance of Fire Prevention Day on Oct. 9, the anniversary of the great Chicago fire, In the case of fire as in the case of plish the defeat of Mr. Murphy's man. disease, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. It is some- A navy surgeon now maintains that pellagra is caused from the bite of in sects. We wonder if this insect busi ness is not being overdone a bit. They tell us that the mosquito is responsible for chills, but when we inquire as to the presnce of mosquitoes in Communi ties where the people are much afflicted with chills, we find that in some cases I j the plans for an observance of Fire Prevention Day. In this letter he at least there are fewer mosquitoes there than in communities where chills are less numerous. Many so-called theories are doubtless not much more than guesswork. , THE WEIGHT OF DOLLARS. times a matter of a moment's time and effort to prevent a fire whereas to put out a fire is often a' gigantic undertaking. Nearly all fires, like nearly all sickness, is preventable and it is up to the people to get busy and prevent them. Insurance Commissioner James R. Young has sent out a circular letter in which he urges general co-operation STALE PHRASES ARE NEEDED says: - . "I desire your city authorities. May or; Aldermen, chief of fire department and city building' inspector, as well as your civic bodies, board of trade, Mcrchaa'.s' Assodition, and womens' clubs, to all unite in observance of this day and pushing the work. . "The day should be observed by public meetings, addresses on lire waste, a parade of your Fire Department, and frol. Irving r isher suggests as a remedy for the high cost of living that the weight of the gold dollar be increased so as to restore some of its purchasing 1 power.'. He says Governor Woodrow.a general inspection and cleaning up Wilson has said the same thing. If so, 'of all premises. - Many cities and towns we belie e it is one of the few mistakes ' observed the day last year and derived the Democratic candidate has made, j much benefit therefrom. . " - , ' One of the controlling causes of the I The, need for greater precautions' hfgh cost of living is the immense pro-'against fires in our State will' be i in fill which "big business" insists on ' pressively evident when it is recalled taking. It is difficult to sec how link-! that there is an annual fire loss In the ering with the coinage will corroct that State of a million and a half dollars. rtouble. , . . MIDDLE MEN A Baltimore man writing the Sun F NANCIERING VS. SPUNK. We have been fearing that Bud of that city on the high cost ct living, Fisher, the creator of Mutt and Jeff, says that in fixing the responsibility was something of commercialist Writer Who Expresses Powerful Emotion Must 8ay What Hat Been 8ald Countless Timet. Our dramatic critic,, In hit review of Sardou'i play "Above 'Sueplclon," eaid of one of the characters that "his Hps were sealed," and remarked that such phrases necessarily accompany tucb plays. They do. Indeed, and the use of them makes one understand the emotional quality of such playt better than the most elaborate analy sis of them. . There are hundreds of phrases like this, containing metaphor both vio lent and stale, which, are only used seriously by writers who snatch at the easiest meant of expressing an emotion which they do not feel. For If a writer hat a real emotion of his own to express he will either use metaphor suggested to- him by that particular emotion or none at' all. This Is a matter of Instinct, not of literary art; for a fresh emotion will not be satisfied with stale phrases but will feel Itself misrepresented by them. That Is one reason wh.y, when power fully moved, we are often so Inarti culate. We feel that commonplaces will not serve our turn, but we have nothing to put In their place. The writer's task Is to be neither Inarticu late nor commonplace. He mutt not be artless, nor must he give us bad art for good. If he has a new idea to express he Is not tempted by stale phrases. For they are associated with emotions rather than with thoughts, since emotions are - not discoveries, like new ideas, and when expressed In literature are valued, not for their novelty, but for the power with which they are expressed. Thus, a .writer who expresses a new Idea says what baa never been said before, but a writer who wlsbea to express a pow erful emotion has to say what bat probably been said a thousand timet, and by bad writers at well at good. These bad writers have burdened our memory with metaphors, some of them lifeless from the first, some kill ed by constant repetition, or In appro priate nse;' and their metaphors stay in our minds because they have been so often repeated. The good writer's mind it often Infetted with them, so that, before he can And th phrase be wants, he must reject half a dozen that he' does not want This is the penalty that he has to pay for living at a time when literature Is old and language sophisticated. London Times. , . . Democratic Gains and Maine Impressive. OTHER - PARTIES' PLIGHT Few, if any, medicines, have met with the uniform success that has at- i i .u. - t rM i i r""i:- in VermOIU , cho,era and Diarrhoea Remedy. . The ' i.-va- r i:- . j : - icitiai uuic bui ui iuhi aiiu uiaiinuca which it has effected in almost every neighborhood ' have given it a wide reputation. For sale by all dealers. Third Termers to Poll Their Entire Strength , From the Rapidly v. r Thinning Republican v Ranks. ; ;.vv" v.. ,, That the result of the state eleo tlona in .Vermont and Maine mean a tremendous Democratic victory In No vember, la freely admitted by all ex cept the bitterest , partisans. ' Politi cal experts have done some analysing, and some claim to have reached nove) conclusions. But these facts stand out: v- . On Monday, September 9, 1913, the Republican and Third Term parties combined elected William T. Haines governor of Maine, over Frederick W. Plalsted, the present Democratic in- clumbent, by 3,023 plurality; In 1908, a presidential year, a Republican was elected governor by 7,653 plurality; In 1904, the plurality was 25,800, and in 1900 It was 34,132. in other words, in 12 years the Democrats have cut down the Republican plurality In state elections by 31,109. In this period the Democratic vote has increased from 39,000 to 68,000 whereas the Republican vote haa de creased from 74,000 to 71,000. The Democratic vote of this year exceeds that of September, 1908, by 1,000, but the Republican vote. Is about 2,000 leas than that party cast four years ago. The split in the Republican ranks, following the election of William T. Haines, is pronounced. If the divi sion, in Maine in November is as it was In the recent Vermont election, six-tenths of the Republican vote will go for Taft, three-tenths for Roose velt, and one-tenth for the Demo crats. It is significant that the latter party has to date suffered no losses, as compared with the vote In previous years, from the Third Term move ment. On the contrary, it has gained. The result In Maine may be expected to be something like this: Wilson, 74,000; Taft, 42,600; Roosevelt, 21,300. The returns from the recent Ver mont election show, in round figures, that the Joint Republican and third party vote was eight per cent, short of the Republican vote four years ago, while the Democratic vote in that state shows a gain of twenty-five per oent. over that of 1908. It is of spe cial Interest to speculate what will happen next November throughout the nation if the Republican and Democratic vote for the national tickets 'happen to be affected as the gubernatorial vote this - month In Vermont has been affected. - The New York Evening Post has done some interesting figuring along this line and as a net result It is shown that, under the contingencies mention ed, President Taft would carry only two states in November, Rhode Island and Vermont, all the others going for Gov. Wilson.: The conclusions reach ed by the PoBt follow:, - - " , "To compute this result we should have to deduct 8 per cent from the vote cast for Taft four years ago and apportion the remaining vote In the ratio of 62 to 38 between Taft and Roosevelt, and we should have to add 35 per cent to Bryan's vote In 1908, and give the 'demnltlon total to Woodrow Wilson. In other words, give Taft 57 per cent and Roosevelt 35 per cent.- of Taft's vote four years ago, and give Wilson 125 per cent of Bryan's vote four years ago. "The result In round numbers would be as follows, so far as regards Taft and Wilson. States. Taft Alabama ........... 14.000 Arkansas 32,000 California 122.000. Colorado 71,000 Connecticut 65,000 Delaware 14,000. Florida 6,000 Georgia 24,000 Idaho 30,000 Illinois 360,000 Indiana 199,000 Iowa 157,000 Kansas 113,000 If all epitaphs had to be truthful it would be better to leave some tomb stones blank. Children Cry ; FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA .. A good way for a man to discover that he doscn't know a woman is to marry her. - v. .. . ..; ; ;v. New York is more excited over the world's series than over the political campaign. 1 - - The implicit confidence that many people have in Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and Dirrahoea ' Kemedy is founded on their experience in the use of that remedy and their knowledge of the many remarkable cures1 of colic, diarrhoea and ' dysentery that Jt has effected, tor sale at a'l dealers. A man who takes a lot of trouble to tell you he is your friend never takes any to prove it. v .135,000 . 51,000 . 38.000 . 66,000 .152.000 Kentucky ....... Louisiana Maine .......... Maryland ....... Massachusetts . , Michigan .......... 192,000 Minnesota ..........112,000 Mississippi ........ ' 8,000 Missouri .....199,000 Montana i ....... ..' 18,000 '' Nebraska 73,000. Nevada ............ 6,000 New Hampshire.,.. 80,000 New Jersey .......161,000 New York .........497,000 North Carolina ..... 66,000 North Dakdta ..... 13,000 Ohio ......327,000 Oklahoma ......... 63,000 Oregon ............ 86,000 ' Pennsylvania ......426,000 " Rhode Island ...... 35,000 South Carolina 1,000 South Dakota 39.000 Tennessee ........ 68,000 Texas 37,000 :, Utah 85,000 j 'Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C A ST O R I A Friendship sm" to be moie costly than enmities by about a thousand per cent. ' ; Children Cry - FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Prominent among the fall openings is the coal bin. ,. . - The Hon. James Smith, of New Jer sey, at least knows how it happened. Now comes a scientist. who predicts that cees will be made out of air. Hot air. Best "lYeatment for Burns If for no other reason, Chamberlain's Salve should be kept in every house hold on account of its great value in the treatment of burns. It allays the pain almost instantly, and unless the injury is a severe one, heals the parts without leaving a scar. , This salve is also un. equaled for chapped hands, sore nipples and diseases of the skin. Price, 25 cents For sale by all dealers. A platform on which the colonel was speaking broke down, and the one on which he is running is dangerous. . Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Lawson's "remedy" in the magazi nc will be all right if he gets people to take the magazine. ' .. Dr. Eliot advised Harvard students to marry early. 1 ... Good for Biliousness .. ' "I took two of Chamberlain's Tablets last night, and I feel fifty per "cent, b:tter than -I have for weeks, says J. J. Fire' stone of Alleean. Mich, -They are certainly a fine article for biliousness." For sale by all dealers." " -- Wilson. . 93,000 ,109,000 160,000 159,000 85.000 28,000 39,000 90,000 45,000 503,000 423,000 226,000 301,000 305,000 .79,000 44,000 145,000 194,000 319,000 136,000 76,000 448,000 83,000 164,000 14,000 42.000 208.000 834.000 171,000 ! Running up and down stairs, sweep 41,000 Ing and bending over making beds wi 628,000 not make a woman healthy or beautiful, 153,000 she muit get out of doors, walk a mil 45,UUU l rinv and fata Chamber iSJ 'Iain's Tablets to improve her digestion o,uu I i . . . v I- .l k all dealers. An investigating committee at least calls men by their right names. The life of the umbrc.Ua these dayi is full of ups and downs'. .. . CASTORIA " tot Infants and Children. - Th Iti Yea K::3 Aliajs Bcsght Signature of CjtLJj-&&tf Some men are born poor, some a chleve poverty, and others., meet up with a frenzied financier. - Vermont 33,000 Virginia ........... 30.000 Washington ........ 61,000 West Virginia ..... 79,000( Wisconsin .',......142,000 Wyoming 12,000 78,000 50,000 170,000 271,000 . 63.000 14,000 . 103,000 73,000 139,000 308,000 18,000 In saying that a man does bis best work between 60 and 70 Dr. Wood Hutchinson must be trying to encourage his readers. . .' ' Those who know .and feel for Chair man Hllles say he really Isn't to blame for the Republican presidential candi date's announcement that he "Is out of politics.' Their Advantage. ' There Is one class of men who cer tainly ought to have a grip on the pub. Uo." ....... "Who are theyT "The dealer In suit cspps." - An article that has real merit should In time become popular. ' That such Is the case with. Chamberlain's .Cough Remedy has been attested by many dealers. Here is one of them H. W, Hendrickson, Ohio Falls, Ind., writes, "Chamberlain's Cough Remedy ii the best for coughs, colds and croup, an is my best seller." For sale by dealers. It is often necessary to drive home a truth with a blind bridle. . Dr. F.lint seem to have come down ff of his S-foot shelf. The liquids and the digested foods in the nlimentnry canal Das through tha wajl of the canal into the blood. Has process is called absorption and takes placa chiefly from the small intestine. After absorption the blood carries the food through the body, and each cell takes from the blood the food it needs. A pure glyceric extraot made front b'looJroot, mandrake, stone. Queen's root and lolden. seal root, and sold by druggists (or the past forty years under the name of Doctor Pierce's Golden Sledlcal DUcorery, . gives uniformly excellent results ai a tonio to help in the assimilation of thai food and in the absorption by. the blood of the food it requires. Eradicate the poisoni from the blood with this alterative extract which does thriii k the white blood corpuscle! , because contain ing no alcohol or other injurious ingredients. Thus the body can be built up strong to resist disease. This is tonio taken from Nature's garden that buildi up those weak- ' ened by disease. Sold b druggists everywhere; r Address World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Mr. Chas. Fakkbbk, Jr., of 832 Woodlawn Ave., Philadelphia. Pa writes: I was troubled with my stomach for almost three yearn Tried several doctors and most everything anybody recommended to me, but kept retting worse and honestly did not care to live as 1 was never well even though, at times. I had -no pain. My symptoms were aa follows: Always tired, my whole body In a throb, belrhinc of aas, ' pain and soreness in the stomach, vomlUng-, constipation, eould not . trll what to eut or what would ssree with me, and was nuluncholy. But after taklnff llr. Piffn-tt's ftohlim Mariii-iLl rHvnmrv with thii PlMMnt Ccas, FAJtaSES, Jb. ' Pcllata' it has nuula me a well man which U something to live for." Has all SAVE IHONEYI Buy your Millinery, Dress Quods and Notions at On Friday and Saturday, Sept 27 and 28 we will show, you VfBY BEST LINES FDRTHE LFAST MONEY. . , Come See For Yourself I .' THE- PROPORTICN OF SURPLUS AND IIHDKD PROFITS TO CAPITAL-' . Till: NATIONAL BANK - OF NEW BERNE, N. C. J. STANDS FIRST among the banks of the City THIRD among the National Banks of the State : j . And as it has urjiloH tind ' Undivided Profits amounting to $106,000 and 1 ' apital amounting ln"$( 0,CC0, it has a place on Ihfe National Bank Roll j of Honor, which includes only banka having Surplus and Undivided profits i qual to or exceeding their Capital stock. m . MEREST PI OH SAVINGS DEPOSITS I SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT - smBgrrw: ygiwrTrr-MAS3..v m.r l.iiijmllj im ay.usujM. 3tn . CUT OUT THIS AD . MOLES and WARTS MOLESOFF for the removal of MOLES and WARTS without pain : v1 and leaving neither scar nor mark ; . U ths earn remedy that we sold yoar grandmother, and haa, since its firtt appearance upon the market, carried ' wi:h it the UNANI- ; MOUS INDORSEMENT of MAN and WOMAN. MOLESOFF was the beit In plon cr days, Is still the best today. Our long exK-rience protects you. y"' - , : ' Letters from personages we all snow, together with much va'ouble info-mation ara contained in an attractive booklet, which will be ' sent free upon req iest. , . . . , :l ,'c . If you have any trouble getting MOLESOFF, send one . dollar di rect to . -;r.'."." -J Ooa huodrad dollars in sold will l paid to ths party mailing to a a ptatai ot tbaav . aalvM bafora and after using- MOLESOFF; thaa pictures to ba accepted, sad oasd by as. for advertising- MOLESOFF. Oaa million peopls wl'l so your picture with and . without en ucly growth on yoar person. .: ,--. , v FLORIDA DISTRIBUTING CO., Dept. C. 235 - ' '' "" ' ' Pensacol-t, Florida. TOE SATISFACTION STORE SUGAR'S is the satisfaction store. People who buy their dry goods there go away pleased and they come back pleased because the goods come up to the repre sentations. No matter what you need, if it is founJ in a first-class dry goods store, we have it and v. e ad vise you to come arid Took our stock over before buying .A. 631 Middle Street,' New Ccrn North Ccrc!:-i Cotton ! Cotton!! E. B. Elliott, representing J. E. Latham, is in therr.ar ket for Cotton. All r-rt havlr.?, Cotton to sell v. Ill do well to see him before selling. E. B. ELLIOTT, 6 Craven St. WHILE WAITING FOR YOUR TRAIN DROP IN AT THE IN UNION STATION For a nice Fundi, Co! Drinks, C'inrs or Hot Roasted lV;.nr! , also Check your Parcels here. C. F. TAYFOIi, . . . ProriKtiJ-.
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 1, 1912, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75